T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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746.1 | DIR/TITLE=Card, or SHOW KEYWORD/FULL Card | MTWAIN::KLAES | N = R*fgfpneflfifaL | Thu Feb 09 1989 09:13 | 2 |
| See Topics 295, 436, 539, 601, and 612.
|
746.2 | But is there *more* ...? | IOSG::LAWM | Moderation with moderation. | Thu Feb 09 1989 11:22 | 8 |
|
Thanks, but I've done that already. I just re-checked these notes,
and the only addition I could find was _Capitol_ which is an anthology.
I just want to be sure that I've got *everything*.
Mat.
*:o)
|
746.3 | Two short stories I'll never forget | HPSTEK::CONTRACTOR | | Thu Feb 09 1989 13:00 | 12 |
| Omni magazine had a couple of short stories by O.C.C when they first
came out in '79.Check out the first 36 issues.
One was called "Fat Farm" a great 2 or 3 page story about a narcissist who
changes bodies every few years.
The other one was about a man who's memory was transfered to a clone
while he was being executed. This process was repeated until he
"confessed" to crimes against a totalltarian state.
Post all your findings!
Domenic
|
746.4 | | ASABET::BOYAJIAN | Klactovedesteen! | Fri Feb 10 1989 01:12 | 4 |
| I've got a bibliography stashed away somewhere at home. I'll
dig it up.
--- jerry
|
746.5 | Songmaster for free ... | BOOKS::BAILEYB | too much of everything is just enuff | Wed Feb 15 1989 11:03 | 10 |
| Hi Mathew,
I have a copy of Songmaster that you're welcome to. I didn't really
like it that much and I can use the space on my shelf for something
else.
I'll send it along to your mail stop.
... Bob
|
746.6 | `notable' generosity ... | IOSG::LAWM | That's just the way it is! | Wed Feb 22 1989 11:44 | 12 |
|
Well I can cross Songmaster off my `wanted' list! Many thanks,
Bob.
Of course, I've now got to add "'Prentice Alvin"(?) to the list
(see note on Seventh Son). Has anyone read this through yet? Has
OSC fallen into the trap of many sequel-writers, or has the third
book retained the high quality of the other two?
Mat.
*:o)
|
746.7 | | OASS::MDILLSON | | Wed Feb 22 1989 13:02 | 2 |
| _'Prentice Alvin_ was excellent. It does for slavery what _Red
Prophet_ did for the Indian. A must read.
|
746.8 | Abyss anyone? | IOSG::LAWM | Mathew Law (only *one* T), Reading UK | Fri Jun 16 1989 08:15 | 8 |
| I have heard rumour of another Card book called _Abyss_. Did I read it
somewhere in here, or not? Anyone got any pointers?
Mat.
*:o)
PS I've done a SH KEY/FULL ABYSS, SEARCH/NOTE=20.* ABYSS,
DIR/TITLE=ABYSS, and come up with nothing.
|
746.9 | It's from a script | HPSCAD::WALL | You and me against the world: attack! | Fri Jun 16 1989 11:09 | 6 |
|
You are referring to Card's novelization for the James Cameron
(Terminator, Aliens) film The Abyss, scheduled for release this summer.
The novelization is all over bookstores in the Northeastern U.S.
DFW
|
746.10 | you've read the book, now... | IOSG::LAWM | Mathew Law (only *one* T), Reading UK | Fri Jun 16 1989 12:08 | 11 |
|
Okay. Thanks for the info. I'd heard the name of the film, and
wondered if it was just a coincidence. Perhaps I'll wait till people
have seen the film before I ask for comments on how good the book is,
and whether it contains much additional creativeness on Card's part.
Cheers,
Mat.
*:o)
|
746.11 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | Protect! Serve! Run Away! | Sat Jun 17 1989 01:12 | 18 |
| re:.9, .10
I have the book, but I'm waiting for a nice long plane flight
next week to read it.
