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- EDITORIAL. Read more fanzines. "Get Into Print"
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- CHEAP TRUTH stalwart Sue Denim sharpens her lance and charges the windmill:
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- ** REAL SF FANS DON'T READ PRIEST **
-
- There's a saying: "REAL programmers don't eat quiche... they eat
- Twinkies and Szechuan food." This kind of junk-food mentality is true of
- your typical SF fan, too. Your REAL SF fan doesn't read Priest. He doesn't
- read Dick or Ballard, either. He reads David Brin and Larry Niven and Anne
- McCaffrey. Junk food for the brain.
-
- And what's more, he's proud of it. He holds his head high so the
- light will catch his coke-bottle glasses, hoists his basketball gut, and,
- with the odor of Twinkies on his breath, tells you, "I'm SPECIAL. It takes a
- special kind of person to appreciate this stuff."
-
- And the hell of it is, every so often something that really IS
- special comes along in a junk-food wrapper. Like a granola bar, or maybe
- chicken cordon bleu on a bun -- it looks like junk food, tastes like junk
- food, but it's actually got real nutrition in it. This year we're lucky --
- we've had a couple of rich, vitamin-packed granola bars already, and at least
- one of them is being scarfed down by junk-food addicts everywhere.
-
- Certainly they like the taste of NEUROMANCER (by William Gibson, an
- Ace Special, $2.95 (Gollancz L 8.95)). I mean, this is high-tech enough to
- satisfy the most acned sixteen-year-old hacker whose only sex life is getting
- his modem on-line with an X-rated bulletin board. Never mind that it shows
- you how the future may very well BE, never mind the political issues, this
- guy knows what it's like the be plugged IN, man.
-
- But that's okay. Literature, the really good stuff, has a way of
- changing your thinking whether you want it to or not.
-
- But let's talk about our other granola bar for a minute. You see,
- the problem with this kind of literature is it's got a short shelf life. A
- book that comes out in September might as well have a little printed squib on
- the back that says "Best if enjoyed before November 1," like you see on bags
- of Twinkies, because in no time at all it's going to be gone.
-
- You may already have trouble finding THE DIGGING LEVIATHAN (by James
- P. Blaylock, Ace, $2.95). You probably passed it by the first time because
- you weren't interested in some Edgar Rice Burroughs pastiche, or because it
- looked like a kid's book. I suppose it IS a kid's book, at least in the
- sense that Jim, the main protag, is only 15 -- but then Daniel Pinkwater's
- LIZARD MUSIC is a kid's book, and you shouldn't miss that one either.
-
- What makes this book special is its integrity. Blaylock refused to
- humiliate his characters for the sake of a cheap laugh, quite an achievement
- when those characters are a bunch of lunatic pseudo-scientists trying to get
- to Pellucidar. This isn't Burroughs' junk-food Pellucidar with the dinosaurs
- and all, though -- this is the 'real thing,' the hollow earth written about
- by countless other nutcases over the years.
-
- These people get so real that it's scary. We see them at their
- Newtonian Society meetings and in the backyard workshop where they are
- training mice to be amphibians. But we also see Jim's father William raging
- in paranoia at a neighbor's dog, even, in one of the book's most brilliant
- scenes, at a tube of toothpaste.
-
- Blaylock's best trick, though, is the way he draws you in so deeply.
- When William looks in the mirror, the readers see their own faces.
-
- When you finish this book, give it to somebody who likes Twinkies --
- but don't tell them it's good for them. You don't want to scare them
- off.
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- ** CLARKE: A SOCIAL STUDY **
-
- Arthur C. Clarke's latest book is 1984: SPRING, a nonfiction
- collection of essays, articles and speeches of varying consequentiality.
- Many are simply filler, the genial time-marking of a dean of letters. The
- flyleaf lists fifty-four Clarke books, and anyone familiar with them will
- find that little has changed. Clarke's personal credo was set many decades
- ago.
