Thread of Wonder, the next 5000 posts: science fiction, fantasy, speculative fiction 2021 and beyond

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Charles Platt - An Accidental Life volume 4

This book stops at 1990 and I don't think he will write any more because his involvement with science fiction is much smaller after that point (to be honest I'm not sure how much I'd enjoy a book about his time at Wired magazine, even though they seem to be some of his happiest years, but I would try to read it if he eventually does write it, I'd like to know about his prehistoric novels he written as Charlotte Prentiss).
This is my favorite book in the series. Platt gets addicted to computers, involved with cryonics and there's a lot about his meetings with most of the famous cyberpunks, especially his friendship with Bruce Sterling.
Harlan Ellison, Susan Wood, Jerry Pournelle and Arthur Byron Cover get violent. Platt writes his favorite novels and tries to write a Warhammer book. Lots of fun little stories about people in science fiction, nice photos of them hanging out.

A big part of my reason for reading this series is trying to figure Platt out. I still don't understand a lot of his opinions. He criticizes a lot of SF for having a lack of rigor/explanation but praises Ballard for not explaining much and he likes Marvel superheroes! He doesn't like horror but he loves Stephen King and has quite a morbid imagination. He offers very little reasoning for disliking french people so much. Why did he make his porn videogame sound so controversial? It looks pretty standard, there's hundreds of games like that today and it even looked quite classy by comparison, especially for a game in the 80s (looked like Uno Moralez!)
I think I understand Andre Norton's complaints about how Platt was portraying her in the early drafts of their interview, perhaps she didn't want to look like a nice cozy granny next to younger, more radical writers.

I don't know how defensible it was but I thought his prank on Lewis Shiner and Bruce Sterling was brilliant and funny.

I want to read his Patchin Review collection and then Silicon Man and Free Zone when I can, probably some others too.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Saturday, 2 March 2024 20:35 (one month ago) link

Wondering if I should try Shadrach in the Furnace

The Ginger Bakersfield Sound (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 3 March 2024 00:52 (one month ago) link

two weeks pass...

Did we ever discuss this historical dictionary of sf?
https://sfdictionary.com/view/1090/pocket-universe

Don’t Want to Say Goodbye Jumbo (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 17 March 2024 02:26 (one month ago) link

Although I lurked on I Love Music for a long time, I didn't look beyond that sub and only recently joined ilxor.

I look forward to reading this thread, as well as those that preceded it.

Although it has been many years since I read Armor, I am surprised that a search of this website for John Steakley turned up zero results, as I enjoyed the book back then.

What was I missing?

BriefCandles, Thursday, 21 March 2024 03:01 (one month ago) link

never heard of it/him, but i am confident that james redd can weigh in

mookieproof, Thursday, 21 March 2024 03:15 (one month ago) link

Thanks for the quick response!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armor_(novel)

I will try to weigh in on other favourites as well...

BriefCandles, Thursday, 21 March 2024 03:36 (one month ago) link

never heard of it/him, but i am confident that james redd can weigh in

Ha, thanks but no clue

Make Me Smile (Come Around and See Me) (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 21 March 2024 04:00 (one month ago) link

Although I have never read it, as I am not a vampire fan, Steakley's other novel "Vampire$" was adapted into a movie starring James Woods...

BriefCandles, Thursday, 21 March 2024 04:04 (one month ago) link

Currently (re)reading the Fionavar Tapestry by Guy Gavriel Kay. I'm in the middle of The Wandering Fire, which is the second book.

Although I had previously read Kay's Tigana and thoroughly enjoyed it, I was always more of a SciFi fan, and despite being Canadian, I was originally offput by the first novel being set in 1980s Toronto.
"
That said, this trilogy is a nice mix of Arthurian legend, high fantasy and "modern" day (80s) fiction.

A solid 8/10 for me.

BriefCandles, Thursday, 21 March 2024 04:24 (one month ago) link

i like the fionavar series a lot; there are Consequences

wouldn't say the first one is set in toronto any more than the first narnia book is set in england

mookieproof, Thursday, 21 March 2024 04:36 (one month ago) link

Recently read my first K.W. Jeter, Mantis: rude, speedy hyperfocus of ov narrator who has just discovered the joy of typing on his first 1980s computer (green words on black screen, whirling away as he shuts it down, coming back when he does), hovering anxiously over the latest nightly escapes of his schizoid brain child (also has a daylight sperm-egg child and ex-wife who still cares about him, and vice-versa). These last provide welcome change, also the narrator has a downstairs neighbor somewhat like Jeter's buddy PKD, but mainly this mines a narrow vein among nerves, if w/o that 80s "splatter" horror effect---planty stanky though, in cold sweat way. Violence against certain women, the ones who supposedly seek it out. However, there's a twist at the end (with another implied).
Ugh, but it's usually not that hard to read, at least for (old male) me. Would like to see Jeter's talent and skill applied otherwise. May read his one Star Wars bounty hunter books that the local library still has

dow, Friday, 22 March 2024 03:25 (one month ago) link

"books" got in there because was thinking of Jeter's Star Wars bounty hunter trilogy---may have been more, but that's what the library used to have (think he's also written at least one Star Trek tie-in)(and SF Encyclopedia says that he seems to have been the first to use "steampunk" in print, re what he and Blaylock etc. were doing).

dow, Friday, 22 March 2024 03:32 (one month ago) link

two weeks pass...

Sharon Green died two years ago but her obituary only appeared recently in Locus because she must have been distant from the SFF scene

Robert Adam Gilmour, Saturday, 6 April 2024 17:57 (three weeks ago) link

three weeks pass...

recently been looking at SF anthologies over the last 40 years -- mostly gardner dozois, but a few others as well

dozois took it upon himself, in the intros, to opine on the State of SF each year. i haven't fully read them -- they're extremely lengthy -- but based on the introductory paragraphs i'd break them down as such:

55% THIS WAS A TERRIBLE YEAR AND SCIENCE FICTION IS DOOMED
25% THIS WAS AN OKAY YEAR, BUT THERE ARE STORMS ON THE HORIZON
20% SCIENCE FICTION RULES AND ANYONE WHO DOUBTS ITS STAYING POWER IS A CLOWN

mookieproof, Sunday, 28 April 2024 04:03 (four hours ago) link

tbf he apparently felt that his core audience was SF Magazine Publishers, and they really were ultimately doomed

mookieproof, Sunday, 28 April 2024 04:10 (four hours ago) link


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