Friday, May 17, 2013
Shiva Dances
Sunday, March 24, 2013
Touring the stars with Myron and friends
Ports of Call
Jack Vance
Fiction 300 pages
Tor, 1998
Lurulu
Jack Vance
Fiction 204 pages
Tor, 2004
Myron Tany longs to visit other worlds. When the opportunity arrives at last, he readily agrees to captain his great-aunt’s space yacht. When she strands him on Dimmick, he demonstrates the resourcefulness typical of Jack Vance heroes—he joins the crew of a space freighter.
Now Myron begins the series of minor adventures that fill out Ports of Call and its sequel Lurulu. While some Vance stories are filled with adventure and danger, others are closer to a P. G. Wodehouse’s comedy of manners. This story is one of those.
Although Myron Tany is the central character, the books are not entirely about his doings. Their episodes also involve the ship’s crew members and its passengers. In the end, two themes emerge: 1) lurulu, an undefinable state of self-realization and contentment, and 2) the friendship of the freighter’s four crew members.
When Vance wrote these stories, he was well into his older years and had already lost his eyesight. The two books are uniquely Vance, however their characters are not the plucky heroes of earlier Vance novels. Myron is unexciting and conventional, yet displays enough wanderlust to join a ship’s crew. The other crewmembers are neither dashing nor daring, except perhaps Fay Schwatzendale, who compensates for his good looks with his cautious and skeptical manner.
Vance, himself, spent time on freighters. And while his freighters plied the seas, rather than the stars, Vance experienced his share of distant customs and vistas. He lived and wrote abroad with his wife during various periods. Some of the exotic customs which make their way into Vance’s fiction may be parodies of customs he encountered abroad. In his autobiography, Vance describes of a port in Chile where the strict enforcement of laws parallels their enforcement on one of Lurulu’s worlds. In many of his novels, Vance tells the story through a single perspective. Here he employs the perspectives of multiple characters of varying ages. These are books to be sipped rather than gulped.
The two women who play important parts in these books include Myron’s great aunt and the captain’s mother. Aunt Hester is depicted as vindictive and vain, while the captain’s mother is frivolous, vain, and senile. Both refuse to let go of their youth, and one wonders if they may have been modeled after some of Vance’s contemporary female acquaintances. Another elderly character, Moncrief, is a showman who manages to muster enough of youth’s second wind to hold his troupe together. Unlike the captain’s mother, or Aunt Hestor, Moncrief demonstrates the possibility of aging with dignity.
Wednesday, March 13, 2013
Amazon – It’s a jungle out there
The Martian Chronicles
Ray Bradbury
Fiction 256 pages
Simon & Schuster; Reprint edition. 2012
Out of curiosity, I looked up Ray Bradbury’s, “The Martian
Chronicles” on Amazon. I read it as a child and enjoyed it immensely. However,
even then, I could spot Bradbury’s inconsistencies and deviations from his
basic milieu. Still, there are those who consider it a classic, so I looked.
This book, published in 1950, includes stories published
during the later portion of the 1940s. That explains the
inconsistencies—Bradbury didn’t set out to write a book. It emerged from his
stories. Actually, that’s part of its charm. The Mars in one story isn’t quite
the same as the Mars in another. And, there’s no great effort to be scientific.
That’s not what Bradbury is about.
The book has 391 reviews and well over half of those display
five stars. However, I was more interested in the nine one star reviews and
perhaps a few of the twos. Two of the one star reviews, and at least five of
the two star reviews, were written by A
Customer—amazingly all on the same day. It makes one wonder how many Amazon
accounts A Customer has, or perhaps
multiple people use that handle and write reviews at the same time.
Two of the reviewers found Bradbury’s language graphic
and/or offensive. At least three reviewers found the book dull. One called it
far-fetched and another said it was the “worst non-fiction book i ever read.” Did he mean to write science fiction?
After reading some of the reviews, I’ve come to several
conclusions: 1) some people don’t proofread, 2) some people are offended by
1950s era profanity, 3) some people found the book dull. Regarding the second
two conclusions, I further conclude: 1) some people don’t see many movies, at
least not those without G ratings, and 2) if you prefer science fiction with
more special effects, you should probably stick to movies.
Before Amazon, books didn’t get 391reviews. That’s because
there were only a handful of people with literary credentials available to
write them. Now you don’t need literary credentials to write a review. There’s
been a revolution and the people have taken the power from the critics. There
are good aspects to the democratization of opinion. However, without experts to
tell us what to like, we may sink to the depths of bad taste. Therefore, we
still need literary critics, unless something high-minded emerges to take their
place. Luckily, civilization generally survives temporary lapses of good taste.
Among its advantages, Amazon, provides a path to publishing
that some authors would not otherwise have. It also provides a platform for
hacks and lack wits. Still, there are some self-published gems out there. There
are also thousands of me-too opinions, uneducated opinions, and trolls lurking
about. In fact, it’s a jungle—so one must tread carefully. In time, the jungle
will become more manageable. Let’s just hope it isn’t destroyed in the process.
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