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391.1 | | GCANYN::TATISTCHEFF | | Tue Jul 14 1987 12:12 | 16 |
| The only problem with feminist SF is that it gets me all "het up."
Start thinking nasty things about men, their competence, worth in
this world, etc, etc. Reminds me how superior women are... in
general :)
So if I start making nasty comments about "that other gender", you
know I've been reading too much again, and gently steer me in the
direction of one of the good men of the world so I can remind myself
what is real and what is fiction.
Haven't read LeGuin since I was a tot (10-12 or so), so while the
stories remain quite familiar, their impact and social commentary
are not -- as I missed them the first time around.
Lee
|
391.2 | Official Response | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Tue Jul 14 1987 12:41 | 36 |
|
In the interest of economy, I've modified the basenote title & moved
this (originally a basenote) here as a response.
=maggie
=======================================================================
3D::CHABOT "May these events not involve Thy servan" 26 lines 14-JUL-1987 11:21
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Okay, as Charles suggested, here's a topic for feminist science
fiction authors. I've included fantasy, for the usual reasons,
and also because I read more of that these days.
And I'll start with a favorite of mine. A new one:
Emma Bull's _War_for_the_Oaks_.
This is a fantasy set in contemporary Minneapolis. A guitarist
starting out her own new rock and roll band is called upon to assist
in the summer's battle between the Seelie and the Unseelie (roughly,
the light Sidhe and the dark Sidhe). A July paperback from Ace.
Also, a first novel (published, anyway, I don't know of any others).
Why is this feminist? Well, it's not preachy. But Eddie is her
own person and she's strong and she's good at what she does. She
starts the band with and at the prompting of a woman who was in
the previous band with her. Other strong female characters: well,
the queens of both courts, although they're background characters
they are the ones in charge of their realms. And the men are fine
too--they're neither the heavies (any more than others) and they're
competent too. People's gender doesn't influence their musical
ability or courage.
---------------
More later...my library's at home...
|
391.3 | feminist sf - yeah! | PARITY::TILLSON | If it don't tilt, fergit it! | Tue Jul 14 1987 12:41 | 26 |
| Love LeGuin, also Kate Wilhelm (check this month's OMNI for her
latest short story), MZBradley, Diane Duane, Jean Lichtenburg,
Jaqueline Lorrah.
But...
The best, least sexist, most feminist sf I have ever read was written
by a man!
Samuel Delany!
When I read the Neveryona series (which I highly recommend), I had
to keep turning to the front cover and checking out the name to
make sure it really _wasn't_ a woman who wrote the books! Great
stuff! Especially Venn's Tale...
Samuel Delany was married to feminist poet Marilyn Hacker for eight
years, and has been openly gay for ages...this probably has something
to do with his startlingly feminist perspective.
Any of you who wish recomendations for feminist sf/woman-authored
sf, or even a loan of the same, feel free to mail me. I live with
over 5000 sf books.
Rita
|
391.4 | A small point ... | RDGE00::BURRELL | Friends with the Beauty queens | Tue Jul 14 1987 13:16 | 13 |
|
> Samuel Delany was married to feminist poet Marilyn Hacker for eight
> years, and has been openly gay for ages...this probably has something
> to do with his startlingly feminist perspective.
Excuse me - are you saying that a man can only understand
feminist issues if he is openly gay, or has been married to a
femenist poet ????????
Paul - just curious, because if that's the case - I haven't a
chance of understanding femenism.
|
391.5 | Wilhelm faves | ARMORY::CHARBONND | Noto, Ergo Sum | Tue Jul 14 1987 13:30 | 7 |
| Two ***** by Kate Wilhelm
Juniper Time
Welcome, Chaos
Where Late The Sweet Birds Sang didn't do me. It won the Hugo,
so I'm obviously in a minority there.
|
391.6 | case by case | PARITY::TILLSON | If it don't tilt, fergit it! | Tue Jul 14 1987 13:33 | 15 |
| > Excuse me - are you saying that a man can only understand
> feminist issues if he is openly gay, or has been married to a
> femenist poet ????????
Nope, don't worry, Paul, you still got a chance ;-)
I certainly don't think that one has to be gay or married to a feminist
poet to be a man who can understand feminist issues. It is just
_my_ guess and _my_ opinion on why _this_particular_man_ has such
a good feminist perspective. Analysis of individual case, not of
the generic.
Rita
|
391.7 | The Cosmic Poetess whose mind encompassed all tounges... | HPSCAD::WALL | I see the middle kingdom... | Tue Jul 14 1987 13:45 | 11 |
|
If you want to read another good feminist SF novel by Samuel Delany,
(although I learned to love it for other reasons), I'd suggest
Babel-17. It's principal protagonist, Rydra Wong, is one competent
lady.
I didn't know Delany was gay. He certainly has some interesting
perspectives on relationships, as evidenced by Babel-17, Dhalgren,
and Triton.
DFW
|
391.8 | more on Delany | PARITY::TILLSON | If it don't tilt, fergit it! | Tue Jul 14 1987 14:14 | 29 |
|
I've read _everything_ that Delany has written (including some serious
XXX rated poststructuralist pornography, hard to find, but _real_
interesting, called Tides of Lust), and Rydra Wong is one of my
favorite characters.
Delany really came out in a big way in his last Neveryona book
(title forgotten, I leave the 5000 books at home ;-) but I'll look
it up if you're interested). Neveryon is a pre-written-history
world. In it he discusses a plague which affects gay men and
prostitutes and is decimating the population. Interspersed with
this story are Delany's real life experiences with AIDS and its
victims, and his experiences as a gay man living in New York City.
In particular he addresses "tricking" and promiscuous behavior among
the NYC gay population. In particular, he gives an example of a
closeted man who "tricks" on the way home from work on the subway;
the man in the example has anonymous sex with 3-4 different contacts
per week, and is never home late to dinner with his wife. That's
over 200 anonymous contacts a year! The book made a very powerful
political statement about AIDS, the need for education, and safe
sex!
I also highly recommend his most recent, "Stars in My Pockets Like
Grains of Sand". In fact, I wouldn't hesitate to recommend any
of Delany's work, with the disclaimer that if you hated James Joyce,
you might not find Dhalgren readable (I loved it).
Rita
|
391.9 | I'm tempted to SET SHIELDS=UP for this | MAY20::MINOW | Je suis Marxist, tendance Groucho | Tue Jul 14 1987 15:08 | 12 |
| One of the first authors to write "feminist" science fiction was
Robert Heinlien. Many of his early books, especially those written
for a teen-age audience, had competent female main characters;
many of them scientists or engineers ("Rolling Stones", "The
Menace from Earth").
While Heinline can be embarrasingly cute at times (his sexual
scenes could render a goat impotent), he has generally presented
novels of sexual equality.
Martin.
|
391.10 | I haven't read any I liked so far | AKA::TAUBENFELD | Almighty SET | Tue Jul 14 1987 17:25 | 16 |
| Some of the only SF books (which are about the only ones I read) I read
which were written by women were the Anne McRafferty (I think that's
her name) Dragon Song series. Definitely written for the young
girl turning woman group. I also read the Thieves Worlds series
in which some of the stories were written by women. It was only
until after I had read quite a bit before I realized that the ones
I didn't like were by women.
