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- **************************************************************
- * *
- * R E A D I N G F O R P L E A S U R E *
- * *
- * Issue #2 *
- * *
- * June 1989 *
- * *
- * *
- * Editor: Cindy Bartorillo *
- * *
- * *
- * Published monthly and initially distributed *
- * the weekend before the first of each month. *
- **************************************************************
-
-
- CONTACT US AT: Reading For Pleasure, c/o Cindy Bartorillo, 1819
- Millstream Drive, Frederick, MD 21701; or on CompuServe leave a
- message to 74766,1206; or on GEnie leave mail to C.BARTORILLO; or
- call our BBS, the BAUDLINE II at 301-694-7108, 1200/2400 8N1.
-
-
- NOTICE: Reading For Pleasure is not copyrighted, but excerpts
- from copyrighted material are contained within. When copying or
- otherwise reproducing any part herein, please give appropriate
- credit, whether it be to Shakespeare or Reading For Pleasure.
-
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- The better the book the more room for the reader.
- --Holbrook Jackson
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-
-
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
-
- Editorial . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70
- What's News . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 130
- Award Winners & Nominees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 288
- Random Recommendations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 475
- Good Reading Periodically . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 533
- Beach Bag Books . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 577
- June Birthdays . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1245
- Featured Author: Stanley Ellin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1304
- Horror: Splatterpunk . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1367
- Mystery: Murderous Vacations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1526
- NF: The Psychology of Everyday Things . . . . . . . . . . . 1620
- Fiction Into Film: The Shining . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1697
- SF: Fan-Lingo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1783
- Pseudonyms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1895
- Coming Next Month . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2080
- Trivia Quiz . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109
- Trivia Answers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2062
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-
-
- CONTRIBUTIONS: No money changes hands anywhere at Reading For
- Pleasure -- no one makes any, no one pays any. If that sounds OK
- to you, we'd be delighted to receive anything you'd like to
- contribute: articles, news, letters, etc. See masthead for our
- various addresses. Let us know how you like Reading For Pleasure.
-
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-
-
- EDITORIAL
-
-
- I'd like to thank everyone who took the time to get a comment
- to me about the first issue of Reading For Pleasure. The
- compliments were much appreciated, and made it so much easier to
- get out this second issue. I'm still most anxious to get any
- suggestions you might have, so please drop me a line if an idea
- occurs to you.
-
-
- About nonfiction submissions for Reading For Pleasure: Send
- them. I can use all the help I can get. If you've read anything
- lately that you particularly liked, or didn't like, a paragraph
- about it would make a great submission. Also, any book related
- news would be much appreciated.
-
-
- The biggest problem facing RFP right now is distribution.
- Very soon PC Pursuit will be a metered service, which means I
- won't be able to afford much time on it. If you have local access
- (no long distance rates) to a good BBS area, and wouldn't mind
- passing RFP around it in your spare time, please contact me. If
- we could get some kind of distribution network going, we could
- maintain (maybe even expand) the readership of RFP and preserve
- the guiding principle of FREE ACCESS TO INFORMATION.
-
-
- It has been suggested that we start a sister publication of
- fiction and poetry. This is a wonderful idea, but not until we
- get some kind of handle on the distribution problem. More on this
- subject next month.
-
-
- Wouldn't it be nice to call your favorite BBS and find a
- large selection of magazines on every conceivable topic? If you
- are interested in starting a magazine dedicated to your area of
- expertise (or if you already have), be sure to let me know. We
- could work on this distribution problem together.
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-
-
-
- TRIVIA QUIZ
-
-
- 1. You know that the Pulitzer prizes come from an endowment by
- Joseph Pulitzer, but how did he get the money?
- 2. You know that SF fans give out the Hugo Awards, but just who
- is/was Hugo?
- 3. Whose biography did Boswell write?
- 4. Who wrote about the Joads trekking from the Dust Bowl to
- California?
- 5. What is the occupation of Willie Loman?
- 6. Where were Geoffrey Chaucer's characters going?
- 7. What book begins with the line, "Call me Ishmael"?
- 8. What was Dante's last name?
- 9. What do George Sand and George Eliot have in common?
- 10. What was Ian Fleming's last published novel before his death?
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- WHAT'S NEWS
-
-
- * Another magazine bites the dust! PULPSMITH, a small press
- magazine published by Harry Smith has ceased publication after
- changing from quarterly to an annual issue. The magazine did,
- however, go out in style with a last issue that was 384 pages
- long.
-
-
- * One of the very best mystery editors, Joan Kahn, has retired
- from St. Martin's Press. How good was she? Just take a look at a
- list of her writers: Tony Hillerman, Joseph Hansen, Dick Francis,
- Reginald Hill, Jonathan Gash, and John Ball. Wow!
-
-
- * This is from the April 21, 1989 issue of Publishers Weekly:
-
-
- TWO LONDON STORES HIT BY ARSON
-
-
- Two arson attacks against well-known London bookshops--Collets
- Penguin on Charing Cross Road and Dillons on Gower Street--are
- thought to be the work of protesters against Salman Rushdie's THE
- SATANIC VERSES. The attacks took place within minutes of each
- other during the night of April 9, causing widespread smoke
- damage but no casualties. The Collets store had received several
- threats of an attack if it continued to sell the disputed novel.
- --Vivienne Menkes
-
-
- * Also, in the May 5, 1989 issue of Publishers Weekly:
-
-
- ...Collets has now decided not to continue to sell the book, just
- as the huge bookshop, Foyles, also decided against selling it
- after the staff received death threats. The other attacked store,
- Dillons, will continue to sell it, but not promote it. Also, a
- public library in Woking, Surrey, reported that two men, "of Arab
- appearance" asked for the names and addresses of those people who
- had borrowed THE SATANIC VERSES from the library. These were, of
- course, refused, and the police were alerted.
-
-
- THE SATANIC VERSES is a big deal in Britain -- reportedly 1 out
- of every 2 books sold there is the controversial volume.
-
-
- * True Story: Saying he wanted to improve his vocabulary, a
- community college student asked his bookstore clerk for a copy of
- ROGER THE SORCERER. It was later determined that ROGET'S
- THESAURUS was what he had in mind.
-
-
- * Sol Stein, author of 8 novels, has created WritePro, a creative
- writing computer program, which will be the first software chosen
- by the Literary Guild. We presume that the program helps you to
- write more clearly.
-
-
- * An ornithologist died on February 14th in Philadelphia, at the
- age of 89. Why am I telling you this? Because a writer saw the
- ornithologist's name on a book in the late '40s and thought that
- the name would be perfect for a character he was creating. The
- ornithologist's name was James Bond.
-
-
- * I've heard that Robert Bloch is editing a book for Tor called
- THE PSYCHO FILES OF NORMAN BATES. Robert Bloch wrote the original
- book PSYCHO, but not the Hitchcock screenplay (that was Joseph
- Stefano).
-
-
- * A TV miniseries of SCANDALS by Una-Mary Parker is planned.
-
-
- * Morrow/Avon were unhappy with Whitley Streiber's new UFO novel
- MAJESTIC, so he bought it back from them and sold it for even
- more money to Putnam/Berkley.
-
-
- * For those of you who want to read EVERYTHING about Stephen
- King, don't miss getting hold of the Feb. 27, 1989 issue of The
- New Yorker magazine. There's an article in it about his limited-
- edition collaboration with typographic artist Barbara Kruger, MY
- PRETTY PONY.
-
-
- * Barbara Tuchman, bestselling, Pulitzer prize-wining writer and
- historian, died recently at the age of 77 from complications
- following a stroke. Her books were regularly on the bestseller
- lists, and THE GUNS OF AUGUST (1962) and STILWELL AND THE
- AMERICAN EXPERIENCE IN CHINA (1971) both won Pulitzer prizes.
-
-
- * Michael Korda claims that horror is the next big genre -- the
- hot category for new writers to tackle.
-
-
- * The market's not bad for older writers either. Dean R. Koontz
- is reportedly getting an advance of $1.8 million for six of his
- books that have already been published. Berkley gets THE SERVANTS
- OF TWILIGHT, THE EYES OF DARKNESS, THE HOUSE OF THUNDER, and THE
- KEY TO MIDNIGHT (all published under the name Leigh Nichols), THE
- VOICE OF THE NIGHT (published under the name Brian Coffey), and
- DEMON SEED (published under the name Dean R. Koontz).
-
-
- * DRAGON CON will be held October 6-8, 1989 at the Omni
- International Hotel and Convention Center in Atlanta, GA. Guests
- include: Wes Craven, Anne McCaffrey, Michael Whelan, Andrew
- Greenberg, Larry Elmore, and others. Pre-registration (through
- September 15) is $30. Fantasy Role-Playing, Strategic, Miniature
- and Computer Gaming in over 100 feature tournaments, and much
- more. For additional information send a self-addressed stamped
- envelope to: Dragon Con '89, Box 47696, Atlanta, GA 30362.
-
-
- * Anne Rice is working on a movie based on her three vampire
- novels: INTERVIEW WITH A VAMPIRE, THE VAMPIRE LESTAT, and THE
- QUEEN OF THE DAMNED.
-
-
- * Here's a report on a new writer's market that was in the April
- 1989 issue of Science Fiction Chronicle. Readers as well as
- writers might want to take notice.
-
-
- BORDERLANDS, P.O. Box 5788, Baltimore, MD 21208. Editor: Thomas
- F. Monteleone. Current needs: This is a horror/dark fantasy
- anthology, planned to be an annual, to consist of all new,
- original fiction. I am looking for horror, suspense, tales of the
- bizarre and surreal. No taboos, no restrictions; stories on the
- "borderlands" of current HDF fiction. I want disturbing,
- innovative, provocative stories. Don't send any trunk stories:
- writers guilty of this will be spirited off to the Outer
- Darkness. Payment rates: 4-7 cents per word, depending on who you
- are and how good the story is. SASE: If you don't send one, it's
- going in File 13.
-
-
- * Unsolicited manuscripts are the bane of a publisher's or
- editor's existence. Every moron who can put crayon to paper sends
- them his/her deathless prose, and even if they don't read it, all
- that tonnage of paper has to be dealt with. Several months ago,
- the editors of MIDNIGHT GRAFFITI magazine received an unsolicited
- manuscript with the following cover letter:
-
-
- Dear Mssrs. Horsting and Van Hise,
-
-
- Enclosed is a short story, "Rainy Season," which I thought
- might be right for GRAFFITI. It's pretty gross.
-
-
- Thanks for the reading.
-
-
- Sincerely,
- Stephen King
-
-
- The hottest writer in America sends an unsolicited manuscript
- out. Can you imagine what went through the editors' minds when
- they got it? I can: "Right. Sure. Stephen King. I bet." It turned
- out to actually be SK, and they produced a Stephen King Issue of
- their magazine. On one page they reproduced the cover letter and
- wrote beneath it: "What would you have done?"
-
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-
-
- We live in the greatest age in the history of the world -- the
- age of The Paperback. We no longer have to be bored out of our
- minds during all the "dead" times of modern life: waiting in
- lines, waiting at the doctor's office, waiting for the squash
- court to be free, waiting for Janey to finish her piano lesson,
- and waiting for your significant other to finish whatever it is
- they do that takes so long. There's no excuse for being caught
- without reading material.
