I read Driftglass in my early teens. Didn't get everything but got a lot. Delany for me will always represent vistas opening (yet in truth I never read much past Nova). "Night and The Loves..." was exactly what I wished a short story would do. It probably still is but I don't dare reread it. His use, over and over, of teen-prodigy characters didn't seem realistic when I was that age, and far into adulthood, having seen a certain amount, I find it a gimmick and more about Delany (or SF) than about the world.
These days, the imaginary world of Delany that fascinates me is his lost New York, as unreachable as his distant planets.
― alimosina, Monday, 21 February 2011 23:42 (fifteen years ago)
Editing issue: should be "did exactly what" and "probably still does."
― alimosina, Tuesday, 22 February 2011 15:13 (fifteen years ago)
I shall begin reading The Mad Man soon, I'm expecting some of Delany's 'lost New York'.
― historyyy (prettylikealaindelon), Tuesday, 22 February 2011 15:43 (fifteen years ago)
You won't be disappointed there, as I recall.
― old man yells at poop first thing in the morning (pixel farmer), Tuesday, 22 February 2011 16:36 (fifteen years ago)
And check Heavenly Breakfast, an autobiographical novel(pub. 1979). Its title is also the name of a real-life 60s NYC psych-folk band. SD was a satellite member, sort of.
― dow, Tuesday, 1 March 2011 00:33 (fifteen years ago)
Also loads of 1960-1965 Manhattan in his memoir, The Motion of Light in Water.
I was just looking at the wiki for his next novel -- it's done, he's just having trouble finding a publisher. It was originally supposed to be published by Alyson Publications, but apparently they've gone under and he's back to shopping it around to publishers.
― WmC, Tuesday, 1 March 2011 01:49 (fifteen years ago)
Man, I'm just finishing up The Mad Man(took me 5 months wtf?! I've been busy). Insane book, really, but Delany really knows how to challenge and reward I think, just as you're becoming insensitive to some bloke shitting all over another blokes face whilst a group of other guys are jacking off all over the guy who is getting shitted on, he throws you a bone. Fantastic.
― historyyy (prettylikealaindelon), Sunday, 14 August 2011 13:24 (fourteen years ago)
try hogg next, then. no thrown bones in that one.
― king of torts (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Sunday, 14 August 2011 19:04 (fourteen years ago)
Finally reading Auden's Dyer's Hand, which is everything Motion of Light in Water made it out to be and more -- the secondhand quote that Delany gives from it is golden -- and really perfect for Motion..., which is one of my fav Delany books, and fav. works of literary autobiography full stop. There's so many scenes that I remember really clearly from it -- the pockets thing, for example!
― s.clover, Thursday, 18 August 2011 18:12 (fourteen years ago)
a tour of a planet from the other set of aliens (the Family?)
as i understand it, the sygn and family don't exactly work like this ... you might be reading it a bit too much like star trek. the sygn and the family are names for philosophies, not rigid political groups like the federation and klingons.
i forget whether it's the north or the south where humans and evelm don't get along, but in that half of the world you might say the family philosophy is predominant - you are a human first, or an evelm first, and you find strength in that mentality.
in the sygn communities you are a free thinking subject first, and you sort of choose your family or define it as you see it, and your identity (racial, gender, cultural, whatever) comes second.
― mr peabody (moonship journey to baja), Thursday, 18 August 2011 18:45 (fourteen years ago)
never read him, should I go?
http://www.welcometolace.org/events/view/screening-the-polymath-or-the-life-and-opinions-of-samuel-r-delany-gentleman/
― Jung Danjah (admrl), Thursday, 18 August 2011 18:46 (fourteen years ago)
he is one of my favorite authors and i found him really tedious. i posted a thread about going to see him, it was an awful experience. he mostly talked about discovering he was bisexual, how he got into cruising times square porn theatres, and the gradual erosion of our shared times square porn theatre cultural heritage.
if you are a bicurious or a queer theory grad student you might find it highly stimulating? but as a sci fi fan, or just for kicks, no.
