home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 2009-09-16 | 93.0 KB | 2,178 lines |
-
- **************************************************************
- * *
- * R E A D I N G F O R P L E A S U R E *
- * *
- * Issue #6 *
- * *
- * November 1989 *
- * *
- * *
- * COMPUTERS & ROBOTS *
- * *
- * Editor: Cindy Bartorillo *
- * *
- **************************************************************
-
- 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. You may copy
- freely, but please give us credit if you extract portions to use
- somewhere else. Sample copies of our print edition are available
- upon request. We ask for a donation of $1.50 each to cover the
- printing and mailing costs.
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- DISTRIBUTION DIRECTORY
-
- Here are a few bulletin boards where you should be able to pick
- up the latest issue of READING FOR PLEASURE. See masthead for
- where to send additions and corrections to this list.
-
- Ad Lib Monroeville,PA John Williams 412-327-9209
- The Annex Dayton,OH John Cooper 513-274-0821
- Beginnings BBS Levittown,NY Mike Coticchio 516-796-7296 S
- Billboard Bartlett,IL Gary Watson 312-289-9808 P
- Boardello Los Angeles,CA Bryan Tsunoda 213-820-4527 P
- Bruce's Bar&Grill Hartford,CT Bruce 203-236-3761 P
- Byrd's Nest Arlington,VA Debbie&Alan Byrd 703-671-8923 P
- CC-BBS ManhattanBchCA Chuck Crayne 213-379-8817 P
- Center Point PCB Salt Lake,UT Kelvin Hyatt 801-359-6014 P
- Chevy Chase Board Chevy Chase,MD Larkins/Carlson 301-549-5574 P
- CompuNet Venice,CA Karen Zinda 213-306-1447 P
- Daily Planet Owosso,MI Jay Stark 517-723-4613
- Death Star Oxon Hill,MD Lee Pollard 301-839-0705 P
- Diversified Prog PacPalisadesCA Jean-Pierre Denis 213-459-6053 P
- Farmington Valley Hartford,CT John Walko 203-676-8920 P
- Future Tech Boston,MA Napier & Moran 617-720-3600 P
- Futzer Avenue Issaquah,WA Stan Symms 206-391-2339 P
- HeavenSoft Dayton,OH John Wampler 513-836-4288
- Home DBA Support Seattle,WA Mark Findlay 206-789-9302 P
- IBMNew CompuServe Library #0
- Inn on the Park Scottsdale,AZ Jim Jusko 602-957-0631 P
- Invention Factory New York,NY Mike Sussell 212-431-1273 P
- Ivory Tower Manchester,CT Karl Hakmiller 203-649-5611 PS
- JETS Philadelphia T.A. Hare 215-928-7503 P
- JForum CompuServe Library #8
- KCSS BBS Seattle,WA Bob Neddo 206-296-5277 P
- ()Lensman() BBS Denver,CO Greg Bradt 303-979-8953 P
- Litforum CompuServe Library #1
- Lost Paradise Alexandria,VA Jerry Shifrin 703-370-7795 P
- Magpie HQ New York,NY Steve Manes 212-420-0527 P
- NiCK at NiTE Salt Lake,UT Nick Zahner 801-964-1889 P
- Nostradamus Los Angeles,CA Al Menache 213-473-4119 P
- Oak Lawn Oak Lawn,IL Vince & Chris 312-599-8089 P
- Poverty Rock PCB Mercer Is.,WA Rick Kunz 206-232-1763 PS
- Quantum Connec. PacPalisadesCA Richard W. Gross 213-459-6748 P
- Riverside Premium Lyons,IL Don Marquardt 312-447-8073 P
- Science Fiction GEnie Library #3
- SF & Fantasy CIS Hom-9 Library #1
- Suburban Software Chicago,IL Chuck Valecek 312-636-6694 P
- Technoids Anon. Chandler,AZ David Cantere 602-899-4876 P
- Writers Happy Hr Seattle,WA Walter Scott 206-364-2139 P
- Writers' RT GEnie Library #1
- Your Place Fairfax,VA Ken Goosens 703-978-6360 P
-
- RFP Home Board:
- Baudline II Frederick,MD the Bartorillo's 301-694-7108
-
- Any board that participates in the RelayNet (tm) email system can
- request RFP from NetNode.
-
- P = PC Pursuit-able
- S = StarLink-able
-
- NOTE: Back issues on CompuServe may have been moved to a
- different library.
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
- Editorial . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 138
- What's News . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 188
- 1989 World Fantasy Award Nominations . . . . . . . . . . 252
- Good Reading Periodically . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 355
- Random Reviews . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 397
- Donald M. Grant, Publisher . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 491
- Cyberpunk & Neuromancer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 627
- Computer Books . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 767
- Digital Delights . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 869
- Comics: Nightmare On Elm Street . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1039
- Read A Banned Book . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1124
- Featured Author: Josephine Tey . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1192
- Mystery Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1382
- Guest Reviewer: Darryl Kenning . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1478
- Books On A Chip . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1573
- New From Carroll & Graf . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1631
- Important Days in November . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1714
- Computer Cowboy Reading . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1796
- Number One Fan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1864
- November Book Releases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1915
- And ANYTHING Is Possible . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2034
- Back Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2115
- Trivia Quiz . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 331
- Trivia Answers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2160
-
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- The public which reads, in any sense of the word worth
- considering, is very, very small; the public which would feel no
- lack if all book-printing ceased tomorrow is enormous.
- --George Gissing
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- CONTRIBUTIONS: RFP is not copyrighted and nonprofit, and if
- you're crazy enough to play that game, send us any book-related
- material you'd care to contribute. Check out the masthead on the
- Table of Contents page for our various addresses.
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- EDITORIAL
-
- Do you realize that scientists are, at this very moment, slaving
- away at their insidious Devil's machines, attempting to duplicate
- the human brain with a computer? What kind of idiots are we
- giving white coats and pocket protectors to?
-
- Let's take a look at People. There are world leaders: Adolf
- Hitler, Benito Mussolini, Idi Amin, Kadafi, Dan Quayle. There are
- great spiritual leaders: the Ayatollah Khomeni, Jim & Tammy
- Bakker. Great strategists like Oliver North. Great sports
- figures: Leon Spinks, George Steinbrenner. Women in politics like
- Jessica Hahn. Even humans with computer-like memory capacity like
- John Dean. These are People. Can you imagine if those scientists
- ever succeed? I don't know about you, but I'll stick to my PC.
-
- Why don't they spend their time trying to make computers really
- better, meaning more useful to us, not like us? We have literally
- billions of human beings--we don't need more--but a handy
- computer with lots of good software is still a godsend.
-
- Which brings me to this issue. This issue was composed on a PC's
- Limited (now Dell) 286; the electronic edition is disseminated
- via an Avatex 2400; the print edition is "desktop published" on a
- Proteus 286; and the print edition is actually printed on a
- borrowed laser jet (we hope to get our own soon). RFP owes its
- very existence to the invention of silicon, so it's only fair
- that we give thanks with this Computers & Robots Issue.
-
- As they say nowadays: Have your computer call our computer.
-
- Happy Reading!
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- THE HACKER ETHIC:
-
- Access to computers--and anything which might teach you something
- about the way the world works--should be unlimited and total.
- Always yield to the Hands-On Imperative!
- All information should be free.
- Mistrust Authority--Promote Decentralization.
- Hackers should be judged by their hacking, not bogus criteria
- such as degrees, age, race, or position.
- You can create art and beauty on a computer.
- Computers can change your life for the better.
- --from HACKERS by Steven Levy
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- WHAT'S NEWS
-
- * The book window of Liberty's, a department store in London, was
- blown up by a bomb apparently thrown from a passing car. Anger
- over THE SATANIC VERSES was given as the reason. It is the first
- time in these London bombings that people have been injured (3
- people hurt, one seriously). Unfortunately for the sake of logic,
- Liberty's does not (and did not) carry the novel.
-
- * Umberto Eco (THE NAME OF THE ROSE) finally has a new novel out,
- called FOUCAULT'S PENDULUM. It's about a literary joke that turns
- into a psychological thriller, and sounds really good (it's not
- out yet as I write this). Publishers Weekly says that it's "a
- mixture of metaphysical meditation, detective story, computer
- handbook, introduction to physics and philosophy, historical
- survey, mathematical puzzle, compendium of religious and cultural
- mythology, guide to the Torah, reference manual to the occult,
- the hermetic mysteries, the Rosicrucians, the Jesuits, the
- Freemasons--ad infinitum". And you can get ALL THIS for only
- $22.95 from Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. ISBN: 0-15-132765-3
-
- * Just in case you're thinking about all those extra dollars
- going into Salman Rushdie's bank account because of all the
- controversy, think about his life now. He is closely guarded and
- must move to a new hiding place every few days. A bestseller is
- hardly compensation for living your life on the run.
-
- * Scott Turow (PRESUMED INNOCENT) has got a new novel, THE BURDEN
- OF PROOF. It's another story centered around legal concerns, and
- one of the central characters is from his first novel (Alejandro
- Stern, the smooth and classy defense attorney), but the highlight
- is not a trial, as in PRESUMED INNOCENT. THE BURDEN OF PROOF is
- supposed to be a more complicated story, a psychological tale of
- family secrets and loyalties. Like the first book, it will be
- published by Farrar, Straus & Giroux, possibly around June of
- next year, just in time for summer reading.
-
- * While we're on the subject of PRESUMED INNOCENT, it appears
- that the movie will finally be made. The latest news that I've
- heard is that Harrison Ford has been signed to star.
-
- * While we're in Hollywood, let's catch up on book/movie news:
- the movie version of THE RUSSIA HOUSE by John le Carre currently
- filming in Moscow and Leningrad has a screenplay written by Tom
- Stoppard....Sally Field has optioned ROUGH JUSTICE by Keith
- Peterson (Andrew Klavan)....Lee Rich will produce THE BAD PLACE
- by Dean R. Koontz and Koontz will do the first-draft screenplay.
- Also, Guber & Peters (BATMAN) will produce Koontz's ODDKINS, his
- "fable for all ages".
-
- * Author Donald Barthelme died on July 23 (age 58) of cancer. His
- first novel was SNOW WHITE (sort of a modern-day slant on the
- Grimm/Disney character) and his last novel is THE KING (a World
- War II-period story about King Arthur), to be published by Harper
- & Row sometime next year.
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- Everyone who works with computers seems to develop an intuitive
- faith that there's some kind of ACTUAL SPACE behind the screen...
- --William Gibson
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- 1989 WORLD FANTASY AWARD NOMINATIONS
-
- We couldn't get the actual winners by press time, but here are
- the nominees, chosen by past members of the World Fantasy
- Convention and a panel of judges.
