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-
- **************************************************************
- * *
- * R E A D I N G F O R P L E A S U R E *
- * *
- * Issue #14 *
- * *
- * *
- * *
- * Editor: Cindy Bartorillo *
- * *
- * HAPPY HOLIDAYS *
- * *
- * Featured Authors: Robert A. Heinlein / Ellis Peters *
- * *
- **************************************************************
-
- CONTACT US AT: Reading For Pleasure, c/o Cindy Bartorillo, 103
- Baughman's Lane, Suite 303, Frederick, MD 21702; 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, 1200-9600 HST.
-
- 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.
-
- ????? Omaha, NE Pete Hartman 402-498-9723
- Academia Pomono, NJ Ken Tompkins 609-652-4914
- Accolade! BBS Round Rock,TX Jack Moore 512-388-1445
- 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 708-289-9808 P
- Blcksbg Info Serv Blacksburg,VA Fred Drake 703-951-2920
- Boot Strap OnLine Yuma, AZ Daryl Stogner 602-343-0878 S
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- Checkpoint El Cajon,CA 619-442-3595 P
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- Computer Co-Op Voorhees,NJ Ted Hare 609-784-9404
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- Dorsai Diplomatic Mission NYC Jack Brooks 212-431-1944 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
- 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
- KCSS BBS Seattle,WA Bob Neddo 206-296-5277 P
- Litforum CompuServe Library #12
- Lost Paradise Mike King 703-370-7795 P
- Magnetic Bottle Pennsylvania Bill Mertens 814-231-1345
- Magpie HQ New York,NY Steve Manes 212-420-0527 P
- MoonDog BBS Brooklyn,NY Don Barba 718-692-2498 P
- MSU Library BBS St. Paul,MN Dana Noonan 612-722-9257 P
- Oak Lawn Oak Lawn,IL Vince & Chris 708-599-8089 P
- Poverty Rock PCB Mercer Is.,WA Rick Kunz 206-232-1763 PS
- Round Table BBS Chicago,IL Kevin Keyser 312-777-9480 P
- Sabaline Don Saba 619-692-1961 P
- Science Fiction GEnie Library #3
- SF & Fantasy CIS Hom-9 Library #5
- SoftServ Long Beach,CA J. Neil Schulman 213-957-1176
- Suburban Software Chicago,IL Chuck Valecek 312-636-6694 P
- Sunwise Sun City W.,AZ Keith Slater 602-584-7395
- 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
- Xevious Framingham,MA Nels Anderson 508-875-3618 P
- Your Place Fairfax,VA Ken Goosens 703-978-6360 P
-
- RFP Home Board (all issues available all the time):
- Baudline II Frederick,MD the Bartorillo's 301-694-7108
- (RFPs downloadable on first call; 9600 HST)
-
- Any board that participates in the RelayNet (tm) email system can
- request RFPs from BAUDLINE.
-
- P = PC Pursuit-able
- S = StarLink-able
-
- NOTE: Back issues on CompuServe may have been moved to a different
- library.
- ************************
-
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
- Editorial . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127
- What's News . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 164
- Gauntlet #2 Coming . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 241
- Postcards From the Edge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 288
- A Good Old-Fashioned Christmas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 365
- Lost In a Book . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 424
- Making the Most of Medicare . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 471
- The Dame in the Kimono . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 523
- Trust Me On This . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 538
- The Cuckoo's Egg . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 618
- Best Western Nonfiction Books . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 698
- Passages To Freedom . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 740
- SoftServ Paperless Bookstore . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 771
- How To Read Paperless Books . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 998
-
- Genre Sections:
- .............................................................
- Loosen Your Grip On Reality 1025
- Murder By The Book 2631
- Frightful Fiction 3495
- The Laugh's On Us 4148
- '''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''
-
- Back Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4215
-
- ************************
-
- EDITORIAL
-
- The subject this time is Naming Names. To begin with, there is a
- controversy right now about uncredited book reviews. Several powerful
- review periodicals, including Publishers Weekly, don't put any byline
- on the reviews they publish, and a growing group of authors are
- steamed about it. Despite the fact that Reading For Pleasure is
- neither powerful nor controversial, we understand the position of
- authors against uncredited reviews, and we will try very hard to
- remember to put a byline on any review that we publish. Up to now the
- rule of thumb is that any review not credited to someone else was
- written by me.
-
- That's what we're doing--now for what you should be doing. First of
- all, it would help everyone out if you would mention RFP whenever
- appropriate. If publishers and retailers hear our name, they might be
- a bit more inclined to keep us up-to-date with catalogs and book
- announcements. And if they keep US informed, we'll keep YOU informed.
- Also, let us mention again that if you have a BBS and you carry RFP
- regularly, *please* let us know your information so we can list you in
- our Distribution Directory. We know for a fact that there are a bunch
- of you out there who aren't 'fessin' up.
-
- Lastly, sprinkled around this issue are a few mini biographies of some
- of the people involved with RFP. Sort of a Parade of the Guilty, I
- guess you could call it.
-
- Have the very best Holiday you've ever had, and be sure to buy lots of
- books for gift-giving. There are lots of great ideas in this issue,
- and there are even more at your local bookstore. See you again in
- issue #15 (available February 1, 1991), when our Featured Authors will
- be Jonathan Carroll and Chet Williamson.
-
- Cindy
-
- ************************
-
- WHAT'S NEWS
-
- * Are you a writer who can't seem to get published? Why not join The
- Society of Rejected Writers, a support group for unpublished writers.
- Membership will cost you $10 and 30 rejection slips. For more
- information, write to: Bonnie Kaufman, SRW, 225 Central Park West,
- #11-17, New York NY 10024.
-
- * Writers frequently complain that their publishers don't publicize
- their books sufficiently. William L. Shirer, author of the 1960
- National Book Award winner THE RISE AND FALL OF THE THIRD REICH, has
- put his money where his mouth is. Little, Brown took out some
- advertisements when his book, A NATIVE'S RETURN 1945-1988, first came
- out in January 1990, but failed to publish further ads after all the
- book reviews had come in. Shirer filled the gap by taking out ads in
- the New York Times and the Los Angeles Times at his own expense. Nice
- idea if you can afford it. Unfortunately, most authors can't.
-
- * Jerry Biederman went on "a scavenger hunt for strangers' secrets".
- In a city he won't name (even his publishers don't know where it is)
- he approached people for their secrets; and got legal releases from
- them to put these secrets in a book as long as they, and the town,
- remain anonymous. A mailman confesses that he subscribes to Time
- simply for show, that he can't really read that well. A trash
- collector has a recurring dream of being a superhero's sidekick. And
- so on. If you'd like to see if other people's secrets are as weird and
- depraved as your own, watch for Biederman's book, SECRETS OF A SMALL
- TOWN: THE EXTRAORDINARY CONFESSIONS OF ORDINARY PEOPLE, coming in
- March 1991 from Pharos Books.
-
- * Just in case you thought evolution was finally working, I'll repeat
- a story I read in Publishers Weekly. Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist
- H.G. Bissinger has been forced to cancel a promotional tour to Odessa,
- Texas, because he has received "bodily threats" from some of local
- citizens. He would have gone to promote his new book, FRIDAY NIGHT
- LIGHTS, which is about Odessa's obsession with high school football.
- OK, granted the book is a tad critical of Odessa, but "bodily
- threats"?
-
- * As I type this, more than 200,000 paperback books are being sent to
- U.S. military personnel serving in the Persian Gulf. Eleven paperback
- publishers, under the guise of the Paperback Publishing Division of
- the Association of American Publishers, have donated books which
- should have begun reaching the troops in early November. Some 100,000
- of the books will be distributed by the USO in "Oasis Packages", which
- will also include M&Ms, toothpaste, toothbrush, razor and blades,
- writing paper, audio cassettes, and sunglasses. The eleven publishers
- contributing books are: Avon, Ballantine, Bantam, Berkley, Dell,
- HarperCollins, Penguin USA, Pocket Books, St. Martin's Press, Warner,
- and Zebra Books.
-
- * What do you do if you enjoy Kevin Costner's movie, DANCES WITH
- WOLVES, but missed the book's publication in paperback back in 1988?
- Newmarket Press comes to the rescue with a new hardcover edition of
- the original novel, with an introduction by Costner and an afterword
- by author Michael Blake (who also wrote the screenplay). The same
- publisher also has DANCES WITH WOLVES: THE ILLUSTRATED STORY OF AN
- EPIC FILM by Kevin Costner, Michael Blake, and Jim Wilson (he's the
- producer of the movie). This is a $14.95 trade paperback with 170
- photos and drawings, portions of the screenplay, articles about the
- film's costumes and sets, and bits of relevant history, legend, and
- literature.
-
- * Jay McInerney's THE STORY OF MY LIFE (about a character named Alison
- Poole), is being made into a one-woman play and will open in London
- with Ally Sheedy.
-
- * There's a new British magazine starting this month. It's called
- MILLION: THE MAGAZINE OF POPULAR FICTION, the brainchild of David
- Pringle (best known for his science fiction magazine, INTERZONE).
- MILLION will have 68 pages of articles about popular writers,
- interviews with them, book reviews, short stories, novel excerpts,
- news, etc. For more information, write to: Popular Fictions, 124
- Osbourne Rd., Brighton BN1 6LU, UK.
-
- ************************
-
- COMING SOON! GAUNTLET #2!
-
- GAUNTLET: Exploring the Limits of Free Expression
-
- The only general-interest magazine about censorship has its second
- issue coming out in March 1991. There's a new format this time--it's a
- trade paperback (6 x 9), perfectbound; and it's not too soon to
- reserve your copy. Issue #2 is a Stephen King special and will
- include:
-
- * Stephen King commentary by Michael Collings, Stephen Spignesi,
- George Beahm and Howard Wornom; the latest news on King projects; and
- an index of work by King censored in 1990.
-
- * TWO stories by Ray Bradbury
-
- plus:
-
- Graham Masterton
- Karl Wagner
- Nancy Collins
- Piers Anthony
- 2 Live Crew
- Kathryn Ptacek
- Kelley Wilde
- Ray Garton
- Dan Simmons
- Skipp & Spector
- Rex Miller
- Andrew Vachss
-
- and much more.
-
- Make a check out for $8.95 to Gauntlet, Inc. (make it $15 if you want
- #1 and #2; make it $21 if you want #1, #2, and the following year's
- #3; add $15 if you want a Gauntlet T-shirt and specify Adult L or
- Adult XL). Mail your check to: Gauntlet, Inc., Dept. O, 309 Powell
- Rd., Springfield, PA 19064. Tell them RFP sent you.
-
- (Late breaking news: There is now a special $75 limited edition
- version of GAUNTLET, signed by many of the contributors--including
- Stephen King, Graham Masterton, and Andrew Vachss. Send your check
- (plus $3 shipping & handling) to: Borderlands Press, PO Box 32333,
- Baltimore, MD 21208.
-
- ************************
-
- POSTCARDS FROM THE EDGE
- by Carrie Fisher
- (1987)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- Actress Carrie Fisher (best know as Princess Leia of STAR WARS)
- apparently had a good-sized drug problem at one time, and POSTCARDS
- FROM THE EDGE is where she put a lot of the insights she gained from
- the related experiences (being on drugs, being around people who are
- on drugs, being in a rehab clinic, being off drugs, etc.).
-
- I'm of two minds about this book. On the one hand, the characters are
- all drawn from a limited section of our population--they're all rich,
- self-involved southern Californians who make their living in the movie
- industry. They're psychologically screwed up, but very, very
- sophisticated about it. I don't know about you, but I don't know
- anybody like this, and I'm damn glad about that. Here's a sample of
- First Date dinner conversation from someone our heroine has an
- almost-relationship with (this is all said dead-serious):
-
- "I envy people meeting me for the first time," he said. "That first
- meeting is everything, because I can watch their eyes and see it all
- happen, and I want to BE them. *I* want to meet somebody like me."
-
- Would you sit around listening to this kind of person? Would you
- voluntarily spend time with this person? So, what I'm saying is that
- the characters are difficult to sympathize with---because they're
- alien, and because they're so obnoxious.
-
- On the other hand, though, there's the writing, which is devastatingly
- perceptive and enormously funny. Early in the book there's the
- interior monologue of a cocaine user who decides to give it up and
- then, within minutes, is consuming enough cocaine (and other drugs) to
- wind up in the hospital. How he talks himself into his behavior is the
- funniest and saddest few pages I've ever read.
-
- Also, once we get away from the early emphasis on drugs, POSTCARDS
- becomes more cheerful and more interesting. We see Suzanne Vale, our
- heroine, on the job making a movie, shopping with a girlfriend, and
- facing the terrifying possibility that, just maybe, she's actually
- having an honest-to-God relationship. It's a fun trip.
-
- On the whole, I give POSTCARDS FROM THE EDGE a thumbs-up. I'm still
- suspicious of Californians, but at least they're funny.
-
- NOTES: As I'm sure you noticed, POSTCARDS FROM THE EDGE was a major
- motion picture of Fall 1990, directed by Mike Nichols and starring
- Meryl Streep, Shirley MacLaine, and Dennis Quaid. Carrie Fisher wrote
- the screenplay herself, which she will also do for her second novel,
- SURRENDER THE PINK, the film to be co-produced by Ms. Fisher and
- Steven Spielberg. Her third novel, DELUSIONS OF GRANDMA, is due to be
- released in early 1992.
-
- MORE NOTES: While I've got you here, I might as well pass along the
- rumor that Carrie Fisher did not actually write POSTCARDS FROM THE
- EDGE (the novel, that is). I have NO knowledge about this issue at
- all, and mention this only as an interesting bit of trivia.
-
- ************************
-
- CINDY BARTORILLO was given a copy of THE SECRET GARDEN by Frances
- Hodgson Burnett at a very young and impressionable age, which explains
- her fascination for secret doors. Another favorite volume of her early
- years was EDWARD LEAR'S BOOK OF NONSENSE, a large collection of
- limericks, which explains her interest in poetry. These first volumes
- led inevitably to Nancy Drew mysteries, which led to Perry Mason
- mysteries, and before long she was hooked on the hard stuff: Fredric
- Brown and Cornell Woolrich. In school she learned that of all the ways
- to waste your time, school is the most boring. One day she found
- herself reading Theodore Dreiser for fun, and immediately quit going
- to school and eating meat. Before long, Cindy had discovered the
- Victorians, which soon led to gothic fiction and ultimately to modern
- horror. Today, when asked what she "does", she replies "I read", which
- satisfies her and tends to puzzle everyone else.
-
- ************************
-
- A GOOD OLD-FASHIONED CHRISTMAS
- by Robert Benchley
- (1981, Ipswich Press)
- review Cindy Bartorillo
-
- What better way to celebrate Christmas than with a collection of
- Robert Benchley's yuletide essays? This volume makes a great Christmas
- gift and a very nice introduction to Benchley's humor. The essays
- range from 1921 to 1949, and deal with such standard Christmas issues
- as boredom, the tyranny of tradition, social obligations, and
- children:
-
- "One of the problems of child education which is not generally
- included in books on the subject is the Visiting Schoolmate. By this
- is meant the little friend whom your child brings home for the
- holidays. What is to be done with him, the Law reading as it does?"
- ---from "The Stranger Within Our Gates" (1930)
-
- Indeed, Benchley manages to put his finger on the true value of
- children at Christmas:
-
- "For, after all, we must keep in touch with the children, because some
- day they will get all of Grandma's money."
- ---from "Here Come the Children" (1925)
-
- If your bookstore doesn't carry A GOOD OLD-FASHIONED CHRISTMAS, you
- can get it the same place I did--from A Common Reader, a terrific
- catalog source of unusual reading material, or as they say, "A
- selection of books for readers with imagination". You can reach them
- at: A Common Reader, 175 Tompkins Avenue, Pleasantville, NY 10570;
- 914-747-3388. By the way, they have other Robert Benchley books too.
-
- ************************
-
- WHO IS ROBERT PITTMAN
- AND WHY DOES HE WRITE FOR RFP?
-
- He lives in Glenview, Kentucky and for the past five years has enjoyed
- the state and status of retirement. His work career spanned 36 years
- with a single company, B.A.T. Industries, where he specialized in
- marketing, public relations and political relations. Other than the
- United States, interesting tours of duty included Costa Rica, El
- Salvador and Panama. He is a native of North Carolina but departed
- that delightful area immediately following graduation from North
- Carolina State College and now considers himself a fully-qualified
- Kentuckian. He is married and has four children, all young adults.
- Reading has always been a favorite pastime and his range of interests
- is wide with a slight leaning toward science fiction.
-
- Contributions to Reading For Pleasure came about because of his son
- Bill. Bill is a Macintosh maven and through his contacts in the
- computer networks, found an early issue of RFP and formed a
- communication with the editor. It was not long before Bill was saying,
- "Pop, why don't YOU write something and contribute it to Reading For
- Pleasure?" He wrote something, Cindy said, "Thanks", Bill said,
- "More", and so it goes.
-
- ************************
-
- LOST IN A BOOK
- The Psychology of Reading For Pleasure
- by Victor Nell
- (1988, Yale University Press)
- review by Howard Frye
-
- Remember Masters & Johnson, the pair who published the huge study of
- human sexuality? That was when we all found out for the first time
- that everyone else is just as much of a pervert as we are. Well, LOST
- IN A BOOK does the exact same thing for readers. The prose is on the
- dry side, but it's a fascinating study of who reads, how they read,
- what they read, and why they read. You'll particularly like the
- discussions of "reading trance", a phenomenon that I bet you thought
- nobody else knew about. Finally, someone who brings the literary focus
- back where it belongs, with the reader.
-
- "Traditional methods of criticism are fine if you're preparing a
- museum exhibit, with the author, or his book, carefully pinned to
- black velvet and positioned under glass, but what meaning can it
- possibly have to readers?"
- --from LOST IN A BOOK by Victor Nell
-
- "Reading is creative...what any reader derives from the printed page,
- therefore, is not exactly what some other reader would get or even
- what the author had in mind, but to a certain degree at least a
- personal recreation on the part of the reader."
- --from BASES FOR EFFECTIVE READING by M.A. Tinker (1965)
- and quoted in LOST IN A BOOK by Victor Nell
-
- "When we hold a book in our hands, all we hold is paper. The book is
- elsewhere."
- --from THE BOOK REVOLUTION by R. Escarpit (1966)
- and quoted in LOST IN A BOOK by Victor Nell
-
- LOST IN A BOOK is now available in an economical ($14.95) trade
- paperback from Yale University Press.
-
- ************************
-
- ANNIE WILKES is a retired nurse who first discovered books while
- working the 11pm to 7am shift. At first she preferred romance novels,
- but she's since gone on to suspense and horror stories. Annie spends
- her time doing volunteer work at the local Retirement Center, and in
- the evenings she reads and avoids housework.
-
- ************************
-
- MAKING THE MOST OF MEDICARE
- by Arthur R. Pell, Ph.D.
- (1990, DCI Publishing)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- Yeah, I know, Medicare is that idea they came up with for your
- grandparents. Well, don't look now, but you're one year closer to
- Medicare than you were this time last year, and next year you'll be
- even closer. If you or your parents are within shoutin' distance of
- 65, you'll want to have a copy of this book. You can't win the medical
- insurance game if you don't know the rules.
-
- Dr. Pell starts with a thorough description of who's covered by
- Medicare, how to apply, and generally what Medicare will do for you
- once you've got it. An entire chapter is devoted to explaining what
- Medicare will pay for if you receive medical care in a hospital, a
- skilled-nursing facility, a hospice, or at home (and how to make
- informed decisions if you have a choice about where to be sick).
- Another chapter covers the bills you receive from your doctor, along
- with many recommendations for managing your medical care for
- economical efficiency.
-
- Perhaps the most useful parts of this guide are the practical
- chapters. Let's say you've determined that Medicare should pay you
- $100, but *they* say they should pay you only $15. What do you do now?
- Dr. Pell includes many pages of real-life examples with concrete
- solutions. Let's face it, rules aren't much good if you can't enforce
- them in your own behalf.
-
- MAKING THE MOST OF MEDICARE also covers groups with specific
- perspectives. Those with coverage from another company will find out
- how to use both to their best advantage. Medicaid, veteran's benefits,
- and HMO's also are covered at length. And for those with chronic
- medical problems, there is an entire chapter discussing the insurance
- aspects of nursing homes, hospices, and home care.
-
- Rounding out the book with a more human element, Dr. Pell discusses
- general strategies and common sense advice for dealing with medical
- care professionals and hospitals. This is important and encouraging
- material that will help in the empowering of patients. The idea is to
- participate actively and aggressively in your own medical care,
- improving the quality of your own life (and possibly improving the
- quality of medical care in general).
-
- MAKING THE MOST OF MEDICARE is an absolutely essential guide to the
- maze that is medical insurance for the elderly, and I can't imagine
- the subject being handled more lucidly. All the information is
- presented clearly and arranged usefully. At $11.95, this is a Best
- Buy.
-
- ************************
-
- THE DAME IN THE KIMONO
- Hollywood, Censorship, & the Production Code
- From the 1920s to the 1960s
- by Leonard J. Leff & Jerold L. Simmons
- (1990, Grove Weidenfeld)
- comment by Howard Frye
-
- A good, if somewhat dry, account of movie censorship, and the eleven
- movies that shaped the Production Code: DEAD END, GONE WITH THE WIND,
- THE OUTLAW, THE POSTMAN ALWAYS RINGS TWICE, THE BICYCLE THIEF,
- DETECTIVE STORY, A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE, THE MOON IS BLUE, THE
- FRENCH LINE, LOLITA, WHO'S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF?
-
- ************************
-
- TRUST ME ON THIS
- by Donald E. Westlake
- (1988, Mysterious)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- JOGGING CAUSES NYMPHOMANIA
-
- Have you ever wondered where those great headlines you see at the
- supermarket checkout come from? "11-Yr-Old Gives Birth To Siamese
- Twins During Gym Class" "Enraged Wife Feeds Husband To Dogs" "I Had
- Bigfoot's Baby" How do these newspapers find all those crazies? How do
- they generate so much nonsense week after week? Well, here's Donald
- Westlake to the rescue, to tell us all about the inner workings of the
- Weekly Galaxy. TRUST ME ON THIS does, however, bear the following
- notice in the front:
-
- A WORD IN YOUR EAR
-
- Although there is no newspaper anywhere in the United States
- like the WEEKLY GALAXY, as any alert reader will quickly
- realize, were there such a newspaper in actual real-life
- existence its activities would be stranger, harsher and more
- outrageous than those described herein. The fictioneer labors
- under the restraint of plausibility; his inventions must stay
- within the capacity of the audience to accept and believe.
- God, of course, working with facts, faces no such limitation.
- Were there a factual equivalent to the WEEKLY GALAXY, it
- would be much worse than the paper I have invented, its staff
- and ownership even more lost to all considerations of truth,
- taste, proportion, honor, morality or any shred of common
- humanity. Trust me.
-
-
- That has got to be the most eloquent preface I have ever read, as well
- as being an incredibly clever twist of logic to tweak the nose of the
- scandal sheets.
-
- If a supposed real newspaper's activities are going to be "stranger,
- harsher and more outrageous" than those of the WEEKLY GALAXY, they've
- really got to work at it. Hilarious from first page to last, TRUST ME
- ON THIS is a romp through the big issues of our day: morality, the
- First Amendment, the power of the press, and the sex lives of
- celebrities. On the way we meet some of the wackiest characters on
- this side of the nuthouse. But let me get back to the beginning.
-
- We begin with Sara Joslyn on her way to her first day of work as a
- reporter for the WEEKLY GALAXY. On her way to the office she comes
- upon a car on the side of the road with a dead body falling out of it.