― mr peabody (moonship journey to baja), Thursday, 18 August 2011 18:50 (fourteen years ago)
ok
― Jung Danjah (admrl), Thursday, 18 August 2011 18:51 (fourteen years ago)
. this is in part due to a bit which isn't particularly central to the thrust of the book in itself, that part in the opening section where rat (?) finds a mental implant that lets him read/experience the entire western canon in seconds
this *is* central to the thrust of the book itself
― mr peabody (moonship journey to baja), Thursday, 18 August 2011 18:52 (fourteen years ago)
he's one of martin skidmore's favorite authors. the guy doing martin's funeral service today read from something martin wrote about dhalgren, which i found really moving. it was martin's favorite book.
― TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Thursday, 18 August 2011 19:23 (fourteen years ago)
really want to hear sam delaney monologuing about cruising
― plax (ico), Thursday, 18 August 2011 21:39 (fourteen years ago)
i found it hard to follow because a lot of it was in reference to cruising scenes in post-70s delany i hadn't read.
― mr peabody (moonship journey to baja), Thursday, 18 August 2011 22:28 (fourteen years ago)
i really want to read some more delaney, when i was in america you could pick up cheap paperbacks by him really easily but over here he's p hard to come by
― plax (ico), Thursday, 18 August 2011 22:31 (fourteen years ago)
― plax (ico), Thursday, August 18, 2011
there's a whole book about this btw
― king of torts (strongo hulkington's ghost dad), Friday, 19 August 2011 01:04 (fourteen years ago)
yeah, baja's summary of the event sounds a lot like 'times square red, times square blue'
― thomp, Friday, 19 August 2011 01:21 (fourteen years ago)
that was the book!
― mr peabody (moonship journey to baja), Friday, 19 August 2011 01:42 (fourteen years ago)
I haven't read Times Square Red, Times Square Blue, but his book The Mad Man features a lot of cruising, the porn theatres are involved too, the book also documents the impact of AIDS on the gay community. The way Delany describes them, those porn theatres were really home to a kind of exchange and communication that is seldom seen nowadays, I'm not a queer theorist though.
― historyyy (prettylikealaindelon), Friday, 19 August 2011 11:54 (fourteen years ago)
that's the thesis of times square blue (which is the second half of 'times square red...', the first ('times square red', natch) being a memoir of them): that the sexual motivation to go into those locales actually underscored and expedited a whole raft of non-sexual contact up and down the social scale, & that in 'cleaning up' times square (& in similar efforts elsewhere) we're making movement lateral to one's class boundaries much less likely. i don't know in what form it creeps into the novel; never found a copy of 'the mad man'. (almost wrote 'mad men'.)
― thomp, Friday, 19 August 2011 12:00 (fourteen years ago)
I think that argument is certainly a big part of the mad man novel. I should really give times square red, time square blue a read.
― historyyy (prettylikealaindelon), Friday, 19 August 2011 12:23 (fourteen years ago)
http://www.thewaythefutureblogs.com/2010/11/chip-delany/http://www.thewaythefutureblogs.com/2011/01/chip-delany-part-2-the-miracle-of-dhalgren/
― Singularities Going Steady (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 31 March 2012 17:17 (fourteen years ago)
found a copy of 'the mad man'
― thomp, Sunday, 29 July 2012 19:02 (thirteen years ago)
nice! let us know how it is, i've never read it.
i've started on my draft of "the splendor and misery of bodies, of cities", brian herbert and kevin j anderson style
― the late great, Sunday, 29 July 2012 19:08 (thirteen years ago)
i'm at the part where rat and marq sneak into the xlv fleet and commandeer a stolen experimental fighter, it turns out that the rings of vondramach okk allow rat to interface w/ xlv biocomputers!
