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- **************************************************************
- * *
- * R E A D I N G F O R P L E A S U R E *
- * *
- * Issue #16 *
- * *
- * *
- * *
- * Editor: Cindy Bartorillo *
- * *
- * Reviews by: Travis Adkins, Cindy Bartorillo, Drew *
- * Bartorillo, Howard Frye, Peter de Jager, Darryl *
- * Kenning, Robert A. Pittman, Peter Quint, Carol *
- * Sheffert, Annie Wilkes *
- * *
- * Featured Author: Raymond Chandler *
- * *
- **************************************************************
-
- CONTACT US AT: Reading For Pleasure, 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 $2 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
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- GEnieUs GEnie Library #8
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- Science Fiction GEnie Library #3
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- Sunwise Sun City W.,AZ Keith Slater 602-584-7395
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- Writers Happy Hr Seattle,WA Walter Scott 206-364-2139
- Writers' RT GEnie Library #1
- Xevious Framingham,MA Nels Anderson 508-875-3618
- Your Place Fairfax,VA Ken Goosens 703-978-6360
-
- 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.
-
- NOTE: Back issues on CompuServe may have been moved to a different
- library.
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- TABLE OF CONTENTS Line #
-
- Editorial . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 120
- What's News . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 157
- Awards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 249
- Lost Stories by Peter de Jager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 323
- Cowboys of the Americas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 421
- Top 25 Fiction/Nonfiction Bestsellers of 1990 . . . . . . . 573
- Gallup Poll . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 902
- Books About the Persian Gulf . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1256
- Computer Corner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1658
-
- Genre Sections:
- Murder By the Book . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1737
- Frightful Fiction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3056
- Loosen Your Grip On Reality . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4001
-
- Back Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5021
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- EDITORIAL
-
- As I type this, it finally looks like we might get a little spring
- weather here in Maryland. We've been trying to get some gardening done
- around RFP Central, but so far it's either been freezing cold,
- raining, or both. Hope it's nice where you are.
-
- I've been meaning to say something about the authorship of the text
- included in RFP. Whenever you see uncredited text about a book, the
- chances are that it has been written either by the author or by the
- publisher. As a free publication we have more-than-usually finite
- resources here; most notable is our lack of personnel and time. So we
- can't always give every book that comes our way the attention it
- really deserves. But nothing is in any issue of RFP because someone
- paid us to put it in, it's there because we thought you'd be
- interested in reading it. Many books, catalogues, and Press Releases
- come our way; we pass along only those that look the most promising.
-
- Our next issue, #17, will be released on June 1, 1991, and is our 2nd
- Anniversary Issue. We already have a number of great books lined up to
- tell you about, some of which you'll see mentions of in this issue. We
- also have two new columns that will debut in #17: a column about
- mysteries you might miss that will be written by Jack Curtin, and a
- regular piece about good reading for adults that can be found in the
- children's literature section written by Janet Peters.
-
- I want to thank all the writers who have taken the time to get in
- touch with me about their work--we appreciate getting the information
- and so do our readers. If you have any book-related news that you'd
- like to share with RFP, just stuff it in the mail or send us an
- electronic message. Our addresses can be found under the masthead on
- the first page/screen.
-
- ^*^ Cindy
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- WHAT'S NEWS
-
- * Warner has finally set a date for the release of Alexandra Ripley's
- sequel to Margaret Mitchell's GONE WITH THE WIND. Warner Books will
- release SCARLETT on September 25, 1991.
-
- * The National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) has wisely decided to drop
- the controversial anti-obscenity pledge that artists were being forced
- to sign in order to receive federal grants.
-
- * Most people don't realize that filmmaker John Sayles (RETURN OF THE
- SECAUCUS 7, EIGHT MEN OUT, etc.) started out as a writer. His first
- novel, PRIDE OF THE BIMBOS, came out in 1975, and his latest, LOS
- GUSANOS, will be released by HarperCollins this June. It's about the
- history of Cuba, focusing on one family from the 1930s through 1981.
- And, as the author says, "...it is also a book about information,
- about free will and responsibility--and my feeling that if you are
- going to hold people responsible and expect them to exercise free
- will, the thing they have to have, and never do, is information."
-
- * This could turn out to be a Don DeLillo year. Not only will his
- latest novel, MAO II, be released by Viking this June, but three more
- DeLillo novels could show up in theaters this year: LIBRA, WHITE
- NOISE, and RUNNING DOG.
-
- * Two years ago, Lyle Stuart sold his publishing business and all of
- its imprints (Lyle Stuart, Citadel Press, and University Books) to
- Steven Schragis. Now Stuart is starting a new publishing house called
- Barricade Books Inc. (PO Box 1401, Secaucus, NJ 07096). The new
- company will emphasize controversial books, and begins operations
- already owning two. One is THE ANARCHIST COOKBOOK by William Powell, a
- book about all kinds of weapons, that Lyle Stuart had published before
- and was the only Stuart title that Schragis didn't want (Stuart bought
- the rights back for $75,000). The other is ISRAEL: REVOLUTION OR
- REFERENDUM by Rabbi Meir Kahane. Kahane was assassinated several days
- after meeting with Stuart to discuss publicity. New titles that are on
- Barricade's first list, coming this fall, are: POISON PEN by George
- Carpozi Jr., a biography of Kitty Kelley; an "unusual" novel by
- Gregory ("Fletch") McDonald; and the autobiography of Eartha Kitt.
-
- * BURDEN OF PROOF, Scott Turow's sort-of-sequel to PRESUMED INNOCENT,
- appears destined to be a made-for-TV movie or mini-series, rather than
- a theatrical feature like the first.
-
- * Eugene Fodor, founder of Fodor's Travel Guides, died February 18,
- 1991, at the age of 85. Fodor's famous series of travel books began
- with one book: 1936 ON THE CONTINENT, which was the very first
- guidebook ever published with the year in the title to ensure
- timeliness. Fodor's Travel Guides are now published by Random House.
-
- * Coming this September is the autobiography of Brian Wilson, the lead
- songwriter and producer for the Beach Boys. The book will be called
- WOULDN'T IT BE NICE? and publisher HarperCollins says it's "searingly
- candid". It will tell about Wilson's complete psychological collapse
- in the 1970's, violent abuse as a child, his unusual sex life, his
- weight problem (he weighed 350 pounds at one point), and his 20 years
- spent as a recluse.
-
- * Roald Dahl, master of the macabre as well as a renowned children's
- author, died on November 23, 1990 at the age of 74. His adult writing
- includes the novel MY UNCLE OSWALD as well as collections of short
- stories: SOMEONE LIKE YOU; KISS, KISS; and SWITCH BITCH. Some of his
- stories were adapted for the Alfred Hitchcock TV series, and Dahl
- himself wrote screenplays for the short-lived-but-highly-acclaimed WAY
- OUT. He also wrote screenplays for YOU ONLY LIVE TWICE and CHITTY
- CHITTY BANG BANG. His stories for children include JAMES AND THE GIANT
- PEACH, THE MAGIC FINGER, and the famous CHARLIE AND THE CHOCOLATE
- FACTORY (filmed as WILLIE WONKA AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY).
-
- * I mentioned in RFP #15 that Jonathan Carroll's BLACK COCKTAIL would
- be published someday in the U.S. (my review was based on my British
- copy). Well here it is: BLACK COCKTAIL is due to be released by St.
- Martin's as a trade paperback in September 1991.
-
- * Attention Vonnegut fans! FATES WORSE THAN DEATH (nonfiction), is due
- in hardcover from Putnam in August 1991, and a paperback reprint of
- HOCUS POCUS is on Berkley's schedule for November 1991.
-
- * Michael Bishop's novella, BRITTLE INNINGS, is about Dr.
- Frankenstein's monster coming back to earth during World War II
- disguised as an outfielder for a minor league baseball team. His
- secret is uncovered by his roommate, a mute shortstop, largely because
- of his ornate Victorian speech. The story has been optioned for
- theatrical development by producer Robert Laurence and 20th
- Century-Fox. Can't you just picture Schwarzenegger as the monster?
-
- * Anya Seton died on November 8, 1990, at the age of 86. She was the
- author of novels such as THE WINTHROP WOMAN, GREEN DARKNESS, and
- DRAGONWYCK.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- AWARDS
-
-
- Awards given by the Association for Library Service to Children
- division of the American Library Association:
-
- 1991 Randolph Caldecott Medal: BLACK AND WHITE by David Macaulay
- 1991 John Newbery Medal: MANIAC MAGEE by Jerry Spinelli
-
-
- NATIONAL BOOK AWARDS
-
- Fiction: THE MIDDLE PASSAGE by Charles Johnson (Atheneum)
- Nonfiction: THE HOUSE OF MORGAN: AN AMERICAN BANKING DYNASTY AND THE
- RISE OF MODERN FINANCE by Ron Chernow (Atlantic Monthly Press)
- Distinguished Contribution to American Letters: Saul Bellow
-
-
- NATIONAL BOOK CRITICS CIRCLE AWARDS
-
- Biography/Autobiography: MEANS OF ASCENT: THE YEARS OF LYNDON JOHNSON
- by Robert A. Caro (Knopf)
- Criticism: ENCOUNTERS AND REFLECTIONS: ART IN THE HISTORICAL PRESENT
- by Arthur Danto (FSG)
- Fiction: RABBIT AT REST by John Updike (Knopf)
- General Nonfiction: THE CONTENT OF OUR CHARACTER by Shelby Steele
- (St. Martin's)
- Poetry: BITTER ANGEL by Amy Gerstler (North Point)
-
-
- NOBEL PRIZE FOR LITERATURE
-
- Octavio Paz
-
-
- PULITZER PRIZES
-
- Biography: MACHIAVELLI IN HELL by Sebastian de Grazia (Princeton)
- Fiction: THE MAMBO KINGS PLAY SONGS OF LOVE by Oscar Hijuelos (FSG)
- General Nonfiction: AND THEIR CHILDREN AFTER THEM by Dale Maharidge &
- Michael Williamson (Pantheon)
- History: IN OUR IMAGE: AMERICA'S EMPIRE IN THE PHILIPPINES by Stanley
- Karnow (Random House)
- Poetry: THE WORLD DOESN'T END by Charles Simic (Harcourt Brace
- Jovanovich)
-
-
- ROMANCE WRITERS OF AMERICA
-
- Best Traditional Novel: RHAPSODY IN BLOOM by Wendela P. Kilmer
- (Silhouette)
- Best Long Contemporary Novel: THE ICE CREAM MAN by Eileen Dreyer
- (Silhouette)
- Best Short Contemporary Novel: NIGHT OF THE HUNTER by Alison Hart
- (Silhouette)
- Best Young Adult Novel: RENEE by Vivian Schurfranz (Scholastic)
- Best Single Title Contemporary: PRIVATE RELATIONS by Diane
- Chamberlain (Berkley/Jove)
- Best Series Historical: SILVER NOOSE by Patricia Gardner Evans
- (Harlequin)
- Best Single Title Historical: THE BRIDE by Julie Garwood (Pocket)
- Best Regency: THE RAKE AND THE REFORMER by Mary Jo Putney (NAL
- Signet)
- Best Romantic Suspense: PERCHANCE TO DREAM by Eileen Dreyer
- (Silhouette)
- Best First Book: OUT OF THE BLUE by Alaina Richardson (Silhouette)
- Golden Choice Award: MORNING GLORY by LaVyrle Spencer (Putnam)
- L.L. Winship Award: AMONG SCHOOLCHILDREN by Tracy Kidder (Houghton
- Mifflin)
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- _______________________
- < >
- < LOST STORIES >
- < by Peter de Jager >
- <_______________________>
-
- This issue we take a look at two very different stories with a subtle
- common element. They focus on what we as individuals can achieve when
- we set our minds to the task.
-
- All too often we take the attitude that an individual has little, if
- any, impact on our society. These stories will entice you to rethink
- that attitude. The setting for the first is our recent history, the
- other a possible future.
-
-
- A MESSAGE TO GARCIA
- by Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915)
- Written: February 22nd 1899, The Roycroft Shop
- (Available through Peter Pauper Press ISBN 0-88988-434-7)
-
- This review could easily be longer than the story! 'A Message to
- Garcia' is a tiny piece, less than 1,600 words. By 1913, governments
- and companies had printed more than 40,000,000 copies worldwide in all
- written languages. It is impossible to estimate how many copies exist
- today. I read it about ten years ago. It has stuck in my mind ever
- since.
-
- It is not a 'story' in a traditional sense, more a description of an
- incident during the Cuban War. When the Spanish-American War broke
- out, President McKinley needed to get a message to General Garcia.
- Nobody knew where he was. The closest thing to a mailing address was
- 'somewhere in the Cuban mountains'. Colonel Andrew Summers Rowan was
- the messenger. He delivered the message.
-
- What is it about the piece that is so compelling? It does not contain
- any detailed character descriptions of Garcia or Rowan. There is no
- battle between good or evil, no violence, no sex, no examples of great
- prose. What is there about this piece that has prompted people to
- print it more than 40 million times?
-
- It is 'just' a description of someone taking responsibility for a task
- and following the task through to completion. This type of
- responsibility was obviously rare in the 1890's. How common is it
- today?
-
- Several thoughts cross your mind when you read this piece. Firstly you
- wish that all people were as reliable as Rowan... and then you ask
- yourself a soul searching question. 'Are you as reliable as Rowan?'
-
- 'A Message to Garcia' has motivational impact. If you want to feel
- hopeful about people, if you want to have a role model in a time when
- role models are hard to find...perhaps even passe...then read 'A
- Message to Garcia', it will only take about ten minutes, but the
- impact will last a lifetime.
-
-
- WASP
- Eric Frank Russell (1905-1978)
- Written 1957
-
- Has a wasp ever got into your car while you were driving? If so, then
- you understand the basic premise of WASP. A small irritant can have an
- effect larger than it deserves.
-
- Russell takes this idea and weaves a superb spy story around it. He
- drops a single spy on an enemy planet way behind the front lines.
- Supplies him with a bag of relatively simple tricks and leaves him to
- irritate the enemy. The effect is wonderful and a joy to behold.
-
- The tricks do not include mass mayhem and destruction, that would be
- too obvious. Instead, the Wasp does little things. Messages on
- windows, taking credit for accidents, creative use of the press and
- misdirection of all sorts.
-
- The authorities begin to believe a huge underground is operating
- against them. To combat this, they start rounding up suspects (thus
- creating discontent in the populace). They overreact to the situation,
- never suspecting that a single individual is responsible for their
- problems.
-
- Russell writes a simple story. No sub-plots, no complexities, no
- hi-tech, just plain words and a wry sense of humor. WASP is a perfect
- example of his style. He brings chaos to an entire planet with only a
- few strategically scrawled messages. He could have given the hero a
- huge selection of high tech weapons and gadgets, instead he chooses
- items that most of us could get our hands on...
-
- This of course is part of the attraction in WASP. It becomes a game,
- what else could he be doing to annoy the government? You don't just
- read WASP, you get involved and cheer for the ultimate underdog, one
- man against a planet.
-
- WASP is not a serious novel. There are no hidden meanings, it is just
- an example of one person winning against great odds. So, next time the
- government or the authorities have got you down, pick up WASP and read
- about an individual getting the upper hand for once.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- COWBOYS OF THE AMERICAS
- by Richard W. Slatta
- (1990, Yale University Press, $35 plus $2.75 shipping)
-
- Here's what people are saying about COWBOYS OF THE AMERICAS:
-
- "This is an outstanding work. Abundantly illustrated, superbly
- organized...It is factual without being pedantic, yet has just enough
- wistfulness to make us dream."
- (William Dieter, renowned Western novelist, in SMITHSONIAN, Nov. 1990)
-
- "This unique panoramic history is an absolute delight to read."
- (Howard R. Lamar, historian of the West, Yale University)
-
- RFP found Dr. Slatta in his office in the History Department of North
- Carolina State University and persuaded him to talk to us about his
- favorite subject.
-
-
- RFP: COWBOYS OF THE AMERICAS is not just another examination of our
- national Hollywood stereotype. Can you tell us a little about your
- book and what makes it so special?
-
- Dr. Slatta: Cindy, thanks for taking on interest in COWBOYS OF THE
- AMERICAS. You are right. I did not set out to write just another
- cowboy book. I chose to work on a very large canvas. I compare the
- history and mythology of North and South American cowboys. The effort
- seems be be paying off. Most reviews have been quite favorable. The
- National Cowboy Hall of Fame in Oklahoma City has honored the book
- with its Western Heritage Award for nonfiction. This is a work of
- social history, so the focus is on people, working ranch hands, and
- how they lived their lives. I examine cowboys of Alberta, Canada and
- the American West, Hawaii's "paniolo," Mexico's "vaquero," Venezuela's
- "llanero," Chile's "huaso," and Argentina's "gaucho."
-
- I tried to structure the book somewhat like an old Western film. It
- opens with quick vignettes that highlight the various cowboy types.
- Flashbacks reveal the remote origins of the cowboy as a wild-cattle
- hunter. The cowboy hero rides onto the plains. Close-ups show his
- appearance, character and values. The camera then draws back for a
- sweeping shot of the range rider's environment--the great plains
- stretching toward an infinite horizon.
-
- In the heart of the book, I try to evoke the dust, smoke, and sweat of
- life on the range. The reader rides along on roundups and trail drives
- and eats a meal by a campfire. I take the reader with the fun-loving
- cowboy to horse races, saloons, and houses of ill repute. But I also
- reveal the harsh reality of frontier racial conflict and Indian wars.
-
- As the movie nears its end, we see rapid changes engulfing the cowboy.
- Farmers, foreigners, and new technology push across the open range and
- largely end the cowboy's old way of life in the saddle. The cowboy
- rides off into the brilliant desert sunset, but his image and memory
- live on in myth and popular culture.
-
- I wrote the book for both general readers and specialized,
- professional scholars interested in cowboys and frontier life. Many
- readers will not be familiar with all the different cowboy types. The
- book includes seven photo-essays with nearly 140 illustrations to show
- the reader these fascinating characters.
-
- I trust that general readers will find stirring, sometimes humorous
- references to cowboys in mythology, literature, and popular culture.
- But the book also challenges comfortable assumptions about the
- "uniqueness" of US history by presenting evidence of historical
- similarities in North and South America.
-
- I try to address several important questions concerning frontier
- history. One area of concern is the century-long critique of Frederick
- Jackson Turner's frontier thesis. The book does not reject entirely
- Turner's thesis. Rather, it modifies it along lines suggested by David
- M. Potter ("People of Plenty") by examining the role of relative
- natural abundance in shaping cowboy character. I analyze and compare
- the contradictory images of plains regions everywhere as desert and
- garden.
-
- COWBOYS OF THE AMERICAS challenges the "cowpens" theory of Terry
- Jordan (see his TRAILS TO TEXAS) and many others that trace the roots
- of western ranching in the colonial Carolinas. My evidence indicates
- that the meager cultural trickle from the Carolina Piedmont through
- the Old South to the coast of east Texas was a minor sideshow in the
- development of the Western ranching industry. Spanish influence from
- Mexico dominated and shaped the Western cattle culture. The
- Anglo-American cowboy, in my view, learned his trade from Mexico's
- vaquero. Spanish terms, equipment, and technique spread from Texas and
- California throughout the Western United States, Canada, and Hawaii.
-
- In sum, this book is not a micro-study. It uses a broad, comparative
- perspective along lines called for by Spanish Borderlands scholar
- Herbert Eugene Bolton in the 1930s. Narrow, regional works can make
- important contributions, but broad comparisons enrich our
- understanding of history.
-
- RFP: GAUCHOS AND THE VANISHING FRONTIER (1983) and now COWBOYS OF THE
- AMERICAS (1990)--obviously this is more than just a passing fancy for
- you. How did you come by your abiding interest?
-
- Dr. Slatta: First, Cindy, my present location notwithstanding (North
- Carolina), I am a Westerner. I grew up in small towns in North Dakota,
- Wyoming, California, Oregon, and Washington. I still call Oregon home.
- I later studied and taught history in Texas and Colorado. As an
- undergraduate, I studied western history and loved it. I still travel
- to and explore the West when I get a chance. For example, I hosted
- some sessions at the 7th Cowboy Poetry Gathering in Elko, Nevada, in
- late January. I'm helping plan the 1992 program, which will highlight
- the Spanish heritage of the West.
-
- I joined the Peace Corps in 1969, trained in the mountains of Puerto
- Rico, and worked with residents of a squatter settlement near Panama
- City. Work in Panama and travel throughout Central and South America
- convinced me that I wanted to learn more about that beautiful but
- troubled region.
-
- After an undistinguished two-year stint in the Army, I earned a
- Master's Degree in Latin American history from Portland State
- University. I continued with doctoral studies at the University of
- Texas at Austin. I am a social historian. I focus on how ordinary
- people lived, worked, and played. As a work of new social history,
- COWBOYS OF THE AMERICAS reveals the real lives of a rural
- underclass--working ranch hands who tended cattle in ranching
- frontiers of North and South America. I tried to combine social with
- intellectual and culture history by comparing the social reality of
- historical cowboys with later images in political and popular culture.
-
- RFP: We've heard that there is another book in the works. Can you
- tell us just a little about it?
-
- Americans and people around the world identify the cowboy as a
- national symbol. COWBOYS OF THE AMERICAS focuses mainly on the cowboy
- as a historical figure in the 19th century. I do trace later cultural
- images attached to the cowboy in the final two chapters. My next book,
- THE COWBOYING OF AMERICA, takes up the growing cultural significance
- of the cowboy in the twentieth century. I'll explore how the cowboy
- (and related frontier symbols) have become an integral part of US
- political rhetoric, advertising, and popular culture. I believe that
- romanticized cowboy virtues and values become embedded in the fabric
- of American culture.
-
- As with the COWBOYS book, I hope to provide many illustrations to help
- readers visualize what I am talking about. I believe that this
- examination will be fun and colorful. I think that it will illuminate
- twentieth-century U.S. values. Am I overrating the cowboy's influence?
- I don't think so. I will argue that much of Ronald Reagan's immense
- popularity stems from his skillful mobilization and manipulation of
- what the public perceives as traditional cowboy virtues. Advertisers
- and filmmakers have long recognized and cashed in on the cowboy's
- appeal to children and adults. And, of course, I'll delve into popular
- western literature. Thanks for taking an interest in my work on
- cowboys, Cindy. Adios and happy trails.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- THE TOP 25 FICTION BESTSELLERS OF 1990
- (according to Publishers Weekly)
-
- 1. The Plains of Passage by Jean M. Auel
- 2. Four Past Midnight by Stephen King
- 3. The Burden of Proof by Scott Turow
- 4. Memories of Midnight by Sidney Sheldon
- 5. Message From Nam by Danielle Steel
- 6. The Bourne Ultimatum by Robert Ludlum
- 7. The Stand: The Complete & Uncut Edition by Stephen King
- 8. Lady Boss by Jackie Collins
- 9. The Witching Hour by Anne Rice
- 10. September by Rosamunde Pilcher
- 11. Dazzle by Judith Krantz
- 12. The Bad Place by Dean R. Koontz
- 13. The Women In His Life by Barbara Taylor Bradford
- 14. The First Man in Rome by Colleen McCullough
- 15. Dragon by Clive Cussler
- 16. Longshot by Dick Francis
- 17. Under Siege by Stephen Coonts
- 18. Jurassic Park by Michael Crichton
- 19. Buffalo Girls by Larry McMurtry
- 20. A Ruling Passion by Judith Michael
- 21. Sullivan's Sting by Lawrence Sanders
- 22. The Golden Orange by Joseph Wambaugh
- 23. Vital Signs by Robin Cook
- 24. Bittersweet by LaVyrle Spencer
- 25. Coyote Waits by Tony Hillerman
-
-
- THE TOP 25 NONFICTION BESTSELLERS OF 1990
- (according to Publishers Weekly)
-
- 1. A Life on the Road by Charles Kuralt
- 2. The Civil War by Geoffrey C. Ward with Ric Burns & Ken Burns
- 3. The Frugal Gourmet on Our Immigrant Heritage by Jeff Smith
- 4. Better Homes and Gardens New Cook Book
- 5. Financial Self-Defense: How to Win the Fight for Financial Freedom
- by Charles J. Givens
- 6. Homecoming: Reclaiming and Championing Your Inner Child by John
- Bradshaw
- 7. Wealth Without Risk by Charles J. Givens
- 8. Bo Knows Bo by Bo Jackson and Dick Schaap
- 9. An American Life: An Autobiography by Ronald Reagan
- 10. Megatrends 2000: Ten New Directions for the 1990s by John Naisbitt
- & Patricia Aburdene
- 11. By Way of Deception: The Making and Unmaking of a Mossad Officer
- by Victor Ostrovsky & Claire Hoy
- 12. Get to the Heart: My Story by Barbara Mandrell & George Vecsey
- 13. Millie's Book: As Dictated to Barbara Bush by Mildred Kerr Bush
- 14. Men At Work: The Craft of Baseball by George F. Will
- 15. The Cat and the Curmudgeon by Cleveland Amory
- 16. Don't Shoot, It's Only Me by Bob Hope with Melville Shavelson
- 17. Trump: Surviving at the Top by Donald Trump with Charles Leerhsen
- 18. Beware the Naked Man Who Offers You His Shirt by Harvey Mackay
- 19. You Just Don't Understand by Deborah Tannen
- 20. Powershift by Alvin Toffler
- 21. Barbarians at the Gate by Bryan Burrough & John Helyar
- 22. Dave Barry Turns 40 by Dave Barry
- 23. Secrets About Men Every Woman Should Know by Barbara DeAngelis
- 24. Martha Stewart's Christmas by Martha Stewart
- 25. The Wreath Book by Rob Pulleyn
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- HOW TO MAKE AN AMERICAN QUILT
- by Whitney Otto
- (Villard Books, 1991)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- This imaginative and unconventional novel provides insight into the
- passages of women's lives through the eight women of the Grasse
- Quilting Circle, and metaphorically with seven sets of historical
- quilting instructions. The circle includes one woman whose dreams are
- pushed aside by marriage and motherhood; two sisters whose love for
- each other ultimately transcends betrayal; a quiet, detached woman who
- follows her own path despite town talk; a wife who forgives her
- husband's numerous affairs; and a half-black, half-white woman and her
- daughter who must come to terms with their heritage.
-
- I don't believe it's possible to give you an accurate idea of the joy,
- the pain, the vibrant life that is contained in this one short book.
- The stories of these women are not just about marriage and family,
- they touch on independence, prejudice, the economics of gender, and
- war. First-time author Otto shows that a woman's life doesn't always
- turn out as advertised, and yet happiness, fulfillment, and peace can
- still be patched together from the scraps of her life. HOW TO MAKE AN
- AMERICAN QUILT is simply luminous prose--not to be missed.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- MAGIC HOUR
- by Susan Isaacs
- (HarperCollins, 1991)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- Magic Hour is the name given by Hollywood to that time just around
- dawn, and again around twilight, when the lighting is perfect, and
- this image underscores this entire story, illuminating the ways in
- which life can be--but seldom is--perfect. Stephen Brady, a native of
- Long Island's the Hamptons, went to Vietnam and came home with a major
- drug habit which over the course of years mutated into alcoholism. His
- drinking got him a demotion in his career as a homicide cop, but now
- he's sober and has a girlfriend he's going to marry. Everything is
- perfect, except it isn't.
-
- For one thing, he loves his girlfriend, he respects her, he feels a
- need for her, but he just doesn't have any FUN with her. For another
- thing, big-time movie producer Sy Spencer, in town making his latest
- film, gets himself murdered and Brady has to solve this very touchy,
- newsworthy case side-by-side with the tiresomely dense and dangerously
- ambitious Robby Kurz. And to top everything, Brady finds himself
- falling in love with the prime suspect, Sy's former wife Bonnie.
-
- Brady, no more logical than any of the rest of us, reacts with anger
- to his obsession with Bonnie and initially works hard to develop the
- case against her. Then, once he's got everyone else on the force
- convinced of her guilt, he changes his mind and starts to look for
- other suspects. But the case proceeds regardless of Brady's
- orientation, and the clues pile up, mostly pointing toward Bonnie.