First of all, it's not written from the script. Card did write it
from the script originally, but then Cameron provided him with miles
of videotape dupes of working prints, and Card trashed what he'd
written and did it all over again from the film itself.
Second of all, Card (if his and Cameron's afterwords can be believed)
added significant background material. Both he and Cameron consider
the book a legitimate novel as opposed to a novelization (it's
certainly much thicker than the usual novelization). It's like
thinking of Clarke's 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY as a novelization of
the film.
--- jerry
|
746.12 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | Protect! Serve! Run Away! | Thu Jun 29 1989 04:38 | 7 |
| re: THE ABYSS
I'm starting a new topic on THE ABYSS, with the idea that it can
be used for discussion of the film. I'll start it off, though,
by reviewing Card's novel based on the film.
--- jerry
|
746.13 | Edited for 80 columns (three replies) | ASABET::BOYAJIAN | Protect! Serve! Run Away! | Wed Jul 12 1989 04:02 | 50 |
| ================================================================================
Note 746.13 Orson Scott Card 13 of 15
STKHLM::LITBY "...and he built a Crooked House" 10 lines 10-JUL-1989 04:22
-< what were the nice little pets called? >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
re early issues of Omni -
I remember reading an OSC short story in Omni some time in '79 or '80; it was
about a guy who acquired some interesting termite-like animals and kept them
as pets. From what I can remember, they ended up eating his house...
Anyone remember what the story was called?
/POL
================================================================================
Note 746.14 Orson Scott Card 14 of 14
RUBY::BOYAJIAN "Protect! Serve! Run Away!" 13 lines 10-JUL-1989 05:26
-< Sandkings >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
re:.13
Actually, I believe you're thinking not of a story by Card, but
one by George R.R. Martin called "Sandkings", which appeared in
the August 1979 OMNI (won both Hugo and Nebula Awards the next
year as well). It's the title story in one of his collections,
and can also be found in another collection, SONGS THE DEAD MEN
SING (published only in a limited edition in the US, but in
mass-market paperback in the UK), not to mention various "best of"
anthologies from the early 80's. Last, but not least, DC Comics
adapted it into a "graphic novel" a couple of years ago.
--- jerry
================================================================================
Note 746.15 Orson Scott Card 15 of 15
STKHLM::LITBY "...and he built a Crooked House" 6 lines 10-JUL-1989 06:25
-< Righto. >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Jerry, you're right - I was thinking of "Sandkings". For some reason I got the
authors mixed up. It's an excellent story in any case. Sure would like to
read it again if I can find it somewhere; SF bookstores don't grow on trees
here in Scandinavia...
/POL
|
746.14 | _Treason_ | ABSZK::SZETO | Simon Szeto at ABS/ZK, Spitbrook | Sat Mar 17 1990 11:22 | 6 |
| Card has revised _A_Planet_Called_Treason_ and the new version is
called simply _Treason_. I have started reading it but I'll be
finishing it tomorrow on the plane to Hongkong.
--Simon
|
746.15 | (TREASON) | OTOO01::MCKEOGH | | Fri Mar 23 1990 11:28 | 8 |
| I am about halfway through "TREASON", very strange concepts for
Card, especially around the advanced genetics in a primitive society.
Quite unlike any of his other works, but as usual an excellent
story.
Ian
|
746.16 | re: _Treason_ | HGABSS::SZETO | Simon Szeto @HGO, Hongkong | Sat Mar 24 1990 06:49 | 13 |
| The ending had a strange twist to it; maybe I wasn't trying to outguess
the author and didn't see it coming. Also, I wonder (since about 10%
of the book was new material since the original version) if Card
rewrote that part.
One thing which was not explained (in my mind) was how the Ambassador
was supposed to work. I can only explain it as a limited-scope faster-
than-light teleportation device; however, the civilization that exiled
the rebels to Treason (3000 years before the time of the story) didn't
have FTL technology.
