June 2011

SF/F Commentary

WISB Podcast: The Final Push — Last Day!

Well, today is the last day of the funding drive for The World in the Satin Bag.  As of this moment, I am $135.44 short of my goal, which means I don’t have to do the Truffle Shuffle or Peanut Butter Jelly Time this time tomorrow if that number doesn’t change.  That’s up to all of you, though. But if watching me embarrass myself doesn’t do it for you, remember that there’s lots of free stuffs to be had once the project is finished.  But only for folks who donate!  I need roughly 14 people to donate $10 each and I’m over the hump.  Could you be one of those 14?  Maybe.  Maybe not. It’s hard to complain, though.  Reaching $860ish in a month is not bad at all. Anywho!  Thanks to everyone who has supported the project thus far.  You rock!  I will have the next chapter up this weekend, which will keep you all entertain, I’m sure.

SF/F Commentary

Guest Post on Young Adults and Literature!

For those of you who don’t follow John Ottinger’s Grasping For the Wind, you really should, because then you wouldn’t have to read this post telling you to check out my guest post there called “Our Inner Children and Childhood Suppression:  Let Kids Be Kids.”  Seriously, you should read it. But first, here’s a little taste: It’s only as we get older that our wonder and imaginations are clamped down on by society. Schools stifle creativity by resorting to “by the numbers” teaching styles and teaching goals. Parents begin to tell us to grow up, to act our age, to stop talking to ourselves in the corner or playing house or all those silly little games we used to play. Hooray for out of context quotes!

SF/F Commentary

My American Literature Course (Science Fiction = Well-Represented)

In case any of you were curious, the following is the final reading list for the Survey in American Literature course I begin teaching tomorrow.  I think the list is fairly diverse and incorporates a great deal of the important figures of American literature while avoiding all the stuff that would bore the hell out of me.  Feel free to provide any thoughts you might have in the comments. Books The Sun Also Rises by Ernest Hemingway (1926) Slaughterhouse Five by Kurt Vonnegut (1969) The Forever War by Joe Haldeman (1974) Writing About Literature:  A Portable Guide by Janet Gardner Plays “War Brides” by Marion Craig Wentworth (1915) “Mine Eyes Have Seen” by Alice Dunbar-Nelson (1918) Short Stories “The Comet” by W.E.B. Du Bois (1920) “The Grave” by Katherine Anne Porter (1944) “The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson (1948) “Lost in the Funhouse” by John Barth (1967) “The Artificial Nigger” by Flannery O’Connor (1955) “Going to Meet the Man” by James Baldwin (1965) “Advancing Luna–and Ida B. Wells” by Alice Walker (1977) “Speech Sounds” by Octavia Butler (1983) “The Lions Are Asleep This Night” by Howard Waldrop (1986) “Thi Bong Dzu” by Larry Rottmann (1973) “The First Clean Act” by Larry Heinemann (1979) “Faith of Our Fathers” by Philip K. Dick (1967) “Harrison Bergeron” by Kurt Vonnegut (1961) Essays “‘The Sun Also Rise’: A Memory of War” by William Adair “’Slaughterhouse-Five’: Time Out of Joint” by Arnold Edelstein “The Vietnam War as American Science Fiction and Fantasy” by H. Bruce Franklin

SF/F Commentary

WISB Podcast: My Grandma Will Be a Frog

One of the amusing things about my family is that it explains why I am so strange.  I seem to contain much of my strangeness on this blog, but every once in a while, it gets out… For example, I recently wrote the following to my Grandma in response to a misunderstanding she had about the WISB podcast project (i.e., the donation tier): I’ll write a character *based* on you, which means you’ll likely be a talking frog named Bethel from Ferngarden-upon-Erethen. But that will be up to you. How interested are you in being a giant talking frog? To which she said this: Me a FROG what a novel idea. I know so little about them I know that they are toadly great Are hoppy most of the time Jump willing into new and different situations They love their pad They slurp their food Eat most of the meals on the fly … or is that the fly Go to great lengths …orally … for most of their meals … sometime without moving Can be environmentally friendly ….. they are green for the most part and are a super insect abaters. I will concider being a frog BUT only if I don’t turn into something fluffy and cute if a tall dark and handsome stranger kisses me Can you change the name to Bethellda it sound a little classier and you know me I’m all about couth and culture. Do you see now why I have become a very strange 27-year-old man? (Chapter Thirteen is on its way.  My sister is currently staying here as part of her “get to know my brother so I can annoy him better” vacations.  But the chapter is coming!)

