T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
754.1 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | I'm the NRA | Fri Feb 24 1989 14:22 | 4 |
| 'The Rainbow Cadenza' by J. Neil Schuman (I think)
strange, but.....>:-)
|
754.2 | | ASABET::BOYAJIAN | Ah ah, ee ee, tookie tookie | Sat Feb 25 1989 00:38 | 3 |
| Let us not forget Anne McCaffrey.
--- jerry
|
754.3 | To the point | ARTMIS::GOREI | | Mon Feb 27 1989 08:48 | 7 |
|
Harlan Ellison made some interesting comments in the afterword to
"Catman" (I think) in the "Final Stage" collection of shorts.
As a description of "the act", RAH's "the slippery friction of
mucous membranes" is going to take some beating!
Ian G
|
754.4 | hey baby wanna **** | NOETIC::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Mon Feb 27 1989 13:05 | 17 |
| < Harlan Ellison made some interesting comments in the afterword to
< "Catman" (I think) in the "Final Stage" collection of shorts.
< As a description of "the act", RAH's "the slippery friction of
< mucous membranes" is going to take some beating!
<
< Ian G
Hmm, well, yes...but it's not very romantic. I don't, in
general, much care for RAH's male/female interactions. The women
especially don't seem real to me. I can suspend a lot of
disbelief regarding the science/magic but I find myself wanting
the characters to act like real human beings. RAH's women just
don't ring true for some reason. Of course the last book of his I
read was NOTB which I disliked intensely, in part for how he had
the females acting. I don't much remember any of his other female
characters very well. liesl
|
754.5 | getting terms clear .... | LESCOM::KALLIS | Anger's no replacement for reason. | Mon Feb 27 1989 16:04 | 10 |
| Re subject:
Sex and love aren't necessarily synonymous (nor exclusive). Thus,
"erotic" might or might not equate to romantic.
Theodore Sturgeon was romantic.
Philip Jose Farmer frequently is erotic.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
754.6 | ?? | PSI::CONNELLY | Desperately seeking snoozin' | Mon Feb 27 1989 22:04 | 11 |
| re: .0
Hmmmn, you've got me thinking hard! I thought a lot more SF books
with semi-realistic romantic or erotic relationships would spring to
mind--but i'm having a tough time coming up with any.
I guess i could give a limited vote to _The Masters of Solitude_,
by Kaye and Godwin, although unhappiness is never very distant from
all of the relationships described. What else? _Davy_? The series
that has _Cruiser Dreams_ (or whatever it's called) in it?
paul
|
754.7 | Mea Culpa | ARTMIS::GOREI | | Tue Feb 28 1989 04:05 | 5 |
|
Re the RAH quote I put in .3; I think it was Arthur C Clarke who
wrote that in "The View From Serendip". Sorry!
Ian G.
|
754.8 | Some SF Romances | ATSE::WAJENBERG | Aardvarks make strange bedfellows. | Tue Feb 28 1989 09:30 | 43 |
| Someone (Brian Aldiss?) once described science fiction as "the
literature of alienation." I think the description a pretty good
one, though certain not complete (nor intended as complete). So maybe
it isn't surprising that few romances spring to mind in SF. But here
are a few I recall:
It certainly isn't center-stage, but the romance between Dr. Conway and
and Nurse (later Dr.) Murchison is a constant leitmotif in James
White's "Sector General" series.
In Smith's series, the Gray and Red Lensmen are a husband-wife team
whose love is described at some length.
In Herbert's first two "Dune" novels, the romance of Paul and Chani is
executed along traditionally tragic heroic lines.
In LeGuin's "The Lathe of Heaven," the hero, George Orr, keeps meeting
and losing his sweetheart (whose name I forget) as history gets revised
over and over by the "lathe" of his dreams.
Brin describes a tinglingly Platonic romance between a man and a semi-
humanoid, semi-shapeshifting alien "girl" in "The Uplift War."
In James Schmidt's "Witches of Karres," a space trader's charity and
paternal love toward some wayward psychic children is answered by a
very determined little witch who sets her cap for the captain in a way
that it would be bodily dangerous to call a "crush."
