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- 0$0$0$$0$0$0$0$0$0 CHEAP TRUTH 9 $0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0
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- EDITORIAL. Ghettos are insular places. The antics of ghetto elders or
- sinister youth gangs may assume absurd importance to a degraded and indigent
- populace. In their wretched haste to eke out a living, they may forget that
- the outside world exists.
-
- This is modern SF's predicament. Extrapolations, that once held some
- intellectual validity, have now become distorted folk tales, passed down
- through generations. SF's vision of the future has become a Punch and Judy
- show, ritualized, predictable, and fit only for children.
-
- This is not due to latter-day decadence. It is the result of a
- profound terror of the future and what it holds, a fin-de-millenaire
- obsession with apocalypse. Reader and author alike wrap themselves in
- escapist nonsense, quilted up from rags and tatters of jingoist imperial
- Americana or the comfortable minutiae of technical obsession.
-
- Yet this represents a profound abdication of SF's role in society.
- It is as if the scouts of a panic-stricken army had retreated to an obscure
- corner of camp.
-
- Attempts to actually go out and survey the territory are dismissed
- out of hand: too difficult, too dangerous, too depressing. Too much hard
- work. It's easier to exploit the panic: either by addiong to it with the
- latest gray dystopia, or by preying on the terror of a demoralized readership
- by offering cathartic power fantasies.
-
- To survive and revitalize itself, SF must find new visions of the
- human future. Never mind that 40-year-old crap about atomic armageddon. If
- we can't see any farther than that, then we will have added to the apathy and
- fatalism that are the allies of destruction.
-
- Think of it as an act of self-preservation. In the case of any
- profound disruption of society, our snug little ghetto will be the first to
- go. It's up to us to look for ways out. If not us, who?
-
- As a first step in this daunting and worthy task, CHEAP TRUTH offers
- the following guideposts in the
- wilderness.
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- ** SQUIRMING MAGS: Second Installment **
-
- ** Social and Political Issues **
-
- AFKAR INQUIRY, 55 Banner Street, London EC1Y 8PX. Single issues
- US$2.50, UK80p. Perhaps the first order of business is to destroy our
- preconceptions and few magazines could be better fitted for that than AFKAR.
- Imagine an English-language magazine by radical fundamentalist Islamic
- FUTURISTS. Essays on Koranic epistemology alternate with analyses of Alvin
- Toffler and solar-age, small-is-beautiful manifestos. The upshot is little
- short of staggering: defiant, militant, self-contradictory, blazing with
- dangerous energies. Those who think of the Muslim Resurgence as a vaguely
- comic medieval anomaly should read this post-haste. AFKAR is a mix of
- mosques and monorails, AK-47s and Arab satellites, a propaganda organ for a
- new intelligentsia, who fancy themselves the avant-garde for an OPEC-financed
- global Islamic rebirth. Their writers are smart, fluent, furiously angry,
- and fanatically determined to build a future "neither East nor West." They
- mean business.
-
- SOUTH, The Magazine of the Third World, Suite 319, 230 Park Avenue,
- NYNY 10169, US$28/yr.; also 13th Floor, New Zealand House, 80 Haymarket,
- London SW1Y 4TS. The US media ignore Third Worlders unless they're either
- starving, or shooting Americans. Yet the curves of demographics and economic
- growth prove that the developing nations will wield an ever-growing influence
- in years to come. This is an excellent magazine, authoritative,
- well-written, with superior graphics. It covers Third World politics,
- finance, technology, and the arts, always with mind-opening perspectives. It
- is neither militant nor Marxist, yet doesn't cater to comfortable Yankee
- prejudice. Highly recommended.
-
- WORLD PRESS REVIEW, Box 915, Farmingdale, NY 11737, $19.95/yr. WPR
- is a summary of "news and views from the foreign press," most of them devoted
- to nervous assessments of what the rest of the world thinks of the US.
- "Moscow Beat" and "Asia/Pacific Beat" are especially intriguing. Its
- interest in economic issues gives it a forecaster's outlook useful to
- investors, speculators -- and extrapolators.
-
- WHOLE EARTH REVIEW, 27 Gate Five Road, Sausalito, CA 94965, US$18/yr.