--Simon
|
746.17 | Not as good as his other stuff | SNDPIT::SMITH | Powdered endoskeleton | Fri Mar 30 1990 11:30 | 5 |
| Maybe the Ambassador wasn't FTL, but 'communicated' with a ship in
orbit. Strange book, and didn't 'feel' like Card to me. Not a bad
read, but I should have read Red Prophet instead (it's in my backlog).
Willie
|
746.18 | Maps in a Mirror | ABSZK::SZETO | Simon Szeto, ISEDA/US at ZKO | Sun Oct 21 1990 23:25 | 31 |
| re .0: Fans of Orson Scott Card who want to read as much of his works
as you can get your hands on, there is now a book that "brings together
nearly all of Card's stories from his first publications in 1977 to
work as recent as last year." (from the dust jacket)
Maps in a Mirror: the short fiction of Orson Scott Card
ISBN 0-312-85047-6
A Tor Book, published by Tom Doherty Associates, Inc.
49 West 24th Street, New York, N.Y. 10010
"In this enormous volume [675 pp. of smaller than usual print] are 46
stories, broken into five books: Ten fables and fantasies, fairy tales
...; eleven tales of dread ...; seven tales of human futures ...; six
tales of death, hope, and holiness ...; and twelve lost songs.
"The Lost Songs are a special treat for readers of this hardcover
volume, for here are gathered tales which will not see print again.
Here are Card's stories written for Mormon children, a pair that were
published in small literary magazines, a thoughtful essay on the
writing of fiction, and three major works which have, since their
original publication, been superseded by novel-, or more than novel-
length works [Ender's Game, Songmaster, and the Tales of Alvin Maker]
... ``Mikal's Songbird'' will never be published again. ..." (ibid.)
As you may have guessed, I have the book in front of me. At $22.95,
this is probably the most expensive (to-date) book of this genre I have
bought. I consider it a Christmas present for myself.
--Simon
|
746.19 | Folk of the Fringe | ABSZK::SZETO | Simon Szeto, ISEDA/US at ZKO | Sun Oct 21 1990 23:29 | 5 |
| Another book by Card that I have seen (in paperback) is Folk of the
Fringe. (Not sure about exact title)
--Simon
|
746.20 | Has Ender ended? | RVNDEL::MCCARTHY | | Fri Nov 09 1990 14:07 | 12 |
|
Greetings
I'm new to this conference but look forward to keeping track
of new Sci Fi as they come out.
Anyway, I read ENDER'S GAME and SPEAKER FOR THE DEAD and found
both excellent!! I was left with the feeling that there would
be a 3rd volume after SPEAKER. Did anyone else get that impression?
Does anyone know if a sequal is planned?
Thanks
Kevin
|
746.21 | Third "Ender" book written | TALLIS::SIGEL | | Wed Nov 14 1990 20:25 | 7 |
| Re: .20
Orson Scott Card recently turned in the third "Ender" novel,
tentatively entitled XENOCIDE, to Tor books. Look to see it
in hardcover in late 1991/early 1992.
Andrew
|
746.22 | Maps in a Mirror (again) | ABSZK::SZETO | Simon Szeto, ISEDA/US at ZKO | Wed Jan 02 1991 23:29 | 108 |
| So far, I have touched only one section of Maps in a Mirror, and read
the original Ender's Game (which was later rewritten as a novel of the
same name) and Mikal's Songbird (which was later rewritten as the novel
Songmaster). In the Afterword to this section, Card explained how he
went about the rewrite of these and others of his stories. Apparently
"hardly a sentence from the original books remained in the new version"
[of the Worthing Chronicle, as with Songmaster and Ender's Game]. I
read Ender's Game and Songmaster (the novel versions) sufficiently long
ago that I only remembered the general story lines, so a re-reading of
the original short versions was still enjoyable.
Incidentally, the original Ender's Game was Card's first science
fiction novelette he sold, and Mikal's Songbird was the fourth.