"God Stalk," by P.C. Hodgell (sp?), stars a teenage girl or young woman
(even she isn't sure which) of a semi-magical race, whose career in an
ancient Byzantine city is complicated by the people who keep falling in
love with her. The most complicating of all is the love from a young
man of her own race. Unfortunately, he's a ruthless killer; and MOST
unfortunately, she finds this bloodlust stimulating other kinds of
lust, so that she is deeply disturbed by the conflicts within herself.
In Stallman's trilogy of "The Book of the Beast," the Beast in question
has a fine old time experimenting with sex in assumed human forms,
until one of his forms (and therefore the Beast indirectly) falls
deeply in love with a woman with an abusive husband. Their romance
dominates the middle book of the trilogy.
Earl Wajenberg
|
754.9 | Helen O'Loy | ATSE::WAJENBERG | Aardvarks make strange bedfellows. | Tue Feb 28 1989 14:46 | 4 |
| Then there's the short story, "Helen O'Loy," about a decidedly romantic
robot. But I can't recall the author. Sturgeon? Leinster?
Earl Wajenberg
|
754.10 | am I really admitting this | NOETIC::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Tue Feb 28 1989 14:50 | 16 |
|
I'm going to make some mondo generalizations here, be prepared.
I've wondered if the reason romance/love (/erotica??) are so
sparse in SF (as opposed to fantasy or general fiction) is that
SF, especially the hard science type, is geared more towards men
and fantasy more towards women? It sounds so sexist when I say it
but I do believe women (often) read more for the relationships in
a story rather than the technical whiz-bang. I know I start to
skim as soon as long winded nuts and bolts descriptions appear. I
wouldn't have bought the book if I wasn't willing to believe in
the pretended science, I accept it as a given for the story.
Lord, this almost sounds like the true confessions note of SF.
Next thing you know I'll be buying the National Equirer to read
about aliens abducting humans. liesl
|
754.11 | | ASABET::BOYAJIAN | Ah ah, ee ee, tookie tookie | Wed Mar 01 1989 00:14 | 5 |
| re:.9
"Helen O'Loy" was by Lester del Rey.
--- jerry
|
754.12 | hard to pin down | LESCOM::KALLIS | Anger's no replacement for reason. | Wed Mar 01 1989 08:41 | 40 |
| Re .10 (leisl):
>I've wondered if the reason romance/love (/erotica??) are so
>sparse in SF (as opposed to fantasy or general fiction) is that
>SF, especially the hard science type, is geared more towards men
>and fantasy more towards women?
I think it's in part more the nature of the way SF evolved. If
you go back to the initial pulps, they were primarily geared towards
the gadgeteer-type young person, who, in the culture of the time,
was primarily male. A good case in point are the majority of the
borderland-to-SF Doc Savage stories, where a good rousing adventure,
oftern involving one or more effective Gadgets was the norm. In
fact, when F. Orlin Tremaine began the Nova "thought variant" tales
in the slowly evolving (i.e., pre-Campbell) _Astounding_, the idea
was to come up on a novel philosophical concept (e.g., the consequences
of time travel or the ability to manipulate things in 4-space) and
buil;d a story around it.
This perspective, regardless of the writer or audience, made it
difficult to write a story with a strong romantic element in it.
Later SF, though, has opened up somewhat. Sturgeon's _The Dreaming
Jewels_ or _More than Human_, the running romance in the Lensman
saga, absolute gems like "No Woman Born" by C. L. Moore (or "Judgement
Night" for that matter), show the meduim can take a love element.
As for fantasy -- well, there's fantasy and fantasy. Fantasy like
the Conan sagas has little romance, love, _or_ eroticism in it (that
Conan smothered the girl of choice with hot barbarian kisses until
she lay panting in his arms is of little consequence -- this might
take up a paragraph, after which he gets bacxk to the "serious"
business of nailing someone's hide to a bramble). The Northwest
Smith science fantasies by Moore had some marvelous eroticism in
them; some odf the Zothique tales of Clark Ashton Smith take the
thoughts to their final extremes (e.g., "The Black Eidolon" or that
one where both lovers became liches). In short, there's such a
gamut in the fantasy fielsd that it's hard to pin down.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
754.13 | Did someone say "sex"? | CSCOA3::CONWAY_J | and finish too soon | Wed Mar 01 1989 10:14 | 10 |
| I liked the romance between Ivo Archer and Afra Glynn Summerfield
in "Macroscope". Ivo's interest in her was the motivating force
for much of his action including the ultimate conquest of the "Shone"
portion of his split personality.