I can't exactly pinpoint the reason why I haven't liked any SF books
by women, it has nothing to do with the woman as the main character.
Some very good books written by men with a woman as the hero, or
villian, are among my favorites. I guess I just see a lack of
violence and sex and an overdose of romance from the women authors.
But maybe I've just been reading the wrong books.
|
391.11 | other women | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the side walk ends | Tue Jul 14 1987 17:50 | 8 |
| Anne McCafferty has written quite a few books based on Pern
the planet where people fly on dragons. Only two of them -
the Dragonsong/drums books are aimed more at younger readers
and both make more sense when read in the context of the rest
of the series.
Other female writers of SF that I have enjoyed are Octavia Butler,
Zenna Henderson, Andre Norton, and James Tiptree Jr.
|
391.12 | rambling | OPHION::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Tue Jul 14 1987 21:59 | 49 |
| Regarding Babel-17, it's a great read, but I like it because of
it's treatment of linguistics. The idea that if you don't have a
word for a concept, you can't think about it is very intriguing
to me. I'm not completely convinced, but it is compelling, and if
true would bring a whole new dimension to inequality in language.
This theory is one of the reasons I've made a conscious effort to
change the way I speak. Since I don't want to think of women as
"girls" or "gals", I don't EVER call them that (well, not unless
I'm being deliberately offensive...) I call them women. Language
has power, and (to get back to the subject) I like science fiction
that explores this idea.
Other interesting books involving the Worff Hypothesis are "Stranger
in a Strange Land", "The Word for World is Forest", and most of
Suzette Haden Elgin's stuff.
As for feminist male authors, we can argue for weeks about Heinlein,
I personally don't think he measures up as a feminist, true he has
strong female characters, but I always get the feeling that he thinks
they're somehow exceptional. Furthermore the rape scene in Friday
was a disgusting display of male fantasy. Bleah.
I vote for the late much lamented Theodore Sturgeon. I found his
exploration of human sexuality much more convincing than Heinlein.
But one of the best feminst science fiction authors was Racoona
Sheldon, otherwise known as James Tiptree Junior. She really had
the power to engage my thoughts and emotions, and was a truly powerful
writer.
I'm afraid I don't care much for Anne McCaffery's stuff. The short
story "Weyrsearch" was great, but the rest of the Dragon books
degenerated, and I found myself quickly tired of the "romantic
women/macho men" attitudes I found throughout the series. I couldn't
identify with the characters.
I like Zenna Henderson's stuff, but she doesn't particularly write
about women. Some yes, but I view her stuff as pretty mainstream.
Enjoyable but not challenging.
What do people think of Joanna Russ? I find her stuff very thought
provoking, but I am put off by her stridency. I use her as the "fringe"
that keeps me on my intellectual toes. I disagree with much of what
she has to say, as being too extreme, but I feel a need to justify
myself, so she keeps me intellectually honest. But she CAN grate
on my nerves. What do other people think?
-- Charles
|
391.13 | ack! still not home with my library | 3D::CHABOT | May these events not involve Thy servant | Wed Jul 15 1987 00:17 | 94 |
| I also disagree about Heinlein being feminist. There are several
cases of men being victimized by aggressive women (_Citizen_of_the_
Galaxy_ and _Starship_Troopers_ (I think), contain examples). A
lot of the older novels and stories degenerate into playing house.
[Another Worff Hypothesis novel is _The_Languages_of_Pao_ by Jack
Vance. But this is sort of off the topic, and the novel isn't at
ALL feminist.]
If you're going to call Russ fringe, then what about Alice Sheldon?
Stories like "The Screwfly Solution" and "Houston Do You Read..."?
I like Russ's critical eye; there's an excellent role reversal short
story about a male android created just to be a pretty and dumb
sex object--it's nauseating, but it's something you see all the
time in the sideshows of a lot of science fiction, but with the
genders reversed. I have to admit, I haven't been able to face
any Russ since _We_Who_Are_About_To..._, which is an excellent book,
it's just that half of it is the protagnist starving to death after
she's killed everyone else (well, it *was* necessary). When I read
Russ more often, I felt a lot less queasy, though, than I do reading
quite a few Tiptree stories. Russ is better at the novel form,
also. [It's not science fiction, although it does contain some
quotations, but I enjoyed her nonfiction _How_To_Suppress_Women's_
Writing_. I very much recommend it. It's disturbing to have pointed
out just how little of the college curricula include literature
by women. I used it as a source book for finding a wealth of
literature by women, that I never would have found on my own. And
such books I've found!]
I was pledged to never forgive McCaffrey for _Restoree_ (sick! sick!
sick!) but I've since heard that she wrote it as a joke. Yes, the
dragon books get to be a bit much, but Lessa at least doesn't have
to be the most gorgeous creature on the planet, a failing of too
many heroines.
Pat Wrede's latest, _Caught_In_Crystal_, is one of her more feminist,
I suppose, since the protagnist is an innkeeper and former swordswoman
who gets called on a quest by her old associates. A quest she can't
ignore, but now she's got two kids. Yeah, you get gentle romances
in her books, but I'm kept afloat by the fact that women have the
same jobs as men and nobody bats an eye.
Nobody's mentioned Bradley. I can't abide her writing.
In Pamela Dean's _The_Secret_Country_ and _The_Hidden_Land_ the
current ruler of the Secret Country is a King, but there are all
those women guards, and mention is made of the Queen's council
(but you don't see the queen), and I think there are hints of sometimes
a queen rules rather than a king. Both genders can be equally good
at magic.
Name a LeGuin novel with a female protagnist. I can't. Sure, in
_The_Left_Hand_of_Darkness_, people were both, but she used
masculine pronouns and other references. Yes, there is a short
story (published outside the novel) where she switches to using
feminine pronouns. Still. I don't know if this is because she's
of the old school of proper grammar and will refuse to use "they"
as a singular pronoun of indeterminate gender (so will Dean) instead
of "he", or what. I suspect it might be something of that sort,
but also that she aims to be writing to our mythic tradition (see
her book of essays _The_Language_of_the_Night (I think)), which
is pitifully lacking in active feminine pronouns. [Ug. I thought
of one. _The_Beginning_Place_ has a female and a male protagnist.
Don't read it, though.] Don't mind me, I read nearly everything
I can find by LeGuin (except for that book with that cassette, whatever
it is). But I do think she's copping out.
Which brings me to a book I just finished, _Don't_Bet_On_The_Prince_,
editted by Jack Zipes. No, it's not dreadful preachy feminist fairy tales,
:-) like those amusing but strange modified mother goose rhymes that
have been published in the last couple of years.
It's nice fairy tales, with active female characters. In one gem,
the king and queen have the usual three princes, well, except the youngest
is really a princess, and she runs off and has a quest too--she
goes off to rescue a prince from the clutches of a wizard (or something
like that). There're two sections: one of stories appropriate for
all ages (with a Jane Yolen story, yay!), one of stories for an older
set (included in this section is Margaret Atwood's "Bluebeard's
Egg", which I don't think would interest your six-year-old).
And at the end are some essays about feminine images in fairy tales
and the general yuckiness of the role models there for girls. Sorry
for going on and on, but it's a book I've wanted to read for !ages!.
I don't know if LeGuin, Dean, Wrede, Bull, or Heinlein would describe
themselves or their writing as feminist. They might.
