T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
815.1 | meeeoow! | GUESS::STOLOS | | Thu Aug 03 1989 08:01 | 4 |
| yes! i read the first vol. a few months back and pick up the second
this weekend...great adventure from "those rattail tabbies from
hell" ;')
pete
|
815.2 | Good stuff | SA1794::CHARBONND | I'm the NRA | Fri Aug 04 1989 07:28 | 2 |
| Warning - 'The Childrens' Hour' steals heavily from a
famous movie. But it is quite good. And nasty.
|
815.3 | Re.2 | MEMIT::SCOLARO | Fusion in a Glass! | Fri Aug 04 1989 10:09 | 8 |
| > <<< Note 815.2 by SA1794::CHARBONND "I'm the NRA" >>>
>Warning - 'The Childrens' Hour' steals heavily from a
>famous movie. But it is quite good. And nasty.
Which one? Set it behind hiddens, but I really cannot identify it.
Tony
|
815.4 | A hint | TLE::DMURPHY | Dennis Murphy | Fri Aug 04 1989 11:19 | 6 |
|
Let's just say that the owner of the bar in 'The Children's Hour' is
NOT named Rick.
Dennis Murphy
|
815.5 | Yep | MEMIT::SCOLARO | Fusion in a Glass! | Fri Aug 04 1989 11:43 | 6 |
| GRONK! Ok, I get it. Very different direction than what I was
thinking. But, now that you mention it, a very interesting rip-off.
Some technological related differences, but close enough for horse-
shoes.
Tony
|
815.6 | | ELRIC::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Mon Aug 07 1989 14:58 | 11 |
| "The Children's Hour" is also the title of a play and a movie dealing
with something completely different.
Any relation?
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
815.7 | Forget the title... | SNDCSL::SMITH | Let's go trigger Warf! | Mon Aug 14 1989 16:31 | 6 |
| Just saw the third volume in the Man-Kzin Wars shareduniverseseries,
I think it was at Lauriats in the Burlington Mall. Now I'm awaiting
my copy anxiously... (It's a Baen book and my SO gets all the new
Baen SF via permanent mail-order every month).
Willie
|
815.8 | basic info? | ALASKA::QUIRICI | | Mon Aug 14 1989 16:43 | 9 |
| i assume the Man-Kzin wars series is a spin-off of Larry Niven's
Ringworld series and some short stories?
could someone fill me in on the apparent 3 volumes of this series,
since i really enjoyed the afore-mentioned stuff?
also, re: .7, is Baen a SF publisher? are they new? good?
ken
|
815.9 | Answers | SNDCSL::SMITH | Let's go trigger Warf! | Mon Aug 14 1989 17:00 | 14 |
| Yup, though one might more clearly say it's more books in the series of
his Known Space, except now he's thrown it open to others, in the
shared-universe style.
I really enjoyed the first two volumes, and expect the third to
be good as well. It's not till one of these things gets into 5
to 10 books that they print anything that comes along....
Baen is a publisher. I dunno how new they are, though they have
been around for (guess) at least 5 years that I know about. We
get all their new SF/Fantasy every month, and while I'm not wild
about _everything_ we get in, most of it's quite good.
Willie
|
815.10 | Tangent... | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | He's baaaaccckkk!!!! | Tue Aug 15 1989 05:09 | 10 |
| Jim Baen started out as an editor for the magazine GALAXY, bringing
it out of the slump it'd been through for about five years. In the
mid-70's, he got the position as sf editor at Ace Books, and helped
make that one of the premiere sf houses of the time. Eventually,
he moved over to Pinnacle Books, where he co-created the Tor Books
line. After a few years, he decided to strike out on his own, and
created a "packaging" firm, Baen Books, which was contracted by
Pocket Books to be their sf line.