RAH's sex isn't erotic, its embarassing! The fantasies of an old,
old man wishing for immortality and willing sexpartners. By "beyond
the sunset", or whatever, it had grown into a nauseaus obsession.
|
754.14 | Spinrad? | IND::BOWERS | Count Zero Interrupt | Wed Mar 01 1989 14:19 | 5 |
| Norman Spinrad ("Bug Jack Baron", "The Void Captain's Tale", "Child
of Fortune") is often quite explicitly erotic, although seldom
romantic.
-dave
|
754.15 | now it's real problems too | NOETIC::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Wed Mar 01 1989 19:20 | 19 |
| < RAH's sex isn't erotic, its embarassing! The fantasies of an old,
< old man wishing for immortality and willing sexpartners. By "beyond
< the sunset", or whatever, it had grown into a nauseaus obsession.
I hadn't been thinking in terms of embarassment but now that you
mention it I have to agree. It's like being in someone's desparate
fantasy and feeling you really shouldn't be watching.
Steve, I hadn't thought about the beginings of SF and suppose you
are right about the original audience. I also don't remember many
women at all in the early space flight stories I'd read.
That just reminded me of a newspaper article I read a few months
back about women astronauts. Apparently there are some at NASA
that are worried about mixed sex missions. It seems they are
afraid of sexual/emotional liaisons causing crew problems on long
flights. While I know human beings well enough to know it's
certainly possible I hope this doesn't turn into an excuse to
keep women from the longer missions. liesl
|
754.16 | Something a little different... | HPSCAD::WALL | Ready when the Dutchman comes | Thu Mar 02 1989 09:31 | 9 |
|
Samuel R. Delaney (sp?) appears to have a thing for three-party
relationships. They are important parts of the setting in Babel-17,
and they also show up in the much-maligned Dhalgren.
The stuff in Dhalgren is just erotic, but there's more than a little
romance in the triples of Babel-17.
DFW
|
754.17 | worried? maybe intrigued ... | LESCOM::KALLIS | Anger's no replacement for reason. | Thu Mar 02 1989 17:27 | 10 |
| Re .15 (leisl):
>That just reminded me of a newspaper article I read a few months
>back about women astronauts. Apparently there are some at NASA
>that are worried about mixed sex missions.
They should stick to worrying about space flight and leave the mixed
sex missions to hedonists. :-D
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
754.18 | Naughty All Sex Association | NOETIC::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Fri Mar 03 1989 12:54 | 7 |
| < They should stick to worrying about space flight and leave the mixed
< sex missions to hedonists. :-D
<
< Steve Kallis, Jr.
What can I say Steve, I like the way you think ;*)
|
754.19 | Can't forget Burrough's Mars series for romance | RBW::WICKERT | MAA DIS Consultant | Tue Mar 07 1989 12:55 | 14 |
|
Can't forget ERB's John Carter, Warlord of Mars and his Princess, Dejah
Thoris (sp?)! Poor guy would save her from one horrible death and by the
end of the next chapture (or even page!) she'd be in hot water again.
The whole series is one long girl gets stolen with her hero chasing
after her! Of course, none of his women were wimps either, most of them
could take care of themselves pretty well...
I remember reading the series while in late elementary school, maybe 5 or
6th grade, and wondering what the big deal was. So, I ignored the "romance"
and concentrated on the action/swordplay.
Ray
|
754.20 | Piers Anthony | CIVIC::SWANSON | Stitch-aholic | Wed Mar 08 1989 11:55 | 9 |
| Piers Anthony always has some romance in his (?) books. My favorites
are the Blue Adept series -- most of the others aren't very appealing
to me, so I haven't read very many.
I like the idea of a technical vs. magical world, and the Blue Adept
has a lady friend in both worlds. It's romance rather than eroticism.