-
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-
-
-
- 1988 NEBULA AWARDS
-
-
- Voted on by the Science Fiction Writers of America:
-
-
- Best Novel: FALLING FREE by Lois McMaster Bujold
- Best Novella: "The Last of the Winnebagos" by Connie Willis
- Best Novelette: "Schrodinger's Kitten" by George Alec Effinger
- Best Short Story: "Bible Stories for Adults, No. 17: The Deluge"
- by James Morrow
- Grand Master Award: Ray Bradbury
-
-
-
-
- 1988 PULITZER PRIZES
-
-
- Fiction: BREATHING LESSONS by Anne Tyler
- General Nonfiction: A BRIGHT SHINING LIE: JOHN PAUL VANN AND
- AMERICA IN VIETNAM by Neil Sheehan
- History: PARTING THE WATERS by Taylor Branch and
- BATTLE CRY OF FREEDOM: THE CIVIL WAR ERA by James H.
- McPherson
- Biography: OSCAR WILDE by Richard Ellmann
- Poetry: NEW AND COLLECTED POEMS by Richard Wilbur
- Criticism: Michael Skube
-
-
- The Pulitzer Prizes are annual awards in journalism and
- letters made by the trustees of Columbia University, endowed by
- the will of Joseph Pulitzer.
-
-
-
-
- THE HUGO AWARD NOMINEES
-
-
- The Hugo Awards are voted on by the members of the World
- Science Fiction Convention. It's not written out here, but No
- Award is a nominee in every category.
-
-
- Best Novel of 1988: CYTEEN by C.J. Cherryh
- FALLING FREE by Lois McMaster Bujold
- THE GUARDSMAN by P.J. Beese & Todd Cameron
- Hamilton
- ISLANDS IN THE NET by Bruce Sterling
- MONA LISA OVERDRIVE by William Gibson
- RED PROPHET by Orson Scott Card
-
-
- Best Novella of 1988:
-
-
- "The Calvin Coolidge Home for Dead Comedians" by Bradley Denton
- "Journals of the Plague Years" by Norman Spinrad
- "The Last of the Winnebagos" by Connie Willis
- "The Scalehunter's Beautiful Daughter" by Lucius Shepard
- "Surfacing" by Walter Jon Williams
-
-
- Best Novelette of 1988:
-
-
- "Do Ya, Do Ya, Wanna Dance" by Howard Waldrop
- "The Function of Dream Sleep" by Harlan Ellison
- "Ginny Sweethips' Flying Circus" by Neal Barrett, Jr.
- "Peaches for Mad Molly" by Steven Gould
- "Schrodinger's Kitten" by George Alec Effinger
-
-
- Best Short Story of 1988:
-
-
- "The Fort Moxie Branch" by Jack McDevitt
- "The Giving Plague" by David Brin
- "Kirinyaga" by Mike Resnick
- "Our Neural Chernobyl" by Bruce Sterling
- "Ripples in the Dirac Sea" by Geoffrey R. Landis
- "Stable Strategies for Middle Management" by Eileen Gunn
-
-
- Best Non-Fiction Book of 1988:
-
-
- A BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY OF SCIENCE FICTION AND FANTASY ARTISTS
- by Robert Weinberg
- FIRST MAITZ by Don Maitz
- THE MOTION OF LIGHT IN WATER by Samuel R. Delany
- THE NEW ENCYCLOPEDIA OF SCIENCE FICTION edited by James Gunn
- SCIENCE FICTION, FANTASY, AND HORROR: 1987 by Charles N. Brown &
- William G. Contento
-
-
- Best Dramatic Presentation of 1988: ALIEN NATION
- BEETLEJUICE
- BIG
- WHO FRAMED ROGER RABBIT?
- WILLOW
-
-
- Best Professional Editor of 1988: Gardner Dozois
- Edward L. Ferman
- David G. Hartwell
- Charles C. Ryan
- Stanley Schmidt
-
-
- Best Professional Artist of 1988: Thomas Canty
- David Cherry
- Bob Eggleton
- Todd Cameron Hamilton
- Don Maitz
- Michael Whelan
-
-
- Best Semi-Prozine of 1988:
-
-
- INTERZONE edited by David Pringle
- LOCUS edited by Charles N. Brown
- THE NEW YORK REVIEW OF SCIENCE FICTION edited by Kathryn Cramer,
- David G. Hartwell, Patrick Nielsen Hayden, Teresa Nielsen
- Hayden, and Susan Palwick
- SCIENCE FICTION CHRONICLE edited by Andrew I. Porter
- THRUST edited by D. Douglas Fratz
-
-
- Best Fanzine of 1988:
-
-
- FILE 770 edited by Mike Glyer
- FOSFAX edited by Timothy Lane
- LAN'S LANTERN edited by George "Lan" Laskowski
- NIEKAS edited by Edmund R. Meskys
- OTHER REALMS edited by Chuq Von Rospach
-
-
- Best Fan Writer of 1988: Avedon Carol
- Mike Glyer
- Arthur D. Hlavaty
- Dave Langford
- Guy H. Lillian III
- Chuq Von Rospach
-
-
- Best Fan Artist of 1988: Brad W. Foster
- Teddy Harvia
- Merle Insinga
- Stu Shiffman
- Taral Wayne
- Diana Gallagher Wu
-
-
-
-
- THE BRAM STOKER AWARD NOMINEES
-
-
- The Bram Stoker Awards are voted on by the eligible members
- of the Horror Writers of America. The Stokers are notable for
- being given for "superior achievement" rather than for being
- "best".
-
-
- Novel: THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS by Thomas Harris
- STINGER by Robert R. McCammon
- BLACK WIND by F. Paul Wilson
- THE DRIVE-IN by Joe R. Lansdale
- QUEEN OF THE DAMNED by Anne Rice
- FLESH by Richard Laymon
-
-
- First Novel: THE SUITING by Kelley Wilde
- CITIES OF THE DEAD by Michael Paine
- RESURRECTION, INC. by Kevin J. Anderson
- DELIVER US FROM EVIL by Allen Lee Harris
- DEMON NIGHT by J. Michael Straczynski
- FEAR BOOK by John Byrne
-
-
- Novelette: "The Skin Trade" by George R.R. Martin
- "The Function of Dream Sleep" by Harlan Ellison
- "The Juniper Tree" by Peter Straub
- "Orange Is For Anguish, Blue For Insanity" by David
- Morrell
- "The Night Flier" by Stephen King
- "Horrorshow" by John Farris
-
-
- Short Story:
-
-
- "Night They Missed the Horror Show" by Joe R. Lansdale
- "The Thing at the Top of the Stair" by Ray Bradbury
- "She's a Young Thing and Cannot Leave Her Mother" by Harlan
- Ellison
- "The Music of the Dark Time" by Chet Williamson
- "Jack's Decline" by Lucius Shepard
- "Nobody Lives There" by Carol Orlock
-
-
- Collection: CHARLES BEAUMONT: SELECTED STORIES by Charles
- Beaumont
- THE TOYNBEE CONVECTOR by Ray Bradbury
- BLOOD AND WATER AND OTHER TALES by Patrick McGrath
- THE BLOOD KISS by Dennis Etchison
- ANGRY CANDY by Harlan Ellison
- SCARE TACTICS by John Farris
-
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- I am sitting in the smallest room in my house. I have your review
- in front of me. Soon it will be behind me.
- --German composer Max Reger
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-
-
-
- RANDOM RECOMMENDATIONS
-
-
- When's the last time you read Lewis Carroll's ALICE IN
- WONDERLAND? That long? You'd be surprised how much adult material
- is in this children's book. Seems like everyone sees something
- different and fascinating in it. Try it again. You may be
- surprised.
-
-
- If L.A. LAW on TV has given you the willies for a lawyer
- mystery, you really should try PRESUMED INNOCENT by Scott Turow.
- The writing style is a little unpolished, but the story is
- involving and the suspense is well orchestrated. This is another
- of those books that tends to cause long discussions/arguments.
-
-
- A lovely box-of-peanuts book (bet you can't read just one
- page) is THE SEARCH FOR SIGNS OF INTELLIGENT LIFE IN THE UNIVERSE
- by Jane Wagner. This is the Broadway play that Lily Tomlin did a
- while back. There are a number of different characters (all
- played by Tomlin), and they all have something fresh and
- intriguing to say about the human condition. Makes me wish I had
- been able to catch the play live.
-
-
- Remember GONE WITH THE WIND? Margaret Mitchell's book is as
- wonderful as the movie, and you could do a lot worse than spend a
- week at Tara. The historical precision is always open to debate,
- but Mitchell's South does come alive and it's a thoroughly
- engrossing story.
-
-
- Do you ever enjoy reading about scandals of the rich and
- famous? How about odd deaths? If you're one of us, you'll love
- THEY WENT THAT-A-WAY: How the Famous, the Infamous, and the Great
- Died by Malcolm Forbes with Jeff Bloch. Constructed of short
- chapters, one on each person, this is a perfect book to carry
- around for those short boring periods of life. I was particularly
- fascinated by the chapters on Jim Morrison, Sal Mineo, and
- Princess Grace.
-
-
- My all-time favorite time travel book is Jack Finney's TIME
- AND AGAIN. There are fewer "hard" science details than in most of
- the others, and yet somehow I had no trouble at all believing in
- the process. And, like all good books, this one not only has a
- gimmick (time travel), it also has a wonderful historical
- mystery. I can recommend this novel without qualification.
-
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-
-
- Don't forget the value of books on cassette for friends who are
- ill, and particularly children. When you don't quite feel up to
- reading, having someone read to you is almost as good. And a
- cassette never gets hoarse. Some genres even have cassettes with
- special effects, like the 3-D special sound effects in the
- dramatized version of Stephen King's "The Mist".
-
-
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-
-
- GOOD READING PERIODICALLY
-
-
- NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC -- Yeah, you remember this one, the thick,
- slick magazine that you used to sneak peaks at in the library.
- Now that you're all grown up you should take another look,
- because this is definitely a BEST BUY in the magazine market. Not
- only are the pictures fabulous, but the writing is absorbing. And
- it's not all "Our Friend, the Warthog" kind of articles. Here are
- some of my favoriate articles from NG so far this year:
-
-
- Searching for the Secrets of Gravity
- Braving the Northwest Passage
- Living With Radiation
- Indian Burial Grounds: Who Owns Our Past?
- The Great Yellowstone Fires
- Cocaine's Deadly Reach
-
-
- Great writing, great photography, and a price that will surprise
- you (I've GOT to stop watching so many TV commercials). NG
- subscriptions only start at January or July, so the 18-month
- period from July 1989 to December 1990 is the current
- subscription and it'll cost you $27. Lifetime membership (in the
- U.S. only) is $500, in case you wondered. Contact: National
- Geographic Society, P.O. Box 2895, Washington, D.C. 20077-9960.
-
-
- THE ARMCHAIR DETECTIVE -- This is another big, slick magazine
- with thick covers and thick inside paper and it costs $6 per
- issue, $20 for four quarterly issues. Inside is a lot of good
- reading for the mystery buff, and invaluable information. They
- publish articles that are controversial (we're still muttering
- about a PRESUMED INNOCENT essay), and have wonderful columnists
- (William L. DeAndrea is our favorite).
-
-
- There are many, many book reviews, as well as coverage of short
- stories, movies, TV, and books about mysteries. And, aside from
- their one-person's-opinion articles, there are many that are
- well-researched and very informative. All in all, well worth the
- $20 a year to the mystery fan. Send your check to The Armchair
- Detective, 129 West 56th Street, New York, NY 10019.