- Following the twin threads of MAGIC HOUR--the labyrinth of Brady's
- relationship with Bonnie and solving Sy's murder--is a joy from start
- to finish. Isaacs' portrait of the movie types is hilarious as well.
- (Could this part of the story come from the experience of filming her
- first book, COMPROMISING POSITIONS? What happened to that movie,
- anyway? The story was so good, and the cast was so talented; why was
- the film so lackluster?)
-
- Isaacs has a lot to say in MAGIC HOUR, about addictions and
- obsessions, about natives versus "summer people", about class
- divisions and pretensions, about the Hollywood power hierarchy, about
- what you need versus what will make you truly happy. It's a great
- story filled with interesting characters, and I recommend it to
- everyone. (I also recommend COMPROMISING POSITIONS, which is not quite
- as ambitious as MAGIC HOUR, but is laugh-out-loud funnier.)
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- HENRY FIELDING
- by Donald Thomas
- (St. Martin's, 1991)
-
- Henry Fielding is best known as the father of the English novel,
- author of TOM JONES and JOSEPH ANDREWS. In fact, he was a man of many
- careers. He was a popular playwright, a political and social essayist,
- and his legal career culminated in his becoming a magistrate and one
- of the founders of the Bow Street Runners, the earliest police force.
-
- Within Fielding lay a powerful intelligence that sought nothing less
- than a revolution in English society. Beneath the generous and
- good-natured panorama of JOSEPH ANDREWS and TOM JONES lay a vigorous
- impetus for change. Scorned for the "indecency" of his writing and, as
- a magistrate, for dabbling in "the sinks of vice and misery", Fielding
- dealt almost singlehandedly with the great crime wave of the 18th
- century in his final years.
-
- From little-known legal documents and unpublished correspondence,
- Donald Thomas brings evidence of family feuds and personal tragedy. He
- shows Fielding as both the last of an old order and the precursor of
- revolution; as the man whose plays brought censorship on the English
- stage yet who worked for the overthrow of social corruption; as a
- novelist condemned for indecency who was to emerge as a giant of
- fiction and morality. And he reveals how the winning and losing of one
- woman was the greatest drama of Fielding's life.
-
- (Good, readable material about Henry Fielding is tough to come by,
- making this biography essential for any reader interested in the
- English Novel. --Cindy)
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- A HISTORY OF KNOWLEDGE:
- Past, Present, and Future
- by Charles Van Doren
- (Birch Lane Press, 1991)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- Representing a lifetime of learning, A HISTORY OF KNOWLEDGE is a
- one-volume examination of every major step in the progress of human
- knowledge (although not all steps were in a forward direction). In
- fifteen chapters, from "Wisdom of the Ancients", through "The Middle
- Ages: The Great Experiment", "What Was Reborn in the Renaissance?",
- and "The Twentieth Century: Art and the Media", to "The Next Hundred
- Years", Charles Van Doren tells the story of the human thirst for
- understanding, and in the last chapter he uses what has gone before to
- predict where we are headed in the immediate future.
-
- For the autodidact, the lifetime student, A HISTORY OF KNOWLEDGE is
- indispensable. In addition to providing the grand scope of human
- endeavor, this volume makes a wonderful catalogue of pockets of
- knowledge. You may find yourself intrigued by Descartes, or the
- Industrial Revolution, or the caste system in India. A HISTORY OF
- KNOWLEDGE, and a library card, could just be the beginning of the best
- learning experience of your life.
-
- Charles Van Doren is the former editorial director of the ENCYCLOPEDIA
- BRITANNICA, the author of THE JOY OF READING, and the co-author of HOW
- TO READ A BOOK (all of which are in the top ten of my Most Read
- reference books). A new Charles Van Doren book is a very special
- occasion--be sure not to miss A HISTORY OF KNOWLEDGE. If you local
- store doesn't have it, ask them to special order it for you.
-
- NOTE: For another perspective on the same general subject, try THE
- DAY THE UNIVERSE CHANGED by James Burke. Not as comprehensive, or as
- disciplined, as A HISTORY OF KNOWLEDGE, but Burke's charm and wry
- humor make the book a delight.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- IN THE COMPANY OF WRITERS: A Life In Publishing
- by Charles Scribner, Jr.
- based on the Oral History by Joel R. Gardner
- (Scribner's, 1990)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- You will have a difficult time finding a more charming and interesting
- volume of bookish memoirs. Charles Scribner was born into the
- publishing firm that was founded by his grandfather in 1846 and whose
- stable of authors has included F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway,
- Thomas Wolfe, James Jones, Edith Wharton, and many others. When
- Scribner first went to work at Scribner's, it was the old world of
- publishing, where agents were practically unheard of and where the
- corner office of their fifth floor was the home of the legendary
- editor Maxwell Perkins, ruling the world of belles lettres with a sure
- hand.
-
- Perhaps most astonishing of all is Scribner's objectivity. An expert
- in the field of Science History, his intellectual grounding has
- enabled him to achieve a remarkably detached perspective. He speaks at
- length, and with obvious affection, of Ernest Hemingway, and later
- segues into a description of James Jones, none of which is flattering.
- And yet when he mentions that Hemingway didn't like Jones either, he
- points out with insight and honesty that Hemingway's animosity was
- more likely due to jealousy over Jones' success with FROM HERE TO
- ETERNITY rather than to the personality defects that irritated
- Scribner.
-
- There are delightful anecdotes on every page, and with Joel R.
- Gardner's careful handling you can actually HEAR Scribner speaking.
- Here's a small sample of Scribner on several authors:
-
- On Hemingway: "Working with Hemingway was rather like being strapped
- in an electric chair. All the electrodes were always in place, and it
- would need just the flicking of a switch to ruin me."
-
- On James Jones: "Here was a young man who had a real gift and didn't
- know exactly what it was for and how best to develop it."
-
- On Charles Lindbergh: "He was the most fussy of authors, living or
- dead...To him, every detail in the book had as much significance as if
- it were a moving part in his airplane."
-
- On Alan Paton: "He thought of himself as I thought of him--as a
- genius."
-
- On P.D. James: "We hit it off immediately...Conversation with her was
- entertainment in itself."
-
- IN THE COMPANY OF WRITERS is a delight from the first page to the
- last. Highly recommended.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- CHEERLEADERS CAN'T AFFORD TO BE NICE
- by Susan Sullivan Saiter
- (Donald I. Fine, 1991)
-
- CHEERLEADERS CAN'T AFFORD TO BE NICE, the fiction debut of Susan
- Sullivan Saiter, is a poignant, humorous and at times heart-rending
- evocation of growing up midwestern during the 1950s. Blending irony
- with real warmth, Saiter explores familial love and betrayal and the
- often illusory promises of the American Dream as she recounts the
- antics and aspirations of the Rawson family: Crosby Rawson, the book's
- narrator and the pretty and smart daughter who is wise beyond her
- years; Ben, Croz' younger brother, who might be a lunatic or a genius,
- but is definitely a certified pain in the neck; their father, a tire
- salesman who makes Willy Loman's life look secure; and their earthy,
- chain-smoking mother who never quite manages to redecorate and wears
- too much "Cherries in the Snow" lipstick. These reminiscences of
- midwestern youth alternate with the complexities of Croz's adult life
- in California, which is dramatically interrupted when brother Ben
- disappears in New York City and it is up to Crosby to find him.
-
- With an unforgettable array of characters, always striving for
- happiness, success, and a truly American lifestyle, CHEERLEADERS CAN'T
- AFFORD TO BE NICE is a remarkable story about America's heartland that
- introduces a sparkling new talent.
-
- Susan Sullivan Saiter is a former reporter for the Chicago SUN-TIMES
- and a stringer for the Chicago bureau of the New York TIMES. At work
- on her second novel, she is the mother of two daughters and makes her
- home with her husband, author N.R. (Sonny) Kleinfield, in New York
- City.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- COUNTER STRIKE
- by Sean Flannery
- (William Morrow and Company, 1990)
- review by Robert A. Pittman
-
- It is somewhat surprising but always gratifying how often good writers
- anticipate and describe change. Sean Flannery has done this in his new
- thriller COUNTER STRIKE. His platform is the story of an assassination
- attempt on USSR President Gorbachev. It is to be carried out by a
- hired assassin who is an American and is also a veteran of Vietnam, a
- sociopath and a holder of the medal of honor. The assassination is
- planned and ordered by a high level dissident group in the Soviet
- military and is to take place at an international meeting where the
- President of the United States will also be present. The plot is
- discovered by the Moscow home militia, which is supportive of
- Gorbachev, and the race is then on to prevent the killing and to
- capture the assassin. The contest pits the "good Russians" and the
- "good Americans" against the "bad Russians" and the "bad American."
-
- The attitudes, backgrounds and interests of the various characters
- give the author the means of creating situations which express many
- representations of change that is currently occurring between the USSR
- and the USA. Trust, for example; when the Russian police inspector and
- the American detective need to cooperate and share information, they
- do not do so easily. They test and probe each other and very
- tentatively arrive at a state of harmony in which they can proceed
- with their common job. This does not mean to imply that the book
- offers a lesson in psychology or drifts into any type of deep message.
- It is just a good thriller that sits comfortably in today's
- environment of political change between two great world powers.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- GALLUP POLL OF READERS
-
- Some results of a recent Gallup Poll about readers and their reading
- material:
-
- Favorite Author Living or Dead:
-
- #1---Stephen King
- #2---Danielle Steel
- #3---(tie) Louis L'Amour, Sidney Sheldon
- #4---(tie) James Michener, V.C. Andrews
- #5---(tie) Charles Dickens, Mark Twain, Ernest Hemingway, John
- Steinbeck, William Shakespeare, Tom Clancy
- #6---(tie) Robert Ludlum, Isaac Asimov, J.R.R. Tolkien, Dick Francis,
- Alex Haley
-
- Favorite Living Author:
-
- #1---Stephen King
- #2---(tie) Danielle Steel, James Michener
- #3---Tom Clancy
-
- Percentage Who Have Read A Book By...:
-
- Mark Twain---86%
- Stephen King---43%
- Herman Melville---24%
- Leo Tolstoy---21%
- James Joyce---16%
- John Updike---12%
- Saul Bellow---6%
- Gustave Flaubert---3%
-
- 48% of Americans read fewer than 5 books in 1990
- 16% of Americans did not finish even 1 book in 1990
- 45% of Americans say they "expect to read more in the future"
-
-
- THE STORY GETS WORSE: Bookstore sales for December 1990 were
- terrible. Compared to December 1989, this past December was down 25%
- for hardcovers, 21% for trade paperbacks, and 19% for mass-market
- paperbacks.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- THE PERPIGNON EXCHANGE
- by Warren Kiefer
- (Donald I. Fine, 1990, $19.95, ISBN 1-55611-227-0)
- review by Travis Adkins
-
- Dahoud El Beida, alias David Perpignon, is a half-Palestinian,
- half-French, self-taught computer expert and con man. Nearing forty
- and having spent the better part of his existence hustling a living
- around Europe and the Middle East--pleasantly battling his weakness
- for beautiful women and Viennese pastry--Perpignon/El Beida is ready
- to bury his Arab identity and live out the rest of his life as a
- Frenchman.
-
- Far from a major criminal, but always trying to stay one step ahead of
- the law, he boards a flight to Athens--only to find himself in the
- midst of a hijacking. After a week-long odyssey of fear and fatigue,
- the plane lands in Libya, where he is mistaken for the mastermind of
- the hijacking and is embraced (all-too-tightly) by Qaddafi-backed
- terrorists. At the same time, he is recruited as a double agent by an
- international coalition plotting a rescue operation. Boxed in on all
- sides, needing to find a way to save his own life, as well as those of
- his fellow passengers, the resourceful El Beida/Perpignon gambles on a
- chance to emerge as the hero--and get the swag.
-
- Though the story is a little far-fetched and at times borders on the
- unbelievable, I thoroughly enjoyed this book. I particularly enjoyed
- Perpignon/El Beida's uncanny ability to get into precarious situations
- and come away unscathed. The story is well paced and very difficult to
- put down. On a scale of 1 to 10, I give this book an 8.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- Horace Bent's award for the oddest title of 1990 (in The Bookseller
- magazine) went to THE LESBIAN SADOMASOCHISM SAFETY MANUAL. Runners up
- included: KNIFETHROWING: A PRACTICAL GUIDE, WHAT BIRD DID THAT?,
- ITALIAN WITHOUT WORDS, and THE TEACH YOUR CHICKEN TO FLY TRAINING
- MANUAL. Wow, I'm just not going to the right bookstores.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- DICKENS
- by Peter Ackroyd
- (HarperCollins, 1990)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- "The danger, in outlining the characters of those who make up this
- history, is that in some sense we place them within the context of our
- own period. In fact everything has changed to such an extent that the
- social and economic relations between individuals are not easily to be
- recaptured. Nor is the atmosphere and quality of the world in which
- they moved--we must think of it as a less secure, a more invidious, a
- more ANGULAR, world. If a late twentieth-century person were suddenly
- to find himself in a tavern or house of the period, he would be
- literally sick--sick with the smells, sick with the food, sick with
- the atmosphere around him. It is an unimaginable journey we must take,
- therefore, a journey back through time."
- ---from DICKENS
-
-
- Charles Dickens is without doubt the most beloved writer in the
- English language, and he has created more enduring characters than
- anyone except possibly Shakespeare. Now the acclaimed novelist, poet,
- and biographer, Peter Ackroyd, has given us what is already being
- acknowledged as the definitive biography of this consummate creative
- artist.
-
- The story reads much like one of Dickens own novels, with more dark
- corners than most readers will anticipate. Ackroyd has studied
- original sources and brings together all the people that made up the
- private Charles Dickens: the guilty and lonely child, the
- already-famous writer in his youth, the social critic, the performer,
- and the burnt-out middle-aged man. You'll discover in these pages a
- character more fascinating than any he put in the pages of his
- stories, and with Ackroyd's careful and energetic prose you'll enjoy
- every page.
-
- Peter Ackroyd has written an earlier biography (T.S. ELIOT), a volume
- of poetry (THE DIVERSIONS OF POETRY), criticism (NOTES FOR A NEW
- CULTURE), and some absolutely wonderful fiction (THE GREAT FIRE OF
- LONDON, THE LAST TESTAMENT OF OSCAR WILDE, HAWKSMOOR, CHATTERTON, and
- the recent FIRST LIGHT). His HAWKSMOOR was reviewed in RFP #11.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- THE MISSION
- by Jerome Tuccille and Philip Sayetta Jacobs
- (Donald I. Fine, 1991, $18.95, ISBN 1-55611-199-1)
- review by Travis Adkins
-
- Nearly fifty years have passed since Rudolf Hess, Deputy Fuhrer of the
- Third Reich, crash-landed in the Scottish countryside. He spent the
- remainder of his life in Berlin's Spandau prison, a lasting symbol of
- Hitler's ravages. To this day, the reasons for Hess' clandestine
- mission have not been revealed. Now, in a tense espionage thriller
- reminiscent of Ken Follet's EYE OF THE NEEDLE, authors Jerome Tuccille
- and Philip Sayetta Jacobs dramatically uncover the secret behind the
- mysterious flight of Rudolf Hess:
-
- Journalist Philip Renfield suspects the true identity of the downed
- German pilot who has been recently apprehended. Determined to locate
- and approach the man he believes is really Rudolf Hess, Renfield
- begins to put together the pieces of the puzzle. Rudolf Hess is locked
- in the Tower of London...but what about the man Renfield saw being
- spirited away to an out-of-the-way safehouse? Renfield finds he's
- become a pawn in a high-level contest of secret diplomacy between Nazi
- Germany and Churchill's strife-torn government. As the novel races
- toward its climax--and its ultimately shocking revelation--Renfield
- realizes he's no longer pursuing a story, he's trying to save his
- life, as well as that of the woman he loves.
-
- As a general rule, I try to avoid fictionalized histories because I do
- not like the idea of adapting an historical event into something it
- was not. However, much to my surprise, THE MISSION did not completely
- adulterate history as I feared it would. Nevertheless, I would rate it
- only a five on a scale of one to ten. The book was slow-paced and left
- me waiting for a climax that never really occurred. The historical
- background was quite intriguing and did provide an interesting
- foundation upon which the story was built.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- RED OAKS AND BLACK BIRCHES
- The Science and Lore of Trees
- by Rebecca Rupp
- (Garden Way Publishing, 1990, $10.95, ISBN 0-88266-620-7)
- review by Darryl Kenning
-
- RED OAKS AND BLACK BIRCHES is not a title that would inspire me to
- pick this book up for almost any kind of reading that I habitually do.
- Nonetheless, I found this an incredible fascinating, and well written,
- potpourri of the science and folklore of trees. With a wealth of
- information covering 20 varieties of trees, this book should satisfy
- even the most ravenous seeker of information. Included are types of
- trees from the mighty oak, one of whose uses is to produce corks, to
- the towering redwoods. A nicely prosaic description of each--in
- non-technical terms--is included. A slice of intriguing historical
- data is also included and a dash of seasoning in the form of less
- often remembered facts has been stirred in. The nutritional
- composition of nuts was fascinating, as was the BTU content from
- various trees when used in the stove or fireplace. Occasionally we are
- treated to a colonial recipe for pickled walnuts or sycamore wine,
- reminding us of how much better our ancestors used the natural
- environment available to them than we care to.
-
- I do recommend this book to anyone who has an interest in trees, to
- anyone who enjoys a well written book, and especially to anyone who is
- a collector of forgotten facts and folklore. It will find a permanent
- place on your bookshelf and you will find yourself picking it up over
- and over again. I for one am looking forward to seeing more by Rebecca
- Rupp.
-
- This books rates a 5 on my scale of readability
- 0 = Ugh 5 = A real keeper
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- HEART'S DESIRES
- by Katharine Marlowe
- (Donald I. Fine, 1991)
-
- "At random moments, often when she was happiest, she'd have a sudden
- viewing of that scene. Like a full color slide from someone else's
- collection slipped mistakenly into the midst of her own, it would
- click into focus and she'd gaze at the carnage, breath held, eyes gone
- wide. She'd study the image then force it away, shaking her head to
- clear it of those lives, that long-gone horror..."
-
- In HEART'S DESIRES, the literary debut of Katharine Marlowe, childhood
- traumas reverberate through the life of a woman who is successful and
- happily married with children, but who is unable to fully escape the
- dark memories of her past.
-
- Growing up in 1950s Manhattan, the daughter of divorced parents and a
- mother who is "ahead of her time", Aly is used to her mom's special
- overnight friends--most of them married--but takes an immediate,
- inexplicable dislike to one very eligible bachelor, a plainclothes
- detective with the NYPD. Left alone with him one evening, Aly's worst
- fears are realized. When her mother dismisses Aly's accusation of
- abuse as a figment of her young imagination, Aly decides to move in
- with her father. Shortly thereafter, a tragic act of unspeakable
- violence shatters her life. The memory of this horror haunts Aly
- throughout adulthood, affecting her choice of career and men--and
- distorting her perception of herself--until she finally confronts the
- subconscious truths controlling all she feels and does.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- FORBIDDEN CHANNELS
- The Truth They Hide From TV GUIDE
- by Penny Stallings
- (HarperPerennial, 1991)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- Normally, as you know, we maintain a <ahem> high level of dignity and
- taste here in RFP. Now, however, the time has come to throw off the
- shackles of good breeding and dish some dirt. As the unbridled (but
- accurate) cover text says: "FORBIDDEN CHANNELS blows the lid off the
- rumors, the scandals, and the deepest, darkest secrets of your
- favorite small-screen stars". What you have here is the NATIONAL
- ENQUIRER for college graduates. Who could resist reading about what
- the TV stars are like when the cameras aren't rolling--the feuds, the
- secret pasts, the plastic surgery. FORBIDDEN CHANNELS has the answers
- to these fascinating questions:
-
- What did Eva (GREEN ACRES) Gabor wear under her wigs? (Hint: It
- involves advanced engineering.)
- What really went on between takes on the set of HOWDY DOODY?
- What was it that Oscar Levant said that got his show canceled?
- Who did they originally want to play STAR TREK's Mr. Spock?
- Who was originally cast as DALLAS' Bobby Ewing? Pam?
- What really went on between Desi and Lucy, Sonny and Cher, Bruce and
- Cybill?
- How did Steve McQueen get off WANTED DEAD OR ALIVE?
- Did Flipper really commit suicide?
-
- Did you know that these actors used to appear on daytime soap operas:
- Ellen Burstyn, Armand Assante, Kathleen Turner, Ted Danson, Sigourney
- Weaver, Roy Scheider, Robert De Niro, Dustin Hoffman, Martin Sheen,
- Jack Lemmon, James Earl Jones, Hal Linden, Eva Marie Saint? Did you
- know that Dustin Hoffman made TV commercials for Volkswagen?
-
- And the pictures are wonderful. Familiar stars caught in unfamiliar
- roles, or as babies or children. Old, old photographs from long
- forgotten episodes of live television with familiar faces in them.
-
- FORBIDDEN CHANNELS is the guilty pleasure of Spring 1991, and also
- makes a dandy photograph album for all of us who grew up in front of a
- television set. Author Penny Stallings is a pop-culture essayist on
- THE MacNEIL/LEHRER NEWS HOUR, author of FLESH & FANTASY and ROCK AND
- ROLL CONFIDENTIAL, and managing editor of TITTERS: THE FIRST ANTHOLOGY
- OF HUMOR BY WOMEN.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- RUPERT MURDOCH
- by Jerome Tuccille
- (Donald I. Fine, 1991)
-
- Now available in paperback, with new and updated information, RUPERT
- MURDOCH, by Jerome Tuccille, is the most complete and objective look
- at the man many observers call the "Citizen Kane" of his time. While
- other Murdoch biographies have been predominantly critical works,
- Tuccille, a veteran investigative financial journalist, focuses on the
- facts--the hows and whys of Murdoch's deals--and leaves critical
- judgement to the reader.
-
- Through interviews with numerous sources both inside and outside the
- Murdoch media empire, including a rare session with Murdoch himself,
- the author reveals little-known facts about the man behind the public
- face, and explores how--in spite of skeptics who claim he is
- overextending himself--he manages his widespread international
- operations in a remarkably hands-on manner, while continuing to add to
- his unprecedented string of successful acquisitions.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- WORD WATCHER'S HANDBOOK (Third Edition)
- A Deletionary of the Most Abused and Misused Words
- by Phyllis Martin
- (St. Martin's, 1991)
- review by Howard Frye
-
- "All our lives we've been urged to add words to our vocabularies.
- Isn't it time we were encouraged to delete feeble phrases and abused
- or misused words from our speech and writing?"
- ---from WORD WATCHER'S HANDBOOK
-
-
- Going through the pages of WORD WATCHER'S HANDBOOK is by turns
- educational (when you pick up new information), embarrassing (when
- author Martin condemns one of your long-standing speech habits), and
- provoking (when you disagree with Martin's insistence on conservative
- and formal word usage). In the "Deletionary" section, containing words
- and phrases that should be removed from your speech, I winced to be
- reminded that my beloved "hopefully", and "curiously enough" are
- ungainly and make many listeners gag. But I think that replacing the
- often-heard "aren't I?" with the correct "am I not?" is going to make
- most people think you're quoting Victorian poetry.
-
- In the chapter on usage, I was happy to see that Martin confirms the
- plural status of "scissors". I've heard several speakers recently use
- the word in the singular, even catching one character in a television
- show asking for "a scissors". On the other hand, it seems odd to
- insist on an old definition of "decimate", to "select by lot and kill
- one in every ten". In my vocabulary "decimate" has been modernized to
- refer to a more contemporary form of destruction.
-
- My favorite sections of WORD WATCHER'S HANDBOOK are the pronunciation
- guides. I don't know about you, but I bet I have hundreds of words
- stored away in some corner of my brain, words that I know the meanings
- of but I can't use because I don't know how to say them. For instance,
- we all know that a wine gets aged (one syllable, long a). But when
- referring to an elderly individual is it really correct to say AY-jed?
- (Yes.) Do you really pronounce the "k" in knish? (Yes.) Also, lately
- I've heard "species" pronounced on TV more often as SPEE-sees, rather
- than the SPEE-sheez that I've always said. Who's right? (I am.) And is
- "schism" pronounced SKIZ-em or SHIZ-em? (Neither--it's SIZ-em.) There
- are also pronunciation guides to French and Italian menu items as well
- as place names. For instance: is it New OR-lee-anz or New or-LEENZ?
- (New OR-lee-anz.)
-
- With many examples, exercises, and lots of good advice, WORD WATCHER'S
- HANDBOOK is just the thing for cleaning up the words and phrases you
- use now, and for getting the rest of your vocabulary out of the closet
- and into your conversation. Phyllis Martin is also the author of
- MARTIN'S MAGIC FORMULA FOR GETTING THE RIGHT JOB.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- BOOKS ABOUT THE PERSIAN GULF
-
- This list of recommended reading on the Persian Gulf was broadcast on
- National Public Radio and has been very popular.
-
- A Peace to End All Peace: Creating the Modern Middle East by David
- Fromkin (Holt, Avon paper)
- The Rape of Kuwait by Jean P. Sasson (Knightsbridge, paper)
- Republic of Fear by Samir al-Khalil (Univ. of Calif., Pantheon paper)
- The Modern History of Iraq by Phebe Marr (Westview)
- Iraq: Eastern Flank of the Arab World by Christine M. Helms
- (Brookings)
- The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money & Power by Daniel Yergin
- (Simon & Schuster)
- Saddam Hussein and the Crisis in the Gulf by Judith Miller & Laurie
- Mylroie (Times Books, paper)
- From Beirut to Jerusalem by Thomas Friedman (Anchor, paper)
- Middle East and the West by Bernard Lewis (HarperCollins)
- The Future Battlefield: The Arab-Israeli Conflict by Hirsh Goodman &
- W. Seth Carus (Transaction)
- The Persian Gulf and the West: The Dilemmas of Security by Charles A.
- Kupchan (Unwin & Hyman)
- Arms & Oil: U.S. Military Strategy & The Persian Gulf by Thomas L.
- McNaugher (Brookings)
- The High Walls of Jerusalem: A History of the Balfour Declaration &
- The Birth of the British Mandate for Palestine by Ronald Sanders
- (Holt)
- Arabia, the Gulf, & the West: A Critical View of Arabs & Their Oil
- Policy by John B. Kelly (Basic)
- The Vanished Imam: Musa Al Sadr & the Shia of Lebanon by Fouad Ajami
- (Cornell Univ.)
- Lessons of Modern War, Vol. 2: The Iran-Iraq War by Anthony H.
- Cordesman & Abraham R. Wagner (Westview)
- If War Comes: How to Defeat Saddam Hussein by Trevor Dupuy (Dupuy)
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- WHERE ON EARTH?
- A Refreshing View of Geography
- by Donnat V. Grillet
- (Prentice Hall, 1991)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- "Many people say that geography is their favorite subject. Yet about
- half of the American young people polled couldn't locate the United
- States on a map. Many said that Washington, D.C., is in the state of
- Washington or IS the state of Washington. More than a quarter of young
- Texans could not name the country that lies "south of the border, down
- Mexico way."
-
- Furthermore, as author Grillet points out, this ignorance has some
- very real consequences:
-
- "The Dust Bowl of the 1930s reflected a general ignorance of
- topography and climate. The killer air-pollution attack on Donora,
- Pennsylvania, in 1948 reflected a lack of environmental knowledge. The
- discharge of liquid waste in a disposal well near Denver, Colorado,
- between 1962 and 1965 led to earthquakes, further demonstrating our
- lack of understanding of geology. Building structures on unstable
- ground contributed to devastation in the 1964 quake in Alaska."
-
- "Other recent geographically influenced events included the dust storm
- in the Iranian desert that aborted arguably the most important US
- military mission since Vietnam...the deaths near Mount Saint Helens's
- eruptions...the numerous landslides and mudslides and floods in
- California...the ongoing fight to clean up toxic waste and air
- pollution."
