
Friday June 10, 2005
time travel notes [cont]
[continuing to read and reflect on langford's white dwarf reviews
collected in
the complete critical assembly]
feb 84 review mentions herbert and ransom's the lazarus effect as
enjoyable, good average SF, neither unputdownable nor unpickupable.
langford says jesus incident [previous book] is fairly awful. i do
not know. the first book was destination: void which i liked
enough to read twice in one year, and i did pick up the late sequels.
for whatever reason [awfulness sense?], i could never get into jesus
incident so both books in sequence remain unread to this day, in one of
the back rows of my double-packed sf shelves. sigh. this reminds me: some
of herbert's non-dune sf, eg. saratoga barrier, dosadi experiment
etc. have been re-released by TOR. [never mind links. i would visit my
local sf bookstore for these, eg. Incomparable bakka in toronto.]
july 84 review has gardner's wheels, life and other mathematical
amusements and dewdney's planiverse. i think i had a copy of the
first one and second one was always in the list of books i would pick
up if i ever find it remaindered. [i also keep waiting for a definitive
gardner encyclopedia of all his sciam columns. i have his
wonderful colossal book of mathematics and his lesser known but
very thoughtful the whys af a philosophical scrivener - thanks henry]
aug 84 review mentions deadeye dick, my introduction to kurt vonnegut,
even though usual starting points seem to be sirens of titan,
cat's cradle or bluebeard. after the shooting incident (hence
deadeye) i just could not put it down.
kurt vonnegut's deadeye dick makes it as near-sf by
including the neutron-bombing of a US city, but is chiefly
a straight tragicomedy of power, responsibility and the awful
things we do to each other.
[i absolutely detest those "V" cover designs of dell's reissued vonnegut trade
pbks. literary giants should not be handed off to unimaginative
amateurs. an undergrad can program a robot to design better.]
sep 84 reviews pohl's heechee rendezvous which i think is still (after all
these years) in one of my to be read someday boxes. of course pohl's
gateway and beyond the blue event horizon were favorites, so i am
not sure why i never got around to reading the last book in the trilogy.
langford also reviews james p. hogan's voyage from yesteryear which
i read at least a couple of times.
background is presented in stodgy lectures, most readers will skip
the one on physics occupying most of chapter 24. solid and quite worthy
stuff, but practically devoid of characterization.
oct 84 reviews get into some of the best sf reading for me in those days:
benford's across the sea of suns, [the sequel to in the ocean of night]
and his against infinity. benford is one of my scientist/writer heroes;
i think by now i have everything he has ever published, including
the recent reissues of the galactic center series in preparation for
another (last?) book in that series. [i first came across benford
through his collaboration with brin in the heart of the comet and picked
up all his other books]
gregory benford's across the sea of suns is a fat, impressive
demonstration that one can do ultra-'hard' sf with every rivet placed
just so, and still write well.
indeed, every benford book is just such a demonstration.
[to be continued]
(2005-06-10 14:22:27.0)
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