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- CHEAP TRUTH 14
-
- EDITORIAL by Todd Refinery. Regular CT editor V. Omniaveritas is currently
- out of touch in Haiti, where he is pelting the Tonton Macoute with concrete
- blocks. And longtime CT contributor Sue Denim has our passports ready for a
- romantic tour of her own.
-
- CHEAP TRUTH TOURS CENTRAL AMERICA with Sue Denim
-
- The current chaos in Central America is the result of foreign meddling,
- greed, laziness, guilt, and misplaced idealism. That's a lot of factors, but
- then, Central America is a hell of a mess.
-
- So is this year's Nebula ballot.
-
- What happened? Take an area -- say, Central America, or the SFWA -- that has
- traditionally been governed by enlightened self-interest. Sweeten the pot by
- making this area suddenly very valuable -- either politically or monetarily
- -- and the adjective "enlightened" tends to disappear.
-
- For example. Say you're an over-the-hill SF writer or politician, like
- Anastasio Somoza. You're going to do anything you can to keep your power --
- beg, plead, humiliate yourself, take help from anybody, even the U.S., just
- to get those votes. If you're an up-and-coming politician, you're going to
- curry favor as widely as you can (one reviewer recommended over 125 stories
- in one category alone, bloating the ballot like a drowned corpse).
-
- But enough generalities. Climb into our Mi-24 Hind gunship and let's have a
- look at the countryside.
-
- First stop: Costa Rica. Here is a fairly stable democracy -- conservitive,
- predictable, with a comparatively high standard of living that's the result
- of guilt -- American guilt over the country's former banana republic status.
- How like this year's novels: Greg Bear's BLOOD MUSIC, which expands
- predictably his earlier brilliant (and award winning) short story. DINNER AT
- DEVIANT'S PALACE by Tim Powers, on the ballot for everyone who really liked
- his ANUBIS GATES and forgot to vote for it before Powers joined SFWA. ENDER'S
- GAME by Orson Scott Card. (How many people voted for this because it has all
- the ritual trappings of military SF, complete with cadet school and blowing
- up alien ships real good?) David Brin's two-dimensional POSTMAN. Malzberg's
- REMAKING OF SIGMUND FREUD. (Surely we should give him a Nebula for something.
- He's always telling us what an unsung genius he is.)
-
- Even the good stuff here in Costa Rica is tainted with guilt and
- predictability. Bruce Sterling's SCHISMATRIX is first-class futurism. But in
- many ways it's the book he was expected to write, the logical culmination of
- his popular "Shaper/Mechanist" stories. Brian Aldiss's HELLICONIA WINTER is
- by no means the strongest element of the trilogy (and why the hell isn't the
- trilogy on here as a single item, HELLICONIA?), but it's too late now to
- recognise the first two books.
-
- A few hundred miles north is El Salvador, Costa Rica gone wrong. Here
- democracy is enforced at gunpoint, and inspiration is in jail. It is the
- dictatorship of the novella. Here Generalissimo Silverberg rakes in the big
- bucks with his predictable "Sailing to Byzantium." On his right hand sits the
- former firebrand James Tiptree, Jr., now apparently suffering from a
- Heilein-ish senility and turning out gushing '40's space opera like "The Only
- Neat Thing To Do." Kate Wilhelm turns in a limp nod to Castaneda with "The
- Gorgon Field" (it's too hot to work hard here in El Salvador). Kim Stanley
- Robinson, the American attache', is eager and earnest in his walking shorts
- and knapsack, but his "Green Mars" is marooned in the '70's. There is some
- nice landscape -- Roger Zelazny presides over a scenic province called "24
- Views of Mount Fuji" -- but it has no life or heart.
-
- Then there are the "desaparecidos," like Norman Spinrad's "World War Last,"
- which you won't see on the ballot. They have simply ceased to exist, for
- being too noisy, too unorthodox, asking too many hard questions.
-
- But wait! What's that up in the hills? It's Bruce Sterling's "Green Days in
- Brunei," the single most visionary and exciting piece of fiction on the
- ballot, armed to the teeth and about to blow this fatuous and complacent
- government off the map! We'd better head back to the gunship and be on our
- way.
-
- Welcome to Nicaragua, home of the dream gone sour. Liberals around the world
- feel compelled to continue to praise the Sandinista revolution, even though
- its armies have regressed to the same terror tactics as the Guardia they
- replaced. Just as the "younger writers" (all of them at least in their
- thirties) continue to admire the bloodless, self-conscious work of Michael
- Bishop ("Gift from the Graylanders"), Lucius Shepard ("The Jaguar Hunter") or
- Harlan Ellison ("Paladin of the Lost Hour"). William Gibson and Michael
- Swanwick, like the Sandanistas' Commander Zero, seem terribly uncomfortable
- in this regime, managing only a heartless, pro-forma video-game exercise,
- "Dogfight." The chameleon-like Scott Card here offers "The Fringe," a
- competent and very politically correct tale of a handicapped schoolteacher.
