May 2012

SF/F Commentary

Film Crit Hulk on the New Yorker? Dumbest Thing of the Week…

(Originally on Google+; cross-posting to amuse myself.) Excuse me while I call this the dumbest thing to hit Geek culture all year that happens to not be some racist or sexist rant of doom. Seriously? Your idea of how the Hulk would speak is to give him remarkably sophisticated diction…but in ALL CAPS? Because ALL CAPS = The Hulk, right? Because The Hulk is a privileged white male teenager having a temper tantrum, but who is remarkably aware of himself as a literary cliche? Here’s how the Hulk would assess Mark Ruffalo’s performance in truth: Funny jokes. Smash good. That’s about it. He’s a man/creature of few words for a reason. That’s why he says all but one (maybe more if you count grunts and roars as words) line in the entire Avengers movie. Pah! This is why Film Crit Hulk works on Twitter, but not on a blog. On Twitter, he seems like he’s actually in Hulk character (or she, if the person behind the persona happens to be a woman). On the blog? Not so much. He’s using “Hulk” as a justification for putting things in all caps (i.e., to be annoying as hell). Meh.

SF/F Commentary

The Preliminary PhD Reading List: Hard Times Ahead (or, Yay Caribbean Literature)

If you didn’t know, I’ve been hard at work putting together my committee and reading list for my PhD exams, which I intend to take in March or April of next year.  The list will likely change in the next few weeks, given feedback from my director, but I thought you’d all like to see what I’m up to academically. For those that don’t know, I am writing my PhD on the relationship between the Caribbean and the space of Empire (spatiality).  In particular, my work will be an attempt to conceptualize how Empire is spatially constructed and how such constructions are reflected in the literature and resisted/manipulated/etc. by Caribbean peoples/characters/authors/etc.  The idea is to (hopefully) mold together my work on Hopkinson and Buckell for the MA into a larger project on Caribbean literature. With that in mind, here is the list I’ve so far constructed.  Feel free to offer suggestions of your own, as this reading list is only for my exams and not necessarily for my final project. Here goes: Novels (Early Period) The English in the West Indies, Or, the Bow of Ulysses by James Anthony Froude Wonderful Adventures of Mrs. Seacole in Many Lands by Mary Seacole Rupert Gray, a Study in Black and White by Stephen N. Cobham (Modern and Mid-20th Century) Emmanuel Appadocca by Michel Maxwell Philip Minty Alley by C. L. R. James A Morning at the Office by Edgar Mittelholzer Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys (Contemporary) The Enigma of Arrival by V. S. Naipaul Frangipani House by Beryl Gilroy Cambridge by Caryl Phillips A Map to the Door of No Return:  Notes to Belonging by Dianne Brand (Genre and Related Contemporary) Crystal Rain by Tobias S. Buckell Ragamuffin by Tobias S. Buckell Sly Mongoose by Tobias S. Buckell (note:  there is a fourth book coming out in this series, which I may add to this list at a later time) Midnight Robber by Nalo Hopkinson Redemption in Indigo by Karen Lord Theory, History, etc. (Spatial Theory) The Production of Space by Henri Lefebvre The Urban Experience by David Harvey The Road to Botany Bay:  An Essay in Spatial History by Paul Carter The Archaeologies of the Future by Fredric Jameson The Poetics of Space by Gaston Bachelard (Caribbean History, Postcolonial Theory, etc.) Writing in Limbo by Simon Gikandi Poetics of Relation by Edouard Glissant The Repeating Island:  the Caribbean and the Postmodern Perspective by Rojo Antonio Benitez The Pleasures of Exile by George Lamming The British Caribbean:  From the Decline of Colonialism to the End of Federation by Elisabeth Wallace

SF/F Commentary

Top 5 Science Fiction Mothers (in Film)

