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- CHEAP TRUTH 16
-
- EDITORIAL. How stands the Empire? In this special issue, we publish the first
- results of our mystic quest for truth and Vimto. First, a guest writer
- presents a very typically British threnody on the state of culture here on
- Airstrip One.
-
- FAULT-LINE SKIRMISHING by Phaedrus
-
- We're too damn polite we British. Culturally, we are a mixed bag --
- everything from the most rabid Scots and Welsh Nationalists to the Little
- Englanders. And yet the country is not shuddering with murmurs of revolt or
- even reverberating to the roars of mass demonstrations outside 10 Downing
- Street. And this despite 4 million unemployed. Why? Politeness has a lot to
- do with it, but fear and insecurity have played their dramaturgical parts --
- helped along by Our Leaderene and her corhorts -- to the extent that the
- populace is being cut apart by cultural fragmentation.
-
- And so it is with British science fiction. British SF writers find a certain
- bleak joy in their isolation, in writing in a vacuum, and we display little
- sense of direct involvement in the exploration of ideas. We are certainly
- less gregarious and confident than our American counterparts, whose works
- consistently occupy prime places in, for example, INTERZONE.
-
- British writers are not lacking in talent or perception; but unfortunately
- they are too well endowed with apathy, and let things bumble along pretty
- much as they have done. They perceive politics and commercialism as fearful
- and distasteful. These perceptions are perhaps laudable, coming from the
- older, liberal, literary traditions in British SF that retain critical
- perceptions that might otherwise vanish. But the times they are a-changing,
- and not for the better, and apathy and complacency are hampering those who
- would combat depredations from the politicians and the market vampires.
-
- There is a lack of vital organisation, so serious that the British
- culture-at-large experiences British SF as some hideous TV porridge of Dr.
- Who, Blake's Seven, Space 1999 and Gerry Anderson, baked up with a whole load
- of cardboard sets and topped with a squirting of Essence of Clarke.
-
- Because the printed word is being supplanted by TV, we are slliding into some
- seriously deep shit. Serious? Why yes. As a medium, TV is utterly different
- from print: there it sits, in the corner:
- BLINK!advertsBLINK!idiocyBLINK!dreckBLINK!drossBLINK!BLINK!B LINK!
-
- Discontinuity is the norm in TV viewing; the acceptance of contradictory
- thinking, the unified advertising, the debasement of everything -- especially
- political discourse - to the level of quiz-panel games. This IS television.
- By its very nature it trivialises the information it disseminates. In
- presenting a polished version of the 'facts,' it conceals the grounds for
- criticism. This superficiality is filtering out into the British macroculture
- of which SF is a part.
-
- Our more immediate problem is to prevent British SF from degenerating into a
- marketeer's playpen. What I offer up for argument is this:
-
- An organisation called 'Science Fiction Writers of Great Britain.'
-
- Yes! -- you heard me: SFWGB, dammit! We need an organisation to cater
- specifically to the needs of science fiction and fantasy writers, run by
- writers for writers in the speculative field. The needs of these writers
- cannot be met by the BSFA, the Cassandra Workshop, the Writers Guild of Great
- Britain, or the Society of Authors. Only through a gathering of skills, such
- as SFWGB, can we properly identify our problems through criticism, create
- workable solutions, and even (who knows) effectively take an initiative.
-
- Uncompromising criticism with integrity. It is not a safe stance to adopt,
- for it is the fault-line that cuts right across our society. The problems of
- the genre are not unique to SF. Modern Britain appears to be breeding a youth
- that is unemployed, unimaginative, and hopeless, with minds contaminated by
- stereotypes and wish-fulfillment slammed in by unchallenged television
- advertising.
-
- The big answers lie in the politcal arena. No amount of ducking and evading
- will make this reality vanish, because experience has shown us that we can't
- write our fictional way out of a cultural crisis.
-
- So do something! We'd better start cultivating a sense of urgency, because
- the Great British Culture Death is approaching critical mass. If we don't
- organise NOW we'll be cut to pieces by the shrapnel.