-
- Several groups, notably the National Geographic Society, have decided
- to do something about our most overlooked academic discipline. One
- example of this push is the National Geography Bee, sponsored
- nationwide by the NGS. This book of 14 multiple choice quizzes and 50
- map quizzes will help youngsters study for the Geography Bee, and help
- adults shore up some gaps in their education.
-
- The quizzes cover such areas as: Agriculture/Food, Animals, Cities,
- Climate, Continents, Countries, The Planet Earth, Islands, Landmarks,
- Mountains, Natural Resources, People, The United States, and Waters of
- the World. In addition, there is a Geographic Dictionary to define
- words like biome, equinox, karst, loess, moraine, taiga, etc. And
- sprinkled throughout there are pages of "Oddish Facts" such as, "The
- western tip of Virginia is 25 miles west of Detroit, Michigan."
-
- Between the multiple choices and the map quizzes, there are about 660
- questions in all. I decided to go through the book's tests, and give
- my score as representative of the average American citizen who has had
- a normal public school education and a little college, and who has
- received high grades throughout. I had 327 correct answers, which
- author Grillet judged "Very good. You have more than a passing
- knowledge of the world." Please notice, however, that I still scored a
- bit under 50%, which would have been a flunking grade in any of the
- schools I ever attended. (When did they put Suriname in South
- America?) I'm planning a trip to the bookstore to buy an atlas
- tomorrow, and vow that WHERE ON EARTH? is soon to become one of the
- most-thumbed volumes on my shelf.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- WRITER'S NOTEBOOK PRESS
-
- Writer's Notebook Press is the nonfiction imprint of Pulphouse
- Publishing. There are two periodicals being produced by them that you
- might be interested in:
-
- THE REPORT: A writer's magazine, filled with writers talking about
- all aspects of writing. Digest-sized, over 60 pages, it is full of the
- most recent market information, how-to-write articles, business
- articles, and lots of fun and controversy. It's $2.95 each, $10 for
- four, and $30 for 12 monthly issues.
-
- MONAD: A Journal of Science Fiction Criticism edited by Damon Knight.
- This is irregular, and only one issue has appeared so far. It's $5 for
- trade paper, $15 for the limited cloth, and $18 for a four-issue
- subscription.
-
- Send orders to: Pulphouse Publishing, Box 1227, Eugene, OR 97440.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- LOVESICK: THE MARILYN SYNDROME
- by Elizabeth Macavoy, Ph.D. and Susan Israelson
- (Donald I. Fine, 1991)
-
- Marilyn Monroe suffered from it. Millions of women ignore its symptoms
- every day and face the consequences of ill-fated romances and
- devastating "fatal attractions". LOVESICK: THE MARILYN SYNDROME, which
- DIF published on February 15, 1991, is a book for women who didn't
- find the valentine of their dreams because of this destructive,
- emotional illness that affects those who don't love themselves and
- can't accept love from others.
-
- Written by Dr. Elizabeth Macavoy, a psychologist who runs "Women Who
- Love Too Much" workshops, and Susan Israelson, one of her recovered
- patients, LOVESICK rises above the pack of relationship books by not
- only diagnosing the symptoms of this illness, but also providing a
- step-by-step recovery plan. Similar to the philosophy behind
- Alcoholics' Anonymous, LOVESICK concludes that sufferers will be
- lovesick for life, BUT, with preemptive measures, they can spot the
- warning signs, avoid the pitfalls of unhealthy romances and even find
- true love.
-
- LOVESICK also traces the roots of this affliction--it is often a
- product of growing up in a dysfunctional family--as well as some of
- the side-effects (such as substance abuse), instructing readers how to
- achieve not only healthy love lives, but balanced professional and
- familial relationships too.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- MM II: THE RETURN OF MARILYN MONROE
- by Sam Staggs
- (Donald I. Fine, 1991)
-
- In his novel MM II: THE RETURN OF MARILYN MONROE, Sam Staggs combines
- intensive research with bold imagination to explore the provocative,
- and--as rendered here--startlingly plausible scenario that Marilyn
- Monroe is alive and well and living in New York.
-
- Almost eerily capturing her voice and the soft-spoken, smoldering
- sexuality that catapulted her to stardom, as well as her
- often-suppressed witty sense of humor, Staggs' novel--a lovely "what
- if"--supposes that Marilyn's 1962 "suicide" was orchestrated by the
- powers-that-were to prevent her from making good on her threat to go
- public about her relationship with John F. Kennedy. An emotionally
- fragile alcoholic, Marilyn is abducted to a small mining town in
- Colorado. But under the strain of captivity, Marilyn surprises
- everyone, including herself, by summoning the strength of the woman
- she kept hidden inside--Norma Jean. She escapes to New York and,
- disguised as a redhead, pursues a serious acting and singing career
- under an alias, supporting herself with odd jobs, including
- waitressing and clerking at Doubleday's flagship bookstore on Fifth
- Avenue and 57th Street... Until a suspicious former colleague appears
- and a talent search is launched for the "real" Marilyn Monroe as we
- might know her today.
-
- AUTHOR SAM STAGGS DISCUSSES THE MARILYN MYTH:
-
- "Many others have attempted to solve the mystery of what really
- happened in August 1962 in Marilyn Monroe's house in Brentwood. But
- because I'm writing fiction, not biography or history, I am permitted
- to step across the usual boundaries and meet a very different Marilyn
- Monroe, one who goes on living into 1963, 1964, 1965... Have I started
- something? Is this the next phase of the Marilyn Monroe myth? No one
- really wants to relinquish Marilyn. That's why her image is alive
- everywhere today--on magazine covers, in advertisements, in the shop
- windows of Hollywood, New York and countless other cities. So in a
- very real sense Marilyn is alive; certainly her glamour and her
- unforgettable image are alive. Every time I walk on Fifth Avenue near
- 57th Street, I half expect to see a woman in a red wig, with an
- unmistakable figure and a dazzling smile, rushing into Doubleday, late
- as usual, but pausing just enough to whisper 'Sorry' in that classic
- breathy voice and then laugh, mostly to herself."
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- THE BARNHART DICTIONARY COMPANION
- A Quarterly to Update General Dictionaries
- David K. Barnhart, Editor
- (Springer-Verlag, 1991)
-
- As the pursuit of knowledge advances, a new language is created to
- express new ideas, concepts and discoveries. The revised editions of
- dictionaries cannot keep up with the avalanche of new terminology. On
- the leading edge of scientific research, Springer-Verlag expands its
- boundaries to include the science of language with THE BARNHART
- DICTIONARY COMPANION.
-
- The only publication of its kind in the world devoted to updating
- general dictionaries, THE BARNHART DICTIONARY COMPANION has recorded
- nearly 4,000 new terms and expressions recently added to the English
- language. An essential addition to the modern library, the dictionary
- covers: science and technology; the social sciences; business,
- economics and finance; the arts; contemporary lifestyle; sports; and
- common vocabulary.
-
- Pioneering the classification of knowledge, THE BARNHART DICTIONARY
- COMPANION features:
-
- * new words and meanings not in current dictionaries
- * word usage and commentary
- * explanations of word formation
- * variation in forms of entry word
- * comprehensive classification of usage features
- * word origins explained with attention to related and earlier forms
- * quotations from a wide range of literary, scientific, and general
- news sources
- ...and much more!
-
- Send $49 ($60 Institutional Rate) for a 1991 subscription to Volume 6
- (4 quarterly issues) to: Springer-Verlag New York, Inc., Attn: Dean
- Smith, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010. Or you can charge it by
- calling 1-800-SPRINGER.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- OFF TO A GOOD START
- by Mary Ann Bartusis, M.D.
- (1991, Donald I. Fine, $18.95, ISBN 1-55611-186-X)
- review by Travis Adkins
-
- Getting married should be one of the happiest times in a person's
- life. But there are all kinds of hidden pressures that arise in
- planning a wedding and honeymoon that can strain even the truest of
- loves. To help engaged couples avoid the pitfalls and perfect their
- wedding, marriage therapist and psychiatrist Mary Ann Bartusis has
- written Off TO A GOOD START: A Guide For Engaged Couples and
- Newlyweds Of All Ages.
-
- Whether you're marrying your first love or your fourth spouse, whether
- you are young or middle-aged, starting out with anyone new is always a
- new start. Now, for the first time, Mary Ann Bartusis guides couples
- through the many concerns of the newly married, including easy to
- identify trouble spots such as:
-
- * money questions
- * lifestyle expectations
- * pressure from parents, in-laws and other family members
- * attitudes toward work and education
- * career choices
- * conflicting work schedules.
-
- As a newlywed myself I was particularly interested in OFF TO A GOOD
- START, hoping that it might reveal the secrets of a successful
- marriage. Although it didn't reveal any secrets, it did provide
- common-sense solutions to problems that couples typically face in
- their new life together. I recommend this book not so much for the
- advice that it gives, but for the issues it raises.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- THE WORLD BOOK RUSH-PRESBYTERIAN-ST. LUKE'S MEDICAL CENTER
- MEDICAL ENCYCLOPEDIA
- Your Guide to Good Health
- (World Book Inc., 1991)
- review by Howard Frye
-
- A comprehensive, understandable, and practical encyclopedia of over
- 4,500 alphabetically-arranged entries (over 1,000 pages) that explain
- parts of the body, medical terms, pharmaceuticals, medical procedures,
- diseases, seemingly everything anyone would need to know about their
- health and its care.
-
- Copiously illustrated, with photographs, charts, and drawings, this
- MEDICAL ENCYCLOPEDIA is easy and quick to use. Many first aid
- procedures are explained with a series of illustrations, making them
- particularly easy to put to practical use. Extra sections in the back
- give you help in accessing entries by symptom--useful when you don't
- know exactly what to look up. Other sections discuss health care
- issues by age group and cover nutrition and exercise.
-
- THE WORLD BOOK RUSH-PRESBYTERIAN-ST. LUKE'S MEDICAL CENTER MEDICAL
- ENCYCLOPEDIA is a one-volume health care reference book that will
- serve the entire family. Highly recommended, particularly for its
- readability.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- ACES
- by Robert Denny
- (Donald I. Fine, 1991, ISBN 1-55611-225-4)
- review by Darryl Kenning
-
- ACES is a story about the bomber crews that went into German
- territory, day after day from 1942 until the end of the second World
- War. To a lesser extent it is a story of the dwindling German
- resources as well. Mr. Denny, with some discipline, stuck to his
- original story throughout the book and was able to keep the reader's
- attention well focused. In a way that's too bad, because a number of
- comparatively minor incidents and personalities would certainly be
- worth additional time and space (perhaps another book?).
-
- In many ways the author seems to have captured the story of the events
- taking place on one narrow strip of the broad canvas of the war. The
- personalities might have been a bit more defined. It is clearly a
- difficult task to write a novel about such a momentous slice of
- history with a lot of the heroes still looking down at your
- typewriter. In fact the very writing makes it clear that the author
- participated in the historic events of that time and place.
-
- Aficionados of this period won't want to miss this one.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- FILMED BOOKS AND PLAYS
- A List of Books and Plays from Which Films Have Been Made
- 1928-1986
- by A.G.S. Enser
- ($59.95, Gower Publishing)
-
- FILMED BOOKS AND PLAYS is a unique and valuable reference work,
- containing a list of books and plays from which English language films
- have been made between the years 1928 and 1986.
-
- The commencing date of 1928 was chosen because from that year on most
- films produced for public viewing were talking pictures. This edition
- brings it right up-to-date and includes films made especially for TV
- and indicates which filmed books and plays are available for home
- video viewing.
-
- Add 3% for postage and handling and send to: Gower Publishing Company,
- Old Post Road, Brookfield, VT 05036. For fastest service, call
- 1-800-535-9544 (orders only) or FAX 802-276-3837.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- CASTING THE CIRCLE
- A Women's Book of Ritual
- by Diane Stein
- (The Crossing Press, 1990)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- I was brought up with the rule that it is generally impolite to talk
- about sex, religion, or politics in polite society, mostly because
- emotions tend to run rather high in these areas. I quickly realized,
- however, that banning these three fascinating topics leaves one with
- not much more than the weather and baseball statistics as
- conversational pivots, and my generation has suffered because of this
- popular rule of etiquette. Many of us find ourselves in lives that
- have no visible purpose, and no worthwhile foundation. And some of us,
- particularly if we are women, find that the popular western religions
- seem foreign to our nature, not the fundamental spiritual base that we
- need. CASTING THE CIRCLE addresses just this problem.
-
- Women's Spirituality is a fairly new subject for several reasons. To
- begin with, it's only recently that women have had the social and
- economic clout to get books by and about women published. And it's
- only recently that archaeological evidence has emerged that indicates
- that civilization was not always the patriarchy we have grown
- accustomed to, nor was God always a Him. CASTING THE CIRCLE is a book
- for women who feel a need for spiritual sustenance in their lives, a
- spirituality that doesn't punish and demote them for their gender, but
- rather celebrates the creativity and nurturing that are the
- distinctive features of women everywhere.
-
- CASTING THE CIRCLE gives women a foundation of historical spirituality
- upon which they can base their own religious lives. The reader will
- discover what is known about the ancient goddesses and the ways in
- which women have traditionally manifested their spiritual selves. The
- largest part of the book is devoted to women's natural relationship
- with the moon and its phases, and to the important spokes of the
- Neverending Wheel of the Year and the rituals common to them. Each
- ritual is given with specific ideas for songs, words, music, and
- symbolic talismans, but Diane Stein always reminds the reader that
- each element should be personalized to the needs of the woman, or
- women, involved. This is one of the chief attractions of Women's
- Spirituality, as I see it---it's willingness to encompass the
- individual nature of its practitioners. Where many religions attempt
- to mold each person into a single form, Women's Spirituality
- encourages each woman to seek what she needs in her own way.
-
- It should be noted that CASTING THE CIRCLE is not the only book
- available concerning Women's Spirituality, but it is an excellent
- volume to begin with. Diane Stein is the author of a number of other
- related books: THE WOMEN'S SPIRITUALITY BOOK, THE GODDESS BOOK OF
- DAYS, etc. And there is a bibliography in the back of CASTING THE
- CIRCLE that will give the reader many other interesting titles. I
- recommended CASTING THE CIRCLE highly, and is best thought of as a
- gift---for yourself or for a female friend.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- *******************
- * COMPUTER CORNER *
- *******************
-
- COMPLETE GUIDE TO VENTURA PUBLISHER
- by G. Keith Gurganus & Gary Katz
- (ScottForesman Professional Books, 1991, $21.95)
- review by Drew Bartorillo
-
- Learning to use Xerox's Ventura Publisher can be very challenging. The
- documentation that comes with the Ventura Publisher software package
- is very cumbersome and confusing to use. Even after a couple of years
- of experience using Ventura Publisher and its documentation, I find it
- usually easier to learn a new feature by trial and error than to look
- it up in the documentation.
-
- COMPETE GUIDE TO VENTURA PUBLISHER shows you how to use the Ventura
- Publisher desktop publishing system. It assumes only a basic knowledge
- of computers and requires no previous experience using Ventura
- Publisher. Step-by-step tutorials logically introduce you to Ventura
- Publisher's commands while showing you how to produce a publication.
- After the tutorials, the book discusses advanced Ventura Publisher
- topics and continues with a complete reference section to all the
- Ventura Publisher commands.
-
- Following is a breakdown of the chapters in the book:
-
- o Chapter 1: Preparing for Desktop Publishing
- o Chapter 2: How Ventura Publisher Works
- o Chapter 3: Basic Layout with Ventura Publisher
- o Chapter 4: Creating Large Documents with Ventura Publisher
- o Chapter 5: Using Ventura Publisher's Built-in Graphic Tools
- o Chapter 6: Importing Graphics into Ventura Publisher
- o Chapter 7: Ventura Publisher's Menus and Commands
-
- Appendixes A through E include important information about installing
- Ventura Publisher, the Ventura Publisher character set, text
- attributes for importing word processed documents, third-party
- software utilities for Ventura Publisher, and a printout of Ventura
- Publisher sample chapters.
-
- All-in-all, I found COMPETE GUIDE TO VENTURA PUBLISHER to be very easy
- to use and a valuable addition to the suite of tools necessary to
- master Ventura Publisher. I especially liked the simple graphic and
- text explanation that was given to each of the pull-down menus and
- each command that is available within each of those menus. Even after
- having used Ventura Publisher for a couple of years I found I still
- had a few tricks to learn. Appendix D, listing third-party software
- utilities available for Ventura Publisher, is extremely valuable for a
- source of software that can make creating Ventura Publisher documents
- a little less painful. The name of the vendor that produces each of
- the add-on utilities is listed. It would have been very helpful if
- their addresses would have been listed also.
-
- One serious omission from COMPETE GUIDE TO VENTURA PUBLISHER is any
- discussion whatsoever of the features available with the Ventura
- Publisher Professional Extension add-on. The VERY powerful tabling
- feature is included in this extension along with vertical
- justification and others. Mention is made in the front of the book
- that the Professional Extension exists, but that is the last time it
- is ever mentioned. A TRUE complete guide to Ventura Publisher would
- also have included this valuable extension package. The new Gold
- versions of Ventura Publisher include the Professional Extension as
- part of the basic package. COMPETE GUIDE TO VENTURA PUBLISHER could
- have been easily used with the latest version of Ventura Publisher
- also if this information would have been included.
-
- --------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Coming in Reading For Pleasure #17, The Anniversary Issue, I will be
- reviewing two computer user guides written by Richard Maran (both from
- Hypergraphics Inc. in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada):
-
- Simplified User Guide for Microsoft Windows 3.0
- and
- MS DOS Simplified User Guide
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
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- #:#:#:#:#:#:#:#:#:#:#:#:#
- # 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:
-
- RAYMOND CHANDLER
- (1888-1959)
-
- article and reviews by Howard Frye
-
-
- "If being in revolt against a corrupt society constitutes being
- immature, then Philip Marlowe is extremely immature. If seeing dirt
- where there is dirt constitutes an inadequate social adjustment, then
- Philip Marlowe has inadequate social adjustment. Of course Marlowe is
- a failure and he knows it. He is a failure because he hasn't any
- money. A man who, without physical handicaps, cannot make a decent
- living is always a failure and usually a moral failure. But a lot of
- very good men have been failures because their particular talents did
- not suit their time and place. In the long run I guess we are all
- failures or we wouldn't have the kind of world we have."
- ---Raymond Chandler (RAYMOND CHANDLER SPEAKING, 1962)
-
-
- Born into a well-to-do family in Chicago, Raymond Chandler's mother
- took him to England when he was a boy and he received a classical
- education at Dulwich College in London, later attending a business
- college in Paris. He worked as a teacher and a freelance journalist
- before returning to the United States, and during World War I he
- served with the Canadian Gordon Highlanders in France and won two
- medals. After the war Chandler lived in Los Angeles, briefly working
- as a reporter, then as an accountant, finally becoming a very
- successful executive with several oil companies. He married Pearl
- Cecily Bowen, 17 years his senior, in 1924, and was devoted to her
- until her death in 1954. (Deteriorating health and alcoholism,
- possibly caused by depression over his wife's death, took his life
- only 5 years later.) It wasn't until the Depression, when he found
- himself broke and out of work, that he took up writing, selling his
- first story to the pulps (BLACK MASK) in 1933 ("Blackmailers Don't
- Shoot").
-
- Chandler wrote 20 novelettes for the pulps, in which the hero was
- occasionally nameless, occasionally Carmody, Dalmas, Malvern, Mallory,
- and finally became Philip Marlowe. His stories added weight to the
- new, more realistic form of "hard-boiled" detective fiction.
-
- One of Chandler's most famous pieces of writing was an essay called
- "The Simple Art of Murder", published in the ATLANTIC MONTHLY in
- December of 1944. In this essay you will find one of Chandler's most
- famous lines:
-
- "Down these mean streets a man must go who is not himself mean, who is
- neither tarnished nor afraid. The detective in this kind of story must
- be such a man. He is the hero, he is everything. He must be a complete
- man and a common man and yet an unusual man. He must be, to use a
- rather weathered phrase, a man of honor, by instinct, by
- inevitability, without thought of it, and certainly without saying
- it."
-
- Another insight into Marlowe's character is provided by Robert B.
- Parker, whose name appears more prominently later in this article:
-
- "The hard-boiled hero belongs, therefore, not to the Marxist but to
- the chivalric tradition--a tradition he shares in this country with
- the Westerner. He is not of the people; he is alone. His adventures
- are solitary statements. His commitment is to a private moral code
- without which no other code makes any sense to him. He regularly
- reaffirms the code on behalf of people who don't have one."
- ---Robert B. Parker ("The American Tough Guy" in MURDER INK
- by Dilys Winn)
-
- You will find that one of Chandler's chief themes was the class system
- in America. By keeping Marlowe lower-middle class and having him rub
- shoulders with the wealthy, Chandler was able to play the social
- critic by highlighting the pros and cons of being wealthy or poor in a
- capitalist system. Like Hammett and Hemingway, Chandler wrote about an
- unpleasant world in a realistic fashion, creating detective stories
- that, while enjoyable, certainly are not escapism.
-
-
- THE FILE ON PHILIP MARLOWE:
-
- Philip Marlowe was born in 1906 in Santa Rosa, California, and
- attended two years of college in Oregon. He began work as an insurance
- investigator, eventually winding up working in the L.A. County DA's
- office as an investigator, at least until he was fired for
- insubordination.
-
- * He's an unmarried white male just over 6 feet tall, 190 pounds, with
- dark hair and brown eyes.
-
- * He can most often be found wearing a hat, a trench coat, and
- horn-rimmed sunglasses.
-
- * He smokes quite a lot--usually Camels, but a pipe helps him figure
- out tough cases when he's in his office.
-
- * He drinks quite a lot, and keeps a bottle in the bottom drawer of
- his desk.
-
- * His office is 1-1/2 rooms on the 6th floor of the Cahuenga Building
- on Hollywood Boulevard. He has no secretary, nor does he have an
- answering service. (His phone number, by the way, is GLenview 7537.)
-
- * His apartment is also on the 6th floor--$60 a month buys him 3-1/2
- rooms.
-
- * He drives a Chrysler and carries a gun in a shoulder holster.
-
- * For fun he works on chess problems and goes to the movies.
-
- * He gets $25 a day plus expenses ("mostly gasoline and whiskey"), and
- he doesn't do divorce work.
-
- TRIVIA: Raymond Chandler's London solicitor was a colleague: mystery
- writer Michael Gilbert.
-
-
- THE BIG SLEEP
- (1939)
-
- "I'm on a case. I'm selling what I have to sell to make a living. What
- little guts and intelligence the Lord gave me and a willingness to get
- pushed around in order to protect a client."
- ---from THE BIG SLEEP
-
- "Neither of the two people in the room paid any attention to the way I
- came in, although only one of them was dead."
- ---from THE BIG SLEEP
-
-
- As soon as I got PERCHANCE TO DREAM, Robert B. Parker's new sequel to
- THE BIG SLEEP (see review below), I sat down and reread the original
- novel to refresh my memory. You remember THE BIG SLEEP. General
- Sternwood, old, sick, and very rich, hires Philip Marlowe to take care
- of a blackmail threat for him. Who could forget that first meeting
- between the two men in the Sternwood greenhouse? Marlowe sweating in
- his shirt sleeves and drinking the General's fine brandy, while the
- General sits nearly immobile in his wheelchair. Marlowe likes the
- General, which is the start of (now) two books' worth of trouble.
-
- The General tells Marlowe about his family. There's oldest daughter
- Vivian, painted as predatory and hard as nails. And there's her most
- recent husband, Rusty Regan: a former bootlegger who became fast
- friends with the General and disappeared about a month ago. And then
- there's the youngest daughter Carmen, who giggles a lot and spreads
- trouble wherever she goes. Now the General has received several
- gambling IOUs from a man named Geiger, apparently signed by Carmen.
- Marlowe figures that there's a hidden agenda here--not only does the
- General want the blackmail taken care of, he wants to be reassured
- that Rusty doesn't have anything to do with it.
-
- Almost immediately people assume that Marlowe has been hired to find
- the missing Rusty, which seems to upset everyone. Despite his initial
- decision to stick to the blackmail, Marlowe gets caught up in the
- mystery of what happened to Rusty. THE BIG SLEEP successfully juggles
- these two main plotlines, making it a more complex, and more
- interesting, mystery.
-
- TRIVIA: THE BIG SLEEP was an created, in part, from two of his early
- pulp stories: "Killer in the Rain" (1935) and "The Curtain" (1936).
-
-
- FAREWELL, MY LOVELY (1940)
-
- Moose Malloy, "a big man but not more than six feet five inches tall
- and not wider than a beer truck", wants to find his girlfriend Velma,
- who disappeared while he was in prison. Reluctantly, Marlowe begins to
- look for Velma, and his search will turn up a blackmailer, an elderly
- alcoholic with a secret, an Indian, a phony psychic, a crooked doctor
- managing a psychiatric clinic, a gambling ship, crooked cops, and
- women of loose virtue. But will he ever find Velma? And will he ever
- housetrain Moose Malloy?
-
- TRIVIA: FAREWELL, MY LOVELY makes use of three earlier pulp stories:
- "The Man Who Like Dogs" (1936), "Try the Girl" (1937), and "Mandarin's
- Jade" (1937).
-
-
- THE HIGH WINDOW (1942)
-
- A rare coin worth $10,000 is missing--stolen, according to Marlowe's
- client Mrs. Murdock, by her son's wife. Marlowe has only to get the
- coin back and arrange for a quiet divorce for the young Murdock.
- Sounded pretty simple, that is until the bodies started piling up.
-
-
- THE LADY IN THE LAKE (1943)
-
- Once again we have a missing female: Derace Kingsley, an executive at
- a perfume company, hires Marlowe to find his wife, Crystal. In this
- case Marlowe will do much traveling, and will even find another man
- whose wife is missing. Chandler often seems fascinated by unlikely
- and unsuccessful marriages.
-
- TRIVIA: THE LADY IN THE LAKE makes use of three earlier pulp stories:
- "Bay City Blues" (1937), "The Lady in the Lake" (1939), and "No Crime
- in the Mountains" (1941).
-
-
- THE LITTLE SISTER (1949)
-
- The title character wants to find her missing brother, and Marlowe
- explores the seamy side of Hollywood uncovering drugs, blackmail, and
- murder. In this book you will find the evidence of Chandler's
- increasing dislike of Los Angeles, which Marlowe characterizes as
- having "no more personality than a paper cup". It is possible that
- this antagonism was caused by his experiences as a screenwriter.
- (While we're on the subject, you can read more about the horrors of
- screenwriting in Harlan Ellison's THE GLASS TEAT, about television,
- and in William Goldman's ADVENTURES IN THE SCREEN TRADE. Both are
- fascinating reading.) Chandler received Oscar nominations for the
- screenplay for DOUBLE INDEMNITY (1944), written with Bill Wilder, and
- THE BLUE DAHLIA (1946)
-
-
- THE SIMPLE ART OF MURDER (1950)
-
- This collection includes his famous essay, "The Simple Art of Murder"
- (originally published in the ATLANTIC MONTHLY), a story originally
- published in the SATURDAY EVENING POST ("I'll Be Waiting"), and eleven
- stories from the pulps: "Red Wind", "Finger Man", "Goldfish", "Trouble
- Is My Business", "Smart-Aleck Kill", "Guns at Cyrano's", "Pearls Are a
- Nuisance", "Nevada Gas", "Spanish Blood", "The King in Yellow", and
- "Pick-Up on Noon Street".
-
-
- THE LONG GOODBYE (1953)
-
- Marlowe befriends Terry Lennox, an alcoholic living the high life.
- When Terry's ex-wife gets herself killed, he flees to Mexico, where it
- is said that he wrote a confession and shot himself in a hotel room.
- Marlowe senses a cover-up and his sense of honor forces him to
- discover what really happened to his troublesome friend.
-
-
- PLAYBACK (1958)
-
- I haven't been able to locate a copy of this novel, and the only
- information available from my references is that the book is not very
- good. Whether that's "not very good" for Chandler, or just "not very
- good" in general, I don't know.
-
- TRIVIA: Chandler wrote a screenplay called PLAYBACK, published by
- Mysterious Press in 1985.
