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- CHEAP TRUTH #15
-
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- EDITORIAL. Science fiction today is in a rare state of ferment. This happy
- situation has been created only with great effort and must now be prolonged
- and intensified.
-
- In this issue, guest agitatrix Hunilla de Cholo addresses her fellow Eighties
- writers, with a moving lecture on pluralistic Postmodern solidarity. We at
- CHEAP TRUTH echo her sentiments. We also regard much of her literary
- analysis as rank deviationist heresy. All the better -- honest controversy
- sheds light on truth. And in the meantime, we can use the heat to bring SF
- to a boil. We are pleased to offer her this podium.
-
- REPORT ON THE SOPHOMORE CLASS DRESS CODE by Hunilla de Cholo
-
- One of the regrettable legacies of the modernist movement has been the idea
- that perpetual revolution is necessary to "progress" in the arts and in the
- school dress code. Progress in the arts? In the dress code? Who, as we
- say, is kidding whom? A little reading and a little thought will make clear
- to even the slowest of the kids in class that the concept of natural and
- inevitable progress, mutated offspring of the Industrial Revolution, Marxist
- economic theory and muscular Christian ideas of "self-improvement," is a
- chimera. As some froggy wit once said, the more things change, the more crap
- you get on television.
-
- Until recently Science Fiction High School, being the sandbox for SLOW
- LEARNERS that it has been for most of its history in America, has been
- relatively immune to such high-born notions. Sure, we had successive
- "revolutions" as Gernsback, Campbell, Gold and Boucher, Moorcock/
- Ellison/Knight, brought on his own version of the One True SF. But what did
- these vast and earthshaking changes bring forth: the SAME OLD STUFF, redux.
-
- "Bullshit!" I hear from the noisy contingent in the middle rows of the
- classroom, the kids who wear leather and those funny sunglasses because they
- would like to think it makes them look tough like real punks. The real punks
- are guys who fall asleep in the back of the classroom; they can hardly read,
- let alone write. They're the ones who get "D's" in shop class. In gym they
- punch out these kids with the glasses for being wimps.
-
- "Bullshit!" scream these honor students who run off their little fanzines and
- invent clever names for themselves like "Cyberpunks" or "Neuromantics" or,
- you should try not to laugh too hard, "the Movement." "Science fiction is
- about IDEAS. NEW IDEAS." "Say goodbye to your old stale futures!" "Take
- the ideas out of SF and it's not SF." "We are the pure quill, the daring,
- clear-sighted cutting edge that's writing about the FUTURE, NOT THE PAST."
-
- Sure, kids. We all want to think we're the first to discover sex and
- dissolution and good writing. The truth is that the wonderful new IDEAS that
- we're always trumpeting as the justification for SF High School's
- revolutionary edge over boring Mainstream Central High are available three
- for a quarter in your local pop science magazine; even better, try PARADE,
- right after the "Personality Profiles" and before the cartoon about the dog.
- What we call a revolutionary idea in SF is usually something like Del Rey's
- "Helen O'Loy" or Godwin's "The Cold Equations" or Gibson's "Burning Chrome."
- "What a novel idea -- instead of having the robot be an emotionless machine,
- make it neurotically emotional, like a real woman, only better! Have it be
- THE PERFECT WOMAN!!" "What a neat idea -- instead of having the stowaway be a
- criminal, make it a young girl! And have the spaceship pilot throw her out
- the airlock instead of saving her, to prove that THE UNIVERSE IS INDIFFERENT
- TO PEOPLE!!!" "Wow! -- instead of having the computer expert be a nerd,
- make him a glamorous, existential criminal! He acts like Humphrey Bogart and
- loses the girl in the end! Not only that, he PLUGS IN INSTEAD OF USING A
- KEYBOARD!!!"
-
- Old Mainstream High has nothing to compare with it, right? When in fact the
- only innovation these SF stories provide consists precisely in their
- adaptation of STYLE and TONE from outside the genre. Del Rey grafts the
- bathetic style of women's magazine fiction onto an SF plot and the fans eat
- it up because they're used to a diet of E. E. Smith and Harry Bates. They've
- never seen it before, it's a STUNNING NEW IDEA. Godwin borrows some
- third-rate existentialism (maybe, totally unaware of his derivativeness, he
- invents it himself!), spices it with a little "Invictus," writes in the same
- bathetic style Del Rey used twenty years earlier, and VOILA, another entry in
- the SF HALL OF FAME. Too bad Steven Crane did it better, did it RIGHT, in
- "The Open Boat." We haven't read that, and besides, the SF version has a
- STUNNING NEW IDEA -- it happens in a spaceship!