In celebration of Mother’s Day, I offer to you all my favorite science fiction mothers. There are a few lists of mothers in science fiction, but this will be one of the only lists that narrows things down specifically to heroines who are also mothers (of which there are very few) and who can be found in fim. I gave myself a few rules for the selection process: Heroine will be defined as a woman who achieves (or attempts to achieve) physical or intellectual goals either as an equal member in a group, a leader, or on her own. A mother will be defined as a woman who either gives birth to and participates in the raising of children OR a woman who adopts (de facto or literally) a child and participates in their raising. They must actually be heroines while being mothers.  It doesn’t count if she was a heroine in her younger days, and then stopped being one when she got pregnant and had kids.  It also doesn’t count if she wallows in despair because she lost manly man, gives birth, and then decides to die (I’m looking at you, Padme Amidala). Here’s my list: #5 — Sarah Jane Smith (Doctor Who and The Sarah Jane Adventures) Saves the world a bunch of times?  Check.  Has a genius kid who’s slightly obnoxious, but still lovable?  Check.  Has a wicked super computer?  Check.  Is completely and utterly capable of being a badass while handling the responsibilities of being a parent?  Check. One of my favorite Sarah Jane moments:  reminding Davros in “Journey’s End” with little more than the tone of her voice that she was there in the beginning, on Skaro — sort of like rubbing salt in an open wound.  There’s a reason Sarah Jane Smith remains a favorite among Whovians.  It’s because she’s awesome. #4 — Dr. Beverly Crusher (Star Trek:  The Next Generation) An accomplished doctor on a powerful exploration ship full of menfolk with enormous egos?  Yup.  But she holds her own, telling her Captain what’s what from time to time and resolving all manner of medical anomalies brought aboard by her intrepid crew.  And she has to handle all of that while being the mother of a genius son, Wesley.  Imagine trying to do best by your son while in an official “military” post.  Now imagine trying to handle being separated from your son in an increasingly hostile galaxy.  Yet Crusher handles all of that with extraordinary strength. #3 — Sharon “Athena” Agathon (Battlestar Galactica) Not many mothers have to survive the disgusting levels of violence thrown at Sharon Agathon.  Being a cylon, she’s hated by what’s left of the human race, because her people nearly wiped humanity out.  She’s hated so much that she’s kept in a prison for most of her life — where she is beaten and almost raped — and has her half-human/half-cylon baby stolen away from her (supposedly “dead”) by people who think Hera (the baby) will destroy the ragtag fleet of leftover human ships.  But she perseveres, fighting with all her might to save her daughter and her family.  She’s a lot like… #2 — Sarah Connor (The Terminator Series) What list of SF moms would leave out Sarah Connor?  With two enormous weights on her shoulders — the looming threat of the sentient robot apocalypse and the responsibility of raising the savior of mankind — she’s  the kind of mother we all can respect.  Sure, she’s not perfect — after all, she’s sort of mental and homicidal — but so is everyone else.  Without her strength and determination, John Connor wouldn’t exist and humanity would be screwed. #1 — Ellen Ripley (The Aliens Series) She may not be a “traditional” mom, but she does essentially become a surrogate in Aliens and then a much more creepy mother in Alien Resurrection.  But we’ll focus on Aliens, where Newt Gingrich’s future cousin, who is also named after an amphibian, is taken under the wing by one of the greatest would-be-mothers in the science fiction universe.  And what happens when the greatest female heroine in science fiction becomes a surrogate mother?  This: I rest my case. Who would you add to this list and why? ——————————————- Runner up:  My mom.  She may not be a space ninja or whatever, but she does live in an alternate reality in her head.  Plus, she’s my mom and had to deal with me through my teen years.  Somehow she survived.  Kudos to her.  And happy Mother’s Day.