(Bradley, yes? Anybody know?) (Did Alice Sheldon make any such
declaration? I don't remember.) It's not just making do, I really
appreciate a book that has equal roles for both women and men.
And after all these years of reading books with only male heroes
who go off and do things, it's so nice to find ones where the females
go off and do things.
It's kind of reassuring.
|
391.14 | Anyone for a line-marriage? | CADSE::GLIDEWELL | | Wed Jul 15 1987 01:22 | 27 |
| > Other interesting books involving the Worff Hypothesis are
And Douglas Hofstedetr, Metamagical Themas, a collection of
essays that "feels" like sci-fi without the plot. It includes
an essay that examines sexist & racist language by creating a
word set for blacks based on the root "octaroon" and examines the
derivatives and effects. Funny, breathtaking, illuminating.
(Someone should do a research project on the power and endurance of
"no white shoes after Labor Day.")
About ten years ago I wrote a fan letter to Heinlein but also said he
was a bit sexist but so was I, and we should both work on it.
He wrote back, said he was trying hard, and his wife helped by beating
him when he slipped. He expected to be perfect if he lived
as long as Lazarus. Let's.
I've always loved sci-fi that surprised me with totally new concepts
and devices. Henderson's Anything Box, Asimov's Mule with the emotion
dial, Heinlein's old one. I think it was Stranger In a Strange Land that
presented the society in which being late incurred the death penalty.
And I'd like to try a line-marriage. Heinlein and Henderson should be
req'd reading in soc-101. ABC et al can go for weeks between new ideas.
Another plus for Henderson and Heinlein ... they have full familes,
babies to old folks. So many American books and movies portray worlds
that begin at 16 and end at 24. As in, if you're not mating or
warring, it's not worth showing. Meigs
|
391.15 | How about John Varley | WCSM::PURMAL | Something analogous to 'Oh darn!' | Wed Jul 15 1987 11:50 | 5 |
| I haven't seen John Varley mentioned. Do you feel that the
Titan/Wizard/Demon trilogy was feminist, or did it just feature
strong female characters?
ASP
|
391.16 | more feminist SF | PARITY::TILLSON | If it don't tilt, fergit it! | Thu Jul 16 1987 12:43 | 67 |
| Hey, this is a *great* topic! You could get me raving for *weeks*
on this one!
re: .13:
> Nobody's mentioned Bradley. I can't abide her writing.
I did mention Bradley in passing. I think she's terribly sexist
in a feminist supremist sort of way, especially her Free Amazon
stuff, but...true confession time, I love it and read it any way;
It kinda balances the Heinlein I read. I think he's pretty sexist,
too, but I'm hooked :-) Also, MZB's _Mists_Of_Avalon_ was really
above par for her. It is a (large) volume of Aurthurian (sp?)
legend written from a female viewpoint, ie; Vivienne, Morgaine,
Gwenefyre. What a marvelous concept! The intro chapter in the personna
of Morgaine _alone_ was worth what I paid for the hardcover edition.
>In Pamela Dean's _The_Secret_Country_ and _The_Hidden_Land_ the
Where can I get Pamela Dean's work (other than going to Minneapolis
and asking her for copies :-))? I read a little of it prior to
its publication. I worked with her husband, an ex-DECcie, in Marlboro
a few years back, and I'm dying to read what she's written! (I
live in the Boston area.)
re .15:
I haven't read Varley's trilogy, so I can't comment. I've read
his short story collections, _Persistance_of_Vision_, and
_Blue_Champagne_ , and thought they were pretty nonsexist.
_Blue_Champagne_ also contains a couple of *great* short stories
which show *heavy* computer hacker influence. And surprise! the
last story in the book (name of story escapes me) features a hotshot
woman hacker! (Yahooo!) And he has the hacker culture down! In
the story, his protagonist gets her man by wearing a tshirt (she
only has tshirts and jeans in her wardrobe - another yahoo!) with
a picture of a screw and a large "P" underneath it. (LISPish way
of requesting sex - I LOOOVED it, this is my kinda woman!)
re: Whoever it was that mentioned Theodore Sturgeon:
I just read _Godbody_, his last work, and really enjoyed it. It
was somewhat reminiscent of _Stranger_In_A_Strange_Land_, minus
Heinlein_gooey_sexist_nonsense. I heard it rumoured that he died
prior to its completion, and it was finished by his wife (Rowena,
of the marvelous SF artwork fame?). Anyone know the truth about
this?
Also, how about _Stardance_ by Jeanne and Spider Robinson? *ANY*
couple that can write a book together (especially such a good one!)
and have their marriage come thru intact gets extra credit in my
accounting!
I picked up a volume of Lesbian and Gay themed SF recently, but
I'll need to go thru my library to remember who edited/contributed
and what the title was. I remember it *was* a good read, and was
published by a house in Boston.
Also, does Margaret Atwood's _The_Handmaiden's_Tale count as SF?
On good days I hope it does, on bad days I'm sure it doesn't :-(
Powerful book, in any case.
Rita
|
391.17 | Bradley et all | YAZOO::B_REINKE | where the side walk ends | Thu Jul 16 1987 12:55 | 30 |
| re .16
Rita the story with the female hacker is "Press Enter" I also
loved it and read it several times (tho the ending depresses the
%&#@ out of me).
I think that Handmaids Tale is excellant SF - tho when I tried to
enter a topic on it in the SF notes file no one responded....
I do like Bradley also I must confess (isn't it great that we
all have different tastes). Her earlier books on DarkOver were
fairly typical male dominated sword and scorcery types. It appears
that a lot of female readers really picked up on her Amazon guild
and as a result she has gone with tales of that side of the society
more recently (especially with the stories by the Friends of Darkover).
I would also agree that Mists of Avalon is by far and away her best
book - and deserves a place with the rest of the classic retellings
of the Arthurian Legend.
There is a story in "More Women of Wonder" called "Tin Soldier" that
I especially like - with women being the only ones able to pilot
the space ships at FTL speeds, and a nearly immortal (male) bartender
who falls in love with one such woman and waits for her over the
years.
Finally I will agree with an earlier writer that I have not been
able to read Joanna Russ since her "We Who are About to..."
Bonnie
|
391.18 | Mercedes Lackey | HPSCAD::TWEXLER | | Fri Jul 17 1987 10:32 | 31 |
| Marion Zimmer Bradley (MZB) has her feminist moments, but it is
very clear that she is coming FROM the perspective of a male dominated
society as the norm that pretty much everyone accepts. Note that
her Amazons are outcasts and MZB makes it plain that some of the
chained women wouldn't WANT to be unchained. The one book she wrote
about a society where men were considered inferior, the men were busy
revolting (ISIS?).
Try the short story Whileaway by Joanna Russ. Absolutely fantastic.
The opening paragraph starts with a couple driving along in a car,
and the person in the suicide seat describing the driver, the wife.
How the driver is wizzing along at ridiculous speeds--as Russ writes
you pick up the fact that there are rampant stereotypes on women
drivers... That story plays far out mindgames with the reader.
I could describe it more clearly, but then you folks would miss
the fun of the surprise.