-
-
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-
-
-
- BEACH BAG BOOKS
-
-
-
-
- It's a derogatory term used by literary critics during the
- summer, a damning with faint praise: "It would make a good beach
- bag book", meaning that it's best read with a brain bleached by
- the sun. This only comes up when discussing "popular literature";
- you know, all that bestselling trash. The theory is, if millions
- of people like it, how can it possibly be any good? Yeah, I know,
- literary critics are a strange bunch, but everybody's entitled to
- an opinion. I guess. Just wish it wasn't such a dumb opinion. Now
- I've lost my train of thought. What was I......Oh, yeah, beach
- bag books.
-
-
- Anyway, even though "popular" is a dirty word to critics,
- publishers and booksellers think it's just wonderful. And so do
- readers like you and I, the foot soldiers who create a bestseller
- and thereby keep the critics, publishers, and booksellers
- employed. But I digress again. Without further ado, here are some
- great ideas for your summer reading list:
-
-
- HC = Hardcover TP = Trade Paperback PB = Paperback
-
-
-
-
- HUMOR: In my opinion, humor is always in season, and here are
- some of the new choices:
-
-
- THE NIGHT THE BEAR ATE GOOMBAW by Patrick F. McManus (June HC
- from Holt, $15.95). A new collection from McManus for the
- outdoorsman or anyone who sees the funny side of life.
-
-
- STAND UP! MY LIFE AS A WOMAN by Roseanne Barr (August HC from
- Harper & Row, $17.95). This is the story of Roseanne Barr,
- "domestic goddess", as told by the woman herself.
-
-
- DAVE BARRY'S GREATEST HITS by Dave Barry (July TP from Fawcett/
- Columbine, $8.95). According to a local poll RFP conducted, Dave
- Barry is the funniest prose humorist currently working. Why not
- find out for yourself?
-
-
- THE CATALOG OF LOST BOOKS: An Annotated and Seriously Addled
- Collection of Great Books that Should Have Been Written, but
- Never Were by Tad Tuleja (August TP from Fawcett/Columbine,
- ($7.95). I'm not sure exactly how FUNNY this is going to be, but,
- being a humorous book about books, I don't think anyone here at
- RFP will be able to resist.
-
-
- GROUCHO AND ME by Groucho Marx (July TP from Simon & Schuster/
- Fireside, $9.95). An autobiography of Groucho, this is on the top
- of our shopping list for summer reading (along with the next
- entry). Certainly one of the funniest people of all time.
-
-
- MEMOIRS OF A MANGY LOVER by Groucho Marx (July TP from Simon &
- Schuster/Fireside, $8.95). A continuation of the above, this is
- guaranteed to entertain.
-
-
- NOBODY'S PERFECT by Donald E. Westlake (July PB from Mysterious
- Press, $3.95). The comical criminal, Dortmunder, is back with his
- bungling band. This one's been out of print since 1979.
-
-
- LOVE AND MARRIAGE by Bill Cosby (May HC from Doubleday, $16.95).
- Another sure bestseller, this time Mr. Cosby holds forth on the
- history and pitfalls of relationships. Advance word says that
- this could be his best book yet.
-
-
- FRED ALLEN: HIS LIFE AND WIT by Robert Taylor (June HC from
- Little, Brown, $19.95). If you aren't aware just how funny this
- man was, now is your chance to find out. Mr. Allen's radio
- program was the most popular in the country for quite some time.
-
-
- DAVE BARRY SLEPT HERE: A SORT OF HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES by
- Dave Barry (June HC from Random House, $15.95). What can one say
- except -- more Dave Barry.
-
-
-
-
- CLASSICS: Why gamble when you can read a sure thing?
-
-
- MYTHOLOGY by Edith Hamilton. Here is the quintessential scratch
- to the tell-me-a-story itch, all the great story plots as they
- were in the beginning, pure and primeval.
-
-
- THE WARDEN by Anthony Trollope. What happens when good politics
- are applied without a sense of humanity? This is a story as
- meaningful today as the day it was written.
-
-
- HAMLET by William Shakespeare. Read it aloud in your head (did
- that make sense?) for best effect. A tale of a family that makes
- the Ewings seem boring.
-
-
-
-
- THRILLERS: What better way to relax after a hard year's work
- than to have the fate of the world hanging by a thread? Here are
- a few good choices:
-
-
- THE EIGHT by Katherine Neville (1988 HC from Ballantine, $18.95).
- Couldn't resist listing this. This novel about the search for the
- pieces to the fabled Montglane Chess Service has mystery,
- fantasy, science, history, the occult, and even romance. If
- you're hard to please, this could be the one.
-
-
- THE BIOASSASSINS: A NOVEL by Gerald Posner (July HC from McGraw-
- Hill, $18.95). A technothriller about a CIA program to develop a
- lethal bacterium that causes instant death but leaves no traces.
-
-
- CLEAR AND PRESENT DANGER by Tom Clancy (July HC from Putnam,
- $21.95). The author of the bestselling THE CARDINAL OF THE
- KREMLIN tells of Jack Ryan, the CIA agent who appeared in
- Clancy's four other novels and his run-ins with Colombian drug
- lords at home and abroad.
-
-
- THE EIGHTH TRUMPET by Jon Land (May PB from Fawcett, $4.95). A
- retired professional killer is called back to solve a mystery.
- More for your money: this books contains TWO psycho killers.
- Warning: this book is not for the squeamish.
-
-
- WIN, LOSE OR DIE by John Gardner (July HC from Putnam, $13.95).
- The James Bond series continues with Gardner's eighth entry, in
- which Bond joins a Soviet diplomat to fight terrorists.
-
-
- THE MAMMOTH BOOK OF SPY THRILLERS edited by John Winwood (July TP
- from Carroll & Graf, $8.95). Contains the complete texts of three
- classic spy novels: THE NAKED RUNNER by Francis Clifford; THE
- WRATH TO COME by E. Philips Oppenheim; and ROGUE MALE by Geoffrey
- Household.
-
-
- CARDINAL OF THE KREMLIN by Tom Clancy (August PB from Berkley,
- $5.95). CIA agent Jack Ryan of PATRIOT GAMES returns in this
- reprint of the bestselling hardcover.
-
-
- THE RUSSIA HOUSE by John le Carre (June HC from Knopf, $19.95).
- The players: a dissident Soviet physicist, a London publisher,
- MI5, and the CIA. Reviews are calling le Carre's latest novel
- "brilliant", and saying "the genre may never be the same again".
- Be sure not to miss this one.
-
-
- MAZE by Larry Collins (June HC from Simon & Schuster, $19.95).
- The KGB have a magneto-encephalogram that uses electromagnetic
- waves to trigger responses someone's brain at a distance. The
- author of IS PARIS BURNING? does it again.
-
-
- RULES OF PREY by John Sandford (July HC from Putnam, $18.95). A
- serial killer is murdering Minneapolis women and leaving "murder
- rules" at the scene. John Sandford is a pseudonym for Pulitzer
- Prize-winning journalist John Camp.
-
-
-
-
- BUSINESS: If you're a die-hard Yuppie (or want people to think
- you are), you'll probably want to flash one of the latest
- business books. Frankly, some of the summer crop sound so good
- you don't even have to be a Yuppie to want to read them.
-
-
- THE FALL OF THE HOUSE OF HUTTON by Donna Sammons Carpenter & John
- Feloni (July HC from Holt, $19.95). Looks at the collapse of the
- Wall Street institution E.F. Hutton.
-
-
- INSIDE JOB: THE LOOTING OF THE SAVINGS AND LOANS by Stephen
- Pizzo, Mary Fricker & Paul Muolo (July HC from McGraw-Hill,
- $18.95). Theorizes that federal deregulation led to the problems
- facing the savings and loan industry.
-
-
- SUDDEN DEATH: THE RISE AND FALL OF E.F. HUTTON by Mark Stevens
- (August HC from NAL, $19.95). An account of the growth problems
- of the Wall Street brokerage firm.
-
-
- THE AMERICAN DREAMERS: SIX BUSINESSMEN AND THE EMPIRES THEY BUILT
- by Michael Meyer (July HC from Times Books, $19.95). The story of
- six visionary business leaders and what drives them. Sort of
- Lifestyles of the Rich and Obsessive.
-
-
- STAY OR LEAVE: A COMPLETE SYSTEM FOR DECIDING WHETHER TO REMAIN
- AT YOUR JOB OR PACK YOUR TRAVELLING BAG by Barry Gale & Linda
- Gale (August TP from Harper & Row/Perennial Library, $9.95). The
- authors of DISCOVER WHAT YOU'RE BEST AT now offer a simple,
- self-administered test to evaluate your job situation.
-
-
- HIGH STEPPERS, FALLEN ANGELS AND LOLLIPOPS: WALL STREET SLANG by
- Kathleen Odean (July TP from Holt/Owl, $8.95). Learn to talk a
- good game while you're losing your shirt.
-
-
-
-
- HOLLYWOOD: It doesn't matter whether your body is on the beach
- or in the back yard when you can send your imagination to
- tinseltown:
-
-
- THE ZANUCKS OF HOLLYWOOD: THE DARK LEGACY OF AN AMERICAN DYNASTY
- by Marlys J. Harris (July HC from Crown, $18.95). How three
- generations of the powerful Hollywood family were dominated and
- destroyed by the spirit of one man.
-
-
- NO TRICKS IN MY POCKET: PAUL NEWMAN DIRECTS by Stewart Stern
- (July HC from Grove, $17.95). Describes Paul Newman as he
- rehearses his cast for the film THE GLASS MENAGERIE, which Newman
- directed.
-
-
- AMERICAN MADNESS: THE LIFE OF FRANK CAPRA by Joseph McBride
- (August HC from Knopf, $29.95). The life of the celebrated film
- director. I assume from the price that this is a large photo-
- filled volume. If so, this would make a wonderful gift.
-
-
- KING OF THE NIGHT: THE BIOGRAPHY OF JOHNNY CARSON by Laurence
- Leamer (July HC from Morrow, $19.95). The career of the eminent
- TONIGHT SHOW host.
-
-
- HOLLYWOOD'S UNSOLVED MYSTERIES by John Austin (August HC from
- Shapolsky, $16.95). Many never-before-published photographs of
- Hollywood figures who died under mysterious circumstances,
- including Natalie Wood, Bob Crane, Vicki Morgan and Marilyn
- Monroe. I love this kind of stuff.
-
-
- THE WIZARD OF OZ: THE OFFICIAL 50TH ANNIVERSARY PICTORIAL HISTORY
- by John Fricke, Jay Scarfone & William Stillman (August HC from
- Warner, $29.95). An illustrated tribute to the MGM film classic
- and includes many never-before-published photographs from private
- collections and the MGM archives.
-
-
- THE MAKING OF THE WIZARD OF OZ: MOVIE MAGIC AND STUDIO POWER IN
- THE PRIME OF MGM AND THE MIRACLE OF PRODUCTION #1060 by Aljean
- Harmetz, introduction by Margaret Hamilton (July TP from
- Delacorte/Delta, $12.95). Another 50th anniversary celebration.
- Do you remember who Margaret Hamilton is?
-
-
- CULT MOVIES: THE CLASSICS, THE SLEEPERS, THE WEIRD, AND THE
- WONDERFUL by Danny Peary (July TP from Delacorte/Delta, $14.95).
- Analyzes 100 all-time favorite cult movies, from MAD MAX to THE
- ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW.
-
-
- THE WIZARD OF OZ: THE SCREENPLAY edited & with an introduction by
- Michael Patrick Hearn (August TP from Delacorte/Delta, $9.95).
- The screenplay appears in book form for the first time.