SF/F Commentary

A Game of Thrones: Episodes Eight, Nine, and Ten (and Final Thoughts)

I’ve decided to review the last three episodes of HBO’s A Game of Thrones together in order to avoid repeating the same praises over and over.  The cast of the show, as I’ve already said, is practically perfect, and that doesn’t changed in the final three hours worth of show.  Most of what I’ll relay below are my final thoughts about the last three episodes, somewhat disconnected from any formal review structure and episodic order.  A lot of these final thoughts will be focused on my issues with the series.  I will say that the following things are still some of the greatest strengths of the series: Cast/Acting (as I just noted):  almost every single actor/actress in this series is superb.  Peter Dinklage better damn well get an award for playing Tyrion.  Maisie Williams is still one of my favorite child actors in GoT; if she does not have a great career ahead of her, I will be pissed.  Lena Headey is still brilliant and loathsome (in a good way).  Emilia Clarke is also quite amazing in this series; she gets stronger and stronger as an actress (and as a character) with every episode.  And Sean Bean is, well, Sean Bean; what more can I say?  I don’t think there’s been a TV series where I have loved the cast as much as I do in GoT.  I will come back to the series based on the actors alone (though Sean Bean will be sorely missed, of course). Sets/Costumes:  To put it briefly — gorgeous sets, gorgeous scenery, and gorgeous costumes and design. CG:  The producers of GoT were intelligent enough to limit their use of CG, which means the few times when we do see something put together by computer, they are properly budgeted and look decent enough for a TV series.  No more of that SyFy cheap cheese garbage. Beyond that, the series moves back and forth between good and bad.  I’ll talk about some of those issues below. (Note:  I’m not going to offer any synopses for the episodes.  You should watch the show.  There may be some spoilers, though; if you haven’t watched the show, then don’t read beyond this point.) Now to the reviews: Episode Eight — “The Pointy End” “The Pointy End” is a product of wasted time.  I’ve mentioned many times before that the writers for Game of Thrones have taken significant detours, often for no other purpose than to present breasts or, as in episode seven, to tell us what is going to happen later, thus spoiling the surprise.  Sadly, this means that significant moments in the story or shortened to make room for all that extra stuff (more often than not extra scenes involving male chest shaving, women fingering one another, random penis shots, or four or more naked breasts in the same shot). “The Pointy End” opens with what should be a major sequence (i.e., the fall of Eddard Stark and his House in King’s Landing) and takes a lot of the power out of it by removing a good deal of the death that is supposed to take place there.  It’s fortunate that the writers decided to keep the final showdown between Syrio and the Lannister’s guard, but that doesn’t change the fact that the entire sequence ends so quickly that it’s hard to feel the impact it has on the characters (not just Arya and Sansa, but the dozens of guards and the like who, we are to assume, have been slaughtered).  A similar reduction takes place later in the episode when Tyrion tries to convince the hill people to join him, which suffers from the poor establishment of the Vale earlier in the series.  The absence of narrative fulfillment in both these instances does a great disservice to the consistency of the writing and the strength of the character arcs, though I’ll admit that at least the fall of House Stark is better handled than Tyrion’s “rise to power.”  Things simply “happen” without much in the way of explaining how; when explanation is offered, it is without development (i.e., “do this” “okay” “done”). The problem is that “The Pointy End” is such a good episode if you ignore these two problem areas.  It draws out all of the established plotlines and shows how everything is tangled together, and the episode avoids many of the pitfalls that killed the earlier parts of the series (pointless nudity, etc.).  It’s fortunate that the aforementioned problems are less egregious than those in other episodes I have reviewed, but they also expose the fundamental flaw in HBO’s adaptation:  narrative direction and space.  The fact of the matter is that 10 episodes is not enough to meet HBO’s tit quota and fully develop all the plotlines they’ve tried to insert throughout the series.  I understand that the writers are anticipating A Clash of Kings, but that doesn’t give them an excuse to wander away from internal consistency in this season.  While the second season was ordered before A Game of Thrones even aired, such things are never sure things.  We have no guarantee that a second season will ever be filmed until the season is over and all the ratings are in.  If A Game of Thrones lost 50% of its viewers after episode five, I doubt HBO would spend millions on producing a second season. Having said all this, I do want to reiterate that “The Pointy End” is a good episode.  Much of what is great about A Game of Thrones can be found here in good order.  Here the story finally gets back to, well, the story, without spending inordinate amounts of time playing around with other nonsense.  If not for the inability of the series as a whole to deliver the promise it set up in the first half, I think “The Pointy End” would be in my top three episodes for the entire show. P.S.:  Momoa is bloody awesome…still.  The cast is just so wonderful in this

Scroll to Top