- The dead body has a bullet hole in the forehead. Like a good reporter,
- Sara's main thought is what a great first day this will be; she will
- arrive with her first story ready to be written up. She reports the
- dead body to the guard at the gate, then rushes to meet her new
- bosses. At the top there's Bruno DeMassi (appropriately called "Massa"
- by his employees). He's the editor, publisher, and owner of the WEEKLY
- GALAXY, and his office is in a large elevator so that he can pop up
- amongst his employees unexpectedly, the better to instill terror in
- the troops. Sara is assigned to work for editor Jack Ingersoll, a
- ruthless, ambitious man who just might (or might not) have the
- remnants of what used to be a conscience.
-
- Sara joyfully presents him with her story about the dead body and
- receives the response, "On what series is he a regular?" Which is
- Sara's first lesson in WEEKLY GALAXY journalism, a lesson that shocks
- and appalls her, but which she learns well, and soon Sara shows
- promise of becoming a first-rate WEEKLY GALAXY reporter. (Westlake
- makes it very clear that working for such a "newspaper" is two things
- above all: tacky and terrifically fun.) Her dead body, however,
- refuses to go away. First, the guard she reported it to is never seen
- again. Then the paper on which she took notes about the body,
- including the license plate number of the car, disappears. Even though
- Sara is busy with her important assignments as a reporter: the
- beer-and-potato chip diet, the 100-year-old twins, the marriage of a
- Don Johnson-like TV star--still, the insignificant murder of one
- unknown man continues to intrude on her life.
-
- A typical bravura performance by Donald Westlake, and a particular
- delight for the reader. Highly recommended.
-
- ************************
-
- THE CUCKOO'S EGG
- Tracking a Spy Through the Maze of Computer Espionage
- by Clifford Stoll
- (Doubleday, 1989)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- Clifford Stoll is an astronomer by training, who, through the
- capricious whim of fortune became an expert on computer security. The
- loss of his grant at the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratories found him
- accepting a job in the computer department, and on his second day on
- the job he was given a busywork assignment: find out why the two arms
- of the accounting software disagreed by 75 cents. You see, computer
- time costs (at that time the cost was $300 an hour), so accounting and
- billing are important parts of the computer department's life. Cliff
- Stoll studied the computer log and discovered a user named Hunter who
- didn't have a valid billing address, so no one was paying for his
- time. And he had used exactly 75 cents worth of time.
-
- The ominous fact that Cliff Stoll discovered was that 75 cents worth
- of computer time was all that it took for "Hunter" to break into the
- LBL computer and steal several legitimate accounts for use later. With
- one brief call, someone had seriously compromised security at LBL.
- More ominously, this same person had used the phone connection to LBL
- to continue on out over a computer network, calling and breaking in to
- computers all over the U.S., military computers mostly. On each
- computer he'd take the password file, scan electronic mail for
- interesting bits of information, and read any text files that seemed
- to contain high-tech military information.
-
- And only Cliff Stoll realized this computer thief was around. When
- Cliff notified the systems managers at the various installations the
- hacker visited, he invariably got one of two reactions. Either the
- head computer person didn't realize there was a problem, and either
- refused to believe it or didn't really care; or Cliff got total
- rejection--the "Not here, buddy, we run a SECURE computer" song and
- dance. Which, as Stoll proved, is entirely an illusion. Any computer
- that is connected to the outside world is vulnerable and CAN be
- infiltrated. If the good guys can get in, so can the bad guys.
-
- In the course of this fascinating story, Cliff Stoll demonstrates that
- ignorance can be very damaging. By ignoring or minimizing the problems
- of computer security, systems managers insure that the problems will
- continue. As we see in THE CUCKOO'S EGG, hackers are not the bored
- overachieving computer geniuses that the media has painted them. They
- are simply disaffected people with access to computers, and we are at
- the mercy of their malevolence, or the motivations of the foreign
- government that pays them.
-
- Among the many rewards of reading THE CUCKOO'S EGG is the glimpse we
- get of our government organizations at work, or not at work.
- Organizations who appear to be using secrecy to hide the fact that
- they essentially do nothing at all. And organizations that are avid
- collectors of software loopholes, but won't tell anyone about them. As
- Stoll shows, the bad guys are good at finding loopholes; the only
- people who don't know about them are the good guys.
-
- Wisely, Cliff Stoll doesn't make his book simply a high-tech thriller.
- THE CUCKOO'S EGG is very much the personal story of a distinctive, and
- charming individual. He bakes cookies, and gives us his recipe. He
- dresses up like the Pope. He cooks sneakers in the microwave. No one
- else could have told this story exactly like Cliff, and he has done an
- excellent job of weaving his themes together. It's partly a detective
- story, partly a personal odyssey, and partly a political statement.
- And all of it makes great reading.
-
- NOTE: THE CUCKOO'S EGG is now available in a mass market paperback
- edition for $5.95 from Pocket Books.
-
- ************************
-
- Reading for pleasure is often light reading, but not always: one of
- pleasure reading's paradoxes is that for many sophisticated readers, a
- wide range of materials, from the trashiest to the most literate and
- demanding works, may induce reading trance, and such readers are
- intrigued by the pleasure they derive from material they know to be
- culturally worthless.
- --Victor Nell (LOST IN A BOOK)
-
- ************************
-
- BEST WESTERN NONFICTION BOOKS
- (according to members of the Western Writers of America)
-
- Abbey, Edward Desert Solitaire
- Abbott, E.C. We Pointed Them North
- Adams, Andy Log of a Cowboy
- Bourke, John G. On the Border with Crook
- Brown, Dee Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee (biggest vote-getter)
- Cunningham, Eugene Triggernometry
- Dary, David The Buffalo Book
- DeVoto, Bernard Across the Wide Missouri
- DeVoto, Bernard Year of Decision, 1876
- Dobie, J. Frank Coronado's Children
- Dobie, J. Frank The Longhorns
- Dobie, J. Frank The Mustangs
- Fehrenbach, T.R. The Comanches
- Fehrenbach, T.R. Lone Star
- Graves, John Goodbye to a River
- Gregg, Josiah Commerce on the Prairies
- Grinnell, George Bird The Fighting Cheyennes
- Haley, J. Evetts Charles Goodnight
- Horgan, Paul The Great River
- Lake, Stuart N. Wyatt Earp
- Lavender, David Bent's Fort
- Metz, Leon C. Pat Garrett: The Story of a Lawman
- Parkman, Francis The Oregon Trail
- Rollins, Philip A. The Cowboy
- Rosa, Joseph G. They Called Him Wild Bill
- Sandoz, Mari The Buffalo Hunters
- Sandoz, Mari Cheyenne Autumn
- Sandoz, Mari Crazy Horse
- Sandoz, Mari Old Jules
- Sonnichsen, C.L. Law West of the Pecos
- Stone, Irving Men to Match My Mountains
- Thrapp, Dan The Conquest of Apacheria
- Twain, Mark Roughing It
- Ward, Fay The Cowboy at Work
- Webb, Walter Prescott The Great Plains
- Webb, Walter Prescott The Texas Rangers
-
- ************************
-
- PASSAGES TO FREEDOM: A Story of Capture and Escape
- by Joseph S. Frelinghuysen
-
- The honest, unpretentious story of a captain in the U.S. Army,
- ambushed and imprisoned in Nazi German-occupied North Africa, and
- taken to Italian POW camps.
-
- On 23 September 1943 Joe Frelinghuysen escaped from the camp at Fonte
- d'Amore and spent the next seven weeks in the Italian mountains,
- running and hiding from the Germans.
-
- PASSAGES TO FREEDOM is a suspenseful, touching story of a gentle,
- compassionate American, set in a brutal epoch.
-
- 303 pages, illustrated, $17.95, from Sunflower University Press, 1531
- Yuma (Box 1009), Manhattan, Kansas 66502-4228. Phone 913-539-1888.
-
- ************************
-
- If you're handy around the house, or would like to be, you need to get
- a catalog from The Taunton Press, 63 South Main Street, Box 5506,
- Newtown, CN 06470-5506. They have beautiful, profusely illustrated
- how-to guides and a comprehensive line of helpful videotapes too. Ask
- for their Fine Homebuilding Books & Videos catalog for help with
- flooring, stairbuilding, tilesetting, cabinets, trim, and
- architecture. Ask for their Fine Woodworking catalog for help with
- tools, methods, wood, furniture, and design. The books look great and
- the prices are very reasonable.
-
- ************************
-
- SOFTSERV PAPERLESS BOOKSTORE
-
- If you're interested in books-on-disk, be sure to fire up your modem
- and call The SoftServ Paperless Bookstore BBS (213-957-1176 or
- 213-957-0874, 9600 baud HST Dual Standard). You can have the books
- mailed to you on disk, or you can download them right while you're
- online. Here's a list of what's available there, and what's on the
- way.
-
- CURRENTLY AVAILABLE ON SOFTSERV
-
- AGBERG, LTD. [available only on SoftServ]
- Capricorn Games, stories--Robert Silverberg
- Parsecs and Parables, stories--Robert Silverberg
- The Shores of Tomorrow, stories--Robert Silverberg
-
- BANKS & LAMBE, PUBLISHERS
- The Odysseus Solution, a novel--Michael Banks and Dean R. Lambe
-
- CADENZA COMMUNICATIONS, INC. [available only on SoftServ]
- The Rainbow Cadenza, a novel--J. Neil Schulman
- The Robert Heinlein Interview and Other Heinleiniana--J. Neil Schulman
-
- CONNECTED EDITIONS [Originals/available only on SoftServ & Connect Ed]
- The Birdhouse Cathedral, poetry--William Dubie
- Fellow Travellers--Sharon Lerch
- Security, a Novel--Sharon Lerch
- Essays on Cyberspace--Paul Levinson
- Deuce of a Time, a novel--Paul Levinson
- Onlines: Chronicles--Paul Levinson
- Decisions--Donald B. Straus
- The Loom & The Keyboard--Gail S. Thomas
- The Age of Choice: Commentaries on Public and International
- Affairs, 1987-1990--Harlan Cleveland
-
- DISTANT EAGLE PUBLISHING COMPANY [Originals/available only on
- SoftServ]
- Seven Novels of the Last Days
- Volume I The Voice of Day--James David Audlin
- Volume II The Wings of the Morning--James David Audlin
- Volume III The Productions of Time--James David Audlin
-
- HEWW [available only on SoftServ and HEWW BBS]
- The Harbinger Trilogy
- Book 1: Not Against Flesh and Blood--J.H. Kent Lyons
- Book 2: What Shall Be the Sign?--J.H. Kent Lyons
- Book 3: The TIme of the End--J.H. Kent Lyons
- The Jesus Case--J.H. Kent Lyons
- Canadiana--J.H. Kent Lyons
- The Short Form Bible--J.H. Kent Lyons
-
- THE KILIMANJARO CORPORATION [available only on SoftServ]
- The Beast That Shouted Love at the Heart of the World--Harlan Ellison
- Paingod and Other Delusions--Harlan Ellison
- The Glass Teat: essays of opinion on television--Harlan Ellison
-
- KOPUBCO
- The Jehovah Contract, a novel--Victor Koman
- Solomon's Knife, a novel--Victor Koman
- New Libertarian Manifesto--Samuel Edward Konkin III
-
- LOOMPANICS UNLIMITED
- Natural Law or Don't Put A Rubber On Your Willy--Robert Anton Wilson
-
- SYNAPSE BOOKS [Originals/available only on SoftServ]
- The Hawk Trilogy
- Volume 1 Hawk's Last Case--Red Greene
- Volume 2 Hawk Gets Liberated--Red Greene
- Volume 3 Hawk Goes Hollywood--Red Greene
- The Devil's Drainpipe--Keith Kirts
- Space Sex, or Tricks For Goldfish--Keith Kirts
- Trysts--William T.R. Mellon
- Aids Inc--Jon Rappoport
-
- ROBERT RODI, PUBLISHER [Original/available only on SoftServ]
- The World in a Hurry Again, a novel--Robert St. Onge Rodi
-
-
- COMING SOON FROM SOFTSERV
-
- BENARES & CARR, PUBLISHERS [Original/available only on SoftServ]
- The Crying Clown Celebration--Camden Benares and John F. Carr
-
- BERKLEY PUBLISHING CORPORATION [available only on SoftServ]
- The Rape of the A*P*E, humor--Allan Sherman
-
- CADENZA COMMUNICATIONS, INC. [Originals/available only on SoftServ]
- Alongside Night, a novel--J. Neil Schulman
- The Second Remove and Other Departures--J. Neil Schulman
- The Musician and Other Musings--J. Neil Schulman
- No Strings Attached: A Screenplay--J. Neil Schulman
- All The King's Horses and other Screen Treatments--J. Neil Schulman
- Profile In Silver and other Teleplays--J. Neil Schulman
- Alongside Night: The Screenplay--J. Neil Schulman
-
- CONNECTED EDITIONS [Original/available only on SoftServ & Connect Ed]
- Understanding In-Flight Radiation--Robert Barish
- The Visual Plough, poetry--Ron Buck
- Snapshots, poetry--Ron Buck
-
- DISTANT EAGLE PUBLISHING
- Seven Novels of the Last Days
- Volume IV A Mirror Filled With Light--James David Audlin
- Volume V A Stitch in Time--James David Audlin
- Moths That Seek The Moon and Other Dreams--James David Audlin
- After Creation and Other Poems--James David Audlin
-
- GPG PUBLICATIONS [Original/available only on SoftServ]
- Lines of Fire, a novel--Guy Giovanello
-
- HEWW [available only on SoftServ & HEWW BBS]
- The Adventures of Harbinger--J.H. Kent Lyons
- Plain Upon Tables, autobiography--J.H. Kent Lyons
- The Elders' Cookbook--grandmothers in Vancouver, Canada
- Compuflu: Five Tales--H E W W writers
- Northern Light Verse... Eh?--HEWW poets
-
- THE KILAMANJARO CORPORATION [available only on SoftServ]
- Approaching Oblivion--Harlan Ellison
- The Web of the City--Harlan Ellison
- The Other Glass Teat--Harlan Ellison
- Memos from Purgatory--Harlan Ellison
- Ellison Wonderland--Harlan Ellison
-
- KOPUBCO
- An Agorist Primer--Samuel Edward Konkin III
-
- LOOMPANICS UNLIMITED
- Native American Anarchism--E. M. Schuster (ed.)
- The Eden Seeker's Guide--edited by William L. Seavey
-
- ROBERT RODI, PUBLISHER [Original/available only on SoftServ]
- Baleford House, a novel--Robert St. Onge Rodi
-
-
- IN PROCESS OF CONVERSION TO ELECTRONIC TEXT
-
- AGBERG, LTD. [available only on SoftServ]
- Valley Beyond Time--Robert Silverberg
- The Science-Fictional Dinosaur--Robert Silverberg (ed.)
- Men and Machines--Robert Silverberg (ed.)
-
- CONNECTED EDITIONS [available only on SoftServ & Connected Education]
- Provocations-- Walter Orr Roberts: non-fiction essays by co-author
- of the nuclear winter book.
-
- DISTANT EAGLE PUBLISHING
- Seven Novels of the Last Days
- Volume VI The Stars Blindly Run--James David Audlin
- Volume VII The Silence--James David Audlin
-
- THE KILIMANJARO CORPORATION [available only on SoftServ]
- Deathbird Stories--Harlan Ellison
- I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream--Harlan Ellison
- No Doors, No Windows--Harlan Ellison
- Stalking the Nightmare--Harlan Ellison
-
- KOPUBCO [available only on SoftServ]
- Death's Dimensions--Victor Koman [Original/available only on SoftServ]
- Saucer Sluts--Victor Koman [available only on SoftServ]
-
- LOOMPANICS UNLIMITED
- Free-Lance Writer's Handbook--James Wilson
- The Complete Guide to Science Fiction Conventions--Erwin S. Strauss
- How to Publish a Fanzine--Mike Gunderloy
- How to Make Cash Money Selling at Swap Meets, Flea Markets, Etc.
- --Jordan Coopers
- How to Find Missing Persons--Ronald George Eriksen 2
- The Resurrection of Aristocracy--Rudolph Carlyle Evans
- Lucifer's Lexicon--L.A. Rollins
- The Myth of Natural Rights--L. A. Rollins
- How to Buy Land Cheap--Edward Preston
- How to Survive a Nuclear Accident--Duncan Long
- Surviving Major Chemical Accidents--Duncan Long
- Survival Bartering--Duncan Long
- Uninhabited and Desert Islands--Jon Fisher
- The Last Frontiers on Earth--Jon Fisher
-
- OFF-THE-WALL ENTERPRISES
- Off The Wall, edited by Brad Linaweaver [Original/available only on
- SoftServ]
-
-
- UNDER CONTRACT BUT NOT YET IN CONVERSION
-
- AGBERG, LTD. [available only on SoftServ]
- The Aliens--edited by Robert Silverberg
- The Best of New Dimensions--edited by Robert Silverberg
- Car Sinister--edited by Robert Silverberg
- Dawn of Time edited--by Robert Silverberg
- Mutants--edited by Robert Silverberg
- Lost Worlds, Unknown Horizons--edited by Robert Silverberg
- Strange Gifts edited by Robert Silverberg
-
- BLUE MOON PRODUCTIONS [Original/available only on SoftServ]
- Stretch Marks, a novel--Christine Conlin
-
- THE KILAMANJARO CORPORATION [available only on SoftServ]
- The Deadly Streets--Harlan Ellison
- An Edge in My Voice--Harlan Ellison
- Gentleman Junkie and Other Stories of the Hung Up Generation--Ellison
- Love Ain't Nothing But Sex Misspelled--Harlan Ellison
- Medea: Harlan's World--Harlan Ellison
- Partners in Wonder: sf collaborations with 14 other wild talents--Ellison
- Shatterday--Harlan Ellison
- Sleepless Nights in the Procrustean Bed--Harlan Ellison
- Spider Kiss--Harlan Ellison (edited by Marty Clark)
- The Starlost #1: Phoenix Without Ashes--Ellison (with Edward Bryant)
- Strange Wine--Harlan Ellison
-
- KOPUBCO [available only on SoftServ]
- Firescar: The Screenplay--Victor Koman [available only on SoftServ]
- Untitled New Novel--Victor Koman
- Agent For Anarchy: The Rann Gold Stories--Samuel Edward Konkin III
- [available only on SoftServ]
- Perspective Inversion: Collected Essays of Samuel Edward Konkin III
- [available only on SoftServ]
- An Essay on Trial By Jury--Lysander Spooner
- No Treason: The Constitution of No Authority--Lysander Spooner
- The Best of New Libertarian Notes, 1971-1975
- [available only on SoftServ]
- The Best of New Libertarian Weekly, 1975-1977
- [available only on SoftServ]
- The Best of New Libertarian, 1977-1988 [available only on SoftServ]
-
- ************************
-
- HOW TO READ PAPERLESS BOOKS
-
- The best program I know of for reading long text files on your IBM
- computer is David R. Grigg's Autoread. With Autoread you can set
- chapter stops so that you can go directory to any chapter. You can set
- bookmarks to return to any particular place in the file. And you can
- search on keywords to find just the right paragraph. When a
- character's name is mentioned, and you can't remember who it is, just
- tell Autoread to search out all previous references to that name.
- Shazam! Instant memory. On top of all that, every time you start
- Autoread with a particular text file, it automatically goes to where
- you were when you left the program the last time. I also like the fact
- that screen colors are easily changeable on the fly, and the author
- has some other good features planned for future updates (like mouse
- support, 43- and 50-line screens, and shortened forms of the menu
- commands).
-
- Autoread is a $15 shareware program for IBM's and compatibles. Look
- for it on BBSs near you, or you can download it from RFP's home board
- (The Baudline II BBS 301-694-7108. At the moment the latest version
- for download is called AUTOREAD.ZIP). Best idea of all: for $25 you
- can get the very latest version sent to you from the author himself
- (David R. Grigg, 1556 Main Road, Research, Victoria 3095, Australia).
-
- ************************
-
-
- <-*->:<-*->:<-*->:<-*->:<-*->:<-*->
- < >
- < LOOSEN YOUR GRIP ON REALITY >
- < >
- <-*->:<-*->:<-*->:<-*->:<-*->:<-*->
-
- << Editor: Darryl Kenning >>
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
- Loosen Your Grip On Reality is a division of Reading For Pleasure,
- published bimonthly. This material is NOT COPYRIGHTED and may be used
- freely by all. Contributions of information, reviews, etc. should be
- sent to:
-
- Darryl Kenning CompuServe: 76337,740
- 6331 Marshall Rd. or GEnie: D.Kenning
- Centerville, Ohio 45459 HeavenSoft BBS 513-836-4288
- The Annex BBS 513-274-0821
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- --------- RANDOM ACCESS ----------------------------------------------
-
- Instead of my usual editorial, for this issue I am including remarks
- made by Robert A. Heinlein. In some ways the style marks the speech as
- older; it has not been particularly fashionable to be unabashedly
- patriotic in recent years; and few people will profess to duty and
- country. But every time I read this, from the very first time, I
- confess to a lump in my throat and a stiffening of shoulders - because
- I also believe - Thank You for saying it so well Bob.
-
- Darryl Kenning
- Centerville, Ohio
-
- **********************
-
- THIS I BELIEVE
- Robert A. Heinlein
-
- [This was originally broadcast on the Edward R. Murrow show, and read
- by Mrs. Virginia Heinlein on the occasion of NASA's posthumous award
- of the Distinguished Public Service Medal to Robert Heinlein, October,
- 1988.]
-
- I am not going to talk about religious beliefs but about matters so
- obvious that it has gone out of style to mention them. I believe in
- my neighbors. I know their faults, and I know that their virtues far
- outweigh their faults.
-
- Take Father Michael down the road a piece. I'm not of his creed, but I
- know that goodness and charity and loving kindness shine in his daily
- actions. I believe in Father Mike. If I'm in trouble, I'll go to him.
-
- My next-door neighbor is a veterinary doctor. Doc will get out of bed
- after a hard day to help a stray cat. No fee -- no prospect of a fee
- -- I believe in Doc.
-
- I believe in my townspeople. You can knock on any door in our town
- saying "I'm hungry," and you will be fed. Our town is no exception.
- I've found the same ready charity everywhere. But for the one who says
- "To heck with you -- I got mine," there are a hundred, a thousand who
- will say "Sure pal, sit down."
-
- I know that despite all warnings against hitchhikers I can step to the
- highway, thumb for a ride, and in a few minutes a car or a truck will
- stop and someone will say "Climb in Mac -- how far are you going?"
-
- I believe in my fellow citizens. Our headlines are splashed with crime
- yet for every criminal there are 10,000 honest, decent, kindly men. If
- it were not so no child would live to grow up. Business could not go
- on from day to day. Decency is not news. It is buried in the
- obituaries, but it is a force stronger than crime. I believe in the
- patient gallantry of nurses and the tedious sacrifices of teachers. I
- believe in the unseen and unending fight against desperate odds that
- goes on quietly in almost every home in the land
-
- I believe in the honest craft of workmen. Take a look around you.
- There never were enough bosses to check up on all that work. From
- Independence Hall to the Grand Coulee Dam, these things were built
- level and square by craftsmen who were honest in their bones.
-
- I believe that almost all politicians are honest ... there are
- hundreds of politicians, low paid or not paid at all doing their level
- best without thanks or glory to make our system work. If this were not
- true we would never have gotten past the 13 Colonies.
-
- I believe in Rodger Young. You and I are free today because of endless
- unnamed heroes from Valley Forge to the Yalu River. I believe in--I am
- proud to belong to--the United States. Despite shortcomings from
- lynchings to bad faith in high places, our nation has had the most
- decent and kindly internal practices and foreign policies to be found
- anywhere in history.
-
- And finally, I believe in my whole race. Yellow, white, black, red,
- brown. In the honesty, courage, intelligence, durability and GOODNESS
- of the overwhelming majority of my brothers and sisters everywhere on
- this planet. I am proud to be a human being. I believe that we have
- come this far by the skin of our teeth. That we ALWAYS make it just by
- the skin of our teeth, but that we will always make it. Survive.