As for new authors, has anyone read Mercedes Lackey's book
_Arrows_of_the_Queen_? A polished writer Lackey may not be,
but the book is fun reading. I must admit that I almost didn't
read it through due to the first page which begins with a girl-child
doing what (the book informed me) GIRLS aren't supposed to be
doing--READING. It occurs to me that Lackey did that so that *we*,
the readers, would have someone to identify with--because the rest
of the book takes for granted that women do *anything*. After
all, the soveriegn of the kingdom is a queen, and the next most
important person in the kingdom is female--and it really feels like
it doesn't matter! --And if you like horses, they also are main
characters.
Tamar
|
391.19 | Nit about .16 | VAXRT::CANNOY | The seasons change and so do I. | Fri Jul 17 1987 10:41 | 17 |
| RE:.16
>I just read _Godbody_, his last work, and really enjoyed it. It
>was somewhat reminiscent of _Stranger_In_A_Strange_Land_, minus
>Heinlein_gooey_sexist_nonsense. I heard it rumoured that he died
>prior to its completion, and it was finished by his wife (Rowena,
>of the marvelous SF artwork fame?). Anyone know the truth about
>this?
Ted had drafted _Godbody_, but I don't think it was a final draft.
His wife, Jayne Taynehill (I don't think that's the correct spelling),
Lady Janye to anyone who knew them, is an author in her own right
and would have been more than capable of completing it to Ted's
satisfaction. I don't know for sure that this is what happened,
but I never heard that anyone else finished the manuscript, either.
Tamzen
|
391.20 | MZBradley | GCANYN::TATISTCHEFF | | Fri Jul 17 1987 13:30 | 11 |
| MZB sexist?!
Yes her early books are sword/slasher, with post-adolescent males
as protagonists, but these days that not at all true: some of her
most powerful characters are women who do whatever the heck they
want, men be d***ed.
Also, I could have sworn she was Lesbian: perhaps the early stories
were from before she came out??
Lee
|
391.21 | MZB | PARITY::TILLSON | If it don't tilt, fergit it! | Fri Jul 17 1987 14:56 | 15 |
| re MZB:
>Also, I could have sworn she was Lesbian: perhaps the early stories
>were from before she came out??
Lee, I realize this doesn't unequivocably determine MZB's sexual
orientation, but she _is_ married. Her first husband was Paul Zimmer
Bradley, by whom she had at least one (maybe more) child. She is
currently married to Walter Breen, a writer of some fame in the
occult literature world. The two of them traveled to Stonehenge
and other places together prior to MZB's writing _Mists_Of_Avalon_.
Rita
|
391.22 | more MZB | MAY20::MINOW | Je suis Marxist, tendance Groucho | Fri Jul 17 1987 16:02 | 19 |
| MZB has also written explicitly gay literature. Several -- if not
all -- of the recent books in the Darkover series have gay/bi/lesbian
characters and themes. She also wrote a gay non-sf novel called,
I believe, "The Catch Trap."
Her books never struck me as being particularly "feminist", unless
feminism means nothing more that "anything a man can do, a woman
can do better."
While on the subject of science fiction, you might consider reading
the David Brin novels "Sundiver," "Startide Rising," and "The Uplift
War." These -- especially Startide Rising -- deal with an interaction
between human-people and newly-emergent species (dolphins, chimpanzees)
who were given intelligence by humans. Some of the issues that are
raised ("Can a dolphin be an effective starship captain") sound
strangely familiar. Also, Brin is a much better writer than Bradley.
Martin.
|
391.23 | | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Fri Jul 17 1987 16:08 | 5 |
| The other day I picked up the first (I blush to say this) woman-
written SF that I've enjoyed since Andre Norton and Zenna Henderson.
Cynthia Felice. She actually does non-cutesy-poo dialog!
=maggie
|
391.24 | | MOSAIC::IANNUZZO | Catherine T. | Fri Jul 17 1987 17:31 | 4 |
| MZB's orientation: She's been publishd in a gay & lesbian science
fiction anthology, along with Samuel Delaney, John Varley, Joanna Russ
and others I can't think of at the moment. Last I knew, she was living
in a totally female household (even the cats).
|
391.25 | yea MZB, boo GOR | IMAGIN::KOLBE | Mudluscious and puddle-wonderfull | Fri Jul 17 1987 20:51 | 17 |
|
I love MZB and Darkover and don't care what her sexual preferences
are. Try reading Forbidden_Tower for some steamy sex. She admits it
took her awhile to get brave enough to write it. I thought ISIS was
good and hoped she'd write another like it.
As for Hienlein (sp) - after Number_of_the_beast I won't buy another
one of his books. What a piece of crap!!!
Try Shards of Honor for a great love/war/scifi novel. Lois Bjolhd (sp)
Also The Book of Kantela is a wonderful read and I'm dying for the
next book in the series.
Just an aside - all GOR novels should be burned and destroyed. These
are the sorts of books that pander to sick minds. I bought one
unknowing and threw it out after a couple of chapters. liesl
|
391.26 | ditto on GOR - burn it! | PARITY::TILLSON | If it don't tilt, fergit it! | Fri Jul 17 1987 23:42 | 1 |
|
|
391.27 | Ray Bradbury understood | QUARK::LIONEL | We all live in a yellow subroutine | Sat Jul 18 1987 00:17 | 18 |
| My word - we have book-burners in our midst? What harm did that
collection of wood pulp ever do to you?
I have never read a Gor book, and never plan to do so. There's
lots of stuff I won't bother reading, but I'd NEVER advocate denying
someone else the ability to read it if they want to. What gives
you the right to dictate what others can and can't read? Who appointed
you Lady High Censor, anyway?
If you burn Gor books, maybe we can throw in some of Andrea Dworkin's
stuff for good measure. And then a lot of the stuff mentioned in
these notes - surely some people will find them offensive. Personally,
I've never read a Joanna Russ story I've liked; shall we burn her
books too?
Remember that tolerance is a two-way street.
Steve
|
391.28 | got you fired up, eh? | PARITY::TILLSON | If it don't tilt, fergit it! | Sat Jul 18 1987 03:05 | 38 |
|
Well, well, I guess I shoulda stuck in one of those stupid smiley
face :-) :-)
Certainly if _you_ wish to read trashy sexist pulp which serves
to give serious sf authors a bad rep, be my guest, read all the
GOR you can lay your hands on. I have no interest in denying you
or anyone else that dubious pleasure. Any that comes my way will
find a home in the nearest woodstove, and yes, that goes for any
Andrea Dworkin that reaches my home, too. I have no intention of
denying anyone else the right to read anything they want to (you can
go and read RPG manuals if you're brain damaged enough to enjoy it
:-)). It is a right that is constitutionally guaranteed to all
of us.
My note was intended as an expression of the level of disgust I
have for "literature" like GOR. As far as I'm concerned, GOR is
not useful as anything other than kindling. I am certainly not
advocating censorship in any way, shape, or form. Burning all GOR
novels would require me to first buy them all, and I am not willing
to put that much $$$ into the hands of the sexist jerk author :-)
The only true form of "censorship" I can advocate is economic.
I just don't buy the crap. When others have enough sensitivity
to sexism in literature, then there will be no market for it, and
I'll have to cut wood, like everyone else :-)
For the record:
o I have never burned any book (although I did torch a roommate's
Ramones album once :-))
o Out of the 5000 or so books in my possesion, none are GOR or Andrea
Dworkin.
o I own more than one copy of Farenheit 451
|
391.29 | Books Are Holy + Ellison | GCANYN::TATISTCHEFF | | Sat Jul 18 1987 15:13 | 41 |
| No matter how trashy, sexist, racist, or generally_evil a book is,
I cannot bring myself to burn it or throw it away.