Jen
|
754.21 | latest release in paperback | ANT::MLOEWE | Low in sugar; Low in salt; Lowenbrau | Thu Mar 09 1989 08:57 | 12 |
| > Piers Anthony always has some romance in his (?) books. My favorites
> are the Blue Adept series -- most of the others aren't very appealing
> to me, so I haven't read very many.
> I like the idea of a technical vs. magical world, and the Blue Adept
> has a lady friend in both worlds. It's romance rather than eroticism.
The lastest one in the series has just been released in paperback. The
title is ROBOT ADEPT. According to my wife who is reading it right now,
it's almost on the point of being *too* mushy.
Mike_L
|
754.22 | Anthony and others | REVEAL::LEE | Wook... Like 'Book' with a 'W' | Thu Mar 09 1989 19:32 | 22 |
| I tend to read more fantasy than SF. That being said I can get on with it.
I've noticed that a lot of Piers Anthony's work has a romantic element. His
Xanth novels often had some pretty complex romantic relationships (if you could
look past the offal [pun intended] puns.) I like Crewel Lye for its romantic
content and his latest Xanth novel (Skeleton Key?) has his main character
getting into a rather complicated romantic tangle.
I guess the thing I like about Piers Anthony is that while he can get pretty
mushy at times, he always has a healthy dose of realism in his relationships
that makes them believeable.
His Cluster series explored the possibilities of alien sex and love. I thought
it was interesting.
For romance, I have to put the _Fionavar Tapestry_ by Guy Gavriel Kay high on
my list. There is a romantic subplot that will tear your guts out.
Well, enough said for now. I'm reading parts of _Burning Chrome_ right now and
can't be bothered with anything mushy (just desperate and augmented by wetware).
Wook
|
754.23 | For the romantic at heart | MARKER::REED | A laugh a day keeps the blues away | Tue Mar 21 1989 16:39 | 48 |
|
I realize this is reply is late but I have to agree with .-1, that
Piers Anthony's Blue Adept series is romantic SF/F. I, too, read
more fantasy than science fiction but I must admit that my favorite
author is Anne McCaffery.
I was fortunate enough to discover her before the ongoing Dragonriders
series became one. I was able to read the stories as they came out.
They can be read as standalones but I think it's better to read
them as a series.
Dragonflight \
Dragonquest - Dragonriders of Pern trilogy
White Dragon /
Dragonsong \
Dragonsinger - Harper Hall trilogy
Dragon Drums /
Moreta \
Nerilka's Story - Additional Pern reading
Dragonsdawn /
Anne McCaffery also has other SF stories: The Ship Who Sang, Restoree,
Crystal Singer/Killashandra. I find that she handles the romance with
a believable tone (not too mushy, not too erotic, you could fall
for some of the characters yourself). I must admit, I have the complete
collection of Anne McCaffery's books.
The other SF stories that I found rather interesting was an older
SF story by Cary Neeper entitled A Place Beyond Man. It involves
a woman who is _kidnapped_ by aliens (two different species that
have joined together to study but not get involved with, the
_primative_ Earthlings) and brought back to their world. I got this
book a long time ago in a used bookstore and am not sure if it is
still in print. A library may have a copy of it.
About a year and half ago, I found a new novel by Chris Claremont,
author of Marvel Comics X-Men. It's called First Flight. The main
character is Lt. Nicole Shea and I found I really liked it and am
hoping for more from this author. It's not wishy-washy, has enough
science in it, there's romance and the women are strong but not
Amazonian. You get to laugh, cry, be scared, rejoice, etc. with the
characters and that's one of the main things I like when I'm reading
for entertainment.
Roslyn
|
754.24 | Try the Keltiad ... | BOOKS::BAILEYB | too much of everything is just enuff | Mon Apr 10 1989 09:25 | 7 |
| If you like your SF with romance, try reading the Keltiad novels
by Patricia Kaneally (sp?). Good story, interesting characters,
and more than a little romance. These two books are an interesting
mix of SF and fantasy, all rolled into one story.
