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-
- **************************************************************
- * *
- * R E A D I N G F O R P L E A S U R E *
- * *
- * Issue #18 *
- * August/September 1991 *
- * *
- * *
- * Editor: Cindy Bartorillo *
- * *
- * Reviews by: Cindy & Drew Bartorillo, Carol Bream, *
- * Jack Curtin, Dan Ellis, Howard Frye, Carl Ingram, *
- * Peter de Jager, Darryl Kenning, Janet Peters, Robert *
- * Pittman, Peter Quint, Carol Sheffert, Annie Wilkes, *
- * Robert Willis *
- * *
- * "Books I've Been Meaning To Read" *
- * *
- **************************************************************
-
- 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. This electronic edition is free, but print editions
- cost $2 each for printing and postage.
-
- **************************
-
- 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.
-
- Academia Pomono, NJ Ken Tompkins 609-652-4914
- Accolade! BBS Round Rock,TX Jack Moore 512-388-1445
- Ad Lib Monroeville,PA John Williams 412-327-9209
- Alexandria Link Alexandria,VA Patrick Pluto 703-799-5650
- The Annex Dayton,OH John Cooper 513-274-0821
- Beginnings BBS Levittown,NY Mike Coticchio 516-796-7296
- Boot Strap OnLine Yuma, AZ Daryl Stogner 602-343-0878
- Burg Board System Amarillo,TX Tom Whittenburg 806-352-5784
- Byrd's Nest Arlington,VA Debbie&Alan Byrd 703-671-8923
- Checkpoint El Cajon,CA 619-442-3595
- Chevy Chase Board Alexandria,VA Larkins/Carlson 703-549-5574
- City People BBS New York,NY Barry Weiser 212-255-6656
- Computer Co-Op Voorhees,NJ Ted Hare 609-784-9404
- Daily Planet Owosso,MI Jay Stark 517-723-4613
- Death Star Oxon Hill,MD Lee Pollard 301-839-0705
- Del Ches Systems Exton,PA Peter Rucci 215-363-6625
- Diversified Prog PacPalisadesCA Jean-Pierre Denis 213-459-6053
- Dorsai Diplomatic Mission NYC Jack Brooks 212-431-1944
- Futzer Avenue Issaquah,WA Stan Symms 206-391-2339
- GEnieUsers GEnie Library #8
- The Gooey(GUI) BBS New York,NY David Shapiro 212-876-5885
- HotTips BBS Glendale, CA Mike Callaghan 818-248-3088
- Humanware BBS New York Jim Freund 212-980-3128
- IBMNew CompuServe Library #0
- INDY-PC BBS Indianapolis Mark Dutton 317-257-5882
- Inn on the Park Scottsdale,AZ Jim Jusko 602-957-0631
- Invention Factory New York,NY Mike Sussell 212-431-1273
- Ivory Tower Manchester,CT Karl Hakmiller 203-649-5611
- J.E.T.S. RBBS-PC Philadelphia,PA 215-955-7503
- KCSS BBS Seattle,WA Bob Neddo 206-296-5277
- ()Lensman() BBS Denver,CO Greg Bradt 303-979-8953
- Litforum CompuServe Library #12
- Lost Paradise Mike King 703-370-7795
- Magnetic Bottle Pennsylvania Bill Mertens 814-231-1345
- Magpie HQ New York,NY Steve Manes 212-420-0527
- MCS BBS Centerville,OH Darryl Kenning 513-434-8355
- The MOG-UR'S EMS GranadaHills,CA Tom Tcimpidis 818-366-6442
- MoonDog BBS Brooklyn,NY Don Barba 718-692-2498
- MSU Library BBS St. Paul,MN Dana Noonan 612-722-9257
- Over My Dead Body Oakland,CA Cherie Jung 415-465-7739
- Port of Call BBS Indiana Brian Cload 219-763-4908
- Poverty Rock PCB Mercer Is.,WA Rick Kunz 206-232-1763
- The Rib 'n' Rail Ontario,CAN David Logan 519-264-2919
- Round Table BBS Chicago,IL Kevin Keyser 312-777-9480
- Sabaline Don Saba 619-692-1961
- SF & Fantasy CIS Hom-9 Library #5
- SF & Fantasy RT GEnie Library #3
- SMOF-BBS Austin,TX Earl Cooley 512-467-7317
- SoftServ Long Beach,CA J. Neil Schulman 213-957-1176
- SunShine PCBoard PembrokePines,FL Michele Hamilton 305-432-2223
- Sunwise Sun City W.,AZ Keith Slater 602-584-7395
- Technoids Anon. Chandler,AZ David Cantere 602-899-4876
- The Windows BBS John Champion 804-766-0553
- 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
-
- Editorial . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 129
- What's News . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 170
- Books I've Been Meaning To Read . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 222
- Lost Stories . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 363
- Good Reading Periodically . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 437
- Mainstream Fiction Reviews . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 548
- Nonfiction Reviews . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 751
- The Natural World . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 753
- The Computer Bookshelf . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 911
- Seeking Serenity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1370
- Loompanics Unlimited . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1619
- Murder By The Book (Mystery Reviews) . . . . . . . . . . . 2464
- Loosen Your Grip On Reality (SF & Fantasy Reviews) . . . . 3394
- Frightful Fiction (Horror Reviews) . . . . . . . . . . . . 4267
-
- **************************
-
- EDITORIAL
-
- Welcome to RFP #18. I think there are more good reading suggestions in
- this issue than ever before. At least it seems that way to me--I've
- had a lot of fun in the past two months reading many of the books
- you'll see talked about here. And it doesn't look like the good news
- stops here; the fall lineup I've been hearing about sounds really
- great this year. (Last fall was pretty much a disappointment all the
- way around. Or was I just in a bad mood for 4 months?) While I've got
- you here, let me pass on a few notes:
-
- SUBSCRIPTIONS: I've been getting questions about subscriptions to the
- print edition of RFP. The bottom line is: send me $2/$4/$6 and I'll
- send you the next 1/2/3 issues. I don't like to make promises any
- further ahead than that. Remember, the very best way to get RFP is to
- give your computer a modem and download each issue for free. See our
- Distribution Directory for a BBS near you, or call The Baudline II to
- get RFP from us directly.
-
- ADVERTISING: We don't accept advertising, but if you send us a copy
- of whatever it is you have to sell there's a good chance we'll mention
- it in the next available issue of RFP. We will mention it, and
- possibly review it, if 1) It's some kind of text or is book-related,
- and 2) It strikes us as something RFP readers might want to know
- about. Be sure to include the necessary ordering information.
-
- WHERE TO SEND THINGS: If you want to send books, information, or
- other materials to RFP, address them to:
-
- Reading For Pleasure
- 103 Baughman's Lane, Suite 303
- Frederick, MD 21702
-
- Watch for issue #19, due to be released October 1, 1991. This will be
- our annual Halloween Issue, and we hope to have a lot of scary
- recommendations for your fall reading list. Right now it's difficult
- to imagine fall--the temperature yesterday was near 100 degrees. If
- the computers don't melt, see you next time.
-
- **************************
-
- WHAT'S NEWS
-
- * You probably don't want to miss THE MEDIEVAL HOME COMPANION, a
- September release from HarperCollins. It's a translation of a 14th
- century manuscript with a new husband's instructions to his bride on
- proper conduct in marriage and management of a household. Sure to be a
- conversation starter for months.
-
- * BLACK COCKTAIL, a novella by Jonathan Carroll, is due to be released
- by St. Martin's in September 1991 as a stand-alone hardcover. If you
- haven't fallen under the Carroll spell yet, check it out. You can find
- out more about his books in RFP #15, when he was one of the Featured
- Authors.
-
- * The Turner Tomorrow Award top prize went to ISHMAEL by Daniel Quinn,
- who got $500,000 and will have his book published in January 1992 by
- Turner Publishing and Bantam.
-
- * Bantam has purchased world rights (all permissions except for film)
- to the memoirs of General H. Norman Schwarzkopf for a sum estimated at
- more than $5 million.
-
- * Just when you thought you'd never hear "Iran-Contra" again, Wiley
- bought the North American rights to the inside story as told by Maj.
- Gen. Richard V. Secord. According to Secord's agent, "He's going to
- clear his name by revealing everything he knows, including rolling
- over Reagan and Bush for their participation." The book is tentatively
- titled HONORED AND BETRAYED: MY SECRET WARS and is being co-written by
- Jay Wurts (WHEN HEAVEN AND EARTH CHANGED PLACES).
-
- * BEFORE AND AFTER, a novel by Rosellen Brown in which a 17-year-old
- son in a seemingly average family is charged with murdering a
- neighbor's child, has been optioned by GPEC (Guber Peters
- Entertainment Corp.) for Meryl Streep to star in and Barbet Schroeder
- (REVERSAL OF FORTUNE) to direct.
-
- * Jay Brandon's RULES OF EVIDENCE, about a black lawyer who defends a
- white cop accused of a racial killing, has been optioned by Universal
- for a film starring Bill Cosby.
-
- * Have you heard about the Writers' Helpline? Any writer can get
- marketing tips 24 hours a day for $2 per minute by calling
- 900-988-1838, ext. 549.
-
- * HarperCollins bought world rights to I HOPE: REMINISCENCES AND
- REFLECTIONS by Raisa Gorbachev, scheduled for release in early
- September. The book is a series of conversations between Mrs.
- Gorbachev and Soviet writer Georgy Pryakhin and contains 28 pages of
- photographs chosen by the subject herself.
-
- **************************
-
- BOOKS I'VE BEEN MEANING TO READ
- by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- We all have a list like this, don't we? Books you feel you SHOULD read
- for one reason or another, or books that sound good but somehow you've
- just never quite gotten around to them. We conducted an informal
- survey around RFP Central and came up with the following short list.
- Are some of these books on your list too?
-
- WAR AND PEACE by Leo Tolstoy. Yep, we start out with the big one, and
- I do mean BIG. Everybody is always droning on about how this is the
- greatest novel ever written, but gee! Did it have to be that long? And
- the characters--not only are there a kajillion different people, they
- all have unpronounceable looong names. All I can tell you is that real
- people (not college English professors) who have conquered these
- initial prejudices say that it's all worthwhile. The story is
- magnificent and the characters actually settle into identifiable
- patterns after a while. Nowadays everybody seems to like these huge,
- sprawling epic novels. Well, this is the original; the one they're all
- trying to duplicate.
-
- something SHAKESPEARE. Shakespeare is virtually a synonym for
- culture. Even the ol' Lethal Weapon himself has felt the urge to prove
- his craft with HAMLET. So why haven't you been reading your
- Shakespeare? Mostly it's the weird language, but the fact that it's
- poetry doesn't help either. A bit too MUCH culture all at once, don't
- you think?. Here's a few recommendations from those who've been there:
- 1) Stick to the good stuff. Even Shakespeare could be boring. Start
- with HAMLET, then go on to OTHELLO and KING LEAR. For a comedy, try
- THE MERCHANT OF VENICE or MEASURE FOR MEASURE. 2) Get yourself a good
- copy of the play you want to read. Many swear by the Folger Library
- series, but anything with easy-to-use explanatory notes will do. With
- a little initial help, you'll find you develop an ear for the language
- and you won't need the notes after a while. 3) About the poetry--just
- ignore it. Just pretend it's prose. Don't EVER read it in nursery
- rhyme cadence. 4) Shakespeare must be heard to be truly appreciated.
- Why not read the plays aloud to yourself?
-
- MOBY DICK by Herman Melville. This is supposedly one of America's
- greatest contributions to World Literature. But did it have to be
- about some old coot and a whale? And why does it have to be such a
- long story with such small type? Inside word is that this is not only
- a very exciting book, but is an education in literature all by itself.
- It's nearly impossible to read the story of Ahab and Moby Dick without
- finding and interpreting deeper levels to the surface plot, even if
- you've never thought about things like that in your life. And this is
- without some boring professor putting you to sleep every Tuesday and
- Thursday for 90 minutes. The big trick to MOBY DICK is to hang in
- there for 100, maybe 150 pages, to let the interest level sneak up and
- grab you.
-
- 1984 and ANIMAL FARM by George Orwell. These are a couple of those
- really embarrassing books that everyone just seems to expect you to
- have read. They talk about Big Brother, the Thought Police, and some
- animals being more equal than others, without explanation or citation,
- just KNOWING that anyone who can read knows what they're talking
- about. The good news is that both of these books are very quick reads.
- You can catch up on your social theory in just a day or two's
- concentrated reading.
-
- DAVID COPPERFIELD by Charles Dickens. Another huge book. And you ever
- notice the non-answer you get when you ask someone what it's about?
- "Well, this guy has a rotten childhood, grows up anyway, gets a job,
- gets married, then realizes he screwed it all up and becomes a
- writer." Not much of an advertisement, is it? The inside scoop on this
- one is: pretend you're watching a soap opera, and enjoy the secondary
- characters. You'll really enjoy meeting the Micawbers and the
- Murdstones, wonderful Peggotty and the ultimate creep, Uriah Heep. The
- episodic, rambling structure of the story won't seem so weird if you
- think of it as a soap opera like DALLAS or DYNASTY.
-
- THE LORD OF THE RINGS by J.R.R. Tolkien. The two big hurdles to
- reading this story cycle are the page count and the fact that this is
- "just" a fantasy. It just doesn't seem very adult; doesn't fit in with
- the serious intellectual image we have created for ourselves. Maybe it
- would help to concentrate on Tolkien and his accomplishment here.
- Tolkien was a serious academic; he taught Anglo-Saxon literature at
- Oxford, for goodness sake. And in THE LORD OF THE RINGS (and
- associated works) he "merely" created an entire world, complete with a
- language system, history, anthropology, geography, and literature. You
- may never meet another mind as creative as Tolkien's. Give yourself a
- treat someday and spend some time with hobbits, elves, dwarves,
- wizards, orcs, and ants.
-
- Once you get started with this, it's difficult to know where to stop.
- If you'd like a little help with your reading selections, be sure to
- get yourself a copy of...
-
-
- AN ENGLISH LIBRARY: Sixth Edition
- edited by Nigel Farrow, Brian Last, Vernon Pratt
- (Gower Publishing, 1990, $29.95, ISBN 0-566-05818-9)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- The first edition of AN ENGLISH LIBRARY was published in 1943, the
- fifth arriving in 1963, so this is the first update in over a quarter
- of a century. As editor Nigel Farrow says in his Introduction,
-
- "AN ENGLISH LIBRARY is for everyone who likes reading books. It has
- been compiled with one objective: to identify the books from the
- classical and modern heritage that will extend your enjoyment of
- reading."
-
- AN ENGLISH LIBRARY has over 2500 titles, arranged in 15 categories,
- selected by a panel of readers who "write, teach or publish books for
- a living but read them for enjoyment". This is one reference book for
- readers that makes no apologies for the joy of reading; you needn't
- excuse your reading with rhetoric derived from Literary Criticism. "If
- a book is listed in these pages it is because it has given an
- experienced reader real pleasure, not because it fits a particular
- critical theory of literary excellence."
-
- This volume is like having a circle of fellow readers to exchange
- views with any time you like. Agree with them, argue with them, and,
- most importantly, allow them to make suggestions for you. It's
- difficult not to fall under the charm of AN ENGLISH LIBRARY when Nigel
- Farrow makes statements like,
-
- "Reading is not a competition: challenge yourself but do not waste
- valuable time reading without enjoyment."
-
- Entries are arranged into the following categories: Fiction, World
- Literature in English, Children's Literature, Poetry, Drama,
- Biography, Autobiography, Essays and Other Prose Writings, Travel,
- Literary Criticism, History, Philosophy and Other Writings on Morals
- and Religion, The Bible, Fine Arts, and Reference. For the serious
- reader who really enjoys reading, this volume is indispensable.
-
- Here's a sample entry:
-
- Kurt VONNEGUT Jr. (1922- )
-
- SLAUGHTERHOUSE FIVE 1969
- A powerful work inspired by Vonnegut's own experience on emerging from
- an underground slaughterhouse after the horrific bombing of Dresden in
- World War II. Bill Pilgrim comes to see the tragic absurdity of life,
- a feature of all Vonnegut's novels, but seldom realized by his
- characters.
- **************************
- _________________________
- ( )
- ( LOST STORIES )
- ( by Peter de Jager )
- (_________________________)
-
- The book reviewed this time must stand alone as I could not find a
- another book like it. If I were forced to chose another it would have
- to be ZEN AND THE ART OF MOTORCYCLE MAINTENANCE by Pirsig. This is by
- no means a "Lost Story" so it is outside the domain of this column.
- (On the other hand... if you have not read ZEN... then get a copy. It
- will get you thinking in new ways.)
-
- Another reason for the single review this issue is that I had planned
- to do reviews of two totally different books. The first was THE HAB
- THEORY by Allan W. Eckert. The second was THE JESUS FACTOR by ?... My
- problem is that I cannot find a copy of THE JESUS FACTOR anywhere!
- This makes it a true "Lost Story", one I have been searching for high
- and low for weeks.
-
- The reason why these two books were chosen is they both create
- theories that at first sound ludicrous... but which force us to ask
- "Could it? naw..." If anyone has a copy of THE JESUS FACTOR they would
- be interested in loaning me for a short period, please contact me via
- CompuServe (ID: 70611,2576). I would like to have these reviews ready
- for the next issue of RFP.
-
-
- THE STARSHIP AND THE CANOE
- by Kenneth Brower
- Published 1978 by Holt Rinehart & Winston ISBN 0-553-12451-X
-
- This is not a "story" in the traditional sense. It is more a biography
- of father and son. Freeman Dyson and his son George. The father is a
- nuclear physicist who wants to ride to the stars on Orion, a
- spacecraft powered by nuclear explosions from surplus atomic bombs.
- The son builds silent canoes and lives in a tree house besieged by
- flying squirrels.
-
- On one level, the dual biography is just that, a tale of two men on
- different paths. There is little in common between these two
- individuals.
-
- One is determined to reach the stars both for himself and for mankind.
- He is searching for new frontiers. He finds potential in comets,
- asteroids and possibly other planets. He solves ecological problems by
- creating trees growing hundreds of miles into space.
-
- His son seeks solitude on the west coast of America, traveling from
- southern British Columbia to Alaska in a homemade 32 foot canoe. The
- rooms of his home are scattered along the coast, from a single room
- treehouse 60 ft in the air to a rock cabin existing only in his mind.
-
- These men have little in common other than blood and eccentricity.
-
- On another level the two biographies could be of the same individual.
- One possessed with great vision, determination and compassion for this
- planet. They are both geniuses, one in the hard sciences and the other
- in life. They both suffer (? are blessed with) tremendous imaginations
- leading them to different lifestyles.
-
- THE STARSHIP AND THE CANOE is a musical narrative. Kenneth Brower has
- a poetic turn of phrase (although I suspect that the poetry came
- sometimes from the subjects rather than the author), he also plays the
- two men against each other in subtle counterpoint. The father amongst
- the Stars, the Son amongst the Waves.
-
- I have two copies of The Starship and the Canoe... if you cannot find
- a copy, I will send you one of mine... on one condition: you send it
- to the next person on the list I send you. You see, I expect to
- receive more than one request for a copy, if we pass it on with loving
- care... maybe it won't be a lost story anymore? Contact me on
- Compuserve. Happy reading!
-
- **************************
-
- GOOD READING PERIODICALLY
- reviews by Cindy Bartorillo
-
-
- WONDER
- Observing and Confronting the Enigmas That Surround Us
- Issue No. 1
-
- The most interesting magazine I've discovered lately is WONDER, an
- "irregular" periodical devoted to intellectual inquiry. The first
- issue has articles on graphic artist M.C. Escher, Raised Planting
- Fields (an ingenious agricultural technique resurrected from the mists
- of pre-history), the idea of a Space Tower (a physical connection
- between Earth and space along which we could travel without rockets),
- and Part I of a history of cartography. The magazine closes with a
- section called "Voices From The Past", in which good ideas get a new
- airing: quotes from Albert Einstein, The Bill of Rights, and Leonardo
- da Vinci's Canon of Proportions.
-
- The entire magazine is printed on very heavy, slick paper; the type
- size is large and very easy to read; and the whole issue is filled
- with beautiful black and white illustrations. The M.C. Escher article
- alone contains 18 of his prints, including a two-page layout of his
- famous "Metamorphosis". The cartography article has many lovely map
- reproductions as well. Also, each article comes with a short list of
- sources for "Further Information", in case the text has fired an
- intellectual flame.
-
- WONDER costs $5 (plus $1.50 shipping) for each issue, $100 for a
- lifetime subscription. Send your money to: Ziggurat Press, Box 394,
- Sound Beach, NY 11789.
-
-
- 1 BIT SHOE #7
- $1.50 from: David A. Walbridge, 2760 Louisiana Ct. #9, St. Louis Pk,
- MN 55426
-
- This is a poorly produced home-grown magazine of words and
- illustrations that is really interesting. The informality of its
- production is part of its charm, and lends a sense of spontaneity to
- the whole production. This issue is devoted to art, and includes
- paragraphs like:
-
- "The key to creating is letting yourself. no talk of what on artist is
- or isn't or who your teacher said had pontential or who took the best
- classes, but just doing it. Just create. It is important to separate
- the editing function from the creative one. the two cannot exist
- simeltaneously. let them take turns."
-
- Beyond the art thoughts, and the reproductions, there are random
- ideas, letters, hand-written add-ons, all adding up to a very
- entertaining package. Why don't you send David a little money and let
- him show you what he's been up to lately? He says that issue #8 should
- be out by July 1, 1991.
-
-
- COLUMBUS FEVER
-
- Next year will be the 500th anniversary of Christopher Columbus'
- discovery of the Americas (if you don't count earlier discoveries). As
- you might imagine, loads of big events are planned in celebration; but
- not everyone is in a festive mood--particularly those who know
- something about the real story of Columbus. Hint: He wasn't quite the
- great guy you read about in your grade school textbook. Two new
- magazines are dedicated to countering the hypocrisy of the 1992
- anniversary celebrations: huracan, Box 7591, Minneapolis, MN 55407
- ($15 for 4 quarterly issues); and Native Nations, 175 5th Avenue,
- Suite 2245, New York, NY 10010 ($20 for 12 monthly issues). This
- information was found in Utne Reader, a fantastic magazine that you
- all should try (Utne Reader, Subscriber Services, PO Box 1974, Marion,
- OH 43306-2074; $18 for 6 bimonthly issues).