-
-
- CAPTAIN'S LOG: WILLIAM SHATNER'S PERSONAL ACCOUNT OF THE MAKING
- OF STAR TREK V by William Shatner as told to Lisabeth Shatner
- (July TP from Pocket, $9.95). The actor tells how he faced the
- challenge of writing and directing the latest Star Trek movie.
-
-
- THE WORLDS OF THE FEDERATION by Shane Johnson (August TP from
- Pocket, $11.95). The author of MR. SCOTT'S GUIDE TO THE
- ENTERPRISE discusses in detail many of the alien races seen in
- STAR TREK.
-
-
- OUTRAGEOUS CONDUCT by Stephen Farber & Marc Green (August PB from
- Ivy, $4.95). The authors reveal the inside story of THE TWILIGHT
- ZONE movie tragedy.
-
-
-
-
- GOSSIP: Take your mind off your troubles by reading about the
- troubles of others. If it's dirt you want:
-
-
- THE SECRET WORLD OF CYNDY GARVEY by Cynthia Garvey & Andy Meisler
- (August HC from Doubleday, $18.95). Reveals the violent childhood
- and devastating marriage of Steve Garvey's former wife.
-
-
- BETTE AND JOAN: THE DIVINE FEUD by Shaun Considine (August HC
- from Dutton, $18.95). Reviews the rivalry between Hollywood
- legends Bette Davis and Joan Crawford.
-
-
- THE PRINCESS AND THE DUCHESS by Josephine Fairley (July HC from
- St. Martin's, $17.95). Contains accounts of the lives of Diana,
- Princess of Wales and Sarah, Duchess of York.
-
-
- THE ROLLING STONE INTERVIEWS: THE 1980s by the editors of ROLLING
- STONE, introduction by Kurt Loder (July HC, TP from St. Martin's,
- $24.95, $15.95). Collects interviews with 35 of the major
- entertainment figures of the 1980s, including Bruce Springsteen,
- Woody Allen and Sting.
-
-
- SENATORIAL PRIVILEGE: THE CHAPPAQUIDDICK COVER-UP by Leo Damore
- (July PB from Dell, $4.95). To celebrate the 20th anniversary of
- the tragic car accident. Can a real American ever get enough of
- the Kennedys?
-
-
- THE LOVE YOU MAKE by Peter Brown & Steven Gaines (July PB from
- NAL/Signet, $4.95). Peter Brown, former business manager and
- friend of the Beatles, "sets the record straight" about the Fab
- Four.
-
-
- THE RAGMAN'S SON by Kirk Douglas (July PB from Pocket, $5.50).
- The screen star describes his life with unflinching honesty.
-
-
- GREAT BALLS OF FIRE by Myra Lewis with Murray Silver (July PB
- from St. Martin's, $4.50). An uncensored account of the life of
- music legend Jerry Lee Lewis as told by his former child bride.
-
-
- THE BRIDESMAIDS by Judith Balaban Quine (June HC from Weidenfeld
- & Nicolson, $21.95). The author was one of Grace Kelly's
- "intimate friends" who served as bridesmaid at her wedding in
- 1956. This is the story of what happened to those six bridesmaids
- and is sure to be full of dirt.
-
-
- THE REAL FRANK ZAPPA BOOK by Frank Zappa with Peter Occhiogrosso
- (May HC from Poseidon, $18.95). A hilarious and cynical look at
- subjects ranging from musicians and composing to censorship and
- TV evangelists.
-
-
-
-
- MYSTERY: Some people (like me) feel that there's nothing quite
- so relaxing as a good murder, as long as it's just on a page.
- Here's a whole mountain of murderous print:
-
-
- SIX OF THE BEST: SHORT NOVELS BY MASTERS OF MYSTERY edited by
- Ellery Queen (July HC from Carroll & Graf, $18.95). Novellas by
- Ellery Queen, Michael Gilbert, Ed McBain, Georges Simenon, Erle
- Stanley Gardner and John D. MacDonald.
-
-
- MAIGRET AND THE FORTUNETELLER by Georges Simenon (July HC from
- Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, $16.95). The case of a murdered
- fortuneteller.
-
-
- THE MAN WITH THE LITTLE DOG by Georges Simenon (July HC from
- Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, $16.95). Novel illustrating how the
- disease of egoism can eat away at a man's happiness. Not a
- Maigret story.
-
-
- PERRY MASON IN THE CASE OF TOO MANY MURDERS by Thomas Chastain
- (July HC from Morrow, $15.95). The first original Perry Mason
- book since Erle Stanley Gardner's last title was released in
- 1973.
-
-
- THE QUALITY OF MERCY by Faye Kellerman (June HC from Morrow,
- $19.95). A critical success already, this is an unusual period
- piece set in Elizabethan England, with Shakespeare as a
- character. Publishers Weekly said, "More than just a mystery, the
- novel is a spectacular epic--romantic, bawdy, witty and abounding
- with adventure. It's a stellar performance."
-
-
- OTHER PEOPLE'S MONEY by Arthur Lyons (July HC from Mysterious
- Press, $17.95). L.A. private eye Jacob Asch investigates an art
- smuggler plotting to bring ancient treasure to the U.S.
-
-
- POLAR STAR by Martin Cruz Smith (August HC from Random House,
- $19.95). In the sequel to GORKY PARK, Arkady Renko investigates
- the murder of a female crew member aboard a fishing factory ship.
-
-
- MURDER ON THE GLITTER BOX by Steve Allen (July HC from Zebra,
- $18.95). A suspense novel set amidst the glamour of Hollywood and
- Beverly Hills.
-
-
- A READER'S GUIDE TO THE CLASSIC BRITISH MYSTERY by Susan Oleksiw
- (July TP from Mysterious Press, $19.95). Covers 1440 titles by
- 121 authors.
-
-
- BODY AND SOUL by Sherryl Woods (August PB from Popular Library,
- $3.95). New York reporter Amanda Roberts and ex-cop Joe Donelli
- team up to solve the murder of an aerobics instructor.
-
-
- SISTERS IN CRIME edited by Marilyn Wallace (May PB from Berkley,
- $3.95). Includes stories from Elizabeth Peters, Barbara Michaels,
- Dorothy Salisbury Davis, Mary Shura Craig, Sara Paretsky, and Sue
- Grafton.
-
-
-
-
- TRUE CRIME: Above were the fictional crime stories. Now here are
- a few nonfictional crimes:
-
-
- THE GIRL SCOUT MURDERS: A TRUE STORY OF VIOLENT DEATH AND INDIAN
- JUSTICE by Charles W. Sasser (July HC from Delacorte, $17.95).
- Investigates the murder of three Girl Scouts and the 10-month
- search for the killers, and tells a tale of justice gone wrong.
-
-
- BLOOD AND POWER: ORGANIZED CRIME IN TWENTIETH-CENTURY AMERICA by
- Stephen Fox (July HC from Morrow, $22.95). Relies on manuscript
- collections, congressional hearings and interviews to tell the
- story of organized crime.
-
-
- MURDER ALONG THE WAY: A PROSECUTOR'S PERSONAL ACCOUNT OF FIGHTING
- VIOLENT CRIME IN THE SUBURBS by Kenneth Gribetz & H. Paul Jeffers
- (July HC from Pharos/World Almanac, $16.95). Offers an account of
- D.A. Gribetz's two decades of prosecuting highly publicized
- crimes such as the Andrew Crispo murder case and the Brinks
- robbery.
-
-
- FATAL ERROR: THE MISCARRIAGE OF JUSTICE THAT SEALED THE
- ROSENBERGS' FATE by Joseph Scharlitt (July HC from Scribners,
- $24.95). Examines the Rosenberg case, revealing human, judicial
- and legal errors that led to their execution.
-
-
- THE DEATH SHIFT: A TRUE STORY OF MURDER AND MEDICINE by Peter
- Elkind (August HC from Viking, $19.95). The author, associate
- editor of Texas Monthly magazine, reports on the true murder case
- of Genene Jones, a nurse who was tried for killing young
- intensive-care-unit patients.
-
-
- APPOINTMENT FOR MURDER by Susan Crain Bakos (July PB from
- Pinnacle, $3.95). Report of the St. Louis "killing dentist",
- Glennon Engleman.
-
-
- DEVIANT: THE SHOCKING TRUE STORY OF THE ORIGINAL "PSYCHO" by
- Harold Schecter (May PB from Pocket, $3.95). You guessed it, this
- is the true story of Ed Gein, every gruesome bit of it. Don't say
- we didn't warn you.
-
-
-
-
- FANTASY: When you've had about all the reality you can take:
-
-
- WIZARD'S BANE by Rick Cook (March PB from Baen, $3.50). If you
- like fantasy and computers, this is the book for you. A first
- novel from a very promising author.
-
-
- SPHYNXES WILD by Esther M. Friesner (May PB from NAL, $3.95).
- Sorcerer and sphynx battle it out in the gambling casinos of
- Atlantic City. Take this one to the tables with you.
-
-
- THE DIAMOND THRONE by David Eddings (May HC from Del Rey,
- $18.95). David Eddings is one of the hottest names in fantasy
- today. Don't miss this first volume of a new series.
-
-
-
-
- SF: Here are a couple of suggestions for people who like to take
- their vacations far, far away:
-
-
- THE LANTERN OF GOD by John Dalmas (May PB from Baen, $3.95). Six
- hundred genetically enhanced pleasure androids are being trans-
- ported by a starship when it crashes on a habitable planet -- the
- droids stranded one place, the crew elsewhere. Two thousand years
- later the descendants of both groups are at war. A thoroughly
- engrossing story.
-
-
- 2061: ODYSSEY THREE by Arthur C. Clarke (May PB from Del Rey,
- $4.95). Heywood Floyd must once again confront Dave Bowman (or
- whatever Dave Bowman has become), a newly independent HAL, and
- the power of an alien race. Read all three books together.
-
-
- THE ILLUSTRATED HISTORY OF SCIENCE FICTION by Dieter Wuckel &
- Bruce Cassiday (July HC from Crossroad/Continuum, $24.95). A
- survey of the roots of science fiction from ancient times to the
- present, with more than 200 photographs.
-
-
- THE MAMMOTH BOOK OF GOLDEN AGE SCIENCE FICTION: SHORT NOVELS OF
- THE 1940s edited by Isaac Asimov, Charles G. Waugh & Martin H.
- Greenberg (July TP from Carroll & Graf, $8.95). Ten short science
- fiction novels from the '40s.
-
-
- CRADLE by Arthur C. Clarke & Gentry Lee (July PB from Warner,
- $4.95). An epic novel of adventure and imagination.
-
-
- THE ASIMOV CHRONICLES: FIFTY YEARS OF ISAAC ASIMOV edited by
- Martin H. Greenberg (May HC from Dark Harvest, $21.95). An
- impressive historical collection of writing by Asimov, who's
- still at it after fifty years.
-
-
-
-
- HORROR: When nothing but a cosmic confrontation between good and
- evil will do...
-
-
- THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS by Thomas Harris (June PB from St.
- Martin's, $5.95). The evil genius Dr. Hannibal Lecter returns in
- this followup to the critically acclaimed RED DRAGON.
-
-
- ASH WEDNESDAY by Chet Williamson (April PB from Tor, $3.95). Chet
- Williamson is one of the best kept secrets in horror, but not for
- long. This novel's an excellent introduction.
-
-
- THE NIGHT OF THE MOONBOW by Thomas Tryon (July HC from Knopf,
- $18.95). A novel of terror about young men awaiting a new arrival
- at Bible camp in 1938.
-
-
- LORI by Robert Bloch (July HC from Tor, $16.95). The author of
- PSYCHO writes about a student who returns from her college
- graduation to a life of terror.