... Bob
|
754.25 | A couple that come to mind | SNDCSL::SMITH | This page intentionally blank | Fri Apr 21 1989 19:37 | 11 |
| Stardance, by Jean and Spider Robinson (doesn't quite have the "hit
you over the head" feeling that SR has had of late). 0-440-17367-7
Also, I was impressed by the "Tales Of The Velvet Comet" series,
Eros {Ascending,At Zenith,Descending,At Nadir} by Mike Resnick.
[Durn it's a pain to search the paper list by hand, I don't have
the list on-line at work and the home machines are down for a couple
of days....] :+)
Willie
|
754.26 | techie literature | CSC32::MI_BAKER | | Wed Apr 26 1989 20:53 | 11 |
| I agree that early sf seemed to be directed to the techie of times
who was more interested in gadgets than girls. I think that the
accurate portrayl of women, romance, and sex in sf was a kind of
chicken and egg thing. Techies were about the only ones reading
sf but techies were about the only ones writing sf. I don't think
stories for and about women really caught on until women started
writing the stories. Later on there were some male writers who
could write a good story with a female protagonist but quite a few
couldn't describe a believable female character if they had to.
Mike
|
754.27 | I read mostly women authors now | NOETIC::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Thu Apr 27 1989 18:45 | 12 |
| < stories for and about women really caught on until women started
< writing the stories. Later on there were some male writers who
< could write a good story with a female protagonist but quite a few
< couldn't describe a believable female character if they had to.
Amen to that! I particularly cringe when I read about a character
and find myself muttering "that's not how a woman would react". It
takes me out of the story when I feel that way. Now one may
logically ask how do I know what a woman in one of these imaginary
worlds would act like - to steal a phrase from a supreme court judge,
"I can't describe it, but I know it when I see it". liesl
|
754.28 | | ANOVAX::WHITE | You break it, I'll fix it.I hope | Fri Apr 28 1989 15:53 | 11 |
|
How about "The Forever War" and "Mindbridge" by Joe Haldeman. The stories
are very Hi-Tech/Military but in both there are a lot of interplay between the
sexes and in both a good "man and woman become lovers and best friends through
shared stressful situations" scenario. What do you-all think??
Joe
|
754.29 | Eckert's The H.A.B. Theory | CNTROL::HENRIKSON | Cheeseburgers prevent cancer | Sun Apr 30 1989 17:07 | 9 |
|
Anyone else ever read "The H.A.B. Theory" by (?) ? As our hero
is trying to save the world, he is also involved in an affair. It's
been a long time since I read it but, I thought it was a great story.
Interesting too that the author (darn, I wish I could remember his
name), usually writes historical fiction with this being hs only
(?) SF book.
Pete
|
754.30 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | Starfleet Security | Sun Apr 30 1989 23:39 | 16 |
| THE H.A.B. THEORY is by Allen W. Eckert, and is thought of by people
whose opinions I respect (I haven't read it, myself) as a thoroughly
gawdoffal piece of dreck.
I mean really, the essential plot is the same as Asimov's "Nightfall",
only in this case the recurring fall of civilization on Earth is
due to a build-up of ice at the South Pole, causing the Earth to
tip over on its axis, which in turn causes natural catastrophes
all over the Earth. Wasn't this done already as a Rocky & Bullwinkle
cartoon?
I and some friends were regaled with descriptions of this book from
a friend who was the book designer at Little, Brown that had to
work on it.
--- jerry
|
754.31 | | STRATA::RUDMAN | Corsair,n. A politician of the seas. | Mon May 01 1989 17:46 | 9 |
| FOREVER WAR thumbs up Read better broken down by the original
publications, but the compiliation is O.K., I found it better
to take in small doses. Reads like Heinlein.
MINDBRIDGE thumbs down Didn't work for me; at this time I can't
even recall what it was about. It's the Haldeman (either or) story
I didn't like.
Don
|
754.32 | | CNTROL::HENRIKSON | Cheeseburgers prevent cancer | Tue May 02 1989 00:09 | 10 |
|
Re: Jerry on "The HAB Theory"
Ummm, gee, I musta been on drugs when I read it. :^) Actually, I had
been out of SF for awhile and I read it all on the bus up to Montpelier. I
remember thinking the flipping of the Earth explained some of the worlds
mysteries allot better than Eric Von Daniken's "Chariots of the Gods". I got
caught up on that angle and enjoyed reading the 'proof'.
