Electronic OtherRealms #26 Winter, 1990 Part 5 of 8 Copyright 1990 by Chuq Von Rospach All Rights Reserved. OtherRealms may be distributed electronically only in the original form and with copyrights, credits and return addresses intact. OtherRealms may be reproduced in printed form only for your personal use. No part of OtherRealms may be reprinted or used in any other publication without permission of the author. All rights to material published in OtherRealms hereby revert to the author. Past Imaginging: These are a few of my favorite things Lawrence Watt-Evans Copyright 1990 by Lawrence Watt-Evans Okay, folks, I've written on forgotten classics that I remember fondly from my youth; but I haven't pointed out some of my not-so-forgotten favorites, books that I think everybody should read. Most of these are neither obscure nor particularly famous--they're just good. I'll say a few words about each, so you can pick the ones you think will match your own tastes (though they're all fine). First off, there's The Whole Man, by John Brunner. Brunner became famous when he wrote Stand on Zanzibar, but he'd been working steadily in the field for years before that, and my very favorite of all his work is The Whole Man, the story of Gerry Howson, a lame, humpbacked hemophiliac, one of the most miserable creatures on Earth, born and raised in a slum--and the most powerful natural telepath who ever lived. Expanded from "Curative Telepath", The Whole Man is somewhat episodic, starting with Howson's birth, following through his formative years and his discovery of his talents, then describing a few cases handled in his career, a job that consists of pulling other telepaths out of fantasy worlds they've created, before winding up with a personal search for fulfillment and a happy ending reminiscent of Heinlein's "Waldo"--only more satisfying. And while you're reading Brunner, Stand on Zanzibar remains the best overpopulation novel I've ever read, and The Sheep Look Up, while almost unbearably downbeat and depressing, is the best ecological disaster novel I've ever read. The rest of Brunner's work--except for the magnificent fantasy The Traveller in Black--ain't much by comparison with these three. Engine Summer, by John Crowley, is a long-after-the-holocaust novel that does about the best job I've ever encountered of putting the reader inside the head of a protagonist with a genuinely different way of thinking. Rush that Speaks is entirely human--at least, throughout most of the novel--but a member of a culture that bears little resemblance to our own, even though it's descended from modern-day California. Rush wants to be a saint, which in his society means a person whose life is transparent, so that through it, others may see their world and themselves. If that sounds too metaphysical or mystical, you may not like Engine Summer--but you should try it, as the mysticism is not the contrived occultism of most SF or fantasy novels with mystic elements, but an alternate worldview, a part of a different culture. Anyone interested in anthropology has to read this. Dying of the Light, by George R.R. Martin, I think everyone will like--except maybe for the ending, which even one of the editors hated. It's a story of culture shock, love, war, and action, with something for everyone. The hero has been summoned to the dying festival world of Worlorn by a message he believes comes from his former lover, now married to one of the men of High Kavalaan--except that the lover won't tell him why he was summoned, and things grow ever more complicated as Dirk t'Larien gets further and further embroiled in the internal conflicts and culture of High Kavalaan and the other societies that set up the festival on Worlorn. This book has some of the best chase scenes ever written, a well-thought-out alien culture or two, sex, romance, friendship, treachery, all that good stuff--and an ending that infuriates people because it stops a paragraph sooner than it ought to, leaving it open for the reader to figure out the outcome of a duel. Another of my favorite books is, believe it or not, Star Rogue, by Lin Carter. Okay, I know what you're saying--"Lin Carter? Gimme a break! All he ever wrote was junk!" Well, yeah, that's mostly true. Most of his fiction was bad imitations of Edgar Rice Burroughs, Robert E. Howard and others. A lot was sword-and-sorcery, a genre that's usually pretty bad anyway, and Lin Carter wrote some of the trashiest ever. How can anyone write well, when imitating Howard, or Burroughs, or Lovecraft, all of whom were basically second-rate writers? Sure, they wrote nifty stuff, but stylistically, most of their work was horrible. In Star Rogue he was trying to imitate Heinlein. The result is actually quite tolerable. The story involves an adventure of Saul Everest, Earth's only immortal man and the galaxy's top freelance secret agent, semi-retired. The star rogue of the title--a gravitational anomaly cruising the galactic rim--is totally irrelevant to the plot and explained away in a single sentence near the end. It's all free-form space opera, with terraformed asteroids, telepathic aliens, , galactic empires, attempted coups, and all sorts of fun stuff going on. It's a lot of fun. Not great literature, but one of the best space operas I've read. Makes you wonder how he'd do if he didn't imitate anyone, doesn't it? I just thought of something--you have all read Fredric Brown's stuff, haven't you? I have in mind What Mad Universe and Martians, Go Home. Brown's specialty was humorous SF, usually gently mocking the cliches of the genre--some of which are extinct now, but Brown's been dead for a quarter of a century, so you have to bear with him on that. In What Mad Universe, the mild-mannered editor of a science fiction pulp is visiting the estate of his wealthy publisher in upstate New York, working on the letter column for the next issue-- specifically, trying to answer the latest LoC from Joe Doppleberg, an unbearably fannish space-opera lover--when he's hit