-
- Some critics have been less than kind to Clarke and his thinking. "A
- two-dementional space-jockey rationalist, a libration away from mysticism"
- was Bob Black's memorable phrase. But Clarke's millenial scientism
- peculiarly fits the spirit of the age. And if the dizzy 1980's fit Clarke as
- well, then it is partly his own doing. To a great extent he has CREATED the
- brand of visionary technolatry that is our era's broadest streak of optimism.
-
- His visions -- 'prophecies' is not too strong a word -- have been
- spread across the planet in twenty million books in thirty languages. The
- movie 2001, alone, set Clarchetypes into the backbrains of millions.
- Astronauts joined NASA because of Clarke's books. COSMONAUTS read him. His
- influence on mass culture ranks with that of H. G. Wells, and has possibly
- surpassed it.
-
- Clarke is a political and social activist. The originator of the
- communications satellite. The winner of the UNESCO Kalinga Prize. The
- Chancellor of Moratuwa University in his adopted home, Sri Lanka. The man
- behind the revolutionary suggestion that the United Nations create its own
- spy satellite system. (The instant rejection of this notion by both
- superpowers strikingly confirms its essential soundness.)
-
- And then there is Clarke the media celebrity. Host of a television
- series. Consider the recent OMNI commercial, in which Clarke, on a deserted
- beach, presides over mystic door-frames opening onto star-speckled cosmic
- vistas. This is his folk-mystique in its purest form: Clarke as pop icon,
- the horn-rimmed Gandalf of the spaceways.
-
- Clarke might seem to be a multifaceted, divided man, but this is
- illusion. Clarke is whole; it is our culture that is divided.
-
- More than any other SF writer, Clarke truly lives in the interzone
- between science and literature. His career has been a deliberate struggle to
- make this no-man's-land a place worth living and working in. And he has made
- both sides respect him on his own terms.
-
- When all is said and done, the social role he has created may be his
- most important legacy. Few will ever fill it, for few have his gifts or
- intellectual stature. But those who do will find their way smoothed by the
- precedent he has set.
-
- Clarke's success was no accident. He pursued fame quite
- deliberately, with a set ambition he has followed for years.
-
- Clarke has always portrayed his decision to live in Sri Lanka as a
- dreamer's romantic gesture. But one wonders. It made him a large frog in a
- small pond, giving him a scope and influence he could never have had in a
- larger, industrial nation. It removed him from the centers of publishing,
- with their subtly destructive practicalities. It allowed him to pursue both
- his hobbies, and his muse, without distractions. And it erased his
- parochiality, giving him the global view that is one of his most attractive
- attributes.
-
- Such hardheaded ambition may seem out of character for this gentle
- and donnish man. But the evidence is there. Consider THE SANDS OF MARS,
- written in 1957. It is utterly dated now -- all except for the role of its
- protagonist, Martin Gibson.
-
- Gibson is an internationally famous British SF writer of an
- extrapolated 1990's. He has the sort of bestseller status and critical
- attention that must have seemed pure fantasy to Clarke's fellow SF scribes of
- the '50's. Gibson writes "novels of space travel" and popular science
- journalism. He begins as almost a figure of fun: fussy, overimaginative,
- constantly teased by arrogant know-it-all technicians. But as the book
- develops, Gibson's role becomes crucial: the role of the man in the middle,
- the irreplaceable interpreter, between powerful but mute scientists and an
- equally powerful but ignorant lay public.
-
- The book ends with Gibson's mystic vision of his own future:
- political power, a role of leadership in a new world. "For the first time,
- Gibson knew what lay at the end of the road on which he had now set his feet.
- One day, perhaps, it would be his duty, and his privilege, to take over....
- It might have been sheer self-deception, or it might have been the first
- consciousness of his own still hidden powers -- but whichever it was, he
- meant to know."
-
- It was Clarke's autobiography -- in the extrapolative mode.
-
- As an artist, Clarke may have little to teach the gifted hot-shots
- who are his successors. But those who chafe at the confines of our ghetto --
- those who know that SF is more important to our world than it has ever been
- allowed to be -- have a lot to learn from the canny old Sage of Ceylon.
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