Pete
|
754.33 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | Starfleet Security | Tue May 02 1989 02:13 | 6 |
| re:.31
THE FOREVER WAR certainly doesn't read at all like Heinlein. If
it did, I couldn't have enjoyed it as much as I did.
--- jerry
|
754.34 | < insert something clever > | SUBURB::PALMERRJ | Earth - The Only Alien Planet | Tue May 02 1989 17:12 | 14 |
|
Re:.31,.33
I would agree that Haldeman doesn't read much like Heinlein, but
THE FOREVER WAR and STARSHIP TROOPERS two different treatments
of a 'same' topic. I find the difference very entertaining, given
the different out-look of the two authors... They could hardly
be further apart! ;-)
Regards.
Reggie.
-------
|
754.35 | One more opinion | MCIS2::TKELLEHER | For moral fiber, try Zen Flakes. | Wed May 03 1989 11:23 | 20 |
|
Re: .28,.31,.33
I thought the romance in THE FOREVER WAR and MINDBRIDGE worked
wonderfully. Better in THE FOREVER WAR than the other, though. (Heck,
I *hated* it when he and MaryGay were split, put on different ships,
knowing that-- <insert-spoiler-here>.
And...though I may not win all too many allies with this...I thought
MINDBRIDGE was a brilliant book. The romance was durned familiar
after reading THE FOREVER WAR, but there were some viciously
*painful* moments...like when they needed to select someone to Jump
solo to the alien's location and they picked-- <insert-spoiler-here>.
In both books, the main characters' love for each other was present
and tangible. Liked that a lot.
Tom
|
754.36 | Movies were worse | CSC32::MI_BAKER | | Fri May 05 1989 15:24 | 11 |
| I heard that Heinlein enjoyed FOREVER WAR. Now back on the subject
of the portrayal of women in sf. The situation in films was even worse
until recently. It used to be that the only role women had in sf films
was to scream when the alien monster showed up. Nowadays things are
a little better. We have women like Ripley in Alien and Aliens who
are strong and competent. Another one that comes to mind was the lead
in The Blob. One place where women still have a ways to go is the
Dr Who tv show. It seems like the main purpose of the female assistant
is to say "What is it Doctor?".
Mike
|
754.37 | That's not discrimination, it's just plain silly! | SKETCH::GROSS | Human Factors and much, much more. | Mon May 08 1989 13:28 | 7 |
| RE: -1
I thought the main role of *all* the assistants in Dr. Who was to
say "What is it, Doctor?" :-)
Merryl
|
754.38 | | TRILGY::MESSENGER | Badness comes in waves. | Mon May 08 1989 13:32 | 13 |
| Re: .-1
> One place where women still have a ways to go is the
> Dr Who tv show. It seems like the main purpose of the female assistant
> is to say "What is it Doctor?".
Waitaminute. This is the function of the Doctor's companion, whether
they are male, female or what-have-you. While I will agree that the
majority of the Doctor's companions _are_ female, I disagree that this
is stereotypical of females on this show.
- hbm
|
754.39 | | CSC32::MI_BAKER | | Mon May 08 1989 20:43 | 11 |
| Re: .-1
> Waitaminute. This is the function of the Doctor's companion, whether
> they are male, female or what-have-you. While I will agree that the
> majority of the Doctor's companions _are_ female, I disagree that this
> is stereotypical of females on this show.
I'll grant you that. The other women characters on the series seem
to have better lines regardless of whether they are heroes or villains.
Mike
|
754.40 | | STRATA::RUDMAN | Defenceless,adj. Unable to attack. | Wed May 24 1989 16:24 | 11 |
| re: .34
Interesting you mentioned STARSHIP TROOPERS. That's what *I* thought
about also when I read THE FOREVER WAR. I didn't say it was written
in the style of Heinlein, I said it read like Heinlien. Haldeman
was able to get me quiclky interested in the characters )like Heinlien,
Laumer, Niven, etc.) FW was more like a grownup version of TROOPERS.
And of course the books were different. There are laws against that!
