home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- $0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0 CHEAP TRUTH 7 $0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0
-
- EDITORIAL. Magazines have an immediacy and recklessness unmatched by any
- other SF medium. Cheap, disposable, instantly gratifying, SF magazines are
- the thin edge of the genre's cultural wedge. And non-fiction magazines can
- help the SF writer and reader escape genre stereotypes and come to grips with
- the real social and technical issues of the human future. Welcome, then, to
- this special issue of CHEAP TRUTH On-Line, with the first installment of a
- new review section, "Squirming Mags."
-
- ** State of the Field **
-
- THE MAGAZINE OF FANTASY AND SCIENCE FICTION, Box 56, Cornwall, Conn.
- 06753. $17.50/yr. This splendid periodical, reputedly edited on Ed Ferman's
- kitchen table, shows the long-standing primacy of small-scale craftsmanship
- in the SF genre. Its standards are high, its overhead low, its distribution
- excellent. The genre offers no better arena for young writers. The pay is
- modest to the point of penury, but a well-placed F&SF story can attract more
- attention than a novel.
-
- F&SF is sometimes troubled by fantasies of a peculiarly matronly and
- suburban air. But F&SF is unafraid of relatively harsh language and radical
- concepts; and these often come to the rescue just as the reader is begging
- for insulin. A lively Books column struggles manfully for credibility and
- standards, and the Science column, though burdened by the increasing
- flakiness of Isaac Asimov, serves as a useful ideological anchor. F&SF's
- layout combines dignity and elegance. The covers excel, and the cartoons are
- funny. And at $6.50 the long-advertised F&SF T-shirts are a real bargain.
- They come in a vivid punk red and look great with the sleeves ripped out.
-
- ISAAC ASIMOV'S SCIENCE FICTION MAGAZINE, P. O. Box 1933, Marion, Ohio
- 43305. $19.50/yr. Hard-working editrix Shawna McCarthy now luxuriates in
- the well-deserved ambience of her first Hugo. With Herculean effort, she has
- diverted a river of new writers through the Augean stables of IASFM; and
- while there is still plenty of crap around, it no longer actually chokes the
- doorways. It is now possible to buy and read ASIMOV'S and find as many as
- three decent stories in a single issue.
-
- IASFM has always suffered from faanitis; it often cringingly
- genuflects to Neanderthal fan-letters. It also suffers from Dr. Asimov's own
- prolixity, for his prolificacy has now reached the terminal stage and he can
- write any amount of anything about nothing. IASFM still does not take its
- audience seriously, but at least it has stopped actively insulting it, and
- things are looking up.
-
- ANALOG SCIENCE FICTION/SCIENCE FACT, P. O. Box 1936, Marion Ohio
- 43306. $12/yr. ANALOG suffers from advanced hardening of the arteries; it
- has become old, dull, and drivelling. In an era of unparallelled
- sociotechnical ferment, ANALOG exudes the stale, mummylike odor of attitudes
- preserved too long. ANALOG's brain and heart are in canopic jars somewhere,
- while its contributors' word-processors spit out copy on automatic pilot. It
- is a situation screaming for reform. ANALOG no longer permits itself to be
- read.
-
- AMAZING SCIENCE FICTION STORIES, P. O. Box 72089-BL, Chicago, Ill
- 60609 $9/yr. The venerable AMAZING declines precipitously under the smug
- and tactless editorship of George Scithers. In late years it has steadily
- lost money, circulation, and influence, and it is currently surrounded by
- rumors of collapse. Only a complete change in editorial outlook, plus a
- sudden resurgence of intensity and quality throughout the genre, could save
- it now.
-
- INTERZONE, 370 Avocado Street, Apt. 1, Costa Mesa CA 92627 $10/yr.
- This British SF quarterly is rife with puzzling self-contradiction. It has
- the finest editorial ideology in the English-speaking world, bound
- cheek-by-jowl with stories often riddled with conceit and void of substance.
- Yet INTERZONE sustains hope with unpredictable bursts of appalling brilliance
- and a consistent improvement in design and layout. It is the only truly
- experimental SF magazine in the Anglophone market. Its ingenuously sincere
- editorial cadre have done what they can; INTERZONE's problems are
- symptomatic of much larger difficulties within the genre itself. INTERZONE's
- success depends on a general reform, which INTERZONE is bravely attempting to
- lead. It offers readers a unique sense of openness and risk. It truly
- deserves support.
-
- THE LAST WAVE, P. O. Box 3206, Grand Central Station, New York, NY
- 10163. $8/yr. This sad and awful effort, self-billed as "The Last Best Hope
- of Speculative Fiction," demonstrates with ghastly clarity the utter
- artistic bankruptcy of the '60's idiom. Its antiquarian writers hit
- unerringly on the worst of both worlds, combining the intellectual
- sluggishness of coda sci-fi with the self-satisfied pretension of would-be
- literateurs. THE LAST WAVE is dead in the water.
