T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
467.1 | | ERASER::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Wed Apr 22 1987 10:38 | 3 |
| It's L Ron Hubbard.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
467.2 | A posthumous Dekology - gimme a break! | HARDY::KENAH | and shun the Furious Ballerinas. | Wed Apr 22 1987 11:27 | 9 |
| re .0: No, and I have no real desire to read the series... call
me prejudiced. Anything connected with L.Ron Hubbard and/or the
Scientologists seems suspect to me.
re .1: I have a question -- just how did Ol' Elron manage to release
a Newly-Revised, 1987 verion of "Dianetics"? He *died* (check that--
his death was *announced*) in 1986!
andrew
|
467.3 | Once I start something.... Sigh... | CASPRO::DLONG | Don't try to out-weird *me*! | Wed Apr 22 1987 16:24 | 26 |
| re .0
Well, I have Vols 1-6. [Once I start something I *have* to finish
it].
1-5 came out regularly [I started reading when 3 was a couple of
weeks old], 6 took a while and 7 is taking forever.
It's a satire and you have to be in the right frame of mind to enjoy
it. However, at around 3 or 4 you strt getting a little tired of
just how much Earthen lifestyle is "parodied". It's beginning to
sound like a statement along the lines of:
"Well Earth is so screwed up you might as well forget it."
"Your planet does, however, look lovely from space and would
remain such if you didn't keep mucking it up."
Which could then be construed as an upcoming ad for Scientology.
It does, however, do a good job in a couple of places. I particularly
like how each time the pro/an-tagonist [the story is told from the
viewpoint of the bad guy as he is writing his confession to his
heinous crimes] comes up against the good-guy, is thwarted and still
thinks he [the bad guy] is the smartest thing since sentient life
evolved.
BTW - It $17 each in the US but I find them for $13 at Lauriats.
|
467.4 | and then.... | ERASER::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Wed Apr 22 1987 17:39 | 10 |
| Re .2:
Well, maybe he wrote it posthumously. :-)
Actually, although I have mucho suspicions, since it takes anywhere
from 0.5 to 1.0 years to get a book through final production, and
since books are often, like cars, dated ahead, he _might_ have written
it just before kicking the bucket. On the other hand....
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
467.5 | | AKOV68::BOYAJIAN | Have a merely acceptable day | Thu Apr 23 1987 04:56 | 9 |
| Well, he supposedly wrote the entire "Mission Earth" dekalogy
before he died, so it's possible that he revised DIANETICS
before his death as well.
But actually, it's quite likely that the revisions were made by
others, but that the book is mostly his original work, so his name
stays on the by-line.
--- jerry
|
467.6 | ok for a good read | VIDEO::TEBAY | | Mon Apr 27 1987 11:41 | 5 |
| I am enjoying it but as someone esle stated you have
to be in the right frame of mind. Volumes 5-6 started
to fall down a little bit but it is high camp SF.
There is a pre-volume too.
|
467.7 | finally! | AIMHI::GIARAMITA | | Mon Apr 25 1988 12:31 | 5 |
| Well I have all ten now. Yes, it was worth the expense, but I can't
help feeling his organization drained every dime out of it.
You really have to admit it was a great spoof. I also enjoyed
Battlefield Earth, and am glad they didn't break it into multiple
books as well!
|
467.10 | Posthumous prose | SCOMAN::RUDMAN | Books almost for sale. | Tue May 03 1988 12:51 | 4 |
| I wonder what he's writing next after the dekology. Certainly
something to be said for this Dianetics stuff.
Don
|
467.11 | How Many More Trees? | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Tue May 03 1988 13:35 | 5 |
| I just saw the first volume of the dekalogy in *paperback*. I suppose
I should have known it would come to this.
len.
|
467.12 | Many, many more, I'm afraid | FENNEL::BALS | The Trash Heap has spoken. Nyaaah! | Tue May 03 1988 15:08 | 3 |
| According to the latest SF Chronicle, Bridge (Hubbard's
pseudo-publisher) is planning a major marketing push this year of
the paperback dekology,
|
467.13 | Dianetics is bunk (flame on) | NOETIC::KOLBE | Peace is Disarming | Tue May 03 1988 16:14 | 18 |
| < Note 467.10 by SCOMAN::RUDMAN "Books almost for sale." >
-< Posthumous prose >-
< I wonder what he's writing next after the dekology. Certainly
< something to be said for this Dianetics stuff.
< Don
Some friends of mine got involved with the scientologists in Denver
back around 1972-3. what a bunch of bullcrap!! They had a machine they
used so that a "clear" person could audit a non-clear person and find
out the things that were wrong with them. Anything not agreeing with
scientology was "wrong". People would sign lifetime/eternal contracts
to go with seaorg and work Hubbard's yacht as crew. They finally got
point of telling that lying to a non-scientologist was OK cause they
weren't really important. They even said those who were "clear: could
leviate. liesl
|
467.14 | IN MY OPINION | POLAR::BARKERS | | Tue May 03 1988 19:03 | 3 |
| Please don't waste your time or money on the man.