-
-
- WIGWAG
-
- Wigwag has died, and will be sorely missed.
-
-
- THE VILLAGE IDIOT
-
- If you enjoy short fiction and poetry, you might want to check out THE
- VILLAGE IDIOT, a triannual collection of fiction, poetry, artwork, and
- reviews. The issue I saw, #13 May-August 1991, even included an essay
- called "On Isolation" by Gabriel Monteleone Neruda. The fiction was
- several cuts above average, and the whole magazine was a pleasure to
- read. "Jet Fuel" by Cindy Rosmus evoked the lives of the inner-city
- poor with both sensitivity and cynicism. "It's Hell to Die Rich" by
- Jess Willbanks is a touching story of two west-coast hobos. And "Bundt
- Cake or Coffee Cake" by Elizabeth Mathes penetrates the American Way
- of Death, and hypocrisy. Issue #14 should be out by the time you read
- this. Single copies are $3, a three-issue subscription is $7.50. Send
- your money to THE VILLAGE IDIOT, Mother of Ashes Press, PO Box 66,
- Harrison, Idaho 83833-0066.
-
-
- THE SPEAR-SHAKER REVIEW
-
- THE SPEAR-SHAKER REVIEW is a quarterly magazine devoted to the
- proposition that Shakespeare wasn't who we think he was. Many people
- now believe that the "Shakespeare" plays were written by Edward de
- Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford. Each issue of THE SPEAR-SHAKER REVIEW
- carries a full complement of articles written by scholars in the
- vanguard of Oxfordian research, carefully edited to be entertaining as
- well as informative. The issue I saw (May 1991) was very interesting;
- I particularly liked the cover piece about six known "signatures" of
- Shakespeare. Having the signatures reproduced with the article made
- the information very easy to follow. If you'd like to get in on the
- fun, send $24 for 4 issues to: Spear Shaker Press, PO Box 308,
- Napanoch, NY 12458.
- **************************
-
- MAINSTREAM FICTION REVIEWS
-
-
- ROOM TEMPERATURE
- by Nicholson Baker
- (Grove Weidenfeld, 1990)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- I chose Nicholson Baker's first published book, THE MEZZANINE, as one
- of my favorite three books of all the ones that I read in 1989. It's
- the story of a man who breaks a shoelace, goes to the men's room, then
- leaves his office to get his lunch and eat it outside. During all
- this, our hero ruminates about the inventor of Jiffy Pop, whether the
- electric hand dryers in restrooms are really more sanitary, why straw
- wrappers are so tight now, the incredible engineering of milk cartons,
- why shoelaces break... You get the idea. The "subject" of the book is
- the trivia of our everyday lives, and the hero has many fascinating
- thoughts about these ubiquitous bits of popular culture.
-
- ROOM TEMPERATURE is similarly structured. Now our hero is a young
- married man with a new baby, and the "plot" here is sitting with his
- baby (called "the Bug") on his lap and alternately feeding her and
- watching her sleep. While she goes about her tiny baby business, our
- hero contemplates her, his wife, air currents, playing the French
- Horn, how to tell what someone's writing by the sound the pen makes on
- the paper... Many of the same pleasure of THE MEZZANINE are present
- once again in ROOM TEMPERATURE, but I didn't enjoy the second book
- nearly as much as I did the first. For one thing, the subjects
- discussed were less interesting to me. Too many pages were spent on
- nose picking and pet names for defecation, subjects which may have
- some temporary interest to immediate participants, but whose
- fascination doesn't travel well. Other subjects, such as playing the
- French Horn, or wind instruments in general, were simply foreign to
- me, in contrast to the universal nature of the subjects in the first
- book. The other problem I had was the lack of plot. Now I realize that
- THE MEZZANINE didn't have much of a plot either, but it did have SOME;
- enough to give the book a bit of structure, to give the words a sense
- of forward motion. ROOM TEMPERATURE has much more of a WAITING FOR
- GODOT feeling about it, a senselessness, formlessness. Still
- interesting, you understand, but not nearly as much so as THE
- MEZZANINE. Nicholson Baker has another book out now, U AND I, which is
- definitely on my reading list as well. He's an author that deserves
- careful watching--and reading.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- THE BIRD WHO CLEANS THE WORLD and other Mayan Fables
- by Victor Montejo, translated by Wallace Kaufman
- (Curbstone Press, June 1991, $24.95)
-
- Sent out as a scout after the Flood, the buzzard forgot his mission
- and, overcome by hunger, ate carrion: his punishment was to eat only
- carrion from that day forward, thus cleaning the world. This and other
- Jakaltek Mayan folk tales, first told to the author by his mother and
- the elders of his Guatemalan village, have a deceptive simplicity and
- charm while they deal with weighty themes like mutual respect,
- creation, nature, and ethnic relations and conflicts. Available for
- the first time in English and illustrated with Mayan images, they
- speak eloquently of an ancient culture and are sure to delight readers
- of all ages.
- (Curbstone Press, 321 Jackson Street, Willimantic, CT 06226)
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- FORCE OF GRAVITY
- by R.S. Jones
- (Viking, June 1991, $19.95, ISBN 0-670-83591-9)
- review by Howard Frye
-
- Many writers have discovered the advantages of creating a lead,
- point-of-view character who is mentally ill. Some examples are:
- Dostoevski's THE DOUBLE, Shirley Jackson's THE BIRD'S NEST, Ken
- Kesey's ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEST, Sylvia Plath's THE BELL JAR
- (I'm not sure this one counts as an artistic choice), and Edgar Allan
- Poe's THE TELL-TALE HEART. The eyes of the psychologically disturbed
- see things that others don't see, and give the writer a chance to
- illuminate life from a different perspective. And when the mentally
- ill character is as unfortunate and charming as FORCE OF GRAVITY's
- Emmet, the resulting tale is fresh and captivating.
-
- Poor Emmet began life being bounced from parent to grandparent, with a
- mother who invaded his life only sporadically. Now he's living alone
- in New York City, but it's not quite the city most of the other
- inhabitants live in. Emmet's city looks more like NYC reflected in a
- funhouse mirror: people appear ominously out of nowhere, spy on Emmet
- from hidden locations, speak incomprehensibly. Emmet will only eat
- carrots, but realizes that this sounds "crazy", so he creates large
- and lavish imaginary meals to tell his psychiatrist about at every
- meeting, not-so-cleverly hiding his aversion to food by talking about
- nothing else.
-
- Emmet's equally unhappy dog howls whenever he leaves the apartment, so
- he adopts a cat to keep the dog company. It hardly comes as a surprise
- to the reader when this doesn't work out very well. Intimidating store
- clerks cheat Emmet when he pretends to be a foreigner who doesn't
- understand American money. And a massive burglary presents Emmet with
- an invasion of privacy that would disturb even a more psychologically
- balanced individual. Through it all Emmet is kind and generous,
- struggling to cope with world that gets larger as he gets smaller.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- "Literature was my next love. Until I became loosely acquainted with
- critical theory, which struck me as a kind of intellectualism for its
- own sake. It always seems that one has to choose literature or
- critical theory, that one cannot love both."
- ---from HOW TO MAKE AN AMERICAN QUILT by Whitney Otto
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- THE OLD MAN AND MR. SMITH: A Fable
- by Peter Ustinov
- (Arcade, 1991, $19.95, ISBN 1-55970-134-X)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- The Old Man is a portly guy in robes and tennis shoes. Mr. Smith is a
- smaller dark man with a nasty temper and an odor of sulphur. In case
- you haven't recognized them yet, they are God and Satan, the renowned
- stars of ancient texts and Broadway musicals, and they have come to
- earth to take a look around, to see what we've done with His creation.
-
- Almost immediately they get into trouble, when the concierge of a
- hotel asks the Old Man for His name. The concierge isn't very happy
- with the answer, "God". He becomes happier when the Old Man gives him
- thousands of dollars which He has just pulled from the pocket of His
- robes, but the local bank declares the bills to be counterfeit. Now He
- has the FBI on His trail, and the Old Man and Mr. Smith must flee.
-
- The pair visit locations all over the globe and talk to a diversity of
- human beings: a forest ranger, a prostitute, a TV evangelist, the
- President of the United States, a First Secretary in the Kremlin, a
- panel of rabbis, a Japanese billionaire, and a group of Indian holy
- men. As you might expect, this broad canvas allows Peter Ustinov to
- display his famous wit on a rainbow of subjects, and the author's
- intelligence is what keeps the story from being a one-note joke.
-
- The Old Man finds it odd that Americans find it easier to believe the
- pair are Soviet subversives, or even aliens from outer space, than
- that they are God and the Devil. And when the Old Man performs actions
- that are clearly beyond the ability of humans--are those actions
- "tricks" or "miracles"? There is some discussion that they are
- miracles simply by virtue of the identity of the performer. For anyone
- else, they would be tricks. At another time, the two disappear from
- one location with the intention to reappear at an agreed upon second
- location, but something goes wrong and they wind up at an alternate
- destination. Are God's powers limited? And when significant occurrences
- at the alternate location bring up the question of whether the
- "mistake" was meant to happen, one must ask: Meant by whom?
-
- Along the way, there are bits and pieces of verbal sagacity that make
- you want to take notes, and Ustinov works hard to keep the Devil from
- getting all the good lines. I liked the thought that "Perfection is
- one of those concepts that looks so foolproof in theory, until
- practice turns it into a contagious yawn." And my favorite
- word-painting comes when the saintly are described as those "with
- sickly little smiles of imminent omniscience."
-
- Author Peter Ustinov, or more correctly Sir Peter Ustinov (Queen
- Elizabeth knighted him in 1990), has written a novel that is witty and
- wise. He's created a view of mankind that sees the flaws with great
- humor and yet still feels optimism with the warmth of a fond parent. A
- modern Renaissance man, Sir Peter has performed in more than 50 films
- (winning an Oscar along the way), and is the author of more than 25
- works including fiction, drama, essays, travel writing, and
- autobiography. THE OLD MAN AND MR. SMITH is his third novel, and we
- can only hope that there are many more to come. Recommended.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- KNOPF REDESIGNS AND RE-LAUNCHES "EVERYMAN'S LIBRARY"
-
- The classic hardcover library of the world's great books returns this
- fall from Knopf. Each volume will be 5" x 8-1/4", have anywhere from
- 240 to 1,008 pages, be priced from $15 to $20, and will have
- gold-stamped cloth bindings which will vary in color according to era
- or genre (20th-century books are blue, poetry is sand colored, etc.).
- The first titles, being released in September of 1991, are:
-
- Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
- Cousin Bette by Honore de Balzac
- Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte
- Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte
- Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes
- The Woman In White by William Wilkie Collins
- Typhoon by Joseph Conrad
- Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe
- Bleak House by Charles Dickens
- Poems by John Donne
- Middlemarch by George Eliot
- The Good Soldier by Ford Madox Ford
- Far From the Madding Crowd by Thomas Hardy
- A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by James Joyce
- The Leopard by Giuseppe Tomasi Di Lampedusa
- The Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith
- Tristram Shandy by Laurence Sterne
- Vanity Fair by William Makepeace Thackeray
- Childhood, Boyhood and Youth by Leo Tolstoy
- The Warden by Anthony Trollope
- Fathers and Sons by Ivan Turgenev
- Germinal by Emile Zola
-
- **************************
-
- NONFICTION REVIEWS
-
- ***> THE NATURAL WORLD
-
- THE PRIVATE LIVES OF GARDEN BIRDS
- How to Understand the Everyday Behavior of the Birds in Your Backyard
- by Calvin Simonds
- (Globe Pequot, April 1991, $12.95, ISBN 0-87106-315-8)
- review by Howard Frye
-
- Author Calvin Simonds is an ethologist, a behavioral biologist who
- examines nature from the point of view of the organisms that live in
- it---a fitting choice for a guide to the lives of the birds you share
- your backyard with. Charming essays cover the personalities and
- lifestyles of: Mockingbirds, Swallows, Blue Jays, Chickadees, Song
- Sparrows, English Sparrows, Phoebes, Crows, Red-Winged Blackbirds, and
- Robins.
-
- PRIVATE LIVES is for people whose interest in birds falls somewhere
- between field guides and comprehensive ornithological tomes. You care
- enough to have gotten some sort of field guide and identified at least
- a few of the more popular species around your house, maybe you've put
- up a feeder, maybe even a modest birdbath, but you're not quite ready
- to go for a graduate degree in bird biology. You'd like to enhance
- your understanding and enjoyment of the birds around you, but you're
- not willing to devote months of study to the task. What do you do? Get
- Calvin Simonds' THE PRIVATE LIVES OF GARDEN BIRDS.
-
- Simonds will explain why robins are always hopping around your lawn
- while other birds stick to the bushes and trees. You'll find out that
- blue jays often live in extended families, and why they will empty a
- feeder faster than any other bird. You'll learn why your garden is
- probably "owned" by a song sparrow, and why a chickadee is the bird
- most likely to eat right out of your hand. Simonds' prose is a
- pleasure to read, and his fascinations are infectious. THE PRIVATE
- LIVES OF GARDEN BIRDS is sure to add to your enjoyment of your own
- little patch of outdoors. Recommended.
-
- THE PRIVATE LIVES OF GARDEN BIRDS is available at your local bookstore
- or order directly from Globe Pequot Press (138 West Main Street, Box
- Q, Chester, CT 06412; 1-800-243-0495; in CT, 1-800-962-0973) and
- please include a $3 shipping and handling fee.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- THE GARDENER'S YEAR
- A Practical Guide to Gardening in Rhythm With Nature
- by John Ferguson & Burkhard Muecke
- (Barron's, March 1991, $29.95, ISBN 0-8120-6184-5)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- As an amateur gardener, I've spent the usual amount of time worrying
- about average first and last frost dates, average monthly rain inches,
- average number of sun days, etc. You get your facts and figures, you
- study the seed and plant catalogs, and you carefully make your
- selections and allot each plant a space around your home with the
- precision of the Army Corps of Engineers. Then you find that, once
- again, the only one who hasn't studied the facts and figures is Mother
- Nature, who acts on any whim that comes her way, and makes a mess of
- all your plans.
-
- As Ferguson & Muecke figured out, the problem is that we're using the
- Gregorian calendar (a human construct) to regulate our manipulation of
- a natural process. Why not use a natural calendar? And that is exactly
- what they've done in THE GARDENER'S YEAR. Ferguson & Muecke have
- defined nine gardening seasons, and their starting and ending times
- are based on nature's own signals, not artificial calendar dates. And
- because these seasons are timed by nature, the gardening information
- and advice included here is valid for every reader, no matter where
- they live or how unusual the weather is in any particular year.
-
- In clear and elegant prose, the authors take you through an entire
- gardening year, describing plants from all over the world that you can
- use in your garden, as well as giving well-illustrated instructions on
- all necessary garden chores. There is also careful consideration given
- to the use of environmentally safe herbicides and pesticides. With 70
- beautiful color photographs and 280 color drawings, THE GARDENER'S
- YEAR is several levels of quality above the standard gardening book,
- making it especially suitable as a gift.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- KEEPING THE HARVEST
- Preserving Your Fruits, Vegetables & Herbs (Revised & Updated)
- by Nancy Chioffi & Gretchen Mead
- (Storey/Garden Way, April 1991, $10.95, ISBN 0-88266-650-9)
- review by Howard Frye
-
- Here is everything you need to know about preserving fresh fruits,
- vegetables, and herbs in one volume. The authors talk about freezing,
- canning, curing with brine, drying, root cellaring, pickling, and
- turning your fruits into jams and jellies. Part I discusses each
- method in detail, with clear general directions and charts. They tell
- you how to plan ahead for your food supply, give recipes for jams,
- jellies, pickles, relishes, and even a quick-to-make whole wheat
- bread. Part II is where you go when you have a specific food to
- preserve--it gives individual directions for each vegetable, herb,
- fruit, and berry. All the information is clearly explained, nicely
- illustrated, and easy to find. KEEPING THE HARVEST is a first-rate
- reference book for gardeners and food lovers.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- GARDEN SMARTS
- A Bounty of Tips From America's Best Gardeners
- by Shelley Goldbloom
- (Globe Pequot, May 1991, $12.95, ISBN 0-87106-399-9)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- 34% of households grow vegetables (31 million households)
- --National Gardening Association, Census Bureau
-
- Shelley Goldbloom canvassed gardeners from all over to assemble this
- cornucopia of helpful hints. Arranged by subject area, each tip is
- covered in just a few sentences, making this perfect for bedside or
- garden-side browsing. Every gardener worth his aching back knows that
- there are very few hard-and-fast solutions to a garden's many
- problems. What works for your neighbor may not work for you. With the
- hundreds and hundreds of ideas in GARDEN SMARTS, you're sure to find
- something good to try, no matter what the particular problem is.
-
- Suppose your houseplant has suffered culture shock, or your tomato
- plants have cutworm. Perhaps you're ready to try something new, like
- composting, or a mulch made from old newspapers. When you buy a manure
- for your garden, is it cow manure you want or horse manure? And I just
- know you'd love to find out what Emily George does with cauliflower
- and her old pantyhose.
-
- GARDEN SMARTS is a comprehensive compilation of helpful advice on:
- preparing your soil, composting, starting plants from seed, mulching,
- watering, fertilizing, tool choices, getting rid of garden pests,
- growing herbs, taking care of your trees and shrubs, growing beautiful
- flowers and making your cut flowers last longer, garden folklore,
- harvesting and cooking, and special chapters on two of the most
- popular plants: tomatoes and roses. Some of the most ingenious ideas
- you'll ever come across are waiting to be found in the pages of GARDEN
- SMARTS.
-
- GARDEN SMARTS is available at your local bookstore or order directly
- from Globe Pequot Press (138 West Main Street, Box Q, Chester, CT
- 06412; 1-800-243-0495; in CT, 1-800-962-0973) and please include a $3
- shipping and handling fee.
-
- **************************
-
- If you have *any* interest in gambling, or gaming in general, you must
- ask GAMBLER'S BOOK CLUB for their catalog. It's huge! They have more
- books on gaming that I thought existed, and they even carry computer
- software and videotapes. Here are just some of the divisions in their
- catalog: Baccarat, Baseball, Basketball, Blackjack, Casino-General,
- Craps, Football, Gin Rummy, Greyhound Racing, History, Jai Alai, Keno,
- Lotteries/Sweepstakes, Magic, Management & Dealing, Poker,
- Probability, Psychology, Roulette, Slots, Sociology, Video Machines.
- They even have a large section devoted to fiction with gambling
- themes. You can write to them at: Gambler's Book Club, 630 South 11th
- Street, Box 4115, Las Vegas, NV 89127. Or you can pick up the phone
- and call for a catalog at 1-800-634-6243.
-
- **************************
-
- ***> THE COMPUTER BOOKSHELF
-
- USING TURBO PASCAL 6.0
- by Ben Ezzell
- (Addison-Wesley, May 1991, $26.95, ISBN 0-201-57774-7)
- review by Robert Willis
-
- I'm always on the lookout for a good reference book on Turbo Pascal.
- There are a decent number of them out there (though they often appear
- to be drowning in a sea of C language books), but the only one that I
- ever actually bought was Borland's Turbo Pascal Tutor for version 4.0.
- This was a nice book/disk set that I still use today when I need to
- look up an element of the language that I don't use very often. It had
- a lot of examples that you could use to "cookbook" together an
- application. Most of the other Turbo Pascal books that I looked at
- were either of an introductory level, too specific in focus, or were
- straight reference works (and since Turbo Pascal comes with adequate
- documentation, I didn't need a reference book). Recently, I had the
- opportunity to review one of two Turbo Pascal books. After flipping
- through them both, I grabbed USING TURBO PASCAL 6.0 as it appeared to
- be the more useful of the two. I think that I made a good decision.
-
- The book is 770 pages long, including the index. It starts out at an
- introductory level, with chapters on installing Turbo Pascal 6.0,
- using the integrated programming environment, and entering programs.
- Then it starts getting interesting. The chapters are set up such that
- each one covers "how to do something" - using numbers, manipulating
- strings, using disk files, and so on. The organization and naming of
- the chapters makes it very easy to find information. There are a lot
- of examples. There are a number of demonstration programs that use the
- concepts covered previously in the book. There is good coverage of
- graphics, again addressing practical issues such as business graphics
- and Graphic User Interfaces (GUIs), including mouse routines. Finally,
- there is a lot of useful information on object-oriented programming,
- both general and Turbo Vision-specific.
-
- If you are looking for a comprehensive book on "doing stuff" in Turbo
- Pascal, with a good amount of reusable code, I will recommend USING
- TURBO PASCAL 6.0 as a solid buy.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- STUPID PC TRICKS
- 17 Insanely Great Programs to Make Your PC More Fun (Disks Included)
- by Bob LeVitus with Ed Tittel
- (Addison-Wesley, March 1991, $19.95, ISBN 0-201-57759-3)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- "...some of our criteria for selecting programs for this book were
- that candidate programs be time-consuming, addictive, or have little
- or no socially redeeming value in addition to being as mindless as
- possible."
-
- There are some computer owners/users who take great pride in
- announcing that they have never played a computer game; have never
- even contemplated using their computer for anything but the sober and
- serious uses for which it was obviously intended. This book is not for
- those people. This book is for people who like a little fun in between
- spreadsheets, a few fireworks between electronic messages. People who
- like to explore the diversity of their own interests and the
- computer's capabilities.