-
-
- KILLER IN THE RAIN (1964)
-
- This collection contains the other 8 novelettes, which had been
- "cannibalized"--Chandler's term--becoming parts of THE BIG SLEEP,
- FAREWELL, MY LOVELY, and THE LADY IN THE LAKE.
-
-
- THE SMELL OF FEAR (1965)
-
- This is a short story collection published after Chandler's death that
- contains the only story originally written about Philip Marlowe, "The
- Pencil".
-
-
- POODLE SPRINGS
- (1989)
-
- See the review in RFP #14.
-
-
- PERCHANCE TO DREAM
- by Robert B. Parker
- (1991, Putnam, $18.95)
-
- "How you been, Marlowe?" he said.
- "Nobody's hit me with a sap this month," I said.
- "Surprising," Gregory said.
- "Month's not over yet," I said.
- ---from PERCHANCE TO DREAM
-
-
- We all knew that Robert B. Parker could mimic the style of Chandler
- when he finished the four chapters Chandler left at his death and it
- was published as POODLE SPRINGS (see the review in RFP #14). Now he
- not only borrows Chandler's style, his characters, and even one of his
- old plots in this sequel to THE BIG SLEEP. In PERCHANCE TO DREAM we're
- back with the Sternwoods--the General is gone, but Vivian is still
- around, and still just as attracted to Marlowe. Morris the butler is
- still there, Bernie Ohls is still in the DA's office, Captain Gregory
- is still at the Missing Persons Bureau, and Carmen is still causing
- trouble. And casino owner Eddie Mars is back, this time more of an
- ally than an adversary.
-
- This time Carmen has disappeared from the sanatarium where she was
- getting treatment. According to who you talk talk to, she's either
- escaped, been kidnapped, been released normally, or is still there and
- just not well enough to receive visitors. Usually the Sternwood money
- would be enough to open any doors, but it seems that Dr. Bonsentir,
- the man who runs the clinic, has even bigger connections, connections
- that have the power to affect even the police. But Marlowe has been
- given $1 by Morris to find Carmen Sternwood, so no amount of money or
- political pull will scare him off the case.
-
- During the course of this new Carmen Sternwood case, Marlowe will deal
- with fraud, police corruption, sexual kinks, and drugs. He'll also
- find out about what water rights mean in the western part of the U.S.,
- and what they're worth. And Vivian still looks awfully good, and
- Carmen is still nothing but trouble.
-
- I liked PERCHANCE TO DREAM even better than POODLE SPRINGS. Parker has
- captured the character of Marlowe to perfection, and that's the core
- of all the Marlowe stories. Phillip Marlowe is an amazing character.
- For one thing, he's enormously self-assured--most insults are
- responded to with gentle humor, not defensive anger. And Marlowe's
- smart. Not just in the way he is able to solve the mysteries, but in
- the way he handles himself and others. He often gets into jams, but
- never out of ignorance, it's just that his job requires him to take
- calculated risks with some frequency. The only exception to his
- understanding of human behavior is in his own relationship with women;
- he either sees his own sexual/romantic responses imperfectly, or he's
- not sharing his insights with us.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- "The private eye could only have happened first in those years after
- World War I, the years of Prohibition. There had always been
- aggressive, straight-shooting fiction heroes. But it took the mood of
- the twenties to add cynicism, detachment, a kind of guarded
- romanticism and a compulsion towards action. The disillusionment that
- followed the war, the frustration over the mushrooming gangster
- control of the cities, affected the detective story as much as it did
- mainstream fiction."
- ---Ron Goulart (in AN INFORMAL HISTORY OF THE PULP MAGAZINES)
-
- "It has been said, and with some justification I think, that the
- reason why the pulp detectives were so popular was that the average
- American had lost faith in the society in which he or she lived, and
- therefore needed heroes who cared about real values--even if they were
- only in the pages of magazines."
- ---Peter Haining (in MYSTERY! AN ILLUSTRATED HISTORY OF CRIME &
- DETECTIVE FICTION)
-
- "The English may not be the best writers in the world but they are
- incomparably the best dull writers."
- ---Raymond Chandler
-
- "Best character and suspense writer for consistent but not large
- production, Elisabeth Holding. Best plodding detail man, Freeman Wills
- Crofts. Best Latin and Greek quoter, Dorothy Sayers. Writer with best
- natural charm, Philip Macdonald. Best scary writer: none, they don't
- scare me. But Dorothy Hughes does it the most. Most intriguing
- character I can think of offhand, the M.C. in Margaret Millar's WALL
- OF EYES. Best idea man: Cornell Woolrich."
- ---Raymond Chandler, in a letter to Alex Barris, April 16, 1949
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- MYSTERY POSTER NOW AVAILABLE
-
- Want to know what Sara Paretsky's hot-shot private eye, V.I.
- Warshawski is up to? Just take a look at SISTERS IN CRIME'S stunning
- addition to every mystery lover's 'must have' list--a POSTER!
-
- Full color--Unique--Frameable--20"x30" size. With its rich, glossy
- black background, elegant red Sisters In Crime logo, a map of the
- United States provides the framework for "Solving Mysteries
- Coast-to-Coast" with 44 of mystery's most Lethal Ladies.
-
- Clever, colored artwork gives an intriquing glimpse into the novels
- and series characters created by members of Sisters in Crime--many of
- whom have won Agatha, Anthony, Edgar and Macavity awards.
-
- How will Annie Laurance Darling, Carolyn G. Hart's sleuth, meet murder
- in THE CHRISTIE CAPER? Will Barbara D'Amato's Cat Marsala survive
- being thrown overboard in HARDBALL? What's the latest with: Susan
- Dunlap, Charlotte MacLeod, Lia Matera, Nancy Pickard, Sharyn McCrumb
- and some hot new authors--44 of your favorite or soon-to-be favorite
- authors in all.
-
- This collector's edition is available for $8 from Sisters in Crime, PO
- Box 10111, Blacksburg, VA 24062-0111, or for multiple orders at a
- discount contact: Murder One at 800-522-5833.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- WHO WROTE THE ELLERY QUEEN BOOKS?
-
- Most mystery readers know that the byline "Ellery Queen" was actually
- a collaboration between Manfred Lee and Frederic Dannay. It has been
- revealed recently that in later years a number of their novels were
- ghostwritten by others, sometimes by writers well-known in their own
- right. As rumors fly about which novels were written by who, and how
- much was Lee/Dannay material, Douglas Dannay and Richard Dannay
- recently decided to set the record clear about three particular
- novels. The following is excerpted from a letter that was printed in
- THE ARMCHAIR DETECTIVE (Winter 1991, Volume 24, Number 1):
-
- "THE PLAYER ON THE OTHER SIDE was NOT completely ghostwritten by
- Theodore Sturgeon. Frederic Dannay prepared/created a 42-page outline
- of the book, and Sturgeon wrote the novel based on the outline.
- Manfred Lee then extensively revised the Sturgeon manuscript. There
- were also other revisions by Frederic Dannay.
-
- "AND ON THE EIGHTH DAY... was also written from an outline
- prepared/created by Frederic Dannay, an outline of 66 pages. Avram
- Davidson wrote the novel based on this outline, and the novel was then
- extensively revised by Dannay and Lee.
-
- "THE FOURTH SIDE OF THE TRIANGLE was again written from a Frederic
- Dannay outline, this time of 71 pages. Again it was Davidson who
- finished the novel, and he based his work on the outline. The book was
- revised by Lee and Dannay."
- ---Douglas Dannay & Richard Dannay
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- STEFANIE MATTESON
-
- article by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- There's a new detective now available at your local bookstore---her
- name is Charlotte Graham. She's an aging movie star with four Academy
- Awards on her mantel and four marriages in her past, or as she
- describes herself, "an over-the-hill movie star with a weakness for
- manhattans and marzipan". In her early sixties, she's smart, a bit
- cynical, and wants nothing more out of life than a good play or film
- script.
-
- She was first noticed in bookstores in the pages of MURDER AT THE SPA
- (Charter/Diamond, 1990) in which she helps her old friend, Paulina
- Langenberg, head of a large company of beauty products and health
- spas. Someone seems to be trying to sabotage her spa in upstate New
- York with rumors about the radium levels of the mineral waters the
- High Rock Springs Spa is famous for. Soon after Charlotte checks into
- the spa for the 10-day Rejuvenating Plan a woman dies in her mineral
- water bath. The woman was a pill junkie, so death is easily passed off
- as heart failure despite the odd arrangement of the body--head
- underwater and legs dangling over the end. When another guest dies in
- their mineral bath shortly after, with the body in the same position,
- we know something is very wrong at High Rock Springs.
-
- Is it Paulina's wastrel son? Or maybe her ambitious nephew? Or is it
- part of a corporate takeover by her business neighbor who sells the
- bottled mineral water? Even more suspicious is the charming "doctor"
- who has no medical license and sells worthless, and very illegal,
- injection "treatments" to ward off the effects of aging. Then again,
- maybe one of the spa's other employees is dissatisfied or crazy, or it
- could even be a psychotic guest.
-
- MURDER AT THE SPA is a terrific mystery, worthy of the Golden Age when
- plots were more carefully constructed than is now the norm. There is
- little violence, making this a decidedly "soft-boiled" story. (Have
- you ever wondered why the hard-boiled stories, with their weaponry,
- violence, and cynical plots, are called "realistic"? How many people
- do you know who carry guns? How often do you get beat up? I don't
- think I want to meet anyone who lives in that kind of reality.) MURDER
- AT THE SPA has it all: intricate and interesting plot, recognizable
- characters, and a well-drawn setting. Just the book for readers who
- want a good think and an cheerful tone.
-
- Charlotte Graham's next case is MURDER AT TEATIME (Diamond, March
- 1991), in which she takes a vacation after two years on Broadway and
- stays with friends on a small island off the Maine coast. No sooner
- does she arrive on the island than she discovers a dog who has
- apparently been poisoned. The dog's owner is Dr. Thornhill, a botanist
- and collector of rare botanical books. Thornhill has been the victim
- of various hostile pranks lately, because of his refusal to sell his
- land to the Chartwell Company, who want to turn the island into a
- vacation resort. Was the dog killed as a warning to Thornhill to sell
- his land? When Thornhill himself is later poisoned, the question
- becomes even more important.
-
- Who poisoned Dr. Thornhill's tea? Was it his boozy housekeeper,
- jealous of his upcoming marriage? Or his niece, who believed the new
- wife would turn her out of her home? Or his daughter and her
- hot-tempered husband, afraid that Thornhill would change his will? It
- could have been the bookseller Felix Mayer, who stands to make a great
- deal of money on Thornhill's death, and who desperately needs it. Or
- could it have been Gilley, the destitute lobsterman whose ancestors
- gave Gilley Island its name? Once again, Charlotte solves the crimes,
- giving a Fourth of July performance that makes a thrilling climax for
- the story. MURDER AT TEATIME becomes Charlotte's (and author
- Matteson's) second big success.
-
- NOTE: In addition to the great story, characters, and setting,
- Matteson's Charlotte Graham novels also are very educational. In
- MURDER AT THE SPA you'll learn about mineral water and what it's like
- to go to, and run, a health spa. In MURDER AT TEATIME you can pick up
- a few details about lobstering, and quite a bit of information and
- folklore about herbs. And both books are punctuated with quotes from
- plays. MURDER AT THE SPA reminds Charlotte of Henrik Ibsen's AN ENEMY
- OF THE PEOPLE (a wonderful play to read, by the way, just as bitingly
- funny as it was when it was written), while MURDER AT TEATIME sticks
- to Shakespeare, mostly MACBETH (another great play to read).
-
- Fans of Charlotte Graham will have to wait until this fall (November
- 1991) for her next case---MURDER ON THE CLIFF, set in Newport, Rhode
- Island, the summer social capital of the Gilded Age. The fourth
- Charlotte Graham mystery will be set in western China and is
- tentatively titled MURDER ON THE SILK ROAD.
-
- RFP managed to catch Charlotte Graham's creator, Stefanie Matteson,
- between chapters, and we asked her to tell us about our favorite new
- amateur detective. Here's what she had to say:
-
- "Charlotte Graham is a world-famous movie star who turned to Broadway
- when her age resulted in a dearth of movie roles. Her career in the
- movies and on Broadway has spanned fifty years. Having made her first
- movie in 1939, she is a composite of the great actresses of the
- forties. I chose Charlotte because I wanted a woman and I wanted an
- amateur. But amateur female sleuths who meddle in police affairs seem
- to me to have an insignificance that strains the reader's credibility.
- In order for a woman to meddle believably in murder, I thought, she
- ought to have some kind of distinction, and, distinction, I concluded,
- is conferred on women in our society only by age, money, power, or
- beauty. (Sad to say, brains don't count, though Charlotte has plenty.)
- I chose a legendary movie star because such a character possesses all
- of these attributes, plus an appealing dose of glamor. Another reason
- I chose Charlotte is the modernity of her life story: although she
- belongs to the older generation, her life was shaped by the major
- women's issue of today: the conflict between career and family.
- Married four times, and with no children (by the time she was
- confident enough to stand up to the studios on this issue, it was too
- late), she--like many successful career women in other fields--has
- ended up facing life entirely on her own. Finally, I chose Charlotte
- because of her versatility. As well-known (and as beloved) to several
- generations of Americans as a member of their own family, she can be
- planted by the author in almost any kind of situation and still retain
- the reader's credibility.
-
- "As for my relationship with her, she's a much tougher cookie than I
- am. Though she is outwardly gracious and refined, the circumstances of
- her turbulent personal life have resulted in extraordinary inner
- strength. But at a cost: although she is independent and resourceful,
- she is also often lonely and sometimes sad. Also, she is far more
- adventurous than I. In the 1930s, my mother, who as a young woman was
- beautiful and glamorous, used to fly airplanes as a hobby; I suppose
- Charlotte is the fulfillment of my mother's fantasies of what her life
- might have become had it taken a less conventional turn. The same
- might be said of myself, and probably of my readers as well."
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- Here's four more women of mystery you should know about: Linda
- Paulson, Joyce Morden, Jo Davies, and Barb Adams. Collectively they
- run Death At Your Door: Mail Order Mysteries, selling mystery books,
- audio cassettes, and mystery-related gift items. As they describe it,
- "For those of you who are new to our catalogue, we feature women
- authors/protagonists and Northwest mystery writers and locales. Our
- books tend to fall at the 'cozy' end of the mystery spectrum; we try
- to stay away from books with graphic or gratuitous violence and
- exploitative sex." They also accept special orders and sell gift
- certificates. Write for a catalogue (and I'd enclose a couple of
- dollars to be polite) to: Death At Your Door, PO Box 2452, Sequim, WA
- 98382-2452. They take checks, money orders, VISA, and MasterCard.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- THE DOUBLEDAY MYSTERY GUILD AWARDS
-
- Book of the Year: "F" IS FOR FUGITIVE by Sue Grafton
- Second Place: THE CAT WHO WENT UNDERGROUND by Lillian Jackson Braun
- Third Place: THE OLD SILENT by Martha Grimes
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- A LITTLE GENTLE SLEUTHING
- by Betty Rowlands
- (Walker, 1990)
- review by Carol Sheffert
-
- Melissa Craig, better known to her readers as crime novelist Mel
- Craig, has just moved into a small cottage in the Cotswolds. This is a
- first, tentative stab at independence for the fortysomething woman,
- from her overprotective boyfriend and her domineering agent. Now out
- in the country, the only near neighbor is the cottage next door,
- inhabited by Iris, a colorful vegetarian artist, and her cat Binkie.
- An abandoned shepherd's hut gives Melissa the idea for a new novel,
- and soon she's settled into a comfortable routine, interrupted only by
- mysterious phone calls for a "Babs", from a young man who sounds very
- distraught. The young man desperately wants to meet Babs at "the usual
- place". Who is Babs, and why does the man never wait to hear Melissa
- tell him he's got the wrong number?
-
- Thinking about these calls and the possible explanations gives Melissa
- some more ideas for her novel, and working out the plot of her novel
- is giving her more ideas about what is happening in reality. When Iris
- finds a long-dead body in the woods, Melissa is soon wondering if it
- could be the missing Babs, who disappeared almost a year ago. The
- tangling and untangling of real events and the plot of Melissa's new
- novel is just one of the pleasures provided by Betty Rowlands first
- full-length novel. Another is watching the development of Melissa,
- from the uncertainty she displays in the first few pages to the
- confident and independent woman she has become by the last chapter.
- The language is a delight as well. I have no idea if it's authentic or
- not--but if it isn't, it should be.
-
- The only indication of this being a first effort is the pacing, which
- is a bit slow, even for a "cozy" mystery. The characters and the plot
- are all interesting enough, but the element of suspense could have
- been turned up a notch. In any case though, this is a most promising
- first novel and readers will surely look forward to many more
- mysteries from Betty Rowlands. I know I'd love to read some more about
- Melissa Craig (and of course the cantankerous Iris). Recommended.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- THE OLD CONTEMPTIBLES
- by Martha Grimes
- (Little, Brown, 1991)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- This is Martha Grimes' eleventh novel featuring Superintendent Richard
- Jury of Scotland Yard and his wealthy friend Melrose Plant. This time
- there's a new twist--Richard Jury is under suspicion himself in the
- death of Jane Holdsworth, who died from an overdose of sleeping pills.
- Jury had not only been dating her, but had even purchased a ring to
- give to her as a token of the seriousness of their relationship.
-
- Jane's teenaged son Alex is the one to find the body, and he refuses
- to believe that his mother committed suicide. He is also worried about
- being shipped to Tarn House, where his dead father's greedy family
- lives. Alex likes his great-grandfather Adam, but can't stand any of
- the others. Apparently Adam Holdsworth doesn't like his family any
- better, because he now voluntarily lives at a nearby rest home, where
- he meets the delightful, wealthy kleptomaniac Lady Cray.
-
- After Jane's death, attention shifts to the remainder of the
- Holdsworth family, a family that has suffered more than their share of
- "accidental" deaths and suicides. To find out who killed Jane, and
- possibly others, Jury sends Melrose Plant to Tarn House to be a
- librarian for the boringly pretentious Crabbe Holdsworth. It takes
- Jury, Plant, Alex, Adam, Lady Cray, and the delightfully precocious
- 11-year-old Millie to solve the curse of the Holdsworth family, and
- Martha Grimes' prose style makes getting there at least half the fun.
- After an initial detour with an unnecessary plot thread concerning
- Melrose Plant and his friends, THE OLD CONTEMPTIBLES settles into top
- notch form, adding another success to Martha Grimes' career. Highly
- recommended.
-
-
- THE NOVELS OF MARTHA GRIMES
- (All named after real-life English pubs)
-
- The Man With a Load of Mischief
- The Old Fox Deceiv'd
- The Anodyne Necklace
- The Dirty Duck
- Jerusalem Inn
- Help the Poor Struggler
- The Deer Leap
- I Am the Only Running Footman
- Five Bells and Bladebone
- The Old Silent
- The Old Contemptibles
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- The killer was too clever to be caught.
- Charlie was too smart for her own good.
- She knows how to find him.
- HE knows where she lives.
- Playing with fire, it's easy to get burned.
-
- MOTH TO THE FLAME by Kathleen Dougherty
- A Shattering Novel of Psychological Suspense
- coming in April
- The Berkley Publishing Group, Diamond imprint $4.50
-
- "Terrifying and riveting, Kathleen Dougherty has created that rarest
- of entities: a finely-written, ORIGINAL thriller. The most intriguing
- blend of crime fiction, sci-fi and horror since FALLING ANGEL."
- ---Jonathan Kellerman
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- THE IRISHMAN'S HORSE
- by Michael Collins
- (1991, Donald I. Fine, $18.95, ISBN 1-55611-185-1)
- review by Travis Adkins
-
- Hired by the wife of an earnest young diplomat to find her husband,
- who has just disappeared from the U.S. Embassy in Guatemala City,
- Fortune stumbles upon a murder at a warehouse that appears to be a
- front for a drug-smuggling operation. He is rescued from the ensuing
- shoot-out by a suave, enigmatic stranger--the Irishman--who soon draws
- him into an international scandal involving the CIA and a Columbian
- drug cartel. Fortune's search takes him through the sultry Guatemalan
- jungle and builds into a frantic climax in Mexico City.
-
- I must admit when I read the inside cover of this book and found out
- Dan Fortune was a one-armed private eye living in Santa Barbara, I
- harbored some doubts. The description of Dan Fortune didn't coincide
- at all with my idea of a private investigator. Fortunately, I didn't
- let my narrow-mindedness keep me from reading this very entertaining
- mystery novel. Though this was my first "Dan Fortune" novel, it
- certainly will not be my last.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- KILL THE MESSENGER by Elizabeth Daniels Squire was a March 1991
- paperback release from St. Martin's. Hope you haven't missed it.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- In any of the Sara Paretsky novels you've read, did you ever picture
- private detective V.I. Warshawski as Kathleen Turner? Neither have I.
- Guess we'll just have to wait and see how that works out in the
- upcoming movie, WARSHAWSKI, directed by Jeff Kanew, screenplay by
- David Aaron Cohen.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- ONE MAN'S POISON
- by John R. Riggs
- (1991, Dembner Books)
- review by Carol Sheffert
-
- This was my first Garth Ryland mystery, and I sure hope it won't be my
- last. ONE MAN'S POISON allows us to spend a short time in Oakalla,
- Wisconsin, where Garth Ryland owns/publishes/edits the town's weekly
- newspaper, and throughout the novel, the focus remains on the town of
- Oakalla and it's varied inhabitants. As the story begins, a mild
- earthquake shakes up the town, and several days later everyone's water
- tastes like rotten eggs. Simultaneously, Rowena Parker reports that
- her ex-husband Jimmy hasn't returned her son (little Jimmy) after his
- scheduled weekend custody. Sheriff Roberts isn't feeling well and asks
- Garth Ryland to help out in finding the little boy.
-
- Garth manages to find little Jimmy all right, but not big Jimmy. And
- when he finds the body of Oakalla's most prominent citizen,
- now-retired Judge Glick, stuffed into a toxic-waste barrel, the
- mystery deepens. What do the toxic-waste barrels have to do with
- Oakalla's tainted water? What is in the cave in the Barrens, and who
- is it that's hanging around there? Why did Judge Glick all of a sudden
- kick his sister out of his house and then retire from the bench five
- years ago? Is big Jimmy really little Jimmy's father? Who is the
- strange Indian that is following Garth? Garth will need the answers to
- all of these questions, and a few more besides, to get life back onto
- an even keel in the small town.
-
- The mysteries are interesting, but not as fascinating as the residents
- of Oakalla, and Riggs focuses ONE MAN'S POISON on the characters and
- their reactions to the various conflicts and questions. A thoroughly
- enjoyable story from beginning to end, my only complaint is that the
- story wasn't longer. The characters and plot threads could well have
- borne the weight of an extra hundred pages (over the given 220), and
- some of the plot sped by a bit faster than I would have preferred. I
- guess I'll just have to wait for the next Garth Ryland mystery to get
- some more insight into the citizens of Oakalla, Wisconsin.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- JUROR by Parnell Hall (reviewed in RFP #15) has been optioned for film
- development by Joel Silver at Warner Brothers. Parnell Hall himself
- has been hired to write the screenplay
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- HARDBALL by Barbara D'Amato was a February 1991 release in paperback
- from Worldwide Library. Hope you didn't miss it.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- IMMACULATE DECEPTION
- by Warren Adler
- (1991, Donald I. Fine)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- "The primary mission of the MPD, was to protect the politicians, the
- bureaucrats and diplomats in the nation's capital, protect their lives
- and property and their ability to function. The system was
- politicized, top to bottom."
- --from IMMACULATE DECEPTION (Chapter 14)
-
-
- IMMACULATE DECEPTION is the latest installment in Warren Adler's
- police procedural series featuring Washington, D.C. homicide detective
- Fiona FitzGerald. The first of the series, AMERICAN QUARTET, was named
- as one of 1982's ten best crime novels by the New York TIMES BOOK
- REVIEW. AMERICAN SEXTET is the only other Fiona FitzGerald novel.
-
- The mystery this time surrounds the death of Congresswoman Frances
- ("Frankie") McGuire, a right-to-lifer found siting in bed with a glass
- of wine spiced with cyanide. An autopsy finds that, despite her
- long-standing lack of marital relations with her husband, she was six
- weeks pregnant. A case of Immaculate Conception, or is it more likely
- deception? Fiona's boss, oddly nicknamed the Eggplant, immediately
- declares that his instincts all point to murder, but just about
- everyone else is hoping it's simply a suicide.
-
- One of the most fascinating aspects of IMMACULATE DECEPTION is the
- working out of the political strands involved in the case. We come to
- realize that despite our moral insistance that a human life has ended
- and justice must be done, this death is undeniably a political event.
- On one level, the police must determine who brought about the death
- and prosecute the guilty party if such person is still around. On
- another level, the pro-lifers and the pro-choicers are going to have
- to deal with whatever happens, minimizing bad press and exploiting the
- positive aspects. On yet another level, the Congresswoman's death has
- left a vacant seat that some lucky politician will get to fill and
- several unlucky ones won't. We come to realize that separating
- politics from a death is impossible when that life was devoted to
- politics.
-
- Continuing the wheels-within-wheels structure of this story, Fiona has
- decided to conceive a child by her current lover without his consent
- or knowledge. This gives the McGuire case a particular resonance to
- Fiona as she shares in many of the conception/deception issues.
- Indeed, the depth of Fiona's character lifts a mundane mystery into
- more rarefied territory as she constantly surprises and engages us
- with her many strengths and weaknesses. IMMACULATE DECEPTION is not
- for the ethically squeamish, but is highly recommended reading for the
- rest of us.
-
- Warren Adler, by the way, is the author of THE WAR OF THE ROSES, the
- novel from which the film was made. He is also adapting his
- forthcoming novel PRIVATE LIES for a Tristar Pictures 1991 release,
- and is currently at work on the next Fiona FitzGerald novel, SENATOR
- LOVE, to be published in August 1991 by Donald I. Fine, Inc.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- BY SUSAN DUNLAP: PIOUS DECEPTION (a Kiernan O'Shaughnessy story) is
- in Villard hardcover and Dell paperback; TOO CLOSE TO THE EDGE (a Jill
- Smith story) is a Dell paperback; A DINNER TO DIE FOR (Jill Smith) is
- a Dell paperback; DIAMOND IN THE BUFF (Jill Smith) is a May 1991
- paperback release from Dell; and ROGUE WAVE (Kiernan O'Shaughnessy) is
- a June 1991 hardcover release from Villard.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- THE ADVENTURES OF PAUL PRY
- by Erle Stanley Gardner
- (1989, Mysterious Press)
- review by Carol Sheffert
-
- Erle Stanley Gardner is best known as the creator of America's most
- famous criminal lawyer--Perry Mason. Relatively few know that before
- his long series of PM novels, he had an illustrious career writing for
- the pulps, side by side with Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler
- (and many, many others). This book collects a few of his stories about
- Paul Pry, all originally published between 1930 and 1933, and all
- appearing in book form for the first time.
-
- Series sleuth Paul Pry is a professional opportunist who preys on
- criminals, assisted by Mugs Magoo, an alcoholic one-armed ex-cop with
- a photographic memory for faces. Mugs' downfall from the police force
- is described with typical economy: "A political shake-up forced him
- out. An accident took off his right arm at the shoulder. Booze had
- done the rest." Mugs sells pencils on a street corner and fingers
- big-time crooks for Paul Pry, who then follows them to see what
- they're up to. Paul Pry's genius is such that he not only figures out
- what the bad guys are going to do and exactly how they're going to do
- it, he also foils their plans and puts himself in line for a large
- reward.
-
- But we're not done with Pry's idiosyncrasies quite yet. He dresses
- like a dandy and carries a sword-cane, which he apparently knows how
- to use. And he relaxes by playing one of his extensive collection of
- American Indian drums, an odd practice but one that helps him solve
- many perplexing mysteries of the underworld. The Paul Pry stories
- won't make anyone forget Perry Mason, but they show earlier stages of
- Gardner's career and are an interesting peculiarity in their own
- right.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- "I figured out long ago that a negative review meant one of two
- things: either the critic doesn't like the kind of thing I do, in
- which case I figure who can argue with taste? or the critic didn't
- UNDERSTAND what I was trying to do, in which case I say, who cares
- what an idiot thinks?"