My feeling is that no matter the quality of the book, its very nature
-- WRITTEN WORDS -- makes it priceless. If a piece of trash
[metaphorically speaking, of course :) ] can bring even one more
human being into the world of reading, that alone is worth more
than the cover price. If a right wing extremist reads Karl Marx
ONLY TO FIND EXCUSES TO HATE communism, it is still better than having
that person rely on what Ronbo&Co say on TV. If that extremist
reads exclusively right wing literature [if one can call THAT
"literature" <very sarcastic> ], it is still one battle won in the
war against illiteracy.
Yes GOR is awful stuff. But adolescent fiction has its place: perhaps
10% of the boys [I cannot imagine girls wanting to read that, but
maybe I'm a sexist at heart :) ] who read it will go on to read
Heinlein, then Bradbury, then Sturgeon, then Ellison. The
publishers/authors of the GOR series do us a favor. Granted I would
prefer Heinlein-style adolescent SF but most anything helps.
That reminds me: no one has mentioned Harlan Ellison. I must say
he is among the most vocal and radical feminists I have ever read.
His essays _An Edge In My Voice_ are fantastic. Arrogant? Yes,
certainly. Powerful? Even more certainly, Yes.
His fiction is feminist, too : was it "Croation" that described
a man who met up with [read on only if VERY strong of stomach]
the [still viable] embryo's aborted by the zillions of girlfriends
he helped "get in trouble" -- they got flushed down the toilet and
lived in the sewer.
_I Have No Mouth... was a reworking of Sartre's No Exit [Huis Clos],
and had a black woman as the strongest character.
He ticks me off with his self-centered-ness, but is in my opinion
one of the finest writers alive today. And he hates to have his
work classified as SF... :)
Lee
|
391.30 | Le Guin again | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the side walk ends | Sat Jul 18 1987 15:56 | 14 |
| Earlier the question of feminist characters by LeGuin was mentioned...
"The Day Before the Revolution" is definitely a feminist story...
about an old woman remembering how she became the leading figure
in a revolution. If there anyone who would like to read it (and *promises*
to return my book) I could be persuaded to lend it.
I was given a Gor book by a man I worked with who thought it was
very funny to see my reaction to it.....back in my more radical
twenties....I managed to disappoint him in my public reactions...
:-)
Bonnie
|
391.31 | GOR in reverse | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Sat Jul 18 1987 17:23 | 2 |
| Then there's Sharon Green(e?).
|
391.32 | ? | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the side walk ends | Sat Jul 18 1987 22:19 | 1 |
| Please explain further....I missed Ms Green(e?)
|
391.33 | On sexist trash fantasy... | HUMAN::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Sun Jul 19 1987 01:02 | 14 |
| Ms. Greene (I think there is a final e), writes adolescent
fantasy trash ofthe level ofthe later Gor books, though
apparently with a rather different bent. (Never read one other
than skimming a page or two in the store.)
For what it's worth, the first couple of Gor novels are merely
run of the mill trashy John Carter-style other world fantasies.
I actually enjoyed the sereies at first. Norman sort of took a
while to warm up to the slavery and chains bit. I was quite
disappointed in the way the series devolved. (You had to know I
read the Gor books and would defend them, now didn't you?) I
agree that the later ones are worthless trash, though.
JimB.
|
391.34 | Varley! | OPHION::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Sun Jul 19 1987 02:16 | 43 |
| I will shamelessly admit I'm trying to change the subject away from
GOR...
I *LOVE* John Varley's stuff. In his later stories he takes the
ability to choose and change sex for granted, and that in itself
makes some WONDERFUL opportunities for blowing away stereotypes.
But one of his best short stories explores that period of time when
changing sex is just coming into fashion. This stable married woman
comes to decide that she wants to try being male, and her husband
can't handle it! I mean, it says ALL SORTS of threatening things
about his sexuality. Furthermore, if his wife's a man, what does
that make HIM?! IT'S GREAT!
Sorry, I got all het up there. Varley does that to me. I didn't
find Titan/Wizard/Demon particularly feminst, but it seemed pretty
non-sexist to me. After all, all of the major characters I can think
of were women, and strong ones at that.
Oh, I believe Harlan Ellison's short story referred to was "Croatoan".
Wasn't that the inscription they found on a tree at the failed <mumble>
colony on the east coast back in the 1700's?
(Apropos Russ) I really like the Alyx stories, about a wonderful female
thief.. Alice Sheldon while radical, fills me with a "righteous anger",
Russ, on the other hand fills me with "this premise is NUTS". "We who
are about to..." made me feel that way, I think mostly because I
couldn't by the actions of the men. I realize that many men have used
the same "Garden of Eden" scenario with somewhat different results :-)
but that was bad art too...
Wasn't the main character of "The Dispossessed" a woman? It's been
a while, I admit. Perhaps one of the reasons I think of LeGuin as
a feminst author is because I got to audit a class she taught at
UCSD on science fiction.
MZB a feminst? Welll... not really, I think she's just a good author,
and doesn't (usually) have an axe to grind. Take Lythande for example
(one of my favorites) Lythande is definitely a woman in a man's role
:-) and would be a great foil for making some feminst statements, but
MZB (in my opinion) sticks to using Lythande merely (!) in some
wonderful stories.
-- Charles
|
391.35 | Excerpt | GCANYN::TATISTCHEFF | | Sun Jul 19 1987 15:19 | 124 |
| re -1: I read that Varley story and loved it too [figures, eh?].
There are times when I wish we ALL got a chance to be male and
female; then we'd have more of an idea what is our gender, and
what is _us_.
I never read Russ before, but just found a short story collection
from the Women's press (UK) which includes one of hers. The following
is an excerpt from a really hysterical story: The Cliches From Outer
Space. Enjoy.
Disclaimer: while this is super-funny, it is also extremely
offensive, so don't take it personally please. It is a SATIRE!
" The Weird_Ways_Of_Getting_Pregnant Story
`"Eegh! Argh! Eegh!' cried Sheila Sue Hateman in uncontrollable
ecstasy as the giant alien male orchid arched over her, pollinating
her every orifice. She -- yes, she -- she, Sheila Sue Hateman,
who had always been frigid nasty and unresponsive! She remembered
how at parties ahe had avoided men who were attracted by her bee-stung,
pouting, red mouth, long, honey-coloured hair, luscious behind and
proud, upthrusting breasts (they were a nuisance, those breasts,
they sometimes got so proud and thrust up so far that they knocked
her in the chin. She always pushed them down again). How she hated
and avoided men! Sometimes she had hidden under sofas. She had
stood behind open doors for hours on end. Often she had wrapped
herself in the window curtains, hoping to be mistaken for a swatch
of fabric.
`But this was... different
`Ecstacy pounded through her every nerve. How she had wanted
this! Now she would have children. Would they emerge as a bushel
of seeds? A tangle of leaves? Would one of her toes fall out and
root itself in the ground? It didn't matter. Whatever her son
would be like (and she knew, somewhere deep inside her, that she
would have a son) she would love it because it would be His.