-
- Best Novel:
- ----------
- THE LAST COIN by James P. Blaylock (Ziesing; Ace)
- SLEEPING IN FLAME by Jonathan Carroll (Legend; Doubleday)
- FADE by Robert Cormier (Gollancz; Delacorte)
- THE SILENCE OF THE LAMBS by Thomas Harris (St. Martin's)
- THE DRIVE-IN by Joe R. Lansdale (Bantam Spectra)
- KOKO by Peter Straub (Dutton; Viking UK)
-
- Best Short Fiction:
- ------------------
- "Winter Solstice, Camelot Station" by John M. Ford (INVITATION TO
- CAMELOT)
- "Night They Missed the Horror Show" by Joe R. Lansdale (SILVER
- SCREAM)
- "Life of Buddha" by Lucius Shepard (Omni May 1988)
- "Metastasis" by Dan Simmons (NIGHT VISIONS 5)
-
- Best Short Story Collection:
- ---------------------------
- CABAL by Clive Barker (Poseidon)
- CHARLES BEAUMONT: SELECTED STORIES edited by Roger Anker (Dark
- Harvest)
- ANGRY CANDY by Harlan Ellison (Houghton Mifflin)
- THE BLOOD KISS by Dennis Etchison (Scream Press)
- THE KNIGHT AND KNAVE OF SWORDS by Fritz Leiber (Morrow)
- STOREYS FROM THE OLD HOTEL by Gene Wolfe (Kerosina)
-
- Best Novella:
- ------------
- "The Skin Trade" by George R.R. Martin (NIGHT VISIONS 5)
- THE SCALEHUNTER'S BEAUTIFUL DAUGHTER by Lucius Shepard (Ziesing,
- IASFM September 1988)
- "The Gardener" by Sheri S. Tepper (NIGHT VISIONS 6)
- THE DEVIL'S ARITHMETIC by Jane Yolen (Viking Kestrel)
-
- Best Anthology:
- --------------
- THE YEAR'S BEST FANTASY: FIRST ANNUAL COLLECTION edited by Ellen
- Datlow & Terri Windling (St. Martin's)
- NIGHT VISIONS 6 (Dark Harvest)
- SILVER SCREAM edited by David J. Schow (Dark Harvest)
- PRIME EVIL edited by Douglas E. Winter (NAL)
-
- Best Artist:
- -----------
- Jill Bauman, Thomas Canty, Edward Gorey, Don Maitz, Harry O.
- Morris, Phil Parks
-
- Special Award/Professional:
- --------------------------
- Ellen Datlow (Omni, anthologies)
- Paul Mikol & Scott Stadalsky (Dark Harvest Press)
- Dean R. Koontz (author)
- Robert Weinberg (A BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY OF SCIENCE FICTION AND
- FANTASY ARTISTS)
- Terri Windling (editor)
-
- Special Award/Non-Professional:
- ------------------------------
- Carl T. Ford (Dagon Press)
- Peggy Nadramia (Grue Magazine)
- Paul Olson (Horrorstruck)
- Kristine Kathryn Rusch & Dean Wesley Smith (Pulphouse)
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- When I wrote NEUROMANCER, I didn't know that computers had disk
- drives.
- --William Gibson
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- TRIVIA QUIZ
-
- 1) When David Gerrold (WHEN H.A.R.L.I.E. WAS ONE Release 2.0) was
- a college student, he sold his first unsolicited TV script to
- Star Trek. What was the name of the episode?
- 2) Who wrote COLOSSUS?
- 3) Who wrote NORTHANGER ABBEY?
- 4) Everyone knows that the computer in Arthur C. Clarke's 2001: A
- Space Odyssey was named Hal, but what was the model number?
- For extra credit, where was Hal made?
- 5) Who wrote THE MOON IS A HARSH MISTRESS?
- 6) Who did the original drawings for ALICE IN WONDERLAND?
- 7) Who wrote SOFTWARE and WETWARE?
- 8) Who wrote LAST AND FIRST MEN?
- 9) Who was Don Quixote's squire?
- 10) What drug did Coleridge become dependent upon?
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- I come to work because I enjoy playing with the computers.
- --Ray Ozzie
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- GOOD READING PERIODICALLY
-
- DARK REGIONS -- I've been moaning about the narrowing ranks of
- horror and dark fantasy magazines lately, so I was particularly
- glad to find DARK REGIONS 3 in my mailbox last week. Joe Morey is
- the editor/publisher, and does a terrific job at both. The issue
- looks great, with clear medium-large type and nice black and
- white art (the cover art actually illustrates one of the
- stories), and the fiction is mostly first-rate. The best is "The
- Junkyard", a nice grisly piece by Joe R. Lansdale, a 1984 story
- that exercises the blob-beast that later showed up in THE
- DRIVE-IN. If you like to keep up on Weird Fiction, you definitely
- want this magazine. Published 3 times a year: $4 for issue #4, $9
- for a year's subscription, $17 for 2 years. Make your check
- payable to Joe Morey and send it to: Dark Regions, P.O. Box 6301,
- Concord, CA 94524.
-
- EXPLORATORIUM -- The Exploratorium is a museum of "science, art
- and human perception" located in San Francisco, but they have
- quite a few publications to enjoy from wherever you are. Like the
- Exploratorium Quarterly, each issue of which examines one topic
- in depth (recent topics: Dirt, Memory, Hands, Spinning Things,
- Fire, Ice, Photography). Each issue is a fascinating collection
- of articles written for the intelligent layperson, with concrete
- examples and even some hands-on experiments. They have loads of
- good material for school children as well: classroom activity
- packets by topic, posters and charts, visual perception kits,
- etc. They even have volumes called Cookbooks that show you how to
- set up the hands-on museum displays from the Exploratorium at
- home (or in the classroom). To find out about all this good
- stuff, write: Exploratorium, 3601 Lyon Street, San Francisco, CA
- 94123; 415-561-0393. For students of all ages.
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- I didn't see why I couldn't use words instead of symbols; then
- people who like words could write sentences and have the machine
- translate it into code.
- --Admiral Grace Murray Hopper
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- RANDOM REVIEWS:
-
-
- MURDER ON THE GLITTER BOX
- by Steve Allen
- (1989)
-
- This mystery is for fun only. As a novel it has problems--the
- tone is uneven, the dialogue is awkward, and the exposition has
- odd moments like the following:
-
- "In this fair city, Fame is our official goddess, with
- Fortune sitting at Her right-hand side, and Wheels on the
- left--Her golden chariot in which She travels these sun-
- washed and increasingly blood-spattered streets."
-
- This is Steve Allen's way of saying that the automobile is
- considered very important in Los Angeles. Also, Mr. Allen should
- avoid vulgarisms. The colloquial "street" language used in this
- novel is out of date and often improperly used.
-
- As a mystery, MURDER ON THE GLITTER BOX doesn't fare too much
- better. The guilty party is detectable very early on, and the
- standard mystery plot devices are awkwardly managed. The last big
- red herring is so oversold that many readers will want the red
- herring punished far more than the actual murderer.
-
- All that said, this is still a fun book. Steve Allen, who is the
- protagonist/sleuth of the story as well as the author, uses the
- television industry, and a talk-show in particular, as the
- setting. While no real information seems to be revealed, readers
- will have fun soaking up the show biz atmosphere of the Beverly
- Hills Hotel and the Burbank TV studio; not to mention guessing
- who the characters were originally based on. I found each of the
- characters to be very obviously based on a real person with one
- or two alterations, and the changes pique the interest more than
- they hide identity.
-
-
-
- PENN & TELLER'S CRUEL TRICKS FOR DEAR FRIENDS
- by Penn Jillette & Teller
- (1989)
-
- If you've never caught Penn & Teller's magic act, you're going to
- be startled and confused by this book. For those of you who
- haven't seen them, they are Radical Magicians. Penn Jillette is a
- weird-looking giant of a man with rapier wit and a constant
- stream of caustic "patter" for their routines. Teller is a small,
- attractive pixie of a guy who is particularly talented at
- physical magic and apparently NEVER speaks.
-
- And then there are the tricks they do. They're different. They
- usually involve the threat or the illusion of violence. Teller
- has been imperiled in countless ways; the first trick I ever saw
- them do involved picking out Your Card from a deck with a large
- butcher knife, but unfortunately Penn makes a "mistake" and picks
- the card with the knife through Teller's hand (which bleeds very
- realistically).
-
- But what about the book? It's a fun book: you get fiction,
- essays, inside dope on famous Penn & Teller tricks, and you get
- actual tricks to play yourself. As the title suggests, most of
- the tricks have a decidedly "cruel" slant to them, which is
- played up by the text. You are encouraged not just to perform a
- magic trick, but to humiliate your "dear friends". The whole
- thing is a riot. Here's an example:
-
- "You can do this with just you and Lieutenant Zero, alone, but
- it's better if his or her peer group is there watching. That way
- they can laugh at the putz along with you. Peer-group humiliation
- is the best. And if you can get the peer group in on the gag
- before the wazoo shows up, so much the better."
-
- CRUEL TRICKS FOR DEAR FRIENDS is wall-to-wall fun, entertaining
- on several levels, as are Penn & Teller themselves. Several of
- the tricks taught in the text come with accessories, which means
- the book is sold sealed in heavy plastic. Guaranteed to bring out
- the kid in everyone, and it makes a great, and unusual, gift. Be
- the first one in your group to find out:
-
- --Was that really Penn on Miami Vice?
- --What is the Invisible Thread Trick?
- --What was Penn doing at a Live Sex show?
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- The Japanese have a slang word -- paku paku -- they use to
- describe ... the mouth opening and closing while one eats. The
- name 'Pac Man' came from that word.
- --Toru Iwatani
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- DONALD M. GRANT, PUBLISHER, INC.
- P.O. Box 187
- Hampton Falls, NH 03844
-
-
- Donald M. Grant publishes beautiful illustrated volumes of
- science fiction, fantasy, horror, nonfiction, poetry, and
- probably other things that I don't know about yet. He's
- best-known now for the first editions of Stephen King's Dark
- Tower series (and, no, THE DARK TOWER III: THE WASTE LANDS isn't
- out yet--last I heard, it's not even written yet). I have almost
- a full shelf of Grant books myself, all of them gorgeous editions
- of terrific writing.
-
- It seems that I will be buying more Donald M. Grant books in the
- near future, because his Books In Progress list looks great.
- He'll be doing a nice edition of Peter Straub's KOKO, illustrated
- by Thomas Canty, signed by author and artist. My favorite is a
- new edition of AT THE MOUNTAINS OF MADNESS by H.P. Lovecraft,
- issued for the 100th anniversary of his birth. It will be
- "startlingly different", with art by Brazilian artist Fernando
- Duval, who will even sign a few.
-
- Other upcoming projects: THE KINGS OF TARSHISH SHALL BRING GIFTS
- by Stephen R. Donaldson and illustrated by Thomas Canty, VIRGIL'S
- AENEID translated by E. McCrorie and illustrated by Luis
- Ferreira, and THE FACE IN THE ABYSS by A. Merritt and illustrated
- by Ned Dameron.
-
-
-
- POST OAKS AND SAND ROUGHS
- by Robert E. Howard
- (from Donald M. Grant, $25.00)
-
- Robert E. Howard's POST OAKS AND SAND ROUGHS is a semi-
- autobiographical novel centering around Howard's friends and
- acquaintances and the towns in which he lived. Cross Plains and
- Brownwood are thinly disguised as "Lost Plains" and "Redwood",
- and many of Howard's friends and "enemies" alike are easily
- recognizable under fictitious names. Howard himself appears as
- "Steve Costigan", a name which appears more than once in his
- general fiction.
-
- The time frame is from late 1924 (when Howard was 18 years of
- age) to early 1928. This work, covering a span of approximately
- 3-1/2 years, is a revealing picture of Robert E. Howard--man-boy
- --in a formative and crucial period of his life.
-
- Published here for the first time, POST OAKS AND SAND ROUGHS is a
- new and unlooked for revelation of the brooding violence, the
- grave fears, and the terrible hates lying within the strange
- genius that was Robert E. Howard. It is a book of which Howard
- himself wrote: "I...know it won't be accepted. I wouldn't take it
- myself if I were a publisher...I've cursed out every known cult,
- creed and nationality in it; if any man takes it, he'll be either
- unusually broad-minded or else a misanthrope."
-
- Introduction by Glenn Lord, who has also provided an identifying
- checklist of names and places which Howard uses in the book.
-
-
- AVAILABLE: According to my latest information, the following
- volumes are still available from Donald M. Grant. Shipping &
- Handling are free (or are included in the price, however you look
- at it). The address is at the top of this article.