- Endure. I believe that this hairless embryo with the aching, oversize
- brain case and the opposable thumb, this animal barely up from the
- apes will ENDURE. Will ENDURE longer than his home planet--will
- spread out to the stars and beyond, carrying with him his honesty and
- insatiable curiosity, his unlimited courage and his noble essential
- decency.
-
- This I believe with all my heart.
-
- **********************
-
- As always, your comments, questions, or observations about RANDOM
- ACCESS or anything else in LYGOR are welcome, get them to me at any of
- the addresses listed on the masthead.
-
- darryl
-
-
- ------- News 'N Notes ------------------------------------------------
-
- * If there was a medical process that could take your aging, sick body
- and transform it into a healthy, young body, and this process could be
- repeated every 10-12 years, would you go through it? What if the
- process cost one million pounds sterling? This is the basic idea
- behind Joe Haldeman's novel, BUYING TIME, and it is on its way to
- being made into a feature film right now. Joe Haldeman will create the
- first step: a screenplay outline.
-
- * In the beginning there was ENDER'S GAME. Then SPEAKER FOR THE DEAD.
- And soon there will be XENOCIDE. (All by Orson Scott Card.)
-
- * There's a new Elric novel on the way from Michael Moorcock: THE
- REVENGE OF THE ROSE. Currently, Moorcock is working on JERUSALEM
- COMMANDS, the third Pyat novel.
-
- * Have you seen the special 25th Anniversary paperback reprint of DUNE
- from Berkley Publishing? Did you know that there was a $1 refund offer
- on it (and the other Dune novels)? You had to send in your cash
- register receipt, the title page of each book purchased, and a
- filled-in coupon. First problem with this deal: you've got to mutilate
- your book to get one lousy dollar back. Second problem with this deal:
- there were never any coupons printed, NONE. Nice trick, Berkley. To
- placate the unamused masses, Berkley is extending the deal to December
- 30, 1990, and instead of a coupon you can use a 3x5 card or plain
- paper (put you name, address, and the store name and address where you
- bought the books).
-
- * THE DISNEY/HEINLEIN CONNECTION: Disney has bought two Robert A.
- Heinlein novels for production. FARMER IN THE SKY will be a TV-movie
- and PUPPET MASTERS will be a theatrical release.
-
- * AMAZING STORIES, in its present incarnation, will come to an end
- with the March 1991 issue. If your subscription ends with the November
- 1990 or January 1991 issue, TSR (the new owner) will extend your
- subscription through this March 1991 issue free of charge. The new
- AMAZING STORIES will be a monthly of at least 96 pages, full size not
- digest, and will begin with the May 1991 issue.
-
- * The phantom printer that eats fiction at St. Martin's Press has
- struck again! This time it was the last two paragraphs of Brian
- Stableford's short story "The Magic Bullet" in THE YEAR'S BEST SCIENCE
- FICTION edited by Gardner Dozois. The ending was missing from both the
- hardcover and trade paperback editions, but they *promise* that the
- UK, Book-of-the-Month Club, and Quality Paperback Book Club editions
- will be complete. The missing text is as follows:
-
- "They also began an intensive search for Lisa Friemann, but by the
- time they found her, it was too late.
-
- "By then, far too many people had seen the map, and the world was
- already embarked upon its new era."
-
- * Don't miss PACIFIC EDGE by Kim Stanley Robinson, a December 1990
- release. It's not out yet as I write this, but I hear it's every bit
- as good as the other two volumes of in the Orange Count, CA, trilogy
- (THE WILD SHORE and THE GOLD COAST).
-
- * If your interest in SF is on the scholarly side, you might want to
- know about the Science Fiction Research Association, an organization
- of academics, teachers, and anyone interested in the study of SF.
- Membership starts at $45 a year and includes quarterly issues of
- EXTRAPOLATION, 3 issues of SF STUDIES, 10 issues of the SFRA
- NEWSLETTER. For information write: Tom Remington, English Dept., Univ.
- of No. Iowa, Cedar Falls, IA 50614.
-
- * Confusingly, Donald Hassler, of Kent State, edits an academic (but
- not boring) journal that is also called EXTRAPOLATION. It has
- articles, reviews, letters, and news in the SF field. Four quarterly
- issues will run you $15. Write to: Kent State Univ. Press, Journals
- Dept., Kent, OH 44242.
-
- * William Shatner has written a sequel to his novel TEKWAR. The new
- one is called TEKLORDS.
-
- * The Sci-Fi Channel is NOT dead yet! It has bought the rights to at
- least 114 episodes of DOCTOR WHO, all the episodes of MAX HEADROOM,
- and all 1,225 episodes of DARK SHADOWS. There are even plans for a
- Sci-Fi Channel Magazine. If anyone hears about an actual start date
- for this cable channel, please drop me a line.
-
- * Watch for it: THE WAR AGAINST SHADES, a science fantasy trilogy by
- Lawrence Watt-Evans....LORD KELVIN'S MACHINE, a Victorian SF novel by
- James P. Blaylock....STARSEED by Spider and Jeanne Robinson, a
- 20-years-later sequel to STARDANCE....MINING THE OORT CLOUD by
- Frederik Pohl....THE SILENT STARS GO BY by James White....THE CATSWOLD
- PORTAL, an adult fantasy by Shirley Rousseau Murphy....NIGHTSIDE THE
- LONG SUN by Gene Wolfe....BY THE SWORD by Mercedes Lackey.
-
- **********************
-
- STARSTRIKE
- by W. Michael Gear
- (1990, DAW Books, Inc.)
-
- review by Robert A. Pittman
-
- At times it is good to read a Science Fiction story which merrily and
- enthusiastically carries one along without dwelling extensively on
- technical or scientific validity. That is the way STARSTRIKE is
- written; big, bold ideas and concepts not at all restrained by mundane
- practicability.
-
- This is a "first contact" story but it differs significantly from most
- that I have read previously. The contact occurs without any
- preliminary signals or alerts for the people of earth and only a few
- people are aware that it has taken place. As a result, the author has
- an adventure that moves forward on two levels. The first and principal
- level has to do with humans who have been conscripted by an alien
- group and have been carried off planet. The second level concerns the
- people of earth who have been affected but do not realize that a
- contact has occurred.
-
- The off-planet group is made up of highly qualified military
- specialists (men and women) from Russia, Israel and the U.S.A. They
- must deal with the shock of the alien encounter and cope with the
- problems of space travel. An even greater problem is the trauma they
- undergo in adjusting from an historically hostile and competitive
- relationship among themselves to one of cooperation and trust. The
- aliens put their human captors into a conflict which not only risks
- their lives but also puts all of earth at risk. A good story develops
- as human guile and ingenuity is pitted against the alien technical
- superiority and their historical experience in space. At the same
- time, earth is dealing with a perplexing problem. Nuclear weapons and
- most other aggressive tools of war have been rendered inactive by an
- unknown force. Major powers such as the U.S., Russia and China are
- thrown into a state of confusion as they struggle to cope with the
- loss of defensive and aggressive abilities.
-
- W. Michael Gear moves both levels of the story along at a nice pace
- and brings it to a logical and satisfactory conclusion. You will enjoy
- reading STARSTRIKE.
-
- **********************
-
- EARTH
- by David Brin
- (1990, Bantam Spectra Books)
-
- review by Robert A. Pittman
-
- The novel EARTH left me tired--a reader's workout--and feeling
- somewhat deceived by "packaging and brand identity" more alluring and
- offering more promise than the contents delivered.
-
- EARTH is constructed around the central issue of a billionaire
- industrial leader and a young, dedicated scientist as they jointly
- seek to control the effects of a microscopic black hole lodged deep
- inside the earth. If this Beta singularity, as it is termed by the
- author, is not dislodged, it will, over a span of about two years,
- create a geophysical nightmare and ultimately consume the planet.
-
- The story takes place about fifty years in the future on an earth that
- is overpopulated and exhausted from overuse. The atmosphere no longer
- effectively acts as a filter and as a result, we find a temperate
- climate in Siberia, the tropical areas of the world turned into
- deserts, and people wearing special glasses and body shields to
- protect themselves. Animals no longer exist in a wild state but are
- housed, fed and bred in massive "land arks". Humankind struggles
- constantly to produce the food needed to meet its minimal requirement.
-
- While the natural dimensions of life have deteriorated, the
- technological side of life has improved. Communication and information
- is available to all citizens through public networks, medical advances
- have resolved many human ills with service available to all and
- measures are in place for reduced crime and misbehavior.
-
- Out of the conditions and concerns that arise from this environment,
- the author has created some new and different social and political
- groups. There are sun worshipers who deny the radiation, expose
- themselves and die early. Others want strict birth controls and still
- others look for solutions in the extension of humanity into outer
- space. The message in this narrative is that the planet is a mess and
- the human race is at fault!
-
- When the story sticks to that central issue it is good reading and
- intense adventure. It also develops some novel conjectures about
- natural forces that can be harnessed and directed to fight the effects
- of the ravaging singularity. The story unfolds with a level of
- suspense that under other conditions would produce the anticipation
- and the sustained interest that is expected in good reading.
-
- The novel becomes tiresome as a result of extraneous material that the
- author inserts throughout the book. These "inserts" are located at the
- end of most chapters, are a half-page to one page in length and are
- presented as quotations from history texts or other reference sources
- including computer data base references. Maybe it is somewhat
- inaccurate to call the material extraneous as it has been included as
- a way to amplify understanding and provide background to what has been
- read in the preceding chapter or to what will be read in the
- forthcoming chapter. Even though we can understand the author's
- intent, too often the content has no clear relationship to the main
- story. The simple fact that these "inserts" exist is testimony to weak
- construction and an erratic flow of thought that contaminates the
- principal narrative.
-
- At one point while reading EARTH, I was jolted and somewhat irritated
- to run into a full chapter that was a verbatim repeat of a short story
- that I had read in a Science Fiction magazine more than a year ago! It
- was just dropped in the book with no prior rationale for its
- inclusion--completely out of context! To be fair, later in the book a
- somewhat vague link was provided, but not enough to erase the insult
- of finding such blatant filler material.
-
- David Brin is a renowned and reputable writer. He has been honored
- with multiple Hugo and Nebula awards and has written the bestsellers,
- STARTIDE RISING and THE UPLIFT WAR. EARTH therefore is not the result
- of inexperience or a shortage of talent. I have to believe that the
- book is constructed as the author intended and that it says what he
- wanted to say as a contribution to Earth Day and his statement of
- environmental concern. For this reader, it just did not succeed.
-
- In summary, EARTH is a disappointment. The main theme of the novel is
- exciting and unique. The "inserts" standing alone are at least
- intriguing. The book, though, does not hang together. It reads as if a
- good theme has been quickly written, extra material collected and
- forced into a relationship with the central theme, the mechanical
- assembly of both and the publication in time to take advantage of the
- Earth Day movement. The publisher and the author owe more to the
- reader.
-
-
- ------- BOX Scores ---------------------------------------------------
-
- BOX SCORES
- .....................................
- /: :
- : : MAN-KZIN WARS III, Niven +......4 :
- : : FIRE ON THE BORDER,.............. :
- : : Kevin O'Donnell Jr.......3 :
- : : SPQR, John Maddox Roberts.......4 :
- : : CHALLENGE MET, C Ingrid.........2 :
- : : SINGULARITIES, W.T. Quick.......3 :
- : : FUTURE CRIME, Ben Bova..........3 :
- : : STARFIRE, P. Pruess.............3 :
- : : INSURRECTION, Weber & White.....4 :
- : : VOYAGE OF THE STAR WOLF :
- : : D. Gerrold............4 :
- : : :
- : : by darryl kenning :
- : :...................................:
- :..................................../
-
- 0 = ugh! to 5 worth rereading!
-
- **********************
-
- WORLD FANTASY AWARD NOMINATIONS
-
- Best Novel:
-
- A CHILD ACROSS THE SKY by Jonathan Carroll (Doubleday)
- IN A DARK DREAM by Charles L. Grant (Tor)
- THE STRESS OF HER REGARD by Tim Powers (Ace)
- CARRION COMFORT by Dan Simmons (Dark Harvest/Warner)
- LYONESSE: MADOUC by Jack Vance (Underwood-Miller/Ace)
- SOLDIER OF ARETE by Gene Wolfe (Tor)
-
-
- Best Novella:
-
- "Apartheid, Superstrings and Mordecai Thubana" by Michael Bishop
- (Axolotl)
- "Great Work of Time" by John Crowley (NOVELTY)
- "On the Far Side of the Cadillac Desert with Dead Folks" by Joe R.
- Lansdale (BOOK OF THE DEAD, Bantam)
- "The Father of Stones" by Lucius Shepard (Asimov's 9/89)
- "A Dozen Tough Jobs" by Howard Waldrop (Ziesing)
-
-
- Best Short Fiction:
-
- "Varicose Worms" by Scott Baker (BLOOD IS NOT ENOUGH, Morrow)
- "A Last Sad Love at the Diner of the Damned" by Ed Bryant (BOOK OF THE
- DEAD, Bantam)
- "Mr. Fiddlehead" by Jonathan Carroll (Omni 2/89)
- "The Illusionist" by Stephen Millhauser (Esquire 12/89)
- "Edge of the World" by Michael Swanwick (Full Spectrum 2, Bantam
- Spectra)
- "Yore Skin's Jes's Soft 'N Purty...He Said" by Chet Williamson
- (RAZORED SADDLES, Dark Harvest/Avon)
-
-
- Best Anthology:
-
- BLOOD IS NOT ENOUGH edited by Ellen Datlow (Morrow/Berkley)
- THE YEAR'S BEST FANTASY: SECOND ANNUAL COLLECTION edited by Ellen
- Datlow & Terri Windling (St. Martin's)
- RAZORED SADDLES edited by Joe R. Lansdale & Pat LoBrutto (Dark
- Harvest/Avon)
- BOOK OF THE DEAD edited by John Skipp & Craig Spector (Bantam)
-
-
- Best Collection:
-
- NOVELTY by John Crowley (Doubleday Foundation)
- HARLAN ELLISON'S WATCHING by Harlan Ellison (Underwood-Miller)
- BY BIZARRE HANDS by Joe R. Lansdale (Ziesing)
- BLUE WORLD & OTHER STORIES by Robert R. McCammon (Grafton/Pocket)
- RICHARD MATHESON: COLLECTED STORIES (Scream/Press)
-
-
- Best Artist:
-
- Thomas Canty
- James Christiansen
- Don Maitz
- J.K. Potter
-
-
- Special Award--Professional:
-
- Dark Harvest (Paul Mikol & Scott Stadolsky)
- Ellen Datlow
- Underwood-Miller
- Mark V. Ziesing
-
-
- Special Award--Non-Professional:
-
- Richard Chizmar (Cemetery Dance)
- Peggy Nadramia (Grue)
- David B. Silva (The Horror Show)
- Joe Stefko & Tracy Kokoman (Charnel House)
-
-
- ------- FEATURED AUTHOR Robert A Heinlein ---------------------------
-
- Robert A. Heinlein (1907-1988) was not the most prolific writer in the
- Science Fiction genre, but there is no doubt that he was one of the
- most, if not THE most influential writer for the past several
- generations of SF readers and hopefully for the next several as well.
- I won't repeat my RANDOM ACCESS notes from RFP #12 but I will say that
- his writing influenced my life in many ways. If you are a fan of RAH
- you will want to read a copy of GRUMBLES FROM THE GRAVE, a collection
- of letters and commentary edited by Virginia Heinlein, that is one of
- the two best pieces to provide insight into RAH's life, times, and
- thoughts (see my review below).
-
- First, here's a copy of the message posted on CompuServe when Mr.
- Heinlein's death was announced.
-
-
- 09-May-88 11:08:08
- Sb: #R.A.H. obit
- Fm: SysOp Wilma Meier 76701,274
- To: ALL
-
- Friends - Robert A. Heinlein has passed away. Word was passed through
- the network that he died on Sunday morning - the 8th of May.
-
- Mr. Heinlein was one of the biggest names in the Science Fiction
- genre. Born in 1907, his writing career began when he was 32 (1939)
- with the publication of "Life-Line" in Astounding magazine. His first
- published book was _Rocket Ship Galileo_, a juvenile issued by Charles
- Scribner's Sons in 1947. Heinlein married Virginia ("Ginny") in 1948;
- they had no children.
-
- He is the only man ever to win four Hugo Awards for best science
- fiction novel of the year (for _Double Star_, _Starship Troopers_,
- _Stranger In a Strange Land_, and _The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress_); he
- has also received the Nebula Award for over-all achievement as a
- science fiction writer.
-
- In the mid/late 70's Mr. Heinlein had an operation called a "shunt" to
- relieve pressure building up against his brain. After surgery and
- recovery, he published his last works: _Friday_, _The Cat Who Walked
- Through Walls_, _Job: A Comedy of Justice_ and _To Sail Beyond The
- Sunset_. _Cat_ and _Sunset_ appeared to be the beginnings of a series
- of which we will now never see the end.
-
- His papers, correspondence, and memorabilia have been collected by the
- University of California, Santa Cruz.
-
- We have lost a true Master, friends. My grief knows no bounds.
-
- In sadness, SysOp Wilma
-
-
- BIBLIOGRAPHY
- Heinlein, Robert Anson (July 7, 1907 - May 8, 1988)
-
- Assignment In Eternity (1953). (2)
- Reprinted in abridged form as: Lost Legacy (1960). (10)
- (contains: "Gulf", "Elsewhen", "Lost Legacy", and "Jerry Was A
- Man".)
- Best Of Robert A. Heinlein, The (1973). (13) (contents unknown)
- Between Planets (1951). (1)
- Beyond This Horizon (1948). (2)
- Cat Who Walks Through Walls, The: A Comedy of Manners (1985). (11)
- Citizen Of The Galaxy (1957). (1)
- Day After Tomorrow, The (1951) (4)
- Door Into Summer, The (1957). (5)
- Double Star (1956). (5)
- Expanded Universe: More Worlds Of Robert A. Heinlein (1980) (14)
- (contains: Foreword by Robert A. Heinlein, "Life-Line", "Successful
- Operation", "Blowups Happen", "Solution Unsatisfactory", "The Last
- Days of the United States", "How to Be a Survivor", "Pie From the
- Sky", "They Do It With Mirrors", "Free Men", "No Bands Playing, No
- Flags Flying--", "A Bathroom of Her Own", "On The Slopes of
- Vesuvius", "Nothing Ever Happens on the Moon", "Pandora's Box",
- "Where To?", "Cliff and the Calories", "Ray Guns and Rocket Ships",
- "The Third Millennium Opens", "Who Are the Heirs of Patrick Henry?",
- "'Pravda' Means 'Truth'", "Inside Intourist", "Searchlight", "The
- Pragmatics of Patriotism", "Paul Dirac, Antimatter, and You",
- "Larger Than Life", "Spinoff", and "The Happy Days Ahead".)
- Farmer In The Sky (1950). (1)
- Farnham's Freehold (1964). (11)
- Friday (1982). (16)
- Glory Road (1963). (11)
- Green Hills Of Earth, The (1951). (7)
- (contains: "Delilah and the Space-Rigger", "Space Jockey", "The Long
- Watch", "Gentlemen, Be Seated", "The Black Pits of Luna", "It's
- Great to Be Back", "'--We Also Walk Dogs'", "Ordeal In Space", "The
- Green Hills of Earth", and "Logic of Empire".)
- Have Spacesuit - Will Travel (1958). (1)
- Heinlein's Works by C. K. Hillegass (1975). (18)
- I Will Fear No Evil (1970). (11)
- Job: A Comedy Of Justice (1984). (17)
- Man Who Sold The Moon, The (1950). (7)
- (contains: "Let There Be Light", "The Roads Must Roll", "The Man Who
- Sold the Moon", "Requiem", "Life Line" and "Blowups Happen" in the
- original publication. Current publications eliminate the last two
- stories and an intro. by John W. Campbell, Jr.)
- Menace From Earth, The (1959)
- (contains: "The Year of the Jackpot", "By His Bootstraps", "Columbus
- Was a Dope", "The Menace From Earth", "Sky Lift", "Goldfish Bowl",
- "Project Nightmare", and "Water Is for Washing".)
- Methuselah's Children (1958). (3)
- Moon Is A Harsh Mistress, The (1966). (11)
- Notebooks Of Lazarus Long, The (1973). (11)
- Number Of The Beast, The (1980). (15)
- Orphans Of The Sky (1963). (8) /Expanded from: Universe (1951). (9)/
- Past Through Tomorrow, The (1967). (11)
- (contains: "Introduction" by Damon Knight, "Life-Line", "The Roads
- Must Roll", "Blowups Happen". "The Man Who Sold The Moon", "Delilah
- and the Space-Rigger", "Space Jockey", "Requiem", "The Long Watch",
- "Gentlemen, Be Seated", "The Black Pits of Luna", "'It's Great to Be
- Back'", "'--We Also Walk Dogs'", "Searchlight", "Ordeal in Space",
- "The Green Hills of Earth", "Logic of Empire", "The Menace from
- Earth", "'If This Goes On--'", "Coventry", "Misfit", and
- "Methuselah's Children".)
- Podkayne Of Mars (Her Life and Times) (1963). (11)
- Puppet Masters, The (1951). (5)
- Red Planet, The (1949). (2)
- Revolt In 2100 (1953). (7)
- (contains: "The Innocent Eye: an Introduction" by Henry Kuttner,
- "'If This Goes On--'", "Coventry", "Misfit", and "Concerning Stories
- Never Written: Postscript".)
- Robert A. Heinlein: Stranger In His Own Land by George Edgar Slusser
- (1976). (19)
- Robert Heinlein Omnibus, A (1966). (13) (contents unknown)
- Rocket Ship Galileo (1947). (1)
- Rolling Stones, The (1952). (1)
- Reprinted as: Space Family Stone (1969). (8)
- 6 x H (1961). (12)
- Sixth Column (1949). (3)
- Reprinted as: The Day After Tomorrow
- Space Cadet (1948). (1)
- Star Beast, The (1954). (1)
- Starman Jones (1953). (1)
- Starship Troopers (1959). (11>
- Stranger In A Strange Land (1961). (11)
- Three by Heinlein (1965). (5)
- Reprinted as: A Heinlein Triad (1966) (8)
- (Contains: The Puppet Masters, Waldo, and Magic, Inc.)
- Time Enough For Love (1973). (11)
- Time For The Stars (1956). (1)
- To Sail Beyond The Sunset (1987). (14/11)
- Tomorrow, The Stars (1952). (5)
- (contains: "I'm Scared" by Jack Finney, "The Silly Season" by C. M.
- Kornbluth, "The Report On The Barnhouse Effect" by Kurt Vonnegut,
- Jr., "The Tourist Trade" by Bob Tucker, "Rainmaker" by John Reese,
- "Absalom" by Henry Kuttner, "The Monster" by Lester del Rey, "Jay
- Score" by Eric Frank Russell, "Betelgeuse Bridge" by William Tenn,
- "Survival Ship" by Judith Merrill, "Keyhole" by Murray Leinster,
- "Misbegotten Missionary" by Isaac Asimov, "The Sack" by William
- Morrison, and "Poor Superman" by Fritz Leiber.)
- Tunnel In The Sky (1955). (1)
- Unpleasant Profession of Jonathan Hoag, The (1959). (3)
- Reprinted as: 6 x H (1961). (12)
- (contains: "The Unpleasant Profession of Jonathan Hoag", "The Man
- Who Traveled In Elephants", "'All You Zombies'", "They", "Our Fair
- City", and "'And He Built A Crooked House'".)
- Waldo And Magic, Inc. (1950). (5)
- Reprinted as: Waldo: Genius in Orbit (1958). (6)
- Worlds Of Robert A. Heinlein, The (1966). (14)
- (contains: "Introduction: Pandora's Box", "Free Men", "Blowups
- Happen", "Searchlight", "Life-Line", and "Solution Unsatisfactory".)
-
-
- UNCOLLECTED WORKS:
-
- Beyond Doubt (collaboration w/ Elma Wentz) (1941).