The novella Songhouse, on the other hand, was excerpted from the first
part of the Songmaster novel.
In both Ender's Game and Songmaster, Card expanded the story by going
back earlier in the life of the protagonist, Ender Wiggin and Ansset,
respectively.
Two other novellas that turned into novels, Hart's Hope and Wyrms,
followed a different pattern -- the novellas were basically compressed
versions of the novels. (Unwyrm, the novella, actually never appeared
in print.)
Maps in a Mirror didn't include any of the novels: Ender's Game,
Speaker for the Dead, the three Tales of Alvin Maker stories, the
aforementioned Songmaster, Hart's Hope, and Wyrms, or Treason.
Treason was a somewhat hastily revised version of A Planet Called
Treason, pressured by his publisher (St. Martin's Press, in this case,
not Tor) in the face of the commercial success of Ender's Game. As a
result, only the opening was revised and the rest was merely edited
"heavily" so that the result was "no longer embarassing." Card would
have liked to rewrite the story with "many more characters and subplots
that would make it one of [his] deepest novels instead of shallowest."
However, we'll not see it happen because he said a third version of the
same book would be "too absurd to contemplate."
One other novel of his that I have not read before and not included in
Maps in a Mirror is the Worthing Chronicles, which is a rewrite of
Hot Sleep (his first novel) and the collection Capitol, his first book.
The Worthing Chronicles, which I just finished reading, is included in
The Worthing Saga, which also included some (the?) Capitol stories as
well as three Worthing stories: Worthing Farm, Worthing Inn, and
Tinker.
Lastly, there is the collection The Folk of The Fringe, which I have
bought but not yet read.
To end this note, here's a listing of the short stories in Maps in a
Mirror:
Eumenides in the Fourth Floor Lavatory
Quietus
Deep Breathing Exercises
Fat Farm
Closing the Timelid
Freeway Games ("Hard Driver")
A Sepulchre of Songs
Prior Restraint
The Changed Man and the King of Words
Memories of My Head
Lost Boys
A Thousand Deaths
Clap Hands and Sing
Dogwalker
But We Try Not to Act Like It
I Put My Blue Genes On
In the Doghouse
The Originist
Unaccompanied Sonata
A Cross-Country Trip to Kill Richard Nixon
The Porcelain Salamander
Middle Woman
The Bully and the Beast
The Princess and the Bear
Sandmagic
The Best Day
A Plague of Butterflies
The Monkeys Thought 'Twas All in Fun
Mortal Gods
Saving Grace
Eye for Eye
St. Amy's Tale
Kingsmeat
Holy
Ender's Game
Mikal's Songbird
Prentice Alvin and the No-Good Plow (poetry)
Malpractice
Follower
Hitching
Damn Fine Novel (as Noam D. Pellume)
(the rest as Byron Walley)
Billy's Box
The Best Family Home Evening Ever
Bicicleta
I Think Mom and Dad Are Going Crazy, Jerry
Gert Fram
The section starting with Ender's Game will not be included in
paperback versions of this book. So if you are a real Orson Scott Card
fan, you may want to buy the "ridiculously expensive" (his very words)
hardcover edition.
--Simon
P.S. Also see reply .18 for the ISBN number
|
746.23 | | AUNTB::MONTGOMERY | I feel a thought approaching | Fri Jan 04 1991 21:17 | 14 |
|
re .18, 22
OSC *is* my favorite. Imagine my surprise when, this Christmas, my
(16-yr-old) presents me with a copy of Folk of the Fringe...which of
course I already have and didn't have the heart to tell him. I was
just so surprised and pleased that he actually knew who my favorite
author was! Now I see that there is an OSC publication out there that
I can quietly exchange it for....
Thanks,
Helen
|
746.24 | | REGENT::POWERS | | Mon Jan 07 1991 09:40 | 16 |
| Card is a wonderful writer.