-
- Bennett, Robert Ames: Bowl of Baal $10.00
- Bierce, Ambrose: Vision of Doom $12.00
- Brennan, Joseph Payne: Adventures of Lucius Leffing $30.00
- (above is autographed by author and artist)
- Chronicles of Lucius Leffing $10.00
- Creep to Death $15.00
- (above is autographed by author and artist)
- Brennan, Noel-Anne: Winter Reckoning $30.00
- Buchan, John: Far Islands $17.00
- Canty, Thomas: Monster at Christmas $30.00
- Daniels, Les: Yellow Fog $30.00
- De Camp, L. Sprague: Heroes & Hobgoblins $25.00
- Donaldson, Stephen: Daughter of Regals $50.00
- Ellis, Novalyne Price: One Who Walked Alone (2nd printing) $25
- Ellis, Peter: Last Adventurer $25.00
- Finlay, Virgil: Astrology Sketch Book $15.00
- Finney, Charles G.: The Magician Out of Manchuria $25.00
- Grant, Charles L.: Dark Cry of the Moon $15.00
- Long Night of the Grave $20.00
- Soft Whisper of the Dead $15.00
- Grant, Donald M.: Talbot Mundy: Messenger of Destiny $20.00
- Gilmour, William: Undying Land $20.00
- Hodgson, William Hope: Dream of X $15.00
- Howard, Robert E.: Black Colossus $20.00
- Black Vulmea's Vengeance $20.00
- Devil In Iron $20.00
- Hawks of Outremer $15.00
- Hour of the Dragon $30.00
- Iron Man $10.00
- Jewels of Gwalhur $20.00
- Kull $25.00
- Marchers of Valhalla (2nd edition) $15.00
- Mayhem on Bear Creek $10.00
- Pool of the Black One $25.00
- Post Oaks and Sand Roughs $25.00
- Queen of the Black Coast $20.00
- Road of Azrael $20.00
- Rogues in the House $20.00
- Shadows of Dreams $25.00
- (autographed by artist Rick Berry)
- Lamb, Harold: Durandal (limited edition) $35.00
- Durandal $15.00
- Sea of the Ravens (limited edition) $35.00
- Sea of the Ravens $15.00
- Three Palladins $12.00
- Lane, Jeremy: Yellow Men Sleep $15.00
- Lanier, Sterling E.: Curious Quests of Brigadier Ffellowes $30
- Lovecraft, H.P.: To Quebec & The Stars $15.00
- Milne, Robert D.: Into the Sun (Science Fiction in Old San
- Francisco) $15.00
- Moore, C.L.: Scarlet Dream $20.00
- Morrell, David: Hundred-Year Christmas $50.00
- Moskowitz, Sam: History of the Movement (Science Fiction in Old
- San Francisco) $15.00
- Mundy, Talbot: King--of the Khyber Rifles $15.00
- Roscoe, Theodore: Wonderful Lips of Thibong Linh $15.00
- Sidney-Fryer, Donald: Emperor of Dreams $20.00
- Tremayne, Peter: My Lady of Hy-Brasil $30.00
- Vivian, E.C.: Fields of Sleep $15.00
- Wagner, Karl Edward: Book of Kane $20.00
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- The problem in PC software is not power, it's design. The 80386
- will make it easier to write terrible products.
- --Morton Rosenthal
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- CYBERPUNK & NEUROMANCER
-
- What is cyberpunk literature? For starters, it's a subgenre of
- science fiction, normally futuristic. Also, there are some
- standard characteristics of cyberpunk, like the prominent
- inclusion of:
-
- 1) computers
- 2) drugs
- 3) music (often rock 'n' roll)
-
- Of course you know better than to tell any writer he writes
- cyberpunk, don't you? Not just cyberpunk, any genre. Every author
- (and every person, for that matter) likes to think of himself as
- unique, not part of a crowd, so keep in mind that any
- categorizing we do as readers is for our own benefit only. Don't
- bother writers with this; let them get on with business.
-
- NEUROMANCER, a novel by William Gibson (1984), is generally
- regarded as the first major example of cyberpunk to receive
- widespread attention and acclaim, so lets take a closer look.
- It's the story of Case, a former (computer) cowboy who stole from
- his employers and was punished by having his nervous system
- deliberately damaged; just enough to ruin his ability to work
- with computers any more. Enter Molly and Armitage.
-
- Molly, hired muscle with extendable blades in the ends of her
- fingertips, takes Case to Armitage, who has a proposition: if
- Case will agree to do some computer work for him, he will have
- Case's nervous system fixed. Case agrees, but finds out later
- that poison sacs have also been installed in his body to keep him
- loyal to Armitage until the work is done.
-
- So what is the job? Case has got to use the equipment provided by
- Armitage to get past the ICE of an AI (Intrusion Countermeasures
- Electronics of an Artificial Intelligence). He'll be using a
- Hosaka computer deck, with Chinese virus software, and a
- "construct", which is a software version of his mentor (who is
- actually dead).
-
- Case and Molly are the most prominent humans in the story, but
- the star of NEUROMANCER is the technology. Case develops a
- relationship with Molly, and they sleep together, but this is
- related in relatively flat prose. His most intense pairing is
- with the Hosaka; the first time he puts on the 'trodes and "jacks
- in" his pleasure is virtually orgasmic. There's an overall sense
- that people are disposable, but technology is Important.
-
- Another significant term used in NEUROMANCER is cyberspace, which
- is where Case "goes" when he's jacked-in to the computer. It's
- the geography of pure data, which Gibson makes wonderfully
- visual; a bit like what they did in the movie TRON, giving
- personality to software, colors and dimensions to data. Gibson
- turns the computer into a untamed horse that must be ridden by a
- capable computer cowboy--it's all very romantic, but it's a
- romance between human and machine, not between human and human.
-
- When I was a child, parents worried about the isolating influence
- of television. We were constantly told: "Turn the TV off. Go out
- and play with the other kids." Now parents worry about children
- who are closer to their computer than they are to their human
- friends. Cyberpunk stories generally carry this theme forward to
- a time when people naturally and normally relate to machinery,
- and only occasionally, and with difficulty, to other humans.
-
- As I said up top, music is another common element, but it's the
- Sony Walkman, solitary experience of music, not the social
- enjoyment of a dance. And the ever-present drugs further isolate
- the cyberpunk characters, who seem to need them to deal with
- reality on any level.
-
- Depressing? Yeah, pretty much. But the great thing about
- cyberpunk is the presentation of ideas. These are not stories
- about interesting characters, or fascinating plots. These are
- ideas and philosophies given a setting for illustrative purposes.
- These are stories to chew over, not to commit to memory. While I
- found cyberpunk difficult to warm up to, once I stopped trying to
- force it to be like other literature and let it just flow I found
- some of the concepts presented enormously exciting. Cyberpunk
- should be required reading for engineers.
-
- I have been told by some reliable sources that cyberpunk is
- obviously here to stay as a genre of literature. I have been told
- by other reliable sources that cyberpunk is already yesterday's
- news. I guess we'll have to wait and see. I'm more worried about
- avoiding the future that's drawn for us in these stories--
- technology's place in the cosmos obviously needs more thought. I
- don't relish the prospect of becoming merely a mobile input
- device for my IBM (no offense, guy, you know?).
-
- POINT OF TRIVIA: Did you know that NEUROMANCER was written on a
- manual Underwood typewriter?
-
- Below is a brief list to get you started in cyberpunk literature.
- Cyberpunk is only an artificial category, of course, and the
- appropriateness of any particular work's inclusion is a
- subjective personal opinion.
-
-
- GRANDPARENTS OF CYBERPUNK
-
- LAST AND FIRST MEN by Olaf Stapledon (1937)
- THE STARS MY DESTINATION by Alfred Bester (1956)
- NAKED LUNCH by William Burroughs (1959)
-
- PARENTS OF CYBERPUNK
-
- DO ANDROIDS DREAM OF ELECTRIC SHEEP? by Philip K. Dick (1968)
- GRAVITY'S RAINBOW by Thomas Pynchon (1973)
- SHOCKWAVE RIDER by John Brunner (1975)
-
- THE BAD KIDS THEMSELVES
-
- THE ARTIFICIAL KID by Bruce Sterling (1980)
- SOFTWARE by Rudy Rucker (1982)
- FRONTERA by Lewis Shiner (1984)
- NEUROMANCER by William Gibson (1984)
- BLOOD MUSIC by Greg Bear (1985)
- SCHISMATRIX by Bruce Sterling (1985)
- COUNT ZERO by William Gibson (1986)
- MIRRORSHADES: A Cyberpunk Anthology edited by Bruce Sterling
- (1986)
- BURNING CHROME by William Gibson (1986)
- MINDPLAYERS by Pat Cadigan (1987)
- WHEN GRAVITY FAILS by George Alec Effinger (1987)
- VACUUM FLOWERS by Michael Swanwick (1987)
- MONA LISA OVERDRIVE by William Gibson (1988)
- ISLANDS IN THE NET by Bruce Sterling (1988)
- WETWARE by Rudy Rucker (1988)
- DREAMS OF FLESH AND SAND by W.T. Quick (1988)
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- What I like about programming is that it really helps you think
- about how we communicate, how we think, how logic works, how
- creative arts work.
- --Michael Hawley
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- BOOKS ABOUT OR FEATURING
- COMPUTERS AND/OR ROBOTS
-
- The Machine Stops by E.M. Forster (1909)
- Moxon's Master by Ambrose Bierce (1909)
- Player Piano by Kurt Vonnegut (1952)
- They'd Rather Be Right by Mark Clifton & Frank Riley (1957)
- The Moon is a Harsh Mistress by Robert A. Heinlein (1966)
- The Tale of the Big Computer by Olof Johannesson (1966)
- Colossus by D.F. Jones (1966)
- 2001: A Space Odyssey by Arthur C. Clarke (1968)
- When H.A.R.L.I.E. Was One by David Gerrold (1972)
- Roderick by John Sladek (1980)
- The Soul of a New Machine by Tracy Kidder (1981) <nonfiction>
- The Mind's I by Douglas R. Hofstadter & Daniel C. Dennett (1981)
- Bugs by Theodore Roszak (1981)
- Apple Crunch by Frederic Vincent Huber (1981)
- The Lucifer Key by Malcolm MacPherson (1981)
- Roderick At Random by John Sladek (1983)
- Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution by Steven Levy (1984)
- <nonfiction>
- Valentina: Soul in Sapphire by Joseph H. Delaney & Marc Stiegler
- (1984)
- The Planiverse: Computer Contact with a Two-Dimensional World by
- A.K. Dewdney (1984) <nonfiction?>
- Fire in the Valley: The Making of the Personal Computer by Paul
- Freiberger & Michael Swaine (1984) <nonfiction>
- Out of the Inner Circle by "The Cracker" Bill Landreth the
- Teenage Computer Wizard Apprehended by the FBI (1985)
- <nonfiction>
- Memory Blank by John E. Stith (1986)
- When H.A.R.L.I.E. Was One Release 2.0 by David Gerrold (1988)
- Mismatch by Lloyd Pye (1988)
- Planetfall by Arthur Byron Cover (1988)
- Antibodies by David J. Skal (1988)
-
- 1989 Titles:
-
- V.I.R.U.S. Protection: Vital Information Resources Under Siege by
- Pamela Kane (book/software) >Bantam Sep89 TP $39.95
- 0-553-34799-3
- Local Area Networks: Developing Your System for Business by Donne
- Florence >Wiley Sep89 TP $24.95 0-471-62466-7
- The Handbook of Artificial Intelligence, Volume IV edited by
- Avron Barr, Paul R. Cohen, and Edward A. Feigenbaum
- >Addison-Wesley Oct89 TP $29.95 0-201-51731-0 400 pages
- The Ventura Publisher Solutions Book: Recipes for Advanced
- Results by Michael Utvich >Bantam Oct89 TP $24.95 0-553-34504-4
- The Cuckoo's Egg: Tracking a Spy Through the Maze of Computer
- Espionage by Clifford Stoll >Doubleday Oct89 HC $18.95
- 0-385-24946-2
- (Tells how an ex-hippie turned systems manager uncovered an
- international computer spy ring.)