-
- Gibson borrows a style and milieu from Raymond Chandler or James M. Cain (and
- a pretty good style it is, too -- at least Gibson has some taste), pushes up
- the volume about fifty percent, has the caper involve computer information
- instead of cash, makes the break-in occur in "cyberspace" instead of a bank
- vault, and generates an entire new movement in science fiction. STUNNING NEW
- IDEAS you're going to be reading from the camp followers for the next three
- years.
-
- The only thing we have to offer new, kids, is our individual selves. The
- most revolutionary act we can perform, as writers, is to cross genres, graft
- idioms from other kinds of work onto the SF subject matter. Style IS
- content. Gibson gives us something new -- a new style. Not because he
- invented it, but because he had the wit to see that an old style could be
- adapted to our traditional material. More power to him.
-
- Yeah, we can talk about the future. But what we say about the future always,
- ALWAYS, says more about the present in which we are writing, about our own
- psyches. Ask Mr. Rucker about it in his Transrealism class and he'll explain
- it to you. Del Rey, all unconscious, tells us everything we need to know
- about male attitudes toward women in the 1930s. Godwin thinks he's talking
- about the nature of the universe and gives us instead sentimentalized
- right-wing political philosophy. Gibson tells us something about being
- deracinated in the Reaganite 80's, an era of dominance by corporate values
- and bland political conservatism. And we all have Sony compact-disk players
- and Braun coffee makers.
-
- Yes, Michael Swanwick? The "Humanist" writers? No, the so-called "Humanist"
- writers are no different, only a little more obvious. They sit in the front
- of the class and wear nice clothes and are worried about their grades. They
- want to please teacher, so some of them have gone through a regrettable phase
- of imitation. "Yes, teacher," says earnest Johnny Kessel, "I read the
- assignment -- MOBY DICK, by Herman Melville. I can write like him -- see,
- here's a story about a whale." Please, boy, don't be so obvious! Go sit
- with Billy Gibson for a while. That's right. Jimmy Kelly is already over
- there making friends.
-
- That's enough for today. Thank God school vacation is almost here. Let's
- spend a little less time at the library this summer, kids, and a little more
- time playing baseball. By all means, start a club. But let's not have a
- repeat of last summer's nastiness. There's room for everybody on the team.
- Dress whatever way you like.
-
-
- CHEAP TRUTH TOP TEN
-
- This latest edition of the CHEAP TRUTH recommended list concentrates on the
- fractious antics of the sophomore class -- expecially the noisy contingent.
-
- The "Funny Title Trilogy:"
-
- FRONTERA by Lewis Shiner (Baen $2.95; Sphere L2.25) Gives the surface of
- Mars the unpleasant realism of the area downwind of Kiev.
-
- SCHISMATRIX by Bruce Sterling (Ace $2.95; Penguin L2.50) Boils down the
- three-percent beer of space opera into a jolting postmodern whiskey.
-
- NEUROMANCER by William Gibson (Ace $2.95; Gollancz L8.95) Fusion-powered
- icebreaker. Attacked for "flaws" its attackers wish they had.
-
-
- ECLIPSE by John Shirley. (Bluejay $8.95) Demented 21st century epic of
- gutter-level weirdness and paranoid radical politics. In eighteen months the
- stands will be full of stuff along these lines.
-
- HOMUNCULUS by James Blaylock (Ace $2.95) Latest effort in the
- Blaylock/Powers subgenre of West Coast Victoriana. Has the glitter of ANUBIS
- GATES with funnier characters and a better plot.
-
- THE SECRET OF LIFE by Rudy Rucker (Bluejay $14.95) The doyen of Transrealism
- carries his doctrine to the ultimate in this crypto-autobiography. Features
- bizarre alternating spasms of existential gloom and manic farce.
-
- FREEDOM BEACH by James Patrick Kelly and John Kessel (Bluejay $8.95) Lively
- and inventive fix-up by the Glimmer Twins of Humanism. Annoying
- metafictional noodling does not exceed the limits of tolerance.
-
- BLOOD MUSIC by Greg Bear (Ace $2.95; Gollancz L9.95) Now in U.S. paperback.
- The ne plus ultra of modern radical hard SF.
-
- ISAAC ASIMOV'S SCIENCE FICTION MAGAZINE, Gardner Dozois, ed. ($19.50/yr.)
- This periodical has made such a quantum leap in quality that it is now
- impossible to understand American SF in the Eighties without a subscription.
- The current hotbed of Postmodern innovation, since Jan 86 it has serialized
- Gibson's COUNT ZERO and published the best stories to date by Cadigan, Kelly,
- Shiner, and Shepard. Currently featuring odd rumbles of militant pacifism --
- an unexpected and interestingly ominous development.
-
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- COPYRIGHTED. "When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro"
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