- Destination Moon (1950).
- 'My Object All Sublime' (1942).
- Nothing Ever Happens on the Moon (1949).
- Pied Piper (1942).
- Tenderfoot in Space (1958).
-
-
- SHORT WORKS PUBLICATION DATES:
-
- A Bathroom of Her Own (1960)
- "All You Zombies" (1959)
- "And He Built A Crooked House" (1941)
- Black Pits of Luna, The (1948)
- Blowups Happen (1940)
- By His Bootstraps (1941)
- Cliff and the Calories (1977)
- Columbus Was a Dope (1947)
- Concerning Stories Never Written: Postscript (1953)
- Common Sense (1941)
- Coventry (1940)
- Delilah and the Space-Rigger (1949)
- Elsewhen (1941)
- Free Men (1966)
- Gentlemen, Be Seated (1948)
- Goldfish Bowl (1942)
- Green Hills of Earth, The (1947)
- Gulf (1949)
- Happy Days Ahead, The (1979)
- How to Be a Survivor (1979)
- "If This Goes On--" (1940)
- Inside Intourist (1960)
- "It's Great to Be Back" (1947)
- Jerry Is A Man (1947)
- Larger Than Life (1974)
- Last Days of the United States, The (1979)
- Let There Be Light (1940)
- Life-Line (1939)
- Logic of Empire (1941)
- Long Watch, The (1949)
- Lost Legacy (1941)
- Man Who Sold The Moon, The (1950)
- Man Who Traveled In Elephants, The (1957)
- Menace from Earth, The (1957)
- Methuselah's Children (1941)
- Misfit (1939)
- No Bands Playing, No Flags Flying-- (1967)
- Nothing Ever Happens on the Moon (1949)
- On The Slopes of Vesuvius (1977)
- Ordeal In Space (1948)
- Our Fair City (1949)
- Pandora's Box (also as: Where To?) (1952)
- Paul Dirac, Antimatter, and You (1975)
- Pie From the Sky (1979)
- Pragmatics of Patriotism, The (1973)
- "Pravda" Means "Truth" (1960)
- Project Nightmare (1953)
- Ray Guns and Rocket Ships (1952)
- Requiem (1940)
- Roads Must Roll, The (1940)
- Searchlight (1962)
- Sky Lift (1953)
- Solution Unsatisfactory (1941)
- Space Jockey (1947)
- Spinoff (1979)
- Successful Operation (1940)
- They (1941)
- They Do It With Mirrors (1974)
- Third Millennium Opens, The (1956)
- Universe (1941)
- Unpleasant Profession of Jonathan Hoag, The (1942)
- Water Is for Washing (1947)
- "--We Also Walk Dogs" (1941)
- Where To? (1952)
- Who Are the Heirs of Patrick Henry? (1958)
- Year of the Jackpot, The (1952)
-
-
- PUBLISHERS:
-
- (1) Charles Scribner's Sons, New York
- (2) Fantasy Press, Reading
- (3) Gnome Press, New York
- (4) Signet Books, New York
- (5) Doubleday & Co., Garden City
- (6) Avon Books, New York
- (7) Shasta Publishers, Chicago
- (8) Victor Gollancz, London
- (9) Dells Books, New York
- (10) Digit Books, London
- (11) G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York
- (12) Pyramid Books, New York
- (13) Sidgwick & Jackson, London
- (14) Ace Books, New York
- (15) Fawcett Columbine Books, New York
- (16) Holt, Reinhart and Winston, New York
- (17) Ballantine Books, New York
- (18) Cliff Notes, Lincoln
- (19) The Borgo Press, San Bernardino
-
-
- THE ROBERT HEINLEIN INTERVIEW
- AND OTHER HEINLEINIANA
- by J. Neil Schulman
- (SoftServe Books)
- review by Darryl Kenning
-
- It is no great secret I suppose, that I really like the writings of
- Robert Anson Heinlein, and consider him to be one of the all time
- great Science Fiction authors of our times. THE ROBERT HEINLEIN
- INTERVIEW AND OTHER HEINLEINIANA is a series of letters, book reviews
- and the text of an interview that Mr. Schulman did with Mr. Heinlein
- in 1973.
-
- Once in a while you find a writer who says with almost perfect clarity
- the things you have been thinking about and the things you would like
- to say if you only had the skill and artistry. This series of writings
- by and about RAH by J. Neil Schulman have done that for me. A very
- articulate proponent of the libertarian philosophy in his own right
- (read ALONGSIDE NIGHT by J.N.S. and of course anything by Ann Rand),
- he sheds light on RAH's libertarian feelings and beliefs.
-
- I particularly enjoyed the introduction to this book simply because in
- JRN's description of the effect of the Heinlein writings on him, I saw
- a mirror image of me, and I suspect from the ongoing popularity of
- RAH's books and stories, a bit of most of the readers who were at an
- impressionable age when we first had the incredible good luck to
- stumble across his books.
-
- Often I am put off by books about favorite authors - either they don't
- do them justice at all, or they put every bit of imagery under a
- microscope and in doing so destroy the beauty and soul of the story
- and author. None of that is true when Mr. Schulman puts his
- considerable talents to work in this book. The series of letters and
- reviews have a powerful impact - more so when you realize the time
- span that the material covers 1972-1988. The interview with RAH is the
- crown jewel of the book.
-
- By now you have no doubt, gotten the idea (I'm not often accused of
- being overly subtle) that I am recommending this book. On my scale of
- 0 to 5, this is a 5. Worth reading, worth rereading, and worth keeping
- to read again.
-
-
- --------- Quotes 'n Stuff --------------------------------------------
-
- Diplomacy is the art of saying "nice doggie" until you can pick up a
- rock!
-
- One should forgive one's enemies, but not until after they are hanged.
-
- Experience teaches you to recognize a mistake when you've made it
- again.
-
- If the phone doesn't ring...it's me
- (a song title by Jimmy Buffett)
-
-
- ---------- ASK UNCLE HAL 9001 ----------------------------------------
-
- Test the enormous RAM database of UNCLE HAL, the new and improved
- model 9001.
-
-
- Q. What was the the REAL name of the author of ALICE'S ADVENTURES IN
- WONDERLAND?
-
- A. Best known by his pen name Lewis Carroll was really The Rev.
- Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, a noted mathematician who wrote extensively
- on symbolic logic.
-
- Q. SF art is a little known field to most readers. I heard that a
- husband and wife team once won a Hugo for SF art---do you know who
- they were?
-
- A. In 1972 Leo and Diane Dillon won a Hugo as a team. They are best
- known for the original Ace special covers and several Harlan Ellison
- book covers.
-
-
- ---------- THE HUGO's ------------------------------------------------
-
- The HUGO AWARDS were first presented in 1953 at the 11th World Science
- Fiction Convention held in Philadelphia, PA. The HUGO was not
- presented in 1954 at the 12th World SF Convention (San Francisco, CA).
- Only literary works are listed, at least until the brand new 1990
- awards.
-
- 1953 - Philadelphia
- Novel: The Demolished Man by Alfred Bester
-
- 1955 - Cleveland
- Novel: They'd Rather Be Right by Mark Clifton and Frank Riley
- Novelette: "The Darfsteller" by Walter M. Miller, Jr.
- Short Story: "Allamagoosa" by Eric Frank Russell
-
- 1956 - New York
- Novel: Double Star by Robert A. Heinlein
- Novellette: "Exploration Team" by Murray Leinster
- Short Story: "The Star" by Arthur C. Clarke
-
- 1957 - London
- No literary works awarded.
-
- 1958 - Los Angeles
- Novel: The Big Time by Fritz Leiber
- Short Story: "Or All the Seas with Oysters" by Avram Davidson
-
- 1959 - Detroit
- Novel: A Case of Conscience by James Blish
- Novelette: "The Big Front Yard" by Clifford D. Simak
- Short Story: "The Hell-Bound Train" by Robert Bloch
-
- 1960 - Pittsburgh
- Novel: Starship Trooper by Robert A. Heinlein
- Short Fiction: "Flowers for Algernon" by Daniel Keyes
-
- 1961 - Seattle
- Novel: A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter M. Miller, Jr.
- Short Story: "The Longest Voyage" by Poul Anderson
-
- 1962 - Chicago
- Novel: Stranger In A Strange Land by Robert A. Heinlein
- Short Fiction: the "Hothouse" series by Brian Aldiss
-
- 1963 - Washington, D.C.
- Novel: The Man In The High Castle by Philip K. Dick
- Short Fiction: "The Dragon Masters" by Jack Vance
-
- 1964 - Oakland
- Novel: Way Station by Clifford Simak
- Short Fiction: "No Truce With Kings" by Poul Anderson
-
- 1965 - London
- Novel: The Wanderer by Fritz Leiber
- Short Fiction: "Soldier, Ask Not" by Gordon R. Dickson
-
- 1966 - Cleveland
- Novel: (tie) ...And Call Me Conrad by Roger Zelazny
- Dune by Frank Herbert
- Short Fiction: "'Repent, Harlequin!' Said The Ticktockman" by Harlan
- Ellison
-
- 1967 - New York
- Novel: The Moon is a Harsh Mistress by Robert A. Heinlein
- Novelette: "The Last Castle" by Jack Vance
- Short Story: "Neutron Star" by Larry Niven
-
- 1968 - Oakland
- Novel: Lord Of Light by Roger Zelazny
- Novella: (tie) "Weyr Search" by Anne McCaffrey
- "Riders of the Purple Wage" by Philip Jose Farmer
- Novelette: "Gonna Roll the Bones" by Fritz Leiber
- Short Story: "I Have No Mouth, And I Must Scream" by Harlan Ellison
-
- 1969 - St. Louis
- Novel: Stand On Zanzibar by John Brunner
- Novella: "Nightwings" by Robert Silverberg
- Novelette: "The Sharing of Flesh" by Poul Anderson
- Short Story: "The Beast That Shouted Love at the Heart of the World"
- by Harlan Ellison
-
- 1970 - Heidelberg
- Novel: Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K. Le Guin
- Novella: "Ship of Shadows" by Fritz Leiber
- Short Story: "Time Considered as a Helix of Semi-Precious Stones" by
- Samuel R. Delany
-
- 1971 - Boston
- Novel: Ringworld by Larry Niven
- Novella: "Ill Met in Lankhmar" by Fritz Leiber
- Short Story: "Slow Sculpture" by Theodore Sturgeon
-
- 1972 - Los Angeles
- Novel: To Your Scattered Bodies Go by Philip Jose Farmer
- Novella: "The Queen of Air and Darkness" by Poul Anderson
- Short Story: "Inconstant Moon" by Larry Niven
-
- 1973 - Toronto
- Novel: The Gods Themselves by Isaac Asimov
- Novella: "The Word for World Is Forest" by Ursula K. Le Guin
- Novelette: "Goat Song" by Poul Anderson
- Short Story: (tie) "The Meeting" by Frederik Pohl and C.M. Kornbluth
- "Eurema's Dam" by R.A. Lafferty
-
- 1974 - Washington, D.C.
- Novel: Rendezvous With Rama by Arthur C. Clarke
- Novella: "The Girl Who Was Plugged In" by James Tiptree, Jr.
- Novelette: "The Deathbird" by Harlan Ellison
- Short Story: "The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas" by Ursula K. Le
- Guin
-
- 1975 - Melbourne
- Novel: The Dispossessed by Ursula K. Le Guin
- Novella: "A Song for Lya" by George R.R. Martin
- Novelette: "Adrift Just Off the Islets of Langerhans: Latitude 38
- Degrees 54' N, Longitude 77 Degrees 00' 13" W" by Harlan Ellison
- Short Story: "The Hole Man" by Larry Niven
-
- 1976 - Kansas City
- Novel: The Forever War by Joe Haldeman
- Novella: "Home Is the Hangman" by Roger Zelazny
- Novelette: "The Borderland of Sol" by Larry Niven
- Short Story: "Catch That Zeppelin!" by Fritz Leiber
-
- 1977 - Miami Beach
- Novel: Where Late the Sweet Birds Sang by Kate Wilhelm
- Novella: (tie) "By Any Other Name" by Spider Robinson
- "Houston, Houston, Do You Read?" by James Tiptree, Jr.
- Novelette: "The Bicentennial Man" by Isaac Asimov
- Short Story: "Tricentennial" by Joe Haldeman
-
- 1978 - Phoenix
- Novel: Gateway by Frederik Pohl
- Novella: "Stardance" by Spider and Jeanne Robinson
- Novelette: "Eyes of Amber" by Joan D. Vinge
- Short Story: "Jeffty Is Five" by Harlan Ellison
-
- 1979 - Brighton, England
- Novel: Dreamsnake by Vonda McIntyre
- Novella: "The Persistence of Vision" by John Varley
- Novelette: "Hunter's Moon" by Poul Anderson
- Short Story: "Cassandra" by C.J. Cherryh
-
- 1980 - Boston
- Novel: The Fountains Of Paradise by Arthur C. Clarke
- Novella: "Enemy Mine" by Barry Longyear
- Novelette: "Sandkings" by George R.R. Martin
- Short Story: "The Way of Cross and Dragon" by George R.R. Martin
-
- 1981 - Denver
- Novel: The Snow Queen by Joan Vinge
- Novella: "Lost Dorsai" by Gordon R. Dickson
- Novelette: "The Cloak and the Staff" by Gordon R. Dickson
- Short Story: "Grotto of the Dancing Deer" by Clifford D. Simak
-
- 1982 - Chicago
- Novel: Downbelow Station by C.J. Cherryh
- Novella: "The Saturn Game" by Poul Anderson
- Novelette: "Unicorn Variations" by Roger Zelazny
- Short Story: "The Pusher" by John Varley
-
- 1983 - Baltimore
- Novel: Foundation's Edge by Isaac Asimov
- Novella: "Souls" by Joanna Russ
- Novelette: "Fire Watch" by Connie Willis
- Short Story: "Melancholy Elephants" by Spider Robinson
-
- 1984 - Anaheim
- Novel: Startide Rising by David Brin
- Novella: "Cascade Point" by Timothy Zahn
- Novelette: "Blood Music" by Greg Bear
- Short Story: "Speech Sounds" by Octavia butler
-
- 1985 - Melbourne
- Novel: Neuromancer by William Gibson
- Novella: "Press Enter []" by John Varley
- Novelette: "Bloodchild" by Octavia E. Butler
- Short Story: "The Crystal Spheres" by David Brin
-
- 1986 - Atlanta
- Novel: Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card
- Novella: "24 Views of Mount Fuji, by Hokusai" by Roger Zelazny
- Novelette: "Paladin of the Lost Hour" by Harlan Ellison
- Short Story: "Fermi and Frost" by Frederik Pohl
-
- 1987 - Brighton, England
- Novel: Speaker for the Dead by Orson Scott Card
- Novella: "Gilgamesh in the Outback" by Robert Silverberg
- Novelette: "Permafrost" by Roger Zelazny
- Short Story: "Tangents" by Greg Bear
-
- 1988 - New Orleans
- Novel: The Uplift War by David Brin
- Novella: "Eye for Eye" by Orson Scott Card
- Novelette: "Buffalo Gals Won't You Come Out Tonight" by Ursula K.
- LeGuin
- Short Story: "Why I Left Harry's All-Night Hamburgers" by Lawrence
- Watt-Evans
-
- 1989 - Boston
- Novel: Cyteen by C.J. Cherryh
- Novella: "The Last of the Winnebagos" by Connie Willis
- Novelette: "Schrodinger's Kitten" by George Alec Effinger
- Short Story: "Kirinyaga" by Mike Resnick
-
- 1990 - The Hague, Holland
-
- Best Novel: Hyperion by Dan Simmons (Foundation/Spectra)
- Best Novella: "The Mountains of Mourning" by Lois McMaster Bujold
- (May Analog/Border of Infinity, Baen)
- Best Novelette: "Enter A Soldier. Later: Enter Another" by Robert
- Silverberg (June Asimov/Time Gate, Baen)
- Best Short Story: "Boobs" by Suzy McKee Charnas (July Asimov)
- Best Nonfiction Book: The World Beyond the Hill by Alexei & Cory
- Panshin (Tarcher/Elephant Press)
- Best Dramatic Presentation: Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade
- Best Professional Editor: Gardner Dozois
- Best Professional Artist: Don Maitz
- Best Semi-Prozine: Locus, edited by Charles N. Brown
- Best Fanzine: The Mad 3 Party, edited by Leslie Turek
- Best Fan Writer: Dave Langford
- Best Fan Artist: Stu Shiffman
-
-
- ------- Trekology ----------------------------------------------------
-
-
- STAR TREK'S FUTURE HISTORY -- A GUIDE
- by Jim Lyon
- (Based on additional material by Joe Sewell)
-
- The historical dates presented within this document are based upon the
- history of the USS Enterprise. For further reference please see the
- Starfleet Spaceflight Chronology, an earlier publication from Pocket
- Books. The dates presented within have been adjusted precisely 64
- years positive from dates printed in such references as the
- Chronology, FASA's ST RPG, the Best of Trek and other sources due to
- the revelation in the episode "The Neutral Zone" that the missions of
- NCC-1701-D take place in 2364. (Since the date of the aforementioned
- sources presents ST-IV in 2222 and ST:TNG following 78 years later,
- the adjusted date for ST-IV is now 2286, fitting in nicely with movie
- references.) Where those dates have been adjusted, the original has
- been provided in parentheses.
-
-
-
- 2252 The USS Enterprise, NCC-1701, is the second Constitution-class
- starship commissioned -- under Captain Robert April. (2188)
-
- 2254 The Enterprise finishes a shakedown cruise. April's ship embarks
- on its first five-year exploratory mission. (2190)
-
- 2259 After the first five-year mission's completion, April steps down
- and Captain Christopher Pike assumes captaincy.
-
- First and only official contact with the planet Talos IV. (2195)
-
- 2271 Christopher Pike is promoted to Fleet Captain; James T. Kirk,
- fresh from the USS Lydia Sutherland, is given command. (2207)
-
- 2272 First face to face contact with the Romulan Empire since the
- Romulan War of 2170-2173 (2106-2109).
-
- Enterprise involved in only suspension of General Order Seven,
- requiring zero contact with Talos Four.
-
- Organian peace treaty is forced upon the Federation and the Klingon
- Empire. (2208)
-
- 2275 USS Enterprise is the sole survivor of the original 13
- Constitution class ships. Enterprise returns to Earth for refit.
- James T. Kirk is promoted to Commodore. (2211)
-
- 2277 James Kirk promoted to Admiral following the highly successful
- Corinth negotiations which bring the Gorn Alliance to the
- negotiating tables.
-
- Internal problems begin in the Klingon Empire when the human- and
- Romulan fusion races are looked upon by the Imperial Klingon
- society as sub-Klingon. (2213)
-
- 2278 Enterprise is assigned to Captain Will Decker. (2214)
-
- 2279 The V'Ger Incident. The Enterprise deals with the alien invader
- and is granted another five-year mission. Kirk accepts temporary
- reduction to Captain to accept command. (2215)
-
- 2281 Records discovered on the colony planet Sumarik IX lead to the
- conclusion that the Romulans migrated from Vulcan. This decision
- does not settle well on Vulcan. (2217)
-
- 2282 An internal Klingon war begins against the fusion races, which
- were originally created by genetic manipulation as a better way to
- deal with the Federation (who look upon humans as BEING the
- Federation) and the Romulans. Enterprise rescues a group of fusion
- fugitives. (2218)
-
- 2283 The First Vulcan Secession affair becomes a major UFP concern
- when the planet considers withdrawing from the Federation. All is
- resolved during talks, but many Vulcans believe that their world
- should take a lesser role in the politics of the Federation.
- (2219)
-
- 2284 Following the political crisis on Akkadia, the Enterprise is
- returned to Earth on orders of Admiral James Kirk. The Enterprise
- is given to Starfleet training command, where it becomes a cadet
- vessel. (2220)
-
- 2285 The Warrantors kidnapping crisis, where several Warrantors of
- Peace are kidnapped on Vulcan. Enterprise is temporarily
- commandeered in order to lead a rescue mission. (2221)
-
- 2286 The Genesis Incident. The USS Enterprise is destroyed in related
- circumstances.
-
- Earth is attacked by an extragalactic probe during the Cetacean
- Incident.
-
- USS Ti-Ho is rechristened Enterprise, NCC-1701-A. (2222)
-
- -----CURRENT Star Trek Time Frame-----
-
- 2292 The Kinshaya, the so-called "demon race" which has plagued the
- Klingon Empire for centuries, stage their second major attack
- against that civilization. The Kinshaya begin a frontal assault
- which soon pervades the Triangle, the wedge of space between the
- three major space powers.
-
- 2294 A temporary pact, later known as "Pax Unificatum," unites the
- Federation, Romulan Star Empire and Klingon Empire for the only
- time in recorded history, from which the Kinshaya Realm is dealt
- with. Troubles behind, the Romulans subsequently turn on the
- others, severing communication.
-
- 2296 Captain James T. Kirk is killed on the Enterprise. Commander
- Spock retires from Starfleet and Dr. Leonard McCoy is promoted to
- Commodore and offered post at Starfleet Medical. Hikaru Sulu
- becomes the ship's fifth Captain. (He serves with First Officer
- Nyota Uhura, Captain of Engineering Montgomery Scott and Security
- Chief/Second Officer Pavel Chekov.)
-
- 2298 The principles of Superwarp technology are discovered at the
- Deneva Warp Research Facility but scientists realize the
- application will take many years.
-
- 2301 One of the only known outposts from the long-dead Vegan Tyranny
- is discovered on Selene GF-184, a dead planetoid in the Atarsis
- region, by the Enterprise under Captain Sulu. The Vegan Tyranny
- died out many years before the Federation was formed (indeed, the
- last race to encounter them was the Andorians, in their first days
- of interstellar exploration) and was believed to be cybernetic in
- origin. Records indicate this correct, and the Enterprise is
- publicly commended for its advances in the scientific community --
- Vegan scripts answer a good many questions concerning the galactic
- governments before the Federation in this region, and indicate the
- planet Rigel has been a trading colony for at least a million
- years.
-
- 2303 Outcries at Rigel over their little-known history eventually
- reaches the seat of the Orion Colonies government. Many scholars
- demand that the Rigellians open their planet to exploration -- the
- surface of Rigel IV is largely paved over but its cities extend
- many miles deep into its crust on almost the entire world. Rigel
- holds steady, but two years later a group of Federation scholars
- is led many miles down in one part of the planet to a vault where
- records answer a great many questions about the early recorded
- history of our Galaxy.
-
- 2306 Enterprise-A is retired from service and is installed at the
- Starfleet Museum at Memory Alpha.
-
- 2308 USS Enterprise, NCC-1701-B, is commissioned. The latest
- Enterprise is of the Destiny class, the newest stage of the
- now-popular Excelsior-class design.
-
- First contact with the Zhaunnir Dominion occurs when the starship
- USS Carolina is ambushed.
-
- 2309 The Zhaunnir War with the Federation begins after this
- newly-contact race of insectoids attack and destroy Outpost 41
- without warning and level the Beta Gamelus IV colony. Starfleet
- mobilizes its fleet cautiously, insuring both Klingon and Romulan
- empires that it will still protect its borders.
-
- 2310 Date recorded as the official year the Zhaunnir War ended, but
- with no specific conclusion. Following numerous Federation
- victories, the insectoids seemed to break off and flee to their
- homeworlds, as if mobilizing for another threat. Clues as to the
- existence of the Ferengi Alliance are left behind the only
- captured Zhaunnir marauder ship.
-
- 2311 The existence of the Ferengi Alliance is proven when military
- experts examine the ruins at Castenzarus, a Federation colony
- planet attacked by Zhaunnir marauders. It is discovered that the
- Zhaunnir fled to defend themselves against this race, which they
- refer to as the 'dread pirates'.