--- jerry
|
815.11 | $ | GUESS::STOLOS | | Fri Aug 25 1989 15:12 | 33 |
|
spoiler following
i just finished vol2 and loved it, did any one notice that in the
children's hour when the spys finally broke into the computer they
got the $ prompt.
that was great!!
pete
|
815.12 | Not just me... | LENO::GRIER | mjg's holistic computing agency | Mon Sep 11 1989 20:04 | 5 |
| I was afraid that was just me (and my "corporate ego" :-) that noticed that
when I read it this past weekend...
-mjg (who's glad it didn't say
"C>"...)
|
815.13 | | RAINBO::TARBET | Sama budu polevat' | Fri Sep 22 1989 17:13 | 4 |
| it was probably a Cyber 74 running Kronos :-)
=maggie-who-thinks-
60-bit-words-are-still-okay
|
815.14 | @ | TLE::AMARTIN | Alan H. Martin | Fri Dec 29 1989 23:51 | 3 |
| Nah, if it was a dollar sign *without* a trailing space, it was a Tops-20
account with wheel turned on.
/AHM
|
815.15 | Kzin IV is a good read | PENUTS::HNELSON | Hoyt 275-3407 C/RDB/SQL/X/Motif | Thu Nov 07 1991 18:22 | 35 |
| I polished off Volume IV of the Kzin Wars series last weekend. It was
excellent, IMO. It has two stories, one novel length, the other quite
short. Being really bad at remembering things, I'm blanking on the
author of the longer piece, but I think Stirling and Bear collaborated
on the shorter. I'm probably wrong. Anyway, it's a real good read, both
stories replete with the sfysics and logic problems one expects from
Niven. Both stories evoked the alien nature of Kzin well. The longer
story introduced a novel new life-form: independent newly-born "digits"
combine in groups of five to form land-roving adults, each of the five
retaining their own brains and independently-operated eyes, making for
lots of internal conversation and differential talents among the
"fingers." Nice.
I thought Niven's introduction was interesting. He discussed his
response to an amateur who wanted to use Kzin in a Star Trek setting, and
was asking Larry's permission. Larry refused, allegedly on esthetic
grounds, mentioning that Larry has commissioned Kzin work and later
rejected it because it failed to meet his standards. He also made a
point of pointedly mentioning the term "lawsuit" and explicitly
discouraged writers using computer networks (USENET?) to publish Kzin
writings.
This could be interpreted, I think, as Niven's way of protecting his
right to the Kzin series. He's undoubtedly collecting some serious
bucks for making all the effort of writing a two-page intro (I'm sure
there's actually more work entailed, but how much could there be?). And
Larry _did_ say something along the lines "If you want any more Known Space
stories, you'll have to write them yourself" -- this was published in
the back of one of his Known Space books. I think that paragraph might
have put Known Space in the public domain, sort of, and that Niven's
comments in Kzin IV are an attempt to forestall challenges by bringing
up the L-work (lawsuit).
Speculative fiction, and not written as well as Larry's :) - Hoyt
|
815.16 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | History is made at night | Fri Nov 08 1991 00:25 | 30 |
| re:.15
This was discussed ad nauseum on Usenet in rec.arts.sf-lovers.
The specific situation that Larry was referring to and was trying
to avoid mentioning in detail was apparently a series of soft-core
(or possibly hard-core) pornographic stories that someone on the
net was writing and posting to alt.sex or rec.arts.erotica or
whatever. Larry's trying to keep from making the same mistake that
Paramount made. In the early years of STAR TREK fandom, Paramount
never tried to squelch all of the fan fiction that was being written
and published, even the pornographic stuff. Maybe it was because
the show was off the air and they considered Trek to be an all-but-
dead property, I dunno. Anyway, by the time they *did* get concerned
about it, they didn't have a legal leg to stand on. There wasn't
any way they could stop the fan fiction because in the law's view,
they implicitly gave permission by allowing it to go on for years.
Larry *has* to go after even the little guys if he wants to protect
his right to control his property later.
Larry's previously stated comment, "If you want more Known Space
stories, you'll have to write them yourself" does *not*, either
explicitly or implicitly put anything in the Public Domain. There
are no laws against writing stories using other people's characters
and settings; the law is only concerned with the sale or distribution
of those stories. I can write all the Known Space stories I want,
but as soon as I try to sell it, or even post it to the net, I'm
violating Larry's rights to his characters.