As a caster of prose, he is unsurpassed.
As a caster of plot, he is almost as good.
I often find that I have to force myself to slow my reading speed so I can
savor the prose rather than race through the plot.
However, I wish he was not limited to writing about adolescents with special
powers or exceptional genius coming of age and saving their worlds.
Ender, Alvin, Gloriously Bright, the princess in Wyrms, the prince in Treason,
the kid in Worthing, and more I can't recall right now.
Is this a rut?
I'll keep reading it, but I >am< getting a bit tired of his apparent
first premise of characterization.
- tom]
|
746.25 | | RAVEN1::HEFFELFINGER | Vini, vidi, visa | Wed Jan 09 1991 12:35 | 4 |
| Read Maps in a Mirror. Many of his stories there are not variations
on the wunderkind theme.
Tracey
|
746.26 | Norman, your mormon doorman | SUBWAY::MAXSON | Repeal Gravity | Wed Jan 16 1991 16:07 | 11 |
| Folk of the Fringe was wonderful. It has a strange, pastoral quality
which lends it a dreamlike beauty - and the author's afterword was very
interesting as well.
I'm coming to like OSC more and more. Ender's Game was brilliant, in
this humble reviewer's opinion - one of the best things I've read this
decade.
Max
|
746.27 | An opposing view | CIM::GEOFFREY | Beware the robots of cricket | Wed Jan 16 1991 17:29 | 9 |
|
Regarding Folk of the Fringe, .26, I had a completely different
experience with the book. I tend to really enjoy OSC but I felt that
this book was terrible. I felt let down when reading this book, for me
it was not a page turner. I did buy his collection of short stories and
am looking forward to these. I would agree with your opinion of Ender's
Game.
Jim
|
746.29 | | SUBURB::TUDORK | Laboratory lady | Thu Aug 15 1991 19:20 | 7 |
| I also vote "Enders Game" as best.
If OSC is influenced by Heinlen's "Number of the Beast" (just read)
then I won't bother any more...I am SO SICK of Lazarus Long...:-(
K
|
746.28 | moderator action--replies moved | STAR::CANTOR | Have pun, will babble. | Mon Jan 13 1992 00:39 | 6 |
| The replies previously numbered .28 through .46 have been moved to
topic 1003 beginning at reply 1003.1, as they deal specifically with
_Xenocide_.
Dave C.
moderator, SF
|
746.30 | A couple of Ender questions | MAST::FITZPATRICK | Me upon my pony on my boat. | Tue Oct 13 1992 14:25 | 16 |
| Hi,
I read "Ender's Game" and "Speaker for the Dead" last year pretty
much back-to-back, and enjoyed both of them. I'm currently reading
"Xenocide," but there are a couple of details from the first two books
I can't quite remember. Can someone please post (behind a form-feed)
or mail me a brief answers to these questions:
How did Ender and Jane came to know each other? Also, there are a
couple of references to their relationship not being as close as it
used to be. How come?
Thanks,
-Tom
|
746.31 | Responses to previous reply | WMOIS::BEAUREGARD_D | | Wed Oct 14 1992 12:55 | 25 |
| > <<< Note 746.30 by MAST::FITZPATRICK "Me upon my pony on my boat." >>>
> -< A couple of Ender questions >-
>
> Hi,
>
> I read "Ender's Game" and "Speaker for the Dead" last year pretty
> much back-to-back, and enjoyed both of them. I'm currently reading
> "Xenocide," but there are a couple of details from the first two books
> I can't quite remember. Can someone please post (behind a form-feed)
> or mail me a brief answers to these questions:
questions & responses behind formfeed
> How did Ender and Jane came to know each other?
Jane read & was impressed the books that were written by Ender
so she tracked down the author & enetually revealed herself to him
> Also, there are a couple of references to their relationship not being as
> close as it used to be. How come?
Ender disconnected the device in his ear when Jane kept interupting
a conversation he was having
|