-
- For instance, if you think your computer's graphics capabilities are
- wasted on word processors, how about trying a few of the graphics
- programs in STUPID PC TRICKS? My cat likes EXPLOSIV, a program that
- simulates colorful fireworks explosions on your screen, while I prefer
- the the delicacy of KALEIDOSCOPE or GR. All three are mesmerizing to
- watch, and I've used them to freshen burnt-out brain cells. For those
- who like a more intellectual slant to their graphics, there's
- SPIROPLOT, a computerized version of Kenner's Spirograph, and RREALM
- (Recursive Realm), a fractal graphic generator. Both are easy to use
- and difficult to quit.
-
- You also get to see some of the IBM PC's limited sound capabilities.
- WILLTE plays The William Tell Overture by Gioachino Rossini, for the
- full three minutes and 12 seconds (Ctrl-Break will get you out if you
- can't take any more). SSB plays the Star-Spangled Banner, all four
- verses, and highlights each word at the appropriate time so you can
- sing along. And BUGLE offers a menu of 20 different bugle calls and is
- educational as well as fun to play around with.
-
- Several programs could be categorized as Fun Applications. Like
- ADULATE, which presents you with compliments whenever you feel you
- need them. You can customize the data file for your own taste. And
- SAYINGS will put a pithy saying in a pretty box in the middle of your
- screen, perfect to run in batch files. Make your own file of sayings,
- quotes, funny lines, etc., for the most enjoyment. And MLPUSH is a
- deceptively simple dice game that is fiendishly addictive.
-
- There are also programs that are genuine "tricks". Or should I say
- pranks? Like FOOL, best described as an operating system with an
- attitude. Customize it for best effect on the victim. TRIP makes the
- characters on the screen start turning hallucinogenic colors. BUGRES
- has bugs that "eat" whatever is on your screen at the time (hitting
- any key restores the screen, and the victim's temper). ANNOY is a good
- bureaucratic operating system--it constantly demands passwords and
- hurls abuse. The funniest trick is PARASCAN, a parody of viral
- detection programs. You even get to see PARASCAN literally "fight" the
- virus, with graphics and bar charts. Absolutely hilarious. But my
- favorite program for a classic practical joke use is MUTANT. Run this
- on someone's machine and they'll start getting little rattles and
- whirs from their computer. The beauty is the subtlety of it: the
- sounds are occasional, low-key and very realistic. Sounds like the
- bearings on your hard drive are just starting to wear out.
-
- To run these programs you'll need an IBM PC or compatible computer,
- 512 KB RAM, and a hard drive. The disks that come with the book are
- 5-1/4", but you can send in the coupon in the back of the book for
- 3-1/2" disks. The graphics programs will obviously look best on the
- better monitors, like EGA, VGA, or even SVGA. Several of the programs,
- like PARASCAN and BUGRES, run too fast on today's high-speed machines
- and would benefit from slowdown software.
-
- STUPID PC TRICKS is a lot of fun. Some of the programs are good to
- keep around for occasional fun with a new victim, like PARASCAN or
- MUTANT. Others are nice to keep handy for personal recreation, like
- SPIROPLOT or MLPUSH. And others even have, pardon the expression,
- serious uses, like SAYINGS (you can have it print safety warnings or
- legal disclaimers) or EXPLOSIV (makes a good screen saver). At the
- back of the book you get coaching on floppy disks and the management
- of Terminate and Stay Resident software (TSRs, which describes many of
- the programs included), as well as a glossary of important terms. Any
- way you look at it, STUPID PC TRICKS is a great gift item, especially
- if you give it to yourself.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- WORDPERFECT 5.1 ON-LINE ADVISOR version 1.1
- from Sybar Software
- (Sybex, $29.95, ISBN 0-89588-934-X)
- review by Janet Peters
-
- Have you ever used a TSR program? They load somewhere in a dark corner
- of your computer's memory and lurk there even when you've gone on to
- some other program. You may not see it, but the TSR is still there.
- Sybar Software's ON-LINE ADVISOR packages (currently available: DOS
- 3.3, WordPerfect 5.1, Lotus 1-2-3 2.2, and Harvard Graphics, all
- priced at $29.95) are all TSRs. Like a reference book that's always
- handy when you need it, ON-LINE ADVISORs help you use popular software
- and they do it when you really need it---WHILE you're using the
- popular software.
-
- Installing my WORDPERFECT ON-LINE ADVISOR took about 3 minutes, and
- then all I did was type WPADV. The ON-LINE ADVISOR loaded itself, then
- ran my WordPerfect, which it found all by itself. Now I'm sitting at
- the computer looking at the usual WordPerfect screen, blank except for
- a few cryptic letters and numbers in the lower right. Following the
- very brief instructions, I hit Alt-/ and was looking at the beginning
- of what turned out to be a HUGE index. Getting to any particular entry
- can be accomplished by scrolling or paging through the list or by
- beginning to type a particular word you're interesting in, say
- MARGINS. As soon as I hit M I was looking at the beginning of the
- index entries beginning with the letter M. Hitting A brought me to the
- start of the MA entries. And so on.
-
- Once you've found a promising index entry, hit ENTER to arrive at that
- portion of a large reference book; for that's what the ON-LINE ADVISOR
- really is, a book. From there you can ask for a different sub-heading,
- or some related topics, or you can automatically jump to a previous
- entry that you had been looking at. Pressing ESCape backs you out of
- what you're looking at and repeating it will make the ON-LINE ADVISOR
- disappear and you're back to WordPerfect, right where you left it. You
- never have to worry about forgetting a command at the wrong time;
- ON-LINE ADVISOR is there whenever you're in WordPerfect (provided you
- started everything with WPADV). And like a well-behaved TSR, the
- ON-LINE ADVISOR removes itself from your memory when you quit
- WordPerfect.
-
- Also in the package is a book, WORDPERFECT 5.1 INSTANT REFERENCE. It
- seems that the Sybar people have thought of everything. They knew that
- you'd be so taken with the clear instructions that you'd want a
- printout of them to read away from the computer, so they saved you the
- bother. All that great help is available to you ON-LINE, or off. This
- is the most comprehensive computer software reference utility I've
- ever seen and deserves to be a standard feature of every office.
- (Sybar Software has site license arrangements for companies that want
- multiple copies.) Highly recommended.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- UNDOCUMENTED DOS
- A Programmer's Guide to Reserved MS-DOS Functions and Data Structures
- by Schulman, Michels, Kyle, Paterson, Maxey, and Brown
- (Addison-Wesley, December 1990, $39.95, ISBN 0-201-57064-5)
- review by Robert Willis
-
- Back when I was in high school, the students in my physics class had
- the chance to buy a copy of the "Rubber Handbook" at a discount price.
- Most of us ended up buying this huge brick of a book, which was
- published by CRC (the Chemical Rubber Company, hence the name) for
- scientists and engineers. It had a huge amount of information, more
- than we (and most people for that matter) would ever use. Still, it
- was nice to have around, since it was THE reference work on physical
- quantities, and you never knew when you had to look up the atomic
- weight of palladium or find the formula for osmosis of gases through a
- membrane.
-
- UNDOCUMENTED DOS has the same feel to it. It is subtitled "A
- programmer's guide to reserved MS-DOS functions and data structures",
- and it's no lie. It is THE reference work on the hidden workings of
- DOS on the IBM-PC (and compatible) family of computers. It is 694
- pages long, and includes 2 (high-density) 5 1/4" disks loaded with the
- code from the book AND a bunch of utility programs, including a neat
- hypertext version of Ralf Brown's "interrupt list."
-
- Most of this book is, like the Rubber Handbook, way over my head. The
- examples are in C and assembly language, neither of which I use much.
- I doubt that I will need to use any of the undocumented calls in my
- programs. Given all that, it is still an impressive work, and as my
- programming skills improve, I will be going back to it. If you are a
- system-level programmer on PCs and are stretching the limits of DOS,
- you need this book.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- DOS POWER TOOLS: Techniques, Tricks and Utilities
- Revised for DOS 5.0, 2nd Edition
- by Paul Somerson
- (Bantam Computer Books, July 1991, $49.95, ISBN 0-553-35464-7)
- review by Dan Ellis
-
- This massive (over 1,000 pages) reference book is the one volume that
- every IBM PC or compatible computer should have right next to it. To
- begin with, *all* DOS versions are covered, up to and including the
- brand-new 5.0. And the author walks you through a DOS 5.0 installation
- that comes with an "uninstall" procedure, "for those who have learned
- the hard way never to trust a DOS version number that ends with a
- zero."
-
- DOS POWER TOOLS also covers all levels of expertise. Each subject is
- explained from kindergarten level through post-graduate work with a
- consistent spare patience and clarity. You just stop reading when
- you've reached the limit of your interest. A sensible organization,
- table of contents, and an index help you locate specific subjects with
- ease, and the Quick Reference section in the back provides ready
- access to DOS 5.0 commands, as well as those of EDLIN, DEBUG, and
- ANSI.SYS.
-
- There is also comprehensive coverage of disks, files, and filenames;
- just about everything anyone could want to know about hard disks; hex
- numbers; computer keyboards and tricks for their taming; EDIT, EDLIN,
- DEBUG, ANSI and other DOS drivers. And one whole section is reserved
- for Power User's Secrets. It covers batch techniques; the DOS
- environment; screen tricks; EGA, VGA, etc.; and a whole clutch of
- "Favorite Tips".
-
- And did I mention the disks included with the book? You get three
- disks containing over 100 "utilities that DOS forgot". There are
- memory managers, keyboard manipulators, find programs, font programs,
- TSR managers, sort programs, a file compressor, enhanced versions of
- regular DOS commands, etc. Unless you have a modem and regular access
- to a good BBS source of utility files, these DOS POWER TOOLS disks are
- life savers. You're sure to find that at least a dozen become a part
- of every day's computer use.
-
- The cover of DOS POWER TOOLS says that it's the "All-Time Bestselling
- Book/Software Package", which I can certainly understand. It's the
- one-volume reference book that can replace probably all the others you
- have laying around your office. Recommended.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- UNDERSTANDING DESKTOP PUBLISHING
- by Robert W. Harris
- (Sybex, 1991, $24.95, ISBN 0-89588-789-4)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- This book is aimed at the growing crowd of people who are getting into
- some kind of publishing, but who have no training in the field. In the
- old days we all had to go to a professional publisher to get something
- nicely printed, but today we have affordable computers and desktop
- publishing software. The only thing we don't have is expertise. It's
- like the guy sitting in the middle of a pile of bricks and trying to
- "wish" them into the shape of a house.
-
- UNDERSTANDING DESKTOP PUBLISHING is divided into three main sections.
- The first subject covered is the most crucial: how to design an
- attractive page. What font should you chose? What size? How should the
- paragraphs be formatted (left flush, right flush, or justified)? What
- should you do about margins? Every suggestion and recommendation comes
- with examples, so you can see for yourself what works and what
- doesn't.
-
- The second section discusses how to make your documents easier to read
- and understand. There are guidelines to writing clearly and
- effectively, how to organize the ideas and information in your
- document, and how to make the best use of art. Again, examples
- accompany each suggestion, and I found that in many cases, the
- illustrations told me considerably more than the text.
-
- The final section covers the advanced subject of how to use a document
- to accomplish your purpose. How to direct the reader's attention to
- the items that are most important, how to highlight, focus, and
- emphasize. How to persuade, and how to instruct. In the final chapter,
- the learning process is broken down into its component stages
- (attention, intention, retention) and each is related to design
- elements that will facilitate the process.
-
- UNDERSTANDING DESKTOP PUBLISHING practices what it preaches: it's
- attractively arranged and the information literally jumps off the
- page. By being about document design in general, and not tied to any
- particular piece of software (or even any particular computer),
- UNDERSTANDING DESKTOP PUBLISHING fills a real need and addresses a
- rapidly-increasing audience of amateurs with more technology than
- technique.
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- MASTERING TURBO PASCAL 6
- by Scott D. Palmer
- (Sybex, 1991, $27.95, ISBN 0-89588-675-8)
- review by Drew Bartorillo
-
- MASTERING TURBO PASCAL 6 is designed as a fast-track way for you to
- learn practical programming skills in Turbo Pascal 6, as well as in
- other versions of the Pascal language on computers from PCs to
- mainframes. If you want to catch up on the latest techniques, it also
- helps you to develop fundamental skills in object-oriented
- programming. Whether you are a beginner who's never written a program
- before, an experienced programmer who needs a quick authoritative
- introduction to Turbo Pascal, or a student in a college or university
- programming course, MASTERING TURBO PASCAL 6 will help you acquire the
- knowledge, skills, and insight required to write the programs you
- need.
-
- In addition to standard topics such as graphics, data structures, and
- file handling, MASTERING TURBO PASCAL 6 looks at how to design and
- debug your programs. A special chapter shows how to add sound and
- music to your programs, and also develops a toolkit of general-purpose
- routines that you can use any time you need them. Each chapter in the
- book is summarized and provides review exercises. Solutions to
- even-numbered review exercises are given to enable you to evaluate
- your progress in learning Turbo Pascal.
-
- The following chapters are presented in the book:
-
- -> A First Look At Turbo Pascal
- -> Programming and Program Design
- -> An Overview of Pascal Programming
- -> The Turbo Pascal Development Environment
- -> Simple Data Types
- -> Simple Pascal Statements
- -> More Advanced Pascal Statements
- -> Structured and User-Defined Data Types
- -> Procedures and Functions
- -> Using Turbo Pascal Units
- -> Pointers and Dynamic Allocation
- -> Handling Text Files
- -> Typed and Untyped Files
- -> Debugging Your Programs
- -> Graphics in Turbo Pascal
- -> Accessing DOS Services
- -> Elementary Data Structures
- -> Elementary Algorithms
- -> Sound and Music Programming
- -> Creating Turbo Tunemaker
- -> Concepts and Techniques of Object-Oriented Programming
- -> Introducing Turbo Vision
-
- As can be seen from the above list of chapters in the book, MASTERING
- TURBO PASCAL 6 is a very comprehensive training and reference document
- for the Turbo Pascal programmer. I did find one thing lacking in the
- book, though. There is a total disregard of the subject of using
- overlays and the overlay unit in your Turbo Pascal program. A statement
- is made, "Because of its specialized application for very large
- programs, we will not discuss the overlay unit any further in this
- book." Well, I have some serious reservations about this statement.
- After all, the title of the book *is* MASTERING TURBO PASCAL 6. The
- overlay unit is a VERY powerful feature of Turbo Pascal and should be
- fully documented in any comprehensive reference document. Considering
- the level of detail in the rest of the book, the lack of discussion of
- overlays is kind of strange. (Overlays ARE covered in USING TURBO
- PASCAL 6.0 by Ben Ezzell; see review above.)
-
- **************************
-
- IF I HAD A HAMMER: Women's Work
- In Poetry, Fiction and Photographs
- edited by Sandra Martz
- (Papier-Mache Press, $11, ISBN 0-918949-09-2)
-
- This timely and informed collection expresses women's feelings,
- experiences and beliefs about their work and creativity in a variety
- of fields ranging from the artistic to the domestic and professional.
- The 77 contributions evoke the rewards and challenges of being a woman
- in America's changing social and economic life. (Papier-Mache Press,
- 795 Via Manzana, Watsonville, CA 95076)
-
- **************************
-
- WHEN IS A PIG A HOG?
- A Guide to Confoundingly Related English Words
- by Bernice Randall
- (Prentice Hall, June 1991, $19.95, ISBN 0-13-955212-X)
- review by Carl Ingram
-
- Here is the perfect book for resolving arguments, solving crossword
- puzzles, improving your vocabulary, and having a great time just
- browsing. Bernice Randall will help you distinguish between monkeys
- and apes, and between pigs and hogs. (A pig becomes a hog when it
- passes 120 pounds in weight.) She'll explain the difference between
- mist and fog. Each pair of words, along with any other related words,
- are discussed in entries that range from a few sentences to several
- pages.
-
- When does a speech turn into a lecture? What's the difference between
- a burglary and a robbery? Between beer and ale? Morality and ethics?
- Is there a difference between an insect and a bug? How do you refer to
- someone who's passed the bar? Are they a lawyer or an attorney? Or
- perhaps a solicitor, a counselor, or even a barrister? And then there
- are the terms that aren't synonyms, but are so difficult to keep
- straight. Quick now, which is port and which is starboard? How about
- warp and weft? Tweeter and woofer? Flotsam and jetsam?
-
- WHEN IS A PIG A HOG? is divided into eight main sections: Human and
- Not So Human Beings (for instance: vagrant/tramp); Here and There
- (Cape Canaveral/Cape Kennedy); Things (frankfurter/hot dog); Concepts,
- Actions and Other Intangibles (refund/rebate); The Arts: Fine and
- Otherwise (oratorio/cantata); Nature and Science (black hole/white
- hole); Our Bodies and Medicine (epidemic/endemic); Organizations and
- Institutions (Weather Bureau/National Weather Service). There are also
- two appendices: Gods and Goddesses in Greek and Roman Mythology, and a
- Geologic Time Chart. And an index of terms in the back makes this a
- perfect reference volume you can use in a jiffy. WHEN IS A PIG A HOG?
- is an enjoyable and educational book for the entire family.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- THE COMPLETE WHOLE GRAIN COOKBOOK
- by Carol Gelles
- (Donald I. Fine, May 1991, $12.95, ISBN 1-55611-237-8)
- review by Carol Sheffert
-
- In the attempt to lead healthier lives, people are trying to find ways
- to put more fiber into their diets--to aid digestion, help prevent
- colon cancer, lower cholesterol levels, and just generally get away
- from high-fat foods. It doesn't take long to realize that one of the
- best ways to a higher fiber diet is through whole grains. But, having
- been brought up on meat and potatoes, hamburgers and french fries, and
- pizza-with-everything to go, most of us don't know a whole lot about
- whole grains. That's where Carol Gelles' THE COMPLETE WHOLE GRAIN
- COOKBOOK comes to the rescue: over 500 pages that will give you not
- only a comprehensive education in grains, but will provide you with
- loads of specific recipes for their use, each recipe complete with
- it's calorie-count and amount of cholesterol, sodium, and fiber.
-
- You'll get a glossary of all the important grain terminology. What
- does "whole grain" mean? What's the difference between wheat germ and
- wheat bran? What does it mean when the box of barley says "pearled"?
- You'll find out how to buy grains, store them, and cook them. And what
- kitchen equipment you should have. Part II covers the major grains:
- wheat, rice, and corn. Part III covers the minor grains: barley,
- buckwheat, millet, oats, rye, and wild rice. Part IV covers the
- unusual grains: amaranth, Job's Tears, quinoa, teff, and triticale.
- Emphasis throughout is on the practical day-to-day use of whole grains
- to enhance health and be pleasing to the taste. THE COMPLETE WHOLE
- GRAIN COOKBOOK is indispensable to those seeking a healthier way of
- eating.
- **************************
-
- ***> SEEKING SERENITY
-
- FULL CATASTROPHE LIVING: Using the Wisdom of Your Body and Mind to
- Face Stress, Pain, and Illness
- by Jon Kabat-Zinn, Ph.D.
- (Delacorte, June 1991, $19.95, ISBN 0-385-29897-8)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- "...don't we all tend to fill up our days with things that just HAVE
- to be done and then run around desperately trying to do them all,
- while in the process not really enjoying much of the doing because we
- are too pressed for time, too rushed, too busy, too anxious? We can
- feel overwhelmed by our schedules, our responsibilities, and our roles
- at times even when everything we are doing is important, even when we
- have chosen to do them all. We live immersed in a world of constant
- doing."
-
- "When it comes right down to it, the challenge of mindfulness is to
- realize that 'THIS IS IT.' Right now IS my life."
-
-
- FULL CATASTROPHE LIVING is a very clear and comprehensive description
- of the program at the Stress Reduction Clinic at the University of
- Massachusetts Medical Center, told by an extraordinarily understanding
- man. Dr. Kabat-Zinn has encountered quite a variety of people at the
- clinic, with all sorts of physical and emotional problems, and the
- reader of FULL CATASTROPHE LIVING can certify that he has been paying
- attention to his patients. His rational, understanding yet unemotional
- prose describes the techniques clearly and engagingly, with a full
- measure of respect for the intelligence of the reader.
-
- The core of the program is meditation and mindfulness, and while Dr.
- Kabat-Zinn mentions that the meditation exercises are based on
- traditional Buddhist practices, the techniques described in FULL
- CATASTROPHE LIVING have been shorn of all dogma, mysticism, and mumbo
- jumbo. Each exercise is a gem of simplicity, within the grasp of the
- most unspiritual Western reader. Indeed, the entire program is
- disarmingly simple--the wonder is that our culture has gotten so
- caught up in trivialities that we need someone to come remind us what
- life, and the enjoyment of it, is all about. With simple meditation
- and mindfulness exercises and practical wisdom (your illness is not
- you; there is more right with you than wrong with you; etc.), Dr.
- Kabat-Zinn covers 450 pages with solid, helpful advice.
-
- The title, FULL CATASTROPHE LIVING, by the way, comes from the movie
- ZORBA THE GREEK. When asked if he'd ever been married, Zorba reply is
- something like, "Am I not a man? Of course I've been married. Wife,
- house, kids, everything...the full catastrophe!" Dr. Kabat-Zinn uses
- the phrase to describe everything that modern life means: family,
- work, hobbies, television, ringing phones, deadlines to meet, duties
- and obligations to fulfill, expectations to live up to, etc.
-
- You can use the book alone to follow the Stress Reduction program, or
- you can get audio cassettes and/or videotapes to help out. (I am using
- the book and an audio cassette that I made myself. As I type this, I'm
- entering my third week of the initial 8-week program.) FULL
- CATASTROPHE LIVING is the best book of its kind that I have ever
- encountered, with the clearest and most accessible explanation of
- meditation practices. Highly recommended.
-
- Jon Kabat-Zinn, Ph.D., is the founder and director of the Stress
- Reduction Clinic at the University of Massachusetts Medical Center and
- Associate Professor of Medicine in the Division of Preventive and
- Behavioral Medicine at the University of Massachusetts Medical School.