- This periodical, formerly COEVOLUTION QUARTERLY, has gone through a
- marvelous sea-change. From tired old '60's tech hippies they have now become
- shiny new '80's hip techies, a much more palatable breed. They have
- published THE WHOLE EARTH SOFTWARE CATALOG, possibly the best book ever
- written for the layman about the promise and peril of personal computers.
- Even the earnest, dirt-stained, denim CQ was always good for a shot of uplift
- and optimism; now, equipped with red-hot com technology, they are like
- hardened jungle guerillas suddenly armed with Stealth bombers. These Green,
- eco-decentralist cadres may have underestimated the opposition in their
- struggle to create a sustainable, humanized society. But they suddenly have
- a big new chunk of loose change and a new constituency revolted by recent
- callous excesses against the environment. Exciting things are going to come
- from this magazine, and though their utopian schemes will almost certainly
- fail they will have a strong role in shaping the future.
-
- THE PLANETARY REPORT (journal of The Planetary Society) 110 S.
- Euclid Avenue, Pasadena CA 91101 (available with membership). A very
- interesting ideological struggle is taking shape within this slim little
- propaganda mag. The Planetary Society is Carl Sagan's pressure group for
- space exploration. The civilian scientific intelligentsia behind this
- publication are apparently nauseated by military ambitions in space. They
- have opened their membership to Soviet space scientists, thereby gaining in
- their last issue an incredible coup of previously unreleased Venusian surface
- photos. With the recent "nuclear winter" flap, Sagan and his ideological
- allies have gone to the barricades against what they perceive as
- crypto-Christian jingoistic Neanderthals in high office. Rarely do
- scientists speak out with this kind of media savvy, and they appear to have
- struck a chord. These people are not to be underestimated, despite their
- painful habit of talking down to their audience and their occasional excesses
- in mystic scientism (of the "Our DNA Must Reach The Stars" variety). And if
- their privately financed radiotelescope Search for ExtraTerrestrial
- Intelligence, by some cosmic mischance, should happen to deliver, well, all
- bets are off.
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- We now yield the floor to a worthy comrade in the globe-spanning
- network of CHEAP TRUTH shills. Leaping from ambush behind the smoking office
- xerox, it's that two-fisted voice of reason, Your Friendly Editor, Mark
- Theroux.
-
- ** GRIPE TIME **
-
- You people out there think that all science fiction editors do is
- talk on the phone, go to lunch, and attend conventions. Not so. Large
- amounts of time are spent coddling and placating writers who want to know
- "when are you going to run my stuff," "do you think anyone will like it?",
- "I'm stuck in the middle...." etc. (You know who you are.)
-
- That's okay, it's what we're here for. What editors hate is
- ungratefulness. Take for example the author with whom I spend hours of ofice
- time going over a ms that had potential. I felt sorry for the writer because
- he was only in town for a few days. I liked the story and it was a slow day.
-
- The rewrite didn't work and I rejected the story. Never got a
- thanks. Next time I heard of that writer he's making a big public stink.
-
- Or how about the writer who asked for, BEGGED for editorial comments
- on his ms. I wrote a three-page editorial letter, single-spaced, made
- suggestions, and what did I get back? A two-page personally and
- professionally insulting harangue criticising my solicited comments.
-
- Another time, I asked someone for a change in the beginning of a
- story. The author said sure. I got back the ms with the same beginning but
- with a different ending (worse than the original). I'm convinced that some
- writers cannot hear what editors say (and you know who YOU are, too.)
-
- Or how about the writers whose prose cannot be TOUCHED without
- permission. Don't change a comma, period, colon or misspelling -- or else!
-
- I don't care how long you've been writing or how famous you are, you
- can't be objective about your own work. Stephen King is a prime example.
- Yeah, he's successful, but boy, does he need an editor. Someone who can spot
- the inconsistencies, the repetition, the lapses of logic in plot or
- characterization. Editors aren't trying to destroy your words, your
- thoughts, or your reputations, you paranoid idiots. They're trying their
- damnedest to make a good piece of work better, a potentially great story or
- novel live up to that potential. That's what a good editor can do. Really,
- we're on your side.
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- CHEAP TRUTH On-Line 809-C West 12th Street, Austin, Texas 78701 USA NOT
- COPYRIGHTED. Vincent Omniaveritas, editing. "Bored With the Apocalypse"
-