`Realisation poured through her: *She really loved men*!
`She had loved them all along. But she had been afraid. Afraid
of their strength, their attractiveness, their gentleness, their
cute way of saying, "Hey honey, that's a great pair of boobs you
got there," which had set her heart racing.
`She remembered Boris's direct, strong gaze, and the crushing
power of his beautiful arms as he had attempted to rip off her clothes.
`She remembered Ngaio's twinkly, humorous politeness as he said,
"The reason that you keep disagreeing with my intellectual conclusions,
Sheila, is that you're a bitch."
`She remembered Jose's tender, masculine protectiveness as he
had said, "We can't hire you, Sheila, because this is a man's job.
It's too difficult for a woman."
`She really loved men.
`"Eegh! Argh! Oh! Oh! Argh! Eegh!" cried Sheila Sue, convulsing
all over the place.
`The giant orchid tenderly wrapped its fronds...'
[another cliche from outer space:]
The Turnabout Story
or
I always knew what they wanted to do to me
because I've been doing it to them for years,
especially in the movies
`Four ravaging, man-hating, vicious, hulking, Lesbian, sadistic,
fetishistic Women's Libbers motorcycled down the highway to where
George was hiding behind a bush. Each was dressed in black leather,
spike-heeled boots, and carried both a tommygun and a whip, as well
as knives between their teeth. Some had cut off their breasts.
Their names were Dirty Sandra, Hairy Harriet, Vicious Vivian, and
Positively Ruthless Ruth. They dragged George ( a sandy-haired
fellow with spectacles, but with a keen mind and an iron will) from
behind the bush he was hiding in. Then they beat him. Then they
reduced him to flinders. Then they squashed the flinders to slime.
Then they jumped up and down on the slime.
`"Women are better than men!" cried Dirty Sandra.
`"Lick my boots!" cried Hairy Harriet.
`"Drop your pants; I'm going to rape you!" cried Vicious Vivian
in her gravelly bass voice.
`Ruthless Ruth said nothing (she never did; it was rumoured among
the gang that she had never learned to talk) but only chewed her
cigar and flicked open an eight-inch-long, honed-steel, poisoned,
barbed, glittering knife! Growling, she moved towards George.
`And these women are financially supported by their husbands!
thought George. Those poor, terrified males fastened to the bedroom
door by diabolically constructed chain-link thongs, which only let
them loose to make money!
`Our hero thought his time had come. But suddenly Ruthless
Ruth turned green, smoke came pouring out of her ears, her facial
expression changed, and she fell to the ground, writhing.
`It was that time of the month!
`Dirty Sandra and Hairy Harriet likewise turned green, lost
their judgement, dithered, turned six or seven colours, and groaned,
wallowing on the ground and clutching their stomachs. They were
in no condition to do anything to anybody now.
`That left Vicious Vivian. In mid-snarl she changed, too, but
differently; she slank towards George, her mouth pouting, her body
inviting, her large, moist eyes pleading with him to give her what
she needed.
`It was the other time of the month for her.
`"Tell me, Vicious Vivian," said small, sandy-haired, iron-willed,
bespectacled, heroic George; "Where is your centre of command, who
is your leader, and what are your battle plans?"
`"I will tell you everything," sobbed Vicious Vivian in a gentle
soprano, melting to her knees and embracing George's calves in the
extremity of her biological need. "I adore you. I want you. I
need you. I can't help it." And she told him everything, nibbling
at his knees and sighing between-whiles. "Oh, take me with you!"
she cried; "I love you and I have betrayed The Cause!"
`"You couldn't help it," George said compassionately, and stealing
her motorcycle, he rode off into the sunset. He must get his secret
to the Humane Instruments of Monumentality in Sausalito. Now he
knew why female scientific brains only worked in the rare few days
between that time of the month and the other time of the month.
Once the HIMS had this information (and a calendar) they could
use it to take the world back from Women's Liberation and build
a truly free and egalitarian society for everyone, not just men
but women, too (taking into account their special physical needs,
of course).
`George's bad back, stuffed sinuses, flat feet, trick knee,
migraine headache, hayfever, bladder infection, and angina pectoris
began to.......'
[editorial comment: hee-hee, ooh-haw-haw, giggle, snort...]
Lee
|
391.36 | Gor and feminist SF | MAY20::MINOW | Je suis Marxist, tendance Groucho | Sun Jul 19 1987 18:42 | 24 |
| At a Boskone [Boston Science Fiction Convention] a few years ago, I ate
brunch sitting next to C. J. Cherryh. (Yet another feminist SF author.)
Her publisher (forgot her name) sat next to her.
In my sweetest, most innocent tone of voice, I asked whether "John Norman"
really believed the Gor novels he wrote.
Publisher began a probably well rehearsed speech on how the profits from
this line of pornography (aimed at teen-aged boys) subsidized their
publication of new (many female) authors. (Also "'Norman's' wife is
a feminist and he's really a philosophy professor" and stuff like that.)
Being a generally nice person (and recognizing that we were, after all,
eating a meal together), I refrained from asking Ms Cherryh how she
liked the suggestion that she couldn't hack it without the support of
this trash.
Never did find out whether he believed what he wrote. If you're stuck
in a mall, you ought to pick up a Gor book at random, and see how far
you get before you hit a bondage scene. I've never had to turn the
page twice. Guess I'm just lucky.
Martin.
|
391.37 | | HUMAN::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Sun Jul 19 1987 20:57 | 54 |
| Martin,
I don't remember the publisher's name either, but I have talked
with C.J. Cherryh enough to know that she has a very strong
sense of her self-worth and a willingness to go out on a limb to
get what she wants or to do what needs to be done. I'm sure that
she realizes that it takes a lot of support to become a
successful author, especially if one doesn't want to be just
another copy of an existing stereotype.
Her views, as I remember them, on feminist issues were not of
the strident or adamant variety, but of the "there's a lot of
sexist crap in the world, but I'll be damned if it's going to
stop me" school. She is the kind of person who is determined to
succeed, and who will support others, but is not likely to waste
a lot on anger or frustration.
If you had asked "how she liked the suggestion that she couldn't
hack it without the support of this trash", my impression is
that her reaction would be that with or without John Norman she
would succeed at what she was doing, but that the fact that her
publisher was a bit freer to take risks because of the Gor-
income may have speeded up the process, and she would be foolish
to refuse the opportunity.
She is also independant enough and tough minded enough that if
you offered her the choice of ending the Gor series and
diminishing the amount of crap that reinforced the kind of
images that it plays upon at the cost of not having the support
that came from it, I suspect she'd rather go it alone.
I don't swear to the above but it is the impression she gives me
at least.
Using the income from the John Norman stuff to leverage more
good young female authors is much better than using it for some
other purpose. Given the demand for Gor and its ilk, it isn't
likely that the decision not to publish him by one publisher
would cause him to go away, it would just shift the income to
someone else.
For my money it is much better to concentrate on supporting good
feminist authors and promulgating their views on life than it is
to try to repress sexism. In the end, you achive far more
through the promotion of right thinking than through attempts to
censor or repress wrong thinking. Opposition often strengthens
ideas rather than weakening them.
Oh, yes, and as I remember it, your question of what Norman
believed came up once or twice more during the week-end, and the
answer was that he was probably basically just a hack who was in
it for the money and not someone pushing a view.