-
-
- PILGRIMAGE TO NODE ZERO by Seth L. Lapcart
-
- The Old Polemicist paused for a moment in the scant shade of a utility pole
- and wiped sweat from the plastic headband of his gimmie cap as he watched an
- emaciated grackle wandering around, pecking listlessly at the baked brown
- earth of a nearby backyard. For some reason, he felt a poignant affinity with
- the pathetic bird.
-
- "Your problem," said the Younger Polemicist, unaware of his companion's glum
- preoccupation, "is that you are not Culturally Online."
-
- "Jargon," complained the Old Polemicist, roused briefly from his torpor. "I
- have come two thousand miles in search of enlightenment, and all I get is
- empty jargon."
-
- "It only sounds empty to you because you are so totally 'out of touch'. Or,
- to rephrase it in a dated idiom that you might be better aable to relate to,
- 'unhip.'"
-
- They climbed quaint wooden stairs to the Younger Polemicist's aerie, from
- whence, it was rumoured, all postmodern radical science-fiction ideology
- emanated. "I detested jargon just as much in the 1960's as I do now," the Old
- Polemicist complained, threading his way between tottering book cases into
- the shadowy recesses of Node Zero (as the simple wooden cabin was known in
- the cybernetic argot that the Younger Polemicist and his fellow-travelers
- found so apt). Brushing aside back issues of SCIENCE 86 and SOVIET LIFE, the
- Old Polemicist slumped onto the couch.
-
- The Younger Polemicist put on a tape of Handel played by a Japanese 'koto'
- orchestra, knowing that his visitor would be unable to cope with anything
- more modern. "Let's face it, you don't even read ASIMOV's magazine. You
- hadn't heard of the Humanist Faction, till I told you about it. You probably
- even LIKE some of their stuff." He sneered contemptuously. "Deeply meaningful
- mood pieces evoking insight into the human condition -- that's what your 'new
- wave' was all about back in '68, wasn't it?"
-
- "Well, to some extent. But --"
-
- "Read this." The Younger Polemicist handed his a copy of the April 1986
- ASIMOV's, open at "Down and Out in the Year 2000" by Kim Stanley Robinson.
-
- The Old Polemicist struggled to focus his bleary eyes in the shuttered
- dimness. Already, in the same issue, he had attempted "R&R" by Lucius Shepard
- only to disgrace himself by dozing off during the early pages, baffled and
- bored by the implausible mix of mysticism, drugs, and futuristic warfare.
-
- "Actually I rather like this one," he said a while later, upon finishing
- Robinson's grim depiction of street Blacks hustling spare change from
- high-tech yuppies of tomorrow. "It has verisimilitude."
-
- "That's not the point." The Younger Polemicist seized the magazine and
- flipped back to page 73. "Look at this description of the holo-TV program
- that the panhandlers are watching."
-
- The Old Polemicist re-read the relevant paragraphs:
-
- "Who the fuck is this?" Said Ramon. Johnnie said, "That be Sam
- Spade, the greatest computer spy in the world. ... Watch out now, Sam about
- to go plug his brain in to try and find out who he is." "And then he
- gonna be told of some stolen WETWARE he got to find." "I got some
- wetwear myself, only I call it a shirt."
-
- There was more, and it was suddenly obvious: the show which the characters
- were mocking was a direct parody of William Gibson's NEUROMANCER. Robinson's
- story was not a story at all. It was a REBUTTAL, debunking the glitz of
- techno-fetishistic escapist fiction. No wonder the Younger Polemicist saw
- things in terms of factions. There WERE two factions now -- a whole literary
- context that the Old Polemicist hadn't even known about. "I'm not just
- offline," he admitted sadly, "I'm unplugged."
-
- "Your shame is admirable, and too seldom seen." The Younger Polemicist dumped
- more ASIMOV's issues on his disciple's arthritic knees. "Better get busy." He
- turned back to his computer and logged onto some distant samizdatabase.
- Flickering green symbols danced across the CRT in response to stacatto bursts
- from his fingers at the keyboard.
-
- The Old Polemicist paged through the magazines in the manner of one doing
- dutiful penance. Norman Spinrad's "The Neuromantics" seemed to offer help, as
- an overview; yet it was an overview through binoculars, surveying the subject
- in a wistful attempt to get closer to it. Despite ugly modern idiom
- ("informed his intellectuality" and so on) it had a dated air, and Spinrad
- underlined his own lack of authority by inadvertantly using the word
- "perhaps" three separate times in two short concluding paragraphs.