- He is internationally known for his work using mindfulness meditation
- to help medical patients with chronic pain and stress. Many health
- professionals have trained with him and several clinics have been
- established that are modeled on his program.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- THE SECRET OF THE GOLDEN FLOWER: The Classic Chinese Book of Life
- The Authoritative New Translation by Thomas Cleary
- (HarperCollins, 1991, $16.95, ISBN 0-06-250184-4)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- "Naturalness is called the Way. The Way has no name or form; it is
- just the essence, just the primal spirit."
-
- So begins this new translation of a classic meditation manual. For
- many years the only English version of this text has been a
- translation of a seriously flawed German translation. Now Thomas
- Cleary, the foremost expert in translating classic Chinese and
- Japanese texts (THE ART OF WAR, THE TAOIST I CHING, etc.) has rendered
- this beautiful and powerful manual of enlightenment for
- English-speaking readers.
-
- "This text, like all of Cleary's work, shows that these Eastern
- classics have a depth of intelligence that can enrich any serious
- Western person. Until Cleary, these books have too often been shrouded
- in a mist of mystical allure and vague sentiment: Cleary is finally
- making them authentically available. In giving this particular text of
- extraordinary density and subtlety its first definitive presentation
- in English, Cleary has done a great service in opening THE SECRET OF
- THE GOLDEN FLOWER to as much true understanding and application as
- diligent attention can allow."
- ---Jacob Needleman, professor of philosophy, San Francisco State Univ.
-
- Beautiful thoughts captured in a beautiful book.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- FLOWERS FROM THE FOREST: Meditations
- by Swami Nirmalananda
- (Viswa Shanti Nikethana, 1991, Rs. 12/-)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- "Breath being synonymous with life, we live as long as we breathe and
- we breathe as long as we live. While exhaling more slowly, gently and
- rhythmically than during inhalation, and even after breathing out and
- holding without strain before breathing in again, the steady "mental
- gaze" should be fully focused on the Heart and this process should be
- repeatedly done until the mind gets merged in the Self. This is the
- way to experience the sublime state of freedom from the known, the
- highest form of inner serenity and the indescribable state of Peace
- and Happiness."
-
- FLOWERS FROM THE FOREST is a book of essays by Swami Nirmalananda,
- each a gem of wisdom and gentleness. I like to read several chapters
- aloud into a tape recorder, to play back while I walk/meditate. The
- essays draw my mind into a calmer place, while at the same time
- pointing to certain aspects of existence that it would benefit me to
- think about in greater detail. There are other books, both by and
- about Swami Nirmalananda, available, but you'll have to get them from
- India. If you'd like to have a copy of FLOWERS FROM THE FOREST, or
- other materials from Swami Nirmalananda, go to your bank and get a
- check made out in rupees. FLOWERS FROM THE FOREST costs 12, and you
- should allow extra for postage. Even if you don't wish to order
- immediately, you should always include an International Reply Coupon
- (from the Post Office) for the return postage of a letter. Write to:
- Swami Nirmalananda, Viswa Shanti Nikethana, B.R. Hills--571313,
- Karnataka, India.
-
- **************************
-
- NO TRICKS IN MY POCKET: PAUL NEWMAN DIRECTS
- by Stewart Stern
- (Grove Weidenfeld, 1989, $10.95, ISBN 0-8021-3238-3)
- review by Howard Frye
-
- "The camera is so much closer than an audience looking at a stage that
- it wants more detailed performances from the actors...when Joanne
- pleads with Tom to get a gentleman caller for Laura, for instance,
- she'll need to find a multiplicity of colors for her pleading. Her
- intention can't be just TO PERSUADE. She'll need other active verbs to
- support that--AMUSE, ALLURE, BEGUILE, BULLY, PUNISH. She'll have to be
- pushy and beckoning, sweet and cagey, all under the banner of TO
- PERSUADE."
-
- Required reading for anyone interested in serious drama or the nuts
- and bolts of directing a motion picture. Playwright Stewart Stern
- attended all twelve days of rehearsal for the 1987 film of Tennessee
- Williams' THE GLASS MENAGERIE and records the actions and the words in
- this fascinating study. We get to eavesdrop as director Paul Newman
- coaches his wife Joanne Woodward playing Amanda Wingfield, Karen Allen
- as her crippled daughter Laura, John Malkovich as her narrator-son
- Tom, and James Naughton as Laura's gentleman caller. It's a small,
- fairly claustrophobic play, with a small cast, and cinematographer
- Michael Ballhaus struggles mightily with the small space. We get to
- watch as Michael and Paul argue, as Jim and Karen struggle to breathe
- new life into characters they've played before, and as John
- experiments artistically with the tortured Tom Wingfield.
-
- Stern says that Paul Newman's character isn't easily captured on the
- written page, and indeed, this isn't a tell-all book for the
- starstruck. But for everyone who has ever wondered about the process
- of acting and directing, of how a handful of disparate artists can
- somehow come to create a harmonious whole, this is the finest book
- I've ever read. Stern captures it all for the reader, the silly and
- the profound, the agonies and the ecstasies. Sometimes Stern himself
- doesn't understand what is happening, but he records it faithfully
- anyway and lets the reader attempt an interpretation. Every page comes
- alive with the artistic effort of bringing the play to the big screen,
- and you'll come away from NO TRICKS IN MY POCKET with a greater
- respect for everyone involved. Highly recommended.
-
- Stewart Stern is a long-time friend of both Paul Newman and Joanne
- Woodward, and is the author of many critically acclaimed screenplays,
- including REBEL WITHOUT A CAUSE, THE UGLY AMERICAN, TERESA, and
- RACHEL, RACHEL. He received an Emmy in 1976 for his teleplay SYBIL.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- OVERCOMING MIGRAINE
- A Comprehensive Guide to Treatment and Prevention by a Survivor
- by Betsy Wyckoff
- (Station Hill Press, Barrytown, NY 12507; September 1991)
- Hardcover: $21.95 ISBN 0-88268-110-9
- Paperback: $9.95 ISBN 0-88268-126-5
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- An indispensable volume for the migraine sufferer, in which author
- Wyckoff has gathered together seemingly all known possibilities for
- the treatment and/or prevention of migraine headaches. As a reader who
- has been fighting migraines for over a quarter of a century, I can
- only regret not having something like OVERCOMING MIGRAINE many years
- earlier. I have already managed to decrease the frequency and severity
- of my headaches with the information in this book, and have a long
- list of further ideas to experiment with. The chief value of this book
- lies in its collation of possible migraine therapies--you will
- probably be very surprised at how many avenues of treatment there are
- to explore.
-
- Wyckoff covers drugs that are of interest to migraine sufferers, from
- an over-the-counter herb that has helped many to the high-tech calcium
- channel blockers. She also covers the relationship between diet and
- migraines, and the many foods and ingredients that have been shown to
- cause headaches in certain people. Another chapter is devoted to
- nondietary migraine triggers like environmental factors (barometric
- pressure, wind, intense sunlight, pollutants, etc.), as well as
- stress, medicines, vitamins, etc. Also covered is the connection
- between hormones and migraines, the problem of "mixed" headaches, and
- the challenge of finding the right doctor to help you. There are a few
- pages devoted to the exploration of nonstandard therapies like
- hypnosis, biofeedback, acupuncture and the like, and Wyckoff ends with
- a basic program for you to follow in discovering the best treatment
- and prevention for your own situation. Helpful appendices provide the
- reader with a table of migraine drugs, with doses, precautions, and
- side effects; "The Physiology of Migraine"; a list of headache
- clinics; and a list of migraine associations. All of this valuable
- information is presented in less than 100 pages, with not one
- unnecessary word. Absolutely essential reading for migraine patients.
-
- **************************
-
- COMMON-SENSE PEST CONTROL
- Least Toxic Solutions for Your Home, Garden, Pets and Community
- by William Olkowski, Sheila Daar and Helga Olkowski
- (Taunton Press, June 1991, $39.95)
-
- There are ways to wage a safer war on household and garden pests with
- COMMON-SENSE PEST CONTROL. Chemical pesticides may provide temporary
- relief, but often at a long-term cost. Integrated Pest Management
- (IPM) is the modern approach to controlling pests with environmentally
- sound methods. IPM has proven effective in solving agricultural pest
- problems for over 30 years, and has made great strides against urban
- pests in the past decade. These scientific advancements are now
- available in a landmark book geared to the non-professional. Written
- in layman's language, COMMON-SENSE PEST CONTROL is the definitive
- reference on IPM. It presents all the steps necessary for a successful
- IPM campaign, and control procedures are explained step-by-step
- (including new discoveries such as pheromone traps and insect-grown
- regulators). Each of the 36 chapters includes scientific references
- and suggestions for further reading. Appendices on resources and
- suppliers, and a complete index, are included. Printed on recycled
- paper. (The Taunton Press, 63 South Main Street, Box 5506, Newtown, CT
- 06470-5506)
- **************************
-
- ***> LOOMPANICS UNLIMITED
-
- Loompanics Unlimited is both a publisher and a seller of controversial
- and unusual books. You can get what they demurely call "The Best Book
- Catalog in the World" by sending $5 to: Loompanics Unlimited, PO Box
- 1197, Port Townsend, WA 98368. If you'd like to order any of their
- books mentioned here, send the list price plus shipping and handling
- ($3 for 1-3 books; $6 for 4 or more). When you order a book, the
- catalog is free.
-
- FREEDOM ROAD
- by Harold Hough
- (Loompanics Unlimited, 1991, $16.95, ISBN 1-55950-067-0)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- Like Charles Long's books discussed in RFP #17 (HOW TO SURVIVE WITHOUT
- A SALARY and LIFE AFTER THE CITY), FREEDOM ROAD is essential reading
- for anyone searching for an alternate lifestyle. In contrast to Long's
- books, however, author Harold Hough has a missionary's zeal in
- explaining not only how to live the "Freedom Road lifestyle", but WHY.
- Hough believes in freedom and feels that the United States has
- seriously compromised the intentions of our Founding Fathers. To avoid
- the tyrannies of modern America, he advocates living in an RV
- (recreational vehicle) with no fixed address. Without a regular
- address, a person can more easily fall through the cracks, which is
- exactly what Hough encourages the reader to do.
-
- Beyond the politics and dialectic, however, there is a core of hard
- information in FREEDOM ROAD. Hough explains the Freedom Road lifestyle
- in great detail: how to get ready for it, how to find the right
- vehicle, where to go, how to live cheaply, how to get money, how to
- maintain contacts with the rest of the world. There are specific
- recommendations and suggestions in each category (there are even some
- recipes for cheap and nutritious food), and he expands his concept to
- include two special Freedom Road lifestyle subgroups: the retired, and
- the Freedom Road as temporary sabbatical.
-
- No matter what your particular circumstances, you are sure to find
- much to think about in FREEDOM ROAD, and the specific information
- included is easily co-opted for your own customized use. For the
- reader who is not content to be handed a way of life by parents,
- society, or mass media, FREEDOM ROAD is a core volume of your
- reference bookshelf.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- TAKE NO PRISONERS
- Destroying Enemies With Dirty and Malicious Tricks
- by Mack Nasty
- (Loompanics Unlimited, 1990, $10.00, ISBN 1-55950-043-3)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- Carrying the disclaimer, "This book is sold for informational purposes
- only. The publisher will not be held accountable for the use or misuse
- of information contained in this book.", TAKE NO PRISONERS can be
- understood immediately as a Controversial book. And this is not false
- advertising. Mr. Nasty takes his philosophical stand early in the book
- with:
-
- "Although some people feel that 'forgive and forget' is the best way
- to handle hurt, it's adult and mature to hold a grudge and seek
- retaliation. If someone's hurt you, you have a right to hurt him back.
- Being honest enough with yourself to admit you want revenge is a sign
- of maturity."
-
- The "tricks" outlined in this volume are certainly dirty and
- malicious. Some are pretty nauseating. There's even a warning on the
- back of the book that says, "WARNING: Some of the techniques described
- in this book will make you sick to your stomach." They're not fooling.
- Having no intention of giving you any examples from the book, lest I
- put ugly ideas into your fevered brain, I'll simply give you Mr.
- Nasty's characterization of the contents:
-
- "The techniques described in this book are heavy-duty. Some are
- designed to harm or maim your target, or frame him for a serious
- crime. Others will cause expensive property damage. Still others will
- cost him large amounts of money, directly or indirectly."
-
- TAKE NO PRISONERS might serve its most valuable function in being a
- great litmus test for the depth of your anti-censorship convictions.
- If you can read this book and honestly say that you believe that
- Loompanics Unlimited had the constitutional right to print this book,
- then you are definitely anti-censorship. Me? I can say it, honestly,
- but I sure can't say I'm happy about it.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- THE ANARCHIST'S GUIDE TO THE BBS
- by Keith Wade
- (Loompanics Unlimited, 1990, $8.95, ISBN 1-55950-037-9)
- review by Dan Ellis
-
- Computer bulletin boards are one of the hottest topics in computers
- today, and author Keith Wade says they're too good to be left to the
- computer nerds. You can find almost anything on electronic BBSs:
- dating services, witches, political dissidents, ham radio people,
- authors, criminals, crazies, comedians, aviators, lawyers, doctors,
- experts on virtually any subject you can name. You can talk to
- hundreds of people all over the world, often without making even one
- long distance phone call. On most BBSs, access to people is even
- conveniently categorized for you. Want to talk to people interested in
- science fiction? There's very likely an area already set up
- exclusively for SF fans.
-
- One of Wade's core ideas here is The Five Hundred Dollar Anarchy
- Machine. He figures $500 is an average entry figure for a minimal
- system capable of calling BBSs, and it's an Anarchy Machine because of
- the opportunities available by being "online". Have something to say?
- Something possibly a little radical? You can reach thousands of people
- on a computer BBS. Would you like to get to know others with your
- interests? Your chances of doing so will never be greater than on a
- BBS where so many people gather daily and form into groups. You can
- "eavesdrop" on a group first, to see if they're really your kind of
- people, then step up and say Howdy when you feel comfortable.
-
- You say this sounds great, but you know nothing about computers? Never
- fear, THE ANARCHIST'S GUIDE TO THE BBS explains everything you
- absolutely have to know, yet without confusing computer jargon. Even
- if you've never been friendly with a computer before, this GUIDE (and
- a few bucks) will get you online in short order. This guide is superb
- at explaining both how to use computer BBSs and why you would want to.
- Recommended.
- **************************
-
- ALTERED AMBITIONS: What's Next in Your Life?
- by Betsy Jaffe, Ed.D.
- (Donald I. Fine, May 1991, $19.95, ISBN 1-55611-266-1)
- commentary from the publisher
-
- * Is there room for improvement in your career/life balance?
- * Is it time to rethink your '80s ambitions?
- * Do you wonder if you can enhance your relations--at home and at
- work?
- * Does your health or energy level have you concerned?
- * Do you need a change of lifestyle?
-
- ALTERED AMBITIONS offers solutions to these and many other complex
- questions professional women face today. The '70s and '80s brought
- with them a whirlwind of change in almost every facet of our
- lives--careers, relationships, our culture and lifestyles, our health.
- And these changes will continue to accelerate in the '90s--in fact,
- change may be the only constant we CAN count on.
-
- ALTERED AMBITIONS is the PASSAGES for the new decade, a practical
- guide for navigating these fluctuating times, addressed especially to
- working women who feel pressured by the media to "have it all", yet
- are disappointed that their achievements don't match the ambitions
- they once set for themselves. ALTERED AMBITIONS shows how to think
- strategically in this age in which careers and lives need to be
- MANAGED, not just allowed to go on. Using examples of how different
- women have dealt effectively with shifting lifestyles and employment
- markets, as well as exercises and questionnaires to help you identify
- and achieve your personal goals, ALTERED AMBITIONS can be the key to
- your own best future.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- PARLIAMENT OF WHORES
- A Lone Humorist Attempts to Explain the Entire U.S. Government
- by P.J. O'Rourke
- (Atlantic Monthly Press, June 1991, $19.95, ISBN 0-87113-455-1)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- If this book had been our textbook back in Social Studies class, I
- might have paid more attention. I might also have learned something.
- P.J. O'Rourke, certainly one of the most flexible journalists working
- today (he's been a travel writer, a columnist for AUTOMOBILE magazine,
- Foreign Affairs Desk Chief of ROLLING STONE, he's even written an
- etiquette book), has now crafted his most impressive book yet. He
- explains, he rants, he jokes, he bemoans, he even has a few words of
- praise now and then. You get witticisms like:
-
- "A little government and a little luck are necessary in life, but only
- a fool trusts either of them."
-
- "The mystery of government is not how Washington works but how to make
- it stop."
-
- "Republicans are the party that says government doesn't work, and then
- they get elected and prove it."
-
- "Freedom is its own punishment."
-
- One of the section headings captures my thoughts exactly:
-
- Our Government: What the Fuck Do They Do All Day and Why Does it Cost
- So Goddamned Much Money?
-
- P.J. introduces the idea of U.S. foreign policy with a core concept:
-
- "Whatever it is that the government does, sensible Americans would
- prefer that the government do it to somebody else."
-
- In the pages of PARLIAMENT OF WHORES you'll read about P.J.'s theory
- about our "dictatorship of boredom", how special interest groups (or
- as he calls them, the Perennially Indignant) work, what he found in
- Panama, what he found in Pakistan, and what he found on the streets of
- Washington D.C. at 2 AM. You'll follow him into a drug dealer's house
- of squalor and be at his shoulder as he accompanies the Guardian
- Angels in a raid on a crack house. You'll discover how the three
- branches of government work, and why they don't. And you'll get
- perhaps your first clear and concise explanation of agricultural
- subsidies, the federal budget, the S&L mess ("When buying and selling
- are controlled by legislation, the first things to be bought and sold
- are legislators."), and Social Security.
-
- PARLIAMENT OF WHORES is laugh out loud funny, and at the same time
- manages to be balanced reporting. This is not just a humorous diatribe
- about how screwed up they are in Washington--P.J. O'Rourke really
- comes to grips with the ins and outs of our government: what's wrong
- with it and why, and what's right and should be appreciated more. When
- you stop laughing you start thinking, "You know, this crazy guy's
- right!" Like a certain breakfast cereal, this is good-tasting stuff
- that also happens to be good for you--PARLIAMENT OF WHORES is an
- education. Highly recommended.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- "DUMBTH"
- And 81 Ways to Make Americans Smarter
- by Steve Allen
- (Prometheus, June 1991, $12.95, ISBN 0-87975-650-0)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- "Mountains of evidence--both in the form of statistical studies and
- personal testimonies--establish that the American people are suffering
- from a new and perhaps unprecedented form of mental incapacitation for
- which I have coined the word DUMBTH."
-
- If you've been thinking that people don't seem to be as smart as they
- used to be, Steve Allen says you're right. He says he's been noticing
- the encroaching "dumbth" since the early 1960s. Somewhere along the
- line we stopped caring about effective methods of thinking and stopped
- teaching them to our children. Like a contagious disease, faulty
- reasoning is overrunning our country, and if you think it hasn't made
- a difference you haven't been paying attention. We are accustomed here
- to the attitude that if things are bad HERE, just imagine how they are
- in OTHER countries, the unstated assumption being that the U.S. is
- certainly best in all things. Now we must adjust to the concept that
- the U.S. is at pretty much the bottom of the global pile in
- brainpower. Soon our national image will include our characteristic
- stupidity (if it doesn't already).
-
- "In another instance, a teacher of juniors and seniors in a high
- school raised the question of what tribes had invaded England. Among
- the guesses were the Aztecs and the Jews."
-
- "And as of the beginning of 1989, approximately one-third of America's
- high school students could not locate the United States on a map of
- the world."
-
- But, as Steve Allen argues, it's not simply that we're ignorant of
- facts--the most dangerous aspect of dumbth is that we've lost the
- ability to reason properly. He points to the rising tide of hate-
- related violence (prejudice, in case you haven't noticed, is
- flourishing today), people who mistake actors for the characters they
- portray, and our inability to deal rationally with major issues like
- the arms race, nuclear power, capital punishment, abortion, the
- homeless, and (coming full circle) the crisis in the schoolhouse.
-
- Mr. Allen's book is divided into two sections: The Problem, where he
- provides the above-mentioned "mountains of evidence"; and The
- Solution, where he lays out his suggestions of "81 Ways to Think
- Better". Incidentally, Mr. Allen's careful use of language, which I
- have found discordant and awkward in his fiction, is used to great
- effect here. The clarity and precision of his phrasing is a delight to
- read--he never overstates his case nor does he permit himself bouts of
- emotionalism. The first half of the book is an effective, logically-
- structured argument of his premise.
-
- The second half, the 81 rules, should be required reading by all
- members of every household. Some are very general, others are very
- specific, all are worthy of careful consideration. My personal
- favorite is No. 34: "Decide to continue your education until death".
- Now THOSE are words to live by. And DUMBTH could very well be the most
- important book you've ever read--don't miss it!
-
- A few excerpts:
-
- "Which of the following is true about 87 percent of 10?"
-
- (A) It is greater than 10.
- (B) It is less than 10.
- (C) It is equal to 10.
- (D) Can't tell.
-
- Half of the students tested answered the question wrong, obviously
- having failed to grasp the point that 87 percent--of anything at all--
- cannot possibly be equal to all, or 100 percent, of it."
-
- "Incidentally, readers should by no means infer that, in writing such
- a book, I am presenting myself as a supremely reasonable authority,
- any more than they should assume that a clergyman who delivers a moral
- sermon is necessarily himself saintly."
-
- "Several years ago, the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare
- hired a private consultant, Rockwell International, to find out how
- many private consultants HEW had in its employ. From an original price
- tag of $378,147 Rockwell's contract had reached a cost of $2,200,000."
-
- "A telephone receptionist for a New York publishing company,
- responding to a request to speak to an executive, said, 'He don't work
- here no more.'"
-
- "We must inculcate a respect for wisdom and not put such heavy
- emphasis on material or financial accomplishment. Man was not put on
- this earth primarily to have hit record albums, to be utterly
- irresistible to the opposite sex, to get rich by any means, however
- unethical, or to wear the tightest possible jeans. Every other society
- in history that has accomplished anything of lasting importance has
- perceived such simple truths."