on the head by an unsuccessful unmanned moon rocket. The rocket carries a device designed to make a flash on the lunar surface that would be visible on Earth; instead, it transports our hero into a parallel universe, where Earth is in a war with Arcturus--just the way Joe Doppleberg would like it. In Martians, Go Home, Earth is invaded by ten zillion little green men from Mars, who can turn invisible, see through walls, and so forth, and who haven't come to take over--just to make everybody's lives utterly miserable through petty harassment. What sort of harassment? Oh, well, for example there's the honeymoon couple who find a Martian sitting on of the bed demanding to watch their disgusting mating rituals. Pure fun throughout, both of them. Scattered Gold Charles de Lint Copyright 1990 by Charles de Lint Allow me a slight digression, if you will. While attending Silicon in San Jose this past Thanksgiving weekend, my wife MaryAnn and I had the good fortune to finally meet the faithful editors of OtherRealms--yes, none other than the charming Chuq Von Rospach and the equally charming Laurie Sefton. Not only did they put up with my having a cold (and coughing disagreeably throughout most of the weekend), but they also took MaryAnn and I to some wonderful galleries in Palo Alto. Except for a couple of hours of touring San Francisco in a van, said tour being conducted by Katherine Kerr and the brave Alis Rasmussen (I say brave, because she had her three-and-a-half-month old twins in tow), and Tom Whitmore's ferrying us about the freeways whilst regaling us with welcome conversation, this visit to Palo Alto's University Avenue was about all that we saw of California this time out. Some, the unkind among you, might say that was plenty, but MaryAnn and I love toddling about new cities, and weren't in the least bit ready to get back onto a plane for the ten-and-a-half hour flight back home when the weekend was done. But at least we took home more than just memories of freeways and the convention hotel, for which thanks are hereby being publicly rendered. None of which has anything to do with books or reviewing, except that the folks mentioned are all involved in those very endeavours, in one way or another--in fact, I think we run the gamut of writers, reviewers, editors, publishers and booksellers--and I felt that their cheerful hosting did not deserve to go unremarked. Yes, but what about the books? I can hear the more disgruntled among you muttering as you scan the page looking for the business that's supposed to be at hand rather than your reviewer's reminiscences of his Thanksgiving weekend. (Great dinner, by the way, Donya and Allen--thanks again.) So without further ado: Luck of the Wheels Megan Lindholm Ace, December 1989; 256pp; $3.50, 0-441-50436-1 The trouble with trilogies and series, as you're no doubt tired of hearing, is that far too often the volumes subsequent to the first become merely paler and paler imitations of what seemed so invigoratingly fresh at first. Happily, there are always exceptions to the rule, as can so aptly be seen in the works of writers such as Parke Godwin, Judith Tarr and a handful of others. Like Megan Lindholm. Ki, the Romni trader, and her companion Vandien, a storyteller and swordsman, are once again the protagonists of her latest novel, and they remain as likable and full of life as they did when we were first introduced to them in Harpy's Flight. And Luck of the Wheels, rather than being a repetitive parade of the previous books, moves the characters into new territories--both literal, as they travel across an unfamiliar landscape and the problems inherent therein and interior, as they are forced to re-evaluate their relationship with, and perceptions of, each other. Lindholm's prose is the kind that won't let go; the story just swallows you whole and the writing sings. As has always happened when I start one of her books, I was hooked from the opening page--by the sheer warmth of her characters and her stylistic charm. Luck of the Wheels is as satisfying a fantasy as you could hope for, except for one thing: how does the story of "The Pot of Jam and the Bird of Life" end anyway? Gate of Darkness, Circle of Light Tanya Huff DAW, November 1989; 272pp; $3.95, 0-88677-386-5 I'm a little shocked at how quickly the subgenre of contemporary fantasy has settled into certain stock character types and plot situations not all that different from high fantasy. Wandering thieves, rogues, elves, wizards and bards have been replaced with artists, bagladies, punk elves, Wicca and street musicians. The focus of Light against Dark is still present, there are quests and talisman...in fact, all that's really changed is the setting. There should be a good reason for using a contemporary setting--not simply a transfer of high fantasy elements into modern times for the sake of another "same, but different" stories. The contemporary fantasy should only work in a modern setting, illuminating present day concerns through the use of its fantastical elements. One shouldn't be able to take the story and place it in a mock-medieval setting with no real seams showing, like so much space opera is merely a western in space. Tanya Huff--after a pair of entertaining light high fantasies--gets about half of it right as she moves her storytelling into contemporary Toronto with her recent Gate of Darkness, Circle of Light. We've seen much of this before, in one guise or another. There's the wise force of good (Light) and the utterly evil antagonist (Dark). Mrs. Ruth the baglady takes on the role of the wandering wizard. There's the traditional apprentice in the street musician Roland who is going to be a Bard and the occasional point of views from the local police's perspective. And we have some magical illogic in that the magic is set up as Light versus Dark, with some little faerie grey folk in between, but the whole resolution of the tale comes with a "pull out of the hat" of the Mother Goddess, who's affiliated with none of