― the late great, Sunday, 29 July 2012 19:09 (thirteen years ago)
making movement lateral to one's class boundaries much less likely reminds me of Charlie Haden and others on living in 60s Lower East Side tenements, all those artists in dif genres and media in same bldgs--plus a lot of other characters--this way on into late 70s too
― dow, Monday, 30 July 2012 00:43 (thirteen years ago)
Not only easier to speak of, but it also has its real importance -- important enough so that when such encounters as the above three -- as opposed to any of the others I've described -- cease, one seeks out other cruising grounds. Several times since high school I've abandoned one area of the city for another, when forces I will never comprehend drive down the number of such accessible, satisfying exchanges, whose satisfaction is always, Sam, measured on a (or on several) scale(s) more complex than the sexual. Yet, in all cases, a dismal, gray and unresponsive ground is the incomprehensible template against which they occur, not throwing themselves into relief so much as providing a necessary obscurity to their outlines, making them bearable, even possible (making them hard of impossible for we who indulge in them to speak of in any terms save the sexual, even as they are, in their actuality, wholly social), in a world that largely denies they exist.
― thomp, Monday, 6 August 2012 21:00 (thirteen years ago)
which is to say that the mad man has its elements of elegy for the cruising scene too, though the action (structure?) of the novel is weirdly orthogonal to that.
-
― historyyy (prettylikealaindelon), Sunday, 14 August 2011 13:24 (11 months ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
this seems like a really weird way to be reading this. ('that movie deep throat really manages challenge and reward the viewer, it's amazing how much you want to get to the end of the next blowjob..')
(weird how the rhythms of pornography are still deducible, compelling even if it's pornography you find (abhorrent? not to your taste? well, maybe reading some-hundred pages of it is enough to make it more the latter and not the former) -- either that or i secretly long to have homeless new yorkers of the 80s excrete in my mouth -- delany's reliance on parentheticals is both contagious and compelling.
i read this over like 72 hours, which is the quickest i've read anything of equivalent .. length, density .. in a while.
want to say something about the intersection of different narrative styles (campus novel, detective novel) with the novel's pornotopia, also the different characters as different biographical displacements of delany, also the enjoyably (deliberately?) stilted moments of dialogue common to all delany's 'serious' work. on the other hand, don't want to burn myself out when i will probably start in the valley of the nest of spiders tomorrow
― thomp, Monday, 6 August 2012 21:28 (thirteen years ago)
I found a used paperback of The Mad Man in a store in Gainesville in 2001. In the SF section, natch. brought it home and discovered a $20 bill in the middle. Like you, thomp, I couldn't put the book down and read it in the course of a few days. There was an element of tourism I'm sure, as a straight male on the vanilla end of the spectrum, but that was far from the only driver. It really is an amazing book.
― Lewis Apparition (Jon Lewis), Tuesday, 7 August 2012 15:55 (thirteen years ago)
Mad ol' me, have an unread copy of this since since '07. Will get onto it ASAP.
― xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 7 August 2012 22:07 (thirteen years ago)
on the other hand, i flicked ahead to see quite how long the first truck stop bathroom sex scene in ...spiders goes on for, and put the book down, and haven't picked it up again yet.
― thomp, Thursday, 9 August 2012 10:57 (thirteen years ago)
(it goes on for a lot of pages.)
god i wish he'd finished splendor and misery, i liked stars in my pocket sooo much. i've been keeping my eyes peeled for more but there's only one used book store in town and the only time i went there i overheard the owner slumped over his computer and grumbling "goddamn fucking faggots" and i haven't been back.
only other book i've read was dhalgren. where should i go from there if i'm going to shell out some internet dollars?
― arby's, Monday, 13 August 2012 22:34 (thirteen years ago)
Triton, Driftglass (short story collection with his best short work), Tales of Neveryon, Nova. If you like ToN, there are three more volumes in that series.
I think I'm going to go ahead and buy Nest of Spiders now in the 1st edition. I read the missing chapter online and it's just a couple of pages. Plus, with Delany's bad luck with publishers lately, I worry they'll go out of business before they ever come out with another printing.