- Currents of Death: Power Lines, Computer Terminals, and the
- Attempt to Cover Up Their Threat to Your Health by Paul Brodeur
- >Simon & Schuster Oct89 HC $19.95 0-671-67845-0
- (Presents the case against electromagnetic radiation.)
- The Improbable Machine: What the New Upheaval in Artificial
- Intelligence Research Reveals About How the Mind Really Works
- by Jeremy Campbell >Simon & Schuster Oct89 HC $19.95
- 0-671-65711-9
- Straight Talk: The On-Line Conferencing Resource by Charles Bowen
- & Stewart Schneider (book/software) >Bantam Nov89 TP $39.95
- 0-553-34780-2
- Variations in C: 2nd Edition by Steve Schustack >Microsoft Nov89
- TP $22.95 1-55615-239-6
- (Teaches structured programming in Microsoft C and shows how to
- design and implement a large, professional-quality
- application.)
- How to Win at Nintendo II by Jeff Rovin >St. Martin's Nov89 PB
- $3.95 (Includes tips on winning 30 games not covered in the
- first book.)
- PC DOS: A Self-Teaching Guide, Third Edition by Ruth Ashley &
- Judi N. Fernandez >Wiley Nov89 TP $19.95 0-471-51355-5
- Object-Oriented Programming in Turbo Pascal 5.5 by Ben Ezzell
- >Addison-Wesley Dec89 TP $22.95 0-201-52375-2 500 pages
- The Big Chip: A Witt Kramer Mystery. A Graphic Computer Novel. by
- W.R. Philbrick; illustrated by Bruce Jenson >Microsoft Jan90
- $7.95 1-55615-245-0 (A dynamic and witty computer mystery in
- the appealing format of a graphic novel.)
- The Waite Group's MS-DOS Bible, Third Edition by Steven Simrin
- >Howard W. Sams TP $24.95 0-672-22693-6
- Mastering Nintendo by Judd Robbins >Howard W. Sams TP $7.95
- 0-672-22714-2
- (Ideally targeted for children between the ages of 6 to 16, an
- age group that purchases and actively uses the very popular
- Nintendo game machine, Mastering Nintendo contains a review of
- the most popular games for the Nintendo game machine with a
- strong emphasis on strategy as well as tips and techniques for
- improving the player's score. The book provides an overview of
- each game, rating the challenge level, sound and graphics, the
- plot of the game, a review of the main characters, and power
- tips.)
- Bugs by John Sladek (1989, British publication only so far)
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- Lo! Men have become the tools of their tools.
- --Henry David Thoreau
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- DIGITAL DELIGHTS:
-
-
- THE ELECTRONIC SWEATSHOP
- How Computers Are Transforming the Office of the Future
- into the Factory of the Past
- by Barbara Garson
- (1988)
-
- After all of the futuristic books about the wonderful
- changes the computer was going to bring about in the workplace
- (The speed! The efficiency! The extra leisure time!), here is
- Barbara Garson to tell us about the changes that have actually
- occurred (The isolation from human contact. The paranoia. The
- stress-induced illnesses.). The problem is, of course, that while
- computers are powerful and flexible tools, people are still no
- nicer or fairer than they ever were.
-
- In the first chapter we go to McDonald's, where automation
- has made possible a restaurant staffed by know-nothings and
- managed by a human capable of reading a computer printout. The
- major concerns at a McDonald's are: good fry yields, low M&R
- (Maintenance & Repair budget), and crew labor productivity. As
- Garson points out, "It's job organization, not malice, that
- allows (almost requires) McDonald's workers to be handled like
- paper plates. They feel disposable because they are."
-
- The next job up for consideration is one in Airline
- Reservations. These people sit in isolation, connected to a
- combination computer/phone line, and push bookings all day long.
- They are monitored by the computer, which plots their every
- second; and by human superiors, who listen in periodically for an
- hour or so at a time. Ms. Garson manages to find a reasonably
- happy employee, but we see the problems even here as Ms. Garson
- sums up Kenny, "the thirty-year-old who has no plans for a
- family, no objection to moving, no one expecting him for dinner
- and yet loves being 'involved with people'." What kind of a
- society are we building?
-
- The inherent problems of automation are further revealed as
- Barbara Garson discusses expert systems and notes: "It's
- dangerous to confine our species' expertise to a few. Especially
- to the few who grab for it." All through THE ELECTRONIC SWEATSHOP
- we are forced to re-evaluate our notions about automation. As we
- probably should have seen before, anything with enormous
- potential for good also must have enormous potential for evil.
-
- Some of Barbara Garson's main points are:
-
- 1. Automation is not being used as a labor-saving device, but as
- a labor-controlling device. Also, "A U.S. Department of Labor
- publication estimated that in 1984 nearly two-thirds of the
- people who worked at video display terminals were monitored by
- their employers." Massive loss of privacy.
-
- 2. "The underlying premise of modern automation is a profound
- distrust of thinking human beings...All over the world,
- technology is controlled undemocratically by people who scorn,
- fear or simply want to use their fellow human beings."
-
- 3. She also notes that computers always isolate people, meaning
- that more and more decisions (that affect all of us) are being
- made by people who have very little contact with other humans.
-
- The images that kept coming to my mind as I read this book
- were all from the movie BRAZIL, the most frightening depiction of
- future society I've ever seen. It had never occurred to me that
- the desire for speed and efficiency, as cosmic forces, are petty
- when compared to distrust, paranoia, and the desire for power and
- control. A sobering, important book. Barbara Garson is also the
- author of ALL THE LIVELONG DAY: The Meaning and Demeaning of
- Routine Work (1977).
-
-
-
- COMPUTE!'S COMPUTER VIRUSES (1988) by Ralph Roberts
- and
- COMPUTER VIRUSES: A High-Tech Disease (1988) by Ralf Burger
-
- Here's today's hot computer subject: viruses, the malicious
- little programs that hide on your hard disk, spreading and
- multiplying while awaiting a prearranged signal to become active
- and perform some act of deviltry or destruction. The motivations
- are obvious: from kiddie pranksters to foreign aggression,
- viruses don't display any new human psychology. But viruses do
- give the bad guys a new weapon, scary for two main reasons:
-
- 1) The bad guys understand computers better than we do, making
- prevention very difficult for us.
-
- 2) We were just beginning to trust computers, and now we find
- that they can trash all our data at a moment's notice, through no
- fault of our own.
-
- The crux of the issue, as I see it, is that the good guys
- (creators of anti-viral methods) and the bad guys (virus
- creators) are locked in a life-and-death struggle (the life and
- death referring to our data). The minute one of them makes an
- advance, the other will counter it; leaving us sitting at our
- terminals with worried faces, wondering who will decide our fate.
- The point is, yesterday's news (which is what you'll find in
- these books) isn't as valuable for prevention as current news.
-
- Do these books have any value? Certainly. They are both excellent
- introductions to the whole subject of computer terrorism,
- explained in English. Both are interesting and helpful, but, as I
- said, most of the specifics are out of date -- which is a problem
- with any computer book, not just these two. I should mention that
- Burger's book contains actual virus code, a questionable
- publishing decision.
-
-
-
- RODERICK (1980)
- and
- RODERICK AT RANDOM (1983)
- by John Sladek
- (both available in paperback from Carroll & Graf)
-
- These two books are rightly paired, because they started life as
- one book, RODERICK, OR THE EDUCATION OF A YOUNG MACHINE, a novel
- so long that it was broken up into two. As one book or two,
- RODERICK is a picaresque tale of a robot created at the
- University of Minnetonka in a near-future U.S. that has outlawed
- artificial intelligences, so Roderick spends most of his time on
- the run.
-
- On one level, RODERICK is about the whole subject of intelligent
- machines. As you're reading about young Roderick you'll pick up
- information about the whole history of robots and AI, fiction and
- nonfiction. One of my favorite parts of the first volume is a
- continuing discussion Roderick has with Father Warren, who tries
- to convince him that he's NOT a robot. Both Roderick and Father
- Warren must explore the boundaries of intelligence as well as
- humanity.
-
- On another level, RODERICK is a satire. The U.S. that Roderick
- lives in consists of lunatics and con men, insanity and inverted
- values--in other words, it's a LOT like the U.S. that WE live in.
- During the course of these novels Sladek manages to poke fun at
- everything and everybody. As a matter of fact, if you find one
- paragraph in either book that's not funny, chances are it's
- because the satire hits too close to home. I particularly enjoyed
- the inside view of academia, in all it's backbiting, publish-or-
- perish, insular glory.
-
- On still another level, RODERICK is one enormous collection of
- puns, mathematical games, riddles, paradoxes, cryptograms, and
- other wordplay. Every sentence is a carefully-constructed jewel
- of insanity. For instance, there are two prominent doctors in the
- first novel--one is called Welby and the other De'Ath.
-
- The only criticism of these books that I can imagine is that the
- wordplay and satire get in the way of the story--which they do.
- Getting from plot point A to plot point B is not really the issue
- here; it's the scenery along with way. Sladek not only shows us a
- robot, he shows us ourselves, and makes us laugh at both.
-
- NOTE: Carroll & Graf plan to publish a paperback of John
- Sladek's THE MULLER-FOKKER EFFECT (1970), about a man who is
- reincarnated as a computer program, in March, 1990.
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- My job title was computer. Other people have programmed
- computers, but I have been one.
- --C. Wayne Ratliff
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- COMICS:
-
- REVIEW by Drew
-
-
- Freddy Krueger's A Nightmare On Elm Street
- Written by Steve Gerber
- Penciling by Rich Buckler & Tony DeZuniga
- Lettering by Janice Chiang
- Finishes by Alfredo Alcala
- Published by MARVEL COMICS $2.25
-
-
- Freddy Krueger, "The bastard son of a thousand maniacs", makes
- his comic book debut in this recent Marvel release. The first two
- issues of the comic form a single story titled "Dreamstalker".
-
- Dr. Juliann Quinn has recently returned to her home town of
- Springwood to apply her psychiatric skills in an investigation of
- a most perplexing phenomenon: many of the town's teenagers suffer
- from nightmares about deceased child-killer Freddy Krueger -- and
- often die shortly afterwards. Soon after her arrival, Dr. Quinn
- meets a young woman named Allison Hayes, who claims to almost
- have been killed by Freddy. Using techniques developed by Dr.
- Quinn, the two women dream together in hopes of finding Freddy
- and ridding Allison of his evil presence. But no sooner do they
- enter the dream world than they discover that Freddy has instead
- found them ... and he isn't about to let them go ... Eventually,
- Juliann becomes trapped in Freddy's nightmare world and Allison
- must take up the battle on her own.
-
- Included in Dreamstalkers part 1 is the tale of Freddy's
- conception and childhood years. We find out that Freddy was
- conceived of a nurse named Amanda Krueger in a mental hospital
- called Our Lady of Sorrows. She becomes trapped for three days in
- a mental ward, called The Cage, and is raped literally hundreds
- of times. Eventually Freddy is born, taken away from his mother
- (who is now confined to an institution herself), and adopted and
- raised by two different sets of "parents", the second of which he
- murders.
-
- For those who enjoyed any of the Nightmare On Elm Street movies
- or the TV show, or anyone else for that matter, this magazine-
- size comic is a must. The black and white art is superb and
- you'll recognize the characters and dialog immediately. Here
- you'll find the typical Nightmare scenes: the bloodied body in
- the locked room, the imaginary house in the nightmarish dream,
- the razor-clawed hand rising out of the bed, the bizarre boiler
- room dream-land scenes, etc.