Nuff said
|
467.15 | a bet | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Tue Sep 20 1988 18:18 | 19 |
| >Note 209.35 Whither Ellison?
>SKITZD::MESSENGER
> ...
> This attitude is understandable, given that he quotes LRH as saying:
> "...the only way to make any money in this world is to start a new
> kind of psychotherapy or a new religion." before he started
> Scientology.
> - HBM
I had heard that L. Ron had bet another sf writer (Robert Silverberg
comes to mind, but I could easily be wrong) that he could make it
rich by starting a new kind of psychotherapy or religion.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
467.16 | | FENNEL::BALS | There goes Totoa | Wed Sep 21 1988 09:49 | 16 |
| RE: .15
Hubbard was a member of the Manana Club, a writers social
club/workshop/general bull session which met regularly in
Los Angeles during the late `40s, early `50s. The Manana Club was
started by Robert Heinlein and also included as members Ray Bradbury
and Anthony Boucher among other notables.
The story -- possibly apocryphal -- goes that Heinlein once said
something to the effect that the easiest way to make a million dollars
in the U.S. was to start a new religion (and, if you read STRANGER
IN A STRANGE LAND, you'll see that he thought on that *a lot.*).
According to reports, Hubbard got a gleam in his eye ... and the rest
is history.
Fred
|
467.17 | | PFLOYD::ROTHBERG | Dead kids on the block... | Mon Nov 27 1989 01:10 | 18 |
|
Just thought I'd mention...
I just finished book7 of Invasion Earth, and I
_love_ the series! Not as good as Battlefield
Earth, but still a good read! I started out with
paperbacks (they are releasing one every 2-3
months), but I found a store with the hardcovers
for $10, which is rather surprising 'cause the
publisher offered to buy back the hardcovers from
all bookstores that still had them, and most of
them sent the books back. Well, off to read book
#3 of the Mallorean and then to buy 8,9 and 10!
I love Soltan Gris (even though I've seen salad
bars with higher IQ's...)
|
467.18 | Join my "Higaroonics" | KISHOR::HIGINBOTHAM | Uncle Scrooge vs. Richie Rich | Mon Nov 27 1989 09:47 | 16 |
| The story -- possibly apocryphal -- goes that Heinlein once said
something to the effect that the easiest way to make a million dollars
in the U.S. was to start a new religion (and, if you read STRANGER
IN A STRANGE LAND, you'll see that he thought on that *a lot.*).
According to reports, Hubbard got a gleam in his eye ... and the rest
is history.
=============================================== the version I heard
was that it was John Campbell and Hubbard who were having this chat.
Whichever way it was, it sure seems likely that it took place. First came
that goofy Scientology stuff, than the scarier Dianetics bull.
How does this guy manage to keep coming out with books? He must
have been writing like a madman before he died. Or has his name become a
"housename" like Kenneth Robeson?
bh
|
467.19 | word generator | LESCOM::KALLIS | Time takes things. | Mon Nov 27 1989 14:25 | 19 |
| Re .18 (bh):
> How does this guy manage to keep coming out with books? He must
>have been writing like a madman before he died. Or has his name become a
>"housename" like Kenneth Robeson?
Both are possible. Hubbard was one of those folk who wrote almost
automatically and nearly as fast as he could think. He bought paper
in rolls, stuck one end in an electric typewriter and generally
kept writing until he finished, nonstop. Then he'd cut the stories
into individual pages and send them to his editors. (He had to
use an electric typewriter; manuals were too slow for him.) If
he'd gotten a word processor, he might have been able to increase
his output even more. So no, it's not surprising he was prolific.
However, it's also possible that others are emending or extending
his work; I don't know.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
467.20 | | OASS::MDILLSON | Generic Personal Name | Mon Nov 27 1989 14:47 | 11 |
| RE .18
With the exception of the decalogy that is being released, all of the
books being released by Bridge Publications are re-releases of LRH's
works.
RE .19
Each of these is a very distinct possibility. The third (often
speculated) is that LRH is not dead at all. If you all will remember,
he "died" about ten years ago, too.
|
467.21 | Hubbard's Mission Earth volumes for sale | RCAV8R::HUGHES | Dave Hughes LMO2/N11 296-5209 | Mon Jan 25 1993 17:05 | 12 |
| Mission Earth Decalog Series, paperback volumes for sale:
Vol 1. The Invader's Plan
Vol 2. Black Genesis
Vol 5. Fortune of Fear
Vol 6. Death Quest
Vol 9. Villainy Victorious
Vol 10. The Doomed Planet
$2.50 each, all for $10
Dave Hughes, DTN 296-5209, RCAV8R::HUGHES or NODEX::HUGHES
|