-
-
- NIGHTTOWN by T.E.D. Klein (August HC from Viking, $17.95). A New
- York subway murderer hunts for the crime's only witness in this
- horror novel.
-
-
- SEPULCHRE by James Herbert (August PB from Jove, $4.95). A
- nefarious psychic misuses his uncanny abilities in this novel,
- which was a top bestseller in England.
-
-
- CABAL by Clive Barker (August PB from Pocket, $4.50). Tales by a
- master of horror, including the novella that is the basis for the
- summer film release, THE NIGHTBREED.
-
-
- LIGHTNING by Dean R. Koontz (May PB from Berkley, $4.95). Who is
- the stranger who appears after the lightning strikes? Is he a
- guardian angel or the devil in disguise? Koontz does it again.
-
-
- HOT BLOOD: TALES OF PROVOCATIVE HORROR edited by Jeff Gelb & Lonn
- Friend (May PB from Pocket, $3.95). Stories by Bloch, Campbell,
- Ellison, Etchison, Garton, Masterton, Matheson (pere et fils),
- McCammon, Schow, Skipp & Spector, Sturgeon, Tem, Williamson (Chet
- & J.N.), Wilson, and more. That says it all.
-
-
- THE AXMAN COMETH by John Farris (July PB from Tor, $4.50). A
- blackout in New York City traps a woman with a stranger who may
- be the dreaded Axman.
-
-
- ANCIENT IMAGES by Ramsey Campbell (June HC from Scribners,
- $18.95). Sandy Allen tracks down a horror film starring Boris
- Karloff and Bela Lugosi made in England in 1938 and immediately
- suppressed. It turns out all the horror wasn't on the film.
-
-
- PRIME EVIL edited by Douglas E. Winter (April PB from NAL/Signet,
- $4.95). NEW stories by King, Etchison, Barker, Tessier, Morrell,
- Straub, Grant, Campbell, Strieber, and more. With an introduction
- by Douglas Winter. Essential reading for horror fans.
-
-
-
-
- NF: Below are some top nonfiction choices for your summer
- reading enjoyment:
-
-
- MEN FROM EARTH by Buzz Aldrin & Malcolm McConnell (July HC from
- Bantam, $19.95). Marks the 20th anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon
- landing and recounts the history of the Apollo space program.
-
-
- CARRYING THE FIRE: AN ASTRONAUT'S JOURNEYS by Michael Collins,
- foreword by Charles A. Lindbergh (July HC from Farrar, Straus &
- Giroux, $19.95). What it is like to be an astronaut.
-
-
- REBUILDING SHAKESPEARE'S GLOBE by Andrew Gurr with John Orrell
- (July HC from Routledge, Chapman & Hall, $25). The story of the
- Globe Theatre's rebuilding, which began in April 1988.
-
-
- APOLLO: THE TEN-YEAR RACE TO PUT A MAN ON THE MOON by Charles
- Murray & Catherine Cox (July HC from Simon & Schuster, $19.95).
- The people behind the Apollo space program.
-
-
- THE HOTEL: ONE WEEK IN THE LIFE OF THE PLAZA by Sonny Kleinfield
- (July HC from Simon & Schuster, $18.95). The behind-the-scenes
- activity at a luxury hotel.
-
-
- HEAVY TRAFFIC AND HIGH CULTURE: NEW AMERICAN LIBRARY AS LITERARY
- GATEKEEPER IN THE PAPERBACK REVOLUTION by Thomas L. Bonn (July HC
- from Southern Illinois University Press, $25.95). Profile of the
- book publishing company and its publisher Victor Weybright, from
- 1946 to 1961.
-
-
- PRESERVING DISORDER: THE FAKING OF THE PRESIDENT 1988 by Abbie
- Hoffman & Jonathan Silvers (July HC from Viking, $18.95). This
- account of the 1988 campaign trail, at once serious and
- irreverent, also reviews Democratic party politics since 1968.
-
-
- WOODSTOCK by Joel Makower (July HC, TP from Doubleday, $27.50,
- $15.95). An oral history of the famous rock festival with over
- 150 photographs.
-
-
- HOW TO LOCATE ANYONE ANYWHERE by Ted Gunderson with Roger
- McGovern (August TP from Dutton, $7.95). A step-by-step guide to
- locating individuals. The author is a former FBI agent.
-
-
- BE YOUR OWN DETECTIVE by Greg Fallis & Ruth Greenberg (August TP
- from M. Evans, $8.95). Tips on eavesdropping and tailing,
- accessing public records and subtle interrogation skills.
-
-
- A NATURALIST'S NIGHTBOOK: A JOURNAL OF DISCOVERY ON THE FRONTIER
- OF NIGHT by Cathy Johnson (July TP from Globe Pequot, price not
- announced). Examines the hours between dusk and dawn.
-
-
- RAINBOWS, CURVE BALLS & OTHER WONDERS OF THE NATURAL WORLD
- EXPLAINED by Ira Flatow (July TP from Harper & Row/Perennial
- Library, $7.95). Unveils the mysteries of everyday life.
-
-
- STALAG LUFT III: THE SECRET STORY OF "THE GREAT ESCAPE" by Arthur
- A. Durand (July TP from Simon & Schuster/Touchstone, $10.95).
- This account details the actual adventure that took place in the
- WWII prison camp made famous by the movie THE GREAT ESCAPE.
-
-
- TRANSFORMATION: THE BREAKTHROUGH by Whitley Strieber (August PB
- from Avon, $4.95). This sequel to the bestselling COMMUNION
- provides more information about the author's ongoing contact with
- extraterrestrial visitors.
-
-
- FAMILY OF SPIES: INSIDE THE JOHN WALKER SPY RING by Pete Earley
- (August PB from Bantam, $4.95). The former Washington Post
- reporter bases this examination of the "most damaging spy ring of
- our time" on interviews with Walker and his family.
-
-
- SATAN WANTS YOU: THE CULT OF DEVIL WORSHIP IN AMERICA by Arthur
- Lyons (July PB from Mysterious Press, $3.95). The author of THE
- TERRIBLE MASTER presents a history of Satanism in modern America.
-
-
- WHAT TURNS MEN ON by Brigitte Nioche (July PB from NAL/Signet,
- $4.50). How men view women.
-
-
- THE STORY OF PHYSICS by Lloyd Motz & Jefferson Weaver (May HC
- from Plenum, $24.95). The story of the evolution of physics, the
- most basic science. Publishers Weekly called it "a feast for the
- intellect".
-
-
-
-
- ROMANCE: Take a look -- romance has changed a LOT in the past
- ten years. As they say, not for the squeamish:
-
-
- TIGER'S EYE by Karen Robards (May PB from Avon, $4.50). Isabella
- St. Just is kidnapped by Alec Tyron, AKA the Tiger, the most
- feared man in the London underworld.
-
-
- THE TAMING by Jude Deveraux (May PB from Pocket, $4.50). The
- first of a new trilogy, this is an upside down version of The
- Taming of the Shrew.
-
-
- GIVE ME TONIGHT by Lisa Kleypas (April PB from Onyx, $4.50). A
- fascinating mixture of romance novel and time travel story.
-
-
- IF MY LOVE COULD HOLD YOU by Elaine Coffman (May PB from Dell,
- $3.95). Charlotte Butterworth, the town spinster, saves the life
- of a man named Walker. A tender love story.
-
-
-
-
- SPORTS: Once a jock, always a jock:
-
-
- THE DETROIT TIGERS: AN ILLUSTRATED HISTORY by Joe Falls,
- introduction by Sparky Anderson (June HC from Walker, $24.95). A
- rollicking history of the team that has employed Ty Cobb, Denny
- McLain and Mark Fidrych. Hundreds of action photos.
-
-
- YOU GOTTA HAVE WA by Robert Whiting (June HC from Macmillan,
- $17.95). An interesting comparison of American versus Japanese
- baseball. Wa is the group harmony that is the essence of
- "besoboru" (baseball) in Japan.
-
-
- TAE KWON DO: THE ULTIMATE REFERENCE GUIDE TO THE WORLD'S MOST
- POPULAR MARTIAL ART by Yeon Hee Park, Yeon Hwan Park & John
- Gerrard (July HC from Facts on File, $24.95). A combination of
- illustrations and text that presents the information needed to
- master the ancient Korean fighting art.
-
-
- THE HUNDRED YARD LIE: THE CORRUPTION OF COLLEGE FOOTBALL AND WHAT
- WE CAN DO TO STOP IT by Rick Telander (August HC from Simon &
- Schuster, $17.95). The lead college football reporter for Sports
- Illustrated examines the myths that surround college football.
-
-
- THE DUKE OF FLATBUSH by Duke Snider with Bill Gilbert (July PB
- from Zebra, $3.95). An ex-Brooklyn Dodger talks about his old
- team in this autobiography.
-
-
-
-
- MISCELLANEOUS FICTION: The following books were difficult to
- classify, but represent a lot of good reading:
-
-
- THE SATANIC VERSES by Salman Rushdie (1988). Why not find out
- what all the yelling is about?
-
-
- I, JFK by Robert Mayer (July HC from Dutton, $18.95). The Edgar
- Award nominee depicts President Kennedy reflecting on his life
- from the hereafter.
-
-
- JOURNEY by James Michener (July HC from Random House, $16.95). A
- novel focusing on five men who risked all during the Canadian
- gold rush of 1897.
-
-
- SHINING THROUGH by Susan Isaacs (August PB from Ballantine,
- $5.95). A smart Wall Street secretary becomes a World War II spy
- in this bestseller by the author of COMPROMISING POSITIONS.
-
-
- ALASKA by James Michener (July PB from Fawcett Crest, $5.95).
- This account of our 49th state is a reprint of the bestselling
- hardcover.
-
-
- THE DARK TOWER: THE GUNSLINGER by Stephen King (July PB from
- NAL/Signet, $4.95). The first volume in the Dark Tower series
- finally makes it to mass market paperback.
-
-
- TILL WE MEET AGAIN by Judith Krantz (June PB from Bantam, $5.95).
- The story of a glamorous French family and their ups and downs
- during World War II.
-
-
-
-
- MISCELLANEOUS: Here's one great book that needed a category all
- by itself:
-
-
- CRACKER JACK PRIZES by Alex Jaramillo (June HC from Abbeville,
- $19.95). A lavish picture book history of a classic American
- artifact: the prizes in boxes of Cracker Jacks.
-
-
- JUNE BIRTHDAYS
-
-
- 1 (1878) John Masefield
- 2 (1840) Thomas Hardy
- 2 (1913) Barbara Pym
- 3 (1926) Allen Ginsberg
- 4 (1917) Robert Anderson
- 5 (1898) Federico Garcia Lorca
- 5 (1934) Bill D. Moyers
- 5 (1939) Margaret Drabble
- 6 (1799) Aleksandr Pushkin
- 6 (1875) Thomas Mann
- 7 (1825) R.D. Blackmore
- 7 (1899) Elizabeth Bowen
- 8 (1814) Charles Reade
- 10 (1911) Terence Rattigan
- 10 (1928) Maurice Sendak
- 11 (1572) Ben Jonson
- 11 (1925) William Styron
- 12 (1819) Charles Kingsley
- 12 (1929) Anne Frank
- 13 (1752) Fanny Burney
- 13 (1865) William Butler Yeats
- 13 (1893) Dorothy L. Sayers
- 13 (1894) Mark van Doren
- 14 (1811) Harriet Beecher Stowe
- 14 (1925) Pierre Salinger
- 14 (1933) Jerzy Kosinski
- 16 (1937) Erich Segal
- 16 (1938) Joyce Carol Oates
- 17 (1703) John Wesley
- 17 (1914) John Hersey
- 20 (1905) Lillian Hellman
- 21 (1905) Jean-Paul Sartre
- 21 (1912) Mary McCarthy
- 21 (1935) Francoise Sagan
- 22 (1856) H. Rider Haggard
- 22 (1898) Erich Maria Remarque
- 22 (1906) Anne Morrow Lindbergh
- 23 (1910) Jean Anouilh
- 24 (1842) Ambrose Bierce
- 24 (1916) John Ciardi
- 24 (1935) Pete Hamill
- 25 (1903) George Orwell
- 26 (1892) Pearl Buck
- 27 (1850) Lafcadio Hearn
- 28 (1712) Jean-Jacques Rousseau
- 28 (1909) Eric Ambler
- 30 (1685) John Gay
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- I try to leave out the parts that people skip.