SF/F Commentary

Coming Soon: “Lendergross and Eaves”

Collecting all the votes I received on my blog and on Young Writers Online, it seems folks want to see “Lendergross and Eaves” first (following closely by “Suckled at the Edge of Flesh”).  Cool beans.  That gives me some direction and focus. And so, for your gentle reminder, here’s the description (once more) of the upcoming WISB Short Story, “Lendergross and Eaves”: Set in the same city as the previous story, and in roughly the same era.  The Anurians of Bifur live out their toad-like lives in the slums, eking out an existence while the city finds new ways to exploit them. Except for Terk. He’s cornered the Eaves market, pushing illicit drugs as high as the elite circles. That is until someone important is murdered with Terk’s calling card all over him. Except Terk doesn’t kill people. Maims? Sure. But never kills. Which means someone is trying to set him up to ruin him. Unless he can figure out who’s behind it all and clear his name. Well, mostly clear his name, that is… I shall finish it soon!

Book Reviews

Book Review: Lost Everything by Brian Francis Slattery

Reviewing Slattery’s Lost Everything will seem rather convenient in light of Elizabeth Bear’s Clarkesworld post on the doom and gloom nature of SF.  How awful of me to love another work that makes us all sad and boo hoo inside!  Except Lost Everything isn’t terribly boo hoo, unless the only thing you pay attention to is the central premise:  the United States has gone to pot — global collapse, climate change, and civil war, along with the looming threat of an immense, monstrous storm that will supposedly destroy everything. But underneath that dark premise is something that I think the best SF always draws out:  the pure wonder of the human condition.  The novel follows a diverse cast of characters from different and sometimes opposing backgrounds:  Reverend Bauxite and Sunny Jim, who have set off together to retrieve Jim’s son, Aaron, and escape the Big One (a massive, deadly storm weaving in from the west); Sergeant Foote, who has been tasked with hunting down Bauxite and Jim to determine if they’re a threat against the military, and neutralize that threat if necessary; Faisal Jenkins, captain of the Carthage, who wants to ferry people down the river to safety and listens to the river for the day when it will consume him and his ship; and an eclectic mix of secondary characters, from a con artist to a ship’s first and second mates to military men and resistance fighters, all searching for a sense of home, a sense of who they were and who they have become, and a sense of what it means to have lost everything but not the will to find it all again. Lost Everything is about survival, of adapting to dangerous situations and finding a way to still find love, friendship, companionship, trust, and all those things that have helped us form a civilization.  It’s about faith, not just in a higher power, but in fellow man.  There is something profoundly optimistic about finding these human elements in a time that seems to have no future.  We’re conditioned to assume the worst of humanity at the end of days.  Our movies tell us that we can’t trust anyone, that any one of them could sell us up the river.  But Lost Everything reminds us of the beautiful nature of human interaction:  that even in the darkest of times, the best of what makes us human springs forward.  Optimism at its finest, and handled by Slattery with simple, but beautiful prose and through a narrative that collapses the past and present to show us who people were and who they have become. Slattery’s narrative structure amplifies this thematic content.  Split largely between three spaces — the house, the river, and the highway (iconic spaces in American literature from Twain to Kerouac and so on) — Slattery moves seamlessly between a character’s past and present, doing so in a way that perhaps seems tedious at first, but quickly lifts the veil to reveal the purpose.  Each storyline moves towards a similar idea, albeit expressed through a variety of hopes and dreams (finding family here, discovering home there, and so on).  The result is a narrative that snakes its way like a river towards an “future” that, as the narrative reminds us, has already happened, and which we’re being shown so we know what kinds of people lived before, and the kinds of people that have been left behind.  The structure might jar some readers, but I found it refreshing.  Whereas many SF novels follow the now-traditional conventions of plot, Lost Everything evades all of that, perhaps to explore characters in ways traditional writing makes unavailable, or to simply break apart the notion that there is anything like a stable narrative when humanity’s connection to place has been ruptured.  Call it postmodern or literary; whatever it is, I found myself hooked not just by the characters, but by these very structural choices. Perhaps these stylistic and narrative choices are why some have compared this novel to Cormac McCarthy’s The Road, though it seems to me that the comparison rests primarily on theme.  Slattery is not Cormac McCarthy.  Nor is he Mark Twain.  He is something else entirely — a unique voice in genre who transcends generic tradition entirely, who pulls up the roots of the ancient and the new, plucks them from the tree of knowledge itself and weaves them into twisted creations which never forget that we are dealing with human beings in terrible situations.  While Spaceman Blues adapted the Orpheus myth to the landscape of a city beset with conspiratorial sensawunda, Lost Everything draws upon a long history of river novels, river myths, and river tropes to remind us of how humanity adapts to an uncontrollable natural world and a species struggling with its compulsive nature, with its unchecked neuroses. In other words:  this is a novel that will haunt me for years to come.  Its mark will never go away.  For that reason alone, Lost Everything will sit at the top of my list of WISB Award hopefuls.  And it will take a herculean effort of literary genius to strip this book of its place as the best novel of the year. If you want to learn more about Brian Francis Slattery, check out his website.  You can learn more about the book on this Tor page.  You can also check out my old and slightly crappy review of Spaceman Blues here.