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- PARADISE MISLAID
- Birth, Death, and the Human Predicament of Being Biological
- by E.J. Applewhite
- (St. Martin's, June 1991, $24.95, ISBN 0-312-05944-2)
- commentary from the publisher
-
- Searching for answers to the most fundamental questions--"What is
- Life?" "What is Death?"--E.J. Applewhite, longtime collaborator with
- Buckminster Fuller and coauthor of Fuller's SYNERGETICS, looks to
- science and its vast wealth of facts and findings. By defining
- processes of nature, will we someday also conquer our mortality? Or
- create forms of life that will never die?
-
- In PARADISE MISLAID, Applewhite journeys through a dozen science
- disciplines--molecular biology, entomology, physics and chemistry
- among them--hoping to draw some conclusions about our human condition.
- He collects--and sometimes dissects--the theories of scientists in a
- series of provocative and cohesive essays. No topic is too humble
- (there's a section on Ants & Instinct) or too lofty (Human
- Consciousness) for Applewhite, who served with the CIA for 25 years
- before retiring as Deputy Inspector General several years ago.
- Throughout PARADISE MISLAID, he probes the theories of noteworthy
- scientists, including Jonas Salk, James Lovelock and Freeman Dyson,
- and addresses topics from viruses to robotics.
-
- His insatiable appetite for detail enlivens his stately discourse: he
- explains, for example, if each water molecule in a snowball were
- "magnified to the size of a pea, there would be enough snow to blanket
- the whole surface of the earth equal to the height of the Eiffel
- Tower."
-
- Although each of the essays in the book is distinct and interesting on
- its own, taken as a whole, they create an impressive body of
- knowledge, and present a cohesive argument on the predicament of being
- human. More importantly, he casts a critical eye on the concept of
- heaven, on afterlife, and on our desire to attain immortality. Like
- science popularizer Carl Sagan, he reminds us of the vastness of the
- cosmos, and the small but significant role of the human race.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- 34 ESSAYS
- by G.X. Jupitter-Larsen
- ($4 postpaid from: N D, PO Box 4144, Austin, TX 78765)
- review by Peter Quint
-
- Poet-philosopher Gerald Xe Jupitter-Larsen wrote these 34 essays over
- the last ten years. They are fresh, frustrating, tantalizing, and
- attack subjects from a sideways perspective that keeps the reader off
- balance. Each isolated paragraph is like a Zen koan that you can allow
- your mind to bounce off of for awhile.
-
- "When the mind reacts, it isn't reacting to matter or nothingness. It
- reacts only to its own measurements of matter and nothingness. The
- mind only effects the cross sections of the mind."
-
- Jupitter-Larsen has also done work under the name of "The Haters",
- named that because "any other title would have been just as equally
- inappropriate". He has released several cassettes, singles, and other
- audio objects such as "Oxygen Is Flammable" (1990), which is a record
- that is played by pouring water over it.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- NOT FOR PACKRATS ONLY
- How to Clean Up, Clear Out, and Dejunk Your Life Forever
- by Don Aslett
- (Penguin/Plume, May 1991, $9.95, ISBN 0-452-26593-2)
- review by Janet Peters
-
- The only sure things in life: death, taxes, and junk. Where does all
- this crap come from? And why is it still here? There is stuff in my
- purse that I'm absolutely SURE that I've never seen before. Who sneaks
- in and puts linty Live-Savers in my handbag? And why am I keeping
- them? I have a drawer in the kitchen that defies description: it's got
- rubber bands, nut picks, keys that go to no known locks, expired
- coupons, plastic reusable tops for soft drink bottles no longer made,
- a lump of sticky stuff I really don't want to think about, a dog
- collar for a pet that we almost got, etc. The really bad part is that
- there are a few needed artifacts in that drawer, but it takes about 10
- minutes to dig them out each time they're needed.
-
- I could go on forever about the junk in my life, which is why
- professional cleaner Don Aslett has been moved to write a second book
- about this knotty problem. (His first book about junk was CLUTTER'S
- LAST STAND.) In the pages of NOT FOR PACKRATS ONLY you'll find not
- only hundreds and hundreds of specific tips and helpful suggestions,
- but quite a bit of psychological support, for this is quite an
- emotional issue. If you don't believe that, go through your home with
- a close friend (better yet, a spouse) and try to agree on what's
- junk and what's a family heirloom/work of art/valued memento/etc. Or
- just try to toss the entire contents of a box/closet/drawer that you
- haven't used in years. Can't do it, can you? There is no end to the
- psychological justifications for holding on to junk, but the costs of
- junk (which Don Aslett explains carefully) are enormous: time, money,
- and negative energy like guilt. It's a nasty job, but follow Don
- Aslett's advice and you'll get through it, and be a better (certainly
- lighter) person for it.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- FUMBLERULES
- A Lighthearted Guide to Grammar and Good Usage
- by William Safire
- (Doubleday, 1990, ISBN 0-385-41301-7)
-
- Fumblerule: A mistake that calls attention to the rule.
-
- --> A writer must not shift your point of view.
- --> Make an all out effort to hyphenate when necessary, but not when
- un-necessary.
- --> It behooves us to avoid archaisms.
- --> In their writing, everyone should make sure that their pronouns
- agree with its antecedent.
- --> Proofread carefully to see if you any words out.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- IN STITCHES
- A Patchwork of Feminist Humor and Satire
- edited by Gloria Kaufman
- (Indiana University Press, July 1991)
- Hardcover: $29.95 ISBN 0-253-33141-2
- Paperback: $14.95 ISBN 0-253-20641-3
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- The original stereotyped feminist was a strident, angry-faced woman
- who was forever causing problems. Her favorite brand of humor was
- probably pictures of disemboweled male chauvinist pigs. Now that the
- general paranoia has evaporated and common sense is making some
- inroads in the overall chaos, the term "feminist" isn't quite the
- onerous label it once was, and newstyle comediennes like Rita Rudner,
- Ellen Degeneres, and Elayne Boosler have proved that "feminist humor"
- is not an oxymoron. IN STITCHES collects some of the best (meaning
- funniest and most profound) of the feminist humorists in a collage of
- essays, poems, quips, cartoons, and comic strips. Contributors
- include: Margaret Atwood, Mary Kay Blakely, Ellen Goodman, Guerilla
- Girls, Nicole Hollander, Alice Kahn, Alison Lurie, Jane Wagner, and
- many more. There are even a few men allowed to participate: Dave
- Barry, Berke Breathed, and Jules Feiffer.
-
- Open up IN STITCHES to any page, any page at all:
-
- EASY is an adjective used to describe a woman who has the sexual
- morals of a man. (Nancy Linn-Desmond)
-
- Men were taught from childhood to be aggressive; we were taught to be
- nice. Men are encouraged to go for it; we are encouraged to lose
- weight. (Alice Kahn)
-
- There is certainly plenty of evidence which supports the notion that,
- while age may have a positive effect on wine and cheese, it will cause
- a woman to become invisible. She will disappear from the culture. She
- won't be offered starring roles in movies or be needed to sell any
- cars/tools/luggage/etc. She won't be featured on runways, or
- billboards, or posters, and what possible reason could an older woman
- have for showing up on a beach? (Mary Kay Blakely)
-
- It was so cold I almost got married. (Shelley Winters)
-
- How many of you ever started dating someone 'cause you were too lazy
- to commit suicide? (Judy Tenuta)
-
- IN STITCHES is the funniest thing since pink eye shadow. You might
- also want to hunt down the 1980 collection called PULLING OUR OWN
- STRINGS edited by Gloria Kaufman and Mary Kay Blakely. (If your
- bookstore can't get IN STITCHES for you, write to: Indiana University
- Press, 10th & Morton Sts., Bloomington, IN 47405, or get your credit
- card and call 1-800-842-6796.)
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- COLLISION AT HOME PLATE
- The Lives of Pete Rose and Bart Giamatti
- by James Reston, Jr.
- (HarperCollins, 1991, $19.95, ISBN 0-06-016379-8)
- review by Drew Bartorillo
-
- COLLISION AT HOME PLATE is the combined biography of the banned
- baseball player, and convicted felon, Pete Rose and the late
- commissioner of baseball Bart Giamatti. It is fitting that both
- biographies are contained in one book in that it was Bart Giamatti who
- had Pete Rose banned from baseball for gambling on his own team. A
- parallel is drawn in the book between their lives, beginning with
- their parents and ending up with Pete Rose being banned and Bart
- Giamatti's death. COLLISION AT HOME PLATE is extremely well written
- and full of baseball facts and history. Since Pete Rose played most of
- his career with the Cincinnati Reds, the book is full of information
- about the modern-day Reds.
-
- Normally, I tend to avoid biographies but, due to my love of the game
- of baseball, decided to read COLLISION AT HOME PLATE. I found the book
- to be VERY disturbing and difficult to finish. The passages in the
- book about Pete Rose were very depressing. I still remember going to
- my first baseball game at the old Connie Mack Stadium in North
- Philadelphia to see the Philadelphia Athletics play. Since then, I
- have been an avid baseball fan and, in fact, truly enjoyed watching
- Pete Rose play. I never realized, until I read COLLISION AT HOME
- PLATE, what a truly horrible human being Pete Rose was. When he was
- banned from baseball I really felt sorry for him and regretted the
- possibility that this magnificent baseball player might never be in
- the Baseball Hall Of Fame. After reading COLLISION AT HOME PLATE I
- don't feel sorry for him at all and, in fact, feel that he didn't
- receive nearly the punishment he deserved for the crimes he committed.
-
- If you are a true baseball fan, by all means pick up COLLISION AT HOME
- PLATE and read it. It will fascinate you and keep you entertained for
- hours. If you are a Pete Rose fan, and do not know much about his
- personal life, you might want to stay away from this book. It can
- destroy any illusions you had about this baseball "superhero" and
- leave you feeling very cold toward him.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- WATCHING AMERICA
- What Television Tells Us About Our Lives
- by S. Robert Lichter, Linda S. Lichter, and Stanley Rothman
- (Prentice Hall, June 1991, $24.95, ISBN 0-13-026824-0)
- review by Howard Frye
-
- "Marx once charged that history is made behind the backs of the
- individuals who think they are shaping it. In the age of television,
- history is reshaped before our eyes without our noticing it. The goal
- of this book is to reveal this process by providing the first
- comprehensive guide to the meanings and messages of prime time."
-
- WATCHING AMERICA is a product of the authors' ongoing study of the
- effects of the communications media on society. They perceived a need
- for an examination of televised material that went beyond the
- much-publicized counts of violent acts or sexual innuendos. They saw
- that television, watched by the average American for more than four
- hours every day, has become a part of our reality set and that the
- content of the shows we watch, both the obvious messages and the
- underlying assumptions, affect who were are and how we behave.
-
- "During the past four decades, television has transcended its role as
- mere entertainment to become a potent force shaping everyday life."
-
- "The full force of television's impact is rarely felt in a single
- program or even a single season. It is the long-term result of
- exposure to an artificial reality so pervasive it has become a major
- part of the social environment."
-
- "Our thesis is that television started as an agent of social control
- but became an agent of social change."
-
- To create this impressive guide, the authors examined the
- content--characters, plot, political and social themes--of a randomly
- chosen sample of 620 prime-time shows, 20 from each of 30 seasons from
- 1955 to 1986. The results of their study show how the fantasy world of
- TV has depicted American society in the home, at work, and in the
- public square. Each chapter in the book examines how a major theme on
- prime-time has developed over the past three decades. Taken together,
- they chronicle the changing treatment of groups such as businessmen,
- government officials, law enforcers, ethnic minorities, and other
- major social groups.
-
- WATCHING AMERICA is laudable not only for the depth of its research,
- but for the appealing nature of the prose. What could have been a dry
- and stuffy treatise of statistical minutiae is actually an absorbing
- discussion of what has become a major factor of American life. Indeed,
- for Babyboomers like myself, the history of television is in many ways
- the history of my life: I remember wondering both Who shot JFK? and
- Who shot JR? I remember the living room of Rob and Laura Petrie as
- well as I remember my own childhood living room.
-
- "The medium creates a kind of hyperreality, a shared fantasy world
- that merges with and sometimes even replaces the more mundane world of
- real life for millions of Americans."
-
- WATCHING AMERICA is an intellectual examination of our "shared fantasy
- world", and you may be very surprised at some of the findings. For
- instance: Situations in which parents exercise control over their
- children have INCREASED in frequency over the last 30 years. Also,
- women are still outnumbered by men on TV, and are still more often
- portrayed as younger, having less authority, and working at
- lower-class, lower-paying jobs than men. WATCHING AMERICA is Highly
- Recommended.
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- DALI: THE SALVADOR DALI MUSEUM COLLECTION
- Introduction by Robert S. Lubar
- Foreword by A. Reynolds Morse
- (Bulfinch Press/Little Brown, May 1991, $45, ISBN 0-8212-1810-7)
- review by Carl Ingram
-
- "Of a cubist picture one asks: 'What does that represent?' -- Of a
- surrealist picture, one sees what it represents but one asks: 'What
- does that mean?' -- Of a 'paranoiac' picture one asks abundantly:
- 'What do I see?' 'What does that represent?' 'What does that mean?'
-
- It means one thing certainly, -- the end of so-called modern painting
- based on laziness, simplicity, and gay decorativism."
- ---Salvador Dali
-
- The art reproduced here ranges from 1917 to 1974, an extraordinary
- span of time and styles. Dali, born in Spain on November 5, 1904, was
- a painter, a poet, a novelist (HIDDEN FACES, 1944), and he designed
- furniture, jewelry, and textiles. His outrageous public persona was
- possibly the first example of performance art. His draftsmanship was
- superb--many elements in his pictures are as clear and detailed as a
- photograph, and yet no Dali work has ever been confused with a
- photograph. Watches melt, "still life"s move, body parts demonstrate
- grotesque plasticity. And the titles of the pictures are wonderful
- too. One of my favorites is, "Telephone in a Dish with Three Grilled
- Sardines at the End of September".
-
- The dazzling reproductions in this volume are a treat for the eye and
- a delight for the intellect. Study Dali's 'paranoiac' work and faces
- pop out at you and scenes shift before your eyes. Despite Dali's
- longevity and brilliance, few studies of twentieth-century art spend
- more than a paragraph on him. Why? Probably because he's so difficult
- to pin down. No matter how you divide up the categories for
- classifying artists, Salvador Dali is the one who is always left over
- at the end. Throughout his career Dali's art mutated as he made new
- discoveries, tried new ways of seeing, expanded his horizons. He will
- forever be known as the man who painted dreams, and his work will be
- fresh and exciting as long as there are people who dream.
-
- The 159 oil paintings, drawings, and watercolors in this volume
- represent the Morse Collection of the Salvador Dali Museum in St.
- Petersburg, Florida. They represent more than 50 years of collecting
- by A. Reynolds Morse and his wife, Eleanor.
-
- "The crowds flock to see my paintings and will continue to do so
- because their instinct obscurely and amazedly suspects that my works
- hide treasures of blinding authenticity that nobody has yet perceived;
- artistic treasures that will be more and more coveted..."
- ---Salvador Dali
-
- [There is a useful chronology of Salvador Dali's life in the back of
- DALI: THE SALVADOR DALI MUSEUM COLLECTION. If you'd like to know more,
- check out DIARY OF A GENIUS and THE UNSPEAKABLE CONFESSIONS OF
- SALVADOR DALI, both by the artist himself.]
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN TRUTH AND OPINION
- How the Misuse of Language Can Lead to Disaster
- by Timothy J. Cooney
- (Prometheus Books, June 1991, $17.95, ISBN 0-87975-668-3)
- review by Howard Frye
-
- This charming volume is a longish essay that borrows from a variety of
- disciplines--linguistics, logic, psychology, sociology--to make the
- point that much of the dissension between peoples throughout history
- has been the result more of sloppy speech than genuine hatred. By
- stating an opinion as if it were a truth, a matter of verifiable fact,
- we needlessly infuriate others. Why do we do this? For a variety of
- reasons: to sound forceful, to sound sure of ourselves, or, more
- insidiously, because we actually believe that our position is "right".
- Most of us will passionately defend, with arms if need be, a Truth;
- few of us would harm another over an opinion. Disaster strikes when we
- are unable to tell the difference between the two. Mr. Cooney shows
- the reader how to determine if any particular position is a matter of
- truth or a matter of opinion, and demonstrates through examples that
- if we would all just speak a little more carefully, mankind's future
- might be a bit brighter.
-
- THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN TRUTH AND OPINION is a delightful volume of
- philosophy accessible to anyone, a book with an important message,
- expressed by a man of extraordinary verbal grace. In my opinion, you
- should definitely read this book. You'll enjoy it, and you'll benefit
- from it. You can't ask much more than that.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- FIRE FROM ICE
- Searching for the Truth Behind the Cold Fusion Furor
- by Eugene F. Mallove
- (Wiley, June 1991, $22.95, ISBN 0-471-53139-1)
- review by Carl Ingram
-
- First things first: What is fusion? According to my Funk & Wagnalls,
- in physics fusion is "a thermonuclear reaction in which the nuclei of
- a light element undergo transformation into those of a heavier
- element, with the release of great energy". The last part of that
- definition is what makes fusion such an important subject: anything
- that creates "great energy" is intriguing. The first part of the
- definition is the good news/bad news dichotomy. The good news is that
- this transformation would result in energy that is unlimited,
- inexpensive, safe, and environmentally sound. The bad news is that the
- most successful fusion reactor we know of is a star, and star-like
- temperatures are pretty tough to handle. They can vaporize trees,
- buildings, and nuclear physicists.
-
- This is why the world was rocked when Stanley Pons and Martin
- Fleischmann, highly respected research chemists from the University of
- Utah, announced in March, 1989, that they had achieved nuclear fusion
- in a simple table-top experiment at room temperature. If their results
- were true, the world's energy problems were over. (Ironically, within
- hours of the announcement, the Exxon Valdez left port on its way to
- dumping 11 million gallons of crude oil into the Prince William Sound.
- If cold fusion became a reality, there would be no more need for oil
- or tankers.)
-
- All over the world scientists scrambled to recreate Pons and
- Fleischmann's experiment, with very little success. Later it was
- discovered that Pons and Fleischmann had failed to document the
- details of their work completely, and had bypassed conventional
- routine for scientific discovery. Was this all a hoax? The celebration
- quickly became a scientific scandal, with several key members of the
- scientific community declaring that cold fusion was either the
- delusion or brilliant scam of Pons and Fleischmann. One day we had
- discovered the secret of inexhaustible, cheap, clean energy; the next
- day we had nothing. Where was the truth to be found in all this
- controversy?
-
- Eugene Mallove's FIRE FROM ICE examines the entire history of cold
- fusion research and provides an insider's view of the scientific
- community. He takes a look at the rift cold fusion drove between hot
- fusion and cold fusion scientists, and the infighting, misinformation,
- competition, favoritism, and allegations that it caused. He delves
- into the media's hostile attitude towards cold fusion and the series
- of events that ultimately resulted in Pons and Fleischmann being
- dismissed from their jobs and ostracized by their peers. Mallove also
- tells why he believes many of today's qualified, gifted scientists who
- are intrigued by cold fusion refuse to get involved.
-
- In FIRE FROM ICE, Mallove takes the controversial position that cold
- fusion is not a fantasy or a fluke, but a compelling possibility with
- great potential that demands immediate attention. He tells why cold
- fusion is unlikely to receive the research funds it deserves, and
- reports on the latest successes international scientists have had.
- FIRE FROM ICE is an important book for those who follow current events
- and science, and for anyone concerned with the environment and the
- future of our planet's natural resources.
-
- **************************
-
- THE COLUMBUS QUINCENTENNIAL
-
- We're going to be awash in Columbus mania in 1992, and the publishing
- industry is getting started this fall, with dozens of books about
- Columbus and related subjects. Here are some of the books you'll have
- to choose from:
-
- Isabella of Castile by Nancy Rubin (St. Martin's, Oct, $24.95)
- Fourteen Ninety-Two by Barnet Litvinoff (Scribners, Sep, $22.95)
- Discovery: Exploration Through the Centuries by Eric Flaum (Smithmark,
- Oct, $29.98)
- The Columbus Papers w/narrative text by Columbus scholar Mauricio
- Obregon (Macmillan, Nov, $100)
- The Discoverers: An Illustrated History of Man's Search to Know His
- World and Himself by Daniel J. Boorstin (2-volume reprint w/550
- illustrations, 200 in full color, Abrams, Nov, $75)
- The Log of Christopher Columbus translated & annotated by Robert Fuson
- (reprint, Tab Books, Oct, $14.92)
- Conquest of Eden 1493-1515: Other Voyages of Columbus by Michael
- Paiewonsky (Academy Chicago, Feb, $34.95)
- Columbus: The Great Adventure by Paolo Emilio Taviani (Crown, Oct,
- $20)
- Admiral of the Ocean Sea: A Life of Christopher Columbus by Samuel
- Eliot Morison (reprint, Little Brown, Oct, $24.95)
- The Voyages of Columbus by Lorenzo Camuso (Marboro Books, Sep, $7.95)
- Christopher Columbus: The Voyage of Discovery 1492 by Samuel Eliot
- Morison (Marboro Books, Sep, $12.95)
- The Mysterious History of Columbus: An Exploration of the Man, the
- Myth, the Legacy by John Noble Wilford (Knopf, Oct, $25)
- America Discovers Columbus: How an Italian Explorer Became an American
- Hero by Claudia Bushman (University Press of New England, Spring
- 1992)
- The Conquest of Paradise: Christopher Columbus and the Columbian
- Legacy by Kirkpatrick Sale (reprint, Plume, Sep, $12.95)
- Kingdoms of Gold, Kingdoms of Jade: The Americas Before Columbus by
- Brian M. Fagan (Thames and Hudson, Oct, $24.95)
- Seeds of Change (Smithsonian Books, Oct, $39.95/$24.95)
- The Columbus Encyclopedia (2 volumes, Simon & Schuster, Oct, $175)
- Columbus and the Age of Discovery by Zvi Dor-Ner & William Scheller
- (Morrow, Oct, $40, TV tie-in)
- Columbus: For Gold, God and Glory by John Dyson (Simon & Schuster,
- Oct, $35, TV tie-in)
-
- And Some For Young People:
-
- Follow the Dream: The Story of Christopher Columbus by Peter Sis
- (Knopf, Aug, $15)
- I, Columbus: My Journal edited by Peter & Connie Roop (reprint, Avon,
- Oct, $5.99)
- The Log of Christopher Columbus's First Voyage to America in the Year
- 1492 As Copied Out in Brief by Bartholomew las Casas, One of His
- Companions (reprint, Dover, Oct, $5.95)
- Christopher Columbus: From Vision to Voyage by Joan Anderson (Dial,
- Oct, $14.95)
- Christopher Columbus: The Great Adventure and How We Know About It by
- Delno & Jean West (Atheneum, Sep, $13.95)
- If You Were There in 1492 by Barbara Brenner (Bradbury, Sep, $13.95)
- All Pigs on Deck: Christopher Columbus's Second Marvelous Voyage
- (Delacorte, Oct, $15)
- Garfield Discovers America by Jim Kraft (Grosset & Dunlap, Mar, $9.95)
- I Sailed With Columbus by Miriam Schlein (HarperCollins, Oct, $13.95)
- I Sailed With Columbus: The Adventures of a Ship's Boy by Susan Martin
- (Overlook, Oct, $17.95)
- The Boy Who Sailed With Columbus by Michael Foreman (Arcade, 1992)
- The Canary Who Sailed With Columbus by Susan Wiggs (Panda Books, 1989,
- $12.95)
- A Picture Book of Christopher Columbus illustrated by John & Alexandra
- Wallner (Holiday House, 1990, $14.95)
- The High Voyage: The Final Crossing of Christopher Columbus by Olga
- Litowinsky (reprint, Delacorte, 1991, $14.95)
-
- Miscellaneous:
-
- The Cut & Assemble Columbus's Santa Maria in Full Color by A.G. Smith
- (Dover, July, $5.95)
-
- YESTERDAY WE SAW MERMAIDS by Esther Friesner is set in 1492 and is
- about a ship of Spanish nuns diverted by a naughty genie to the far
- side of the Atlantic. It is bound with Lawrence Watt-Evans' THE FINAL
- FOLLY OF CAPTAIN DANCY and printed as a Tor Double for September
- ($3.99).