-
- "A User's Guide to the Postmoderns" by Michael Swanwick seemed more
- comprehensive. Swanwick's gross ignorance of history was disconcerting (he
- credited Delany, Disch, Lafferty, Spinrad, and Zelazny with "ushering in" the
- 1960s "new wave," while omitting Moorcock, who invented it, and Ellison, who
- imported it); but might ignorance of the past imply a viewpoint aligned with
- the present? Alas, no: the article divided writers into arbitrary, incestuous
- cliques invested with bogus drama via silly phrases such as "they engaged in
- a frenzy of inference swapping" or "Sides had been chosen, names dropped, and
- the battle could commence." Swanwick, who had once cowritten a hard-core
- cyberpunk story with William Gibson, sounded like a housewife narrating
- gossip about new neighbors who'd moved in next door. The characatures were
- less than enlightening.
-
- Where, then, could the Old Polemicist find truth?
-
- ASIMOV's was the new marketplace for postmoderns, and Dozois, its editor, had
- invented the term "cyberpunk"; so the magazine's editorials should offer
- guidance, much like Moorcock's or Campbell's in bygone eras. But Dozois
- wasn't allowed to write the editorials. Asimov did that; and it looked as if
- he hadn't read the stories in his own magazine. He seemed more in his element
- answering the laughably lamebrained letters from readers whose middlebrow
- complacency implied that they didn't read the stories either. An odd (and
- precarious) situation indeed.
-
- These idle musings were interrupted by a sudden call to action. "Hey, we have
- to make it down to the copy center before 5:30 to Xerox the agitprop." The
- Younger Polemicist logged off, grabbed a battered file folder stuffed with
- anonymous diatribes against the status-quo, and slipped into his plastic
- Korean sandals.
-
- The Old Polemicist dutifully accompanied his guru back out into the hear. "I
- gather David Brin doesn't actually believe there is any such thing as a new
- movement," he remarked hesitantly as the Younger Polemicist nursed his
- rust-riddled Volkswagen along Main Street, frugally seeking a parking meter
- with free time left on it.
-
- "There's a trenchant quote from Comrade Shirley about that." The Younger
- Polemicist parked his car and plucked from his folder a transcript of the
- Science Fiction Research Association's 1986 conference panel on cyberpunk
- literature. "Listen: 'You don't want to believe there is a movement, because
- it frightens you -- because you think you're not compentent to handle the new
- idiom of it.'" He gave the Old Polemicist a meaning look, then entered the
- copy center and commenced operating a self-service Xerox machine with
- obsessive intensity.
-
- "It seems to me," the Old Polemicist suggested, "that Shirley's quote implies
- HE'S not frightened by cyberpunk, so he IS compentent to handle the idiom of
- it."
-
- "So?"
-
- "Well, forgive my hubris, O master, but if John Shirley can handle it,
- shouldn't I be able to?"
-
- The Younger Polemicist waved an admonishing finger. "Not until you get
- Culturally Online."
-
- They drove back to Node Zero. The Younger Polemicist urged his aged disciple
- back up the wooden steps. "Come on, we have important work to do."
-
- "You're SURE it's important?" the Old Polemicist asked a little later, as he
- folded leaflets to be disseminated through the network of ideological
- activists spanning the globe from Haiti to Vladivostok.
-
- "Important?" The Younger Polemicist paused in his envelope-stuffing. "This is
- the first new movement in science fiction in twenty years. Its best-known
- member has won every major award. It is the only literature with an online,
- informed world-view. And you question its importance?"
-
- "Well, maybe not."
-
- "Good. When you finish folding those leaflets, we have a couple hundred
- stamps to lick. And after you finish reading those ASIMOV's, there's three
- years worth of OMNI."
-
- "All right." The Old Polemicist nodded dutifully.
-
- Before getting back to work, he stole a momentary glance through the venetian
- blind that half-obscured the window. Down in the yard, the ragged old grackle
- was still there, feebly but persistently pecking, pecking at the unyielding
- soil, under the merciless sun.