-
- The Tomid Incident occurs when the Neutral Zone treaty is violated
- in the Tomid system, located inside that section's borders, where
- Romulan forces attack a Federation freighter. Following this act,
- all contact is again lost with the Empire and ships flee from the
- Zone borders. (It is discovered later that the Romulans had been
- attacked by the Zhaunnir, who were fleeing Ferengi borders in a
- last-ditch effort. The Federation freighter attacked was presumed
- to be a Zhaunnir scout cruiser.)
-
- Superwarp is tested on the vessel USS Swifteagle, a small scout
- ship. Tests are positive, and small scale refits are ordered by
- Starfleet Command.
-
- 2312 The planet Betazed first contacted by USS Melbourne. Betazed
- wishes to remain neutral with sister worlds Zamoyed and Saxxirr.
-
- Dr. Noonian Sung, a scientist whose work with artificial
- intelligence has been ridiculed to date, mysteriously disappears.
-
- 2314 The Great Warp Disaster; the USS Enterprise-B discovers a network
- of planets in the galactic core responsible for creating the
- Galactic Energy Barrier, is crippled by automatic defenses and
- crashes, destroying the barrier mechanisms. The subsequent EM wave
- overload causes almost every ship in the Klingon Empire and
- Federation to stop abruptly, halting standard warp technology.
- Superwarp ships, constructed upon a different principle, still
- functions, but is limited to only about a hundred ships. Subspace
- radio is not affected.
-
- Scientists determine that the pulse of the destruction of the
- barrier will last for two years. Afraid of the huge terror this
- will cause, plans for superwarp technology is broadcasted to all
- Federation worlds, and is picked up by the Klingon Empire.
-
- The "Great Galactic Dark Age" begins, as it is called in UFP media.
-
- Starfleet orders an incredible amount of energy be put into refit
- and construction of superwarp -- thankfully not a heavy refit
- operation in space vessels.
-
- The Romulans, who have already stumbled onto the principle of
- superwarp, begin their own refits. The Zhaunnir Dominion retreats
- once again for the time being, their own starships useless.
-
- 2315 Over 1000 Federation ships now have superwarp technology due to
- incredibly good luck.
-
- Superwarp technology assists the Federation's rescue of a Klingon
- delegate party in the Triangle. The delegates, which include many
- members of the Klingon Emperor's senate, are brought home.
-
- 2316 The interference from the Great Warp Disaster dissipates and warp
- technology becomes functional. Damage from the GWD is extensive --
- many planets have fallen into incredible decay and some have
- attained considerable death due to lack of supplies. Aarda Dzorn,
- an Andorian Starfleet consultant, is awarded both the Nobel and
- Z'Magnees peace prizes, the only time both prizes are awarded to
- the same person in Federation history, for her exhaustive work in
- overseeing the effort to supply needy Federation worlds.
-
- 2317 The term "Great Galactic Dark Ages" is lifted when supply and
- lifelines are completely restored, but the effects will linger on
- for decades. During the next few years, exploration of the
- Federation frontiers is very limited, but soon it is back in full
- swing.
-
- 2320 Project Gamma, a special Federation espionage operation
- concentrating on deciphering Klingon political information, is
- formed. Gamma's concentrated information is eventually used during
- the Great War in determining the validity of intelligence. For
- now, it concentrates on learning the impact of the Great Warp
- Disaster upon Klingon forces. A similar operation, Project
- Theta-7, is also launched to determine the impact upon the Romulan
- Star Empire, but this produces extremely little information.
-
- 2324 The Betazed Concordat signed; Beta worlds join the Federation
- Internal strife begins on Mordan IV; Starfleet Ambassador Mark
- Jameson departs after talks break down. The war will last forty
- years.
-
- 2325 The Urselrope Wars involve a good number of planets in the
- Lorenze Cluster on the Federation border, spearheaded by a colony
- of refugees on Urselrope Seven. The wars come about due to
- colonial disagreements and is supplied by Minos, "the Arsenal of
- Freedom", which is destroyed by its own technology. The wars end
- when the factions heed the Minos example and decide that enough
- killing is enough.
-
- 2327 USS Enterprise, NCC-1701-C, an Ambassador class cruiser, is
- commissioned with superwarp drive, and begins a ten-year mission.
-
- 2328 (It is discovered later that the Romulan Empire, which was
- affected by the Great Warp Disaster about as much as the
- Federation, defeated the Zhaunnir Dominion in this year. The
- Zhaunnir were caught between the encroaching Ferengi Alliance and
- the forces of the Empire. The Dominion is completely wiped out,
- the final remaining forces choosing mass suicide. The destruction
- of their frontier brings the Ferengi Alliance closer, yet the
- Ferengi fail to see the importance in dealing with the Romulans.)
-
- 2329 The Alveda III disaster; medical supplies and food runs out and
- the colony is saved by its own occupants. Jenette Crusher, a
- botanist, saves many lives, including her own granddaughter
- Beverly's, with her knowledge of local flora.
-
- 2330 The involvement of the Organians is seen to wane when the Klingon
- outpost Khitomer, in Treaty territory, is neutralized. It is
- subsequently discovered that Romulan pirates were responsible.
-
- The Romulan Empire begins a massive reconstruction project,
- including full development on superwarp battlecruisers.
-
- 2331 Although there are increased Klingon/Federation relations due to
- the rescue and cooperation during the Great Warp Disaster, a
- quarrel between ships of the two factions at Rigel soon turns into
- a bloodbath -- and no Organian warnings arise.
-
- It is discovered by the Federation Council that rival factions in
- the Klingon Empire calling for all-out war with the UFP are slowly
- becoming a dominant force there.
-
- 2332 Though Federation President Daniel McQuinn and Klingon Emperor
- Khetas epetai-Subaiesh are negotiating, skirmish after skirmish
- takes place.
-
- Graham Attenborough and T'Mariak, the Federation Ambassadors to the
- Empire, are recalled due to hostilities taking place on Klinzhai.
- The Federation embassy is closed.
-
- Starfleet issues a mobilization alert to all forces.
-
- Shortly after Federation personnel leave Klinzhai, Emperor Khetas is
- deposed. "Marak the Berserker" usurps the throne.
-
- The Klingon-Federation joint outposts at Gibraltar and Sheliak II
- are closed and Klingon forces withdraw from the border K-stations.
-
- Marak the Berserker declares war against the Federation by having
- three D-7 cruisers destroy Federation Outpost Seventeen.
-
- The Great War begins.
-
- 2333 The Calstry Prime disaster -- six Federation ships are crippled
- over that planet when a Klingon L-13 battlecruiser explodes after
- its weapons overload.
-
- The Orion Colonies declare themselves off limits to both Klingon and
- Federation forces. Rigel sends out a declaration of neutrality.
-
- Sherman's Planet razed by massive fires.
-
- 2334 The Battle of Rigel -- USS Enterprise and IKV Battlequeen II
- combat each other over Rigel following the Enterprise's attempts
- at sending a peace agreement. Though Battlequeen II is destroyed,
- a message does get through to Klingon border defense posts --
- though it is ignored.
-
- The "Day of Reckoning" occurs in the late part of the year --
- Federation scientists universally determine that the combat will
- eventually destroy the Klingon Empire but will cripple the
- Federation seriously.
-
- President McQuinn killed when an anti-Federation terrorist unit
- assassinates him on Alpha Centauri.
-
- 2335 Marak begins to lose many of his forces when he orders his
- soldiers into useless deaths.
-
- Kazak epetai-Subaiesh, the nephew of Khetas, begins a personal
- challenge to destroy Marak.
-
- The Subaiesh clan, using government-stolen systems, contact Outpost
- 81 on the Federation Border in order to solidify peace talks.
- Kazak is behind the attempt, though uses it as an excuse to order
- the death of an anti-peace leader and gain Marak's respect.
-
- Kazak assumes the Klingon throne after assassinating Marak the
- Berserker and calls for an end to the war. Shortly thereafter,
- attacks against the Federation cease, and internal strife
- overcomes the Empire.
-
- Ambassadors Attenborough and T'Mariak journey under Kazak's
- protection to Klinzhai, territorial seat of the Empire, aboard the
- Enterprise to conduct talks directly.
-
- Kazak's loyalist forces overcome the rebel units of the Empire and
- war is halted. Kazak pronounces the change of the name of the
- Empire and the new name, the Free Worlds of Klinzhai, is adopted.
-
- Enterprise ferries Attenborough and T'Mariak along with the Klingon
- ambassador, Koritarg, and a Klingon delegation to Babel, where the
- Babel Peace Accord is signed.
-
- 2337 The Enterprise vanishes when its superwarp technology is
- sabotaged by remnants of the rebel Klingon forces and speeds away
- out of the galaxy.
-
- 2338 Six Federation worlds and fourteen Klingon planets, all along
- remote frontiers, are subjugated by terrorists now known as
- Ferengi.
-
- 2339 Emperor Kazak proposes unity against the Ferengi invaders, which
- is met with much skepticism.
-
- The Briolis Hearings begin between Federation and Klingon
- representatives.
-
- The Romulan Empire, which up until now has watched the
- Federation/Klingon war with great interest, is suddenly caught up
- in its own civil war begun by Romulans who believe their Empire
- has taken a turn for the worse into barbarism. All set to deal
- with the Klingons, the Romulans must turn unto themselves. Their
- civil war will last 21 years and the preservationists, as they are
- called, will lose to the warmonger Praetor.
-
- 2340 The Great Treaty of Unity is signed at the Briolis affair and the
- Federation Grand Alliance begins. The United Federation of Planets
- and the Free Worlds of Klinzhai will act as the United Nations
- sought to act on Earth, only stronger.
-
- Historians and scientists generally agree that the disappearance of
- the planet Organia three days following the signing of the Great
- Treaty and the earlier disappearance of the Organians themselves
- from their their world were linked to their prediction of
- Federation/Klingon peace, and indeed their disinvolvement with
- relations a means to an end in the cause of peace.
-
- 2342 USS Tripoli discovers the deserted Omicron Theta IV colony and a
- single occupant -- an android that comes alive to the Tripoli
- scout party. The android, code named DATA, has no memory of the
- colony occupants. (It is later determined that Data, who becomes
- part of Starfleet, was created by Dr. Noonian Soong, and the
- colonists were all destroyed by the Crystal Entity.)
-
- 2344 The Second Vulcan Secession Crisis. After reviewing the facts
- concerning the Zhaunnir War, the Kinshaya affair and the Great
- War, Vulcan's leaders decide that it would be more beneficial to
- withdraw from political structures within the Federation. The
- disaster is barely averted; Vulcan is convinced to remain a
- member, though acting on an associate status, while fully
- retaining its scientific and cultural prosperity and position.
- Many Vulcans choose to return home during the affair, some to
- their own colony worlds. Starfleet sees a radical drop in the
- number of Vulcan officers it retains.
-
- 2345 First contact with the planet Bynaus. The Bynars will make
- radical improvements in Grand Alliance computer systems over the
- next 20 years.
-
- Contact is finally established with the Tholian Assembly for the
- first time since the days of the original Enterprise. The
- Tholians, who have long rejected any sort of contact with the
- Federation because they wished to keep all forms of barbarism away
- from their scientifically minded citizens, have come to realize
- the Federation's true intent in their long-distance study of the
- Great War. Negotiations begin.
-
- 2347 The Tholian Assembly joins the Grand Alliance in an associate
- status, preferring to retain their own defense and political
- structure yet open to all forms of trade and communication.
- Tholian advances with dilithium improve superwarp capabilities
- beyond belief, and within a few years all forms of original warp
- travel (of the kind rendered inoperative during the Great Warp
- Disaster) have dwindled to almost nonexistence.
-
- 2348 Federation and Free Worlds borders reorganized in a fashion to
- please both parties. Exploration zones are set up for both
- governments for equal development. Problems with the setup will
- result in the Altarian Conference nine years later.
-
- 2349 USS Stargazer is commissioned under Captain Jean-Luc Picard. It
- becomes the first vessel to contact the Benzites, who will later
- revolutionize superwarp science on practical application yet
- reject (until 2364, when the first Benzite, Mordok, tests in the
- Academy) any affiliation with Starfleet.
-
- The Triangle Unification Affair -- the major governments of the
- Triangle band together (excluding the Imperial Klingon States, a
- segregated group of Klingons who severed ties with their home
- Empire at least a century before) to decide exactly what their
- position will be when dealing with the Grand Alliance.
-
- 2350 The Triangle Unification Affair ends with the declaration of the
- participating worlds as territories. The Baker's Dozen, the
- thirteen allied worlds that have withstood outside pressure for
- nearly 150 years, becomes a protectorate with the full security of
- Starfleet.
-
- 2351 A join Federation-Free Worlds force reseeds Sherman's Planet,
- which was all but destroyed during the Great War. Sherman's Planet
- becomes a symbol of unity between the two governments, and becomes
- not only an agricultural planet but a territorial seat. Its single
- moon, long an independent meeting point, is reconstructed as a
- neutral conference site on the order of Babel and is christened
- "Parliament".
-
- 2353 A lost freighter, the SS Firesprite, returns to Starbase 84 after
- visiting a planet in the Texorith Cluster that Federation probes
- have as yet not found. It is the fourth sighting of the mystical
- planet of "Aldea", where the Firesprite held orbit for three hours
- before departing. Aldea is later found (in 2364) in the Epsilon
- Minos system by the Enterprise.
-
- 2355 The Stargazer is destroyed when it combats an unidentified ship
- in the Maxia Zeta system. It is discovered nine years later that
- the ship was a Ferengi scout cruiser.
-
- 2356 The Alcyones are presumed to have destroyed the last of the
- plague-ridden Tarellians. In actuality, a single ship did survive
- and made its way to the planet Haven eight years later.
-
- Rear Admiral Savar is promoted to Starfleet Commander. Once he
- begins his post, he promises to endorse more scientific and
- exploratory duties for Starfleet rather than military. His
- groundwork for an exploration-based Fleet eventually leads to
- Vulcan's decision to reverse its political "hands-off" within the
- Federation. Savar is killed in 2364; his policy continues, though
- Vulcan's "re-entry" is slow.
-
- 2357 The Altairian Conference takes place to ground out differences
- between the Federation and the Free Worlds of Klinzhai. It
- involves many ship captains and delegates on both sides. All
- differences are resolved.
-
- 2358 Operation Hawkeye is launched by Starfleet Intelligence. Its
- purpose is to send reconnaisance missions to the Alliance borders
- in an attempt to encounter Ferengi traders or other
- representatives of this increasingly active new threat.
-
- 2360 The Romulan Civil War ends with the destruction of the
- preservationist factions. Four years of reconstruction will see
- the development of a number of capital warships and expansion
- toward the Federation.
-
- 2361 The Velara terraforming endeavor, known as the "Gardeners of
- Eden" project, is established.
-
- 2362 The Starfleet facility at Altair III, where the Altarian
- Conference was a huge success five years before, is overcome by
- the People's Abolitionist Front, which seeks to rid the Federation
- of the "Klingon scourge". Lt. Commander William Riker prohibits
- Captain Frank DeSoto of the USS Hood to beam down to talk to the
- PAF leaders, who are waiting to kill him as a sign of their
- seriousness, saving his life. Instead, security teams from the
- Hood, Potemkin and Alliance take the leaders into custody.
-
- The planet Haven becomes the 1500th member world of the Federation.
-
- The Micromius disaster -- colonists settled here unaware that they
- were destroying the indigenous population, a creature whose
- natural form is in liquid state. When she becomes head of
- Starfleet Medical, Dr. Beverly Crusher, along with Dr. Terence
- Epstein, presents a practical solution that will prevent the
- problem happening elsewhere.
-
- 2363 Benzite principles applied to superwarp, greatly increasing their
- power capacity. Second-generation superwarp drive is set for the
- next Enterprise ship.
-
- The principles of holodeck technology are perfected at the Deneva
- Test Facilities. Installation of the newest advances will also
- come on the next Enterprise.
-
- The Bandi of Deneb IV open up their rapidly-created spaceport to
- Federation ships. Christened "Farpoint", the new station will
- allow the current exploration zone to be expanded by its use as a
- way station.
-
- Operation Hawkeye's first success comes on Zeta Reticuli V, where a
- scout party encounters a Ferengi patrol cruiser. Though no actual
- face to face confrontation is recorded, it is the first real proof
- that the Ferengi have penetrated Federation borders.
-
- Rumors from the Alliance Alpha Exploration Zone intelligence section
- say that Ferengi cruisers may even have penetrated as far as
- within 200 parsecs of the Terra-Vulcan-Alpha Centauri home
- cluster.
-
- 2364 USS Enterprise, NCC-1701-D, commissioned and departs Earth. It is
- the first ship equipped with second-generation superwarp drive and
- the "continuous loop" phaser banks. It is commanded by Jean-Luc
- Picard.
-
- First contact with the "Q".
-
- First official contact with the Ferengi Alliance in the Zendi Sabu
- system within the Alliance Alpha Exploration zone by the
- Enterprise. The encounter also clears up mysteries surrounding the
- long-dead Tkon Empire.
-
- USS Stargazer returned after being discovered by the Ferengi, Bok.
-
- Starfleet Code One Emergency, as it is later called, is quelched and
- Fleet admirals, including Grand Admiral Savar, are killed after
- being possessed by strange parasitic life forms.
-
- Contact reestablished with Romulan Star Empire on the border of the
- Neutral Zone after several Romulan and Federation outposts are
- destroyed. Enterprise arranges a temporary information treaty with
- a Romulan ship.
-
- * * * *
-
- This timeline was written by Jim Lyon (72571,3002) based on material
- by Joe Sewell as presented in ENTHIS.TXT. This document may be
- reproduced so long as FULL text remains intact.
-
- Other sources for this document include SPOCK'S WORLD by Diane Duane,
- DEEP DOMAIN by Howard Weinstein, MEMORY PRIME by Gar and Judith
- Reeves-Stephens, THE FINAL REFLECTION by John M. Ford, DWELLERS IN THE
- CRUCIBLE by Margaret Wander Bonanno, the ST:TNG OFFICERS MANUAL and
- many other products from the FASA Corporation (the creators of Star
- Trek: The Role Playing Game), the four ST movies and of course the
- series Star Trek: The Next Generation. Also adapted from
- presentations in the BEST OF TREK series from Signet.
-
- ************************
-
- #:#:#:#:#:#:#:#:#:#:#:#:#
- # MURDER BY THE BOOK #
- #:#:#:#:#:#:#:#:#:#:#:#:#
-
- editor: Cindy Bartorillo
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
- Murder By The Book is a division of Reading For Pleasure, published
- bimonthly. This material is NOT COPYRIGHTED and may be used freely by
- all. Catalogs, news releases, review copies, or donated reviews should
- be sent to: Reading For Pleasure, 103 Baughman's Lane, Suite 303,
- Frederick, MD 21702.
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- FEATURED AUTHOR:
-
- ELLIS PETERS
-
- Sue Feder's name is familiar to anyone who pays attention to the
- bylines on book reviews, and she is also the woman behind the Ellis
- Peters Appreciation Society, as well as the editor and publisher of
- the Society's official journal, MOST LOVING MERE FOLLY. To get a copy,
- write to: Ellis Peters Appreciation Society, c/o Sue Feder, 7815
- Daniels Avenue, Parkville, MD 21234. (She doesn't insist on being
- paid, but it would be polite to include a couple of dollars to pay for
- repro and mailing costs. Make any checks payable to Sue Feder.)
-
- Watch for the third edition of 20TH CENTURY CRIME AND MYSTERY WRITERS.
- It includes a completely new essay about Ellis Peters written by Sue,
- and to show that she does read other authors from time to time, Sue
- has articles on Richard Barth and Les Roberts in the book too.
-
-
-
- ELLIS PETERS SAYS
- by Sue Feder
-
- Luckily for us, Ellis Peters graciously consented to take some time
- out of her busy schedule to give us an interview. She once said, "I do
- love talking to people, but it takes up so much time. I've had to tell
- my publishers not to arrange much for me in case I start enjoying it
- more than writing!" Some quotes were taken (with the permission of EP
- and her agent) from ELLIS PETERS WRITES, an article which has appeared
- elsewhere.
-
- Edith May Pargeter was born the youngest of three in the village of
- Horsehay, Shropshire, on September 23, 1913. Her father was the head
- clerk at the local ironworks. Her elder brother, Edmund Ellis, had
- become an engineer, and her middle sister married--both are now
- deceased. There's a nephew, and some cousins locally and in Cornwall
- with whom she remains close.
-
- She recalls a very happy childhood. "We were all bright at school and
- had no difficulties holding our own, plenty of friends, the company of
- dogs, all the things country children enjoy, miles of countryside in
- which to roam." Her little village is now part of Telford and "a lot
- of the meadows I used to know are now built up with housing estates
- and industrial enclaves. But go west an hour into Wales, and it's pure
- hill country. Eastward you move into the flatter and more industrial
- midlands."
-
- Educated at Dawley Church of England Elementary School, and then on a
- scholarship at Coalbrookdale High School for Girls, she always knew
- she wanted to write. "You might say that was settled from the start."
- Deeply influenced by her mother, who had written poetry but gave it up
- to raise three children, and further encouraged by Miss Harvey, a
- fondly-remembered English teacher, she adds "In my time I have also
- sung in a choir, acted in school plays, danced as a solo act in local
- concerts, and painted quite well while I was at school. But writing
- was always my aim."
-
- Her mother's experience may have had other influences--she has never
- married, believing that she's better at friendship, and felt she
- couldn't properly run a marriage and a career at the same time--and
- for her the writing came first.
-
- Although she obtained an Oxford Higher School Certificate and first
- class honors in English, Edith didn't want to remain in school or
- continue on to a university. Instead, at age 20, she took up on an
- offer to become a chemist's assistant at a shop in Dawley--"both
- serving...and dispensing, experience which has sometimes been useful!
- I learned about medicinal drugs, including those of botanic origin."
-
- Over the next seven years she began to write seriously--in
- longhand!--selling short stories and a short novel. "My first earnings
- were actually in newsprint. Back before the war there were many
- regional newspapers which carried serial stories, and agencies
- commissioned such stories on the strength of a full synopsis and one
- first installment. Length was laid down, thirteen installments, the
- introductory one longer than the rest, and the stories were syndicated
- round the regions, so might appear in four or five different
- newspapers. Nothing like it exists now. Quite independently, some of
- these were taken up by popular publishers, and lengthened--by me, the
- copyright after serial publication was mine--into full-scale novels
- and published under another name. Odd copies turn up occasionally."
- She now looks at these early efforts at mysteries as "rather
- juvenile".
-
- Just before the war she published her first full-length novel, THE
- CITY LIES FOURSQUARE (1939). When the war began she attempted to join
- the Women's Air Force. Rejected because she was in a reserved
- occupation, she resigned from her job with the chemist and applied to
- the Women's Royal Naval Service--this time listing her occupation as
- author. "Authors were clearly expendable, because I was accepted
- without question, and drafted off to Plymouth to joining the staff at
- Western Approaches Command. A year later the command moved to
- Liverpool, to be better placed as covering the convoy route across the
- Atlantic."
-
- Working in the service didn't deter her writing, and SHE GOES TO WAR,
- about the WRNS, was published in 1942. It is due to be reissued in
- England, for the first time in 47 years. The first volume of a trilogy
- about a common soldiers war, THE EIGHTH CHAMPION OF CHRISTENDOM, also
- came out while she was still in uniform (1945), with the second book
- arriving just after (RELUCTANT ODYSSEY, 1946).
-
- On VE Day in 1944 Edith received the British Empire Medal,
- "recommended probably by the naval signals officer we worked under.
- For zeal and whole-hearted devotion to duty, the citation says. It was
- usual each year on the honours list for some such service awards to be
- recommended and awarded. I was a teleprinter operator, and after about
- a year and the move to Liverpool had a watch of perhaps nine girls
- under me. We had probably about thirteen printers in the room, plus
- telex, cable and wireless, and a direct transatlantic line to the
- other end of the convoy route in Newfoundland."
-
- Timing continuing to be everything, Edith was demobilized as Petty
- Officer on VJ Day, 1945.