Don
|
754.41 | Love hurts | STAR::RDAVIS | If I can't dance you can keep your OS | Thu Jun 01 1989 21:23 | 19 |
| This is REALLY late, but the most romantic SF book I've ever read is
"Stars in my Pocket like Grains of Sand" by "Macho Man" Chip Delany.
Admittedly, the romance is incredibly out-of-the-closet gay porn stuff,
but it got to me (and to my SO). "Triton" is also basically a love
story, although in the oblique tradition of Henry James.
Most of my favorite SF writers are influenced enough by "mundane" lit
that they have a hard time imagining love without tragedy. (SimPlGoS
ends in a heartbreaking cliffhanger, for example.) It's too bad -
you'd think that coming up with an interesting healthy romance would be
at least as much of a challenge to an SF writer as constructing an
alien civilization.
Those faves who don't write mopey books don't seem to notice romantic
love at all, or just see it as mockworthy foolishness.
Hmmm, hope there's not a lesson here.
Ray
|
754.42 | ol' Chip has a vivid imagination | POLAR::LACAILLE | There's a madness to my method | Fri Jun 02 1989 14:59 | 8 |
|
I don't know if you can call it 'romance', but Dhalgren by Delany
was chock full of a healthy variety of 'sexual encounters'; male-male
female-female, male-tree (?dream state at beginning), male-male-female,
and maybe a few others I don't remember. Some of the 'scenes' were
rather...um...titillating to say the least.
Charlie
|
754.43 | | COFLUB::WRIGHT | and miles to go before I sleep. | Fri Jun 02 1989 15:32 | 12 |
|
re: .42:
Come now laddie,
How do you know its imagination??
The possibilities boggle the mind....
Grins,
clark.
|
754.44 | The hollo disguises used by the gangs | POLAR::LACAILLE | There's a madness to my method | Fri Jun 02 1989 16:29 | 12 |
|
> How do you know its imagination??
I hesitated wording my note as I did because of your exact
reaction, basically by imagination I was referring to his his writing
in general, not specifically his sex scenes.
Charlie
ps Grins well taken :)
|
754.45 | | PFLOYD::ROTHBERG | I awoke on impact ... | Sat Jun 03 1989 16:58 | 11 |
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Re: .42
What a STRANGE book. I never even came close to
understanding it and it left me wondering for
days afterward, unable to begin reading another
book.
- Rob -
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754.46 | Computer love | RENOIR::KLAES | N = R*fgfpneflfifaL | Sun Jun 04 1989 15:05 | 5 |
| A romantic SF short story I like is "For a Breath I Tarry", written
by Zelazny in 1966.
Larry
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754.47 | Zelazny & Romance | BOMBE::BORSOM | | Mon Jun 05 1989 13:15 | 4 |
| Many of Zelazny's stories have a nice romantic element to
them, including "The Doors of His Face, the Lamps of His Mouth"
and "A Rose for Ecclesiastes."
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754.48 | Also Zelazny | SUBURB::TUDORK | SKEADUGENGA | Mon Jun 05 1989 15:29 | 7 |
| The "Nine Princes" series have their romantic moments (fast switch
to cynical though :-)
Piers Anthony - Split Infinity Series - highly recommended. Likewise
if you like your romance intriguing "Cthon".
Kate
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754.49 | Dhalgren | POLAR::LACAILLE | There's a madness to my method | Mon Jun 05 1989 15:34 | 8 |
|
re .45
Well Rob, I've read it three times now, needless to say I get
something new every time I read it...and I still have a had time
understanding it.
Charlie
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754.50 | | PFLOYD::ROTHBERG | I awoke on impact ... | Mon Jun 05 1989 17:46 | 10 |
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It WAS worth reading, even though it was strange.
It gets your mind working again if you have that
lazy-brain syndrome. My chess game improved
quite a bit for the next week after reading that
book!
Cheers, ROb
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754.51 | exit/rathole | POLAR::LACAILLE | There's a madness to my method | Tue Jun 06 1989 09:43 | 4 |
|
I think I'll move this to note 133...