--- jerry
|
815.17 | Kzinti verses the UFP | MTWAIN::KLAES | All the Universe, or nothing! | Fri Nov 08 1991 12:37 | 10 |
| Niven's Kzinti have already appeared in the STAR TREK universe,
in the animated television episode "Slaver Weapon", based on his short
story, "Soft Weapon". Niven wrote the screen version himself.
FYI - NBC had an animated version of STAR TREK on Saturday mornings
in 1973-1974. While a number of the episodes left something to be
desired, "Slaver Weapon" was certainly one of the better ones.
Larry
|
815.18 | Kzinti rolled into the role-playing game. | ATSE::WAJENBERG | This area zoned for twilight. | Fri Nov 08 1991 13:17 | 7 |
| Star Trek role-playing game shows a map of the Federation (a big
circular bite out of the galactic plane) flanked by the empires of
Klingons, Romulans, and Kzinti, as well as lesser neighbors like
Tholians. I don't know if the rule set provides for playing Kzinti
characters.
Earl Wajenberg
|
815.19 | It seems like Gibson's cyberpunk stuff is ripped regularly | PENUTS::HNELSON | Hoyt 275-3407 C/RDB/SQL/X/Motif | Thu Nov 21 1991 08:44 | 15 |
| This is interesting. If I ever write the story I've been percolating
for years now (!), it will be extremely derivative of Niven's Known
Space stuff. Transfer booths and stasis fields are key, for example.
Can I use these expressions without violating Niven's rights? Or do I
have to resort to "transmission boxes" and "no-time fields" (yuck)?
How about the berserker series? Did Saberhagen invent this? Does he
retain the right to "license" the idea of berserkers? I think Niven
wrote a berserker story. Did they do "cross-licensing"? :)
I wonder what Larry would do if I sent him a wonderful Beowulf Shaefer
(sp?) story. In his intro the Kzin IV he specifically deplored the
quality of the items he rejected.
Thanks for the info, all - Hoyt
|
815.20 | additional reading | SA1794::CHARBONND | Aauugghh! Stupid tree! | Mon Nov 25 1991 08:36 | 3 |
| In addition to the four volumes in the series, you might want to
read Poul Anderson's full-length novel, "Incoonstant Star" which
takes place in the Man-Kzin Wars era.
|
815.21 | I'm gonna call mine "Inconstant Planetoid" | PENUTS::HNELSON | Hoyt 275-3407 C/RDB/SQL/X/Motif | Fri Dec 13 1991 09:19 | 1 |
| "Inconstant Star"???!!! And Niven wrote "Inconstant Moon"!
|
815.22 | RingWorld?? | FROSTY::PENNEY_W | Baffled by Bureaucracy | Wed Aug 19 1992 17:10 | 11 |
| I just read M-KW [II] and Niven's RingWorld-two novels, I think?
Where has this guy been? Great SF.
The kzinti started in RingWorld. Suprised I can't find anything here
on the series.
What's the story on Niven? He seems to write lots of SF in teams.
Does that make for better SF? Or more $?
|
815.23 | Niven | OASS::MDILLSON | Generic Personal Name | Wed Aug 19 1992 19:17 | 9 |
| Niven is a great writer. But he tends to be very technical and in the
fictional world, technical=boring to some readers. By teaming him with
other writers, they can use his worlds and scientific ideas and add
some spice/zip to the story.
As far as money is concerned, Niven doesn't care. He isn't in this for
the bucks. He was a millionaire before he started writing (Ah, family
money) and only writes for his own enjoyment. Fortunately, he writes
well!
|
815.24 | | TECRUS::REDFORD | | Wed Aug 19 1992 23:47 | 12 |
| Niven doesn't seem to have written much recently. I think his
most recent was "Achille's Choice" by him and Steve Barnes, where
people are chosen for public office by individual athletic
contests. An odd idea, and seemingly contrary to everything one
knows about what makes a good leader, but that's what SF is for.