- ---William L. DeAndrea
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- THE BLONDE IN LOWER SIX: Plus 3 Short Novels
- by Erle Stanley Gardner
- (1990, Carroll & Graf)
- review by Carol Sheffert
-
- If you don't think that fiction has to be brand new to be interesting,
- you should always keep an eye on what Carroll & Graf are publishing.
- They are first rate at finding older material that's out of print and
- shouldn't be. Like some of the little-known non-Perry Mason material
- written by Erle Stanley Gardner. THE BLONDE IN LOWER SIX, like DEAD
- MEN'S LETTERS, brings back a handful of Gardner's stories about Ed
- Jenkins, "The Phantom Crook", misunderstood friend of the underworld
- and all-around righter of wrongs.
-
- The major offering here is the title novel, an elaborate and sometimes
- confusing mystery about mistaken identities and corporate
- shenanigans. Ed Jenkins is found in his usual habitat, San
- Francisco's Chinatown, as he accepts a job from the head of the
- Chinese underground, Soo Hoo Duck. It seems that a woman named Betty
- Crofath has important information about about the Japanese military,
- information that would be very useful to the Chinese. She is taking a
- train from New Orleans to San Francisco and Ed must join the train at
- Tucson and keep an eye on her. She'll be easy to find, she's "the
- blonde in Lower Six". Unfortunately, the first time Ed catches sight
- of the blonde in Lower Six, she's dead. But is it really Betty Crofath
- or an impostor? Why do the newspapers say that the dead woman is
- Daphne Strate, a woman suspected of embezzling from the chemical
- company she worked for in New Orleans?
-
- Ed Jenkins must straighten out this situation, keeping one step ahead
- of both the bad guys and the police, and along the way explaining the
- American legal system from his personal perspective (a much more
- cynical explanation than we get from Gardner's more famous character,
- Perry Mason). It's all good fun, as are the other stories ("The Wax
- Dragon", "Grinning Gods", "Yellow Shadows"), making it obvious why
- Gardner was one of the kings of the pulps. And thanks go once again to
- Carroll & Graf for rescuing some more good reading from oblivion.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- THE NOSTALGIA DEPARTMENT AT HARPER PERENNIAL
-
- Remember Race Williams? He was a very popular hard-boiled fictional
- detective (actually I think he might have been the FIRST hard-boiled
- fictional detective) created by Carroll John Daly, and he appeared
- often in BLACK MASK magazine and in novels in the late 1920s and in
- the 1930s. Harper Perennial has bought the reprint rights to the first
- two Race Williams novels, THE HIDDEN HAND and THE SNARL OF THE BEAST,
- which will appear in bookstores early in 1992.
-
- Now I *know* you remember Ellery Queen, the cerebral amateur detective
- created by Frederic Dannay and Manfred B. Lee. Harper Perennial is
- planning a major reprint program, starting later this year with
- CALAMITY TOWN, THE ORIGIN OF EVIL, THERE WAS AN OLD WOMAN, and FACE TO
- FACE.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- THE VIG
- by John T. Lescroart
- (Donald I. Fine, 1991)
-
- With DEAD IRISH (Donald I. Fine, 1989), John T. Lescroart won
- widespread critical acclaim for his ability to invest characters and
- settings with a complex layering of depth and detail, using the
- detective story as a means through which to explore the lower depths
- of human emotion. Now, in THE VIG, Lescroart's ex-cop, part-time
- investigator and sometime bartender Dismas Hardy returns in a major
- novel of revenge and betrayal that delves into the murky shadows
- surrounding the fine line between appearance and reality.
-
- "Louis Baker gets out of jail today and he's going to kill us both,"
- former prosecutor Rusty Ingraham warns his old friend, Hardy. When
- Hardy finds the remains of a bloodbath on Rusty's barge in San
- Francisco's China basin, he sets out to prove the "obvious"--that
- Ingraham was, indeed, murdered by the ex-con. But instead of
- formulating a clear-cut case, Hardy stumbles into a convoluted series
- of deceptions--as the key suspect becomes a killer's target, the
- police react with startling apathy, and Ingraham's body is nowhere to
- be found.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- THE REMARKABLE CASE OF DOROTHY L. SAYERS
- by Catherine Kenney
- (1990, Kent State Univ. Press)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- Dorothy L. Sayers, perhaps more successfully than any other writer,
- combined the detective novel and the more literary, "real" novel in
- one volume. She is not only the favorite mystery writer of many
- demanding readers, but is the ONLY mystery writer enjoyed by many who
- otherwise wouldn't be caught with a detective story on their shelves.
- Catherine Kenney's highly readable assessment of DLS's literary
- output, THE REMARKABLE CASE OF DOROTHY L. SAYERS, fills a longstanding
- need for extended consideration of this eminent writer. This is not a
- biography, but an examination of one writer's work.
-
- Kenney's book is divided into three sections. In the first she takes a
- long look at Sayers' detective fiction, and spends some enjoyable time
- on the question of why scholars and detective stories seem so
- inseparable:
-
- "A good detective story IS entertaining, but its peculiar pleasures
- are much like those provided by university debating societies, the
- rough and tumble of scholarly investigation, the invigorating rigors
- of the tutorial and the examination."
-
- Attention is also paid to the critical essays that Sayers wrote about
- other authors' work, and all is put in the context of Sayers entire
- life, the later years of which she would spend translating Dante and
- writing religious drama.
-
- "She once remarked, vis-a-vis her monumental study of Dante, that
- there are really only two questions at the foundation of all good
- criticism: What is the writer trying to tell us? and What does this
- statement mean to us today?"
-
- Ultimately, Kenney concludes that Sayers' influence on the history of
- the detective story was considerable, and interprets the stories, and
- other critics' evaluations, from her own well-argued perspective:
-
- "At her best, Sayers has no peer as a detective story writer who is
- also a genuine novelist...THE NINE TAILORS, GAUDY NIGHT, and just
- below them, THE DOCUMENTS IN THE CASE and BUSMAN'S HONEYMOON, are
- truly great mystery stories, the classics of their kind."
-
- "By the time she wrote GAUDY NIGHT and BUSMAN'S HONEYMOON, the element
- of detection was so subordinated to other novelistic considerations,
- including theme and character development, that some readers felt she
- had abandoned the genre. I would suggest that she had redefined it."
-
- Early in the book, Kenney discusses the appeal of Lord Peter Wimsey,
- particularly as he appeared in the beginning in WHOSE BODY?--a
- stereotypical English gentleman, without being foppish or overly
- pompous.
-
- "In Wimsey, ambivalent colonials can have their aristocrat and like
- him, too."
-
- In the second section, Kenney studies Sayers as Feminist, not only
- looking at her delightful essay, "Are Women Human?", but taking stock
- of what her fiction reveals about her sexual politics.
-
- "I am occasionally desired by congenital imbeciles and the editors of
- magazines to say something about the writing of detective fiction
- 'from the woman's point of view.' To such demands, one can only say,
- 'Go away and don't be silly. You might as well ask what is the female
- angle on an equilateral triangle.'"
- ---Dorothy L. Sayers, in "Are Women Human?", quoted on p. 123
-
- And from Kenney we hear:
-
- "Harriet Vane's search for a relationship based upon equality,
- honesty, and mutual respect is the compelling story of achieving a
- precarious, hard-won balance between opposing forces that goes beyond
- the simple solution of a detective story."
-
- "In its scathing portrait of the Vane-Boyes liaison, the novel [STRONG
- POISON] underscores how so-called sexual liberation has tended to
- exact a higher toll on women than on men."
-
- "The Vane-Wimsey quartet, especially in its last two books, remains
- Sayers's most serious and subtle treatment of sexual politics and the
- predicament of modern woman."
-
- And finally, in the last section of THE REMARKABLE CASE OF DOROTHY L.
- SAYERS, Kenney examines Sayers' contribution to Christianity, the
- major focus of her later years.
-
- "THE DOCUMENTS IN THE CASE dramatizes what she would later argue: that
- belief is enhanced by knowledge and rational questioning, and that all
- the disciplines, when properly employed, can help make sense of an
- often forbidding and mysterious universe."
-
- "[MURDER MUST ADVERTISE] asks implicitly whether pleasure, physical
- comfort, and entertainment are the proper goals of human experience,
- and suggests that the value of human activity must be judged by some
- standard outside the human being."
-
- The appeal of Kenney's book, like that of Sayers' detective stories,
- lies in its combination of intellectual sustenance, plain speaking,
- and appeal to common feelings. This is not the desiccated autopsy that
- literary criticism has made famous, if not popular, over many years.
- THE REMARKABLE CASE OF DOROTHY L. SAYERS is an absorbing study of a
- talented writer, and is written with great charm and good sense.
-
- "Wide appeal does not necessarily prove artistic merit, of course, but
- the common modern contempt for writers who have such appeal does not
- prove the opposite, either."
-
- At the end of all her ruminations, Kenney decides, as the reader will,
- that the trip was worth it:
-
- "Novelist, essayist, dramatist, scholar, critic, translator,
- poet--Dorothy L. Sayers may properly be awarded the title few have
- earned: woman of letters."
-
- THE REMARKABLE CASE OF DOROTHY L. SAYERS is highly recommended.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- "Life is like an Italian sausage. You don't want to examine it too
- closely and find out what it's made of. It might be awful stuff like
- pig's farts and cow dung. Just eat it and if it tastes good, count
- yourself lucky."
- ---from NEWSPAPER MURDERS by Joe Gash (pseudonym of Bill Granger)
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- MURDER IMPOSSIBLE
- An Extravaganza of Miraculous Murders, Fantastic Felonies
- & Incredible Criminals
- edited by Jack Adrian & Robert Adey
- (1990, Carroll & Graf)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- It's impossible to read very widely in the mystery field without
- coming across the subgenre of Impossible Crimes, a particularly
- intellectual, puzzle-oriented form of the classic detective story. As
- the editors point out in their introduction, plot is all important
- here, with characterization and other literary niceties becoming
- mostly irrelevant. To an Impossible Crime fan, the physical problem
- and its logical solution is everything. Of course, not everyone likes
- Impossible Crime literature. I think, like an appreciation of Agatha
- Christie's THE MURDER OF ROGER ACKROYD, it depends on your tolerance
- for being stumped (and occasionally tricked).
-
- As an example, take the first story in this impressive anthology: "The
- House in Goblin Wood" by John Dickson Carr, generally acknowledged to
- be the Grand Master of the Impossible Crime story. With hindsight, I
- can see that Carr announces his intention at the very beginning of the
- story, he actually told me what was going to happen, and yet I was
- STILL fooled. (I was also amazed at the grisly nature of this 1947
- story.) Not to imply that I'm particularly difficult to hoodwink, but
- it still astounds and delights me to find writers with this much
- narrative power.
-
- MURDER IMPOSSIBLE contains a varied selection of criminous stories,
- some you'll like more than others. I thought W. Hope Hodgson's
- "Bullion!" was too complicated, and I didn't believe the science of
- Jacques Futrelle's "An Absence of Air", but I thought Bill Pronzini's
- "Proof of Guilt" was wonderful. Pronzini's deceptively simple writing
- style highlights the theme without getting in its way.
-
- "The Impossible Theft" by John F. Suter charmed me by being the only
- story that I figured out immediately. In "It's a Dog's Life", by John
- Lutz, the private detective's sidekick is a neutered female dog named
- Samantha, or Sam for short or--wait for it--Sam Spayed. If you like
- old-fashioned mysteries with locked train compartments and exotic
- poisons, you'll enjoy Sax Rohmer's "The Death of Cyrus Pettigrew". Sax
- Rohmer, of course, is best known for his stories featuring Dr. Fu
- Manchu.
-
- I thought "Ghost in the Gallery" by Joseph Cummings was a better story
- than a mystery, while Edgar Wallace's "The Missing Romney" and Gerald
- Findler's "The House of Screams" didn't particularly stand out as
- either. All was forgiven, however, for Edward D. Hoch's "The
- Impossible Murder", where the crime has occurred in bumper-to-bumper
- traffic. George Locke's parody, "A Nineteenth Century Debacle" is fun;
- John Dickson Carr's radio play, "A Razor in Fleet Street", is better;
- and "Dinner at Garibaldi's" by Leonard Pruyn is better still.
-
- The longest piece in the book, Joel Townsley Rogers' novella, "The
- Hanging Rope", reminds me of the clever misdirection of Agatha
- Christie at her best, keeping the answer from you by holding it too
- close to your nose for you to focus on. Like the purloined letter
- hidden in the letter rack, facts become part of the landscape before
- you've had a chance to analyze them in the light of the mystery.
-
- One of my favorite's in MURDER IMPOSSIBLE is "Now You See Her" by
- Jeffrey Wallmann, which was as educational as it was entertaining.
- This is the kind of information that you want to keep in the back of
- your mind, just in case someone in your life becomes more troublesome
- than they're worth...
-
- MURDER IMPOSSIBLE finishes up with Barry Perowne's captivating "The
- Blind Spot", and the very best parody I've ever read--"Chapter the
- Last: Merriman Explains" by Alex Atkinson (having some fun with John
- Dickson Carr and his series character Sir Henry Merrivale).
-
- One important note about MURDER IMPOSSIBLE: To any fan of a
- particular type of story, anthologies are more often disappointing
- than not. Given a finite pool of literature to fish in, fans exhaust
- the common stories easily and early, and the common examples of a
- subgenre tend to show up in anthology after anthology with irritating
- regularity. MURDER IMPOSSIBLE doesn't have that problem, as almost all
- of the stories appear in book form for the very first time, a
- refreshing change of pace for the weary short story collector.
-
- MURDER IMPOSSIBLE packs a lot of reading enjoyment between its covers,
- and is recommended to all.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- TWO BY WILLIAM F. LOVE
-
- Love's mysteries are set in New York City and feature an unlikely
- detective duo: wheelchair-bound Auxiliary Bishop Francis X. Regan, an
- amateur sleuth with an IQ of 220, and his Special Assistant, Davey
- Goldman, a Jewish New York City cop-turned-private-eye.
-
-
- THE CHARTREUSE CLUE
- (Donald I. Fine, 1990)
-
- A priest awakens one morning in a locked apartment to find his
- ladyfriend murdered. The challenge for Regan and Goldman is to find
- the murderer before the police find the priest.
-
- THE FUNDAMENTALS OF MURDER
- (Donald I. Fine, June 1991)
-
- Jerry Fanning, a young Fundamentalist preacher, arrives in New York
- convinced that the Lord has sent him to convert the entire city to
- Jesus. But before he can complete his mission, the police uncover
- clues pointing to him as the murderer of four prostitutes and he finds
- himself behind bars. Luckily for him, he had met Bishop Regan before
- his incarceration. After reviewing the facts, Regan is determined to
- prove the man innocent. His razor-sharp mind delves into areas the
- police never thought of, and using Davey's contacts, street smarts and
- legwork, he sets out to reveal and apprehend the true killer.
-
- Author William F. Love, born and raised in Oklahoma, was a Catholic
- priest from 1958 to 1969. Following his resignation from the
- priesthood, he married, moved to Chicago and became a banker. He
- worked at three banks over the next fourteen years, then from 1984 to
- 1988 he was a private consultant. In 1988 he began writing THE
- CHARTREUSE CLUE, and is now a full-time novelist.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- RECENT RELEASES AND FORTHCOMING GOODIES
-
- WHO IS JOE MERCHANT? by Jimmy Buffett (a comic mystery coming from HBJ
- in the fall)
- KAT'S CRADLE by Karen Kijewski (the third Kat Colorado novel)
- ROMAN BLOOD by Steven Saylor (historical mystery set in ancient Rome,
- coming from St. Martin's)
- DEAD ON THE ISLAND by Bill Crider (a Truman Smith mystery, from
- Walker)
- SWEET WOMEN LIE by Loren Estleman (an Amos Walker mystery, coming from
- Houghton Mifflin)
- BREAKDOWN by Bill Pronzini (a Nameless mystery, from Delacorte)
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- COMING IN JUNE (OUR 2nd ANNIVERSARY ISSUE)!!
-
- Reviews of:
-
- CHAMELEON
- by William X. Kienzle
-
- When a prostitute is murdered after midnight on the mean streets of
- Detroit, it usually isn't front-page news. But when the prostitute's
- body is found dressed in a nun's habit outside one of Detroit's
- oldest--and at one time most prestigious--Catholic churches, it
- strikes the interest of the curious-minded. And when that prostitute
- is Helen Donovan, a call girl who numbered among her clientele some of
- the city's most powerful figures, and whose sister is the most
- influential nun in the Detroit archdiocese, the prostitute's death
- takes on a significance that no one can ignore.
-
- Helen's death becomes Father Koesler's thirteenth mystery.
-
-
- SEA OF TROUBLES
- by Janet Smith
- (Perseverance Press)
-
- When young Seattle attorney Annie MacPherson boards the ferry for the
- San Juan Islands, she has no idea that she's embarking on a sea of
- troubles. Her investigation at a luxury resort soon broadens from real
- estate legalities to kidnapping and murder. Whether to unravel the
- past's tangled secrets, or to sport with kayaks and killer whales in
- the deadly straits, that is the question. But it's in suffering love's
- slings and arrows that Annie ultimately discovers her outrageous
- fortune.
-
-
- THE LAST PAGE
- by Bob Fenster
- (Perseverance Press)
-
- A mystery editor is found slumped across her desk, with a rejection
- note stapled to her sleeve and a bullet hole through her heart--for
- the second time. Does the murder have a personal motive, or is it just
- a frustrated writer who can't deal with rejection? The New York City
- police captain vetoes an investigation of thousands of suspects, so
- Detective Brian Skiles and editor Anne Baker must set a deadly trap to
- catch the killer, and to prove the pen is mightier than the sword.
-
-
- EVERYTHING YOU HAVE IS MINE
- by Sandra Scoppettone
- (Little, Brown, 1991)
-
- In EVERYTHING YOU HAVE IS MINE, veteran mystery writer Sandra
- Scoppettone introduces Lauren Laurano, a savvy, street-smart, and
- socially conscious private detective who is sure to intrigue and
- entertain readers from page 1. Not your average hard-bitten toughie,
- Lauren is terrified of insects and blood, and addicted to the
- chocolate torte at her favorite pastry shop in New York City's
- Greenwich Village. She's pretty, funny, fashionable, financially
- secure, and lesbian.
-
- With the support of her beautiful psychotherapist lover, Kip, Lauren
- must solve the grisly murder of a wealthy young woman--the
- incongruously named Lake Huron--who made one too many connections
- through a computer dating service. This case is every bit a product of
- the high-tech nineties, and Lauren must overcome her computer phobia
- in order to follow a trail of clues left via modem and floppy disk.
- Matters are complicated still further by the fact that Lake's
- supposedly bereaved family is not quite what it seems, and Lauren soon
- finds herself involved with a type of violence that is even more
- heinous, perhaps, than murder.
-
- In dealing with this complex amalgam of confused family relationships,
- greed, and betrayal, Lauren is forced to confront her limits as a
- woman, a detective, and a member of a society in which the value of
- human life seems to be decreasing at an alarming rate. Yet through it
- all, she employs her own brand of zany yet down-to-earth sleuthing and
- keeps her sense of humor. In EVERYTHING YOU HAVE IS MINE, Sandra
- Scoppettone, an Edgar Award nominee, serves up a story that is not
- only suspenseful but also full of sly commentary on the crazy, hip
- denizens of New York City and the central issues of modern urban life.
-
-
- ...And Maybe Even A Few Surprises!
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
- * *
- * 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.
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- SLEEPWALKER
- by Michael Cadnum
- (St. Martin's, 1991)
- ISBN 0-312-04995-1 $15.95
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- "Michael Cadnum writes with a poet's economy of prose and an intensity
- of characterization that would grace the work of far better known
- writers in the field. SLEEPWALKER is genuinely chilling, for it is
- more than a horror novel--it is an examination of the greatest of
- mysteries, death, and the aim of Cadnum's unflinching eye is always
- true."
- ---Chet Williamson (author of ASH WEDNESDAY, REIGN, etc.)
-
- Michael Cadnum is an award-winning poet, which is apparent in both of
- his novels, last year's wonderful NIGHTLIGHT and now SLEEPWALKER. Both
- are spare, lyrical tales of the dark corners of human existence. The
- author wields the tools of the horror novel like an experienced
- dream-stalker, while expressing his own thoughts and feelings about
- darkness, fear, and death. If you appreciate fine literature, whatever
- the genre, both of Cadnum's novels are essential reading.
-
- In SLEEPWALKER, Cadnum tells us about archaeologist Davis Lowry,
- tormented by nightmares about his wife who recently died, nightmares
- in which he walks in his sleep to the point of endangering his life.
- Realizing that a change is necessary, he accepts a job from his mentor
- Dr. Higg to take over at a troubled dig in Yorkshire, England. Another
- old friend, Peter Chambers, has been in charge so far, but Peter's
- questionable psychological health, as well as the deteriorating morale
- at the site, which is said to be haunted, encourage his superiors to
- ask Davis to lend a hand.
-
- It's immediately apparent that this isn't the average dig. Not only do
- tools rearrange themselves during the night and accidents happen
- regularly, they have discovered a 1200-year-old bog man, remarkably
- well-preserved by the tannic acids in the Yorkshire soil. They call
- him Skeldergate Man, and he has apparently had his throat cut, adding
- yet another mystery to the amazing discovery.
-
- Davis Lowry's presence does little to help the situation. The
- accidents continue, the tools keep moving, and Peter Chambers has
- several dark secrets that will soon threaten several people. And,
- contrary to expectations, scientific Davis Lowry is as disturbed by
- Skeldergate Man as the others are. For one thing, even though he is
- securely locked in an underground laboratory, the corpse is repeatedly
- found on the floor next to the table he was left on, as if he has been
- trying to leave the room.
-
- Running underneath the story of Davis Lowry and Peter Chambers is the
- major theme of SLEEPWALKER: death. The archaeological setting allows
- Cadnum to talk about death from the perspective of people who make
- their living amongst the dead, and the scientific nature of the
- archaeologist's pursuit is seen to be of no help in dealing with basic
- cosmic issues. Another level of insight is provided by the setting: in
- contrast to the common concern over the destruction of ancient sites
- by incompetent archaeologists, SLEEPWALKER allows us to see that the
- dead are more of a threat to the living than the other way around. In
- the end, Davis Lowry must lay his ghosts, both psychologically and
- physically. SLEEPWALKER is exciting, disturbing, and though-provoking.
- Highly recommended.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- THE DARK TOWER III: THE WASTE LANDS
- by Stephen King
-
- This long-awaited third installment in the Dark Tower series is close
- to being released. Close enough that if you haven't reserved a copy
- yet, you'd better do so RIGHT NOW! It is supposed to be about 25%
- longer than THE DARK TOWER II: THE DRAWING OF THE THREE, and contains
- 12 full color illustrations, including 10 double-page spreads, by
- artist Ned Dameron. There is a deluxe edition, limited to 1200 copies,
- signed by both King and Dameron, beautifully bound, slipcased, and
- numbered....but the method of getting it is so complicated that I
- won't go into it here. It's $120, plus $5 postage, handling, and
- insurance, and if you really care, get in touch with Donald Grant.
-
- The regular trade edition for people like me is $38 plus $3 for
- postage, handing, and insurance, and like I said, if you haven't
- reserved a copy yet, you'd better send a check for $41 to Donald Grant
- TODAY! Don't waste time asking questions, just send the check. If
- you're too late, your money will be refunded.
-
- Donald M. Grant, Publisher, Inc.
- PO Box 187, Hampton Falls, NH 03844
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- MORE KOONTZ FROM BERKLEY
-
- Berkley Books continues to reprint the works of Dean R. Koontz. Here
- is the 1991 schedule, to the best of my knowledge:
-
- Mar: The Vision
- Apr: Lightning
- The Mask
- Jun: Midnight
- Jul: Shattered
- The Voice of the Night
- Aug: Phantoms
- Sep: Whispers
- Oct: Night Chills
- Nov: Strangers
- Dec: Cold Fire
- Twilight Eyes
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- PSYCHO-PATHS
- edited by Robert Bloch
- (Tor, 1991)
- review by Annie Wilkes
-
- "If there's any pattern to these tales, their purpose is to explore
- the RATIONALE and IRRATIONALE of violent behavior. This anthology was
- not meant to demonstrate that if you build a grosser gross-out than
- your neighbor, the world will beat a path to your door."
- ---Robert Bloch, Introduction
-
- You will have noticed that this anthology is edited by a Famous Writer
- editor, not an Editor editor. Robert Bloch is the author of PSYCHO
- (the original novel, not the Hitchcock screenplay), for which he will
- always be remembered, despite the hundreds of other terrific novels
- and short stories he has perpetrated in his long career. (Speaking of
- his long career, did you realize that he was originally a protege of
- H.P. Lovecraft?) In any case, Robert Bloch has been one of our finest
- writers of Psychotic-Person Fiction, a notable subgenre of Horror. As
- he says in the Introduction to PSYCHO-PATHS:
-
- "Properly presented amidst commonplace but convincing everyday
- surroundings, real horrors can be far more frightening than the
- fantastic. The credible is always a greater menace than the
- incredible, merely because we know it CAN happen and--even worse--it
- can happen to US."
-
- But Bloch distances himself from the current trend towards the
- excessively violent "splatter" movies and fiction:
-
- "If the intention is merely to shock and nauseate, why write
- screenplays when you can run newsreels?"
-
- "One of the apparent misconceptions of the writers [of 'splatter'
- fiction] is that describing the infliction of pain or the throes of
- death makes their stories realistic. All it does, actually, is
- demonstrate that they've been seeing too many movies."
-
- Having outlined his position, Editor Bloch then gives a practical
- demonstration with the 17 short stories in this volume. And what
- terrific reading this is! All new stories by some of the most famous
- names in Horror and a few newer bylines as well.
-
- PSYCHO-PATHS gets off to a humorous start with Gahan Wilson's "Them
- Bleaks", a roman a clef obviously written specifically for Robert
- Bloch. That's the only funny story, alas, but the other 16 tales are
- wonderful nonetheless. Several deal with the theme of Psycho Meets
- Psycho, or, no matter how big and mean you are, somebody somewhere is
- bigger and meaner: "A Determined Woman" by Billie Sue Mosiman,
- "Kessel's Party" by Michael Berry, William F. Nolan's "Him, Her,
- Them", "Kin" by Charles L. Grant, and David J. Schow's "Pick Me Up".
-
- Another popular theme is the Hidden Psycho; twisted people who wear a
- mask of sanity in public: "No Love Lost" by J.N. Williamson, "Clutter"
- by Brad Linaweaver, "Dreaming in Black and White" by Susan Shwartz,
- and Kathleen Buckley's "Waste".
-
- A sweet little girl preys upon sympathetic men in Dennis Etchison's
- "Call Home", and "Confession of a Madman" by Chelsea Quinn Yarbro
- demonstrates that it's not a good idea to be TOO ahead of your time.
- PSYCHO-PATHS also includes David Morrell's "Remains to Be Seen", in
- which fanatic loyalty slides into psychosis; a teenage prank backfires
- in "Red Devils" by Hugh B. Cave; and a paranoid artist creates
- "nuclear art" in Robert E. Vardeman's "Enduring Art". Edward D. Hoch's
- "The Secret Blade" speaks to us about state-sanctioned brutality, and
- "Jesse" by Steve Rasnic Tem weaves an impressionistic tale of a
- psychotic version of Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn.
-
- Seventeen stories, and not a clunker in the bunch. PSYCHO-PATHS is the
- must-have anthology of Spring 1991. You won't be disappointed.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- RECENTLY RELEASED BY MARK V. ZIESING
-
- COLD BLOOD: New Tales of Mystery and Horror
- edited by Richard T. Chizmar
-
- With COLD BLOOD, the World Fantasy Award-nominated editor of CEMETERY
- DANCE magazine has gathered a landmark anthology of eclectic stories
- meant to reshape the reader's perception of the Horror Genre. Dark
- visions abound, to be sure: fear and terror stalk the pages of this
- book of previously unpublished stories. But there's a difference.