Charlie
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754.52 | ....and never the twain shall meet? | COOKIE::MJOHNSTON | MIKE.....(Dammit! Spock...) | Tue Jun 06 1989 17:42 | 21 |
|
I'll probably bungle this, but my opinion is that in Science
fiction, Romance and Eroticism seldom meet. In most stories involving
romance, the romance is usually a ploy to provide plot twists and
action. Star crossed lovers, the tragedy of caring, etc. I can't, at
the moment, think of a single story where a mature and loving
relationship was presented as a natural sidebar to a central story
without doom and catastrophe befalling the unfortunate couple.
Eroticism, on the other hand, is in the eye (or something) of the
beholder. An Ursala Le Guin might present us with a silhouetted curve
of back and hip, somehow vulnerable in its simplicity (At least I seem
to remember something of the sort from old Urse); whereas a Jack
Chalker's idea of the erotic would be to clone himself 50 times, turn
each clone into a different animal, and sell tickets to the Sexual
Extravaganza of the Century. I think much of what we perceive as erotic
depends on our mood of the moment. If there are enough pheromones in
the air (and there usually are), I could probably accelerate the old
heartbeat pretty well with a perusal of the phone book.
Mike
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754.53 | Recommended author--Bujold | MINAR::BISHOP | | Fri Jun 09 1989 18:20 | 7 |
| re .52
Lois McMaster Bujold's _Shards_of_Honor_ has just the kind
of thing you couldn't think of: a love story as a side story
to the plot, with a happy ending.
-John Bishop
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754.54 | SHARON GREEN ???? | DELREY::KILMER_RO | | Thu Jun 29 1989 17:55 | 12 |
| ***SHARON GREEN*** I THINK SHE IS A GREAT AUTHOR, AND YES SHE DOES
WRITE THE ROMANTIC/EROTIC SF, BUT I PERSONALLY FIND IT AN ENJOYABLE
ESCAPE READING ANYONE ELSE EVER HEARD OF HER.????? AND IF SO WHAT
ARE YOUR OPINIONS ??????
SOME OF HER MOST FAMOUS ARE:
CRYSTALS OF MIDA (SERIES)
TERRILIAN SERIES,
THERE IS ONLY ONE OF HER BOOKS THAT I KNOW OF THAT I HAVE NOT READ
AND OFF HAND CAN'T THINK OF THE NAME. AND CAN'T FIND IT ANYWHERE.
RK
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754.55 | Turn down the radio, I cannot see where I'm going | POLAR::LACAILLE | There's a madness to my method | Wed Jul 05 1989 16:01 | 8 |
|
Why are you YELLING AT US. We can hear your typing very well
ALL around the world.
Please keep the capitals only for YELLING, and the rest of us
can read without plugging our ears. :-)
Charlie
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754.56 | Just Got Here | USWRSL::SHORTT_LA | | Fri Sep 28 1990 02:15 | 20 |
|
RE: .23
I also recommend First Flight by Claremont. If any of you
read his comic the X-Men, you'll find the dedication amusing!
I certainly hope that wasn't a one shot deal for him. It has
been quite a while with no word of further novels.
RE: .52
I'm intrigued by a man with enough imagination for a phone
book to be erotic. We aren't talking 976 numbers are we?
RE: .54
Sharon Green is great! There is more on this author in 290.
She also has tons more books out now.
L.J.
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754.57 | Rathole | ASABET::BOYAJIAN | Protect! Serve! Run Away! | Fri Sep 28 1990 02:51 | 10 |
| re:.56
I've had it from a good source that Claremont wants to bow out of
comics altogether and write novels, but for the nonce, he's kind
of trapped writing X-MEN for a good long while.
Anyway, he's doing some writing for the Wild Cards series -- I
*think* for the ninth volume.
--- jerry
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754.58 | Emma Bull | SSGV01::TANG | | Wed Jun 19 1991 10:54 | 5 |
| Emma Bull's _War for the Oaks_ is *very* romantic. _Falcon_ (her
second novel) had some romance but she didn't focus on it as much as in
WftO.
Scarlet
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754.59 | Claremont's sequel is called... | BIGUN::HOLLOWAY | Savage Tree Frogs on Speed | Mon Aug 17 1992 01:00 | 3 |
|
Grounded
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