― Romney's Kitchen Nightmares (WmC), Monday, 13 August 2012 23:39 (thirteen years ago)
Not an expert either, but you might try Triton, Nova and The Complete Nebula Award-Winning Fiction of Samuel R. Delaney (compiled in miid-80s,good used copies easy to find online)Combined edition of two novels and two short stories which won the Nebula Award. Babel - 17 (winner, 1966 Nebula, 1995 James Tiptree, Jr. Award, Classics; nominated, 1967 Hugo Award; 1975 Locus Poll Award, All-Time Best Novel (Place: 36)); A Fabulous, Formless Darkness (original title The Einstein Intersection) (winner, 1967 Nebula Award; nominated, 1968 Hugo Award); Time Considered as a Helix of Semi-Precious Stones (winner, 1969 Nebula Award, 1970 Hugo Award); Aye, and Gomorrah (winner, 1967 Nebula Award; nominated, 1968 Hugo Award).
― dow, Monday, 13 August 2012 23:47 (thirteen years ago)
triton!
einstein intersection!
drift glass seconded.
― the late great, Monday, 13 August 2012 23:47 (thirteen years ago)
iirc there is a complete short sci fi that's sweet
― the late great, Monday, 13 August 2012 23:48 (thirteen years ago)
that's...a lotta stuff! thanks y'all. with school starting in a few weeks i'll scarcely read a thing for the next nine months :[
― arby's, Monday, 13 August 2012 23:50 (thirteen years ago)
Try the short stories when you can catch a breath, usually works for me
― dow, Tuesday, 14 August 2012 00:11 (thirteen years ago)
The Neveryon stuff is fucking great. Also, it starts out broken up into novella-like chunks which may aid in digestibility...
― Lewis Apparition (Jon Lewis), Tuesday, 14 August 2012 15:23 (thirteen years ago)
haven't read a word of this guy... saw him read from his Times Square nonfic book before a showing of an early '70s gay porn film tonight.
He's kinda bored by gay marriage. "Tolerance, not assimilation" is the key to advancing civilization, he said.
― playwright Greg Marlowe, secretly in love with Mary (Dr Morbius), Sunday, 7 July 2013 07:33 (twelve years ago)
every time this gets revived now i'm worried that he's ill or dead.
what was the film?
― the bitcoin comic (thomp), Sunday, 7 July 2013 07:43 (twelve years ago)
also is there another delany thread we alternate with because i swear i remember talking about all the piss-drinking in 'through the valley ...'
― the bitcoin comic (thomp), Sunday, 7 July 2013 07:56 (twelve years ago)
ask sam delany a question?
― WilliamC, Sunday, 7 July 2013 12:38 (twelve years ago)
ah yeah
― i better not get any (thomp), Sunday, 7 July 2013 15:02 (twelve years ago)
film was The Back Row
― playwright Greg Marlowe, secretly in love with Mary (Dr Morbius), Sunday, 7 July 2013 16:50 (twelve years ago)
I have no idea whether to recommend Delany to you, Morbs -- either the sf or the porn.
― WilliamC, Sunday, 7 July 2013 17:02 (twelve years ago)
If your mind has a mind to, maybe check one or even two of the threads about said book--both started by thomp, come back thomp:dhalgrenSTRANGER IN A STRANGE LAND, then DUNE and now, the major novel of love and terror at the end of time: DHALGREN, by Samuel Delany, four-time Nebula award winner (ilx book club #Y8554)
― dow, Monday, 30 March 2026 20:20 (two months ago)
I don't remember what I said about it, but I know that I enjoyed reading it in the early 80s, though wasn't surprised to further read that author and come back to it every now and then between other things, and now I wonder if it might be best read or re-read the same way, maybe at random, for a while anyway (maybe I'll try that). It's where I got off the bus (after digging Nova and Triton), missing a lot of good stuff, but now I'm starting to catch up, slowly.
― dow, Monday, 30 March 2026 20:29 (two months ago)
author *had* come back to it
Did you finish it, Aimless?
― dow, Monday, 30 March 2026 20:32 (two months ago)
A: those couple of things do not justify my reading 900 pages of it.
― more difficult than I look (Aimless), Monday, 30 March 2026 22:04 (two months ago)
Oops, sorry I didn't finish reading your post (not because it was boring; yours never are).
― dow, Monday, 30 March 2026 22:12 (two months ago)