-
-
- CHEAP TRUTH Top Ten (with helpful quotes from locals)
-
- TRILLION YEAR SPREE by Brian Aldiss "assisted by" David Wingrove (Gollancz
- L15) Authors tremble for their reps as "Britain's oldest Young Turk" prepares
- to unleash this massive new version of his 1973 SF litcrit classic. Described
- as "completely revised," "brutally frank," and "bang up to date," this hefty
- opus is an essential accoutrement for the serious, globally-minded critic or
- fan. Without doubt, SPREE will once again prove the unquestioned superiority
- of Britain as a source of intelligent, informed criticism and provocative,
- well-formulated literary analysis. Most of it will be about Americans.
-
- THE UNCONQUERED COUNTRY by Geoff Ryman (Allen & Unwin L9.95) Slightly
- expanded version of the instantly classic INTERZONE novella, a shocking,
- brutally depressing SF tragedy that directly confronts the reader with
- high-voltage visionary excess. "I wept aloud!" "Really great illustrations!"
- "The best thing INTERZONE ever published!" "Most of the new stuff is
- padding."
-
- MYTHAGO WOOD by Robert Holdstock (Gollancz L8.95) Archetypal fantasy
- concerning a tiny patch of ancient English forest where the mystical soul of
- Britain, or at least a lot of deeply portentous literary/mythic symbols, seem
- to reside. Involuted, damp, very insular, vaguely creepy. "Where it's at in
- Britain today!" "A marvel!" "Brilliantly written and perceptive!" Britons
- adore this book.
-
- THE BRIDGE by Iain Banks. (Macmillan L9.95) The third novel by the wunderkind
- Scottish author of the amazing WASP FACTORY and cryptic WALKING ON GLASS. The
- subterranean fantasy influences of this vividly imaginative and cheerfully
- sadistic writer have come directly to the fore in THE BRIDGE, but don't tell
- his publishers. "The most compulsive and original writer working today!"
- "Obviously possessed of twisted genius!" "Wow!"
-
- ESCAPE PLANS by Gwyneth Jones (Orion L3.50) Bizarre effort by shocktrooper of
- Britain's radical feminist SF contingent, a literary clique which possesses
- admirable discipline, long-term plans, and a well-developed and pitiless
- sociopolitical ideology. "Lesbian tripe that chokes the reader to death with
- jargon!" "Part of the revolutionary struggle to wrest possibilities from
- limitations!" Genuinely twisted, ESCAPE PLANS features spaceships that are
- not allowed to go anywhere and scrabblingly desperate social uprisings.
- Impressive energy level and imaginative concentration make Gwyneth Jones a
- writer to watch.
-
- SONGBIRDS OF PAIN by Garry Kilworth (Gollancz L8.95) Collection by highly
- regarded short story writer. Exotic settings, baroque, obsessive prose.
- "Exceptionally good." "Best I've read in years." "I believe in science
- fiction as a serious literature," declared the author in his intro, a
- declaration that would be more convincing if it didn't have to be made at
- all.
-
- BOOKS OF BLOOD v. 1-6 by Clive Barker (Sphere). This fervid and fertile
- six-volume collection of horror shorts has the clammy intimacy of a blowjob
- from the dead. "The future of horror." "Blows out the genre's amps."
- Heartening proof that a British writer of talent and determination can rise
- suddenly from obscurity to completely paralyze a transatlantic readership.
-
- GHASTLY BEYOND BELIEF by Kim Newman and Neil Gaiman (Arrow L2.50). A
- much-needed dose of comic relief, this book collects a long series of
- horrible excesses and solecisms in written SF and sci-fi films. Convulsively
- funny, it must be read to be disbelieved. None of your "dry British humor"
- guff here -- you'll wince, you'll scream, you'll beg for a chance to breath.
- "The ultimate toilet book!"
-
- CHEAP TRUTH London Editing: Vincent Omniaveritas Graphics: privatised by Tory
- regime and sold to a Yank multinational. NOT COPYRIGHTED. "Granted it's not
- REALLY science fiction, but --"
-
-
-
- "The Central Committee, to meet at the end of the week, will take up
- ideological issues in order to seize the high ground in the realm of ideas
- and overcome resistance from party\ytrap SFWA cadres and conservative
- opponents of the economic changes, according to diplomats here."
-
- -- unattributed press
- release
-