-
- I thoroughly enjoyed this comic book and was anxious to continue
- reading the series (see poscript below). On a scale of 1 to 10
- stars, I give Nightmare on Elm Street 9 stars.
-
-
- POSTSCRIPT
-
- Although Nightmare on Elm Street immediately became the top
- selling Marvel black and white magazine and was solicited by
- distributors through the fifth issue, it has been cancelled after
- only the second issue. The only reason given by Marvel Promotion
- Manager Steve Saffel is that it was done "For a number of
- reasons". Stories written by Buzz Dixon and Peter David had
- already been written and delivered. "The cancellation order took
- a lot of people by surprise," said writer Peter David.
-
- We suspect that Nightmare on Elm Street was a little much for
- Marvel Comics. They seem to cater to the younger reader with the
- "super hero" type comics like The Punisher and The Destroyer.
- Nightmare on Elm Street could have had serious conflicts with
- their normal image. Also--they had targeted Nightmare on Elm
- Street for the newsstand market and could have been taken aback
- by the amount of direct market sales. We hope that another
- publisher will decide to pick up and continue the Nightmare
- series. The first two issues should still be available at near
- cover price and just might be a worthwhile investment.
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- The real danger is not that computers will begin to think like
- men, but that men will begin to think like computers.
- --Sydney J. Harris
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- READ A BANNED BOOK
-
- Don't let someone else decide what you can read! The following
- books have been challenged, burned or banned somewhere IN THE
- UNITED STATES within the past 20 years. Take a stand by
- supporting these books and the stores and libraries that carry
- them.
-
- FLOWERS IN THE ATTIC, by V.C. Andrews
- I KNOW WHY THE CAGED BIRD SINGS, by Maya Angelou
- THE CLAN OF THE CAVE BEAR, by Jean M. Auel
- FOREVER, by Judy Blume
- IGGIE'S HOUSE, by Judy Blume
- OTHERWISE KNOWN AS SHEILA THE GREAT, by Judy Blume
- SUPERFUDGE, by Judy Blume
- THE LIVING BIBLE, by William C. Bower
- THE MARTIAN CHRONICLES, by Ray Bradbury
- A CLOCKWORK ORANGE, by Anthony Burgess
- SILAS MARNER, by George Eliot
- HARRIET THE SPY, by Louise Fitzhugh
- THE DEVIL'S ALTERNATE, by Frederick Forsyth
- THE DIARY OF A YOUNG GIRL, by Anne Frank
- LORD OF THE FLIES, by William Golding
- ORDINARY PEOPLE, bu Judith Guest
- CATCH-22, by Joseph Heller
- A FAREWELL TO ARMS, by Ernest Hemingway
- THAT WAS THEN, THIS IS NOW, by S.E. Hinton
- BRAVE NEW WORLD, by Aldous Huxley
- THE BASTARD, by John Jakes
- ULYSSES, by James Joyce
- ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEST, by Ken Kesey
- FLOWERS FOR ALGERNON, by Daniel Keyes
- CARRIE, by Stephen King
- CUJO, by Stephen King
- FIRESTARTER, by Stephen King
- THE SHINING, by Stephen King
- IT'S OKAY IF YOU DON'T LOVE ME, by Norma Klein
- LOVE IS ONE OF THE CHOICES, by Norma Klein
- A SEPARATE PEACE, by John Knowles
- TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD, by Harper Lee
- MATARESE CIRCLE, by Robert Ludlum
- THE CRUCIBLE, by Arthur Miller
- DEATH OF A SALESMAN, by Arthur Miller
- NINETEEN EIGHTY-FOUR, by George Orwell
- THE CATCHER IN THE RYE, by J.D. Salinger
- THE SEDUCTION OF PETER S., by Lawrence Sanders
- THE MERCHANT OF VENICE, by William Shakespeare
- BLOODLINE, by Sidney Sheldon
- WHERE THE SIDEWALK ENDS, by Shel Silverstein
- ONE DAY IN THE LIFE OF IVAN DENISOVICH, by Alexander Solzhenitsyn
- EAST OF EDEN, by John Steinbeck
- THE GRAPES OF WRATH, by John Steinbeck
- OF MICE AND MEN, by John Steinbeck
- THE RED PONY, by John Steinbeck
- UNCLE TOM'S CABIN, by Harriet B. Stowe
- HUCKLEBERRY FINN, by Mark Twain
- SLAUGHTERHOUSE-FIVE, by Kurt Vonnegut, Jr
- THE COLOR PURPLE, by Alice Walker
- THE PIGMAN, by Paul Zindel
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- Have you ever noticed that there are no Maytag user groups?
- Nobody needs a mutual support group to run a washing machine.
- --Jef Raskin
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- FEATURED AUTHOR:
-
- JOSEPHINE TEY
- (1896-1952)
-
- Miss Tey (whose real name was Elizabeth Mackintosh) was one of
- the foremost authors of the Golden Age of detective fiction, even
- though she was not prolific and wrote only eight mysteries, all
- of the Classic Puzzle variety. Her series detective was Alan
- Grant, appearing in six of the eight novels. Contrary to modern
- practice, Grant is a low-profile detective and does not divert
- attention away from the central plot. Several critics have noted
- that Tey's style is most seen today in Ruth Rendell and P.D.
- James.
-
- Elizabeth Mackintosh graduated from a college for teachers of
- physical training and she actually taught for a brief period
- (this experience shows up in MISS PYM DISPOSES). The last 28
- years of her life, however, were spent taking care of sick
- parents. With a life that seems, at least from the outside, to
- have been fairly devoid of incident, it's curious that she didn't
- write more.
-
- I have read that the eight Josephine Tey mysteries have been in
- print since original publication, a noteworthy achievement. It's
- also been said that she is a mystery writer read by people who do
- not read mysteries, which is meant to be a compliment, even if it
- doesn't sound like it. It is true, however, that her books have
- an appeal that is distinct from the mystery element. For example:
- BRAT FARRAR is a first-rate impersonation tale, and THE DAUGHTER
- OF TIME has created more Richard III fanatics than any other
- piece of writing. And THE FRANCHISE AFFAIR is a fictionalization
- (like that word?) of a real-life mystery.
-
- Whether you're a mystery fan or not, chances are considerably
- better than even that you'll enjoy most of the novels below. Pick
- the one that sounds the best and dig in!
-
- "The continued interest in her books springs from her quiet
- creation of credible people who have relationships a good deal
- more complicated, and likely, than in all but a few of her Golden
- Age contemporaries (and indeed in the bulk of her successors)."
- --from WHODUNIT? edited by H.R.F. Keating
-
- THE MAN IN THE QUEUE (1929) Published under the pseudonym Gordon
- Daviot. A long line had formed for the standing-room-only section
- of the Woffington Theatre. DIDN'T YOU KNOW?, London's favorite
- musical comedy for the past two years, was finishing its run at
- the end of the week. Suddenly, the line began to move, forming a
- wedge before the open doors as hopeful theatregoers nudged their
- way forward. But one man, his head sunk down upon his chest,
- slowly sank to his knees and then, still more slowly, keeled over
- on his face. Thinking he had fainted, a spectator moved to help,
- but recoiled in horror from what lay before him: the man in the
- queue had a small silver dagger neatly plunged into his back. So
- begins Inspector Alan Grant's first spectacular case, and it's up
- to the dapper detective to discover how murder was committed
- among so many witnesses, none of whom saw a thing.
-
- RICHARD OF BORDEAUX (1933) An historical play "by Gordon Daviot"
- which was actually produced, starring John Gielgud.
-
- A SHILLING FOR CANDLES (1936) First book published under the
- Josephine Tey pseudonym. Early one summer morning William
- Potticary's eye was caught by a flock of seagulls diving into the
- surf off the southern coast of England. A young woman's body lay
- limp on the beach--dyed hair, scarlet-tipped toes. The Coastguard
- called it "just a bathing fatality", but an article twisted in
- her hair screamed murder. For Scotland Yard's Inspector Alan
- Grant it was a nightmarish case of too many clues, and too many
- motives. For the woman was the screen actress Christine Clay. And
- the world was full of people who wanted her dead.
-
- This novel was the basis for Alfred Hitchcock's movie YOUNG AND
- INNOCENT (1937), his personal favorite of all his British films.
- Especially memorable is the tracking shot across a dance floor to
- the twitching eye of a musician (who is a suspect).
-
- CLAVERHOUSE (1937) A biography of Scottish leader John Graham.
-
- THE STARS BOW DOWN (1939) A play based on the Bible story of
- Joseph.
-
- LEITH SANDS (1946) A collection of 8 one-act plays.
-
- MISS PYM DISPOSES (1946) Lucy Pym, a popular English
- psychologist, is guest lecturer at a physical training college.
- The year's term is nearly over, and Miss Pym--inquisitive and
- observant--detects a furtiveness in the behavior of one student
- during a final exam. She prevents the girl's cheating by
- destroying the crib notes that were to have been used. But Miss
- Pym's cover-up of one crime precipitates another--a fatal
- "accident" that her psychological theories prove was really
- murder! (Alan Grant does not appear in this book.)
-
- THE FRANCHISE AFFAIR (1948) Robert Blair was about to knock
- off from a slow day at his law firm when the phone rang. It was
- Marion Sharpe on the line, a local woman of quiet disposition who
- lived with her mother at their decrepit country house, The
- Franchise. It appeared she was in some serious trouble: Miss
- Sharpe and her mother were accused of brutally kidnapping a
- demure young woman named Betty Kane. But Miss Kane's claims
- seemed highly unlikely, even to Inspector Alan Grant of Scotland
- Yard, until she described her prison--the attic room with its
- cracked window, the kitchen, and the old trunks--which sounded
- remarkably like The Franchise. Yet Marion Sharpe claimed the Kane
- girl had never been there, let alone been held captive for an
- entire month! Not believing Betty Kane's story, Solicitor Blair
- takes up the case and, in a dazzling feat of amateur detective
- work, solves the unbelievable mystery that stumped even Inspector
- Grant. This story is based on the real-life case of Elizabeth
- Canning.
-
- BRAT FARRAR (1949) Simon Ashby was soon to turn twenty-one and
- the lean years would be over. After his parents' death, his Aunt
- Bee had come to Latchetts, the Ashbys' small country estate in
- the English midlands, to care for him, his three sisters, and his
- twin brother, Patrick, who had later disappeared; it was assumed
- that Patrick had drowned himself, although his body had never
- been found. Now Simon was about to inherit Latchetts and his
- mother's sizable fortune. Enter Brat Farrar, who had been
- carefully coached on every significant detail of Patrick's early
- life, who imitated his every mannerism and even looked like him.
- It seemed an impossible feat: to pose as someone else before his
- very family, especially when Simon discovered what was happening
- and that Brat was out to cheat him of his fortune! The question
- of why he wasn't exposed begged to be answered. Had Simon laid
- careful plans to foil Brat's game? Culminating in a final,
- terrible moment when the two confront one another, BRAT FARRAR is
- a "precarious adventure involving the reader early and firmly and
- then holding on tightly to the explosive conclusion". (James
- Sandoe)
-
- THE DAUGHTER OF TIME (1951) Inspector Alan Grant of Scotland
- Yard, recuperating from a broken leg, becomes fascinated with a
- contemporary portrait of Richard III, which bears no resemblance
- to the Wicked Uncle of history. Could such a sensitive, noble
- face actually belong to one of the world's most heinous villains-
- a venomous hunchback who allegedly killed his beloved brother's
- children to make his crown secure? Or could Richard have been the
- victim, turned into a monster by the usurpers of England's
- throne? With the help of the British Museum and Brent Carradine,
- an American scholar, Grant determines to find out once and for
- all what kind of man Richard Plantagenet really was and who
- killed the Little Princes in the Tower.