-
- COLD BLOOD pulses with a sense of dread and mounting suspense, with
- mystery and intrigue, with a brooding pace that's refreshingly at odds
- with the '80s' in-your-face splatter trend.
-
- Featuring 25 excursions into the blackest part of our souls by F. Paul
- Wilson, Chet Williamson, Ronald Kelly, Joe R. Lansdale, John Shirley,
- Bentley Little, Brian Hodge, Barry Hoffman, Thomas F. Monteleone,
- Ardath Mayhar, Rex Miller, Roman A. Ranieri, James Kisner, J.N.
- Williamson, Paul F. Olson, Nancy A. Collins, William F. Nolan, Rick
- Hautala, Ed Gorman, Richard Laymon, William Relling Jr., Andrew
- Vachss, David B. Silva, Tom Elliot, and including an excerpt from the
- new novel by Ramsey Campbell. Introduction by Douglas E. Winter.
-
- Full cloth hardcover binding; full color jacket art by Nancy Niles.
-
- A 500-copy slipcased limited edition, signed by all contributors, is
- $75 (if there are any left), and the regular trade edition is $25.
- Send check to: Mark V. Ziesing, PO Box 76, Shingletown, CA 96088.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- TERROR ARRIVES BY SPECIAL DELIVERY IN
- THE MAILMAN
- (from Roc SF Advance)
-
- Bentley Little's THE REVELATION was greeted with an enthusiasm almost
- unprecedented for a first novelist.
-
- "A fantastic read," wrote Rick Hautala, author of WINTER WAKE. "Once
- you start reading this book, you'll be up until dawn with your eyes
- glued to the pages."
-
- The reviewers were equally impressed. "A vigorous first novel," opined
- the usually dour Kirkus Reviews, "with style to please horror fans and
- to let them look forward to Little's next."
-
- Little's next is here.
-
- THE MAILMAN (ONYX, Feb. 1991) is a shrewdly crafted tale of terror
- guaranteed to increase Little's already stellar reputation.
-
- A small town nightmare in the mode of GREMLINS or TREMORS--black humor
- and all--THE MAILMAN is about a postman who is dedicated to his job;
- who is not stopped by rain, nor sleet, nor hail--
-
- Nor Hell.
-
- (For more information about Roc SF Advance, write to: NAL, Science
- Fiction Department, 375 Hudson Street, New York, NY 10014.)
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- DOWN WILL COME BABY
- by Gloria Murphy
- (Donald I. Fine, 1991)
-
- "[A] tightly woven tale, which will keep readers turning pages in
- breathtaking, fascinated horror. Recommended and likely to enjoy brisk
- circulation."
- ---Library Journal
-
- "Murphy shows growing skill...choice creepy material."
- ---Kirkus Reviews
-
-
- In the tradition of Mary Higgins Clark and V.C. Andrews, DOWN WILL
- COME BABY is a spine-tingling tale of horror lurking beneath a mundane
- veneer of domesticity. Twelve-year-old Robin Garr witnesses the
- nighttime drowning of her best friend at summer camp, a fatal accident
- for which she is not entirely blameless. Back at home, she is plagued
- by nightmares and hears her friend's voice whispering eerily in her
- ear. Despite the best efforts of her father and of a well-meaning but
- prying downstairs neighbor, Robin cannot recover from the trauma. When
- it turns out that the neighbor has an ulterior motive for wanting to
- get close to Robin, it becomes clear that the real nightmare has just
- begun...
-
- Gloria Murphy is the author of THE PLAYROOM, BLOODTIES and NIGHTSHADE
- (all published by Donald I. Fine). Publishers Weekly described THE
- PLAYROOM as "speedy, direct and engrossing". BLOODTIES was hailed by
- The Bookwatch as "a remarkable, fast-paced story...a powerful tale"
- and Rave Reviews called NIGHTSHADE "a terrifying journey of murder,
- abuse and betrayal. An exciting read." In addition to writing novels,
- Murphy has also worked as a public relations writer,
- consumer-protection advocate and free lance newspaper columnist. She
- makes her home in Ringwood, New Jersey.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- THE CIPHER
- by Kathe Koja
- (1991, Dell Abyss)
- review by Annie Wilkes
-
- This is the first novel in Dell's new horror line--Abyss, which is a
- genuine publishing event because the horror boom is long since over,
- and most publishers are discontinuing horror lines, not starting them.
- Also unusual is the philosophy behind Dell's new Abyss line. Back when
- horror was "in", publishers would print just about anything, which not
- only meant that, as usual, we got a lot of garbage, but they were very
- open to the new, the bizarre, the experimental. This provided the
- horror fan with the occasional rare jewel amongst the glass chips.
- Nowadays, however, the horror boom is just a memory and most
- publishers are unwilling to take a chance on anything but another
- King, Koontz, or McCammon clone. It is to the audience that is most
- distressed by this trend that Dell addresses their new line. Abyss
- books are for the more literate reader, the reader who is willing to
- take a few chances on a new voice, a new style, a new perspective. And
- they couldn't have set the tone better than with the release of Kathe
- Koja's hauntingly surreal THE CIPHER.
-
- Told entirely in normal English words, and yet refusing to be
- restricted by them, THE CIPHER tells of a black hole, possibly a hole
- in our world, possibly a hole in one man's mind. It all starts with
- Nicholas, who finds the blackness in a storage room in his run-down
- apartment building. He shares the find with his girlfriend, the
- unattractive and cruel Nakota, who is soon even more obsessed with the
- "Funhole" than Nicholas is. But the blackness and Nicholas have a
- special relationship. Nicholas has been "kissed too hard by the dark",
- and his destiny will be determined by a consuming blackness that has
- been reserved for him alone.
-
- The author, Kathe Koja, is described as having been "a bonsai
- lumberjack, an oyster cowboy, and a freelance criminologist", none of
- which explains the origin of this disturbingly unforgettable tale. THE
- CIPHER is easily the most exciting thing that's happened in horror
- fiction in the past few years.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- RECENTLY RELEASED BY DARK HARVEST
-
- OBSESSIONS: Chilling Tales of Terror and Suspense
- edited by Gary Raisor
-
- Including fiction by: Dean R. Koontz, Joe R. Lansdale, Thomas F.
- Monteleone, John Shirley, Nicholas Royle, Scott A. Cupp, Lori
- Perkins, Bill Crider, Edward Gorman, Stanley Wiater, Richard Christian
- Matheson, L. Bradley Law, Nancy Holder, C.J. Henderson, Glen Vasey, F.
- Paul Wilson, Chet Williamson, Charles L. Grant, Dean Wesley Smith, Al
- Sarrantonio, Rick Hautala, Darrell Schweitzer, Edward Bryant, Kevin J.
- Anderson, A.R. Morlan, Elizabeth Massie, Kristine Kathryn Rusch, Nina
- Kiriki Hoffman, David B. Silva, and Dan Simmons.
-
- Illustrated by Roger Gerberding
-
- A limited edition of 500 copies, slipcased and signed by all 30
- contributors, is $55 (if there are any left), and the regular trade
- edition is $20.95. Add $1 per book for postage and send to: Dark
- Harvest, PO Box 941, Arlington Heights, IL 60006
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- PETER STRAUB
- TALKS ABOUT CRIME, HORROR, ROMANCE AND OTHER LITERARY TOPICS
- (from Roc SF Advance)
-
- People ask if I'm "moving away from horror." I don't really know how
- to answer that.
-
- I think if I wrote a straight romance, they would call it horror. Yet
- I've never really thought of myself as part of a genre or a category.
- I hate to be reviewed or discussed as a "horror" writer. It means
- people don't THINK much about what you are doing.
-
- In KOKO I wrote with no trace of what is usually found in a
- conventional Horror novel. The conventions had been left out (except
- when they were deliberately put in).
-
- MYSTERY, on the other hand, LOOKS very much like a category crime
- novel. Yet when it's been given to traditional crime reviewers, they
- usually been baffled and annoyed.
-
- They say it's too long. There's stuff in it that a crime novel doesn't
- need. It's too fat.
-
- This is because it's a work on its own terms; it's something else,
- something OTHER THAN a category novel. There's a lot going on in
- MYSTERY that's not necessarily found in the crime novel.
-
- Not that I don't like crime novels; I do. In fact, I set out quite
- deliberately to write a novel with a detective at the center. But I
- wanted to question why he was there. What does it mean when your life
- is about asking questions? How does it happen?
-
- These questions don't often get asked anymore. Since Raymond Chandler,
- they are sort of in our bloodstream. The detective himself is taken
- for granted. But I wanted to ask these questions again.
-
- So in MYSTERY my approach was more psychological. I assumed that if
- you were a detective, you were born with a question mark over your
- head. In MYSTERY Tom Passmore becomes a detective to try to unravel
- certain mysteries in his own life.
-
- And in the end he actually does.
-
- On that level, the book is about the mysteries of identity and
- society. On another level, it's about a deeper, almost religious
- mystery, in the sense of the medieval "mystery plays." It's about the
- mystery of what life is really like. Passmore has these moments of
- mystic clarity that dog him all through the book. He has to figure out
- what they mean.
-
- And in the end, he figures that mystery out too.
-
- I wrote the book in a year. I worked harder than I've ever worked
- before. I wanted the book to come out in the year after KOKO, and I
- figured that to do that I would have to average ten pages a day, seven
- days a week for eight months.
-
- And that's what I did. It was a great experience because I didn't have
- time to get in my own way. It just rolled. I realized at a certain
- point that I knew the answer even if I wasn't AWARE of it yet.
-
- KOKO was a breakthrough book for me. I felt it raised the level of my
- game; I'm proud of it. It sold well in both hard and soft covers, and
- I got letters from Vietnam vets who said that in the main I'd gotten
- it right.
-
- SHADOWLAND was a real adventure. I wanted to write a story that was
- ABOUT stories. I was telling a lot of stories to my young son, fairy
- tales; I was just making them up. I realized at a certain point that
- unless I wrote them down they would be lost forever.
-
- SHADOWLAND was also, of course, about magic. I wanted to develop what
- I'd begun in GHOST STORY. I wanted to work on that point where reality
- and fantasy come together, and widen that crack a little. I did some
- of the same thing in FLOATING DRAGON; that is, I tried to make the
- real world look like an hallucination or a fantasy. I think I
- succeeded a little better in SHADOWLAND.
-
- Working with Stephen King was great. He's an amazingly strong and
- imaginative writer. I've always cherished his work and we are friends.
- I found him insightful, tolerant, and patient. He's amazing because
- when he sits down to work, this whole world just jumps into life. At
- the end, we were actually writing side by side. It was the only time
- I've ever actually written something WITH someone.
-
- The book took a long time, though. It was a tough book and I think we
- were both glad when it was finished.
-
- Right now I'm working on a novel called THE THROAT. It follows
- naturally from KOKO and MYSTERY, and some of the same characters
- appear in it. In a sense it's their completion. All three novels form
- a trilogy called THE BLUE ROSE TRILOGY.
-
- Horror? Mystery? I don't know. I've always seen myself as inventing
- Peter Straub novels. I think this is what any good writer does. Updike
- writes Updike novels, Raymond Chandler writes Raymond Chandler novels.
- Book by book I try to work out the way I think and the way I see
- things. I get closer and closer to it. One day, who knows, maybe I'll
- get it exactly right!
-
- (For more information about Roc SF Advance, write to: NAL, Science
- Fiction Department, 375 Hudson Street, New York, NY 10014. The book
- that Peter Straub was talking about, the one he wrote with Stephen
- King was, of course, THE TALISMAN.)
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
- _____________________________________
- [ ]
- [ PETER QUINT READS THE MAGAZINES ]
- [_____________________________________]
-
-
- MIDNIGHT GRAFFITI
- Winter 90/91 "Apocalypso" Issue
- edited by Jessica Horsting & James Van Hise
-
- MIDNIGHT GRAFFITI is not just another horror fiction magazine; the
- editors manage to give MG a tone, a flavor maybe, all its own. MG
- neither tries to absolve horror by being pretentiously high brow, nor
- by being self-consciously low-brow with a Whatthehell kind of
- attitude. No, MIDNIGHT GRAFFITI takes it for granted that The Dark
- Side, the Weird, the Gruesome, is of interest to sensible adult
- people, without breast-beating or apology.
-
- The theme of this issue is the end of civilization, the Apocalypse.
- Several writers give their personal fictional take on this subject:
- Gregory Hyde gives us "Diary of the Damned", telling us that surviving
- a holocaust might be worse than not; J.S. Russell contributes the
- incredibly gross "City of Angels", and Neil Gaiman is represented by
- "Cold Colours", a longish poem about the "dark magic of technology".
-
- While on the subject of MG's fiction, there is also an excerpt from
- S.P. Somtow's upcoming Avon novel, DARK RIVER. I don't know how you
- feel about this "novel excerpt" business, but I don't much care for
- it. It's all well and good to allow publishers a multi-page "ad" for
- one of their books, but readers who begin a tale, whether it be in a
- book or a magazine, expect closure, an ending. Excerpts are maddening.
- That said, I read a paragraph of Somtow's story by accident, and
- before I knew it I'd finished the whole (really rather long) excerpt.
- There's something about Somtow's prose, the way every sentence lures
- you on, that's irresistible. I was particularly caught by Theo's:
-
- "I guess I'm getting too imaginative again. Like in school sometimes
- during finals when I drift away for what seems like a ninety minute
- action adventure comedy drama but when I drift back again only a
- minute as passed and I'm still trying to answer the same true or false
- question."
-
- Remember doing that? S.P. Somtow is as good as Stephen King at
- creating recognizable characters that you instantly care about. So you
- should probably just save yourself some hassle and go out and buy DARK
- RIVER before you start MIDNIGHT GRAFFITI. You won't be able to resist
- the excerpt.
-
- But the fiction is outweighed in this issue by the nonfiction. Two
- writers give their perspective of a tour through the Alcor Life
- Extension Foundation, a cryonics company. You'll found out probably
- more than you wanted to know about being frozen, as well as learning
- the source behind an episode of L.A. LAW. But the very best offering
- of this issue is David Gerrold's essay, "Death of Tomorrow", in which
- he compares human civilization to that of the ancient dinosaurs, makes
- many strikingly logical points, and finally arrives at an
- understanding of not only where the dinosaurs went, but where we're
- going as well. It's not pretty.
-
- Alongside all this good stuff, there's the usual good stuff. There's
- an interview with Dan Simmons, a guide to apocalypse on videotape,
- book news, and depressing news about frogs and British cows. Terrific
- reading, not to be missed. (To subscribe, send $19.95 for four
- quarterly issues to: Midnight Graffiti, 13101 Sudan Road, Poway, CA
- 92064.)
-
- :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
-
- CEMETERY DANCE
- edited by Richard T. Chizmar
- Winter 1991 Joe R. Lansdale Special
-
- First the fiction: "Layover" is a nice little morality piece by Ed
- Gorman. "The Laughing Man" by Gary Raisor presents his solution to the
- divorce problem, but is not one of Raisor's best stories. Andrew
- Vachss wrote a short-short for CD called "Joyride", violent and
- surprisingly intense for it's length. "Julian's Hand" by Gary Brandner
- is another anatomical horror piece, but much better than those kinds
- of stories usually are. Joe R. Lansdale has two pieces here: "Drive-In
- Date", a nasty play made from an even nastier short story (said story
- to be found in NIGHT VISIONS 8 from Dark Harvest); and "Bestsellers
- Guaranteed", about what desperate writers would do for success. "Pig's
- Dinner" by Graham Masterton wins the Gross-Out Award for this issue,
- although Bentley Little's "The Town" comes a close second. Bill
- Pronzini relates the making of a vampire in "Thirst", and Ronald
- Kelly's novelette, "The Winds Within" gives us a serial killer with an
- obscure motive. There are also excerpts: one from DARK TWILIGHT by
- Joseph A. Citro, and several small ones from HOTTER BLOOD edited by
- Jeff Gelb and Michael Garrett.
-
- There are three interviews: Part 1 of a two-parter with Peter Straub,
- one with Joe R. Lansdale, and one with Joseph W. Zarzynski, monster
- hunter. There are also columns from Ed Gorman, Matthew J. Costello,
- Paul Sammon, a very difficult trivia quiz by A.R. Morlan, and review
- columns by Ed Bryant and Lori Perkins. All in all, another fine issue
- from CEMETERY DANCE, but not *quite* as great as the last one was.
- Treat yourself to a CD subscription by sending a check payable to
- Richard T. Chizmar for $15 (four quarterly issues) or $25 (8 quarterly
- issues) to: Cemetery Dance, PO Box 16372, Baltimore, MD 21210.
-
- :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
-
- HAUNTS
- edited by Joseph K. Cherkes
- Fall/Winter 1990
-
- This issue of Haunts contains their usual fine assortment of horror
- fiction and poetry, as well as a few short nonfiction pieces, but this
- time I want to focus on just one author's material. The first three
- short stories in this Fall/Winter 1990 issue constitute a trilogy by
- Anthony Gael Moral. Remember that name, because this is one great
- horror writer. In his hands the ghost story is revitalized and given
- an immediacy that I haven't felt since I read my first examples as a
- child.
-
- The first installment is "Call FOrdham 5-7197", which introduces
- world-class photographer Michael Drawbore, his fiance Margaret, and
- his long-dead grandmother, Wilderleigh Drawbore, who raised Michael.
- During the process of moving, Michael discovers an old 1944 dime that
- he had saved from his childhood--the dime his grandmother had given
- him to keep so that he could always call her when he was in trouble.
- As Rod Serling would say, that dime becomes Michael's personal door
- into the Twilight Zone.
-
- The next story is called "Dark Eyes", about Margaret's encounter with
- nonliving beings, and "Sad Songs" finishes the trilogy and the story
- of all three of our major characters. Although the material works well
- as a trilogy of short stories, I can easily imagine it being turned
- into a fine novel. THE DRAWBORE TRILOGY is a chilling read, and is
- worth getting as a Back Issue if you missed this particular HAUNTS.
- Send $4.95 (the $3.95 cover price plus $1 postage) to: Nightshade
- Publications, PO Box 3342, Providence, RI 02906-0742. You can save
- yourself some hassle by sending another $13 for a subscription for the
- next four issues. HAUNTS is one of the best creepy fiction magazines
- around today.
-
- :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
-
- SKELETON CREW
- November 1990 issue
-
- Liberally laced with death metaphors and wordplay (column and article
- titles like "Deaditorial", "Killing Note", "Last Writes", etc.),
- SKELETON CREW is a thin, slick magazine of horror fiction, interviews
- and miscellaneous verbiage from England. The first column was by their
- U.S. correspondent Phil Nutman, and was about Frank Miller and his
- involvement in the movie ROBOCOP 2. I thought the article was overlong
- and it gave more consideration to the ROBOCOP saga than most adults
- would say it deserved.
-
- The next piece was a very long interview with writer Neil Gaiman, the
- theme of which was: What artifacts would you take into the Afterlife
- with you? I didn't have much faith in this as an interesting subject,
- but Neil Gaiman's conversation proved me wrong. In addition to
- generally interesting discussions of various cultural subjects, Gaiman
- also threw off the occasional quotable quote:
-
- "On a gut level I don't believe I'll ever die. This is probably sheer
- ego, but I don't actually have any plans to die and I think it would
- be a very bad idea."
-
- "Actually life as a kid was a desperate battle to avoid being taken to
- see THE SOUND OF MUSIC...How could anyone inflict that on a child?"
-
- "Stephen Sondheim is someone for whom I have infinite respect. He's
- not only a terrific song writer, but he's a man who can make words sit
- up and beg."
-
- The first sample of "Crewci-Fiction" in this issue of SKELETON CREW
- was "Those of Rhenea" by David Sutton, an atmospheric Lovecraftian
- tale of old gods who are still active on the Greek island of Delos.
- This was followed by an article by Stan Nicholls about Iain Banks,
- author of THE WASP FACTORY and the recent USE OF WEAPONS, in which
- Banks describes his artistic background and working methods.
-
- "Portfolio" reproduces artwork by Dean Ormston that is not quite as
- misty as Dave McKean's, not quite as stark as Clive Barker's--a couple
- of the pieces have real power. "Clean" by Richard Holland is a crawly
- story about obsession, "Tiff" by Des Lewis is a haunting short-short
- about the desperate lives being lived behind the facades of an average
- small town, and "Amorph" by Stuart Palmer tells of the blobish
- nightmare of a scarred veteran.
-
- The remaining articles: "Picking the Bones" by Di Wathen looks at the
- horrific in children's literature, Dave Reeder's "Film Crew" takes an
- appreciative look at FRANKENHOOKER, "Apocalyptic Thinking" records Dr.
- Christian Lehmann's conversation with Alan Moore, "Dead Write" is a
- cantankerous essay about horror from Joel Lane, and "Dicing With
- Death" contains advice for the novice role-playing gamer from Liz
- Holliday.
-
- The coverage in SKELETON CREW is slanted just a tad toward the
- teenager, but the material is interesting and it's always nice to get
- articles and fiction drawn from a different pool. If all you've read
- are American magazines, you need to expand your horizons a little, and
- SKELETON CREW is not a bad place to start. Subscriptions are currently
- $54 U.S. for 12 issues, to be sent to the U.S. Subscription Agent:
- Wise Owl Worldwide Publications, 4314 West 238th Street, Torrance, CA
- 90505.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- A ROBERT R. McCAMMON UPDATE
-
- May 1991: Pocket Books will publish his last novel, MINE, in
- paperback. It's about the search for a kidnapped baby, and will retail
- for $5.95.
-
- August 1991: Pocket Books will publish UNDER THE FANG, the first
- Horror Writers of America anthology, edited by McCammon and Martin
- Greenberg.
-
- August 1991: Pocket Books will publish his new novel, BOY'S LIFE, in
- hardcover. This is a non-supernatural thriller about a 12-year-old
- boy's life in 1964.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- CHRISTOPHER MOORE
-
- Christopher Moore's first novel, PRACTICAL DEMONKEEPING, is about a
- man who looks 20 but is really 70, and has spent the last 50 years
- traveling around the United States trying to find an incantation that
- will get rid of a people-eating demon who's been with him the whole
- time. The book was sold for movie development even before it was
- bought by a publisher--Disney Studios' Hollywood Pictures will make
- the movie and St. Martin's Press will publish the book. Moore wrote an
- "author's bio" for St. Martin's, part of which was printed in Leonore
- Fleischer's "Talk of the Trade" column in Publishers Weekly, and which
- we reproduce here:
-
- "I wrote the entire first draft of PRACTICAL DEMONKEEPING at the
- counter of a local coffee shop while wearing a pair of deck shoes that
- I bought from a Cuban in Key West who swore on his sister's virginity
- that they belonged to Ernest Hemingway. I am currently working on my
- second book, COYOTE BLUES, which is the story of an American Indian
- businessman who is visited by the trickster god, Coyote. I am also
- working on a science-fiction (cyberpunk) screenplay entitled
- NECROPOLIS, which is being done purely to take my mind off the hype I
- am getting from people in Hollywood. (Hype is California's main
- export, you know.) I am taller than Jay McInerney, I wear less makeup
- than Tama Janowitz, and if I had to, I could probably tear the shit
- out of Saul Bellow. I do not have a drug or alcohol problem but I am
- willing to develop one if you think it will help in marketing.
- Although I am thirty-three, I can pass for twenty-five if you need to
- do the 'hot young writer' pitch to someone."
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- AN INTERVIEW WITH NANCY COLLINS
- (courtesy of Roc SF Advance)
-
- Q: When did you decide to become a writer?
- A: That makes it sound like I had a choice in the matter. I'm
- convinced that just before I was born, Nature sat me down and said,
- "You'll be REALLY good at telling stories, but not a heck of a lot
- else, kid." As far back as I can remember, I was always writing for my
- own amusement. My mother has a story I drew when I was three--before I
- was literate--depicting the unrequited love of a taxi for a bus. I
- always assumed I'd end up being a writer, although I had a couple of
- childhood flirtations with wanting to be a cowgirl and a disc jockey.
- Not at the same time, mind you. I actually WAS a DJ for a while, on a
- community radio station in Memphis. (I was also a DJ at the college
- radio station where I attended university for two years, but that
- doesn't count, since it was probably the ONLY campus radio station
- that broadcast nothing but E-Z Listening.) I've held a number of
- low-paying menial jobs over the past twelve years, and I'm glad I've
- finally attained my true station in life because I'd probably have
- become more depressed than I was already.
-
- Q: Who are your favorite writers and who was the biggest influence on
- you?
- A: I'd have to break that down into two or three categories, since I
- don't have the same tastes now I had as a kid (thank goodness). My
- EARLIEST influences were Dr. Seuss, Madeline L'Engle, L. Frank Baum,
- and whoever it was that wrote the original "Raggedy Anne" stories.
- When I was in Junior High, I started getting into Zenna Henderson,
- Edgar Rice Burroughs, Robert E. Howard, Harlan Ellison, and Robert
- Anton Wilson. When I was in college, during the late 70s and early
- 80s, I started reading Michael Moorcock, Robert Bloch, Stephen King,
- Richard Matheson, and Shirley Jackson. Lovecraft was also a big
- influence, but I didn't discover him until fairly late--around my
- mid-twenties. Now I read a lot of J.G. Ballard, Flannery O'Connor,
- Gabriel Garcia Marquez, William S. Burroughs, and William Kotzwinkle.
-
- As to who was the biggest influence on me, I'd have to say John
- Shirley, since he's the one responsible for tutoring me in the "do's"
- and "don'ts" of professional writing. I learned a lot from him in
- terms of style and aesthetics.
-
- Q: Who do you consider some of the most under-appreciated writers
- currently working in the field?
- A: I'd say John Shirley, right off the bat. He's written some
- outrageously original novels over the years, in both the SF and horror
- genres. K.W. Jeter is another outstanding writer I don't think gets
- the kind of recognition he deserves. Michael McDowell has produced
- some of the finest postmodern Southern Gothic novels published during
- this half of the century, although he's best known for scripting
- BEETLEJUICE. And I stand in absolute awe of Bruce Sterling, who should
- win every Hugo and Nebula he's up for.
-
- Q: What about yourself? How do you go about "being a writer"?
- A: Whenever I hear fellow writers talk about how they get up with the
- chickens and work six hours every day, seven days a week, I feel
- ashamed of myself for not being more organized. I'm a lazy gal and
- tend to have an erratic work schedule. But then, I come from a long
- line of people who worked for themselves without a boss hanging over
- their shoulder, so I guess I'm upholding something of a family
- tradition.
-
- Q: How do you like living and working in New Orleans?
- A: TEMPTER is set in New Orleans, my adopted home, and I hope I can
- work both it and Arkansas, where I was born and raised, into future
- works. I feel that calling on personal knowledge of a region you're
- familiar with lends an air of authenticity to whatever it is you're
- doing. New Orleans is one of a handful of cities in this country that
- has its own peculiar mystique. There's a romantic glamour that
- surrounds the city, with its voodoo, antebellum splendor, and exotic
- Carnival traditions, that lends itself to fiction. But then there's
- also the REAL New Orleans, with its equally long history of racial
- tension, social injustice and political malfeasance. How could a
- horror writer live here and NOT be inspired?
-
- (For more information about receiving Roc SF Advance, write to: NAL,
- Science Fiction Department, 375 Hudson St., New York, NY 10014.)
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- PET PEEVES
- by Annie Wilkes
-
- Why must authors and critics assume that any genre designation is an
- insult? I realize that each writer would like to believe that their
- work is completely original, like nothing else every printed, but that
- makes finding a book in a bookstore kind of tough, not to mention
- wading through my collection here in my home. I have put my copy of
- Michael Cadnum's SLEEPWALKER in my own personal Horror section, not
- because it's lousy, and not because it's content is similar to that of
- any other book I own. I shelve it where I do because my mind, like
- everyone else's, is naturally adept at pattern recognition, and
- because general categories help me find my way around the thousands of
- books in this house.