- George Martin's "Portraits of His Children" is an insufferable bit of
- pretended self-criticism that looks like it was written to please a State
- Committee of Mandatory Literary Values. (Your tour guide is unable, at press
- time, to comment on S.C. Sykes' "Rockabye Baby" due to her inability to read
- ANALOG in recent years.)
-
- It's time to get away from these poetic revolutionaries who are taking
- themselves all so seriously. Let's copter off to polluted, overcrowded,
- corrupt, and exciting Mexico City for a night on the town.
-
- Did somebody say crowded? Eight nominees. But anything goes in Mexico City.
- Howard Waldrop, rather that gamble on actually winning a Nebula, got greedy
- and decided to leave both his stories, "Flying Saucer Rock and Roll" and
- "Heirs of the Perisphere," on the ballot. They're two of his best, full of
- fun and pathos and great characters, and after all, greed is the name of the
- game here in Mexico.
-
- You see all kinds here. There's "Paper Dragons," the year's single best short
- story, a delicate construction of paranoia, innuendo, and crisp language.
- There's Nancy Kress' populist fantasy, "Out of All Them Bright Stars,"
- organizing among the peasants. There are the local favorite sons like Dozois,
- Dann, and Swanwick, who can make the ballot with "Gods of Mars" no matter how
- poor a story it is, or William F. Wu, whose mundane "Hong's Bluff" is swept
- up in the popular imagination after the brutal editorial murder of his
- earlier story, "Wild Garlic." There's Haldeman's perfunctory "More Than the
- Sum of His Parts" and John Crowley's willfully obscure "Snow." So many of
- them! And what's that rumbling from the membership? The hotel is starting to
- collapse!
-
- What's the answer to this glut of egos? More rules? Should Reagan send ground
- troops to Nicaragua? Obviously not. Power will come from the people,
- eventually. There will be a backlash from this year's Nebulas, mark my words.
- Innocents will doubtless suffer, empires will crumble. In the end, the dust
- will settle and the Nebula will either be restored to its former value or it
- will become a joke award, like the Hugo. In the meantime, as we stumble,
- sweaty and exhausted, back into the helicopter, let's dwell on the many new
- friends we made on our journey.
-
- AND NOW for that popular feature, "Ask Sue":
-
- Dear Sue: You're not going to do another of your bitter, tastless,
- near-libelous, irrelevantly political Nebula diatribes this year, are you?
- (Signed) Hopeful.
-
- Dear Hopeful: Sorry.
-
- Dear Sue: Why is the Hugo a joke award? (Signed) H. Gernsback.
-
- Dear Mr. Gernsback: A couple of hundred people (at best) do the
- nominating for an award which thousands vote, with no give-and-take or
- feedback among the nominators. At least the Nebula process allows a means to
- regularly display the titles of recommended works (the Nebula Awards Report)
- and includes a jury which often compensates for oversights.
-
- Dear Sue: So what's your answer (Signed) Wise Guy.
-
- Dear Guy: Fewer rules instead of more. Hands off diplomacy. One short
- fiction category (say 30,000 words and under), one long. We've got enough
- awards already. Maybe even a public service campaign to remind both authors
- and publishers that it's only an award, not life and death.
-
- Dear Sue: So what did you think was missing on the Nebula ballot?
- (Signed) Stupid Question.
-
- Dear Stupid: NOVEL: TIMESERVERS by Russell M. Griffin (reviewed in CT
- 11, a Phil Dick Award nominee); THE GLASS HAMMER by K. W. Jeter; EON by Greg
- Bear (just to show that I'm not prejudiced against hard SF and that I still
- know how to have a good time).
-
- NOVELLA: "World War Last" by Norman Spinrad.
-
- NOVELET: "Tensor of Desire" by Wayne Wightman (a dizzy, headlong
- rush of a story, with teeth and genitals); "Storming the Cosmos" by Rucker
- and Sterling; "Solstice" by James Patrick Kelly (a known BOFFO proves he can
- wear mirrorshades with the best of them); "Dead Run" by Greg Bear (Bear has
- an amazing ability to think like a computer nerd but write like a guy on the
- street when he has to); "All My Darling Daughters" by Connie Willis (yes, you
- heard me, CONNIE WILLIS. How come all her so-called friends drop her when she
- gets really nasty, like in this story?).
-
- SHORT STORY: "Klein's Machine" by Andrew Weiner (weird and literary
- at the same time); "You Never Asked My Name" by Brian Aldiss (in this
- category because the Nebulas don't have one for polemics).
-
- Keep those post cards and letters coming in.
-
- Hugs and Kisses -- Sue.
-
-
- CHEAP TRUTH 809-C West 12th Street Austin,
- Texas 78701. NOT COPYRIGHTED. Todd Refinery, editing. Sheri LaPuerta,
- graphics. CHEAP TRUTH On-Line and CHEAP TRUTH Letters Column: SMOF-BBS,
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