-
- TO LOVE AND BE WISE (1950) Literary sherry parties were not
- Grant's cup of tea. But when Scotland Yard's Detective-Sergeant
- arrived to pick up Marta Hallard for dinner, he was struck by the
- handsome young American photographer, Leslie Searle. Authoress
- Lavinia Fitch was sure her guest "must have been something very
- wicked in ancient Greece", and the art colony at Salcott St. Mary
- would have agreed. Yet Grant heard nothing more of Searle until
- the news of his disappearance. Had Searle drowned by accident, or
- could he have been murdered by one of his young women admirers?
- Was it a possible case of suicide, or had he simply vanished for
- reasons of his own? Who was Leslie Searle really? Witty,
- compassionate, and with the sophistication of MISS PYM DISPOSES,
- the story of TO LOVE AND BE WISE "is worth reading for its
- ingenious denouement alone". (The Times [London] Literary
- Supplement)
-
- THE PRIVATEER (1952) A fictionalized biography of Henry Morgan,
- the buccaneer.
-
- THE SINGING SANDS (1952) While traveling on the night train
- to Scotland, Inspector Alan Grant is perturbed by the close
- quarters of his berth, a sour-faced sleeping-car attendant
- nicknamed Yoghourt, and a dead man in B Seven. The deceased was a
- young man with rumpled dark hair and reckless eyebrows who had
- been drinking heavily the night of his death. Having accidentally
- carried off the dead man's newspaper, Grant discovers a cryptic
- poem written beside the newsprint. It speaks of "The beasts that
- talk, The stones that walk", and "The singing sand, That guard
- the way To Paradise". Though on sick leave from Scotland Yard
- (Anthony Boucher called THE SINGING SANDS "a study in detection
- as a method of psychotherapy"), Grant is determined to discover
- the poem's meaning and, in the process, uncovers the clues to a
- diabolical murder.
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- In 20 years, the Information Age will be here, absolutely. The
- dream of having the world database at your fingertips will have
- become a reality.... The world will be online, and we'll be able
- to simulate just about anything.
- --William H. Gates III
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- MYSTERY TERMINOLOGY
-
- The first step in being a mystery fan is to talk a good game. The
- following lexicon will help.
-
- Cliff-Hanger: A moment of particular suspense. From the old movie
- serials when one installment would end with the hero literally
- hanging from a cliff--you had to return to the theater the
- following week to see if the hero lived.
-
- Clue: Always look for THE clue that reveals the solution to the
- mystery. Often it's a casual statement by a fringe character.
-
- Cozy: Common term for a particular type of mystery. Usually
- British, never violent, often involving older characters and more
- conversation than action. Most famous practictioner: Agatha
- Christie.
-
- Cui Bono: "Who benefits". A legal term and a good place to start
- looking for the guilty party.
-
- Detective Story: A mystery that features a detective, usually a
- professional Private Investigator.
-
- Gothics: A branch of the mystery tree; the damsel-in-distress
- story. Lots of castles (or at least large, dark mansions), dark
- and stormy nights, mistaken identities, long-lost family members.
-
- Had-I-But-Known: First used to describe the stories written by
- Mary Roberts Rinehart. The stories were related in flashback by
- women: "Had I but know, I wouldn't have gone into the deserted
- mansion all alone without a flashlight."
-
- Hard-Boiled Mysteries: A distinctive American mystery type,
- featuring tough-talking detectives (private "dicks"), well-built
- women (dames), and lots of booze and violence. Famous
- practitioners: Dashiell Hammett, Raymond Chandler.
-
- Howdunit: A mystery where the emphasis is on HOW the murder was
- committed.
-
- Inverted Mystery: A mystery where the identity of the murderer is
- known immediately, with the bulk of the story being how this
- person is caught. TV's Columbo is a good example.
-
- Least Suspected Person (LSP): A cliche of the mystery form--the
- murderer is always the LSP.
-
- Means, Motive, and Opportunity: Always scan your list of suspects
- for these hallmarks of guilt. If Miss Scarlet was killed in the
- library with the rope, the murderer must have had access to a
- rope (means), a reason to kill Miss Scarlet (motive), and must
- have been able to get to the library at the appropriate time
- (opportunity).
-
- Modus Operandi (M.O.): The method a criminal uses to commit his
- crime, as distinctive as a fingerprint (well, almost).
-
- Murder Mystery: Many people use this term rather than just
- Mystery. It weeds out the crummy stories that try to palm you off
- with a robbery or a confidence trick.
-
- Police Procedural: The particular branch of mysteries that
- feature professional police as the detecting element. Most famous
- practitioner: Ed McBain.
-
- Red Herring: This is the nasty, prominent clue that the author
- throws in your face just to get your attention off the real
- solution.
-
- Shamus: A slang term for Private Investigator. Found in
- Hard-Boiled stories.
-
- Thriller: The branch of mysteries that feature secret agents,
- military secrets, codes and ciphers, and exotic weaponry. These
- tend to be much more complicated than the usual "Who killed Joe
- Blow?" kind of story, and many mystery fans deny that thrillers
- belong to the Mystery category.
-
- Whodunit: This is the classic mystery focused on who did the
- crime.
-
- Whydunit: A story where the Who and How are known up front--the
- mystery is Why.
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- I'm remarkably free of utopian fantasies. I've never really
- thought about what I would ideally like the future to be. I
- suppose I'm reactionary in this regard, but I'd like it to be as
- much like the present as possible. Of course, I'm sure it won't
- be. It'll be some inconceivable thing.
- --William Gibson
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- GUEST REVIEWER:
-
- DARRYL KENNING
-
-
- THE LEGACY OF HEOROT
- by Niven, Pournelle, and Barnes
- Pocket Books $4.50
-
- It is a good thing they were only charging $4.50 for this one;
- with my three favorite contemporary authors collaborating I
- probably would have invested my last sawbuck without a second
- thought. To say this is a novel of first contact would be
- literally true but a vast understatement. It is also a novel of
- adventure, vision, the human condition, with a word of warning.
- This is one of those books that will leave you thinking about the
- characters and the issues it raises for days and weeks after you
- put the book down. If you read only one book this year...this
- should be the one. Don't miss it.
-
- RATING...0 (low) to 5 (high)...5 *****
-
-
-
- TRILLION YEAR SPREE
- by Brian W. Aldiss
- Avon Books $9.95
- March 1988
-
- This is a HUGO winner, billed as THE history of Science Fiction.
- What rot. This is a book that will be loved by college teachers
- of literature. It does cover a vast time period, but the author's
- prejudices about other authors, books and ideas come shining
- through. Now I don't mind a bit of disagreement about what
- constitutes good science fiction, good fiction, or, good anything
- else. But I bought this because I hoped it would be a good
- reference source for someone who loves the genre, instead what I
- found was a disgruntled author trying to prove his viewpoints by
- heaping scorn on the works and ideas of other authors. The book
- does have some interesting pictures though.
-
- RATING.....0
-
-
-
- MAN-KZIN WARS II
- Created by Larry Niven
- Written by Dean Ing, Jerry Pournelle and S. M. Stirling
- Baen Books; 0-671-69833-8; August, 1989; $3.95
-
- This is a "franchise universe" group of two stories set in Larry
- Niven's Man-Kzin Wars period of Known Space. Those of us who have
- read very many of Niven's stories quickly got caught up in the
- stream of Known Space, and have looked forward to stories to fill
- in the gaps of the future history story lines.
-
- Dean Ing wrote the first story in this duo. This is really a
- follow up story to the first book in this series, Mann Wars. It
- is an fascinating look at the classic enemies/friends war theme.
- This novelette has much of the raw power and enthusiasm of early
- Ing stories, and it is clear that he enjoyed the sojourn into
- Niven's Universe.
-
- The second of the two stories is a collaborative effort by Jerry
- Pournelle and S. M. Stirling - and a nicely done piece too. It's
- been too long since we saw any Pournelle Science Fiction on a
- regular basis (hint, hint!), and it was a nice exercise to watch
- one of the modern masters of the genre at work.
-
- At this point it can hardly be a surprise to you that I liked
- this book. The integration into the Known Universe is excellent
- <Thanks Larry for opening it up to others>, the writing is
- outstanding, and the imagery is as good as one can hope for. This
- one is definitely to be picked up now - no matter how high your
- stack of "to read" books is, and put it on the top.
-
- Rating......5 *****
-
- You can contact Darryl at 6331 Marshall Rd., Centerville, Ohio
- 45459, or on Compuserve (76337,740), or on the ANNEX Bulletin
- Board 513-274-0821 (J 3 to join the Science Fiction conference).
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- I've had a fantasy for years about phoning myself somehow in 1968
- or, more remotely, phoning my father back in the 1950s and having
- a conversation. If you think about phoning yourself in 1968...The
- things you would have to explain. Imagine a kid in 1968 saying,
- "Did we get to the moon?" And you say, "Yeah, but nothing came of
- it. It's just like a television show." "Did we win the sexual
- revolution?" "Well, sort of."
- --William Gibson
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- BOOKS ON A CHIP
-
- Microlytics, Inc. and SelecTronics have made a commitment to
- putting reference works in electronic form. Their WordFinder 220
- is one of America's leading electronic speller/thesaurus
- products, and now they've created the Electronic Bible EB2000.
-
- The EB2000 is based on Zondervan's New International Version
- (NIV) of the Old and New Testaments. With it you can access any
- biblical word, book, chapter or verse instantly; push a button to
- store an "electronic bookmark"; enter commentary using a special
- notepad feature; and use a built-in biblical thesaurus.
-
- The EB2000 is a hand-held hinged unit that opens to a tiny
- keyboard on one half and a 6 x 40 character screen on the other.
- I don't have exact dimensions, but in the photo I've seen it
- looks to be about the size of a checkbook, maybe a bit more than
- a half-inch thick. Suggested retail price is "under $300".
-
- Also, the Electronic Bible, like all planned products from
- SelecTronics, accepts cartridges the size of credit cards for
- add-on capabilities, like chain references, biblical dictionaries
- and concordance data.
-
- Part of what makes all this possible in the powerful text
- compression technology that was developed at the Xerox Palo Alto
- Research Center (PARC) and is licensed to Microlytics. This
- compression system enabled them to put the entire Bible into one
- megabyte, making SelecTronics products potentially cheaper than
- the competition.
-
- SelecTronics has more hand-held reference works planned, like a
- concise encyclopedia. They have already secured (through
- Microlytics) licenses for the Macmillan Legal Thesaurus, Black's
- Legal Dictionary, the Oxford Legal Dictionary, Le Robert
- Dictionnaire des Synonymes, and The Random House Unabridged
- Dictionary.
-
- Personally, I'm looking forward to a hand-held unabridged
- dictionary. I would carry it in my pocket all the time, and refer
- to it repeatedly, all day long. Keep an eye on stores and
- catalogs for it. Meanwhile, the Electronic Bible EB2000 should be
- on sale for Christmas shopping.
-
- Microlytics, Inc., One Tobey Village Office Park, Pittsford, NY
- 14534
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- It's been proven in my own lifetime, at least to my satisfaction,
- that the future is weirder than anything I or anyone else could
- ever dream up. Things like AIDS and the idea that the ozone layer
- is in part evaporating because of little plastic hamburger boxes
- in fast-food joints. Who could have dreamed that one up? It
- sounds like something from a 1950 science fiction story.
