T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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538.1 | moderator? | RUTLND::ASANKAR | | Sun Nov 01 1987 14:42 | 7 |
|
BTW-who is the current moderator? Mike Foley?
sam
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538.2 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | The Dread Pirate Roberts | Sun Nov 01 1987 18:36 | 5 |
| Dave Cantor and Mike Foley are co-moderators. For future reference,
typing "SHOW MODERATOR" will list any and all moderators of the
current notesfile.
--- jerry
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538.3 | For Openers... | BMT::MENDES | Free Lunches For Sale | Sun Nov 01 1987 22:07 | 9 |
| I forget the name, but I guess you'd have to include the city in
Thieves' World. It has certainly had enough books written about
it!
Does New York City count? After all, it has been used in many SF
stories, e.g., When Worlds Collide, the Cities in Flight series,
etc.
- Richard
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538.4 | "to wound the autumnal city" | NUTMEG::BALS | Good writing excuses (most) anything | Mon Nov 02 1987 08:36 | 3 |
| ... Bellona, in DHALGREN.
Fred
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538.5 | | IND::BOWERS | Count Zero Interrupt | Mon Nov 02 1987 09:17 | 1 |
| Try Arthur Clarke's "The City and the Stars".
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538.6 | City Sampler | PROSE::WAJENBERG | Tis the voice of the lobster. | Mon Nov 02 1987 09:27 | 26 |
| The city in Clarke's "The City and the Stars" is Diaspar, the last
remaining human settlement, or so we are told at the beginning of
the novel. There are lots of descriptions of parts of the city,
but nothing like complete maps. The ultra-high technology of the
place could easily adapt to fantasy, if you don't want SF.
I think .4 mentioned Blish's "Cities in Flight" novels. The principle
city is Manhattan, uprooted and sent through space by its "spindizzy
generators." You could adapt any extant city to this method, of
course, though you might want to add some futuristic modifications
to the city map.
There's also the Emerald City, for pure fantasy. The later Oz books,
by Ruth Plumly Thompson and John R. Neil give lots of ambience,
though no detailed maps.
There are maps of Lahnkmar, the foremost city of Fritz Leiber's
Nehwon and the home of Fafhrd and the Grey Mouser. Its big, rambling,
decadent, and riddled with crime and intrigue.
If you were to read Zelazny's Amber series carefully, you could
get some details about Amber, the archetypal city at the center
of the cosmos. Its main features are metaphysical and magical rather
than architectural, however.
Earl Wajenberg
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538.7 | | AQUA::OCONNOR | Allergic to Mondays | Mon Nov 02 1987 10:14 | 7 |
| Hi,
I tried to draw a map of Amber once. Gave up. Very difficult.
Not only is it the center but the 'shadow' worlds seem to extend
out in more than all directions.
Joe
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538.8 | New York? | TUNER::FLIS | | Mon Nov 02 1987 12:54 | 6 |
| Perhaps Trantor and Terminus (sp?) from the Foundation series.
There are also the 'cities' of New York, Tokyo, London, etc from
Rendezvous with Rama, that may have some potential.
jim
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538.9 | | PROSE::WAJENBERG | Tis the voice of the lobster. | Mon Nov 02 1987 14:05 | 9 |
| Terminus was a planet, not a city. Trantor, however, was both --
a planet completely urbanized and covered with a solid sheet of
cityscape.
Tolkien gives a general description of the layout of Minas Tirith
in "Lord of the Rings" -- the city was built on a mountainside,
in seven levels, each with a wall.
Earl Wajenberg
|
538.10 | try the classics | ERASER::KALLIS | Make Hallowe'en a National holiday. | Mon Nov 02 1987 15:40 | 7 |
| The city (_think_ it was New York) in Hugo Gernsback's seminal,
but difficult to read, _Ralph 124C41+_ was described in nearly
_agonizing_ detail.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
(Complete with footnotes, as were many Gernsback stories)
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538.11 | where torturers and witches grow up | BISTRO::WATSON | genius is 99% desperation | Thu Nov 05 1987 06:48 | 10 |
| How about Gene Wolf's Book of the New Sun series? I'm thinking in
particular of the city in which the main character grows up as an
apprentice of the Guild of Torturers. It is described in the first
of the four books, which is entitled The Shadow of the Torturer.
I think that the city if called Nessus.
You'd have to add a lot of your own detail, but I think this would
be fun.
Andrew.
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538.12 | Classics? Did Someone Say Classics?? | TRNING::WPSPLUS | | Mon Nov 09 1987 12:50 | 8 |
| If you really want to try the classics, see Dante's _Inferno_.
Tolkien's Minas Tirith is modelled on just a part of this exquisitely
described landscape (the City of the Virtuous Pagans). Tolkien's
description of Minas Morgul also derives (in part) from Dante's
description of Dis. While Dante's (and Virgil's) journey through
Hell is far from exhaustive, indications of the peripheral geography
have been sufficient to generate any number of "maps" over the past
several centuries.
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538.13 | Canyon | MILVAX::SCOLARO | | Mon Feb 15 1988 19:17 | 11 |
| From The Ringworld Engineers:
Canyon, made by the Wounderland Treatymaker in the 3rd Man-Kzin
War.
It is 20 miles long and is built upon canyon walls ? high. There
is a lake in the center with some slight hills at the exact center.
The walls are lined with sightseeing trams (not for transportation
since the development of the transportation booth).
Tony
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538.14 | Dyson got it right!! | UBOHUB::J_SMITH | A Dyson Sphere is the answer | Thu May 26 1988 17:54 | 9 |
| Speaking of Niven
How about the largest artifact of them all.....the Ringworld itself!
Or on a more *dispersed* track...the Belt???
John
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