-
- But the war years were important for another reason. Her lifelong
- connection with Czechoslovakian people, language and culture began as
- a direct result of her outrage at the 1938 Munich Agreement, that
- infamous agreement amongst Britain, France and Germany, in which the
- two former agreed to parcel Czechoslovakia out to Germany in the vain
- hope of avoiding war. Calling the agreement "shameful", she
- "personally regarded our declaration of war as a relief and a
- reparation. So when the war was over I took the first opportunity of
- visiting the country. I had a few wartime contacts with Czechs
- fighting with us, and had the greatest respect and liking for them. I
- went with my brother in the summer of 1947 to an international summer
- school held at a resort about 30 miles from Prague. Many such schools
- were held that year in other European countries. We took a party of
- students, with university lecturers on British institutions and
- history, and they brought Czech students and lecturers to meet us.
- Thus we made a considerable number of friends at one go, and have kept
- many of them lifelong. I continued my visits whenever I could, grew
- closer to one family in particular, but also made professional
- contacts among writers there, and became very interested in the
- language, and especially in the classics in the language, the books
- all my friends had on their shelves, many of them 19th century works,
- when the language was being studied and revived. Some had no
- translations. I began to read them with the help of dictionaries and
- written grammars, and finding that inadequate, started making my own
- translations as I went along. Translations from both poetry and prose
- have been published, and in time I began to be asked to translate
- works such as a life of Comenius, during his celebratory year among
- educationalists, and even modern novels. I go to Prague every year if
- I can, value my relationships there like gold, and feel myself in a
- sense Czech, with all their hopes and needs. They are a people I not
- only love, but admire. THE COAST OF BOHEMIA (1950) was an account of
- three months spent in Czechoslovakia in 1948, a light travel book.
-
- "It was through diplomatic personnel in Prague that I got to know
- India, and finally went there for a prolonged visit which later
- provided the background to two Felse novels [MOURNING RAGA, 1969, and
- DEATH TO THE LANDLORDS!, 1972]. I loved and hated India; the pressures
- of class division and riches and poverty there are devastating, but
- love predominates. I have two families and scattered friends there,
- mainly in Delhi, but south also, and wish I had the stamina to tackle
- it again. Maybe I'll make it some day yet, but it does take stamina."
-
- It wasn't until 1951 that she tried her first thriller, FALLEN INTO
- THE PIT, which introduced the Felse family. In 1959 she developed her
- `nom-de-crime' upon completion of her second thriller, the non-Felse
- DEATH MASK, in order to keep these works separate from her mainstream
- work. The Felse family finally reappeared in 1961, in the
- Edgar-winning DEATH AND THE JOYFUL WOMAN. From here on out, Detective
- Sergeant George Felse (later promoted to Detective Chief Inspector),
- his wife Bunty, and teenage son Dominic, cheerfully took turns solving
- a dozen mysteries from their hometown of Comerford to such exotic--but
- hardly unexpected, given the predilections of their creator--locals as
- Czechoslovakia and India. Another of Edith's loves, music, featured in
- several non-Felse thrillers.
-
- In the meantime, she continued to write historical novels. "The book
- which came nearest to what I wanted it to be is undoubtedly the HEAVEN
- TREE TRILOGY. It set out as an attempt to create a really great artist
- and set him in his own society, whenever that might be. For me it was
- the period of Early English known to us as `stiff leaf', in church
- building, which the heaven tree itself illustrates--the braced leaves
- that hold up the vault, as of the church, so of the heavens." Indeed,
- it had to be that period--1200 AD and the early English Gothic
- cathedrals, her favorite in art and what she calls the peak of English
- achievement. "I found that the artist's eye, his sense of balance and
- proportion, had a bearing on his view of his world and its justice,
- and must bring about a conflict only resolvable by his victory or
- death. Once created, the people of these books took over and acted for
- themselves in a way which has never happened to me before or since.
-
- "On the other hand confined by historical fact, I think my quartet of
- novels on the life of Prince Llewelyn ap Griffith, the first true
- prince of all Wales [grandson of Llewelyn the Great, who had appeared
- in the trilogy], the BROTHERS OF GWYNEDD QUARTET, never published in
- America, is possibly the most important thing I have done, in
- recording actual history very little studied or appreciated elsewhere.
- It was written to do justice to a very attractive and I think a great
- man."
-
- By 1977 the idea for a story based on a true historical incident had
- been germinating for a while. The time had come to join her passionate
- love of the history of the region with the pleasure of writing a
- well-crafted thriller. "The story of the Shrewsbury Abbey's expedition
- to obtain the bones of St. Winifred, in the 12th century, presented a
- wonderful way to dispose of a body." So A MORBID TASTE FOR BONES came
- to be. "At the time I had no intention of starting a series. But
- there, only a few months after the St. Winifred affair, came the siege
- and capture of Shrewsbury by King Stephen, and the massacre of the
- castle garrison, 94 men hanged and thrown over the battlements into
- the ditch. A private murderer might well take advantage of this
- opportunity to toss a 95th among them. So there was the germ of ONE
- CORPSE TOO MANY. By that time Brother Cadfael had taken me over,
- apparently for good. The writing of these books has given me more pure
- pleasure than anything else I have done. So the line continues, each
- book based on some aspect of the recorded monastic life of Shrewsbury
- and fitted into the history of the time. Each books carries the
- history of the time a step forward, as accurately as possible, and
- into that framework my own characters and stories have to be fitted.
- There is a foreground and a background, in both of which sacred and
- secular move in counterbalance."
-
- Having lived her life in the Church of England, Edith believes her
- writing is bound to reflect some of these teachings. Cadfael's
- optimism, tolerance, and occasionally necessary unorthodoxy are all
- characteristics he shares with his creator. Although she maintains
- that there isn't much of her in him, she will concede that he could be
- `her better self'. His wisdom and experience in the world outside
- makes him passionate about the cause of (here's that word again!)
- justice. Edith has said elsewhere, "I don't believe I could ever have
- conceived him when I was forty."
-
- Edith's roots in Shropshire remained firm and true. She has lived in
- the same early 1800's house for about 35 years, having shared it with
- her brother until his death a few years ago. She has memorialized him
- by taking his first name for her most famous pen name. Ellis, the
- maiden name of her Welsh grandmother, was given to Edmund as a second
- Christian name and became the name the whole family called him. (The
- last name, Peters, is a nod to a young friend named Petra, who was
- still a child when the name was chosen.) She has even placed his
- picture as Cadfael on the back cover of four of the books, from THE
- DEVIL'S NOVICE to AN EXCELLENT MYSTERY in the British editions.
- Surrounded by her records and books and writing--now with an old
- portable typewriter--she still doesn't really feel happy unless she's
- working on a book. Although Cadfael gardens, she does not. She was a
- late convert to television, but now enjoys it--and, of course, waits
- with the rest of us for the day when Cadfael makes his screen debut,
- courtesy of Cadfael Productions Ltd.
-
- One of the most important aspects of Cadfael's success is "the books
- have been the means of drawing me close to the Abbey church itself,
- which then, as now, was also the parish church of Holy Cross, and as
- such survived the Dissolution, while the monastic buildings are almost
- all lost. Nine hundred years old, considerably changed over the years
- but still basically Norman, and still beautiful."
-
- She goes on to say, "I loved and enjoyed the Felse family, but Cadfael
- has been more demanding. He opens channels for me to say, through him,
- things it would be difficult to say through a modern protagonist. He
- has also opened wonderful prospects of actual current usefulness, a
- practical application of literary communication. All his readers are
- helping Shrewsbury Abbey to keep its fabric upright against the
- pressures of modern traffic and modern exploitation and pollution, and
- bringing friends and prosperity into Shrewsbury town. It wasn't
- planned, but it is happening. And I am enjoying it!"
-
-
- BIBLIOGRAPHY OF EDITH PARGETER/ELLIS PETERS
-
- The following bibliography has been assembled from a variety of
- sources, and the frayed edges may be showing. If you find a major
- error here, I'd appreciate it if you let me know about it. ---Cindy
-
-
- Hortensius, Friend of Nero (The Greystone Press, 1937)
- The City Lies Four-Square (Reynall & Hitchcock, 1939)
- People of My Own (Reynal & Hitchcock, 1942)
- Ordinary People (W. Heinemann Ltd, 1942)
- The Eighth Champion of Christendom (W. Heinemann Ltd, 1945)
- By This Strange Fire (Reynal & Hitchcock, 1948)
- The Coast of Bohemia (Heinemann, 1950)
- Lost Children (Heinemann, 1951)
- Fallen Into the Pit (Heinemann, 1951) Felse
- Holiday With Violence (Heinemann, 1952)
- This Rough Magic (Heinemann, 1953)
- Most Loving Mere Folly (Heinemann, 1953)
- The Soldier at the Door (Heinemann, 1954)
- A Means of Grace (Heinemann, 1956)
- The Heaven Tree (Doubleday, 1960)
- Death Mask (Doubleday, 1960)
- Where There's a Will (Doubleday, 1960) Felse
- British title: The Will and the Deed
- Death and the Joyful Woman (Doubleday, 1961) Felse (won Edgar Award)
- The Linden Tree; an anthology of Czech and Slovak literature,
- 1890-1960 (Artia, 1962)
- Funeral of Figaro (Morrow, 1964)
- Flight of a Witch (Doubleday, 1965) Felse
- The Lily Hand, and Other Stories (Heinemann, 1965)
- Who Lies Here? (Morrow, 1965) Felse
- British title: A Nice Derangement of Epitaphs
- The Piper on the Mountain (Morrow, 1966) Felse
- Black is the Colour of My True-Love's Heart (Morrow, 1967) Felse
- Ivos Weihnachtsgeschenk; eine Erzahlung (Die Arche, 1968)
- The Grass-Widow's Tale (Morrow, 1968) Felse
- The House of Green Turf (Morrow, 1969) Felse
- Mourning Raga (Morrow, 1970) Felse
- The Knocker on Death's Door (Morrow, 1971) Felse
- Death to the Landlords! (Morrow, 1972) Felse
- The Bloody Field (Viking, 1973)
- British title: A Bloody Field by Shrewsbury
- Sunrise in the West (Macmillan, 1974)
- Part 1 of the quartet The Brothers of Gwynedd
- City of Gold and Shadows (Morrow, 1974) Felse
- The Horn of Roland (Morrow, 1974)
- Never Pick Up Hitch-Hikers! (Morrow, 1976)
- The Hounds of Sunset (Macmillan, 1976)
- Part 3 of The Brothers of Gwynedd
- A Morbid Taste for Bones (Morrow, 1978) Brother Cadfael
- The Marriage of Meggotta (Viking, 1979)
- Rainbow's End (Morrow, 1979) Felse
- One Corpse Too Many (Morrow, 1980) Brother Cadfael
- Monk's-Hood (Morrow, 1981) Brother Cadfael (won Silver Dagger)
- Saint Peter's Fair (Morrow, 1981) Brother Cadfael
- The Leper of Saint Giles (Morrow, 1982) Brother Cadfael
- The Virgin in the Ice (Morrow, 1983) Brother Cadfael
- The Sanctuary Sparrow (Morrow, 1983) Brother Cadfael
- The Devil's Novice (Morrow, 1984) Brother Cadfael
- The Pilgrim of Hate (Morrow, 1984) Brother Cadfael
- Dead Man's Ransom (Morrow, 1985) Brother Cadfael
- An Excellent Mystery (Morrow, 1985) Brother Cadfael
- The Raven in the Foregate (Morrow, 1986) Brother Cadfael
- The Rose Rent (Morrow, 1986) Brother Cadfael
- The Scarlet Seed (Macdonald, 1987)
- The Hermit of Eyton Forest (Mysterious, 1988) Brother Cadfael
- The Confession of Brother Haluin (Mysterious, 1989) Brother Cadfael
- A Rare Benedictine (Mysterious, 1989) Brother Cadfael
- The Heretic's Apprentice (Mysterious, 1990) Brother Cadfael
- The Potter's Field (Mysterious, December 1990) Brother Cadfael
-
- ***********************
-
- THE LINE UP FROM MYSTERIOUS PRESS
-
- THE POTTER'S FIELD by Ellis Peters
- When the Benedictine monks' plows turn up a long-dead corpse in a
- newly-acquired field, Brother Cadfael delves into the intricate
- mysteries surrounding the discovery. December $16.95
-
- THE ICIEST SIN by H.R.F. Keating
- Inspector Ghote is dispatched to get the goods on Bombay's most
- notorious blackmailer, but uncovers murder instead. The latest Ghote
- novel from the celebrated author. December $18.95
-
- MISTLETOE MYSTERIES edited by Charlotte MacLeod
- A collection of new mystery tales set around a Yuletide theme, by such
- masters of the cozy style as Mary Higgins Clark, Peter Lovesey, and
- Aaron Elkins. December $4.50
-
- THE NEW YORK DETECTIVE by William Marshall
- The author of the celebrated Yellowthread Street series now turns to
- the most bizarre island nation of all--Manhattan, circa 1883--proving
- that all the action wasn't in the wild west. December $4.95
-
- DEAD ON TIME by H.R.F. Keating
- The death of a wealthy young landowner takes Inspector Ghote from the
- relative safety of Bombay into the rustic--and deadly--backwaters of
- rural India. December $4.95
-
- THOSE IN PERIL by Nicolas Freeling
- Inspector Castang, in disgrace, is reassigned to a drab Parisian
- suburb--but a pillar of the community who moonlights as a child
- molester inspires him to new heights of unorthodox police procedure.
- January $18.95
-
- A TIME WITHOUT SHADOWS by Ted Allbeury
- Did Winston Churchill betray a French underground espionage network to
- appease Stalin during WWII? MI6 officer Harry Chapman
- investigates...and the spies who survived the war begin to be
- murdered. January $19.95
-
- SAND CASTLES by Nicolas Freeling
- A major mystery event--the return of Inspector Piet van der Valk,
- after a hiatus of nearly twenty years. Freeling's popular detective
- hero investigates murder among the vacation communities of the north
- Holland coast. January $4.95
-
- BERTIE AND THE SEVEN BODIES by Peter Lovesey
- Albert Edward, Prince of Wales, enters into his second case as an
- amateur detective. A witty foray through Victorian manners, mores, and
- murder by the master of the period mystery. January $4.95
-
- WHO SHOT LONGSHOT SAM? by Paul Engleman
- New York P.I. Mark Renzler is enticed into entering a handicapping
- contest, and murder visits the racetrack. Engleman's latest, and
- zaniest. January $4.95
-
- ***********************
-
- MYSTERIOUS AFFAIRS
-
- * Early reviews are very good for both THE GIFT HORSE'S MOUTH by
- Robert Campbell and THE POTTER'S FIELD by Ellis Peters. The Campbell
- book, another Jimmy Flannery story, is supposed to be as good as the
- previous six. And I've heard that Peters' tale is as brilliant as
- usual, but a bit gloomier.
-
- * Three books reviewed in RFP #13 are now available in paperback
- editions: THE CRIME OF THE CENTURY by Kingsley Amis ($4.95, Mysterious
- Press); A MOUTHFUL OF SAND by M.R.D. Meek ($3.50, Worldwide Library);
- and A SERIES OF MURDERS by Simon Brett ($3.95, Warner Books).
-
- * If your interest in detection extends to nonfiction, be sure to get
- yourself a copy of The Crime-Busters P.I. & Security Mail-Order
- Catalog--you'll find hundreds of books on "the secrets and techniques
- used by private investigation and security professionals". They don't
- say so, but you should probably send them a dollar or two to defray
- the printing and mailing costs (don't bother with an SASE, the catalog
- is too big). You can place your orders on CompuServe too. For your
- catalog, write to: Crime-Busters, PO Box 887, Stn B, Ottawa, Ont. K1P
- 5P9, Canada.
-
- * Two Jack Early (pseudonym of Sandra Scoppettone, see RFP #12) novels
- are on their way to the big screen. RAZZAMATAZZ has been acquired by
- Warner Bros. and DONATO AND DAUGHTER was bought by Marion Brayton
- Productions. Look for Charles Bronson to play the father, at least in
- the DONATO AND DAUGHTER film.
-
- * Don't miss it! Harlan Ellison has finally sold a story to the Ellery
- Queen Mystery Magazine after, according to H.E. himself, 35 years of
- trying. Whatever it is, it will be in the December issue.
-
- * Lawrence Block's latest is A TICKET TO THE BONEYARD, a Matthew
- Scudder story from Morrow just this past September. His next book will
- be a short story collection scheduled by Morrow for April or May 1991.
- It will be probably be called either THE BURGLAR WHO DROPPED IN ON
- ELVIS or BATMAN'S HELPERS. After that we'll get another Matthew
- Scudder novel, DOWN ON THE KILLING FLOOR, probably in September 1991,
- also from Morrow.
-
- * Ridley Pearson has become the first recipient of a new fellowship
- given by the U.S.-United Kingdom Fulbright Commission in cooperation
- with the Estate of Raymond Chandler and with Oxford University. The
- award is given in the field of detective and spy fiction, to "a
- yet-to-be-fully established writer who has an emerging reputation and
- has published several significant works but has not yet gained major
- national or international reputation." Pearson's most recent novel was
- PROBABLE CAUSE and you can see a review of his UNDERCURRENTS in RFP
- #5. Pearson is also a composer and rock musician.
-
- * NO FOOLIN': One of Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine contests of
- yesteryear gave Second Prize to a story called "An Error in
- Chemistry". It was written by William Faulkner.
-
- * Did you know that Leslie Charteris, author of the mysteries about
- "The Saint", was born in Singapore with the name Leslie Yin? He was
- half-Chinese, half-English.
-
- * Did you know that John Creasey wrote using as many as 28 pseudonyms?
- Among his "stable of writers" was: J.J. Marric, Elise Fecamps, Henry
- St. John Cooper, Tex Riley, and Anthony Morton.
-
- * If you like short mystery fiction, you might like to give HARDBOILED
- DETECTIVE a try. It's a quarterly, and it combines and replaces two
- previous magazines, DETECTIVE STORY MAGAZINE and HARDBOILED. According
- to the publishers, each issue will be "packed with original stories by
- well-known pros AND talented newcomers, fine articles, classic
- reprints, hard-hitting reviews, as well as Marv Lachman's fine column
- from DETECTIVE STORY MAGAZINE. If you like the work of Vachss,
- Randisi, Gault, Prather, Nolan, Fischer, and the rest of the
- best--we've got the magazine you've been looking for!" Send $20 for 6
- issues ($24 outside USA) to: Gryphon Publications, PO Box 209,
- Brooklyn NY 11228-0209.
-
- ***********************
-
- TOO LATE TO DIE
- by Bill Crider
- review by Joan Panichella
-
- Bill Crider is a new mystery writer and one to watch. In his debut,
- TOO LATE TO DIE, he creates some interesting characters and a
- memorable sheriff.
-
- Dan Rhodes isn't your typical cowboy-hat-wearing, boots-shined lawman.
- Instead he's a rather average older man with a school teaching
- daughter. He enjoys baloney sandwiches and Dr. Pepper in old fashioned
- glass bottles instead of beer.
-
- A young wife is beaten to death on his "beat". Was it her much older
- husband or one of the flock of clandestine visitors? Or was it
- possibly someone from her "wild" past?
-
- Thurston, the town in which the murder took place, seems very real.
- Mr. Crider knows how to craft vivid images. From Barrett's country
- store to the chickens scratching in the bereaved's yard, the pictures
- seem sharp.
-
- Dan Rhodes postulates and tests several solutions to his dilemma
- before he solves this mystery. In the meantime he jeopardizes not only
- his upcoming reelection campaign but his life as well to discover what
- went on.
-
- I guessed part of the solution but watching Dan reach it was quit
- enjoyable. I would eagerly read more about Rhodes and his locale.
-
- ***********************
-
- HAWK'S LAST CASE
- by Red Greene
- (Synapse Books)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- Cable Hawkins, Hawk to his friends, is a former policeman who now
- works as a private investigator. His office is a pit and his love life
- stinks. When ex-jockey Wayne Teagueworthy wants to hire him to help
- with a personal problem, Hawk isn't exactly happy, but he could use
- the money. It seems that Teagueworthy has decided to stay married to
- Bobbie, which is causing girlfriend Cybil Rogers to resort to
- violence. The night before she had actually fired arrows at him,
- arrows which missed and became embedded in his car. Teagueworthy would
- like Hawk to smooth things with Cybil before her aim improves.
-
- Hawk sees Cybil and she promises to stop harassing Teagueworthy, but
- you never know with women, you know? Next thing WE know, the little
- guy has been stabbed in the chest and is in critical condition in
- Intensive Care. Did Cybil rethink her promise, or does Teagueworthy
- have other enemies? Hawk is on the case, and we get a great ride as he
- digs into the horse racing scene past and present, with a little
- police corruption thrown in as a bonus. And did I mention that an
- unknown sniper is out to kill Hawk? He had had several close calls
- before he ever heard about Teagueworthy's problem so the two
- situations can't be related, or can they? You won't know until Hawk
- does.
-
- Red Greene handles the story with a very sure touch, and I
- particularly enjoyed the way he let a lot of his characterization of
- Hawk come from the other characters; we see a number of
- slightly-different Hawks reflected in the other points of view. The
- only complaint I can come up with is the understated finale--I wish
- Hawk had discovered the last piece of the puzzle with more of a bang.
-
- HAWK'S LAST CASE is classic American hardboiled detective fiction, and
- it's only available from SoftServ, the Paperless Bookstore. If you
- have a computer and modem you can call them at 213-957-1176 or
- 213-957-0874. Otherwise you can get a disk of HAWK'S LAST CASE in the
- mail (IBM, Macintosh, or CP/M) by sending $4.95 plus $3 shipping and
- handling to: SoftServ Publishing Services, Inc., PO Box 94, Long
- Beach, CA 90801-0094.
-
- By the way, HAWK'S LAST CASE is the first of a trilogy, and I'll bet
- you'll want all of them. The other two are HAWK GOES HOLLYWOOD and
- HAWK GETS LIBERATED, and I can't wait to see how Hawk's screwed up
- private life turns out.
-
- ***********************
-
- CHERIE JUNG was born at the usual early age, and by the age of five
- had learned to read... This proved to be a handy skill since she will
- read practically anything, including cereal box labels! When
- arthritis and injuries cut short her career in teaching martial arts,
- she turned her attention to writing, full-time. Along with her
- husband, who is also a writer, they created a mystery BBS named Over
- My Dead Body! about one year ago. Along with their six cats (who love
- to help input data!) they operate the BBS 24 hours a day at (415)
- 465-7739. Mystery readers, writers and fans get on-line information
- about mystery events, conven- tions and author signings as well as
- book reviews, articles, interviews and author profiles. There are
- numerous readers and writers conferences on-going at this time but the
- Twin Peaks conference is currently the most active with fingers flying
- furiously over the keyboards as upwards of 100 messages a day were
- written during the "Who Killed Laura" frenzy!
-
- ***********************
-
- DEADLY SAFARI
- by Karin McQuillan
- (St. Martin's Press, 1990, $17.95 ISBN: 0-312-03808-9)
- review by Cherie Jung
-
- Format: Hardcover
- Character: Jazz Jasper, 1st appearance
- Locale: Kenya, Africa
- Status: Amateur, safari leader
- Setting: Someone is killing members of the safari
-
-
- Reading the quotes from praising authors regarding Ms. McQuillan's
- first novel is like paging through a list of who's who in the mystery
- genre. Tony Hillerman loved it. So did Linda Barnes, Kinky Friedman,
- Patricia Moyes, Aaron Elkins, Dorothy Simpson, Nancy Pickard, Carolyn
- Hart, Sheila Radley, Jeremiah Healy and Robert B. Parker. Other
- authors have written glowing reviews, including Dorothy Uhnak. I
- haven't heard a discouraging word about this book. I was skeptical. It
- couldn't be THAT good, could it?