- --William Gibson
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- NEW FROM CARROLL & GRAF
-
- CHEKHOV'S JOURNEY
- by Ian Watson
-
- Never before published in the United States, CHEKHOV'S JOURNEY is
- one of the most imaginative of Ian Watson's science fiction
- novels. It confirms his position in the front ranks of
- contemporary British writers and his status--in J.G. Ballard's
- view--as the most interesting science fiction writer of ideas.
-
- Here he writes about a Soviet film unit's latest venture to
- hypnotize an actor so that he does not just play the role of
- Anton Chekhov but actually "reincarnates" him. But what they
- didn't bank on was Chekhov's vivid imagination and memories. Deep
- in a trance, the actor recalls that Chekhov knew about the 1908
- Tunguska explosion back in 1890. This evidence of clairvoyance
- baffles the film crew even more when it is associated with the
- Soviet space program that has become so technologically advanced
- that the Film Unit at Krasnoyarsk begins to function very
- strangely indeed.
-
- Ian Watson received enormous critical acclaim for his novel THE
- EMBEDDING which Carroll & Graf also publishes this season. He is
- a British Science Fiction Award winner and has been features
- editor of the journal Foundation since 1975 and a full-time
- writer since 1976.
-
- Hardcover 184 pages ISBN: 0-88184-523-X $16.95
-
-
- MARILYN'S DAUGHTER
- by John Rechy
-
- In this brilliant fiction, John Rechy reinvents the life of
- Hollywood's most glamorous legend as he tells the enthralling
- story of a young woman's attempt to discover her heritage and the
- true identity of her parents. While unraveling this historic
- mystery, the novel examines the chic decadence of contemporary
- Los Angeles, dramatizing the power of popular myth in our
- society, and speculating about the figures who have become our
- modern icons.
-
- John Rechy is the author of the international bestseller and
- landmark novel CITY OF NIGHT, as well as, among others, NUMBERS
- and BODIES AND SOULS.
-
- Trade Paper 528 pages ISBN: 0-88184-531-0 $8.95
-
-
- BEYOND APOLLO
- by Barry Malzberg
-
- BEYOND APOLLO, winner of the John Campbell Award for the best
- science fiction novel, is another fine example of Barry
- Malzberg's mastery of the genre.
-
- Harry Evans is the lone survivor of the first Venus expedition, a
- space journey that went disasterously wrong. But no one knows the
- reason behind the tragedy. Was it a systems breakdown, or the
- result of mind-altering beings on the planet of love? As the
- world anxiously waits for the truth, Evans wrestles with dreams
- and fantasies, piecing together memories of primary sexual urges
- and an uncontrollable series of mental states.
-
- Beyond the intrigue of the narrative this novel is a clever
- comment on the science fiction genre and the theme of "space
- imperialism".
-
- Barry Malzberg has published hundreds of science fiction stories.
- Besides BEYOND APOLLO, his best known novels include GALAXIES,
- GUERNICA NIGHT, THE FALLING ASTRONAUTS and THE CROSS OF FIRE.
-
- Paperback 153 pages ISBN: 0-88184-551-5 $3.50
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- The sky above the port was the color of television, tuned to a
- dead channel.
- --the beginning of NEUROMANCER by William Gibson
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- IMPORTANT DATES IN NOVEMBER
-
- 01 1871 Stephen Crane, American writer
- 01 1880 Sholem Asch, Polish-born American writer
- 01 1896 Edmund Blunden, English poet and critic
- 03 1901 Andr Malraux, French novelist and critic
- 04 1862 Eden Phillpotts, English writer
- 04 1873 G.E. Moore, English philosopher
- 05 1884 James Elroy Flecker, English poet and dramatist
- 05 1885 Will Durant, American historian
- 05 1943 Sam Shepard, American dramatist
- 06 1558 Thomas Kyd, English dramatist
- 06 1671 Colley Cibber, English writer and actor
- 07 1913 Albert Camus, French writer & existentialist philosopher
- 08 1900 Margaret Mitchell, American author of GONE WITH THE WIND
- 08 1900 Theodore Dreiser's novel SISTER CARRIE is published
- 08 1916 Peter Weiss, German-born Swedish writer
- 09 1818 Ivan Turgenev, Russian novelist
- 09 1928 Anne Sexton, American poet
- 09 1934 Carl Sagan, astronomer & astrophysicist
- 09 1953 Dylan Thomas died in New York
- 10 1730 Oliver Goldsmith, Irish-born English writer
- 10 1759 Friedrich von Schiller, German dramatist and poet
- 10 1879 Vachel Lindsay, American poet
- 11 1821 Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoyevsky, Russian novelist
- 11 1914 Howard Fast, American novelist
- 11 1922 Kurt Vonnegut, Jr., American writer
- 12 1915 Roland Barthes, French literary critic
- 13 354 St Augustine of Hippo, early Christian philosopher
- 13 1792 Edward John Trelawney, English biographer and traveler
- 13 1850 Robert Louis Stevenson, Scottish writer
- 15 1887 Marianne Moore, American poet
- 15 1897 Sacheverell Sitwell, English poet and writer
- 16 1889 George S. Kaufman, American dramatist
- 16 1895 Michael Arlen, Armenian-born English writer
- 16 1930 Chinua Achebe, Nigerian writer
- 18 1836 Sir William S. Gilbert, English dramatist, the lyricist
- half of Gilbert & Sullivan
- 18 1874 Clarence Day, American writer
- 18 1882 Wyndham Lewis, English writer and painter
- 18 1882 Jacques Maritain, French Catholic writer
- 19 1899 Allen Tate, American poet and critic
- 20 1752 Thomas Chatterton, English poet
- 20 1858 Selma Lagerlf, Swedish writer
- 20 1923 Nadine Gordimer, South African writer
- 21 1694 Voltaire, French writer and philosopher
- 21 1863 Arthur Quiller-Couch, English scholar and editor of the
- OXFORD BOOK OF ENGLISH VERSE
- 22 1819 George Eliot, English novelist Mary Ann Evans
- 22 1857 George Gissing, English writer
- 22 1869 Andr Gide, French writer and editor
- 22 1888 Tarzan of the Apes
- 23 1920 Paul Celan, Romanian poet
- 24 1632 Baruch Spinoza, Dutch philosopher
- 24 1713 Laurence Sterne, English novelist and clergyman
- 24 1888 Dale Carnegie, author of HOW TO WIN FRIENDS AND INFLUENCE
- PEOPLE
- 24 1912 Garson Kanin, American playwright
- 24 1925 William F. Buckley, American writer
- 25 1562 Lope de Vega, Spanish dramatist and poet
- 25 1877 Harley Granville-Barker, English dramatist
- 26 1731 William Cowper, English preromantic poet
- 26 1905 Emlyn Williams, Welsh actor & playwright
- 26 1912 Eugene Ionesco, Romanian-French dramatist
- 26 1922 Charles M. Schultz, cartoonist
- 27 1909 James Agee, American writer
- 28 1628 John Bunyan, English writer and preacher
- 28 1757 William Blake, English poet, painter, and mystic
- 28 1820 Friedrich Engels, German collaborator of Karl Marx
- 28 1907 Alberto Moravia, Italian writer
- 29 1832 Louisa May Alcott, American novelist
- 29 1898 C.S. Lewis, English writer and scholar
- 29 1902 Carlo Levi, Italian writer and painter
- 30 538 St. Gregory of Tours, chronicler and bishop
- 30 1554 Sir Philip Sidney, English poet and scholar
- 30 1667 Jonathan Swift, English writer and clergyman
- 30 1835 Mark Twain, American writer Samuel L. Clemens
- 30 1874 Winston Churchill, English statesman and writer
- 30 1947 David Mamet, American dramatist
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- COMPUTER COWBOY READING
-
- We approached a few typical computer cowboys in the RelayNet (tm)
- cyberspace, and asked them about their reading preferences. Here
- is what they said, translated from binary electrical impulses
- into a typescript more intelligible to carbon-based units.
-
- What is/are your favorite computer magazine(s)?
-
- Jay Alexander: PC Magazine. It has in-depth hardware and software
- reviews; and lots of ads, to give you some feel for what's hot
- and how much it's going to set you back.
-
- Drew Bartorillo: My two favorite magazines are Info World and PC
- Week. Since both are weekly publications, they offer up-to-
- the-minute information about events in the computer world.
- Info World has its From The Test Center in which they
- evalute/compare hardware/software products. PC Week is a
- glossy publication that monthly does an in-depth study on a
- hardware/software topic.
-
- Doug Burg: PC Magazine is my favorite computer magazine. It
- contains a wealth of information.
-
- Chris Harrower: I read PC Magazine, DataBased Advisor, and Info
- (for C64 and Amiga computers). PC Mag seems to be a "standard"
- of sorts for PCs, DBA is excellent for dBASE programmers, and
- Info gives all the info (clever, huh?) for my "recreational"
- computers at home!
-
- Brian McEntire: My favorite magazine is Byte because it is very
- big and it has good ads (and very good articles). I also like
- PC Express because it is an all-ads magazine for businesses.
- And I like PC Week.
-
- Rob Rosenberger: I like PC Magazine and CompuMag. PC Magazine
- talks to me at "my" level, which is pretty high nowadays.
- CompuMag pays me as a contributing editor, so I put bread on
- my table.
-
- What is the most useful computer reference book you own?
-
- Drew Bartorillo: Since I do a lot of programming, I couldn't be
- without Borland's Turbo Pascal and Turbo Basic manuals.
- Nowadays, with doing a lot of Desktop Publishing work, I rely
- heavily on the manuals for Ventura Desktop Publisher and Gem
- Presentation Team. Occasionally I'll have to refer to the IBM
- PC DOS 3.3 manual for some syntax/option problem with a
- command.
-
- Doug Burg: GETTING STARTED WITH MS-DOS by Van Wolverton
- (Microsoft Press)
-
- Chris Harrower: ADVANCED dBASE III PLUS PROGRAMMING AND
- TECHNIQUES by Miriam Liskin and CLIPPER PROGRAMMING GUIDE by
- Rick Spence. Both are indispensible for dBASE programming.
-
- Brian McEntire: The MS-DOS manual and the GW BASIC manual.
-
- Rob Rosenberger: Nelson Ford's SOURCE BOOK OF FREE AND LOW-COST
- SOFTWARE. If I need a program for a particular purpose, I look
- for it in that book. I instantly know who's got the best
- program for that purpose; I know if it's PD (public domain) or
- shareware; and I know I can call an 800 number to order a copy
- of it on disk.
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- :HEADER,CENTER
- NUMBER ONE FAN
-
- by Annie Wilkes
-
- :PARA,0INDENT
- Do authors really use word processors? Only if they want to get
- some work done. A computer with word processing software allows a
- writer the luxury of changing a semicolon or adding a word at
- will; with no need to type the whole thing over again, have a
- messy looking paper, or wait for the secretary to show up.
- /END PARA
-
- I've heard that executives are getting into word processors now.
- They're getting to like being able to compose a memo or letter in
- private, press a button and have a "hard copy" (an actual printed
- page) in their hand in under a minute. The text and the process
- of writing can be more private, and the whole job (from idea to
- hard copy) is faster.
- /END PARA
-
- Writing by hand has some advantages: it's easy to scratch things
- out or write something in, it's cheap, and it's completely
- portable. Unfortunately, it's also hard on the hand (you can
- pound a keyboard far longer than you can write) and it leaves you
- with a very messy document. Most writers who compose longhand
- also use a typist to get a finished copy. But what if last-minute
- changes are needed? Retype. And retype. And retype. Or else you
- just stop being such a perfectionist.
- /END PARA
-
- No--word processors are definitely the way to go, for amateurs
- and professionals alike. On top of everything else, you can get
- an online dictionary and thesaurus, as well as spelling and
- grammar checkers. Then when someone accuses you of using the
- wrong word, or of a mispelling, you just blame it on the
- computer.