-
- COLUMBUS A LA MODE by Robert Wechsler is a collection of parodies in
- which the author recounts major events in Columbus' life as other
- writers might have. His decision to make the voyage is told as Anne
- Tyler might, his wife's gruesome death is described in the manner of
- Stephen King, etc. Other writers whose styles are lampooned include
- Kurt Vonnegut, Art Buchwald, Ann Landers, Kitty Kelley, John Updike,
- Dr. Seuss, and Mille (First Dog). Look for this book April 1992 from
- Catbird Press.
-
- OCTOBER WINDS by Susan Wiggs (Tor, Oct, $4.99) is a rather different
- account of Columbus. According to this fictional account, when
- Cristobal Colon appeared for the first time before Queen Isabel, "his
- appearance struck her like a thunderbolt, causing her heart to quicken
- against her stiff bodice and her fingers to clench around the tassels
- of her cushion."
-
- **************************
-
- #:#:#:#:#:#:#:#:#:#:#:#:#
- # 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.
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- ?..................................?
- ? ?
- ? IT'S ALL A MYSTERY TO ME ?
- ? ?
- ? by Jack Curtin ?
- ? ?
- ?..................................?
-
- So here we are again. As it turns out, I'm not going to be able to
- deliver on all the things I promised last time due to a couple of
- major time-consuming personal matters that have turned this summer
- into a horror show. But we'll find some things to talk about here, yes
- we will, and we'll begin with the latest entry in what is rapidly
- becoming one of my favorite P.I. series.
-
- Moroni Traveler, Robert Irvine's Salt Lake City private eye who is a
- "fallen angel" to the Church of the Latter Day Saints which controls
- that city--indeed, that state--is back for his fourth case in CALLED
- HOME (St. Martin's Press, 1991, $17.95). I've always had a soft spot
- for the Mormons--in a mystery sense, that is--because it seems to me
- that their church-dominated society offers the best opportunity this
- side of the Catholic Church for using the crime story to explore
- questions of power and morality and the place of religion in our
- lives. I remember a book called PROPHET MOTIVE by an ex-Mormon named
- Cleo Jones which appeared about a decade ago and dealt with the murder
- of an old-line Mormon Bishop in a small Utah town, which I enjoyed
- immensely. I don't think the book ever went to paperback and I never
- heard of Cleo Jones again, but I found the setting intriguing and
- eagerly picked up Irvine's BAPTISM FOR THE DEAD, which introduced
- Traveler in 1988.
-
- Over the course of two ensuing novels (THE ANGEL'S SHARE and GONE TO
- GLORY), I've grown familiar with Traveler, his father Martin (who, in
- fact, is not his father at all), his ex-wife Claire (who is more than
- a little crazy), his friend Willis Tanner (a power broker in the
- Mormon hierarchy) and several offbeat and often very funny characters
- who populate their world. Serious books all, but with a touch of humor
- throughout.
-
- CALLED HOME is, as they say, a whole 'nother smoke. It opens with
- Traveler on trial for assault: he broke the leg of one of a trio of
- young thugs hired by Claire to beat him up. He's acquitted, and his
- father has already signed him up for an out-of-town case to get him
- away from things for a while. That takes him to the town of Wasatch, a
- totally Mormon town, to investigate the apparent suicide of his
- client's wife. Since Wasatch is in the area where Claire grew up, this
- also provides an opportunity to try and find out why she is the way
- she is and whether or not the son she says Moroni fathered in their
- last time together actually exists and can be found. But there was
- another recent suicide in Wasatch, Moroni learns, and the women of the
- town are severely agitated by some secret issue and nobody seems to
- want him around.
-
- A shocking and unexpected murder brings things to a head and turns
- Traveler's investigation into a very personal matter. There are others
- with a claim on the killer, however, and it is their final vengeance
- that ultimately brings things to a conclusion. By novel's end,
- Traveler is still in search of a son who might not even exist and has
- given his word that he "owes one" to his powerful Mormon friend, two
- plotlines that promise further delights in a series that just keeps
- getting better.
- * * * * * * * * * *
-
- About the only thing that is going to save this feature from being a
- regular paean to the works of Mitchell Smith, I suspect, is that the
- man has only produced two novels to my knowledge (under his own name,
- that is, there is indication in the author's note of the original
- paperback edition of the title about to be discussed that he has done
- a whole slew of paperbacks under various aliases). I raved on and on
- about his STONE CITY last time around, and I'm here to tell you that
- its predecessor, DAYDREAMS (reissued in April by Signet/Onyx at $5.99)
- comes very close to being an even better read, missing out only
- because it seems to lose its sense of pacing--if not excitement--in
- the closing sections.
-
- DAYDREAMS is the book that people like Wambaugh and Caunitz are
- supposed to be writing, an extraordinary thriller set in New York City
- and featuring some of the most memorable cops and killers you'll ever
- meet on the printed page. The story is this: beautiful prostitute
- Sally Gaither is found horribly murdered in her apartment, tied to a
- chair after having been sexually abused and left to scald to death in
- a steaming shower. Since Sally apparently had some sessions with some
- really, really big wigs (including the sitting Vice President of the
- United States), the very top men in the NYPD and a ruthless, if
- somewhat inept, crew from Washington DC are extremely fearful that
- something might turn up--an appointment book, perhaps--that would open
- doors they would just as soon stay closed. They have no desire to
- solve the case; they just want the lid kept on.
-
- As a result, the case doesn't go to Homicide or Major Crimes; it is
- given instead to the Commissioner's Squad, a decidedly minor
- departmental outpost, specifically to maverick cop Tom Nardone and his
- female partner, Ellie Klein, whose career in the Department has been
- less than spectacular. Nardone and Klein aren't about to be
- sidetracked, however, and keep on turning up evidence and pushing
- things to the point where the DC team tries to slow them up, with
- disastrous--and murderous--results.
-
- As is STONE CITY, this is hard-hitting, often shocking stuff. Smith
- pulls no punches, often detailing the most intimate bodily functions
- in some detail, using the language and the attitudes of the street to
- full effect, painting acts of violence in cold, graphic terms. For
- example, a pair of lengthy letters that the dead woman wrote to her
- high school age daughter (who was fully aware of her mother's
- occupation) are truly startling documents, offering a series of
- opinions sure to appall the vast majority of readers--and set them
- thinking just a little bit.
-
- DAYDREAMS is often gruesome, sometimes almost hilarious, completely
- unforgettable. Mitchell Smith is a writer to watch.
-
- * * * * * * * * *
-
- IF I WERE A PUBLISHER....Ah yes, if only I had the power to bring back
- into print some overlooked masterpieces. This will be a regular
- feature around here, as announced last time, and the nominee for this
- installment is DEADLY WEAPON by Wade Miller, originally published by
- Farrar Straus in 1946 and in paperback by Signet thereafter. This
- forgotten thriller, with its most unusual and unexpected ending,
- should be one of the genre's classics and instead has been shamefully
- overlooked.
-
- One of the major benefits to be gained from working at a store where a
- significant number of the customers are amateur experts in mystery
- fiction is that they become a great resource to be plumbed. It was as
- a result of a lengthy conversation with one such gentleman that I
- decided to give Miller a try (another benefit of working in a mystery
- bookstore is ready access to all this good old stuff). "Wade Miller,"
- by the way, was a pen name for a writing team of Bill Miller and Bob
- Wade, who also wrote as "Will Daemer," "Whit Masterson" and "Dale
- Wilmer." My intent was to look at the team's series of six "Max
- Thursday" private eye novels, but DEADLY WEAPON came first and I'm the
- kinda guy who cares about that sort of thing, so...
-
- Wow! This one is a keeper, folks, with an ending that you won't see
- coming and won't forget. Private eye Walter James is in a San Diego
- burlesque house getting set to confront the man he has come from
- Atlanta to see. That man is murdered in his seat before that meeting
- happens, setting off a series of action packed events that carry the
- reader along so swiftly that there isn't time to consider all the
- dangling plot threads or oddities (I'm not sure we ever learn who did
- kill the man in the theater, for example, but that isn't important by
- book's end). James and the aforementioned Clapp, working together in
- an uneasy alliance, uncover an expanding crime web having to do with
- the smuggling of marijuana from Mexico, but a mysterious killer
- thwarts their efforts at finding the person behind it all.
-
- I won't say any more here, lest I give away any of its secrets, but
- this is highly recommended--if you can find a copy.
-
- * * * * * * * * *
-
- Due out just around the time this review appears is THE SONG DOG
- (Mysterious Press, $17.95), the eighth in James McClure's estimable
- series of South African police procedurals starring Afrikaner CID
- lieutenant Tromp Kramer and Bantu sergeant Mickey Zondi. And I make my
- judgment of the quality of the series based upon this one book; I've
- not read the earlier books but went out and got them as soon as I
- finished THE SONG DOG--it's that good.
-
- Actually, if you are going to come in late on a series (something I
- hate to do), this is just about the perfect situation to do so: THE
- SONG DOG is actually a prequel to the other books, a jump back in time
- to when Kramer and Zondi first met. I'm sure that there are all sorts
- of inside references and jokes here that I did not catch, not being
- familiar with the other stories, but I can always come back and reread
- this one once I'm up to speed.
-
- The time here is 1962, and Kramer is sent to a backwater town in
- Zululand after a young housewife with something of a "reputation" and
- a respected police officer are blown to bits when dynamite destroys
- her isolated home. Her jealous husband is certainly a suspect, but
- then again, he might well have been the target since he was supposed
- to be home that night. As Kramer investigates (and chafes over the
- incompetent police and medical personnel on the scene), he keeps
- stumbling over Zondi, who is tracking down a killer of his own. I
- presume that the relationship between the acerbic Kramer and the
- carefully clever Zondi and the pointed but neatly underplayed
- depiction of South African customs and attitudes are the heart and
- soul of all the books; that's why I rushed out to get them. Highly
- recommended.
- _____________________________________________________________________
- Jack Curtin is a freelance writer and editor currently working on a
- mystery novel set in Philadelphia's wealthy Main Line suburbs and
- eking out a living writing book reviews of crime and mystery titles
- for a variety of publications. He also recently began working part
- time at the Whodunit Book Store in Philadelphia. Jack invites
- comments, arguments or suggestions for future column subjects and can
- be reached via CompuServe (ID # 72437,506), fax (215-896-9503) or good
- old U.S. mail (1008 Black Rock Road, Gladwyne, PA 19035).
-
- Portions of this column have (or will) appeared in MYSTERY *FILE and
- BEACHCOMBER magazines in slightly different form or are adapted from
- unsigned reviews which appeared in PUBLISHERS WEEKLY or KIRKUS
- REVIEWS.
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- 1991 SHAMUS AWARD NOMINATIONS
-
- The Shamus Awards are given out by the Private Eye Writers of America,
- and will be presented at Bouchercon XXII in Pasadena.
-
- BEST PRIVATE EYE NOVEL:
-
- A Ticket to the Boneyard by Lawrence Block
- "G" is for Gumshoe by Sue Grafton
- Poor Butterfly by Stuart Kaminsky
- Polo's Wild Card by Jerry Kennealy
- Dead Irish by John T. Lescroart
- The Desert Look by Bernard Schopen
-
- BEST FIRST PRIVATE EYE NOVEL:
-
- Kindred Crimes by Janet Dawson
- Body Scissors by Jerome Doolittle
- Devil in a Blue Dress by Walter Mosley
- The Stone Veil by Ronald Tierney
-
- BEST PAPERBACK PRIVATE EYE NOVEL:
-
- Bimbo Heaven by Marvin H. Albert
- The Queen's Mare by John Birkett
- Rafferty: Fatal Sisters by W. Glenn Duncan
- Made in Detroit by Rob Kantner
- The Blue Room by Monroe Thompson
-
- BEST SHORT STORY:
-
- "Naughty, Naughty" by Wayne D. Dundee
- "Cigarette Stop" by Loren D. Estleman
- "A Poison That Leaves No Trace" by Sue Grafton
- "Battered Spouse" by Jeremiah Healy
- "Final Resting Place" by Marcia Muller
- "Bypass for Murder" by Dick Stodghill
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- AMERICAN MYSTERY AWARDS
-
- The American Mystery Awards are voted on by the readers of MYSTERY
- SCENE magazine.
-
- Traditional Mystery: THE GLADSTONE BAG by Charlotte MacLeod
- Romantic Suspense: GOODNIGHT, MR. HOLMES by Carole Nelson Douglas
- Police Procedural: VESPERS by Ed McBain
- Crime Novel: WHISKEY RIVER by Loren D. Estleman
- Private Eye Novel: JACKPOT by Bill Pronzini
- Paperback Original: THE MAN WHO WOULD BE F. SCOTT FITZGERALD by David
- Handler
- Espionage: COUNTDOWN by David Hagberg
- Short Story: "A Poison That Leaves No Trace" by Sue Grafton
- Fan Publication: The Armchair Detective
- Television Series: L.A. LAW
- Movie: PRESUMED INNOCENT
- Scholarly Work: JOHN DICKSON CARR by S.T. Joshi
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- 1991 EDGAR AWARDS
-
- Edgar Awards are given out by the Mystery Writers of America.
-
- Best Mystery Novel: NEW ORLEANS MOURNING by Julie Smith (St.
- Martin's)
- Best First Novel by an American Author: POST MORTEM by Patricia
- Daniels Cornwell (Scribner's)
- Best Original Paperback: THE MAN WHO WOULD BE F. SCOTT FITZGERALD by
- David Handler (Bantam)
- Best Fact Crime: IN A CHILD'S NAME by Peter Maas (Simon & Schuster)
- Best Critical/Biographical: TROUBLE IS THEIR BUSINESS: PRIVATE EYES
- IN FICTION, FILM, AND TELEVISION, 1927-1988 by John Conquest
- (Garland)
- Best Short Story: "Elvis Lives" by Lynne Barrett (EQMM, September)
- Best Juvenile: STONEWORDS by Pam Conrad (Harper & Row)
- Grandmaster Award: Tony Hillerman
- Robert L. Fish Award: "Willie's Story" by Jerry F. Skarky (AHMM)
- Special Edgar: THE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF CRIME by Jay Robert Nash
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- WHO KILLED PRECIOUS?
- by H. Paul Jeffers
- (Pharos Books, June 1991, $17.95, ISBN 0-88687-538-2)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- Do you remember, early in the movie (or Thomas Harris' novel) SILENCE
- OF THE LAMBS, when Officer Starling (Jodie Foster) takes a
- questionnaire to Dr. Hannibal Lecter (Anthony Hopkins)? She puts it in
- a tray that passes through into Lecter's cell. That questionnaire was
- one of the research tools developed in the FBI's Behavioral Science
- Unit that operates out of the FBI training facility in Quantico,
- Virginia. The BSU is part of a more comprehensive entity called the
- National Center for the Analysis of Violent Crime (NCAVC). SILENCE OF
- THE LAMBS is, of course, fiction, but the questionnaire, the BSU, and
- the NCAVC are all very real. WHO KILLED PRECIOUS? is a fascinating
- look behind the scenes at the people who have created some of the most
- modern law enforcement techniques available to the police.
-
- The BSU has done research into a variety of criminal types, starting
- with serial killers and working through mass murderers, rapists, child
- molesters, arsonists, and terrorists. They use carefully constructed
- questionnaires to acquire psychological information from known
- criminals. This information can be added to the general knowledge of
- criminal psychology and used to create "personality profiles" of
- criminals based on their crimes. When local police need help, they
- send the case file to the BSU, who view the crime as a "symptom" of
- the criminal's personality. With the array of psychological knowledge
- available to them, they can give the police an idea of what kind of
- person they should be looking for, how the criminal could best be
- caught, and sometimes they even help with the prosecution of the
- suspect (as they did in the Atlanta Child Murders case). They're not
- infallible, but in the nation that contains three-fourths of the
- world's serial killers, most of which are never caught, they provide
- some of the best hope we have for the future of law enforcement.
-
- Author Jeffers examines the work of these extraordinary and
- controversial agents by following some of the actual investigations,
- including Ted Bundy, Wayne Williams, the Green River Killer in
- Washington State, the mysterious explosion aboard the U.S.S. Iowa, and
- many others. You'll find out why questionnaires are no longer given
- one lone agent, and you'll hear about the Son of Sam slayings in David
- Berkowitz's own words. WHO KILLED PRECIOUS? is an engrossing look at
- the way law enforcement professionals attempt to deal with the
- criminal mind, and makes a very interesting companion volume to Thomas
- Harris' SILENCE OF THE LAMBS.
-
- NOTE: There was a short-lived television show a couple of years ago
- called UNSUB (Unknown Subject), which was about people who do exactly
- what the BSU does, only the television characters seemed to visit the
- scene of the crime more often. The show was very intense, and more
- intellectually oriented than an action or exploitation drama. Which is
- probably why it failed to catch on. But it occurs to me now that UNSUB
- was simply a TV show ahead of its time--pre-SILENCE OF THE LAMBS.
- Right now I would think you could sell such a show rather easily. It's
- too bad--I really liked that show.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- THE NEW MURDERERS' WHO'S WHO
- by J.H.H. Gaute & Robin Odell
- (International Polygonics, March 1991, $14.95, ISBN 1-55882-093-0)
- review by Howard Frye
-
- THE NEW MURDERERS' WHO'S WHO is a magnificent one-volume reference
- book for anyone interested in real-life murders. Each case is covered
- with a succinct entry, alphabetized by the murderer's name (when
- known), that covers all the pertinent facts clearly and briefly. Along
- with the entries come many, many illustrations--very few pages are
- devoted solely to prose. There are pictures of murderers as well as
- victims. There are contemporary drawings, wanted posters, and
- newspaper clippings. There are photocopies of letters, envelopes, and
- incriminating prescriptions. You'll see Dr. Cream's medicine case as
- well as Dr. Crippen's dug-up cellar. Most of the classic photographs
- are here as well: the pictures of Mr. and Mrs. Borden's bodies, the
- famous shot of Ruth Snyder in the electric chair, and the particularly
- gruesome photo of Marie Kelly, a Ripper victim. One picture I hadn't
- seen before was of Sir Harry Oakes' burned body.
-
- In the back of THE NEW MURDERERS' WHO'S WHO there is a fabulous
- bibliography of true crime books, 1,032 in all, made more incredible
- by the knowledge that it represents the actual library of author
- J.H.H. Gaute. And that's just the beginning. Each entry is linked to
- this bibliography with a list of numbers of each true crime book that
- contains material about that case. This is an enormous boon to anyone
- who needs or wants to research a particular case. Want to become an
- expert on H.H. Holmes? Just follow the numbers to the bibliography and
- make yourself a reading list. You say your library doesn't have all
- the books? No problem--just head to the next section, "Specialist
- Booksellers" to find a whole list of people who can help you track
- down the books you need. And, as a final aid to the serious true crime
- buff, there's a Classified Index, in which you'll find the crimes
- listed by method (Axe, Asphyxiation, Axe, Blunt Instrument, etc.). In
- addition to the murderer or case name, the nationality is listed,
- which might lead you to a study of national trends.
-
- Readable, fascinating, horrifying, informative--THE NEW MURDERERS'
- WHO'S WHO is a must-have for every true crime buff.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- * FALSE COLORS by Miriam Borgenicht (St. Martin's), about two
- stepsisters enmeshed in a coverup of their mother's murder, is being
- made into a movie. Anjelica Huston reportedly will play one of the
- stepsisters.
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- PRESUMPTION OF GUILT
- by Herb Brown
- (Donald I. Fine, May 1991, $19.95, ISBN 1-55611-259-9)
- review by Carol Bream
-
- Strange, eerie, weird, frightening!
- Could it happen? Has it happened? Will it happen again?