-
- Well, it IS that good! Try as I might to remain aloof, I was quickly
- drawn into the sensuous and exciting world of Jazz Jasper. The Kenyan
- wilderness comes alive with Ms. McQuillan's description of its
- majestic beauty - its inhabitants, both human and non-human. The
- oppressive heat, the complaining and disgruntled members of the group,
- and the bickering create an atmosphere ripe for trouble. Boyce
- Darnell, a rich and easily dislikeable man, well used to having his
- way or making life miserable for those who oppose him is the first to
- die. Not everyone is saddened by that fact. Before his body can be
- removed from the encampment, someone else is killed, necessitating a
- call to the Nairobi police.
-
- I think you will find the characters engaging and the plot well
- developed. I also don't think you will be able to figure out "who
- dunnit". Long after you have finished reading this novel you will find
- yourself imagining the Kenyan wilderness, vividly, as Ms. McQuillan
- has described it. Her writing seems to capture the essence of being on
- safari in the untamed Africa many people can only dream about or
- recall from nature documentaries.
-
- The only two criticisms I have are that I was a bit disappointed in
- the final resolution of Ms. Jasper's relationship with Striker (I was
- personally rooting for Inspector Omondi!) and that there isn't a
- second Jazz Jasper book available right now, this very minute, to
- read!
-
- According to the author's bio at the end of the book, Ms. McQuillan is
- working on a new novel. I hope it is a second appearance for Jazz
- Jasper (what a name!) and Inspector Omondi, although I suspect the
- clientele may not be so eager to go on safari if each outing brings
- death to one or more of the group!
-
- ______________________________________________________________________
- You can talk to Cherie anytime, and get loads and loads of mystery
- news and reviews, by having your modem call Over My Dead Body! Mystery
- BBS at 415-465-7739.
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- ***********************
-
- HOT TODDY
- by Andy Edmonds
- (1989, Morrow)
- review by Howard Frye
-
- Thelma Todd was a beautiful blonde film comedienne during the first
- years of talkies. She is best remembered for two series' of movies for
- Hal Roach, the first paired with ZaSu Pitts, the second with Patsy
- Kelly. The last big joke of her life was when she was discovered by
- her maid in a garage in her 1934 Lincoln Phaeton with the motor
- running, dead. She had bruises around her neck, a broken nose, two
- cracked ribs, and assorted other bruises and swellings. The final
- punch line was that the verdict at the inquest was "accidental death".
-
- Thelma (called "Toddy", or, by the press, "Hot Toddy") Todd died just
- before Christmas of 1935, and as with most strange cases that far
- back, there's a definite lack of hard evidence to go on for solving
- the crime now. The trail is *cold*. You'll find in Andy Edmonds'
- narration of events that the official handling of this case was
- anything but professional. This is due partly to the fact that 1935
- was before the scientific age of detection, but is also the result of
- the corruption in government that was common in those days of Al
- "Scarface" Capone and "Lucky" Luciano.
-
- In explaining his version of what happened, Andy Edmonds backtracks to
- tell the story of gangsterism in Chicago in the 1920's and 1930's, and
- he does a fine job of it, making it into a fascinating narrative. As a
- matter of fact, I enjoyed the structure of HOT TODDY as a whole.
- Edmonds gets a lot of good reading out of a smallish story. His
- handling of the early years of Hollywood is good too---he manages to
- be candid about the personalities without being condemning. Ultimately
- he makes his case very well, even if his major evidence is from
- anonymous sources. HOT TODDY is an enjoyable True Crime story of
- 1930's Hollywood, and would make great accompaniment to the rash of
- gangster movies that are making yet another comeback. (HOT TODDY is
- available now in an Avon paperback for $4.95)
-
- ***********************
-
- [About A SHOCK TO THE SYSTEM:]
- "Except that the movie is relocated from Jolly Old to good-old US of
- A; the children, mother-in-law, sister-in-law dropped; another murder
- added, one omitted, the first murder switched, the house burned down
- and the ending altered, the movie is just like the book."
- --Don Sandstrom
- [NOTE: The book is by Simon Brett and the movie stars Michael Caine.]
-
- ***********************
-
- A FATAL ADVENT
- by Isabelle Holland
- (Doubleday, 1989)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- It's just before Christmas at St. Anselm's and the rector has a very
- important guest from England: Alec Maitland, former dean of St.
- Paul's. The Reverend Claire Aldington, St. Anselm's pastoral
- counselor, thinks no more about the matter after the rector's
- announcement, at least not until her husband, who turns out to be an
- old acquaintance of the dean's, brings the dean home to stay in their
- apartment.
-
- When the dean winds up dead at the bottom of a flight of stairs, the
- police discover that he's been murdered, and the plot begins to
- thicken. Who was the murderer? Was it the husband of one of Claire's
- patients who is known to have a violent temper? Was it Claire's
- husband, who had a mysterious relationship with the dean and was seen
- arguing with him shortly before he died? Was it the rector himself? Or
- was it the Reverend Joseph Martinez, a political activist and St.
- Anselm's resident Angry Young Man?
-
- To be honest, I had a tough time caring who murdered the dean. The
- dean had a walk-on role in the story, as did everyone else except for
- Claire, so it was difficult to get involved with personalities. The
- most riveting situation involved Claire's home life, where her husband
- and her son both behave badly and refuse to trust her. When she
- finally has a small temper tantrum, after having been pushed beyond
- all reasonable limits, her husband leaves her in anger and she berates
- herself for her loss of control. Anyone else would have blown up about
- a hundred pages earlier, and the resolution left me thinking poorly of
- all three--Claire, husband, and son. I thought the very best parts of
- A FATAL ADVENT were the descriptions of an Episcopal parish.
-
- ***********************
-
- A DEATH IN A TOWN
- by Hillary Waugh
- (Carroll & Graf, 1989)
- review by Howard Frye
-
- When the Parkers return home one evening, they find the house dark,
- their children asleep, and their babysitter missing. The police
- finally discover Sally Anders' body in back of the Parker's house
- where she'd been left after being raped and brutally beaten to death.
- The shock felt by everyone in the small New England town turns to rage
- when they learn that a mysterious stranger had been seen by several
- women the day Sally was murdered. Unfortunately for the town, the
- stranger turns out to have an iron-clad alibi for the time of the
- murder, and now the investigation grinds to a halt. Someone they have
- been living with for years is a rapist and a murderer. Soon the
- whispers and suspicions are out of control.
-
- A DEATH IN A TOWN is not only a fascinating murder mystery--it is also
- inventively told from multiple perspectives and in varying styles. The
- focus, through most of the book, is on what a murder does to everyone
- around it, not just the immediate participants. About two-thirds of
- the way through the story I began to fear that the murder itself was
- going to be forgotten, but I shouldn't have worried. The murder is
- most definitely NOT forgotten, and the final pages come with a twist
- and a surprise that will make any mystery fan happy. Hillary Waugh has
- won numerous awards before, but this just might be his best book to
- date. (A DEATH IN A TOWN is now available as a mass-market paperback
- from Carroll & Graf for $3.95.)
-
- ***********************
-
- By Sharon McCrumb:
- (in alphabetical order)
-
- Bimbos of the Death Sun
- Highland Laddie Gone
- If Ever I Return, Pretty Peggy-O
- Lovely in Her Bones
- Paying the Piper
- Sick of Shadows
- The Windsor Knot
-
- (There's a review of Bimbos of the Death Sun
- by Darryl Kenning in RFP #5.)
-
- ***********************
-
- POODLE SPRINGS
- by Raymond Chandler & Robert B. Parker
- (Putnam, 1989)
- review by Howard Frye
-
- "I don't have money. I don't have prospects. All I have is who I am.
- All I have is a few private rules I've laid down for myself."
-
- Poodle Springs is a wealthy residential community in the California
- desert, into which private detective Philip Marlowe has just moved
- with his very rich new wife. He's now 42, and is still (despite all of
- his wife's money) plying his trade. In fact, he meets his next client
- when he goes into town to look for office space. It seems that Manny
- Lipshultz runs a gambling establishment outside of town, and he has
- unwisely accepted the marker of one Les Valentine. Now Valentine has
- flown the coop, leaving Manny in a vulnerable position with his boss,
- a guy named Blackstone.
-
- It doesn't take long for Marlowe to discover that Les Valentine lives
- in Poodle Springs, not far from the Marlowe house. In fact, there are
- a number of similarities between the two men: both are poor men
- married to rich wives, and both are having marital problems. In the
- course of finding Valentine, Marlowe meets the usual assortment of
- sleazy characters: the powerful Clayton Blackstone, the dissipated
- Muffy Valentine, the loving Angel Victor, and the aging model Sondra
- Lee.
-
- Typically for Raymond Chandler, POODLE SPRINGS takes place on the
- cutting edge of money--that thin area where those with it meet those
- who want it. At the time of his death, Chandler had only written four
- chapters of this story, but Robert Parker has finished it with a
- talent for mimicry that I had never known he had. From start to
- finish, POODLE SPRINGS is faithful in tone and subject to the rest of
- the Chandler output. I am very seldom in favor of the current
- publishing fad of squeezing a few more dollars out of a dead author's
- good name by releasing books that "continue in the tradition of", but
- I must admit that this time it certainly worked out marvelously well.
- If you like Raymond Chandler's novels, you'll love this
- "collaboration".
-
- NOTE: POODLE SPRINGS is now available in a mass market paperback
- edition for $4.95 from Berkley.
-
- ANOTHER NOTE: If you like POODLE SPRINGS, don't miss PERCHANCE TO
- DREAM: Robert B. Parker's Sequel to Raymond Chandler's THE BIG SLEEP.
- It's due to be a $18.95 hardcover from Putnam in January 1991.
-
- ***********************
-
- SISTERS IN CRIME
-
- Sisters in Crime is an organization of mystery readers, writers,
- publishers, and booksellers. It is devoted to furthering the careers
- of women in the mystery field, correcting imbalances in the treatment
- of women, and promoting recognition of women's contributions to
- mystery fiction. It now numbers more than 900 members on three
- continents.
-
- When Sisters in Crime was formed in May 1987, its founders addressed
- three major concerns: (1) that books by women writers were reviewed
- less frequently than those by men, (2) that books on the so-called
- softer side of the genre were taken less seriously than those
- involving graphically portrayed violence, and (3) that the sadistic
- victimization of women was a growing and disturbing trend in
- contemporary crime fiction.
-
- A survey of mystery reviews in the New York Times for the year of 1985
- revealed that while 40% of the mystery novels published that year were
- authored by women, they received only 16% of the reviews in the Times.
- This imbalance was pointed out to the Times. In 1989 reviews there
- more accurately reflected gender percentages. SinC is now analyzing
- reviews in other major publications. (Figures for 1989 are available
- on request.)
-
- The issue of violence toward women is a far more difficult one to
- address since it raises the specter of censorship. In order to better
- understand this complex issue, SinC is cooperating with the University
- of New Hampshire's nationally respected Family Research Laboratory on
- a study of violence against women in crime fiction.
-
- Contact Sisters in Crime at PO Box 9563, Berkeley, CA 94709.
-
- Carolyn G. Hart, currently vice president of Sisters in Crime, has
- compiled a Books-In-Print list of the members of the group. This list
- is available on the RFP home BBS (The Baudline II, 301-694-7108) for
- downloading any time (file name RFP-SC.ZIP).
-
- ************************
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
- * *
- * FRIGHTFUL FICTION *
- * *
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- Editor: Annie Wilkes
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
- Frightful Fiction is a division of Reading For Pleasure, published
- bimonthly. This material is NOT COPYRIGHTED and may be used freely by
- all. Catalogs, news releases, review copies, or donated reviews should
- be sent to: Reading For Pleasure, 103 Baughman's Lane, Suite 303,
- Frederick, MD 21702.
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- STUNTS
- by Charles L. Grant
- (1990, Tor)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- It's 2 AM in a smallish New England town. It's autumn and the first
- chill of winter has your hands thrust in the pockets of your coat.
- You're alone, at least you hope you are, and the wind is whistling
- around the corners of houses and blowing dead leaves down the middle
- of the street. There's a streetlamp, but it's all the way down at the
- end of the block, much too far away to do you any good.
-
- Know where you are? You're in Charles Grant country, made famous with
- a string of books like THE HOUR OF THE OXRUN DEAD, THE PET, IN A DARK
- DREAM, FOR FEAR OF THE NIGHT. In case you're new in town, Charles
- Grant is considered by many to be the very best practitioner of what
- has come to be called "quiet" horror. STUNTS would make a superb
- introduction to Grant-style horror, with a very good chance of sending
- you to the used-book store looking for more.
-
- STUNTS begins in England, with our central character Evan Kendal, a
- teacher from Port Richmond, New Jersey, now doing freelance lecture
- work in England. We don't find out why Evan left Port Richmond for
- many pages, by which time he's returned home. It all starts when his
- best friend, Englishman Paul Burwin, disappears. Paul's wife Addie, a
- doctor, suspects that her husband is very ill and is avoiding her, and
- Evan and Addie provide emotional support for each other as they wait
- for Paul to return. He finally does, during a nasty road accident
- while Addie is busy attending to the wounded. Evan is the only one who
- sees the sickly-looking Paul, and Paul tells him to come to London for
- a meeting, and not to tell Addie. All Paul will say by way of
- explanation is "Remember New York". Mr. Grant has a talent for the
- chilling phrase, which he sets up and pulls off like a well-told joke.
- That "Remember New York" resonates with the reader for several
- chapters, replaced in London by the even more horrible, "I wasn't
- alone."
-
- Before we've resolved Paul's trouble, Evan and Addie have gone to New
- Jersey and have found more trouble there. Evan's uncle, John Naze, has
- also disappeared, and many personal plotlines locally are all coming
- to a head. The high school's hated principal has forbidden the
- traditional Halloween pranks, called stunts, so of course various
- groups of kids are planning something extra-special in defiance. The
- reader can sense that this is not the time for tempting fate, that
- powerful forces are about that have no tolerance for foolishness. The
- suspense is palpable.
-
- Have you ever seen one of those movies where something horrid happens
- immediately, only to have the camera pull back and reveal that it was
- only in a movie that the characters were watching? STUNTS is exact
- opposite. Charles Grant distracts us with a puppet show, fascinates us
- with vague supernatural mythology, enthralls us with concern for the
- characters as we turn pages wondering to what magical realm he's
- taking us---only to find, when the house lights go up and we're ready
- to get our hat and coat and go home, that we never left home at all.
- Which, of course, is what makes STUNTS one of the most terrifying
- stories published this year: the horror jumps off the page and sits
- in your living room refusing to leave. This is Charles Grant's best
- yet.
-
- **********************
-
- HAUNTED HOUSES
- by Annie Wilkes
-
- Have you ever considered what you would do if you had a supernatural
- experience? What if you were in your house looking for the TV remote
- control, and suddenly, it pops up from behind the chair where it had
- fallen and flies through the air right into your hand across the room?
- What would you do? What would you think? Would you immediately doubt
- that you had seen it happen? Would you tell anyone? Would they, like
- so many characters in fiction, assume you were crazy? Would YOU assume
- you were crazy?
-
- Let's take a look at two stories about people in confrontation with
- the supernatural. Both were written by masters, and both were made
- into movies (one classic, one at least above average). Both tales
- illustrate the difficulty of dealing successfully with the unknown
- when you insist upon forcing your own preconceived interpretations on
- everything that happens.
-
-
- THE HAUNTING OF HILL HOUSE
- by Shirley Jackson
- (1959)
-
- "It was Shirley Jackson's achievement to write THE great modern novel
- of supernatural horror. ... This book is a work of art. And it is
- still one of the scariest stories I've ever read."
- --Lisa Tuttle (HORROR: 100 BEST BOOKS edited by Stephen Jones & Kim
- Newman, 1988)
-
- "Shirley Jackson's HILL HOUSE is as nearly perfect a haunted-house
- tale as I have ever read..."
- --Anne Rivers Siddons (author of THE HOUSE NEXT DOOR, another
- fantastic haunted house story)
-
- "By common consent, the single best contemporary ghostly novel is
- Jackson's THE HAUNTING OF HILL HOUSE."
- --Keith Neilson (HORROR LITERATURE edited by Neil Barron, 1990)
-
- Dr. Montague has rented Hill House in order to investigate the
- supernatural phenomena that are supposedly what has kept anyone from
- living there for many years. Two women will be joining him, both
- chosen for their association with the paranormal: Eleanor Vance was
- involved in an episode of possible telekinesis as a child (it rained
- stones), and Theodora has scored high in formal ESP testing. Filling
- out the party is Luke, future heir of Hill House, ostensibly there to
- keep an eye on his inheritance, but also encouraged by his family in
- order to keep him out of trouble for a brief time.
-
- We begin the story almost immediately with Eleanor, and it is through
- Eleanor's eyes that we will see and experience most of Hill House. She
- has led a sheltered, repressed life of virtual slavery to her mother
- and sister, and she sees this trip to Hill House as an escape from an
- intolerable existence. Her extensive fantasies on the way to Hill
- House alert us that Eleanor has lived most of her life in her head,
- and we will see her having difficulty throughout the story in
- separating what she imagines from what she sees happening around her.
-
- The moment when Eleanor meets Hill House is powerful and her litany of
- "journeys end with lovers meeting" foreshadows future events. The bulk
- of the story revolves around the disintegration of Eleanor's
- personality, and her inability to make meaningful contact with the
- others around her. By the end of the story Eleanor has decided where
- she really belongs, and one senses that the other characters will live
- out their lives unchanged, soon forgetting both Eleanor and Hill
- House.
-
- So was Eleanor the target of Hill House's insanity, or the source? (We
- must remember that she might have caused the shower of stones as a
- child.) One can't help but think that wherever the truth lies, Eleanor
- and Hill House were a perfect match.
-
- "And suddenly we understand that whatever Hill House is up to, its
- only victim is a volunteer."
- --Leonard Wolf (HORROR: A Connoisseur's Guide to Literature and Film,
- 1989)
-
- Shirley Jackson's novel, THE HAUNTING OF HILL HOUSE, is certainly one
- of the classics of horror literature. In a sense, instead of putting
- the horrors on the page, she puts them in the reader's mind, allowing
- the reader to experience Hill House in his or her own way,
- shoulder-to-shoulder with Eleanor. In the final analysis, we find that
- Jackson has used the supernatural as a tool of characterization,
- allowing the human vs. inhuman confrontations to illuminate the
- personalities gathered at Hill House. Highly recommended.
-
- "The writing style, with its stark lines and queer angles, is the
- verbal equivalent of Hill House, making the house come intensely alive
- in a way that few settings do."
- --Jack Sullivan (THE PENGUIN ENCYCLOPEDIA OF HORROR & THE
- SUPERNATURAL, 1986)
-
- "The ending sounds Jackson's characteristic note of ambiguity: we
- never know for sure how many spectral occurrences Eleanor really sees,
- but her deteriorating psyche is so insidiously welded to the novel's
- supernatural scenes that the question of her 'madness' becomes
- chillingly irrelevant. ... Yes, Eleanor's lonely life has been a
- psychological process of 'waiting for something like Hill House,' but
- Hill House is clearly waiting for her too."
- --Jack Sullivan (THE PENGUIN ENCYCLOPEDIA OF HORROR & THE
- SUPERNATURAL, 1986)
-
- The movie adaptation of Shirley Jackson's novel is called simply THE
- HAUNTING, and is without doubt one of the classic supernatural films.
- Watching it always reminds me of why I was drawn to horror stories in
- the beginning: for the spine-tingling excitement of confronting the
- unknown and, just maybe, conquering fear long enough to reach an
- expanded understanding of reality. Here's what some other people have
- to say about this movie:
-
- "Although the camera could not capture all the interior undertones of
- Shirley Jackson's novel, THE HAUNTING OF HILL HOUSE, Wise nevertheless
- managed to conjure up one of the most effective haunted-house
- atmospheres in screen history, most effective when one of the heroines
- realizes the hand she has been holding in the dark does not belong to
- anybody."
- --Les Daniels (LIVING IN FEAR, 1975)
-
- "In a very real way, in spite of fine acting, fine direction, and the
- marvelous black and white photography of David Boulton, what we have
- in the Wise film is one of the world's few radio horror movies.
- Something is scratching at that ornate, paneled door, something
- horrible...but it is a door Wise elects never to open."
- --Stephen King (DANSE MACABRE, 1981)
-
- "Many of the novel's subtleties are beyond the camera's scope, but
- Wise offers some compensatory visuals, including a pounding door that
- bulges grotesquely inward. A frisson of Freudianism is provided by
- roommates Claire Bloom and Julie Harris, respectively a lesbian and a
- repressed virgin, who are tuned into each other's thoughts."
- --Gene Wright (HORRORSHOWS, 1986)
-
- And, finally, here's my favorite line from the film, the line that
- encapsulates the whole story for me. Eleanor has arrived at Hill House
- before the others and is trying to unpack in her room. The creepy
- housekeeper, who always leaves before dark, is giving Eleanor her Hill
- House indoctrination:
-
- "No one lives any closer than town; no one will come any closer than
- that. So no one will hear you if you scream. In the night. In the
- dark."
-
-
- HELL HOUSE
- by Richard Matheson
- (1971)
-
- HELL HOUSE is an obvious updating of Shirley Jackson's novel. This
- time out we have a much more scientific team of supernatural
- professionals who prepare to meet the Other Side with the best that
- Spiritualism and technology have to offer. In place of Doctor
- Montague, we have Doctor Barrett. Instead of Eleanor and Theo, with
- their tenuous associations with the occult, we have Florence Tanner,
- the finest mental medium, and Ben Fischer, possibly the greatest
- physical medium of our day. The fourth is made up by Barrett's wife,
- Edith. Barrett, Florence, and Ben have been retained by millionaire
- Rolf Rudolph Deutsch to either prove or disprove the theory of life
- after death. They will each be paid $100,000, but they are given only
- a week in which to investigate. A world-class haunted house has been
- provided for their use--the infamous Belasco House.
-
- Emeric Belasco was a sadistic murderer and Satanist, and the plumbing
- of the abyssal depths of his personality forms the core of HELL HOUSE.
- But Matheson has other topics to address here as well, such as the
- rarity of true objectivity, even among scientists. The hypocrisy of
- Doctor Barrett's "research" is made plain when he admits, "I've
- learned everything I wish to learn", the motto of every closed mind.
- Shortly thereafter he is finally forced to admit that the evidence he
- has demanded will not change his mind at all, nothing will, ever. We
- discover that Barrett's "knowledge" is no more scientific than that of
- the Spiritualist.
-
- While HELL HOUSE is, like THE HAUNTING OF HILL HOUSE, a truly
- frightening novel, it is also reflects changing attitudes toward the
- supernatural, and toward supernatural fiction. HELL HOUSE is a much
- colder book, and considerably less sympathetic to its characters. The
- motivations have changed, as well. No longer do we have amateurs doing
- research for the love of it, or for excitement. No, now we have
- professionals doing a job for a great deal of money. Also, people
- often take a backseat to machines, typical of this period of the
- beginning of our love affair with technology. People have had
- thousands of years to figure out the supernatural--it's now time to
- let the machines answer our questions. But, of course, machines ask
- mechanical questions and get mechanical answers, quite unsatisfactory
- for human beings. Matheson illustrates this with the clash between
- Florence and Doctor Barrett: she is concerned about Belasco, while
- Barrett keeps blathering on about electromagnetic somethingorother.
- Science is tested and found wanting.
-
- As you might expect, considering that Matheson also did the
- screenplay, the film version is remarkably faithful to the book. Names
- are changed for some reason, and the plot is necessarily simplified,
- but the major scenes are all there, and the cast does a good job of
- giving the characters life (without making them one whit more
- sympathetic).
-
- In a comparison between the two stories, I find that Shirley Jackson's
- story is more truly frightening in both versions than Matheson's. For
- one thing, we are in the position of sharing the fear of the
- characters at HILL HOUSE, whereas the HELL HOUSE gang aren't so much
- scared as they are ill-natured. At one point in the movie HELL HOUSE,
- Florence is subjected to some ghostly manifestations in her bedroom.