- /END PARA
- :END DOC
- :GO HOME
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- He'd operated on an almost permanent adrenalin high, a byproduct
- of youth and proficiency, jacked into a custom cyberspace deck
- that projected his disembodied consciousness into the consensual
- hallucination that was the matrix.
- --Case's history, from NEUROMANCER by William Gibson
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- NOVEMBER BOOK RELEASES
-
- Here are some interesting titles from the November release lists.
-
- Tales of the Dark Knight: Batman's First Fifty Years 1939-1989 by
- Mark Cotta Vaz
- Ballantine Nov89 TP $17.95 0-345-36013-3
- (Traces the history of the superhero on the occasion of his
- 50th birthday.)
- Midnight by Dean R. Koontz
- Berkley Nov89 PB $4.95
- (This novel pits four average folks and a dog against the evil
- that has taken over a town in northern California in this
- bestselling novel.)
- Luncheonette: Ice Cream, Beverage, and Sandwich Recipes from the
- Golden Age of the Soda Fountain by Carol Vidinghoff and
- Patricia M. Kelly
- Crown Nov89 TP $8.95 0-517-57297-4
- (This illustrated collection of recipes takes the reader back
- to a time when sandwiches and sundaes were built--not simply
- made.)
- The Dragonbone Chair by Tad Williams
- DAW Nov89 PB $5.95
- (The publisher calls this "the fantasy equivalent of War And
- Peace".)
- The Renegades of Pern by Anne McCaffrey
- Del Rey Nov89 HC $19.95 0-345-34096-5
- (A new installment in the popular series.)
- The Dragonlover's Guide to Pern by Jody Lynn Nye with Anne
- McCaffrey
- Del Rey Nov89 HC $19.95 0-345-35424-9
- (An encyclopedic tour of the imaginary world of Pern.)
- A Vision of Britain: A Personal View of Architecture by H.R.H.
- The Prince of Wales
- Doubleday Nov89 HC $40 0-385-26903-X
- (A look at the modern architecture of Britain.)
- The Killing Man: A Mike Hammer Novel by Mickey Spillane
- Dutton Nov89 HC $17.95 0-525-24827-7
- (No foolin'--a brand-new Mike Hammer story)
- Running Wild by J.G. Ballard
- Farrar, Straus & Giroux Nov89 HC $12.95 0-374-25288-2
- (This suspense novel chronicles an English psychiatrist's
- attempt to solve a brutal murder.)
- Gumshoe: Reflections in a Private Eye by Josiah Thompson
- Fawcett Crest Nov89 PB $4.95
- (Gives the inside scoop on what the life of a private eye is
- really like.)
- The Amateur Naturalist by Gerald Durrell
- Knopf Nov89 TP $18.95 0-679-72837-X
- Quentin Crisp's Book of Quotations by Quentin Crisp
- Macmillan Nov89 HC $18.95 0-02-528801-6
- (Offers observations on gay life from sources as diverse as the
- Bible and Boy George.)
- Feast of Fear: Conversations with Stephen King edited by Tim
- Underwood & Chuck Miller
- McGraw-Hill Nov89 HC $19.95 0-07-065760-2
- English Country House Murders edited by Thomas Godfrey
- Mysterious Nov89 HC $18.95 0-89296-355-7
- (This highly-popular anthology returns with classic stories of
- "upper crust crime" in the English countryside by Agatha
- Christie, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, P.D. James, and more.)
- The Kennedy Encyclopedia: An A-to-Z Illustrated Guide to
- America's Royal Family by Caroline Latham & Jeannie Sakol
- NAL Nov89 HC $19.95 0-453-00684-1
- (This guide to the Kennedy clan features photos, facts, quotes
- and trivia. For those who really can't get enough.)
- Hidden From History: Reclaiming the Gay and Lesbian Past edited
- by Martin Bauml Duberman, Martha Vicinus & George Chauncey, Jr.
- NAL Nov89 HC $24.95 0-453-00689-2
- (This social history of homosexuality explores its place in
- various cultures and traditions.)
- News of the Weird by Chuck Shepard, John J. Kohut & Roland Sweet
- NAL/Plume Nov89 TP $6.95
- (A collection of offbeat and bizarre news items from the
- mainstream press.)
- Koko by Peter Straub
- NAL/Signet Nov89 PB $5.95
- (Four Vietnam veterans travel to Asia to solve a series of
- murders and save a friend.)
- A Practical Guide to Copyrights and Trademarks by Frank H.
- Andorka
- Pharos Nov89 HC $19.95
- (Incorporates all recently enacted legislation and procedures
- regarding copyrights and trademarks.)
- Miss Manners' Guide for the Turn-of-the-Millennium by Judith
- Martin
- Pharos Nov89 HC $24.95
- (Takes the etiquette-conscious through the 1990s and into the
- new millennium.)
- Nibbled to Death by Ducks by Robert Campbell
- Pocket Nov89 HC $17.95 0-671-67585-0
- (A new Jimmy Flannery mystery.)
- Eternity by Greg Bear
- Popular Library/Questar Nov89 PB $3.95
- (The sequel to the author's Nebula Award-winning novel Eon.)
- Laying the Music to Rest by Dean Wesley Smith
- Popular Library/Questar Nov89 PB $3.95
- (A tale of time travel and the Titanic by the winner of The
- Writers of the Future award.)
- The Prentice Hall Good Reading Guide by Kenneth McLeish
- Prentice Hall Nov89 TP $10.95 0-13-712175-X
- (This annotated paperback original guide features 300 authors
- and 3000 works of literature.)
- Caribbean by James A. Michener
- Random House Nov89 HC $22.95 0-394-56561-4
- deluxe limited edition $100 0-394-55755-1
- (Fact blends with fiction in a new epic.)
- Scare Tactics by John Farris
- Tor Nov89 PB $4.95
- (A novel and short stories.)
- The Dark Half by Stephen King
- Viking Nov89 HC $21.95 0-670-82982-X
- (A bestselling author's pseudonym turns against him.)
- Nature Nearby: An Outdoor Guide to America's 25 Most Visited
- Cities by Bill McMillon
- Wiley Nov89 TP $12.95 0-471-62339-3
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- .....and ANYTHING is possible
-
- by Darryl Kenning
-
- The first time I read Isaac Asimov was in the 10th grade through
- one of those academic reading programs, you remember, where for a
- couple of bucks your English teacher let you use class time to
- pick books from a list and order them for delivery at some
- indeterminate time in the future. A month or two later - long
- after you have forgotten all about the books - they arrive, and
- again using up class time, they are passed out to those of us
- whose parents were so delighted that we might actually read
- something, that they gave us a few dollars to spend.
-
- I still have that book - it was "I ROBOT" - and the rest as they
- say "is history".
-
- That was, for me at least, an introduction to the world of
- Science Fiction, to Isaac Asimov, to the slightly unsavory
- paperback book field (in those days most Paperbacks were sold in
- drugstores and had pictures of weird monsters leering at scantily
- clad nubile female humans - guaranteed to grab the interest of
- any red blooded teenage boy), and robots. Most importantly tho, I
- learned to believe that someplace or sometime, anything is
- possible.
-
- The last time I saw a number, Dr. A had written over 420 books on
- everything from Science Fiction to religion and from physics to
- education. Using a style that by today's standards is almost too
- clear and straightforward, he has the unfailing ability to make
- the complex clear and to grab your interest and hold onto it thru
- many a twisting plot. While I haven't read all of his books by
- any means, I have NEVER read one of his books that didn't teach,
- enlighten, and that I didn't enjoy thoroughly.
-
- In a very generalized sense the robot and the worlds of the
- robots seemed to me to be the glue that cemented many of his
- stories together and formed a critical element of his "universe".
- It is interesting to me that robot stories seem to be enjoying a
- bit of a comeback now. They were very popular in the 50's and
- early 60's (I suspect they were in the 40's too). Then their
- popularity waned and I'm not sure why, though one might speculate
- about the loss of innocence and sense of technological wonder.
-
- I read somewhere recently that the first robot story is in the
- bible where God made Adam from a lump of clay, and man has had a
- keen interest in robot stories ever since. As an interesting side
- note it looks as if our technology is about right to see some
- significant cyborg (human and machine joining) efforts - consider
- the use of artificial hearts, now fairly common. This will force
- us to consider many of the philosophical issues raised in the
- robot stories of the good Doctor.
-
- One of the joys of the recognition by book publishers of the
- large numbers and the cohesiveness of SF readers has been the
- reissue of a lot of the early robot stories and books, with a
- whole series of new spin off books. One can only hope that they
- will have the same impact on a whole new generation of readers as
- they had on me.
-
- A VERY BRIEF LIST
-
- These should all be available either new or still can be found
- in paperback resale stores. All of course are by Isaac Asimov.
-
- I, Robot
- The Caves of Steel
- The Naked Sun
- The Robots of Dawn
- Robots and Empire
- The Rest of the Robots
-
- Good Reading!
-
- The author may be contacted through Reading For Pleasure; via
- Compuserve (76337,740); GEnie (D.Kenning,); The Annex BBS
- 513-274-0821;or by writing to 6331 Marshall Rd., Centerville,
- Ohio, 45459
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- BACK ISSUES
-
- ELECTRONIC EDITION: Check the BBSs in the Directory first. If
- what you want isn't available, send $5 to us for a disk
- containing ALL available issues. Disk will be formatted using
- PC/MS-DOS (for IBM clones). Specify 3-1/2" or 5-1/4" floppy.
-
- PRINT EDITION: Send $1.50 for each issue requested.
-
- Checks: Make checks payable to Cindy Bartorillo.
-
- Address: See masthead on Table of Contents page.
-
- ISSUES AVAILABLE:
-
- #1: Premier issue: 1988 World Fantasy Awards; Books I'm Supposed
- to Like, But Don't; Pronunciation Guide to Author's Names;
- Christie Characters on Film; Featured Author: Richard Matheson;
- Baseball & Cricket Mysteries; Stephen King Checklist; Time Travel
- Books
-
- #2: Summer Reading Issue: Award Winners & Nominees; Beach Bag
- Books; Featured Author: Stanley Ellin; Splatterpunk; Murderous
- Vacations; The Psychology of Everyday Things; The Shining; SF
- Fan-Lingo; Pseudonyms
-
- #3: Books About Books Issue: Two-Bit Culture; Christopher Morley;
- 84 Charing Cross Road; Assorted References; Bibliomysteries; Deep
- Quarry; Featured Author: Harlan Ellison
-
- #4: Hollywood Issue: Recent Awards; About Hollywood; Silver
- Scream; Death of a Salesman; Joe Bob Briggs; The Hollywood
- Mystery; Featured Author: Fredric Brown; The Dark Fantastic;
- Darryl Kenning Reviews
-
- #5: Halloween Issue: Hugo Awards; Year's Best Horror Stories
- XVII; Tracy Kidder; Supernatural Mysteries; Thomas Harris;
- Falling Angel Heart; Ray Garton; New From Underwood-Miller;
- Featured Author: Robert R. McCammon; The Modern Halloween Shelf;
- Darryl Kenning Reviews; The Ultimate Stephen King Character Quiz
-
- #6: Computers & Robots Issue (the one you're looking at now).
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- TRIVIA QUIZ ANSWERS
-
- 1) The Trouble With Tribbles
- 2) D.F. Jones
- 3) Jane Austen
- 4) 9000 Extra credit: Urbana, Illinois
- 5) Robert A. Heinlein
- 6) Sir John Tenniel
- 7) Rudy Rucker
- 8) Olaf Stapledon
- 9) Sancho Panza
- 10) Opium
-
- :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:
-
- COMING NEXT MONTH: Don't miss the next issue -- gift ideas
- galore and lots of good holiday reading!
-
-