SF/F Commentary

WISB Shorts: Which do you want first?

I’m starting up the WISB Project again.  This year, I am going to finish it.  Through and through.  That means four new short stories set in Traea, and a full novel podcast, with an ebook release.  And to make up for life’s complexities, I will give anyone who donated $5 or more a copy of the ebook for The World in the Satin Bag (and the deal applies to anyone else who decides to donate in the future).  I won’t be pushing for donations this time, around, though.  Donate if you want.  All I really want is to hear from people.  If you like a story, or a chapter, leave a comment. But for now, I need some direction.  I have four short stories in the works for the project, ranging from pre-WISB eras to distant futures (though still very much in the realm of fantasy).  Based on the following descriptions, which would you want to read first?  You can leave extended answers in the comments, if you are so inclined. Here goes: “Suckled at the Edge of Flesh” A prequel to The World in the Satin Bag. Fagan Tarceron rides the seas to map the unknown stretches beyond the shores of Elithae and the Black Gap.  But when the many ships under his lord’s command discover a massive continent covered in abandoned cities, Fagan knows they should turn around before it’s too late.  What could empty entire cities without leaving a trace?  The real question:  Is it worth finding out? The Girl Who Flew on a Whale Set several hundred years after the events that take place in The World in the Satin Bag. In the long-forgotten city of Arlin, the Dreamer imagines riding the seas and the skies, having grand adventures with brigands and pirates and all manner of strange creatures.  Most of all, she dreams of the flying whales who have become the great myths and legends of the sailors and seafolk at the edge of the long-forgotten city of Arlin. But the Dreamer is a young lady.  She’s destined for courts and finishing schools and all manner of obscure tortures her mother can dream up.  And when the Royal Archbombasin of Cagerock convinces the Dreamer’s mother to send her to his special school for special children, where it is rumored that he feasts upon young flesh, the Dreamer can take no more, fleeing into the city to discover the adventures she’s always dreamed of… (Probably more like a middle-grade novel, to be honest.) “Murder in Hodgepodge Alley”  Set in a pre-industrial city several hundred years or so after the events of The Girl Who Flew on a Whale. Harper is one of the many who occupy the winding alley of monstrous houses and board-bridges called Magpie City.  One of the Prolet.  The lesser folk.  Life isn’t terribly hard there.  They have food.  They have water.  And they can build up and up and up almost without limitation.  But the city of Bifur does have its limits, with strict security forces to keep those limits enforced.  When Harper finds the body of a member of a royal house, he knows that things will not go well for Hodgepodge Alley or the residents of Magpie City.  Not well at all… “Lendergross and Eaves” Set in the same city as the previous story, and in roughly the same era. The Anurians of Bifur live out their toad-like lives in the slums, eking out an existence while the city finds new ways to exploit them.  Except for Terk.  He’s cornered the Eaves market, pushing illicit drugs as high as the elite circles.  That is until someone important is murdered with Terk’s calling card all over him.  Except Terk doesn’t kill people.  Maims?  Sure.  But never kills.  Which means someone is trying to set him up to ruin him.  Unless he can figure out who’s behind it all and clear his name.  Well, mostly clear his name, that is… Have at it, folks!

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