- --Elmore Leonard
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
-
-
- FEATURED AUTHOR:
-
-
- STANLEY ELLIN
-
-
- Stanley Ellin was born in New York City in 1916 and
- graduated from college at the age of 19. Early jobs included
- being a "pusher" for a newspaper distributor, running a Hudson
- Valley dairy farm, teaching at a junior college, and being a
- steelworker. After army service during World War II his wife
- Jeanne encouraged him to try writing and his first story, "The
- Specialty of the House" not only was bought by Ellery Queen's
- Mystery Magazine but won their Best First Story award for 1948.
- The exact same fate befell his next SIX stories. After that, I
- guess they got tired of giving the same guy the award every year,
- so they inaugurated the annual Stanley Ellin Story, which is
- where almost all of his short stories made their debut.
-
-
- Is he really that good? Dilys Winn (MURDER INK) said:
- "Whenever anyone tells you mystery writers can't write, sit him
- down and read Stanley Ellin to him. Mr. Ellin is clear, direct
- and chilling." Martin Seymour-Smith (NOVELS AND NOVELISTS) said:
- "Ellin manages to sustain a sometimes breath-taking excitement,
- while drawing his characters well and making subtle observations
- of the workings of social groups." If you aren't familiar with
- Stanely Ellin's work, you've got a real treat in store.
-
-
- Tragically for us all, Stanley Ellin died in July of 1986.
- It's a scandal that so few of his books are in print now. Let's
- hope that someone recognizes the oversight and corrects it, soon.
-
-
-
-
- STANLEY ELLIN: A CHECKLIST
-
-
- "The Specialty of the House" (1948) - short story
- Dreadful Summit (1948) - made into the movie The Big Night
- The Key to Nicholas Street (1952)
- "The House Party" (1954) - Edgar-winning short story
- "The Blessington Method" (1956) - Edgar-winning short story
- Mystery Stories (1956) - short stories
- The Eighth Circle (1958) - Edgar-winning novel
- The Panama Portrait (1962)
- The Blessington Method (1964) - short stories
- House of Cards (1967)
- The Valentine Estate (1968)
- The Bind (1970)
- Mirror, Mirror on the Wall (1972)
- Stronghold (1974)
- The Luxembourg Run (1977)
- The Specialty of the House and Other Stories: The Complete
- Mystery Tales, 1948-1978 (1979)
- Star Light, Star Bright (1979)
- The Dark Fantastic (1983)
- Very Old Money (1985)
-
-
- Where should you start if you're new to Stanley Ellin's
- stories? This is the only writer I know of whom it is easy to
- say: anywhere. Pick up the first Ellin book you come to and I'm
- sure it'll be absolutely wonderful. Enjoy.
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
-
-
- THE HORROR DEPARTMENT:
-
-
- SPLATTERPUNK
-
-
- If writers like Stephen King, Peter Straub, and Charles L.
- Grant are the mainstream of horror fiction, then the Splatter-
- punks are the cutting edge, the new frontier. And, like any
- frontier, time may turn it into a populous city or a ghost town.
- But for now, Splatterpunk is here -- and it's SELLING.
-
-
- How can you tell Splatterpunk? The style is explicit, raw,
- and often somewhat crude. Taboos get violated. Gore is usually
- plentiful. The volume is set LOUD. And there's often a serious
- emotional and psychic toll to be paid by the reader. These books
- don't let you off easy.
-
-
- But why talk about Splatterpunk when you could be reading
- it? The following list serves as a comprehensive introduction to
- the raw-edge world of explicit horror. Continue at your own risk.
-
-
- The Splat Pack:
-
-
- Richard Matheson: His seminal novel, I AM LEGEND (1954), brought
- the Victorian vampire into the twentieth century. Still good
- reading today, and is easily read as an AIDS metaphor.
-
-
- Other works that could be taken as early examples of splatterpunk
- writing are: Theodore Sturgeon's SOME OF YOUR BLOOD (1961),
- Anthony Burgess' A CLOCKWORK ORANGE, and S.P. Somtow's VAMPIRE
- JUNCTION.
-
-
- Robert R. McCammon: This soft-spoken Alabama-born author can
- really go over the top when he wants to. THEY THIRST (1981) was
- one of his first books, and also one of the first books in which
- splatterpunk arrived in its current shape and form. Underrated
- and passed-over at the time, this book deserves a re-evaluation
- now. Since then, Mr. McCammon tends to be a bit more controlled,
- with the notable exception of STINGER (1988). Typically, this
- book has also been underrated and mostly dismissed, even though
- Mr. McCammon's plot construction has improved greatly since his
- early days. Both books are highly recommended to splatterpunkers.
-
-
- Clive Barker: This is the poster boy for splatterpunk. Ever since
- Stephen King put the Horror Seal of Approval on him, he's been
- hot. Of course, it didn't hurt that he was young, bright,
- ambitious, and good looking. But his work does speak for itself.
- In my opinion, his writing technique has been overrated and his
- creativity and innovation have been underrated. Try his BOOKS OF
- BLOOD (1984), and I think you'll see what I mean. You'll probably
- have to admit that you've read better writing, but you certainly
- can't call these stories "the same old thing". In this respect he
- reminds me of Poe; a good idea man. This is definitely a writer-
- director-artist to watch. We may not always be cheering, but
- we'll never be bored.
-
-
- John Skipp & Craig Spector: Here you have the Martin & Lewis of
- modern horror fiction (I hope I'm not the only one who remembers
- Martin & Lewis). Their first book, THE LIGHT AT THE END (1985),
- about a "Subway Psycho" in New York, got everyone's attention.
- Their second, THE CLEANUP (1986), was a bit of a stutterstep. It
- was right off the gore meter and got a lot of mediocre-to-bad
- reviews. But they impressed once again with their next, THE
- SCREAM (1988) and DEAD LINES (1989). The very next S&S effort
- will be THE BOOK OF THE DEAD due out this summer; an anthology of
- zombie stories they've edited. Also look for a Skipp & Spector
- writing credit on A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET PART 5: THE DREAM
- POOL.
-
-
- Ray Garton: After having done a few novelizations, Mr. Garton
- burst onto the scene in 1987 with LIVE GIRLS, which proved that
- the vampire story isn't dead and was one of the most rollicking,
- fun horror books in some time. Warning: You guys might get a bit
- squeamish here. According to Ray Garton, vampires don't have to
- be male, and they don't have to bite your NECK, if you get my
- drift. His latest novel was CRUCIFAX (CRUCIFAX AUTUMN in limited
- edition hardcover), well-received, but not quite as much so as
- LIVE GIRLS, which is a tough act to follow.
-
-
- David J. Schow (who coined the term Splatterpunk): Don't miss
- SILVER SCREAM (1988), which Mr. Schow edited. There are
- selections from virtually every author named in this article. And
- you certainly don't want to miss his fiction: start with THE KILL
- RIFF. He calls his new novel THE SHAFT, and describes it as "a
- tale of an apartment building with Ahlzeimer's..." Sounds
- wonderful.
-
-
- Dennis Etchison: Arguably the best writer in this group,
- certainly one of the finest short story writers today, Dennis
- Etchison is also one of the better anthology editors. He edited
- CUTTING EDGE (1986), and MASTERS OF DARKNESS (1986), which
- spawned a sequel, MASTERS OF DARKNESS II (1987). All three were
- well-received and include works of many of the Splatterpunk
- group. But don't forget to read some of Mr. Etchison's own work,
- including his collections: THE DARK COUNTRY (1982), RED DREAMS
- (1984), and BLOOD KISS (1986); also his novel, DARKSIDE (1986).
- His most famous short story is possibly "The Late Shift" (1980),
- which finally explained why the employees of convenience stores
- so often seem, well, not all there.
-
-
- Joe Lansdale: This discussion would never be complete without a
- mention of this terrorizing Texan. His horror always pushes
- sensibilities and taboos to the limit. Warning: His stuff is
- GROSS. Start with THE DRIVE-IN (1988), which, believe it or not,
- is one of his more conservative efforts.
-
-
- J.K. Potter: This is the name to know for horrific art. His best
- stuff (the gospel according to me) is his airbrush work. Potter's
- pictures can be surprising, unsettling, and chilling.
-
-
- Richard Christian Matheson: You're not seeing double; this is
- RM's son. His specialty is the short-short, and he doesn't mind
- going for a sudden shock. See his collection, SCARS AND OTHER
- DISTINGUISHING MARKS (1987). And, he has just written his first
- novel, so far called CREATED BY, which should appear in hardcover
- sometime in 1990.
-
-
-
-
- "I think our task as a species is to work out a moral ground
- that's solid and consistent with people's real lives. That
- involves taking apart the old systems very meticulously to find
- out what works and what's horse flop. To find something that
- really works in the face of increasingly complex and mad times is
- very high on the agenda."
- --John Skipp
-
-
- "As a style, Splatterpunk is often gross, usually extreme, and
- always visceral. You may love it, you may hate it, but it's
- damned hard to read it and be unmoved. That's its job: to shock
- complacency, to attack the neutral reaction, to challenge
- conventional wisdom and morality, to stimulate the dialogue. When
- we're at our best, we are fiction's subconscious saboteurs,
- laying mines behind enemy lines."
- --Craig Spector
-
-
- "When we write this hideous horror stuff we're throwing the
- reality of the ANATOMY of violence in the reader's face. We
- believe that helps the reader to make those hard choices. By
- pushing the limits of our awareness, we're better equipped to
- make real choices."
- --John Skipp
-
-
- "We are dealing with difficult subjects. We are dealing with
- sexual brutality, the nature and ramifications of real flesh-and-
- blood violence. It's ugly terrain; very scary stuff. And it
- doesn't surprise us that some people freak out when they read it.
- But there is a readership for this kind of writing. A lot of
- folks are looking for someone to deal with this stuff in a
- straight-ahead fashion, to go all the way while retaining a
- strong sense of humanity. But a lot of other people think you
- can't, or shouldn't, do this. That because we write it, we must
- be inhuman monsters. The biggest bone of contention thrown at us
- by our critics is that we have no moral compass. That's
- bullshit."
- --John Skipp
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
-
-
- THE MYSTERY DEPARTMENT:
-
-
- MURDEROUS VACATIONS
-
-
- We here at Reading For Pleasure wanted to get you in a
- proper frame of mind for your summer vacation. Here are some
- suggestions to show you how some other peoples' vacations went.
- You may never leave home again.