-
- I will grant that some people use genre designations as a shortcut for
- thinking, and that for some people (notably authors and critics)
- genres are, and will always be, literary ghettos. But stupidity exists
- everywhere, and I refuse to be tarred with the same brush.
-
- Another thing: Why will critics continually criticize a book for not
- playing the game correctly, for a song out of tune? This could be a
- facet of the Genre Designation Stupidity mentioned above, where a
- critic will demand that a book shelved in the horror section resemble
- their idea of a Horror Novel. Once again, this is just garden-variety
- stupidity, and genres can't be expected to pay for a few morons with
- typewriters. Thank you for your attention; you may now return to
- whatever it was you were doing.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- ALL THE NEWS OF GRUES
-
- * Andrew Neiderman has yet another book in film development--THE NEED,
- a Jekyll-Hyde tale involving a female-male metamorphosis. His next
- book is THE IMMORTALS, which imagines what would have happened if
- Ponce de Leon had found the Fountain of Youth he was looking for. It's
- coming sometime soon from Pocket Books.
-
- * WHISPER...HE MIGHT HEAR YOU by William Appel, reviewed in RFP #15,
- has been optioned for a "theatrical feature" (a movie).
-
- * I hear that Stephen King's short story, "Sometimes They Come Back"
- (from NIGHT SHIFT) is being made into a TV movie starring Tim
- Matheson.
-
- * MASTERS OF DARKNESS III, edited by Dennis Etchison, is due from Tor
- in June, and Underwood/Miller (708 Westover Drive, Lancaster, PA
- 17601) will be releasing an omnibus volume containing all three MofD.
-
- * Next time you're in England, you might want to check out the
- Chessington World of Adventures. The amusement park has a horror
- theme, with such attractions as the Black Forest Chateau, the
- Transylvania Village, and an overhead rollercoaster called The Vampire
- (the cars all look like flying bats).
-
- * Forthcoming: Dean Ing's techno-thriller, THE NEMESIS MISSION, and
- Nick Pollotta's military horror novel, DOOMSDAY EXAM.
-
- * AFRAID, The Newsletter for the Horror Professional, has died.
-
- * LITERARY BOOGEYMAN: THE STORY OF STEPHEN KING is an unauthorized
- biography written by George Beahm, author of THE STEPHEN KING
- COMPANION. The new biography will probably be released sometime this
- fall (1991) by Andrews & McMeel.
-
- * Coming soon is the movie version of Stephen King's THE DARK HALF. I
- don't have a release date, but I've heard that it was written and
- directed by George Romero and the stars are Timothy Hutton, Amy
- Madigan, Michael Rooker, and Julie Harris.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- SOME 1991 HORROR HIGHLIGHTS:
-
- CAFE PURGATORIUM by Dana Anderson, Ray Garton, & Charles de Lint (Tor
- Jul hardcover)
- THE VAMPIRE'S APPRENTICE by Richard Lee Byers (Zebra/Pinnacle)
- SAINT PETER'S WOLF by Michael Cadnum (Carroll & Graf, Jun)
- WAKING NIGHTMARES by Ramsey Campbell (Tor Nov hardcover)
- HOME by Matthew Costello (Jove)
- WALLS OF FEAR edited by Kathryn Cramer (Avon Oct reprint)
- THE YEAR'S BEST FANTASY AND HORROR: FOURTH ANNUAL COLLECTION edited by
- Ellen Datlow & Terri Windling (St. Martin's Jul)
- A WHISPER OF BLOOD edited by Ellen Datlow (Morrow Nov)
- SPECTERS by J.M. Dillard (Dell Abyss May)
- MASTERS OF DARKNESS III edited by Dennis Etchison (Tor May)
- METAHORROR edited by Dennis Etchison (Dell Abyss)
- DOWN RIVER by Stephen Gallagher (Tor Nov reprint)
- LOT LIZARDS by Ray Garton (Mark Ziesing, summer)
- FINAL SHADOWS edited by Charles L. Grant (Doubleday Foundation, Sep
- hardcover & trade paperback)
- FIRE MASK by Charles L. Grant (Bantam Young Adult, Apr hardcover)
- SOMETHING STIRS by Charles L. Grant (Tor Oct hardcover)
- NIGHT ANGEL by Kate Green (Dell Apr reprint)
- MADLANDS by K.W. Jeter (St. Martin's Oct hardcover)
- BEST NEW HORROR 2 edited by Stephen Jones & Ramsey Campbell (Carroll &
- Graf, Sep hardcover)
- FOUR PAST MIDNIGHT by Stephen King (Penguin/Signet Sep reprint)
- THE STAND by Stephen King (Penguin/Signet Apr reprint)
- BY BIZARRE HANDS by Joe R. Lansdale (Avon Sep)
- EVIL DEEDS by Bentley Little (Penguin)
- THE WATCHERS OUT OF TIME by H.P. Lovecraft (Carroll & Graf Sep)
- BOY'S LIFE by Robert R. McCammon (Pocket Aug hardcover)
- MINE by Robert R. McCammon (Pocket Jun reprint)
- UNDER THE FANG edited by Robert R. McCammon (Pocket Aug)
- TOPLIN by Michael McDowell (Dell Abyss Aug)
- THE BURNING by Graham Masterton (Tor Apr hardcover)
- CREATED BY by Richard Christian Matheson (Bantam)
- BORDERLANDS 2 edited by Thomas F. Monteleone (Avon Dec)
- THE IMMORTALS by Andrew Neiderman (Pocket Jul)
- BAD DREAMS by Kim Newman (Carroll & Graf Sep hardcover)
- HELLTRACKS by William F. Nolan (Avon Nov)
- DEAD END: CITY LIMITS edited by Paul F. Olson & David B. Silva (St.
- Martin's Nov hardcover)
- THE MAN UPSTAIRS by T.L. Parkinson (Dutton)
- DINNER AT DEVIANT'S PALACE by Tim Powers (Ace May reprint)
- LAST CALL by Tim Powers (contemporary occult thriller)
- THE STRESS OF HER REGARD by Tim Powers (Ace Jun reprint)
- OBSESSED by Rick Reed (Dell Abyss Jul)
- NIGHT by Alan Rodgers (Bantam Nov)
- SONG OF KALI by Dan Simmons (Tor Oct reprint)
- THE BRIDGE by John Skipp & Craig Spector (Bantam Oct)
- CUTTHROAT by Michael Slade (Roc)
- I SHUDDER AT YOUR TOUCH edited by Michele Slung (Penguin/Roc Jun
- hardcover)
- HOUSES WITHOUT DOORS by Peter Straub (Penguin/Signet Nov)
- THE YEAR'S BEST HORROR STORIES XIX edited by Karl Edward Wagner (DAW
- Oct)
- MASTERY by Kelley Wilde (Dell Abyss Sep)
- HELLHOUNDS by Sidney Williams (Zebra)
- REPRISALS by F. Paul Wilson (Jove Nov)
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- COMING IN JUNE (OUR 2nd ANNIVERSARY ISSUE)!!
-
- a review of:
-
- HOLLYWOOD GHOSTS
- Haunting, Spine-chilling Stories from America's Film Capital
- edited by Frank D. McSherry, Jr., Charles G. Waugh, & Martin H.
- Greenberg
- (Rutledge Hill Press, 1991)
-
- And Anything Else We Can Get Our Hands On!
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- <-*->:<-*->:<-*->:<-*->:<-*->:<-*->
- < >
- < 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 The Annex BBS 513-274-0821
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- THE KENNING QUOTIENT (KQ) is a rating applied to books read by the
- editor in this section, a number ranging from 0 (which means the book
- is an unredeemable stinker) to 5 (meaning the book is not to be
- missed.)
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- RANDOM ACCESS
-
- One of the very nice things that is unique to SCIENCE FICTION from
- early on in its short life span has been the CONvention. A CON
- (convention) is a gathering of fen (Plural of SF Fans) for either a
- special purpose Science Fiction related subject, such as SF folk
- singing (called for some inexplicable reason FILK singing), SF
- weaponry, Star Trek, or almost anything else one can imagine; or a
- general purpose CON that is likely to be covering a wide variety of
- Science Fiction, Science, and related issues.
-
- At almost every one of these things at least a few professional
- authors will gather to be on panels, to autograph books, and mingle
- with the other attendees. Now I must admit that I have thus far not
- made it to a WorldCON, but have been to a couple of pretty good sized
- regional Cons. One of the things that impresses me was the interaction
- between authors and the rest of us. As far as I know this is the only
- literary genre in which this occurs, and the authors that I know all
- tell me that they get a lot of outstanding feedback. From my end, I've
- learned a lot about writing, a lot about the frustrations writers
- have, and who some of the "respectable" authors are who wrote dirty
- books to keep body and soul together in their beginning years. Quite
- often the technical aspects of writing SF and writing in general get
- pretty good coverage.
-
- Booksellers and indeed sellers of all sorts of things frequent CONs so
- there always seems ample opportunity to spend your hard earned
- dollars. Typically an art show is included with everything from
- amateur to pro art--and auctions are part of the art show, with
- proceeds ofttimes going to special charities.
-
- The best part of this menagerie however is the other fans who appear,
- from very young to very old, all eager to share their love of Science
- Fiction with anyone who will slow down for even a second. If you
- haven't gone to a SF CON I highly recommend the experience. Find
- someone else who likes SF and just GO. If you don't know where one is
- located, both CompuServe and GEnie have areas in the SF sections where
- postings are made, the magazine LOCUS has a very good listing as do
- several of the popular SF magazines. Local bookstores that specialize
- in SF often know about local CONS. In a pinch, drop me a note and I'll
- get some info to you. If enough of you indicate an interest, I'll
- include some info on CONs in LYGOR in the future. Try one--you'll
- likely get hooked and soon be a SMOF (Secret Master of Fandom). Above
- all--enjoy.
-
- As always, your comments, questions, or observations about RANDOM
- ACCESS or anything else in LYGOR are welcome. Just get them to me at
- any of the addresses listed on the masthead.
-
- dkk
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- LOOSE NEWS
-
- * CANTICLE UPDATE: Locus magazine reports that Walter Miller has
- turned in the first 300 pages of his sort-of sequel to A CANTICLE FOR
- LEIBOWITZ.
-
- * The Los Angeles Science Fantasy Society has created a "Recommended
- Reading List for Ages 9-12" and you can get a copy by sending a
- Self-Addressed, Stamped Envelope (SASE) to: LASFS, 11513 Burbank
- Blvd., North Hollywood, CA 91601.
-
- * It looks like the SCI-FI CHANNEL has made it. They are due to begin
- broadcasting sometime this summer, and will be distributed to the home
- satellite market by Netlink.
-
- * Geoff Ryman, a British fantasy writer, has written a story about
- what happened to Dorothy before and after the events in L. Frank
- Baum's THE WIZARD OF OZ. It's called WAS, and Knopf will be publishing
- it in the U.S. within the next year.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- AWARDS:
-
-
- THE BARRY R. LEVIN COLLECTORS AWARDS 1990
-
- Most Collectable Author of the Year: Stephen King
- Most Collectable Book of the Year: The limited edition of THE STAND:
- THE COMPLETE & UNCUT EDITION by Stephen King (Doubleday)
- Lifetime Collectors Award: Lloyd Arthur Eshbach for "his unique
- contribution to collectable science fiction and fantasy as author
- and publisher"
-
-
- THE SCIENCE FICTION BOOK CLUB AWARDS
-
- Voted on by approximately 14,000 members of the Doubleday Science
- Fiction Book Club:
-
- Book of the Year: DRAGONSDAWN by Anne McCaffrey
- Second Place: THE DRAGONBONE CHAIR by Tad Williams
- Third Place: HATRACK RIVER by Orson Scott Card (omnibus containing
- SEVENTH SON, RED PROPHET, and PRENTICE ALVIN)
-
-
- SCIENCE FICTION WRITERS OF AMERICA NEBULA AWARD FOR BEST SF NOVEL
- Final Ballot
- (Awards will be announced at the annual banquet on April 27.)
-
- Best Novel:
-
- TEHANU by Ursula LeGuin (Bantam Spectra, $4.95)
- MARY REILLY by Valerie Martin (Doubleday, $18.95)
- ONLY BEGOTTEN DAUGHTER by James Morrow (Morrow, $19.95)
- THE FALL OF HYPERION by Dan Simmons (Bantam Spectra, $5.95)
- REDSHIFT RENDEZVOUS by John E. Stith (Ace Books, $3.95)
- WHITE JENNA by Jane Yolen (Tor, $3.95)
-
- Best Novella:
-
- "Weatherman" by Lois McMaster Bujold (Analog 2/90)
- "Fool to Believe" by Pat Cadigan (Asimov's 2/90)
- "The Hemingway Hoax" by Joe Haldeman (Asimov's 4/90)
- "Mr. Boy" by James Patrick Kelly (Asimov's 6/90)
- "Bones" by Pat Murphy (Asimov's 5/90)
-
- Best Novelette:
-
- "Tower of Babylon" by Ted Chiang (Omni 11/90)
- "The Coon Rolled Down and Ruptured His Larinks, A Squeezed Novel by
- Mr. Skunk" by Dafydd ab Hugh (Asimov's 8/90)
- "The Shobies' Story" by Ursula K. LeGuin (UNIVERSE 1)
- "1/72nd Scale" by Ian MacLeod (Weird Tales Fall/90)
- "The Manamouki" by Mike Resnick (Asimov's 7/90)
- "A Time for Every Purpose" by Kristine Kathryn Rusch (Amazing 5/90)
- "Loose Cannon" by Susan Shwartz (WHAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN VOL. 2)
- "Over the Long Haul" by Martha Soukup (Amazing 3/90)
-
- Short Stories:
-
- "Bears Discover Fire" by Terry Bisson (Asimov's 8/90)
- "The Power and the Passion" by Pat Cadigan (PATTERNS; Omni 3/90)
- "Lieserl" by Karen Joy Fowler (ACM #6: PERIPHERAL VISION; Asimov's
- 7/90)
- "Love and Sex Among the Invertebrates" by Pat Murphy (ALIEN SEX)
- "Before I Wake" by Kim Stanley Robinson (Interzone 27; Asimov's 4/90)
- "Story Child" by Kristine Kathryn Rusch (Aboriginal SF 10/90)
-
-
- 1990 PHILIP K. DICK AWARD NOMINEES
- (For the best SF paperback original of 1990.)
-
- THE OXYGEN BARONS by Gregory Feeley (Ace)
- WINTERLONG by Elizabeth Hand (Bantam Spectra)
- THE SCHIZOGENIC MAN by Raymond Harris (Ace)
- POINTS OF DEPARTURE by Pat Murphy (Bantam Spectra)
- CLARKE COUNTY, SPACE by Alan Steele (Ace)
-
-
- ARTHUR C. CLARKE AWARD NOMINEES
- (For the best SF novel published in Britain in 1990.)
-
- USE OF WEAPONS by Iain M. Banks (Macdonald)
- RATS AND GARGOYLES by Mary Gentle (Bantam UK)
- TAKE BACK PLENTY by Colin Greenland (Unwin)
- FAREWELL, HORIZONTAL by K.W. Jeter (Grafton)
- RED SPIDER, WHITE WEB by Misha (Morrigan)
- THE CITY, NOT LONG AFTER by Pat Murphy (Pan)
-
-
- 1991 BRITISH SCIENCE FICTION AWARDS
-
- Best Novel:
-
- USE OF WEAPONS by Iain M. Banks (Macdonald)
- RATS AND GARGOYLES by Mary Gentle (Bantam UK)
- THE DIFFERENCE ENGINE by William Gibson & Bruce Sterling (Gollancz)
- TAKE BACK PLENTY by Colin Greenland (Unwin)
- HYPERION by Dan Simmons (Headline)
-
- Best Short Fiction:
-
- "The Death of Cassandra Quebec" by Eric Brown (ZENITH 2)
- "The Phargean Effect" by Eric Brown (Interzone 41)
- "Axiomatic" by Greg Egan (Interzone 41)
- "Learning to Be Me" by Greg Egan (Interzone 37)
- "Winning" by Ian McDonald (ZENITH 2)
- "The Original Dr. Shade" by Kim Newman (Interzone 36)
-
- Best Dramatic Presentation:
-
- FLATLINERS
- STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION
- TOTAL RECALL
- TWIN PEAKS
-
- Best Artwork:
-
- Iain Byers (for "The Phargean Effect", Interzone 41)
- Dave McKean (cover for THE NIGHT MAYOR, NEL)
- Ian Miller (cover for THE DIFFERENCE ENGINE, Gollancz)
-
-
- 1990 WORLD FANTASY AWARDS
-
- Best Novel: LYONESSE: MADOUC by Jack Vance (Underwood-Miller)
- Best Novella: "Great Work of Time" by John Crowley (from NOVELTY)
- Best Short Fiction: "The Illusionist" by Steven Millhauser (from
- Esquire 12/89)
- Best Anthology: THE YEAR'S BEST FANTASY: SECOND ANNUAL COLLECTION
- edited by Ellen Datlow & Terri Windling (St. Martin's)
- Best Collection: COLLECTED STORIES by Richard Matheson (Scream/Press)
- Special Award, Professional: Mark V. Ziesing Publications
- Special Award, Non-Pro: Peggy Nadramia (GRUE magazine)
- Best Artist: Thomas Canty
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- THE ULTIMATE GUIDE TO SCIENCE FICTION
- by David Pringle
- (Pharos Books, 1991)
- Hardcover--$24.95 Trade paperback--$14.95
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- THE ULTIMATE GUIDE TO SCIENCE FICTION, while rather immodestly titled,
- does feature over 3,000 entries containing brief descriptions and
- reviews, as well as a rating (0-4 asterisks). The entries are by
- author Pringle and his "helper" Ken Brown, although it is acknowledged
- that the opinions of critics John Clute and Brian Stableford were
- influential.
-
- Pringle says in his Introduction that he has included "all the
- masterpieces--and quite a few of the stinkers". Here's a sample entry
- of each:
-
- "STAR MAKER (1937) **** Novel by Olaf Stapledon (UK). A man,
- contemplating life from a hill top, is whisked away into space in
- disembodied fashion and commences a grand cosmic journey which is
- awe-inspiring in its scope. This work, which attempts to portray the
- progress of all intelligent life in the universe, over a period of
- billions of years, is even grander in scale than the author's LAST AND
- FIRST MEN. It lacks plot, dialogue and the other virtues of good
- fiction, but it's the ultimate vision of the end of all things. An
- essential work. 'The one great grey holy book of science fiction' --
- Brian Aldiss, BILLION YEAR SPREE. An earlier version was published
- posthumously as NEBULA MAKER (1976)."
-
- "COSMIC ENGINEERS (1950) Novel by Clifford D. Simak (USA), first
- serialized in 1939. Buddy heroes encounter a robotic civilization and
- a girl who has been refining her intellect during 1000 years of
- suspended animation, in this amusingly inept space opera. Its author's
- first novel, it bears no resemblance to his later excellent work. Best
- left buried."
-
- I picked these examples because I thought they were interesting, but
- you shouldn't now assume that most entries are of books this old
- (indeed, I specifically hunted out these two older books that RFP
- readers may not have heard of). Nor should you assume that the
- opinions in THE ULTIMATE GUIDE TO SCIENCE FICTION are biased in favor
- of the British at the expense of the Americans. I was able to find no
- apparent national bias at all; Pringle has a definite leaning toward
- certain authors, but no favorite country of origin.
-
- THE ULTIMATE GUIDE TO SCIENCE FICTION contains comprehensive coverage
- of the biggies: H.G. Wells, Jules Verne, C.S. Lewis, Isaac Asimov, Ray
- Bradbury, Arthur C. Clarke, Clifford D. Simak, Phillip K. Dick, Robert
- A. Heinlein, Theodore Sturgeon, Ursula LeGuin, J.G. Ballard, Harlan
- Ellison, and William Gibson. You will also find many examples of the
- various subgenres of SF like: disaster novels, alternative world
- stories, near-future dystopias, prehistoric novels, New Wave trips to
- "inner space", cyberpunk tales of "means streets and microchips",
- space operas, and planetary romances.
-
- How about what ISN'T included? In his Introduction, Pringle says that
- he (mostly) ignored: fantasy, children's fiction, non-English language
- sf, borderline sf ("scientific romances" and "slipstream" fiction), sf
- published before 1970 and not reprinted since, lesser work of lesser
- writers, novelizations and other "spin-off" sf. He does, however, hint
- at future editions that will not only bring THE ULTIMATE GUIDE up to
- date, but will be enlarged with elements from these categories that
- were originally left out.
-
- One important category that IS covered is volumes of short stories,
- both anthologies and single-author collections. Many critics avoid
- short stories as if they were small insects that, once let into the
- house, will reproduce by the thousands and overwhelm everything else.
- Being a magazine editor himself, Pringle is obviously closer to the
- short story scene than most, and is to be congratulated for giving
- many fine collections and anthologies some well-deserved attention.
-
- Pringle seems to assume that most readers are title-oriented, and has
- arranged all the entries by title. Unfortunately, I am author-oriented
- and often forget titles. This caused some consternation until I found
- the Author Index in the back, which is an alphabetical listing of all
- included authors, with a list of all their books that have
- accompanying entries. This allows me to use the book both as a
- reference tool, to access any book's entry quickly and easily, and as
- a reader's guide to further enjoyments, by browsing through titles at
- random.
-
- (NOTE: I only had the paperback to look at, but for a reference book
- I would generally recommend a hardcover. The paperback is sturdy
- enough, but as is usual with sturdy and large paperbacks, it's
- uncomfortably stiff to browse through.)
-
- Author David Pringle is the owner and publisher of the critically
- acclaimed British magazine, INTERZONE, as well as the former editor
- (1980-1986) of FOUNDATION: The Review of Science Fiction, an SF
- journal. Most important around my house is that he is the author of
- Carroll & Graf's SCIENCE FICTION: THE 100 BEST NOVELS, in which the
- best of the best is covered in much more depth than in the THE
- ULTIMATE GUIDE. I see by his bio that he is also the author of the
- delectable-sounding IMAGINARY PEOPLE: A WHO'S WHO OF MODERN FICTIONAL
- CHARACTERS and a companion volume to the book I own called MODERN
- FANTASY: THE 100 BEST NOVELS.
-
- THE ULTIMATE GUIDE TO SCIENCE FICTION is an important addition to any
- SF-reader's bookshelf. Highly recommended. (Also highly recommended is
- his previous volume SCIENCE FICTION: THE 100 BEST NOVELS.)
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- THE PAPERBACK BOOKSHELF:
-
- THE GENERAL: Book 1 - THE FORGE
- by David Drake & S.M. Stirling
- Baen Books---February, 1991---$4.95---ISBN 671-720376-6
- review by Darryl Kenning
-
- In spite of a rather hokey beginning that sets the stage for the
- computer assistance the hero gets during the story, a little
- persistence will pay good dividends for the reader. If you like
- military science fiction, if you like interesting social settings, if
- you like rousing adventure, then you will enjoy this book.
-
- Set on a planet that has lost its science but is struggling to retain
- "civilization", the religion of the main country is based upon the
- computer. That means that certain computerese that we recognize
- becomes important to the societal backdrop and provides a bit of "in"
- humor for at least some of us. A fascinating blend of cultures (the
- result of the original colonial patterns) has been skillfully woven
- into a bright tapestry that almost comes alive in the hands of the
- master storytellers in this novel. And when all the good fun has gone,
- some quiet reflection will show the real story in human terms and its
- lessons for our times.
-
- I enjoyed this book as much as any by Drake and the collaboration goes
- very nicely. It has been set up as a series, and since it works so
- well I hardly resented that at all. This one is definitely worth a
- special trip to your bookstore.
-
- KQ........4
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- IN THE COUNTRY OF THE BLIND
- by Michael Flynn
- Baen Books---July, 1990---$3.95---ISBN 671-69886-9
- review by Darryl Kenning
-
- Take an extraordinary premise: What if Charles Babbage's invention of
- a mechanical computer about 100 years ago worked very, very well; and
- what if a number of people of that time formed a secret society to use
- that knowledge to run the world; and just suppose they are
- incompetent!
-
- Michael Flynn has taken these elements, mixed them up with a highly
- plausible scenario set in today's world, and covered this mixture with
- a writing style that works very well in this book for this premise.
- Whether or not you are a computer buff, this story is so plausible,
- the plot so devious, and the results so credible, that you can't help
- wondering if there isn't a basis of truth in all this--what if it IS
- all a plot!
-
- I don't want to beat this to death, and I certainly don't want to
- spoil any of the story by any plot revelations. This book is
- outstanding. Get it today--start reading immediately--and then let me
- know if you could put it down.
-
- KQ........5
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- BOX SCORES
- .....................................
- /: :
- : : Title Author(s) KQ :
- : : --------------------------------- :
- : : STRANDED, W Norwood & M Odom....2 :
- : : BOAT OF A MILLION YEARS :
- : : Poul Anderson............3 :
- : : RETURN OF THE EMPEROR :
- : : A Cole & C Bunch......3 :
- : : NICOJI, M.S. Bell...............3 :
- : : TIME OF THE FOX, M Costello.....2 :
- : : CHICAGO RED, R M Meluch.........2 :
- : : DEATH'S HEAD REBELLION :
- : : J. Pournelle (creator)...3 :
- : : CLARKE COUNTY, SPACE :
- : : Allen Steele..........4 :
- : : REACH, Edward Gibson............3 :
- : : GENERATION WARRIORS :
- : : A. McCaffrey & Moon, E...3 :
- : : MATRIX MAN, William Dietz.......2 :
- : : SURFACE ACTION, David Drake.....2 :
- : : CRISIS, Edited by :
- : : D. Drake & W. Fawcett......4 :
- : : THE SIEGE OF ARTISTA :
- : : Edited by W. Fawcett.....3 :
- : : :
- : : by darryl kenning :
- : :...................................:
- :..................................../
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- THE AUTHOR AS SIDESHOW
-
- We hear that Harlan Ellison has been up to his old tricks again--he
- wrote a story while sitting in the window of the Los Angeles bookstore
- Dangerous Visions. Wouldn't it be great if you could get somebody to
- pay you to sit in a window and read?
-
- While we're on the subject of Ellison-as-performer, he also gave a
- live stage performance, at the Georgia Fantasy Convention, of "The
- Rats in the Walls" by H.P. Lovecraft, which must have been wonderful.
- They taped it and we hear that Centauri Express will be releasing it
- as an audio tape.
-
- And there's still more Ellison news. Borderlands Press has announced
- the first title in its special series of never-before-in-hardcover
- books: NO DOORS, NO WINDOWS by Harlan Ellison. There is a signed,
- limited edition of 1000 copies, slipcased with dust jacket, for $65
- (plus $3 shipping and handling per book). Send your check to:
- Borderlands Press, PO Box 32333, Baltimore, MD 21208.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- BLURRING THE BOUNDARIES
- by Mark Mueller
-
- CYBER WAY by Alan Dean Foster (Ace, 1990, 226pp)
- EYE OF CAT by Roger Zelazny (Timescape [Pocket Books],1982,188pp)
-
- CYBER WAY is the first book by Alan Dean Foster that I have read. I
- have seen his works before on the book shelves, but they have always
- had that air of - I don't know - "marketing" about them. You know what
- I mean - "You've seen the movie; now read the book!"-type of thing.
- This doesn't necessarily mean that he is a bad writer or that he has
- "sold out" - it's just been my impression that while he may be glib
- enough, I'm not likely to find much originality in his work.
-
- I picked up CYBER WAY because it was advertised as "a science-fiction
- mystery" - just the thing to review for this column! Well, it is - and
- it isn't.
-
- This might be as good a time as any to dwell on the nature of mystery
- and why it is possible for good mysteries to exist in so many
- different genres. All mysteries are puzzles in one form or another and
- cause us to seek answers to the questions "who," "what," "why" or
- "how." Often, these answers are interdependent; solve one and you
- solve all. The key thing is the structure, the parceling out of clues
- that allows us to supply our own answers and try them out against the
- problem-solver in the story. Sometimes the mystery is the only
- worthwhile part of package - the puzzle (and its solution) are the
- only thing that keeps the reader turning the pages. Other times, the
- puzzle is transparent, but the characters are so interesting that we
- want to be with them as long as the novel will allow.