JimB.
|
391.38 | Yawn. She's in chains again | HPSCAD::WALL | I see the middle kingdom... | Mon Jul 20 1987 09:14 | 16 |
|
The Gor books:
They gave us some interesting costume ideas for a party once.
Otherwise, they're just middle-grade pulp. I've read one or two,
having been put in the situation that they were around and there
was nothing to do. However, I'm a big boy, and realize that
even for pulp:
The plots are thin.
The background is thinner.
The fight scenes are badly written.
Much sound and fury, signifying nothing
DFW
|
391.39 | Worlds Apart | PARITY::TILLSON | If it don't tilt, fergit it! | Mon Jul 20 1987 13:24 | 24 |
| WORLDS APART
An Anthology of Lesbian and Gay Science Fiction and Fantasy
Edited by Camilla Decarnin, Eric Garber, and Lyn Paleo
Boston, Alyson Publications, Inc.
First Printing July 1986, ISBN 0-932870-87-2
Contents:
Harper Conan and Singer David -Edgar Pangborn
Houston, Houston, Do You Read? -James Tiptree, Jr
To Keep The Oath -Marion Zimmer Bradley
Do Androids Dream of Electric Love? -Walt Liebscher
Lollipop and the Tar Baby -John Varley
The Mystery of the Young Gentleman -Joanna Russ
The Gods of Reorth -Elizabeth A. Lynn
Find the Lady -Nicholas Fisk
No Day Too Long -Jewelle Gomez
Full Fathom Five My Father Lies -Rand B. Lee
Time Considered as a Helix of Semi-Precious Stones
-Samuel R. Delany
|
391.40 | The Rainbow Cadenza | ARMORY::CHARBONND | Noto, Ergo Sum | Tue Jul 21 1987 07:01 | 16 |
| Don't know if this one qualifies : "The Rainbow Cadenza" by
J.Neil Schulman. The author creates a world where males
outnumber females 7 to 1, and "Make Love Not War" has been
implemented on a vast scale. Instead of drafting young males
to fight, young women are drafted for three year terms to
sexually service unattached males. The story focuses around
Joan Darris, an artist in the new field of Lasegraphy, an
art using colored laser light. Her struggle to develop her
art and maintain her sanity in this world forms the plot of
this book. The story abound with new concepts, and old words
take on very different meanings from current usage. Men are
elevated in status when they declare themselves gay, there is
an underclass hunted for sport, Wicce is the dominant religion,
new forms of music abound.
Published by Avon Books, New York.
|
391.41 | Here Is another List from my library | BUFFER::LEEDBERG | Truth is Beauty, Beauty is Truth | Wed Jul 22 1987 12:34 | 43 |
|
Marion Zimmer Bradley "Mists of Avalon" GREAT
Recent Darkover stories
Anne McCaffrey "The Ship Who Sang" Very Good
Pern Stories Good
Vonda McIntyre "Superluminal" Just
"The Exile Waiting" Good
"Dreamsnake" Writing
Robin McKinley "The Blue Sword" For Fun
"The Hero & the Crown"
Patricia McKillip "MoonFlash" Good
"The Moon and the Face" Good
Lydia Obuknova "Daughter of Night" Very Good
(A Soviet Writer)
Joanna Russ "Extra(Ordinary) People" GREAT
Anything by her
Pamela Sargent, ed Women of Wonder Series Great place
to start
James Triptree, Jr. "Women Men Never See" WONDERFUL
Almost anything else
she wrote Very Good
Joan D. Vinge "The Snow Queen" Good
Other stuff is also good
Patricia Wrede "Shadow Magic" Good
"Caught in Crystal" Good
There are many others that I can not think of because I don't own
the books.
_peggy (-)
| The Goddess inspires alternatives
|
391.42 | still at work | 3D::CHABOT | May these events not involve Thy servant | Wed Jul 22 1987 19:22 | 43 |
| re .16 (PCD books)
Er, um, well, I have a spare copy of "The Secret Country", if you
want (3 is more than I usually need; 2 is fine). I still see both
in bookstores, but "The Hidden Land" more often. These are the
only two out yet. If you have problems finding them, tell me:
I go to Harvard Square too often for my checking account's health anyway.
Actually: go to your bookstore and ask, too. I'd still go to
bookstores and fetch for you, but if we ask they might think it's
good to order.
Her publisher is Ace/Berkeley/...
re others
It's Lois Mcmaster Bujold. I haven't managed to read her books
although I returned from Minneapolis with all of them. I recommend
her friend, Lillian Stewart Carl: "Sabazel" and "The Winter King".
I think Bujold's publisher is Tor or maybe Baen; Carl's is Ace?
Carl has captured the best thought out amazon culture that coexists
with other societies--far better than "The Sword is Forged" by
Evangeline Walton. Carl also has great sex scenes! (tee hee)
I considered Varley's "Titan" to be voyeuristic more than feminist,
so I gave up.
Harlan Ellison has been on my list of favorites for a long time,
but even he admits that he's learned over the years. Some of his
earlier stuff is definitely not feminist. I messed up on this
about Heinlein: sorry, we all need time to learn.
Now, the discussions I've been having with authors and editors about
Norman is that he is entirely serious. (And he has two daughters,
ack, etc...). I don't know if these people have actually met the
man. My little sister's friend was addicted to Gor books; it's
often talked about that they are popular with women, that they're
DAW books steady bankroll, allowing DAW a financial margin with
which to experiment by publishing _good_ and less
"safe" fiction (that is, of unknown market value, like stuff by
new authors). Rumors, rumors, rumors. I've never touched the Gor
stuff.
|
391.43 | A question | CYBORG::MALLETT | | Fri Jul 31 1987 16:09 | 4 |
| re: .25 I'm curious - when was Number of the Beast published?
Steve
|
391.44 | too much fantasy for me | IMAGIN::KOLBE | Penguin Lust | Fri Jul 31 1987 21:23 | 13 |
| < Note 391.43 by CYBORG::MALLETT >
-< A question >-
< re: .25 I'm curious - when was Number of the Beast published?
I don't think I looked to see. I'll check it. Did you feel, as I
did that the characters were too phoney-baloney to deal with.
I also nearly choked when they 'landed' on OZ. Give me a break.
"suspension of disbelief" is necessary in any fantasy but he
went beyond my ability to suspend. liesl
|
391.45 | Lemme see now... | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Sat Aug 01 1987 13:52 | 8 |
| He had he brain surgury after Midamericon, and wrote _Number_
after that. Midamericon was in...ah...1976. Yes. George Lucas
had some promotional material for an sf movie he was making,
which came out the following year.
So I think it was published in 1977.
Ann B.
|
391.46 | | ARMORY::CHARBONND | Real boats rock! | Mon Aug 03 1987 07:59 | 1 |
| re .44 And who says that the sixth dimension *isn't* fiction ?
|
391.47 | a book and it's cover | IMAGIN::KOLBE | Vacation countdown commences - 10 | Tue Aug 04 1987 00:50 | 11 |
|
< Note 391.43 by CYBORG::MALLETT >
-< A question >-
< re: .25 I'm curious - when was Number of the Beast published?