the above until the plot requires it. But happily, Huff has also added some touches that are all her own. One of her principal characters is a mentally disadvantaged woman named Rebecca; the sweet innocence of her point of view is refreshing. Another fascinating character is Rebecca's social worker, the East Indian woman Daru, which gives Huff a chance to make some pertinent points about current sociological problems (without preaching, I should add). Unfortunately, these characters aren't on stage nearly enough and Rebecca's warm simplicity is somewhat marred by another "pull out of the hat" when we discover the truth behind her origin. The other strength of Huff's latest novel is how she brings her contemporary setting to life. Her prose ranges from evocative to workmanlike, but all in all, the potential is present in her work for a very fine contemporary fantasist--one capable of taking on the challenge of making her own mark in the fantasy field. If it seems that I've dwelled a little too long on the stereotypical side of this book, it's only because I believe Huff is capable of far more than what we have here--a competent and entertaining fantasy that could have been written by any number of authors. There are characters, passages of prose and aspects of the plot (such as Roland's journey through a literary mythic otherworld) in Gate of Darkness, Circle of Light that are as good as anything the field has to offer. When Huff moves on from territories already covered by Lindholm, Paxson, Bull, et al, and presents us with the elements of her own unique world view, I believe we can look forward to some outstanding fiction, indeed. Cowboy Feng's Space Bar & Grill Steven Brust Ace, January 1990; 224pp; $3.50, 0-441-11816-X Steven Brust's new novel is every bit as wild as its busy Jim Gurney cover purports it to be--even if nothing on the cover actually appears in the book. The concept is pure Brust: there's a restaurant/bar called Cowboy Feng's which has the ability to vanish from one planet as it's about to get nuked and reappear on another one, giving the impression that it's always been there. The why of this is what the plot's all about, and I'm not going to get into it for the usual reasons, except to remark that for all the witty dialogue, neat ideas and the like, that plot could really have been more to the front. That's the down side of the book. It rambles about quite a bit, with much going on, but the plot is furthered at a snail's pace. On the plus side, as mentioned above, it has all the things that make a Brust novel so entertaining--enough so that the vague meanderings of the plot don't really matter. And--I hasten to add, just in case you think that the author of the Jhereg books has lost his touch--the last quarter of Cowboy Feng's is just slam-packed with action and, yes, all is revealed. It's not Brust's best book yet, but I'll take a lesser Brust over much of what else is out there on the stands--every time, hands down, no question about it. Good news from outer space John Kessel TOR, August 1989; 402pp; $18.95, 0-312-93178-6 If you've been following this column for awhile, you might have noticed that this time out I seem a little crankier than usual. I'm not sure why that is; I suppose it's just that I haven't found anything I can really rave over these past few months except for some non-genre stuff and Ken Grimwood's Replay (Arbor House, 1986), neither of which fit in this column--the former because this isn't the place to discuss such books, the latter because it's somewhat old for a column's that's trying to cover more recent work (though that's not going to stop me from telling you to run out and get it because it's astonishingly good). And so, preambling along, we come to the new John Kessel novel. I've been enjoying his short fiction for some time now and was quite looking forward to this new novel, not having read any of his longer work before. And it's a good novel. Kessel takes on the absurdities of TV evangelism and supermarket tabloids and weaves them into a fascinating exploration of our present culture as it nears the year 2000. The prose is evocative, even striking; the characters are realistically represented, warts and all; the future speculation--from technology and its inevitable effects on society through to the changes in society and its mores as the century nears its end--are well-thought out and believably tendered; and the plot, though it meanders some, resolves as it only could--satisfying, yet with a bittersweet edge to it. But--you knew there'd be a but, didn't you?--I found the way that Kessel grafted previously published short stories into the text to be cumbersome and unnecessary to the storyline, for all that they highlighted effects of the aliens upon normal folks. The characters appear only in those segments, never to return except perhaps in a peripheral mention from some television broadcast. What's wrong with putting those stories in there? For me, they lessened the initial impact of the material--their presence in the book stole away their original power. Now perhaps they were always parts of the book and Kessel merely lifted them out for some extra sales, but they didn't work in the context of the book. Not for me. Perhaps because I had read them before. But also, I believe, because they sit there on their own, part of the novel because they share the same background, but apart from it because they're never followed up in the context of the greater plotline. I suppose this is really being nit-picking, but I was moved by the original appearances of these pieces and don't like the way I'm now left feeling about them. I'd be interested in hearing from those of you who haven't kept up on Kessel's short fiction to see what your reactions are. So yeah, read this book. It's got a thread of despair that cuts deeply through it, it serves up a warning of where we're letting the future take us, but it ends with hope. And in these days, we need all the hope we can get. ------ End ------