-
- In the news over the last decade we have been made aware of the
- problem of child abuse. Frequently the witnesses in these horrifying
- reports are the children themselves. And just as frequently the
- question comes up as to whether or not the impressionable child has
- been coached by some adult just looking for a "cause".
-
- PRESUMPTION OF GUILT takes this theme and, telling it in the child's
- voice, produces the ultimate horror. Who is guilty and of what becomes
- the overwhelming question, and then how this guilty knowledge affects
- the various characters becomes the sad conclusion.
-
- Although the purpose of the book is to entertain, one cannot help
- thinking of the social ramifications of cases which have come to our
- courts with the same or even less justification. Because child abuse
- is perhaps the most heinous of crimes, we hate to see a perpetrator go
- free, but can we justify the ruination of an innocent person's life
- because of this hatred?
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- INSPECTOR CROSS: Crossword Capers & Mystery Word Teasers
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- I can already hear your question: Is this a mystery or a puzzle book?
- Actually, it's both. INSPECTOR CROSS is a new line of mystery puzzle
- books from Lombard Marketing, Inc. (45 Wintonbury Avenue, Bloomfield,
- CT 06002) that you should find in your local bookstore or gift shop.
- Each book is available as a wire-bound high-quality puzzle collection,
- or packaged with a pencil, eraser, sharpener, and clue pad in a gift
- box. Each book contains twenty original mysteries and twenty matching
- puzzles--solving the crossword puzzle will help you solve Inspector
- Cross's mystery (and occasionally vice versa). The mysteries are
- short, turn on a significant detail, and the word puzzles are a good
- selection of medium-to-difficult challenges. This is absolutely the
- perfect gift for a sick friend. (Hint: Give the Gift Edition and
- everything they need is right in the box.) The mysteries capture the
- imagination and provide a framework for the word puzzles, which give
- your brain a workout. Wonderfully diverting. As I type this there are
- two volumes of Inspector Cross Mysteries:
-
- Volume 1 contains five mysteries in each of four themes: Murder on the
- Menu, Occupational Hazards, Medical Mayhem, and Final Sales. Ages:
- 12-Adult. Difficulty Level: Easy-Difficult
- Gift Edition: ISBN 0922242267 Book Only: ISBN 0922242240
-
- Volume 2 contains five mysteries in each of four themes: Melodious
- Murders, Looks Can Kill, Catastrophes, and Transparent Thrillers.
- Ages: 12-Adult Difficulty Level: Easy-Difficult
- Gift Edition: ISBN 0922242275 Book Only : ISBN 0922242259
-
- Inspector Cross Mysteries are created by award-winning writers Henry
- Slesar and Alan Robbins and famed puzzle designer Stanley Newman.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- TRUE CRIME
- by Michael Mewshaw
- (Poseidon, 1991, $19.95, ISBN 0-671-73204-8)
- review by Carol Sheffert
-
- "For what is crime after all but a form of betrayal? Whether he kills
- or robs, cheats or embezzles, a criminal is somebody who violates the
- trust of others. And what is a true-crime writer if not somebody who
- makes a career out of betraying betrayers?"
-
- Tom Heller is a true-crime writer who specializes in family murders.
- He's been living in Italy with his Italian wife of 15 years and his
- two sons, but his brother and father are still in Maryland. When his
- brother calls to tell him that their father has been shot and is in
- critical condition, Tom flies home to confront ghosts and old guilts.
- Within days his father dies and there are two more local shooting
- fatalities: the father and son of his college girlfriend. Immediately
- Tom suspects what the police can't possibly know--that there is a
- connection between the three murders, and that that connection is Tom
- himself.
-
- This is an odd book. On the one hand, Mewshaw writes an involving
- story of past mistakes that come back to haunt current lives. The
- clues are strung out enticingly to keep the reader turning the pages.
- On the other hand, the main character, our "hero" Tom, is treated
- abysmally. He is portrayed as pretentious, stupid, and as having a
- huge appetite for humiliation. He solves nothing, and only proceeds
- from one embarrassing mistake to another, degrading himself and
- proving that he is the same immature idiot he was back in college.
- This is particularly strange since author Mewshaw is also a true-crime
- writer, making it tempting to draw parallels between author and
- fictional character. Possibly Tom Heller was meant to be seen as comic
- relief, but I found it distressing to have so little respect for the
- point of view character, particularly in what was otherwise such an
- intriguing murder mystery.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- SCALPEL'S EDGE
- by Margot J. Fromer
- (Berkley/Diamond, September 1991, $4.50, ISBN 1-55773-580-8)
- commentary from the publisher
-
- Amanda Knight is director of nursing at JFK Memorial Hospital in
- Washington, DC. When the chief physician is found with a scalpel
- imbedded in his throat, Amanda begins asking questions--too many
- questions.
-
- A novel that reveals the hidden dangers of hospitals, SCALPEL'S EDGE
- will make you think twice about checking into a place where danger
- seems to lurk in every corner.
-
- Author Margot Fromer is a nurse and knows how murderous things can get
- at JFK Memorial.
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- A CLASSIC ENGLISH CRIME: 13 Stories for the
- Christie Centenary from the Crime Writers' Association
- edited by Tim Heald
- (Mysterious Press, June 1991, $16.95, ISBN 0-89296-456-1)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- In his Introduction, editor Heald says that the guidelines he set down
- for this volume were that the stories be set between the two world
- wars (what is known as the Golden Age of detective fiction), contain
- whatever the author perceives as being the essence of the "classic
- English murder", and each story must have a corpse. Not all of the
- stories kept to the guidelines, but most did, and most are delightful.
-
- Each author interpreted their chore differently. Margaret Yorke chose
- simply to write a mysterious story in the tone of the 1920s or 1930s
- in her entry, "Means to Murder", which relates the murder of a woman
- from the perspective of her small son. Some others decided more
- specifically to recreate the popular "puzzle" nature of Golden Age
- mysteries, with an emphasis on noticing small details. Examples of
- these stories include: Peter Lovesey's "The Lady in the Trunk", which
- used the classic clues of train times to help solve the crime; and "A
- Fete Worse Then Death" by Paula Gosling, in which a murder at a small
- town church fete occasions the airing of some rather dirty linen, and
- the placement of a deadly candied cherry. Another small town is the
- setting for Catherine Aird's "Cause and Effects", wherein a man
- murders his wife in front of a dinner table full of guests. And in a
- further Golden Age touch, the solution has its origins in a classical
- education.
-
- "Wednesday Matinee" by Celia Dale is set in the show business of the
- period, with many of the standard character "types" present. I just
- wish the solution was arrived at by logic instead of confession. Liza
- Cody chose to emphasize an aspect of Golden Age mysteries that most
- fans would rather ignore--the rather intense national chauvinism and
- religious intolerance of the period. Her story "Spasmo" makes good use
- of perspective to tell the story of an appalling little boy. It's the
- most serious of the selections.
-
- All the rest of the selections make direct use of Agatha Christie's
- style and characters, either explicitly or implicitly. The amateur
- crime solvers of David Williams' "Smoke Gets In...", Diana and Berty,
- are dead ringers for AC's Tuppence and Tommy. And my favorite entry,
- HRF Keating's "Jack Fell Down", not only gives us an obvious
- Poirot-substitute for a detective and a nursery-rhyme based mystery
- (as AC did so often), but we get all of AC's band of merry suspects:
- The obnoxious busybody, the dimwitted ingenue, the horsey matron, the
- stiff peer, and the pudgy and pretentious almost-peer with
- expectations. Delightful story.
-
- The funniest selection, hands down, is "Holocaust at Mayhem Parva" by
- Julian Symons, with characters drawn from a mystery boardgame, classic
- AC poisons, and a sleuth named Miss Harple, the Wise Woman of the
- village. Symons even puts himself in the story, as The Author, to
- match wits with the great Miss Harple. I won't tell you who wins.
- Other lighthearted selections are: "All's Fair in Love" by Susan
- Moody, which lacks a real murder, but keeps to the tone of the period
- beautifully. Editor Tim Heald also has a story here, "Experts For the
- Prosecution", which is a literary toast to AC, and reminds us how
- curious it was in that era when amateur crime solvers were accorded so
- much more respect than the professional variety. Simon Brett's "A
- Little Learning" is the most unusual entry of all--it's a purported
- doctoral thesis on "The Literary Antecedents of Agatha Christie's
- Hercule Poirot", complete with loads of pseudo-research and other
- academic silliness. And then there's "Good Time Had By All" by Robert
- Barnard, in which we learn that there was as much ratiocination going
- on behind the scenes of a Poirot mystery as there was in his little
- grey cells.
-
- A CLASSIC ENGLISH CRIME is a delightful collection for all Golden Age
- fans. Some of the stories will appeal more than others, but there
- isn't a clunker in the bunch. Recommended.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- 'GROUP PORTRAIT' OF WOMEN WRITERS TO GO INTO ARCHIVE
-
- The emergence of a new breed of female heroes in popular
- fiction--specifically, the strong-minded women who now appear in many
- contemporary mysteries--is being documented for posterity.
-
- In a joint endeavor of Sisters in Crime and the National Women's
- History Project, women mystery authors have been asked to respond to a
- questionnaire about their protagonists and provide information about
- themselves for the NWHP archives. These materials will be turned over
- to NWHP in a ceremony on the campus of Mills College in Oakland, CA.
-
- The event is scheduled for 2:30 PM on Sunday, August 25, and will be
- co-sponsored by Mills College's Women's Study Group. Speakers will
- include representatives of both Sisters in Crime and NWHP, as well as
- award-winning mystery author Nancy Pickard.
-
- A summary of information from the survey will be made available at the
- Mills College event, according to project co-chairs Mary Bowen Hall
- and Sarah Andrews. All Sisters in Crime members writing stories with
- female protagonists were asked to respond to the questionnaire. More
- than a hundred authors returned information about themselves and their
- protagonists, and a small comparison group of male authors was also
- studied.
-
- "We've created a group portrait, a word snapshot of women protagonists
- at this moment in time," Hall said. The report summary will be
- available after August 25. Anyone wishing a copy should send a
- stamped, self-addressed envelope to Sisters in Crime, 16 Woodgreen
- Street, Santa Rosa, CA 95409.
-
- Sisters in Crime was founded in 1986 to further the careers of women
- in the mystery field, and to promote recognition of their contribution
- to the field. Membership is open to anyone interested in furthering
- these purposes; requests for membership applications should be sent to
- the organization at 6040-A Six Forks Road, Suite 163, Raleigh, NC
- 27609.
-
- The National Women's History Project, which just celebrated its tenth
- anniversary, promotes increased awareness of multicultural women's
- history and has become a major resource for educators, librarians and
- journalists. Copies of their Women's History Resources catalog may be
- requested by sending a postcard to NWHP, 7738 Bell Road, Windsor, CA
- 95492, or by phoning 707-838-6000.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- BLUE TRUTH
- Walking the Thin Blue Line--One Cop's Story of Life in the Streets
- by Cherokee Paul McDonald
- (Donald I. Fine, May 1991, $18.95, ISBN 1-55611-246-7)
- commentary from the publisher
-
- After surviving a harrowing tour of duty in Vietnam, Cherokee Paul
- McDonald returned home with the knowledge that he derived satisfaction
- from combat with an enemy who did bad things to good people. So he
- became a cop. Serving as a Florida policeman, he watched Fort
- Lauderdale change from a laid-back tourist town and Spring Break teen
- heaven, to a drug and criminal-infested urban nightmare. His
- experiences on the street changed him forever.
-
- BLUE TRUTH is McDonald's story of the day-to-day pressures that make
- or break a cop on the street. He explores the motivations that drive
- men and women to enlist in the ongoing, uphill battle to make society
- safe through a series of emotionally charged vignettes, all told with
- gritty realism, as in his description of a struggle with an armed
- suspect:
-
- "...there we are, on our knees, face to face, chest to chest, with the
- gun in between, covered with our hands...With all the twisting and
- turning I know that barrel is pointed up...up into our faces or
- chests, and I know when I pull the trigger the slug is gonna either
- rip up through one of our skulls, or punch its way through one of our
- chests...He's grinning and pulling and I can feel my hands
- slipping..."
-
- McDonald discusses one of the most unexpected dangers of his career:
- its impact on his personal life. Unable to separate his emotional self
- from his facade as a policeman, McDonald's marriage failed, and he
- cracked. After ten years on the force, and despite a psychological
- evaluation telling him he could still be a cop, McDonald resigned.
-
- Of McDonald's searching self-portrait, author Lawrence Block writes,
- "Several former police officers have turned to writing and their job
- experience has served as the stuff of strong fiction. In BLUE TRUTH,
- C.P. McDonald has done something far more daring...the result is a
- scorching, devastating book. McDonald as a cop was tough and tender,
- caring and vicious. McDonald as a writer is unsparing, unapologetic,
- and dead honest. BLUE TRUTH is not a pretty story...but by God, you
- won't stop reading it."
-
- [Cherokee Paul McDonald is also the bestselling author of two police
- novels, THE PATCH and GULF STREAM.]
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- OTHER PEOPLE'S HOUSES
- by Susan Rogers Cooper
- (St. Martin's Press, 1990)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- Chief Deputy Milton Kovak of Prophesy County, Oklahoma, gets a call to
- come to Lois Bell's house, a small two-bedroom place in a middle-class
- neighborhood. Inside he finds unbelievable squalor and filth (piles of
- used diapers, backed-up sink, bathroom floor covered with excrement),
- along with 5 dead bodies: Lois, her husband, and their three children.
- All appear to have died from carbon monoxide poisoning. The car in the
- garage has the ignition switch turned on, the tank is empty, and the
- door from the garage into the house is ajar. No one has a mark on them
- except for Lois, who has suffered a blow to the head.
-
- Milton Kovak knew Lois as the perfectly ordinary bank teller he
- enjoyed an occasional banter with. Now, because of his job, he has
- been thrust into Lois' life without her permission, and must try to
- make some sense of where her life had taken her. He soon finds that no
- one knew any more about Lois, her husband, or her children, than he
- did. Ordinary middle-class people living ordinary lives. But why did
- they live like that? And why did they die like that? And why do they
- have nothing in the house that refers to a life before they moved to
- Prophesy County?
-
- The puzzle in this mystery is among the most captivating I've come
- across in a long time. And while the solution is not quite as nifty as
- the mystery, it was pure delight to spend time in Prophesy County with
- Chief Deputy Milt Kovak. And I was happy to discover that there are
- two previous Milton Kovak mysteries: HOUSTON IN THE REARVIEW MIRROR
- and THE MAN IN THE GREEN CHEVY.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- BEYOND THE GRAVE
- by Marcia Muller & Bill Pronzini
- (Carroll & Graf, 1986/1991, $3.95, ISBN 0-88184-731-3)
- review by Carol Bream
-
- Pronzini is always readable, enjoyable, and frequently unique in his
- plots. BEYOND THE GRAVE is no exception. This paperback edition can be
- completed in one sitting and is a delight. The plot, which involves
- the search for a number of art objects hidden in the 1840s and looked
- for first in 1886 and again in the present, is revealed through
- flashbacks from the present to those earlier times. In the first
- search a detective is the searcher, and in the present time it is a
- museum curator. One male and one female. Although the search for
- hidden antiquities is not a new plot in mystery fiction, the setting
- of California and the double time frame is new in my experience. I
- highly recommend this as a good mystery to while away an evening.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- GOOD NIGHT, SWEET PRINCE
- by Carole Berry
- (St. Martin's, 1990)
- review by Janet Peters
-
- Bonnie Indermill, working as an office temp, is assigned to help out
- briefly at the Gotham Ballet Company. The Russian Bolshoi Ballet
- happens to be on tour and appearing nearby, along with ballet
- superstar Nikolai Koslov, the "Reigning Prince of Ballet". Do you
- already have a hint of who gets bumped off?
-
- Bonnie's temporary job becomes permanent when Niki (as his friends
- call him) comes to her to defect and winds up joining the Gotham
- Ballet, apparently at her urging. Niki enters the story amid much
- drama and fanfare, sticks around long enough to make everyone either
- love him or hate him, then, on cue, gets himself killed. The story
- then becomes a circus of artistic temperaments, youthful passions,
- pushy parents, KGB, drugs, and wounded pride.
-
- GOOD NIGHT, SWEET PRINCE is a light, enjoyable slice of the ballet
- world.
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- ONCE AND ALWAYS MURDER
- by Orania Papazoglou
- (Doubleday, 1990)
- review by Carol Sheffert
-
- "The rich have their own schools, their own stores, their own parties,
- their own clubs. They talk to each other, and no one else. Born rich
- in Greenwich, you could reach adulthood without ever having come in
- contact with anyone who made less than a quarter-million a year, and
- with all your illusions intact."
-
- This is the fifth mystery to feature crime novelist Patience (Pay)
- McKenna, and is my favorite of the lot. I thought the whodunit element
- of the story was the strongest in this novel. The suspect list was
- large enough that the clues could be clearly presented, and small
- enough that an attempt to figure it out yourself is worthwhile. I
- actually sat down and tried to reason through the plot twists to
- discover the identity of the killer--I didn't succeed, but I did have
- fun trying (do I get any credit for coming close?).
-
- Pay McKenna is going home to Waverly, Connecticut, with romance
- novelist best-friend Phoebe. McKenna is going to marry Nick Carras
- (see the previous novels) in her home town, where there is a load of
- family to come to terms with, and Phoebe is seven months into a
- difficult pregnancy. Pay's family consists of the usual assortment of
- crazies, coots and crabs, the worst being Great-Aunt Felicia, who,
- SURPRISE!, doesn't live too long. It was enjoyable to spend more time
- with McKenna and Phoebe, even if it was only 179 pages. I missed the
- usual emphasis on the book world, but the mystery was so intriguing
- I'm not going to pick nits.
-
- It was an old tradition in the theater that tragedies end with a death
- and comedies end with a marriage, which makes ONCE AND ALWAYS MURDER a
- comedy. But then, comedy didn't mean the same thing back then that it
- means today. Today comedies are side-splitting farces; originally
- comedies were simply happy, upbeat stories--which fits ONCE AND ALWAYS
- MURDER precisely, and is why I will continue to look forward to the
- next Orania Papazoglou mystery.
-
- "Every murderer I ever knew was stupid. Not just stupid about one
- thing, the thing they got caught on, but about lots of things. As far
- as I can figure out, you have to be stupid to commit murder to begin
- with."
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- DEAD MEN DON'T GIVE SEMINARS
- by Dorothy Sucher
- (1988, St. Martin's Press)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- I had serious reservations about Sucher's DEAD MEN DON'T MARRY (review
- in RFP #13), but there were enough enjoyable elements that I picked up
- this earlier mystery, apparently the first. I'm very glad I did,
- because this story is much more satisfying than the followup--maybe
- this is another example of the Sophomore Jinx (great first tries are
- so often followed by disappointments).
-
- Vic Newman and his boss Sabina Swift are at a summer gathering of
- physicists in Vermont. Sabina's husband is a physicist, you see, and
- they are taking advantage of the symposium to get in a small free
- vacation in beautiful surroundings. That's what THEY think, but we're
- not surprised when tensions among the group seem unusually high, nor
- when one of the star attendees drops dead. Sabina and Vic get a case
- to solve just in time to prevent their return to Washington, D.C.
-
- The big names at this gathering are Herv Moore-Gann and Saul Sachs,
- who won a Nobel Prize together and for some unknown reason haven't
- spoken in years. Unexpectedly they both show up, possibly because Saul
- is terminally ill. Moore-Gann makes a big show of publicly reuniting
- with Saul, and within minutes Moore-Gann drops to the floor, having
- been fatally poisoned with digitalis (a medication that Saul takes).
- Did Saul kill him? Why was the poison put in an alcoholic beverage,
- when everyone knows Moore-Gann didn't drink? And why *was* he drinking
- an alcoholic beverage, anyway? Was it true that Moore-Gann had stolen
- the ideas of fellow-physicist Leo Pesnik? Why is Judith Wiley so
- nasty, and why does everyone tolerate her? One of the first things we
- find out, on digging into Moore-Gann's past, is that his name was
- originally Harvey Morgan. That he changed his name from Harvey Morgan
- to Herv Moore-Gann tells us a great deal about the murdered man, and
- will ultimately help Sabina sort out the tangled lives that led to
- violence in Vermont. A very enjoyable mystery.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- COPP ON ICE: A Joe Copp Thriller
- by Don Pendleton
- (Donald I. Fine, May 1991, $18.95, ISBN 1-55611-235-1)
- review by Drew Bartorillo
-
- The city of Brighton, CA, a sprawling coastal community on the eastern
- edge of the Los Angeles Basin, is in deep trouble. The Mayor has been
- murdered, the Police Commissioner has just resigned and the Police
- department is full of corruption. Enter our hero, Joe Copp, who is
- just the man to clean things up over the weekend. One of the City
- Councilmen, an old friend of Joe Copp's, asks him to "temporarily"
- take over the job of Police Commissioner and try to straighten things
- up. Of course, he probably only has the weekend to do it so he better
- get hot! Copp finds that there is corruption at all levels of the
- Police department and eventually finds ties between this corruption
- and an international "money laundering" ring. As soon as Copp takes
- over, the ex-Police Commissioner is murdered and a string of other
- cop-murders begins. But our hero proceeds to kick more than his share
- of butt and, oh yes, gets the girl along the way.
-
- COPP ON ICE is your typical hard-boiled police procedural, written by
- the author of the popular Executioner series. It so happens that I am
- an old Mickey Spillane/Mike Hammer fan and really enjoy this type of
- book. I found COPP ON ICE to be very enjoyable and easy to read. I
- look forward to reading other Don Pendleton books. (Other Joe Copp
- novels are: COPP FOR HIRE, COPP ON FIRE, COPP IN DEEP, and COPP IN THE
- DARK.)
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- NOTHING HUMAN
- by Ronald Munson
- (Pocket Books, July 1991, $19.95, ISBN 0-671-73024-X)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- 1. Locate prey
- 2. Study behavior
- 3. Flush
- 4. Chase
- 5. Kill
- ---Jaguar's list
-
- I think it's safe to say that you won't find a more exciting or
- compellingly believable thriller than Ronald Munson's NOTHING HUMAN.