My book, a Ballantine edition, was from 1980. They mention that
it was in it's eleventh printing in 1985. It would seem my dislike
is a minority opinion. I took another look, still crap. liesl
|
391.48 | More on NOTB | MAY20::MINOW | Je suis Marxist, tendance Groucho | Tue Aug 04 1987 09:59 | 12 |
| When I read it, I got the impression that Number of the Beast was
Heinlien's "goodbye" to his friends. In the last chapter (if you
can get that far) is populated by several dozen science fiction
authors (and well known fans) introduced more-or-less by name.
It's also the first time he pulls in characters from his earlier
books into the story (a task he continued with the subsequent books).
I do wish that he would lay off the interminable philosphy discussions.
If I wanted to re-read Shaw's Man and Superman, I'd read that instead.
Martin.
|
391.49 | Woodie's ma | ARMORY::CHARBONND | Real boats rock! | Tue Aug 04 1987 10:32 | 6 |
| Re. NOTB The same charachters reappear in The Cat Who Walks
Through Walls and finally in To Sail Beyond The Sunset. This
last is probably his goodbye to all his fans, especially us
sappy types who like happy endings. I won't spoil it for
you (besides the book cost me 17 bucks :-) .) I will say
that the lead charachter, Maureen Smith, is quite a gal.
|
391.50 | | CHOWDR::EDECK | | Fri Aug 07 1987 15:35 | 13 |
|
Yeah, I get the feeling that "To Sail Beyond the Sunset" will be
his last. It's got a peaceful, sort of resigned feel to it--like
he knows he's at the end and he thinks his life has been...what...
good...satisfactory...worthwhile..fulfilling...and it's time to
move on...
He even goes full circle (forgive the pun) and brings back Dr. Hugo
Pinerio (sp?) from "Lifeline," his first published story. (Not to
mention Drs. Douglas and Martin, and about a thousand others, though
I think he missed Fader Randell and Persperone...:-) )
E.
|
391.51 | MZB speaks out about wimmin | IMAGIN::KOLBE | vacation here I come | Fri Aug 07 1987 20:40 | 15 |
|
I have just bought MZB's newest Sword and Sorcery anthology and
she makes quite a counter-attack against feminists telling her
what she can put in her books. This current one has 50% male
authors and MZB defends herself eloquently. At one point she
mentions that most of those who have attacked her would call those
stories written by women "wimmins stories". A topic she goes on
to rail against. I've always felt she comes across a little bit
on the harsh side in her introductions and this one is sure to
get her a slew of letters. I pretty much agree with what she says
however. I too disagree that the solution to sexism is to bar
men from women's places, the solution is to learn to live with
each other not create a separate but (un)equal society. As such
I enjoy books about men and women togther more than books about
one sex or the other. liesl_a_fantasy_SF_junkie
|
391.52 | I'll take MZB any time! | YODA::BARANSKI | Law?!? Hell! Give me *Justice*! | Tue Sep 29 1987 09:51 | 75 |
| The best '''feminist''' SF&F that I have read has to be Marion Zimmer Bradley's
Darkover books. *Both* the male and female roles have strong characters in
many different situations; even the female householders strength is
appreciated. In many ways MZB has shaped my ideas of "what should be".
Most of the characters or groups that I identify with have psi abilities makes
the dream of having such a society in reality, unrealistic. Yet, as I become
older, the less difference I think it makes in whether it is 'possible'.
Many of the character have traits which are considered 'female' traits which I
wish more people of both sexes had. Yet, the characters are definitely human
and have their failings and tantrums.
Then there is Mists of Avalon....
I was floored when I read the story of how the Darkover books were written...
RE: .3
Samuel Delany, in my opinion, sucks! Of the thirty odd people in MTUSF&F, we
all had a copy of SD's Dhalgren. No one had ever managed to read more then a
fraction of it; everybody hated it and thought it was as boring as Canbe. We
kept threatening to have a Dhalgren bonfire, but could never be bothered to do
it; eve that would be probably be boring!
RE: .9
Heinlien was also a great influence on me... especially "Stranger in a Strange
Land". Pretty weird untill you think about it... Although RAH's lead female
characters were competent, the background female characters had/did not (yet)
reach competence. I think that that is just the place in social evolution that
RAH was writing from; at the time he started writing, all competent female
characters would be unthinkable. But he did write a message that you (women)
could be competent if you tried. I believe that this still holds true, both
for men and women. Competence is not something to be taken for granted. I
think that a few years ago he started going senile.
RE: .11
Zenna Henderson's ('The People' books if I am thinking of the right author),
stories were always surprisingly simple, elegant books. Andre Norton goes
waay back to when I was a juvinile... :-)
RE: Joanna Russ.
I have one very strange book by her, 'we who are about to', or some such.
It falls under the Dhalgren category, but I don't have the same 'contempt'
for JR as I did for SD. Perhaps I just didn't like it...
RE: .13
Being a feminist, or equality writer has to do with more then using as many
female pronouns as male pronouns. I think that's a nit.
RE: books
I feel that books are priceless. If you destory a book, that just means that
sooner or later, it (or something similiar) will be rewritten. If feel that
it's much better to keep a book around and point out to people what trash it
is. I don't burn trash books; they have a long and usefull life for them in my
house as insulation, and if I ever have a need for them, they are there.
What about the 'Ice/Snow Queen' story? (Winter Queen & Summer Queen) Who wrote
that?
RE: .35 stories
Those are great! :-) Hilarious!
RE: .40
How is that 'feminist'??? Sounds pretty gross to me... (sorry to be cliche',
but that's my reaction...)
Jim.
|
391.53 | I only have 2000 sf books | CSC32::M_BAKER | | Wed Nov 04 1987 19:55 | 13 |
| Gosh, I stop reading this file for awhile and come back to find a topic
that I finally know something about. A lot of good books/authors
recommended. I've got to check out some of them. One author I haven't
seen mentioned is James H. Schmitz. He wrote several books with
female protangonists. I'm don't know if they are feminist or not.
I've heard Heinlein described in as fascist but not feminist.
The Gor books are really bad. I have witnessed women buying and reading
them. Strange.
Mike
|
391.54 | chauvenist, maybe | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Thu Nov 05 1987 11:54 | 14 |
| re .53:
Heinlein as FASCIST?
I've heard him called many things, but never "fascist".
Have you read him? I know you are just repeating what you've heard,
but I think Heinlein is about as far from fascist as one can possibly
get.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
391.55 | | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Thu Nov 05 1987 12:39 | 16 |
|
Re: .54
No, Heinlein has been called fascist over and over again (it happens
every couple of months in SF-LOVERS DIGEST). However, this is
"newspeak," in which fascist means "someone with whom I disagree." The
definition of "fascism" includes "exaltation of nation and race above
the individual" and you could argue that some of Heinlein's writings
lean that way (I think that what he actually proposes is that it is a
good thing when an individual puts the welfare of the nation or the race
above his or her own -- which is not the same thing at all). But the
rest of the definition includes "strong autocratic or dictatorial
control of government" and that is certainly not part of Heinlein's
philosophy.
JP
|
391.56 | | LANDO::ROGERS | Becky R. - Whirlwind Nightmare Life | Tue Nov 10 1987 11:37 | 13 |
|
Ok....so I'm strange.
I have almost the entire Gor saga....I love um!
Trashy, I know they are....but still....
I never said I had good taste!
Ta sardar Gor,
Becky
|