- When she responds only with anger, it turns the scene into comedy
- rather than chills. Another slight dulling effect of the second story
- is the insistence on explanations. In HILL HOUSE the bizarre is
- marveled over and taken at face value, while in HELL HOUSE the effects
- are treated as daily occurrences and are passed off with a handful of
- jargon. The reader/viewer is allowed to see that the explanations
- aren't satisfactory, but the humdrum attitude of the characters is
- off-putting. Both books are classics, and both movies are at least
- very good, but I call HILL HOUSE a clear winner in book and movie.
- What do you think?
-
- [About THE LEGEND OF HELL HOUSE] "The film is entertaining, sometimes
- conceptually daring, but its cool, scientific detective story
- mitigates against irrational fear."
- --Kim Newman (NIGHTMARE MOVIES)
-
-
- THE HAUNTING (1963)
- Director/Producer: Robert Wise
- Screenplay: Nelson Gidding
- Photographer: David Boulton (Panavision)
- Special Effects: Tom Howard
- Art Director: Elliott Scott
- Music: Humphrey Searle
- Eleanor: Julie Harris
- Theodora: Claire Bloom
- Dr. Markway: Richard Johnson
- Luke: Russ Tamblyn
- also: Rosalie Crutchley, Lois Maxwell, Fay Compton, Valentine Dyall
-
- THE LEGEND OF HELL HOUSE (1973)
- Director: John Hough
- Screenplay: Richard Matheson, based on his novel HELL HOUSE
- Photography: Alan Hume
- Special Effects: Roy Whybrow
- Music: Brian Hodgson, Delia Derbyshire
- Florence Tanner: Pamela Franklin
- Ben Fischer: Roddy McDowall
- Dr. Lionel Barrett: Clive Revill
- Mrs. Barrett: Gayle Hunnicutt
-
-
- A Few Haunted Houses
-
- THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES (1851) by Nathaniel Hawthorne
- THE CASTLE OF EHRENSTEIN (1847) by G.P.R. James
- THE HAUNTERS AND THE HAUNTED; or THE HOUSE AND THE BRAIN (1859) by
- Edward Bulwer-Lytton
- THE UNINHABITED HOUSE (1875) by Mrs. J.H. Riddell
- THE GHOST OF GUIR HOUSE (1897) by Charles Willing Beale
- BASIL NETHERBY (1926) by A.C. Benson
- THE HOUSE (1926) by Richmal Crompton
- UNEASY FREEHOLD (1941) by Peter Davies (filmed under the U.S. title,
- THE UNINVITED)
- A PLACE OF ONE'S OWN (1941) by Osbert Sitwell
- WITCH HOUSE (1945) by Evangeline Walton
- DEW AND MILDEW (1916) by P.C. Wren
- COLD HARBOUR (1924) by Francis Brett Young
- LETTERS FROM THE DEAD (1985) by Campbell Black
- THE WELL (1980) by Jack Cady
- THE MANSE (1987) by Lisa Cantrell
- THE KING'S GHOST (1985) by R. Chetwynd-Hayes (U.S. title, THE GRANGE)
- HOBGOBLIN (1981) by John Coyne
- GOLGOTHA FALLS: An Assault on the Fourth Dimension (1984) by Frank
- DeFelitta
- THE BROWNSTONE (1980) by Ken Eulo
- WILDWOOD (1987) by John Farris
- THE MAGIC COTTAGE (1986) by James Herbert
- THE WOMAN IN BLACK (1983) by Susan Hill
- THE HAUNTING OF HILL HOUSE (1959) by Shirley Jackson
- THE SHINING (1977) by Stephen King
- THE SENTINEL (1974) by Jeffrey Konvitz
- THE CELLAR (1980) by Richard Laymon
- BURNT OFFERINGS (1973) by Robert Marasco
- HELL HOUSE (1971) by Richard Matheson
- USHER'S PASSING (1984) by Robert R. McCammon
- MAYNARD'S HOUSE (1980) by Herman Raucher
- THE HOUSE NEXT DOOR (1978) by Anne Rivers Siddons
- SOULSTORM (1986) by Chet Williamson
- THE KEEP (1981) by F. Paul Wilson
- FAMILIAR SPIRIT (1983) by Lisa Tuttle
-
- Two of the above titles that I would particularly recommend are Jack
- Cady's THE WELL and Anne Rivers Siddons' THE HOUSE NEXT DOOR.
-
- **********************
-
- NIGHTMARE NEWS
-
- * Has anyone seen Dark Harvest's NIGHT VISIONS 8? This annual volume
- should have been out by now, and I haven't even gotten the
- announcement that they're taking orders yet. It's supposed to have new
- fiction by John Farris, Joe R. Lansdale, and Stephen Gallagher, with
- an introduction by Robert R. McCammon. While we're wondering where
- NIGHT VISIONS 8 is, how about Dark Harvest's Dan Simmons collection,
- PRAYERS TO BROKEN STONES? Let's all send letters and telegrams to Dark
- Harvest and drive them nuts.
-
- [Late breaking news: I just got the announcement for the Dan Simmons
- book: $21.95 for the trade edition, $55 for the limited edition, $1
- for insured delivery. Dark Harvest, PO Box 941, Arlington Heights, IL
- 60006.]
-
- * If you're a Stephen King completist, you'd better buy Santana's new
- album, SPIRITS IN THE FLESH, because King does some narration on it.
- He doesn't make things easy for you, does he?
-
- * Watch out for: DARK CHANNEL by Ray Garton; IMAJICA by Clive Barker;
- COLD BLOOD edited by Richard T. Chizmar (with stories by Richard
- Matheson, Richard C. Matheson, Ramsey Campbell, Dennis Etchison, and
- with an intro by Douglas Winter); COLD SHOCKS edited by Tim Sullivan
- (with stories by Ed Bryant, Graham Masterton, and Gary Brandner, among
- others); THE SHAPE UNDER THE SHEET: The Complete Stephen King
- Encyclopedia by Stephen Spignesi (contact The Overlook Connection, PO
- Box 526, Woodstock, GA 30188); HOME by Matthew J. Costello, a
- psychological horror novel.
-
- * I hear that Tim Powers (THE STRESS OF HER REGARD) is now working on
- LAST CALL, a contemporary occult novel set in Las Vegas.
-
- * LIGHTS OUT!, the Robert R. McCammon Newsletter, has moved yet again.
- The new address is:
-
- Hunter Goatley, Editor
- LIGHTS OUT!
- PO Box 9609
- Bowling Green, KY 42102-9609
-
- * I don't know about you, but one of my favorite horror authors is
- David J. Schow. His first novel was THE KILL RIFF, and he's had two
- paperbacks full of short stories published: SEEING RED (Tor) and LOST
- ANGELS (NAL). You can catch more short stories in BLOOD IS NOT ENOUGH
- II (edited by Ellen Datlow) and PSYCHO PATHS (edited by Robert Bloch,
- a Tor hardcover for March 1991). His latest novel, THE SHAFT, should
- be available (in hardcover) in England by the time you read this. I
- haven't heard anything about an American edition yet.
-
- * Remember last issue, I mentioned that Richard Christian Matheson's
- first novel, CREATED BY, is on its way? Well, I did. And now I've got
- good news and bad news. The good news is the plot of CREATED BY. It's
- about Alan Jason, a writer who's created an exciting and controversial
- TV show, which happens to contain TV's most terrifying character. The
- horror starts when his creation goes out of control and fantasy turns
- into reality. Bantam, who will be publishing CREATED BY as a
- mass-market paperback original, is very excited about it (and we've
- heard that Clive Barker has given them a killer quote for the cover).
- OK, now for the bad news: Bantam won't be releasing it until "early
- 1992". What are we supposed to do until then?
-
- * KEEPING UP WITH ANDREW NEIDERMAN: His horror novel, THE DEVIL'S
- ADVOCATE, is in the development stage of being made into a movie.
- Latest information has Larry Cohen (CARRIE, GHOST STORY, and the
- TV-miniseries IT) writing the screenplay. Another Neiderman book,
- ILLUSION (a romance/suspense novel) has been optioned by Martin
- Sheen's Symphony Productions for a movie of the week. Yet another
- Neiderman novel, SIGHT UNSEEN, is being filmed in Canada by Victor
- (SCANNERS) Solnecke. Look out, in 1991 I hope, for his new hardcover
- novel, THE NEED. It's an erotic Jekyll-Hyde story involving a
- female-male metamorphosis.
-
- * I hear Michael McDowell is doing a screenplay of THINNER by Richard
- Bachman (aka Stephen King).
-
- * The latest novel by John Skipp & Craig Spector, THE BRIDGE, is
- supposed to be released "late this year". That's as specific as I can
- get so far.
-
- * I just heard that Tor is dropping their horror line as of January
- 1991. After I breathed in a bag for a few minutes and the dizziness
- went away, I heard the rest of the story: The books won't really
- change, they will just be marketed as General Fiction instead of
- Horror. Thank goodness. I don't care if they market them as cookbooks
- as long as they keep publishing them. Most bookstores don't have a
- Horror Section anyway.
-
- * Coming soon (well, sort of) from Peter Straub: THE THROAT, a novel
- about trauma and violence, the last of the "Blue Rose" trilogy.
-
- **********************
-
- THE STEPHEN KING QUIZ BOOK
- by Stephen Spignesi
- (1990, Signet)
-
- There are 107 different quizzes (not questions, you understand, 107
- whole quizzes). Instead of trying to describe what they're like,
- here's a random sample of questions culled from all over the book. The
- answers are somewhere else in this issue of Frightful Fiction.
-
- 1. True or False: Jim Gardener was the first person to find the
- spaceship in the earth.
-
- 2. Who designed the dam in the Barrens?
-
- a. Richie Tozier
- b. Bill Denbrough
- c. Ben Hanscom
-
- 3. Who was "Arnie's first love...his only true love"?
-
- 4. What was the name of Carrie's high school?
-
- 5. What was the name of the writer who returned to Jerusalem's Lot to
- do a book about the Marsten House?
-
- 6. Who was the King of Delain?
-
- 7. What was the name of the woods behind Louis Creed's house?
-
- 8. What was the name of the killer flu?
-
- 9. What was the name of Thad Beaumont's "dark half"?
-
- 10. What was the name of the maniacal Presidential candidate who
- Johnny tried to kill in order to stop him from destroying the
- world?
-
- **********************
-
- HAUNTS
- Tales of Unexpected Horror and the Supernatural
- Summer 1990
- Editor: Joseph K. Cherkes
- review by Peter Quint
-
- Another great issue of this fiction magazine, and the look of the type
- has improved too. As usual, there are plenty of great stories, and on
- your trip through this issue you'll find: a war story, the spirit of
- an Egyptian prince, the Antichrist, ancient curses, a modern Burke &
- Hare, an old-fashioned European vampire, a touching story about
- early-American witchcraft, a new use for subliminal tapes,
- revenge--Scottish style, a M*A*S*H rerun that turns out to be VERY
- different from the original, and more, along with poetry in a wide
- variety of styles. A something-for-everyone approach that works very
- well. Cherkes does a fine job of walking the tightrope between the
- self-consciously "literary" and the boring and predictable.
-
- Send $3.50 (plus $1.25 postage/handling) for one issue, $13 (postage
- paid) for a subscription of 4 issues to: Nightshade Publications, PO
- Box 3342, Providence, RI 02906-0742.
-
- **********************
-
- INIQUITIES
- The Magazine of Great Wickedness and Wonder
- Autumn 1990 (Premiere Issue)
- Editors: Buddy Martinez, Bill Furtado, J.F. Gonzalez
- review by Peter Quint
-
- This magazine couldn't have come along at a better time, at least as
- far as I'm concerned. Over the last year or so we've lost three of the
- best horror periodicals: Twilight Zone, The Horror Show, and
- Horrorstruck. I was afraid that all the big money had been scared out
- of the horror magazine market. But now we've got INIQUITIES, and may
- they have a very long life, 'cause this is one great magazine.
-
- First off, the thing is beautiful--110 of the slickest, heaviest pages
- I've ever seen. With a $4.95 price tag, I don't know how they manage
- to pay the bills--just mailing this sucker must cost major bucks. But
- that's their problem; all we have to do is pay up and enjoy.
-
- The philosophy behind INIQUITIES is to provide a true cross-section of
- the horror field, mixing all the varieties they can find (loud, quiet,
- contemporary, surreal). You can see what they're getting at with the
- fiction in the very first issue; the stories cover a lot of ground and
- the quality is uniformly high. The biggest of the big-name offerings
- is Clive Barker's "The Yattering and Jack", a humorous story from the
- first of the Books of Blood, which is presented along with some
- original artwork by Clive Barker specifically for this occasion. The
- only other reprint is "Witch War" by Richard Matheson, the first of a
- regular department called Resurrections, where they will pull classic
- short stories back from the brink of obscurity.
-
- Of the new fiction, my favorite is the novella "Pitt Night at the
- Lewistone Boneyard" by David J. Schow, both touching and funny, kind
- of a cross between Night of the Living Dead and Our Town. David Schow
- hasn't done anything yet that I haven't enjoyed. There's also a great
- gothic piece by Chet Williamson ("His Two Wives"), who shows greater
- versatility every time he tells a story. On the louder side there's
- "Midnight Glider" by Tim Sullivan, "Apostate In Denim" by Roberta
- Lannes, and "Reward And Punishment, Ha Ha" by John Shirley; polished,
- well-told stories that may, however, be a bit extreme for some tastes.
- But then that's what loud horror is all about--pushing edges.
-
- Feature articles include an essay by Lisa M. Feerick about what
- Splatterpunk is REALLY all about, no matter what the lunkheads will
- tell you. There's also an interview with John Skipp, which was a
- delight from start to finish. I was going to include a few quotes
- here, but then I figured they wouldn't play quite as well out of
- context, so you'll just have to get INIQUITIES and see for yourself. I
- thought the Skipp interview was worth the $4.95 all by itself. And
- we'll hear the other shoe drop in the next issue, when the interview
- will be with Craig Spector.
-
- In the regular departments, INIQUITIES also scores high. For their
- book review section they got the very best: Ed Bryant. His commentary
- is always engaging and illuminating. They have two pages of news,
- movie commentary by Bill Warren, a humor section that defies
- description, and S.P. Somtow has resurrected his "A Certain Slant of
- 'I'" column from the old Fantasy Review magazine (another great
- departed genre magazine).
-
- Send $19.95 right away to: Iniquities, 167 N. Sierra Bonita Ave.,
- Pasadena, CA 91106; and be sure to tell them to start your four
- quarterly issues with #1 so you don't miss something wonderful.
-
- **********************
-
- MINE
- by Robert R. McCammon
- (Pocket Books, 1990)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- "You know," he said quietly, "I wonder about some of those people from
- the sixties. You know the ones I mean: they hated everything and
- everybody, and they wanted to break the world apart and start it all
- over again in their image. They fed on hate, day and night. They
- breathed it, in their attics and cellars, while they burned their
- incense and candles. I wonder what they did with that hate when the
- candles went out."
- ---from MINE
-
- Robert R. McCammon's latest novel, MINE, got me to thinking about his
- books, specifically as they compare to the other horror author he's
- usually compared to: Stephen King. One of the serious criticisms that
- have been leveled at King over the years has been his lack of facility
- with female characters--he's obviously much more comfortable writing
- about men or boys. Reading MINE finally forced me to realize how well,
- and how often, McCammon creates strong female characters. MINE is a
- story of two women; the male characters are just a bit of filler and
- window dressing. Whenever anything really important is going to
- happen, the men are shoved aside and the women take action. McCammon
- might be our very first feminist horror writer, which might also have
- something to do with why he's one of my favorites.
-
- In any case, MINE is about a political radical of the 1960s, now a
- complete psychotic, who has this particular problem with babies. She
- buys babydolls at the toy store and they become real to her. She
- treats them just like a real baby, until her psychological tension
- explodes and she "kills" the doll. We find out early in the story that
- she has a whole closet full of these dead "babies". The other lead
- character is also a former radical of the 1960s, but one who has
- managed to integrate herself into the passing timeline. She is a
- full-scale yuppie now, with a workaholic executive-type husband who's
- having an affair, a nice house in the best of neighborhoods, and a
- good career going for herself. She is also pregnant. She just happens
- to give birth right before our psycho realizes how to get a real baby:
- disguise yourself as a nurse and steal one from the hospital. What
- follows is a chase story to end all chase stories as the two women
- travel towards the showdown. The trapped-in-time mentality of the
- psycho and the unresolved hippie-to-yuppie evolution of the mother
- provide depth to this page-turner of a suspense novel. Particularly
- recommended for all of you who left at least a small part of
- yourselves back in the 1960s.
-
- **********************
-
- Answers to THE STEPHEN KING QUIZ BOOK Questions:
-
- 1. FALSE. It was Bobbi Anderson.
- 2. C. Ben Hanscom (IT)
- 3. Christine, a red 1958 Plymouth Fury.
- 4. Ewen High School
- 5. Ben Mears
- 6. Roland the Good.
- 7. The North Ludlow Woods
- 8. Captain Trips
- 9. George Stark
- 10. Greg Stillson
-
- **********************
-
- HaHaHaHaHaHaHaHaHaHaHaHa
- a H
- H THE LAUGH'S ON US a
- a H
- HaHaHaHaHaHaHaHaHaHaHaHa
-
- Editor: Name Withheld By Request
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
- The Laugh's On Us is a division of Reading For Pleasure, published
- bimonthly. This material is NOT COPYRIGHTED and may be used freely by
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- be sent to: Reading For Pleasure, 103 Baughman's Lane, Suite 303,
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- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- THE BIG BOOK OF NEW AMERICAN HUMOR
- The Best of the Past 25 Years
- edited by William Novak & Moshe Waldoks
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- This is a huge trade paperback crammed full of some of the funniest
- material created by our funniest people over the last quarter century.
- And, unlike other humor collections, this is not just reprints of
- humorous essays, or chapters from amusing books. Novak & Waldoks have
- assembled material from magazines (even Mad magazine), TV scripts
- ("Chuckles Bites the Dust" from The Mary Tyler Moore Show), essays,
- quizzes, poetry, music, movie scripts (part of ANNIE HALL), and social
- commentary. They've provided transcripts of standup routines: George
- Carlin's "A Place For Your Stuff"; Steven Wright's loose weirdness;
- excerpts from Mel Brooks & Carl Reiner's "Two Thousand Year Old Man";
- Emily Litella--aka Gilda Radner--'s "The Deaf Penalty"; Jerry
- Seinfeld's "No Pockets". All this is liberally sprinkled with
- cartoons, humorous quotes and many, many anonymous jokes. At $15.95,
- this is *definitely* the Best Buy in humor in a long time.
-
- A partial list of wits represented: Woody Allen, Russell Baker, Dave
- Barry, Sandra Bernhard, Bob & Ray, Billy Crystal, Delia Ephron, Nora
- Ephron, Jules Feiffer, Larry Gelbart, Bill Griffith, Matt Groening,
- Cathy Guisewite, Rich Hall, Garrison Keillor, B. Kliban, Ann Landers
- (Ann Landers?!?), Gary Larson, Fran Lebowitz, Jackie Mason, Martin
- Mull, Philip Roth, Garry Trudeau, John Updike, Bill Watterson,
- (Really? Ann Landers?), Gahan Wilson.
-
- ***********************
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- LOOSE TALK: Rumor has it that Garry Trudeau has been so impressed by
- the classy handling of Matt Groening's THE SIMPSONS on television that
- he may finally, finally allow his Doonesbury characters to come to TV.
-
- ***********************
-
- THE WISDOM OF CALVIN & HOBBES (as told to Bill Watterson):
-
- "That's one of the remarkable things about life. It's never so bad
- that it can't get worse."
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- "There's never enough time to do all the nothing you want."
-
- "People who get nostalgic about childhood were obviously never
- children."
-
- "What do you think is the meaning of true happiness? ... Is it money,
- cars and women? ... Or is it just money and cars?"
-
- ***********************
-
- BACK ISSUES
-
- ELECTRONIC EDITION: Check the BBSs in the Distribution Directory
- first. If what you want isn't available, you can get any (or all)
- issues directly from RFP. Disks you get from us will be formatted
- using PC/MS-DOS (for IBM clones). Specify 3-1/2" or 5-1/4" floppy,
- high or low density. Send $5 for one disk's worth (4 issues in low
- density, all issues in high density), and add $2.50 for each
- additional disk.
-
- PRINT EDITION: We have print copies of all issues except #1 and #2.
- Send $1.50 for each issue.
-
- Checks: Make checks payable to Cindy Bartorillo.
-
- Address: Reading For Pleasure, 103 Baughman's Lane, Suite 303,
- Frederick, MD 21702. On CompuServe leave a message to 74766,1206. On
- GEnie leave a message to C.BARTORILLO. Best of all, call our BBS, The
- Baudline II at 301-694-7108 (1200-9600 baud HST) where all RFPs are
- available for downloading on your first call.
-
- 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: 1989 World Fantasy Award Nominations;
- Donald M. Grant, Publisher; Cyberpunk & Neuromancer; Computer Books;
- Digital Delights; Nightmare On Elm Street, The Comic; Banned Books;
- Featured Author: Josephine Tey; Mystery Terminology; Darryl Kenning
- Reviews; Books On A Chip; New From Carroll & Graf; Computer Cowboy
- Reading; and the usual
-
- #7: Happy Holidays Issue: New From Carroll & Graf; Featured Author:
- Charles Dickens; A Christmas Carol; Religious Reading; An Incomplete
- Education; Great Endings; New From Simon & Schuster; New From
- Underwood-Miller; Christmas Mysteries and Other Yuletide Reading; On
- Line With Steve Gerber; The Last Christmas Trivia Quiz; and the usual
-
- #8: True Crime Issue: New Age Books; Amazing Stories; True Crim in
- Paperback; Steve Gerber; Bluffers Guides; The Onion Field; Mysterious
- Press; Lizzie Borden; John E. Stith; Darryl Kenning; Bestselling
- Children's Books; Awards; Carroll & Graf; and more
-
- #9: Time Travel Issue: Bestsellers of the Christmas Season; Obscenity
- Ruling Reversed; The Turner Tomorrow Awards; Roc Books; Carroll &
- Graf; Meadowbrook; Time Passes For Baby Boomers; Darryl Kenning; Time
- Travel Reading List; Simon & Schuster; Featured Author: Jack Finney;
- Reviews; and all the usual
-
- #10: Earth Day Issue: Environmental Reading; Featured Author: Thomas
- Berger; reviews by Darryl Kenning, Robert A. Pittman, Fred L. Drake,
- Jr., Ollie McKagen; Book lists: The Civil War, India, The Middle Ages;
- Sharing The Wealth; My Favorite Books of 1989; and the usual.
-
- Supplemental Issue #1: Baseball Books of Spring 1990. Distributed
- along with #10.
-
- #11: Magazines: Special Coverage of Magazines; Featured Author: Dean
- R. Koontz; reviews by Darryl Kenning, Fred L. Drake, Jr., Cherie Jung;
- Rotten Rejections; Bram Stoker Awards Nominations; Recent Releases.
-
- #12: Featured Authors: George Alec Effinger and Evan Hunter (aka Ed
- McBain), with bibliographies; reviews by Cherie Jung, Sue Feder,
- Robert A. Pittman. This is our first mini-mag issue, with separate
- sections devoted to Science Fiction, Mystery, Horror, and Humor.
-
- #13: Halloween 1990 Issue: Featured Author: Dan Simmons (including
- bibliography and interview); The Brains of Rats; SoftServ Books on
- Disk; Sand Castles: Step-by-Step; Self-University; Mysteries for
- Halloween; Loosen Your Grip on Reality (our SF&F section); and lots of
- news and reviews.
-
- #14: Holidays 1990 Issue: The one you're reading now.
-
- #15: Groundhog Day Issue: Available February 1, 1991
-
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