-
- OMNI, P. O. Box 5700, Bergenfield, N.J. 07621 $24/yr. This
- anomalous publication, the virginal daughter of Bob Guccione's porn empire,
- takes the prize for peculiarity. Though its rates are the best in the
- business, its stories are often ignored. Genre readers resent paying $2.50
- for one or two stories; while OMNI's "Boy Eats Own Foot" approach to science
- coverage makes its reportage highly suspect. OMNI's fiction is often
- excellent, but its power-mad art department has earned an unpleasant
- notoriety. Stories are trimmed to fit like styrofoam, occasionally withoyt
- authorial consultation; sometimes, incredibly, lines are even added. Stories
- often bristle with non sequiturs and over-edited jumpiness. OMNI's
- oppressive policies and slender output of fiction conspire to keep it out of
- the first rank.
-
- ** The Tech-Head's Workshop **
-
- SCIENCE (Journal of the American Association for the Advancement of
- Science) 1515 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W., Washington DC 20005 $56/yr.
- No one actually READS all of each weekly issue of SCIENCE. Research
- articles and papers are presented baldly, in painfully specialized
- vocabularies meant to preserve intellectual turf rather than to enlighten the
- layman. But close attention to the Letters, News and Comment, Editorials,
- and above all the astonishing and wonderful ADVERTISEMENTS brings a wealth of
- insight to the patient reader. SCIENCE is the tribal tom-tom of the nation's
- scientific/technical culture, a bizarre and very human world full of odd,
- passionate feuds and byzantine power-structures. It is a world worth
- knowing, and SCIENCE, though sometimes as oblique as PRAVDA, shows it like no
- other.
-
- SCIENCE 85 (same address, $18/yr.) This layman's magazine is the
- sister publication of SCIENCE. Its news coverage is authoritative and
- excellent, with fine graphics. But it often displays an irritating arrogance
- and condescension, and its annoyingly up-scale ads reek of East Coast
- yuppiedom. Genial essays and awful poetry sometimes fail to disguise its
- essential nature as an organ of propaganda.
-
- HIGH TECHNOLOGY, P. O. Box 358, Arlington, MA 02174 $21/yr. This
- peculiar and wonderful publication is the handmaiden of yet another
- subculture, that of the corporate investor and industrial entrepreneur.
- These hard-bitten souls are impatient with academic obfuscation, which means
- that HIGH TECH's articles are miracles of clarity. You'll find no gushing
- cosmic gosh-wowism here; just cool analyses and cash-on-the-barrelhead
- pragmatism. Ominous articles on high-tech weaponry take a prominent place,
- putting the American military-industrial complex into refreshingly stark
- relief. Strident editorials, unique advertisements, international scope, and
- relentless practicality make HT an invaluable and fascinating document.
-
- SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, P. O. Box 5919, New York N.Y. 10164 $24/yr.
- For generations, Americans have read SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN with a vague,
- gnawing sense of duty, in the earnest hope of intellectual betterment. And
- for generations this magazine has narcotized them with its cluttered prose
- and useless graphics. It's pretentious and dull and we deserve better.
-
- AMERICAN SCIENTIST, P. O. Box 2889, Clinton, Ohio 52735 $24/yr.
- This is the house journal of Sigma Xi, "The Scientific Research Society."
- Sigma Xi seems to be a clubbier, more personal group than the AAAS, and its
- articles are by members, who attempt to make the significance of their own
- work clear in relatively straightforward language. The intended audience is
- fellow scientists of different disciplines, rather than potential rivals for
- priority or funding. This distinguishes AM-SCI essays from SCIENCE papers,
- which are clearly intended to baffle outsiders, indoctrinate colleagues in
- in-group terminology, and stake irrefutable claims to particular
- sub-sub-disciplines. AMERICAN SCIENTIST is consequently much easier to read.
- It's a professional journal, however, not a popularizing work, which means
- that it comes with the marvelous specialized advertising that so often
- provokes the layman's sense of wonder.
-
- NEW SCIENTIST, 200 Meacham Avenue, Elmont, N.Y. 11003 $95/yr. This
- intriguing British weekly has a deliberately activist point of view, replete
- with wry comments on swaggering Yankees, Third World exploitation, and
- lavishly funded military boondoggles. NEW SCIENTIST is see as somewhat
- left-of-center by American standards. (With the American federal budget
- showing a 65% increase in "defense-related" R&D, a certain chumminess with
- the right-wing has become a bread-and-butter fact of life for batallions of
- Yank scientists.)
-
- This is only a smattering of the smorgasboard of journals, many of
- them newly founded, which exist to feed the technical curiosity of the new
- post-industrial readership. And these are for generalists. The explosion of
- specialized technical journals has given the world a new phenomenon:
- "information pollution." This is hazardous territory, best dealt with by
- computer. Theorists warn us that information is losing its value: it is
- ATTENTION TO INFORMATION that must be rationed and conserved.
-
- Technological literacy is crucial, but by no means ENOUGH. With NEW
- SCIENTIST, we find ourselves edging onto the slippery slope of Social and
- Political Issues. These journals, too, bizarre, outrageous, sometimes
- blackly humorous, deserve a segment of our overloaded attention. We will
- grapple with this topic in the second installment of "Squirming Mags."
-
- $0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$$0$0$0$0$$0$0$0$0$$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0
- CHEAP TRUTH On-Line 809-C West 12th Street, Austin, Texas 78701 U.S.A.
- NOT COPYRIGHTED. Vincent Omniaveritas, editing. Shiva the Destroyer,
- systems operation. "It is better to DO something than to BE someone"
- $0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0
-