-
- Alas, neither is the case with CYBER WAY. The story opens with an
- Amerindian confronting a wealthy Florida industrialist, demanding that
- he sell a Navajo sandpainting. The next chapter introduces Detective
- Vernon Moody who has been called in to investigate the murder of the
- same wealthy Florida industrialist and his housekeeper, the only clues
- being the destruction of a Navajo sandpainting and the report of the
- security guards that an Indian had been arguing with the victim about
- that very painting. Oh, I almost forgot - the victims had been killed
- in a very strange manner; two holes were burned into each of their
- bodies, but they had died not from the wounds, but from shock.
-
- The police are baffled, so they do what police always do when they are
- baffled - they do something that makes no sense whatsoever. Okay,
- we've got an Indian and a sandpainting...let me see, where else in the
- world do they have Indians and sandpaintings...wait, I've got it!
- Let's send our Florida cop to Arizona! He's black, big and somewhat
- fat (but with surprising quickness, of course); he should fit right in
- when he shows up in the Navajo Territory.
-
- Right.
-
- Does all this sound somewhat contrived to you? What Foster has done is
- to set up a "buddy" movie and then written the book for it. This is
- "48 Hours," "Lethal Weapon," "Midnight Run" - take your pick. I guess
- the main thrust of this book is supposed to be the interplay between
- the city cop and the Navajo cop. The mystery elements take a back
- seat; we already know who the killer is - we've known it since the
- second page of the first chapter. The only questions remaining are how
- did he kill his victims and why did he destroy the sandpainting? Are
- they enough to sustain the novel? Are the characters sufficiently
- interesting enough to carry the book?
-
- No. If you like Tony Hillerman, don't bother with this book. Reading
- CYBER WAY is like drinking light beer.
-
- On the other hand...my daddy (who's going to be 70 years old in a
- couple of weeks!) taught me that "if you can't say anything nice,
- don't say anything at all." So, here's the positive thing I can say
- about CYBER WAY: all the time I was reading it, I kept remembering
- that I'd read a science fiction book about a Navajo set in the far
- future, and that if I hadn't read CYBER WAY, I probably wouldn't have
- reread EYE OF CAT by Roger Zelazny.
-
- The plot of EYE OF CAT is fairly straightforward - William Blackhorse
- Singer has chosen to travel among the stars, capturing rare creatures
- for the Interstellar Life Institute. In doing so, he has outlived all
- the rest of his clan - he has become the last Navajo. Now he is asked
- to come out of retirement to thwart a political assassination by an
- alien creature that can not only change shape at will, but also has
- the ability to walk through walls. The shapeshifting ability strikes a
- chord in Billy's mind and he returns to the ILI to confront a
- shapeshifting creature he captured many years ago to determine if it
- might be sentient. It is, and has learned many things in the fifty
- years of its imprisonment. Cat has learned how to communicate with
- humans, that it too is the last of its kind (the sun of its homeworld
- had gone nova) and that its sole reason for living is hate - a burning
- desire to track Billy down and kill him. Billy realizes that he
- cannot stop the assassin by himself and agrees to Cat's terms.
-
- What lifts EYE OF CAT out of the ordinary is Zelazny's ability to
- constantly shift the shape of the novel as it progresses. Just when
- you think you know what the book is about, he illuminates it from a
- slightly different angle and the thing you felt was important two
- pages ago suddenly loses its luster while something else begins to
- command your attention. This book is charged with striking imagery and
- poetry - the impression it makes lingers on long after closing the
- cover.
-
- Zelazny isn't shy about his influences, either; the book is dedicated
- to Joe Leaphorn, Jimmy Chee and Tony Hillerman. Fortunately, he is
- artist enough to create a world that doesn't pale in comparison with
- theirs.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- FROM THE ARCHIVES:
-
- Every issue or so I am going to pull something off the bookshelf that
- I haven't looked at in a long time, but that I remember as being worth
- rereading and provide a short report for you. Most of this stuff will
- probably be out of print but should still be findable as you browse
- your local used bookstore or library.
-
-
- A SPACESHIP FOR THE KING
- by Jerry Pournelle
- (DAW, February, 1973, No. 42, U01042)
- review by Darryl Kenning
-
- This was first seen serialized in ANALOG in 1972. It was also the
- first time I read a Jerry Pournelle book. In some ways it is the
- classic story of colonization (or recolonization), with the benefits
- to go to the Colonial Power, never the colony. Using a skillful blend
- of high tech and 17th century technology, he infuses the heroes with
- the kind of mutual respect between professionals that has become his
- trademark in later novels. He manages to provide a credible society
- for the colony, the empire, and the barbarian world, even to the
- beginnings of liberation for women in a feudal society. While courage
- and battle planning provides the action elements, even the bad guys
- have depth of character, and it is hard not to empathize with most of
- the individuals in the story. The real treat, real message I suppose,
- is that technological level has little to do with brains and ability.
- Something we do tend to forget in our world too, and it is great fun
- to watch the low techies outmatch the high techies.
-
- In short, I liked this book very much. Picking it up after several
- readings some years ago, it still keep my interest and I didn't want
- to put it down until I had devoured every last morsel of the plot and
- characterizations. I also found myself rolling around the basic
- premise in my mind days later, and that is, for me at any rate, when I
- KNOW I've found a winner. This one is worth the hunt.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- QUOTES 'N' STUFF:
-
- If you explain so clearly that no one can misunderstand,]
- somebody will.
-
- Calm down. It's only ones and zeros.
-
- The first sign of a nervous breakdown is when you start
- thinking your work is terribly important.
-
- Whenever I feel like exercise, I lie down until the feeling passes.
-
- Teenage Hell: a parent who's into BBSing
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- SF WRITER AND JIM MORRISON
-
- Patricia Kennealy, an SF writer currently being published by NAL/Roc,
- was once married in a pagan ceremony to Jim Morrison, lead singer for
- The Doors. As a matter of fact, she appears in Oliver Stone's recent
- movie, THE DOORS, both figuratively and literally. The ceremony that
- was performed in an East Village apartment appears in the movie, and
- Patricia Kennealy herself is in the scene. Note, however, that
- Kennealy plays the priestess that performed the ceremony, while
- actress Kathleen Quinlan plays Patricia Kennealy's character. Did I
- get that out right? The real-life writer Patricia Kennealy plays the
- movie characterization of the real-life priestess, while real-life
- actress Kathleen Quinlan plays the movie characterization of the
- real-life Patricia Kennealy.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- ASK UNCLE HAL 9001
-
- Test the enormous RAM database of UNCLE HAL, the new and improved
- model 9001 beta.
-
- Q. Who wrote PETER PAN?
- A. James M. Barrie (1860-1937). Barrie donated all the royalties in
- perpetuity to a children's hospital.
-
- Q. Who wrote the original book THE BODY SNATCHERS?
- A. Jack Finney, who also wrote the outstanding novel TIME AND TIME
- AGAIN wrote THE BODY SNATCHERS in 1955.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- TREKOLOGY
-
- WP BW247 FEB 20,1991 15:50 PACIFIC 18:50 EASTERN
- ( EW)(PARAMOUNT-MOTION-PICTURE) "Star Trek VI" begins principal
- photography
-
- Entertainment Editors & Film Writers
-
- HOLLYWOOD--(ENTERTAINMENT WIRE)--"Star Trek VI" will begin principal
- photography this spring.
-
- The film was written by Nicholas Meyer and Denny Martin Flynn and will
- be directed by Meyer, the director of "Star Trek II: The Wrath of
- Kahn" and co-screenwriter of "Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home," the two
- most successful "Star Trek" motion pictures. Steven-Charles Jaffe and
- Ralph Winter are producing and Leonard Nimoy is the executive producer
- of the film. A presentation of the Motion Picture Group of Paramount
- Pictures, it was announced Wednesday by Gary Lucchesi, president of
- production.
-
- "Star Trek VI" will reunite original "Star Trek" stars William Shatner
- (Captain James T. Kirk), Nimoy (Mr. Spock), DeForest Kelley (Dr.
- Leonard "Bones" McCoy), James Doohan (Scotty), Walter Koenig (Chekov),
- Nichelle Nichols (Uhura) and George Takei (Sulu).
-
- The screenplay is based upon "Star Trek" created by Gene Roddenberry,
- who will serve as executive consultant to the production.
-
- "We are excited to commemorate the 25th anniversary of 'Star Trek'
- with the start of production of a movie that reunites the entire
- original cast with the filmmakers who have been instrumental in the
- creation of the best of the "Star Trek" motion picture series," said
- Lucchesi.
-
- "Star Trek" premiered as a weekly hour-long television adventure
- series in 1966. Canceled by NBC after three seasons, the show's fans
- would not let the show be forgotten. "Star Trek" conventions began to
- be held worldwide and by 1972 the series was being rerun in more than
- 170 syndicated television markets.
-
- In 1979 the unprecedented "Star Trek" phenomenon reached a new height
- with the premiere of Paramount's "Star Trek -- The Motion Picture."
- The film set an industry record at the time of its release with the
- highest-grossing week in box-office history. "Star Trek IV: The Voyage
- Home" has the distinction of being the highest-grossing "Star Trek"
- movie with a domestic gross of $110 million.
-
- In addition to his work on the second and fourth "Star Trek" films,
- Meyer is the director/screenwriter of "Time After Time" and directed
- "Volunteers" and "The Deceivers." He received a best adapted
- screenplay Academy Award nomination for "The Seven Per-cent Solution"
- and is a two-time Emmy nominee for directing "The Day After" and
- co-writing "The Night That Panicked America."
-
- Producer Jaffe is the executive producer of "Ghost" and produced "The
- Fly II," "Near Dark" and "Those Lips, Those Eyes." He was the
- associate producer of "Demon Seed" and "Time After Time." He
- collaborated with his partner Meyer on the acclaimed telefilm "The Day
- After" and their upcoming feature films include "Company Business" and
- "Don Quixote."
-
- Producer Winter is the executive producer of "Star Trek IV: The Voyage
- Home" and "Star Trek V: The Final Frontier." He associate produced
- "Star Trek III: The Search for Spock" and served as post-production
- coordinator for "Star Trek II: The Wrath of Kahn." His other films
- include Paramount's "Flight of the Intruder" and the upcoming "The
- Perfect Weapon."
-
- Executive Producer Nimoy is the director of "Funny About Love," "The
- Good Mother," "Three Men and a Baby," "Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home"
- and "Star Trek III: The Search for Spock." As an actor, Nimoy has
- received four Emmy nominations: three for his role as Mr. Spock in the
- series "Star Trek" and one for his performance in the telefilm "A
- Woman Called Golda."
-
- Paramount Pictures is a Paramount Communications company.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION
-
- Season Four Schedule
-
- Updated : 3/6/91
-
- Week Of Prod. # Stardate Title
- -------- ------ --------- ----------------------------
- 9/24/90 175 44001.4 Best of Both Worlds Part II
- 10/01/90 178 44012.3 Family
- 10/08/90 177 44085.7 Brothers
- 10/15/90 176 44143.7 Suddenly Human
- 10/22/90 179 44161.2 Remember Me
- 10/29/90 180 44215.2 Legacy
- 11/05/90 181 44246.3 Reunion
- 11/12/90 182 44286.5 Future Imperfect
- 11/19/90 183 44307.3 Final Mission
- 11/26/90 175R 44001.4 Best of Both Worlds Part II
- 12/03/90 178R 44012.3 Family
- 12/10/90 177R 44085.7 Brothers
- 12/17/90 176R 44143.7 Suddenly Human
- 12/24/90 179R 44161.2 Remember Me
- 12/31/90 184 44356.9 The Loss
- 1/07/91 185 44390.1 Data's Day
- 1/14/91 180R 44215.2 Legacy
- 1/21/91 181R 44246.3 Reunion
- 1/28/91 186 44429.6 The Wounded
- 2/04/91 187 44474.5 Devil's Due
- 2/11/91 188 44502.7 Clues
- 2/18/91 189 Not Given First Contact
- 2/25/91 182R 44286.5 Future Imperfect
- 3/04/91 183R 44307.3 Final Mission
- 3/11/91 190 Galaxy's Child
- 3/18/91 191 Night Terrors
- 3/25/91 192 Identity Crisis
- 4/01/91 193 The Nth Degree
- 4/08/91 184R 44356.9 The Loss
- 4/15/91 185R 44390.1 Data's Day
- 4/22/91 194 Q-pid
- 4/29/91 195 Drumhead
- 5/06/91 196 Civil Wars
- 5/13/91 197 The Host
- 5/20/91 186R 44429.6 The Wounded
- 5/27/91 187R 44474.5 Devil's Due
- 6/03/91 198 [Data Story]
- 6/10/91 199
- 6/17/91 188R 44502.7 Clues
- 6/24/91 200 [Season Finale]
- 7/01/91 189R First Contact
- 7/08/91 190R Galaxy's Child
- 7/15/91 191R Night Terrors
- 7/22/91 192R Identity Crisis
- 7/29/91 193R The Nth Degree
- 8/05/91 194R Q-pid
- 8/12/91 195R Drumhead
- 8/19/91 196R Civil Wars
- 8/26/91 197R The Host
- 9/02/91 198R [Data Story]
- 9/09/91 199R
- 9/16/91 200R [Season Finale]
-
- Schedule of new episodes past April is subject to change.
-
- "Week Of" is the official Paramount Monday "week of" airdate.
- Satellite feeds of the episodes are two days earlier (Saturday).
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- THE BOOK THAT NEVER WAS:
-
- What Really Happened to A FLAG FULL OF STARS
- by Brad Ferguson
-
- Soon, now, there will appear the umpety-umpth novel in the Star Trek
- series, A FLAG FULL OF STARS. (As of this writing, it has already
- appeared in some areas.) My name is on the cover, which might lead you
- to think that it's my book.
-
- Well, it is and it isn't. Mostly, it isn't.
-
- I first proposed AFFoS to Pocket in 1986, soon after my first Trek
- novel, CRISIS ON CENTAURUS, appeared. I wanted to do a Trek book set
- on Earth during the three hundredth anniversary of the first manned
- lunar landing. That original proposal, which was for a
- first-generation book, had Captain Kirk and a refugee Klingon
- scientist defeating an Imperial spy ring that had gained knowledge of
- an important new source of freely available energy discovered by the
- scientist.
-
- On December 13, 1987, there was a meeting at Pocket Books to discuss
- an ambitious plan: the creation of a series of novels set in the "lost
- years" between the end of the five-year mission and the first film.
- Editor Dave Stern thought that, with a little tweaking, AFFoS might
- work as the second book of the proposed three-novel series. Present at
- the meeting were Dave, Bob Greenberger (who came up with the idea for
- the series), and writers Jeanne Dillard, Irene Kress and myself. We
- all got along very well and got a great deal of planning done. The
- books were to come out, one right after the other, in early 1989.
-
- Too bad it was all for nothing. Gene Roddenberry himself soon enough
- let it be known that he didn't think the "lost years" should be
- written about, although I've never been told why. Irene's book was
- cancelled after it was finished, and it was stated that only two "lost
- years" books would be produced--mine and Jeanne Dillard's. I myself
- added to the problems: I was terribly late in delivering my own book,
- thanks mainly to ill health, but also thanks more than a little to
- being stuck on dead center because of an ever-increasing number of
- restraints on what I could and could not do in the book. ST:TNG had
- come along, you see, and that meant the Star Trek office at Paramount
- was giving the novels a great deal of attention.
-
- The preliminary manuscript of AFFoS, due in August 1988, was
- (finally!) delivered by me to new editor Kevin Ryan at Pocket Books on
- March 31, 1989. That wasn't the end of it, though, because there then
- followed a raft of revisions. Some of the revising did indeed have to
- do with story problems, which is normal and expected....but most of it
- had to do with satisfying anticipated objections from the Star Trek
- office at Paramount--that is, objections from Gene Roddenberry's
- assistant, Richard Arnold. Without exception, those pre-emptive
- revisions weakened the story I was interested in telling. Each
- revision, by my lights, made the story less special and more bland. I
- revised AFFoS from stem to stern fully four times between April 1989
- and August 1990--and, in the end, it was not enough.
-
- Kevin said he was disappointed at the final result and told me that
- AFFoS had been turned over to Jeanne Dillard for a fifth revision. I
- was disappointed at that, and perhaps a little surprised, but not
- angry. To tell the truth, I was relieved; I did not want to have to
- take yet another whack at the book, and said as much at the time--and
- more than once--on the GEnie computer net. I suggested to Kevin that
- Jeanne might deserve a byline on the book, but was assured that she
- would not be doing all that extensive a job. To quote what Kevin told
- me more than once, it would still be my book. (I never talked to
- Jeanne about this myself. Perhaps I should have done so. Live and
- learn.)
-
- I assure you that it is not my book. If AFFoS were a movie, you could
- perhaps give me a "from a concept by" credit, but that's about all.
-
- I finally received the revised manuscript just a month before
- publication, and quickly saw the book for what it had become: a
- hastily produced and clumsily edited cut 'n' paste of my stuff mixed
- with some reasonably good stuff grafted on by Jeanne. Unfortunately,
- the scars of those grafts clearly show: Our writing styles are vastly
- different, and AFFoS indicates that they don't mix very well. The book
- desperately needs some smoothing, and it wouldn't have taken long to
- do, but there was no time left for it. (I know. I volunteered.)
-
- There are other problems, too. For example, one major character is
- introduced twice, ten manuscript pages apart--once by me and once by
- Jeanne. There are sometimes drastic, and occasionally bizarre,
- inconsistencies in characterization. Futuristic terminology is
- awkward: my "viddycams" have been replaced by mundane "cameras," but
- "watches" have become mysterious "chronos." There are also sentence
- fragments strewn all over the landscape like slats from a barn after a
- tornado.
-
- Worst of all--at least, as I see it--the ending of the book, fairly
- downbeat in the original, has been revised drastically and is now
- "happy." There may no longer be room in the Star Trek universe for
- anything more thoughtful than a happy ending. The people who license
- and publish the Trek books may have come to believe that their readers
- can't handle an ending that isn't "happy." Could be, could be. The
- folks who produce those romance novels you see in the supermarket
- think that way, too.
-
- Kevin Ryan tried--briefly--to convince me that it's a good book, but I
- am realistic enough to know better, and he is honest enough not to
- have tried too hard. It is poorly handled and, in the final analysis,
- it is not about very much at all. I am stuck with this two-headed yet
- brainless mutant child who bears my name, and I do not like it. Not at
- all.
-
- [Copyright (c) 1991 by Brad Ferguson. No changes or deletions can be
- made without the written permission of the author. Permission to
- distribute by written and electronic means is hereby granted.]
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- RECENT & UPCOMING BOOKS
-
- FRACTAL MODE by Piers Anthony (sequel to VIRTUAL MODE)
- BARRIYAR by Lois McMaster Bujold
- a new "CHANUR" novel by C.J. Cherryh (DAW hardcover)
- THE GARDEN OF RAMA by Arthur C. Clarke & Gentry Lee (this year)
- RAMA REVEALED by Arthur C. Clarke & Gentry Lee (next year)
- THE GREAT WORK OF TIME by John Crowley (Bantam Spectra Aug 91)
- CUP OF CLAY by Carole Nelson Douglas (first of a trilogy)
- THE SEERESS OF KELL by David Eddings (Book Five of "The Malloreon", a
- Del Rey hardcover in May)
- KENT MONTANA AND THE ONCE AND FUTURE THING by Lionel Fenn (Ace Aug 91)
- CAMELOT TITANIA by Robert Forward (Tor)
- TIMEMASTER by Robert Forward (Tor)
- THE MAN WHO FOLDED HIMSELF by David Gerrold (Bantam Spectra Apr 91)
- SHERWOOD by Parke Godwin (a Robin Hood fantasy, from Morrow/Avon)
- WORLD OF THE NIGHT WIND by Geary Gravel (a "Fading Worlds" novel)
- THE WARLORD OF KANSAS by Geary Gravel (a "Fading Worlds" novel)
- PRINCE OF THE SHAPESHIFTERS by Sharon Green
- THE SOUL THIEF by Sharon Green
- SEE ME, FEEL ME, TOUCH ME by F. Gwynplaine
- SHADOW LEADER by Tara K. Harper
- TRAMP ROYALE by Robert A. Heinlein (nonfiction travelogue)
- WHERE WOLF by Tanya Huff (sequel to BLOOD PRICE)
- DUST TO DUST by Tanya Huff (another sequel to BLOOD PRICE)
- BARDIC VOICES by Mercedes Lackey
- SUCCUBI by Edward Lee (pseudonym of Lee Seymour)
- THE LONG HUNT by James D. MacDonald & Debra Doyle (first of a trilogy)
- EXPEDITION by Vonda N. McIntyre (sequel to TRANSITION)
- WILD CARDS XI: JOKERTOWN SHUFFLE edited by George R.R. Martin (Bantam
- Spectra Sep 91)
- SHADOW OF THE CROWN by Craig Mills
- GLASS HOUSES by Laura Mixon
- BLACK TRILLIUM by Andre Norton (all by herself)
- THE GATES OF AMBERMERE by James Pierce
- BY CHAOS CURSED by Mickey Zucker Reichert (fifth and last book in the
- "Bifrost Guardians" series)
- LAST OF THE RENSHAI by Mickey Zucker Reichert
- THE WESTERN WIZARD by Mickey Zucker Reichert
- CHILD OF THUNDER by Mickey Zucker Reichert
- ALTERNATE PRESIDENTS edited by Mike Resnick & Martin H. Greenberg
- THE SACRILEGE by John Maddox Roberts (Vol. III of "SPQR" series)
- THE TEMPLE OF THE MUSES by John Maddox Roberts (Vol. IV of "SPQR"
- series)
- HEART READERS by Kristine Kathryn Rusch (who is the new editor of The
- Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction)
- DESTROYING ANGEL by Richard Paul Russo (Ace)
- RULER OF THE SKY by Pamela Sargent (Historical novel about Genghis
- Khan)
- REEFSONG by Carol Severance
- THE WIZARD AT MECQ by Rick Shelley
- LUNAR DESCENT by Alan Steele (Ace)
- THE WEAPON MASTERS OF ISHER by A.E. Van Vogt
- THE WEIGHER by Eric Vinicoff & Marcia Martin (an expansion of their
- short story)
- STRANGE MONSTERS OF THE RECENT PAST by Howard Waldrop (Ace Jul 91)
- THE GENOCIDAL HEALER by James White (a "Sector General" novel from Del
- Rey)
- DEATH QUALIFIED by Kate Wilhelm
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- COMING IN JUNE (OUR 2ND ANNIVERSARY ISSUE)!!
- Articles about:
-
- THE DIFFERENCE ENGINE
- by William Gibson and Bruce Sterling
- Publishing Date: March 15, 1991 by Bantam Books
- ISBN 0-553-07028-2, 429 pages, $19.95
-
- "It is a sure Hugo and Nebula contender, and could well be the most
- fun you'll have reading science fiction this year!"
- ---RAVE REVIEWS
-
- "Convincing and colorful--a fast, suspenseful ride through a Victorian
- London that would have given Sherlock Holmes a nervous breakdown. A
- terrific book!"
- ---Tim Powers, author of THE ANUBIS GATES
-
- "A revelation: an action-packed historical thriller that illuminates
- the peculiar dilemmas of the late 20th century information explosion.
- It's also terrific fun."
- ---Steven Levy, author of HACKERS
-
-
- GURPS CYBERPUNK
- High-Tech Low-Life Roleplaying
- by Loyd Blankenship
- (Steve Jackson Games, 1991)
-
- The game/book that was seized by the U.S. Secret Service!
-
- "On March 1, the SJ Games offices, and the home of the GURPS Cyberpunk
- writer, were raided by the U.S. Secret Service as part of a nationwide
- investigation of data piracy. A large amount of equipment was seized,
- including four computers, two laser printers, some loose hard disks
- and a great deal of assorted hardware. One of the computers was the
- one running the Illuminati BBS.
-
- "The only computers taken were those with the GURPS Cyberpunk files;
- other systems were left in place. In their diligent search for
- evidence, the agents also cut off locks, forced open footlockers, tore
- up dozens of boxes in the warehouse, and bent two of our letter
- openers in an attempt to pick the lock on a file cabinet."
- ---from page 4 of GURPS CYBERPUNK
-
-
- Featured Author for June:
- Arthur C. Clarke
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- 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 on low
- density, almost all issues on high density), and add $2.50 for each
- additional disk.
-
- PRINT EDITION: We have print copies of all issues except #1 and #2.
- Send $2 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.
-
-
- Also Available (on the BAUDLINE II only):
-
- RFP-BB.ZIP Baseball Books of Spring 1990
- RFP-SC.ZIP Sisters in Crime Catalogue (mysteries by women)
- RFPINDEX.ZIP An Index To All Issues (updated each issue)
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
- COMING JUNE 1 --- OUR 2nd ANNIVERSARY ISSUE
-
- *** Feature Article: Living the Good Life ***
-
- *** Featured Author: Arthur C. Clarke ***
-
- Plus, reviews of great books like these:
-
- SUPERSTARS AND SCREWBALLS: 100 YEARS OF BROOKLYN BASEBALL
- by Richard Goldstein
- (E.P. Dutton, 1991)
-
- Brooklyn is rich in the tradition of the national pastime. From some
- of the earliest organized teams in the country to the legendary
- Brooklyn Dodgers, baseball flourished in the "city of churches" for
- over a century, until the dark day in 1957 when the Dodgers moved
- West. A NEW YORK TIMES sports editor, Richard Goldstein traces this
- lively, colorful history in SUPERSTARS AND SCREWBALLS: 100 YEARS OF
- BROOKLYN BASEBALL.
-
-
- REGIMENT OF WOMEN
- by Thomas Berger
- (Little, Brown, 1991)
-
- The time is the 21st century. In New York City the worst fears of
- "future shock" have become daily realities for its inhabitants. Gas
- masks are required for the frequent pollution alerts, rent is
- exorbitant, and detention centers are located throughout the city. All
- that was once familiar is no longer: the George Washington Bridge is
- in ruins; Rockefeller Center is an underground penitentiary; but most
- important of all, the aspirations of the most extreme feminists have
- finally been realized.
-
- Georgie Cornell, a 29-year-old secretary with the publishing house of
- Philby, Osgood & Huff, goes to work neatly attired in a white tailored
- blouse and pleated, kelly-green skirt, with beige pumps and matching
- purse. Georgie spends the day dodging the advances of a lecherous
- senior executive, deciphering dictation, visiting the analyst,
- repairing makeup--as do many secretaries of the day. But there is one
- significant difference: Georgie Cornell is a man.
-
-
- CHAPTERS AND VERSE
- by Joel Barr
- (Gibbs Smith, 1991)
-
- CHAPTERS AND VERSE is the name of the bookstore at the heart of this
- magical novel. When its owner, the eccentric and elderly E Baker,
- decides to retire and travel the world, she hand-picks necktie
- salesman Matthew Mason to take over her business. Once behind the
- counter of his new enterprise, Matthew begins to witness a colorful
- and constant parade of customers, all with their own unique and
- intriguing stories. Caught up in the store's crazy rhythms and endless
- miscellany, Matthew comes to realize why E Baker cannot get the
- bookstore out of her soul; why she continues, during her far-flung
- travels, to write him letters of guidance and support, which for
- Matthew are a welcome source of comic relief in his new venture.
-
- Like 84 CHARING CROSS ROAD, this is a novel for anyone who loves books
- and bookstores.
-
-
- Also,
-
- In RFP #17, Janet Peters will begin a new series discussing good
- reading that can be found in the Children's Literature section. The
- first installment will talk about
-
- SOROTCHINTZY FAIR
- by Nikolai Gogol, illustrated by Gennadij Spirin
- (David R. Godine, 1991)
-
- At the Sorotchintzy Fair--an annual tumult of marvelous goods--the
- beautiful Paraska meets a young man in a white coat who asks for her
- hand. But complications arise--the mysterious creature in a Red Coat
- appears, a mare disappears, and in the end, only the help of gypsies
- sets everything right.
-
- *-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
-
-