-
-
- Aldyne, Nathan COBALT
- Anthony, Peter THE WOMAN IN THE WARDROBE
- Barry, Charles THE DETECTIVE'S HOLIDAY
- Bellairs, George ALL ROADS TO SOSPEL
- Blake, Nicholas THE SUMMER CAMP MYSTERY
- Brett, Simon A COMEDIAN DIES
- Buckingham, Bruce BROILED ALIVE
- Burton, Miles FOUND DROWNED
- ACCIDENTS DO HAPPEN
- Cairns, Alison STRAINED RELATIONS
- Cannan, Joanna ALL IS DISCOVERED
- Carvic, Heron MISS SEETON DRAWS THE LINE
- Christie, Agatha APPOINTMENT WITH DEATH (Poirot)
- PERIL AT END HOUSE (Poirot)
- A CARIBBEAN MYSTERY (Marple)
- EVIL UNDER THE SUN (Poirot)
- Clark, Douglas POACHER'S BAG
- Cole, G.D.H. & Margaret THE MAN FROM THE RIVER
- Crane, Caroline COAST OF FEAR
- Crispin, Edmund HOLY DISORDERS
- Dolson, Hildegard BEAUTY SLEEP
- Ferrars, E.X. THE SMALL WORLD OF MURDER
- Gardner, Erle Stanley THE CASE OF THE ANGRY MOURNER
- Grimes, Martha THE DIRTY DUCK
- Hubbard, P.M. PICTURE OF MILLIE
- Hunter, Alan DEATH ON THE BROADLANDS
- GENTLY IN THE SUN
- Huntington, John THE SEVEN BLACK CHESSMEN
- Innes, Michael THE CASE OF THE JOURNEYING BOY
- THE CRABTREE AFFAIR
- James, P.D. UNNATURAL CAUSES
- Jeffers, H. Paul MURDER MOST IRREGULAR
- Lathen, Emma PICK UP STICKS
- Lockridge, Frances & Richard VOYAGE INTO VIOLENCE
- Lockridge, Richard INSPECTOR'S HOLIDAY
- DEATH IN A SUNNY PLACE
- Lovesey, Peter MAD HATTER'S HOLIDAY
- MacKenzie, Donald RAVEN'S LONGEST NIGHT
- Marsh, Ngaio WHEN IN ROME
- COLOUR SCHEME
- PHOTO FINISH
- McConnor, Vincent THE PROVENCE PUZZLE
- McCormick, Claire THE CLUB PARADISE MURDERS
- McMullen, Mary A GRAVE WITHOUT FLOWERS
- Millar, Margaret THE WEAK-EYED BAT
- Morrison, B.J. BEER AND SKITTLES
- Moyes, Patricia ANGEL DEATH
- DOWN AMONG THE DEAD MEN
- Nielsen, Helen THE DARKEST HOUR
- Olmsted, Lorena Ann SETUP FOR MURDER
- Pentecost, Hugh DEADLY TRAP
- Peters, Ellis WHO LIES HERE?
- Queen, Ellery INSPECTOR QUEEN'S OWN CASE
- Rendell, Ruth SHAKE HANDS FOR EVER
- SPEAKER OF MANDARIN
- Robertson, Helen SWAN SONG
- Rutherford, Douglas MYSTERY TOUR
- Siller, Van THE LAST RESORT
- UNDER A CLOUD
- Simenon, Georges MAIGRET IN VICHY
- NO VACATION FOR MAIGRET
- THE GUINGUETTE BY THE SEINE
- Stewart, Mary THE MOON SPINNERS
- Tey, Josephine A SHILLING FOR CANDLES
- Thomson, June THE HABIT OF LOVING
- Williams, Valentine THE CLUE OF THE RISING MOON
- MASKS OFF AT MIDNIGHT
- Wyllie, John THE LONG DARK NIGHT OF BARON SAMEDI
- Yorke, Margaret GRAVE MATTERS
- SILENT WITNESS
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- So what's a Narrative Hook? This is what the author of a work of
- fiction uses in the very beginning to keep you reading. It might
- be an exciting incident (a murder is nice), an odd statement that
- needs explanation ("John was feeling pretty good, except for that
- pain behind his third eye."), or a beginning that is in medias
- res (explained later in this issue).
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
-
-
- THE NONFICTION DEPARTMENT:
-
-
- THE PSYCHOLOGY OF EVERYDAY THINGS
- by Donald A. Norman
- Basic Books, 1988
-
-
- Have you ever walked up to the bank of doors at, say, a
- store, and push when you should have pulled (or vice versa)? You
- feel like a real jerk when you do that, don't you? You probably
- thought: Must be a soft spot in my brain where the door-opening
- ability is. After all, this is a public place, with thousands of
- people coming and going every day, and apparently they can figure
- it out. Does any of this sound familiar?
-
-
- Donald A. Norman says that those thousands of other people
- are also pushing when they should be pulling. And, furthermore,
- the problem isn't with the people, the problem is with the doors,
- or, more correctly, with the people who designed the doors. As a
- matter of fact, our lives are full of these everyday things that
- are poorly design and that cause us frustration. And, typically,
- we blame ourselves when problems arise.
-
-
- Mr. Norman brings up the new phone systems at three
- different locations. When asked, people at all three locations
- complain that there's no HOLD function. He investigates and finds
- that all three systems have a HOLD function. What's the problem?
- The HOLD function is no longer obvious (remember the old-
- fashioned HOLD button that lit up?) and the instructions are so
- complicated that the function is not really usable. Below is the
- cheat sheet that fits over the face plate of the phone at one
- location (provided by the phone system company):
-
-
- CALL HOLD
- TAP + * 99
- To Retrieve
- Replace Handset
- Phone Rings
- Answer Hold Party
-
-
- Can you believe that this was the best that well-educated people
- trying to provide a service could do? By the way, in case you're
- trying to figure it out yourself, you might want to know that one
- of the phone keys is labeled TAP (so TAP isn't a verb, it's a
- noun). Why can't we have the old HOLD button?
-
-
- Donald Norman also brings up the slide projector with one
- button to control the advance. Sometimes the slide advance would
- be forward, to the next slide, sometimes it would be backwards,
- to the previous slide. Only the one button. How do you work it
- properly? It turns out that holding the button down briefly makes
- it go forward, holding it down longer makes the go backwards. Why
- make it so difficult?
-
-
- To be fair, Mr. Norman also points out examples of good
- design. The seat adjustment control on a Mercedes Benz that he
- drove was composed of two knobs, one shaped like the back of the
- seat, one shaped like the bottom of the seat -- both arranged
- like a cut-away view of the seat. To make the back of the seat
- tip backwards, just move the appropriate knob in a similar way.
- No instruction book needed, not even any labels on the knobs, and
- perfectly easy and natural to use. Beautifully designed.
-
-
- If you'd like more discussions like the above, not to
- mention elucidations of what constitutes good design and why, ask
- your bookseller for a copy of THE PSYCHOLOGY OF EVERYDAY THINGS
- by Donald A. Norman. I was enthralled from the first page to the
- last.
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- No, no, there must be a limit to the baseness even of publishers.
- --Dorothy L. Sayers
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
-
-
- FICTION INTO FILM DEPARTMENT:
-
-
- THE SHINING
-
-
- OK, let's start with the surprise revelation: I actually
- LIKED Stanley Kubrick's THE SHINING. And I also was a big fan of
- Stephen King's novel (maybe not SK's "number one" fan, but
- certainly in the top ten).
-
-
- I'll admit that Mr. Kubrick's improvement of Stephen King's
- novel was mostly misguided. As Douglas Winter has said, Stanley
- Kubrick attempted "to transcend a genre that he did not
- understand". First, he transferred the starring role from the
- hotel to Jack Nicholson (of course, he probably paid more for
- Nicholson). I like Jack, but I missed the hedge animals; and what
- used to be a story about a haunted hotel was now the story of one
- man's descent into madness. And the "horror shots" (the little
- girls, the little girls and the blood in the hall, and the tidal
- wave of blood) -- they were WAY to lingering. We had time to do
- lab tests on the fake blood. Not scary.
-
-
- All right. So Kubrick doesn't have Stephen King's
- understanding of horror, and when he tries real hard it's
- self-consciously ludicrous. And the core of King's story -- the
- supernatural entity that is the hotel -- was largely lost (along
- with my hedge animals).
-
-
- BUT ---- Let's look at the pluses: the cinematography
- (director of photography was John Alcott), the chilling sterility
- of the sets, the Bartok music, Nicholson, and all of the scenes
- in and around the ballroom.
-
-
- Take the cinematography: like Kubrick's much-earlier 2001: A
- SPACE ODYSSEY, the cinematography is superb. His films are
- visually striking. Remember the LOOOONG tracking shot of the
- little boy on his Hot Wheels? And the matching soundtrack; the
- alternating raw sound of the wheels on wooden floor and the
- muffled sound on the rugs. Lovely stuff.
-
-
- The sets were the scariest element of the movie, in my
- opinion. The rooms were so large, the furniture sparse, with very
- little human litter anywhere. Reminded me of similar scenes and
- feelings in 2001. Kubrick is scarier when he doesn't try so hard.
-
-
- The music background was perfect for this movie; as it was,
- once again, in 2001. The opening travelogue scenery shots, with
- music, were a great setup for the movie to follow. Good choices.
-
-
- Nicholson, of course, was brilliant. His face alone was
- worth his salary. Remember when the little boy snuck into the
- family's apartment to retrieve a toy? He wasn't supposed to wake
- up his father, 'cause the guy was already going downhill. That
- shot, from the boy's point of view, looking into the parents'
- bedroom was terrific. Nicholson can REALLY be scary.
-
-
- Everybody I know thought that Nicholson's conversations with
- the bartender in the ballroom were the best part of the movie. It
- established Nicholson's deteriorating mental state, and the
- bartender's understated conviviality kept the audience wondering
- what exactly was going on. I also enjoyed the scene in the men's
- room, where there was one of the few remnants of SK's theme (the
- butler's line: "You're the caretaker. You've always been the
- caretaker.")
-
-
- If you'll try watching THE SHINING without looking for the
- Stephen King novel I think you'll find that it's a beautiful
- moody story that's well worth your time.
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- I love you sons of bitches. You're the only ones with guts enough
- to REALLY care about the future, who REALLY notice what machines
- do to us, what wars do to us, what cities do to us, what
- tremendous misunderstandings, mistakes, accidents, and
- catastrophes do to us. You're the only ones zany enough to
- agonize over time and distances without limit, over mysteries
- that will never die, over the fact that we are right now
- determining whether the space voyage for the next billion years
- or so is going to be Heaven or Hell.
- --from Kurt Vonnegut's GOD BLESS YOU, MR. ROSEWATER;
- said to a convention of science fiction writers.
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
-
-
- THE SF DEPARTMENT:
-
-
- SF FAN-LINGO
-
-
- [from THE ILLUSTRATED BOOK OF SCIENCE FICTION LISTS by Mike
- Ashley, Cornerstone Library, 1982.]
-
-
- ACTIFAN - ACTIve FAN: one who participates regularly in fandom
- either by writing for or producing a FANZINE or other FANAC.
-
-
- APA - Amateur Press Association: in existence before SF fandom
- but rapidly adopted, it is a central organization for the
- publication and circulation of a common group of FANZINES. A
- fanzine produced by an apa is usually called an apazine.
-
-
- BNF - Big Name Fan: usually those who have been active in fandom
- for many years and are known to associate with the FILTHY PROS,
- and who may even have sold professionally themselves. Such
- writers as Robert Silverberg, Terry Carr, Ted White, Bob Shaw,
- James White and Wilson (Bob) Tucker were all BNFs at one time.
-
-
- CORFLU - CORrecting FLUid: the saving grace for all fanzines
- produced by stencils and a bad typist.