Niven's glory period was the early seventies, when he wrote the first
Ringworld novel, "Protector" (highly recommended if you like the
hard stuff), and his classic shorts such as "Inconstant Moon".
He didn't hit those peaks again, but at least he hit them once.
/jlr
|
815.25 | Like the Kzin Concept... | CGHUB::PENNEY_W | Baffled by Bureaucracy | Fri Aug 21 1992 10:25 | 26 |
| Yup, he seems to be pretty good. There's a couple of books that I
think he may have written in conjunction with other authors, but I'm
not sure. One was something like "Lathe of God"; the other "Joshua,
SOn of None". It was so long ago, I can't remember anything about
"Lathe of God", except that it was put on TV, possibly PBS [??] MANY
years ago... "Joshua, Son of None" was a good read, about the cloning
of JFK. Forget exactly how it turned out, but I don't think it was
happy.
Then again, maybe my memory is doing its usual, & Niven wasn't involved
with either... Ah, the side effects of middle age :-)
Anyhow, I enjoyed "RingWorld" once I got into it. "Man-Kzin Wars" is
excellent, particulalry about the telepathic human that projects
himself as a Kzin. Neat ending to that one! [But not written by
Niven.] Amazing how the SF authors are doing that now, writing in other
author's scenarios..
I've been reading SF since about 1954. I'm now the "older" generation,
'cause I remember how my parents & others used to view it as trash:
Asimov, Heinlein, Bradbury, VOnnegut.. Back then, I had read every SF
novel in Needham Public Library. I think their collection then fit on
one or two very small shelves... Amazing how the genre evolved. I'm
no great SF trivia freak; it's just my preferred way to escape! My
wife reads trashy romantic novels; I read SF! Good stuff cheap.
|
815.26 | | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Blue devils for a brown study | Fri Aug 21 1992 12:45 | 3 |
| "Lathe of Heaven" was by that hard sf icon, Ursula K. LeGuin.
Ray
|
815.27 | M-KW IV | CGHUB::PENNEY_W | Baffled by Bureaucracy | Mon Aug 24 1992 12:39 | 4 |
| Well, the book I read was Man_Kzin Wars IV. Can't remember the two
authors, but I'd recommend it highly. Last story was neat, if a bit
short. Loved the ending.
|
815.28 | more Niven on the way | SA1794::CHARBONND | Bush in '92 - Barbara! | Tue Aug 25 1992 05:34 | 3 |
| I understand that Niven and Jerry Pournelle are working on the sequel
to "The Mote in God's Eye" - should be interesting when they get it
finished.
|
815.29 | | VSSCAD::SIGEL | | Tue Aug 25 1992 12:26 | 8 |
| Re .28
> I understand that Niven and Jerry Pournelle are working on the sequel
> to "The Mote in God's Eye" - should be interesting when they get it
> finished.
They have finished it. I don't recall whether it's due out late this year
or sometime in 1993.
|
815.30 | Niven has run dry | VSSCAD::ALTMAN | BARB | Wed Sep 02 1992 16:25 | 5 |
| I also read about a year ago that when asked why he hadn't published
anything lately, Niven answered that he was blocked, and could not write.
The partnerships have allowed him to do some work. The Man/Kzin set of
books are written by other people in Niven's universe.
BTW, the Kzin go WAY back before Ringworld.
|
815.31 | | SWAM1::HERKELRAT_RA | If they fire one, we'll fire one. One fired, sir | Thu Sep 03 1992 21:41 | 5 |
| The sequel to Mote in Gods Eye has two titles. In the US it will
be issued as The Gripping Hand, while the British title will be
The Mote Around Murchinson's Eye.
US publication is scheduled for Feb 93, I believe.
|
815.32 | | KACIE::SANDER | I do more in a week than most people do in a day :-) | Tue Sep 08 1992 17:42 | 1 |
| MAN KZIN V is now out....
|