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- CHEAP TRUTH 6
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- EDITORIAL. radical, hard SF
- seeing signs that something new is imminent ---
- new fiction from the bounty of new technology.
- /// the perspectives opened up by contemporary science fight back, using guerilla tactics
- new information systems f/a/s/h/i/o/n that new science fiction
- for the *electronic age*
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- ** ICE CRACKS UP WITH '83 BEST OF THE YEAR **
-
- THE YEAR'S BEST SCIENCE FICTION FIRST ANNUAL COLLECTION, Gardner
- Dozois, ed., Bluejay, $9.95.
-
- With this volume, Bluejay Books has delivered a stinging duellist's
- slap to the slack jowls of the anthology market. Bluejay's daring must be
- roundly applauded and they've come through with a real bug-crusher in this
- 575-page colossus.
-
- Veteran editor Gardner Dozois blithely ignores the stock list of Neb
- and Hugo nominees to give us work of genuine merit from the most esoteric of
- markets. The man's masochistic dedication to the genre -- he reads SF in
- truly industrial quantity -- has never been more in evidence. His opening
- Summation repays close reading for its quick-witted ideology and sagacious
- grasp of industry dynamics.
-
- The book is remarkable for its lack of clunkers. Even the worst
- stories here can be read with a straight face. The best can stand with
- anything written in the past ten years. More importantly, they show an
- earnest effort by '80's writers to scrap old formulas and speak in a modern
- vocabulary.
-
- Greg Bear serves as the exemplar. His two stories included here have
- won dual Nebulas, itself a very promising sign. As co-editor of the SFWA
- Forum, the man was in the heart of the beast, and his daring attempts to
- transcend his own limits are therefore doubly praiseworthy.
-
- His bizarre OMNI story of '82, "Petra," showed something odd stirring
- in the Bear attic. With "Hardfought" and "Blood Music," the man has thrown
- restraint to the winds.
-
- "Hardfought" may be thick with jargon and laden with annoying
- attempts at verse. But it burns with genuine visionary intensity and its
- Stapledonian daring arouses real wonder. This is what SF is about.
-
- "Blood Music" has a ludicrous plot and has filed the serial numbers
- from Sturgeon's "Microcosmic God." But Bear knows what to borrow, and the
- ending goes for broke. Bear's reckless energy has made him a writer to watch
- -- and to emulate.
-
- Efforts by more established writers show the effect of a real thaw.
- Silverberg's "Multiples" is one of his best in years: smooth, devastatingly
- plausible, a brilliant idea handled with great skill. Tanith Lee is at her
- unique best with "Nunc Dimittis," a dark fantasy that shimmers with
- necro-eroticism. R. A. Lafferty spryly tramples convention with a story from
- his splendid small-press collection, "Golden Gate." Lafferty has always been
- a cult figure. He will still be a cult figure a hundred years from now.
-
- Particularly heartening are the efforts of the " '80's Generation,"
- listed by Dozois as Bear, Cadigan, Gibson, Kelly, Kennedy, Kessel, Murphy,
- Robinson, Shiner, Sterling, Swanwick, and Willis -- surely one of the oddest
- groupings ever. Seven have stories here -- the rest figure prominently in
- the Honorable Mentions.
-
- If these heirs-designate were dropped into a strong magnetic field,
- Gibson, Shiner, Sterling, Cadigan and Bear would immediately drift to one
- pole. Swanwick, Robinson, Kessel, Kelly, Murphy and Willis would take the
- other.
-
- Leigh Kennedy goes her own goddamn way. Her story, "Her Furry Face,"
- demonstrates Kennedy's unique style: low-key, determined prose combined with
- an unflinching and peculiar vision. Reading Leigh Kennedy is like having
- your housecat show up with a small dead pterodactyl in its jaws.
-
- Pat Cadigan's "Nearly Departed" is a psi story, not overly burdened
- with technological literacy. But its tough-minded lack of sentiment keeps
- reader interest up.
-
- Bruce Sterling's "Cicada Queen" shows this ambitious writer manfully
- wrestling with this complex Mechanist/Shaper future society. It should have
- been a novel, and apparently will be.
-
- No review could be complete without a mention of Jack Dann's "Blind
- Shemmy." This story is so sharp-edged that it ought to be read with forceps.
-
- Altogether, Dozois' collection is excellent, both for what it is and
- for what it promises. Its Summation and thorough list of Honorable Mentions
- are worth the price in themselves. Winter is over -- prepare for spring
- cleaning.
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- ** S F: A R h a p s o d y. After Swift **
-
- All Human Beings would be Rich,
- So many scratch where all must itch;
- Though few will ever find a Cure
- Except through CRIME or LUCK; and your
- Best chance for Wealth is to inherit.
- For those who have no skill or merit
- A WRITER'S LIFE holds most attraction --
- Requiring neither Mind nor Action.
-
- The hack chews shreds of Literacy
- To nourish those less read than he
- (Thus we define Democracy).
- If even this prove uninviting,
- There's always Science Fiction writing;
- Or baser still, if this he scorns,
- He'll churn out stuff on UNICORNS,
- Assured there is in Magazine,
- Can spot the difference between
- A future possibility
- And rankest ancient Phantasy.
-
-
- The SF Field! O, sore disgrace!
- Where Dunces fight for bottom Place,
- All forced to exercise their Spleen,
- They're in such odious Comp'ny seen,
- Where every mental Deviation
- Is praised as true Imagination.
- If on Parnassus' top you sit,
- You rarely bite, are often bit:
- Conversely, in Parnassus' ditch,
- There's nothing but to BOAST and BITCH
- As brother turns on savage brother
- (e'en while they plagiarise each other)
- As, writhing in low eminence,
- They cannot make their Tales make sense.
-
-
- Their failures clog the lists of DAW,
- Del Rey, Ace Books, Avon, and Tor,
- Where copywriters gild their sins
- With "Greater Tolkiens", "New LeGuins",
- "Beats Arthur Clarke", "Equal to Niven"
- -- As if that awful thought were Heaven! --
- Or "Starrier Wars"... And Sturgeon there,
- Here Budrys, "Masterpiece" declare,
- "Not to be missed...." Such feeble lies
- Support a feebler enterprise
- Of Royalties at 4%
- Which scarcely serve to pay the rent
- -- Or keep a Mistress in a Tent! --
- Yet still these hacks are overpaid!
-
-
- Such fools will never make the grade.
- They have no Style, no Spark, no Topic.
- Their very Pains are Microscopic.
- Although they holler for attention
- In Fanzine, LOCUS, and Convention,
- With Asinine Insistence --
- The World knows not of their Existence,
- The World hears not their Lamentation,
- And holds SF in... Detestation....
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- CHEAP TRUTH On-Line 809-C West 12th Street Austin, Texas 78701
- Vincent Omniaveritas, editing. NOT COPYRIGHTED. Our special thanks this
- issue to Thomas C. Squire, C.B.E., Lecturer in Future Culture at The
- University of Texas at Austin. "Worthless But Not Valueless"
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