-
-
- EGOBOO - EGO BOOst: one has a feeling of egoboo when your
- FANZINE is praised in the PROZINES, or even in other FANZINES.
-
-
- FANAC - FANnish ACtivity: actually participating actively in
- fandom.
-
-
- FANZINE - a FAN magaZINE: sometimes called fanmags; amateur
- magazines produced by SF fans.
-
-
- FEN - plural of fan, in the same way as men is the plural of man.
-
-
- FIAWOL - Fandom Is A Way Of Life: an acronym which reveals that
- SF fandom is sufficiently important to dominate one's life.
-
-
- FILLO - Filler ILLO: a small illustration used to fill up space
- in a FANZINE or PROZINE.
-
-
- FILTHY PRO - a semi-affectionate term tinged with jealousy used
- by fans to refer to one of their number who has sold stories to
- the PROZINES.
-
-
- GAFIA - Getting Away From It All: another acronym to denote an
- escape from FIAWOL and FANAC, hence the verb to GAFIATE, or to
- stop ones fannish involvement.
-
-
- HUGO - the Science Fiction Achievement Award presented annually
- at WORLDCONS and named after Hugo Gernsback, the founder of the
- SF magazine.
-
-
- ILLO - illustration; plural illoes.
-
-
- LETTERCOL - the LETTER COLumn in a magazine, also known as a
- LOCOLUMN.
-
-
- LETTERHACK - a regular writer of letters to FANZINES or PROZINES
- whose letters are usually published.
-
-
- LOC - Letter Of Comment: one way to obtain a FANZINE is to write
- a loc on the previous issue, hence the verb to loc, or to write a
- letter to a ZINE commenting on it.
-
-
- LOCOLUMN - letter column, or more precisely the column for locs.
-
-
- MUNDANE - the world outside fandom and the people in it.
-
-
- NEOFAN - newcomer to fandom (plural neofen).
-
-
- PRODOM - the professional counterpart to fandom.
-
-
- PROZINE - a PROfessional magaZINE, also called promags.
-
-
- SERCON - SERious and CONstructive, an adjective that can describe
- either a fan or a fanzine. It means one that deals seriously with
- science fiction as opposed to a fannish fanzine which deals less
- seriously with SF and involves itself mostly with FANAC.
-
-
- SF - the accepted abbreviation for Science Fiction. An older
- variant is STEF derived from Hugo Gernsback's earlier name for
- science fiction, viz. scientifiction. Either of these terms may
- be used, especially as stef is adaptable as an adjective, e.g. a
- book with a science fiction flavor can be described as stefnish.
- Under no circumstances, however, will any self-respecting fan use
- the term sci-fi which has come to be associated with the public
- image of all that is bad in science fiction. Say sci-fi to any
- TRUFAN and watch him wince - unless he hits back first!
-
-
- TRUFAN - a tried and tested TRUe FAN often, but not necessarily,
- one of many years' standing, and who has considerable loyalty to
- fandom.
-
-
- WORLDCON - the annual World Science Fiction Convention.
-
-
- ZINE - magaZINE, whether fanzine or prozine.
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- OK, so what's "in medias res"? This term comes from Horace, who
- unfortunately didn't speak English. If he had, it would have come
- out "in the midst of things". This term is used to refer to the
- Narrative Hook device of starting a story in the middle of
- something, which forces you to stick around waiting for
- flashbacks to find out what the devil is going on.
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
-
-
- AN EXHAUSTING, IF NOT EXHAUSTIVE, LIST OF WRITERS'
- PSEUDONYMS
-
-
- ALIAS REAL NAME
-
-
- Anthony Abbot Fulton Oursler
- Achmed Abdullah Alexander Nicholayevitch Romanoff
- Catherine Aird Kinn McIntosh
- Martha Albrand Heidi Huberta Freybe
- Sholem Aleichem Solomon J. Rabinowitz
- Peter Anthony Peter & Anthony Shaffer
- Piers Anthony Piers Anthony Jacob
- Christopher Anvil Harry C. Crosby
- Anthony Armstrong George Anthony Armstrong Willis
- Clifford Ashdown R. Austin Freeman & John James
- Pitcairn
- Gordon Ashe John Creasey *
- Richard Bachman Stephen King
- Charles Beaumont Charles Nutt
- Francis Beeding John Leslie Palmer & Hilary Aidan
- St. George Saunders
- Josephine Bell Doris Bell Collier Ball
- George Bellairs Harold Blundell
- Andrei Bely Boris Nikolovich Bugaev
- Anthony Berkeley Anthony Berkeley Cox
- Nicholas Blake C. Day Lewis
- Hannes Bok Wayne Woodard
- John & Emery Bonett John Hubert Arthur Coulson &
- Felicity Winifred Carter
- Anthony Boucher William A.P. White
- Edgar Box Gore Vidal
- Ernest Bramah Ernest Bramah Smith
- Christianna Brand Mary Christianna Lewis
- Lynn Brock Alister McAllister
- Anthony Burgess John Burgess Wilson
- Carol Carnac Edith Caroline Rivett
- Lewis Carroll Charles Dodgson
- Louis-Ferdinand Celine Louis-Ferdinand Destouches
- James Hadley Chase Rene Raymond
- Charles B. Child C. Vernon Frost
- John Christopher Christopher Samuel Youd
- Hal Clement Harry Clement Stubbs
- Brian Coffey Dean R. Koontz
- Manning Coles Cyril Henry Coles & Adelaide
- Frances Oke Manning
- Michael Collins Dennis Lynds
- J.J. Connington Alfred Walter Stewart
- Richard Cowper John Middleton Murry, Jr.
- Edmund Crispin Bruce Montgomery
- Amanda Cross Carolyn Heilbrun
- Priscilla Dalton Michael Avallone
- Clemence Dane Winifred Ashton
- Norman Deane John Creasey *
- Lester Del Rey Ramon Alvarez-del Rey
- Carter Dickson John Dickson Carr
- Isak Dinesen Karen Blixen
- R.B. Dominic Mary J. Latis & Martha Hennissart
- Dick Donovan Joyce Emmerson Preston Muddock
- George Eliot Mary Ann Evans
- A.A. Fair Erle Stanley Gardner
- Ralph Milne Farley Roger Sherman Hoar
- Lionel Fenn Charles L. Grant
- E.X. Ferrars Morna Doris Brown
- Josiah Flynt Josiah Flynt Willard
- Stanton Forbes DeLoris Stanton Forbes
- Leslie Ford Zenith Jones Brown
- Anatole France Jacques Anatole Thibault
- Robert Caine Frazer John Creasey *
- Andrew Garve Paul Winterton
- Anthony Gilbert Lucy Beatrice Malleson
- John Godey Morton Freedgood
- Maxim Gorky Henry Yorke
- Bruce Graeme Graham Montague Jeffries
- William Haggard Richard Henry Michael Clayton
- Adam Hall Elleston Trevor
- Brett Halliday Davis Dresser
- Knut Hamsun Knut Pederson
- Cyril Hare Alfred Alexander Gordon Clark
- Matthew Head John Canaday
- O. Henry William Sidney Porter
- Headon Hill Francis Edward Grainger
- Gordon Holmes Louis Tracy & M.P. Shiel
- H.H. Holmes William A.P. White
- Victoria Holt Eleanor Burford Hibbert
- Leonard Holton Leonard Patrick O'Connor
- Wibberley
- Geoffrey Homes Daniel Mainwaring
- George Hopley Cornell Woolrich
- Richard Hull Richard Henry Sampson
- Kyle Hunt John Creasey *
- Michael Innes J.I.M. Stewart
- William Irish Cornell Woolrich
- P.D. James Phyllis White
- Carolyn Keene Edward L. Stratemeyer
- Milward Kennedy Milward Rodon Kennedy Burge
- Thomas Kyd Alfred B. Harbage
- Ed Lacy Len Zinberg
- Emma Lathen Mary J. Latis & Martha Hennissart
- John le Carre David Cornwell
- Murray Leinster William F. Jenkins
- E.C.R. Lorac Edith Caroline Rivett
- Lawrence L. Lynch Emma Murdock Van Deventer
- C.C. MacApp Carroll M. Capps
- Ross Macdonald Kenneth Millar
- Charles Eric Maine David McIlwain
- Katherine Mansfield Katherine Beauchamp
- J.J. Marric John Creasey *
- Geoffrey Marsh Charles L. Grant
- Andre Maurois Emile Herzog
- Ed McBain Evan Hunter
- J.T. McIntosh James M. Macgregor
- L.T. Meade Elizabeth Thomasina Meade Smith
- Barbara Michaels Barbara Mertz
- Wade Miller Robert Wade & Bill Miller
- Yukio Mishima Hiraoka Kimitake
- Alberto Moravia Alberto Pincherle
- Anthony Morton John Creasey *
- Leigh Nichols Dean R. Koontz
- Edwina Noone Michael Avallone
- Flann O'Brien Brian Nolan
- Frank O'Connor Michael O'Donovan
- George Orwell Eric Blair
- Marco Page Harry Kurnitz
- Barry Perowne Philip Atkey
- Elizabeth Peters Barbara Mertz
- Robert L. Pike Robert L. Fish
- Ellery Queen Frederic Dannay & Manfred B. Lee
- Patrick Quentin Richard Wilson Webb & Hugh
- Callingham Wheeler (usually)
- Anne Rampling Anne Rice
- Seeley Regester Mrs. Metta Victoria Fuller Victor
- Mary Renault Mary Challans
- John Rhode Cecil John Charles Street
- Craig Rice Georgiana Ann Randolph
- Sax Rohmer Arthur Henry Sarsfield Ward
- Jules Romains Louis Farigoule
- A.N. Roquelaure Anne Rice
- Barnaby Ross Frederic Dannay & Manfred B. Lee
- Patrick Ruell Reginald Hill
- Francoise Sagan Francoise Quoirez
- George Sand Amantine Aurore Dupin
- John Sandford John Camp
- Dell Shannon Elizabeth Linington
- Ignazio Silone Secondo Tranquilli
- Stendhal Marie Henri Beyle
- Eugene Sue Marie Joseph Sue
- Italo Svevo Ettore Schmitz
- Josephine Tey Elizabeth MacKintosh
- Mark Twain Samuel Clemens
- S.S. Van Dine Willard Huntington Wright
- Voltaire Francois Marie Arouet
- Henry Wade Major Sir Henry Lancelot
- Aubrey-Fletcher
- Tobias Wells DeLoris Forbes
- Patricia Wentworth Dora Amy Elles Dillon Turnbull
- Nathanael West Nathan Weinstein
- Rebecca West Cecily Andrews
- Mary Westmacott Agatha Christie
- John Wyndham John Beynon Harris
- Dornford Yates Cecil William Mercer
- Jeremy York John Creasey *
-
-
- * John Creasey used 26 different aliases.
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
- TRIVIA ANSWERS
-
-
- 1. By editing and publishing newspapers
- 2. Hugo Gernsback, original publisher of Amazing Stories
- magazine
- 3. Samuel Johnson
- 4. John Steinbeck, in THE GRAPES OF WRATH
- 5. Salesman
- 6. Canterbury
- 7. MOBY DICK
- 8. Alighieri
- 9. They're both female writers
- 10. YOU ONLY LIVE TWICE
-
-
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
-
-
-
- COMING NEXT MONTH:
- Next month is our Books About Books issue. Also planned is a
- Featured Author special on Harlan Ellison. Initial delivery is
- scheduled for June 24/25/26.
-
-
-
-