- With a seamless background of realistic detail, the author weaves a
- captivating narrative about three strangers drawn together: the
- Jaguar, a serial killer; Eric Firecaster, the cop out to get him; and
- Jill Brenner, next on the Jaguar's list of women to kill. Distinctive
- as their roles are, Ronald Munson forces the reader to confront their
- similarities by emphasizing each of the three in their role as Hunter.
- Even Jill, who must use her father's lessons to track the Jaguar if
- she is ever to be free of fear.
-
- The story begins as the second mutilated body is found. Both bodies
- are female, both are headless and have been horribly slashed, and
- neither murder scene offers any real clues. The only hint the cops
- have is a mysterious telephone call one of the women received shortly
- before her death--the caller said, "Beware, the jaguar is on the
- prowl" and hung up. The police decide to be on the lookout for women
- reporting odd harassments, which brings their attention to Jill when
- she reports receiving a box of lilies tied with a black ribbon in a
- hangman's noose. Jill and Firecaster barely have time to acknowledge
- their mutual attraction before the Jaguar makes his next move and all
- three are locked in a life-and-death struggle.
-
- The character of the Jaguar is fascinating. His childhood was
- agonizing, but now he's good-looking, bright, well-dressed, and
- charming. He's exactly the kind of person you would be most likely to
- talk to at a party. Which is exactly what makes him so dangerous. (In
- my mental movie, I cast Rutger Hauer as the Jaguar.)
-
- Ronald Munson teaches at the University of Missouri-St. Louis, and has
- been a visiting professor at Harvard Medical School. He is the author
- of books on logic, philosophy of science, and medical ethics, but
- NOTHING HUMAN is his first work of fiction.
-
- [I loved this comment about writing for a living made by Jill Brenner
- in NOTHING HUMAN: "It pays about the same as panhandling, but you
- don't have to spend as much time being nice to people."]
-
- **************************
-
- <-*->:<-*->:<-*->:<-*->:<-*->:<-*->
- < >
- < LOOSEN YOUR GRIP ON REALITY >
- < >
- <-*->:<-*->:<-*->:<-*->:<-*->:<-*->
-
- << Editor: Darryl Kenning >>
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
- Loosen Your Grip On Reality is a division of Reading For Pleasure,
- published bimonthly. This material is NOT COPYRIGHTED and may be used
- freely by all. Contributions of information, reviews, etc. should be
- sent to:
-
- Darryl Kenning CompuServe: 76337,740
- 6331 Marshall Rd. or GEnie: D.Kenning
- Centerville, Ohio 45459 HeavenSoft BBS 513-836-4288
- The Annex BBS 513-274-0821
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- RANDOM ACCESS
-
- "MAY YOU LIVE IN INTERESTING TIMES" is, as I remember, an ancient
- Chinese curse. I think we live in one of the most fascinating times in
- history. Think about it. If you could go back in time to live in any
- other era, which one would be better/more interesting than this one?
-
- Remember it was only a few short years ago that almost everyone who
- was wounded in war died! Until this century, most people never
- traveled more than a few miles from home. Worse yet, before the
- printing press there was nothing available for most people to read.
-
- All that is well and good I hear you say, but our weapons can easily
- destroy the earth, we might be well on our way to doing irreversible
- harm to our planet, and our world is been turned upside down - values
- mean nothing anymore, the family is disintegrating, and everything is
- generally going to the devil! Well true say I, and all that is part of
- the larger picture of what's going on in our society and our world
- that makes it so interesting.
-
- I believe that we are, as Alvin Toffler has been preaching for several
- decades now, in the midst of a societal change that is so vast and
- sweeping, that is so all-encompassing and pervasive, and generally so
- incomprehensible to us in our daily lives, that I am amazed that
- anyone has been able to figure it out at all. There are of course a
- lot of similarities to the industrial revolution in England. The
- wholesale rearranging of the economic system and the vast shift of
- both populations and employment to mention just a few items. But one
- thing that sets this apart from that era is our communications and the
- glut of information, and even more importantly the speed of events.
-
- I suspect that in 25 or 30 years students will read about these times
- and say things like "That would have been an exciting time to be
- alive!" Again, well yes, but..... It sure is hard to see what's going
- on in our day-to-day lives as they are wrenched and twisted beyond any
- usual shape; it's even harder to maintain a personal equilibrium in
- these times. There are days when I don't think I can can bear to hear
- (and see the graphic pictures) about another famine in some place I
- can barely find on the map. And that tells me that I need to learn to
- filter the information more (or find a program to do it for me). But
- interesting, Ah yes!
-
- If you are suffering from a sense of dislocation and bewilderment, it
- would be worth your while to pick up a copy of Alvin Toffler's latest
- book, POWER SHIFT. It will provide some fascinating insights into the
- basic restructuring that is occurring in our world today and will
- continue for at least another decade or two. I doubt the effects will
- be fully understood or appreciated for another century.
-
- We DO live in interesting times indeed and in spite of the daily
- problems it causes me, I can't think of another time I'd rather live
- in...Now if we were talking about visiting, but that's another RANDOM
- ACCESS.
-
- By the way....
-
- HAPPY BIRTHDAY N3F!
-
- 1991 is the 50th anniversary of THE NATIONAL FANTASY FAN FEDERATION
- (now generally know as N3F). That's pretty remarkable - a fan
- organization that relies on volunteers to staff and run a pretty
- complex and sophisticated organization. It is interesting to note that
- among the founding members in 1941 were: Ray Bradbury, Damon Knight,
- Cyril Kornbluth, Bob Tucker, and Donald Wollheim. If you are
- interested in more information about N3F (and don't be thrown by the
- word FANTASY in the name - it has interest group areas from computers
- to time travel), write : William Center, 1920 Division Street,
- Murphysboro, Ill, 62966-2320, and be sure to mention RFP and LYGOR.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- 1991 LOCUS AWARDS
-
- Awards are voted on by the readers of Locus magazine. Subscriptions
- are $35/$48 for 12 montly issues (1st class/2nd class) delivered to a
- US address. Send to: Locus Publications, PO Box 13305, Oakland, CA
- 94661.
-
- Best Science Fiction Novel: THE FALL OF HYPERION by Dan Simmons
- Best Fantasy Novel: TEHANU: THE LAST BOOK OF EARTHSEA by Ursula K.
- Le Guin
- Best Horror/Dark Fantasy Novel: THE WITCHING HOUR by Anne Rice
- Best First Novel: IN THE COUNTRY OF THE BLIND by Michael Flynn
- Best Novella: A SHORT, SHARP SHOCK by Kim Stanley Robinson
- Best Novelette: ENTROPY'S BED AT MIDNIGHT by Dan Simmons
- Best Short Story: "Bears Discover Fire" by Terry Bisson
- Best Nonfiction: SFWA HANDBOOK edited by Rusch & Smith
- Best Collection: MAPS IN A MIRROR by Orson Scott Card
- Best Anthology: THE YEAR'S BEST SF: SEVENTH ANNUAL COLLECTION edited
- by Gardner Dozois
- Best Magazine: ISAAC ASIMOV'S
- Best Editor: Gardner Dozois
- Best Artist: Michael Whelan
- Best Publisher: Tor/St. Martin's
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- GHOST FROM THE GRAND BANKS
- by Arthur C. Clarke
- (Bantam Books, December 1990, $19.95, ISBN 0-553-07222-6)
- review by Darryl Kenning
-
- Those of you who follow LYGOR at all will know that I rarely review
- hard bound books, not that I have anything against them you
- understand, but with the amount of reading I do I long ago decided to
- stay with paperback books. This one I found while browsing one of
- those itinerant booksellers that go around the country hawking
- overstocks at a price often less than my usual fare. How could I
- resist an Arthur C. Clarke book?
-
- One of Mr. Clarke's fortes has been to look at the relatively near
- future and to propose a world that is recognizable in some almost
- eerie ways. In this case as the year 2012 approaches, several
- commercial interests decide to raise the TITANIC on the 100th
- anniversary of its sinking (April 16, 1912).
-
- An intricate web is drawn around the people who will be crucial to the
- effort as AC chronicles the events that shaped their lives to produce
- the critical mass that is needed to complete the equation. Along the
- way the reader is treated to a great exposition about the Mandelbrot
- Set (the M-SET from here on in). Not only does he provide some
- interesting comments in the story but also gives us an appendix with a
- nice, clearly written and SIMPLE explanation of the whole thing. I
- agree with his analysis that we have only just begun to see the
- results of the M-set in our daily lives and the implications of this
- reasonably simple bit of mathematics will probably be far reaching.
- But I digress.
-
- I enjoyed the story, the projections into the close future, and the
- way he handles the characters. In short, while not a great book, one
- that fulfils all the expectations I had when I spotted the author's
- name on the book.
- KQ = 4
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- THE DARK BEYOND THE STARS
- by Frank M. Robinson
- (Tor, July 1991, $19.95, ISBN 0-312-85166-9)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- "If you knew that you and your fellow crew members were the only life
- in the entire universe, with what concern and respect would you treat
- each other?"
-
- The spaceship ASTRON has been searching the galaxy for signs of
- extraterrestrial life for 2,000 years, without success. Whenever a
- planet is found that might sustain life, they send an exploration
- party to the surface for an examination. On one such survey,
- 17-year-old crew member Sparrow falls from a cliff and only barely
- survives. He wakes up in the ASTRON's sick bay with total amnesia of
- anything before landing on the planet, and must face many baffling
- perplexities. Why does fellow crew member Thrush hate him? Who tried
- to kill Sparrow in the sick bay? Why does the captain take such an
- interest in him? And why, though it seems very important to certain
- members of the crew that Sparrow regain his memories, will no one help
- him in that task?
-
- In addition to Sparrow's mysteries, we find that the ASTRON has now
- approached the Dark, a wide stretch of nearly empty space that will
- take a hundred generations to cross. Captain Michael Kusaka is
- determined to cross the Dark, convinced that life can be found on the
- other side, despite the facts of the ASTRON's circumstances. After
- 2,000 years, all equipment is threadbare, and the population on board
- is slowing decreasing. Most of the crew is convinced that there is no
- alien life to be found and that crossing the Dark is a suicide
- mission. They want to return to Earth. They want Sparrow to help them
- mutiny. Why is Sparrow so important, and what are the memories hidden
- in the depths of his mind that some people long for him to remember,
- and others fear?
-
- I can't recall another story so rich in surprises. Just when I would
- think I knew where the plot was headed, another astounding revelation
- would send everything off in another direction. Frank Robinson has
- written a story of rich detail, intellectual depth, and emotional
- charm. This is what entertainment should be. Do not miss THE DARK
- BEYOND THE STARS.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- SACRED VISIONS
- edited by Andrew M. Greeley & Michael Cassutt
- (Tor, July 1991, $24.95, ISBN 0-312-85025-5)
- commentary from the publisher
-
- Andrew M. Greeley, author of bestselling fiction and the recent
- critically acclaimed nonfiction book, FAITHFUL ATTRACTION, has
- collaborated with producer/screenwriter Michael Cassutt, whose work
- has been published in major SF magazines, to edit SACRED VISIONS, a
- collection of SF works focused on Catholic backgrounds or themes.
-
- With a goal of creating a book that would be both entertaining and
- also relevant to questions of faith and religious issues, the editors
- selected twelve pieces of short fiction that fit both criteria. Among
- the classics included in SACRED VISIONS are the short novels, "A
- Canticle for Liebowitz" by Walter M. Miller, Jr. and "A Case of
- Conscience" by James Blish. These two classics are reprinted in their
- original form, along with "Trinity" by Nancy Kress.
-
- In addition, there are stories by both Catholic and non-Catholic
- writers that create a sense of wonder important to all science fiction
- writing, while also raising universal questions of Catholic faith or
- ethics. Some of the other stories in SACRED VISIONS include work by
- Anthony Boucher, Jeff Duntemann, James Patrick Kelly, R.A. Lafferty,
- and Robert Silverberg. Four new works, by co-editors Greeley and
- Cassutt, Gene Wolfe, and Jack McDevitt were commissioned especially
- for this anthology.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- ISAAC ASIMOV: HIGHLIGHTS OF A CAREER
-
- (This is from ROC SF ADVANCE, which you can get by sending your name
- and address to: NAL, Science Fiction Department, 375 Hudson Street,
- New York, NY 10014)
-
- 1930 The first issue of SCIENCE WONDER STORIES hits the newstands;
- because of the word "science" in the title, a ten-year-old boy in
- Brooklyn is able to convince his father that it's wholesome reading.
-
- 1934 Asimov's first publication, a humorous essay in the BOYS HIGH
- RECORDER.
-
- 1938 Letter published in ASTOUNDING SCIENCE FICTION; first story
- rejected (sold to AMAZING for $64).
-
- 1940 "Robbie," first robot story, published in AMAZING; Asimov opens
- first savings account.
-
- 1941 First "Foundation" story published.
-
- 1946 Visits South Seas courtesy of US Army.
-
- 1949 Asimov publishes PEBBLE IN THE SKY, his first SF novel;
- appointed Instructor of Biochemistry at Boston University.
-
- 1950 I, ROBOT published. Asimov learns to drive.
-
- 1952 BIOCHEMISTRY AND HUMAN METABOLISM, his first nonfiction book.
- With McCarthyism at a peak, Asimov publishes "The Martian Way," an
- anti-McCarthy story.
-
- 1957 Russians send up Sputnik; Asimov vows to devote more writing to
- science FACT.
-
- 1961 WORDS FROM THE MYTHS, 41st book, published in time for 41st
- birthday. Yuri Gagarin orbits Earth; like Asimov, he's from Smolensk.
-
- 1963 Asimov wins first Hugo, for essays in FANTASY & SCIENCE FICTION.
-
- 1965 Asimov tries to turn down job of novelizing FANTASTIC VOYAGE but
- fails.
-
- 1966 Hugo awarded to Foundation Trilogy as Best All-Time SF Novel
- series.
-
- 1968 30th anniversary of Asimov's first professional sale.
-
- 1970 First Honorary degree, Doctor of Science, Bridgewater (Mass.)
- State College.
-
- 1971 Hugo and Nebula for THE GODS THEMSELVES, after 15 years of
- writing only nonfiction.
-
- 1973 Asimov obtains first passport, at age 57, for trip to Canary
- Islands.
-
- 1976 ISAAC ASIMOV'S SCIENCE FICTION MAGAZINE launched.
-
- 1979 Asimov promoted to full Professor at Boston University.
-
- 1982 FOUNDATION'S EDGE continues series.
-
- 1983 ROBOTS OF DAWN weaves together Foundation and robot themes.
-
- 1985 Grand Master Nebula Award.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- MATCH THE AUTHOR WITH HIS/HER PET
- (Answers at the end of LYGOR)
-
- (This is from ROC SF ADVANCE, which you can get by sending your name
- and address to: NAL, Science Fiction Department, 375 Hudson Street,
- New York, NY 10014)
-
- 1. Michael Bishop (UNICORN MOUNTAIN)
- 2. Eleanor Arnason (A WOMAN OF THE IRON PEOPLE)
- 3. Ellen Datlow (editor of ALIEN SEX)
- 4. Lew Shiner (SLAM)
- 5. James Blaylock (HOMONCULUS)
-
- a. Liz the cat
- b. Leroy the 'gator (deceased)
- c. Pomeroy the carp
- d. Spud the gerbil
- e. Seymour the stuffed sheep
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- THE PAPERBACK BOOKSHELF
-
- FALLEN ANGELS
- by Larry Niven, Jerry Pournelle, and Michael Flynn
- (Baen Books, July 1991, $5.95, ISBN 0-671-72052-X)
- review by Darryl Kenning
-
- Take an Earth that has blamed technology for all its troubles and
- turned its back, with a vengeance, on the only possible hope of
- salvation as the glaciers advance relentlessly, well into the United
- States. Mix in a failing space station, the last bastion of freedom
- and technology. this provides the basic elements of FALLEN ANGELS. A
- better teaming of authors I can't imagine for a rousing Science
- Fiction story cast in an almost classical mold.
-
- As if these ingredients are not enough, leaven with a group of harried
- and almost outlawed SF fans holding one of the rare Cons, then fold in
- the crash landing of a ship from the space station after having been
- shot down almost as an afterthought, and the story takes on a whole
- new dimension. Not surprising given this array of talent, the story
- works well, has enough inside jokes for even the most jaded SF reader,
- and literally drags you along to meet some improbable (but not to
- those of us in Fandom) characters on a trek across the country.
-
- Too often there is a sense of mild disappointment in this kind of
- collaboration as the sum of the whole is somehow less than the sum of
- the parts. In this case, the sum ends up being greater - no mean feat
- when you consider the earned stature of the authors. This is an
- outstanding book to take for that day when you want something special
- to read - if you can wait that long.
-
- KQ = 5
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- WOLF AND IRON
- by Gordon R. Dickson
- (TOR, April 1991, $4.95, ISBN 0-812-50946-3)
- review by Darryl Kenning
-
- After I finished reading WOLF AND IRON I went to my bookshelves and
- looked at the huge number of books I've collected that Gordy Dickson
- has written. As I gazed over the titles, there were almost none that I
- said "Yes, but I really didn't like that one..", in fact most stand
- out in my memory as pretty darned good books - even his early titles.
- WOLF AND IRON may just be one of the best books he's done to date.
-
- It is a story, on a very basic level, of survival, personal growth and
- adaptation. But what makes this story and book unique is the Mr.
- Dickson's long standing habit of good solid research. Even if the
- introduction hadn't been largely about the research into social
- patterns of wolves, the detail that is used to describe the patterns
- of behaviour and interaction would have been the tip-off to even the
- casual reader. The story is the odyssey of a man's journey across the
- continent, his almost accidental "teaming" with a wolf, his growth and
- change from a techno-dependant 20th century academic into a real
- survivor that uses knowledge and available technology to enhance
- survival.
-
- As is common with the best of Science Fiction, while the story happens
- to take place in America after the collapse of civilization, it could
- just as easily have taken place almost anytime, in almost any
- location. And that is a statement about the talent of the author. I
- have read a LOT of novels with the "Trek across ruined...(fill in your
- own)". In spite of my high regard for Dickson's writing abilities I
- didn't expect to be swept along so strongly in the story, or to be so
- empathetic to the main characters. This is a Master Storyteller at
- work using an incredible array of talent and research, all of which
- blend together in what will probably be one of the best stories of the
- year (it was originally published in May of 1990).
-
- Find it and start reading at once, but a word of caution; don't start
- unless you are able to devote quite some time to it because you won't
- want to put it down!
- KQ = 5
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- GO TELL THE SPARTANS
- by Jerry Pournelle and S.M. Stirling
- (Baen Books, June 1991, $4.95, ISBN 0-671-72061-9)
- review by Darryl Kenning
-
- Most readers will recognize the partial quote that makes up the title
- of this book. It is another in the loose series of novels about
- Pournelle's "Falkenberg's Legion". This novel ties back to another
- recent one (PRINCE OF MERCENARIES) and fills in the details in the
- universe and time so carefully built up in JP's Mercenary series.
-
- As I've come to expect, the mix of expository writing and a tightly
- woven military action adventure works very well. The collaboration is
- seamless, and the details that make the military novel work so well
- that you can taste the power gun discharges have remained intact.
-
- JP has an uncanny knack of using the Vietnam experience to its
- fullest, and pounds the lessons learned so painfully home again and
- again - almost slipping them in unnoticed. Yet he produces a rousing
- story filled with the lessons of war, and the stories of individuals
- and how they react to the mind-numbing effects of real combat. Not the
- least of the story has to do with the difference between the
- professional soldiers and the society that spawned them and the
- societies that use them - and the effect they have on both.
-
- This one is worth your while even if you don't usually read Military
- SF. It's sure to entertain, but will also start you thinking in some
- unexpected directions. And I'll bet you pick the book back up in a
- year or two to reread it again. Need I say more?
-
- KQ = 5
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- THE SHIELD OF TIME
- by Poul Anderson
- (TOR, July 1991, $4.95, ISBN 0-812-51000-3)
- review by Darryl Kenning
-
- The Time Patrol! How many of us cut our SF teeth on the glorious
- stories by Poul Anderson about the brave men and women fighting to
- preserve their timeline from the deliciously strange effects of
- tampering - both accidental and deliberate. Picking this book up was a
- bit like seeing a friend from years ago suddenly appear at a party
- across the room. I hesitated a bit before picking up the book because
- I was sure that I'd be disappointed.
-
- Let me put your mind at ease. Poul Anderson has retained the magic
- that made him so much fun to read in years past. This is almost a
- classical story, and yet I felt none of the disappointment that has
- happened before in similar circumstances. The story was just as much
- fun to read, and I enjoyed it thoroughly. Not deep, not particularly
- complicated, but with enough romance to stir the soul and a sense of a
- particularly gifted author who has not lost the ability to pull me
- into his story. If you are not a fan of time travel and PA's earlier
- books this probably won't be quite as much fun, but if you've never
- read one then you should.
- KQ = 4
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- THE GATEWAY TRIP
- by Frederik Pohl
- (Ballantine Del Rey, 1990)
- review by Darryl Kenning
-
- This is an oversize paperback edition of short stories and vignettes
- of of the "Heeche". The book itself is extensively illustrated by
- Frank Kelly Freas which adds a great deal. This is a series of stories
- about the "Heeche", visitors to our corner of space a long time ago,
- who after leaving tunnels and some artifacts - some extremely useful
- and some just totally bewildering - have disappeared.
-
- These are stories more in the 1950s style of storytelling, with some
- cute twists, all eminently readable. By the time the mystery is
- unravelled, the reader has travelled a long way in space and time. A
- nice pleasant way to pass a couple of hours.
-
- KQ = 3
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- THE HARRIERS Book 1: WAR AND HONOR
- by Gordon R. Dickson, Chelsa Quinn Yarbro, S.N. Lewitt, & Steve Perry
- (Baen BOOKS, April 1991, $4.50, ISBN 0-671-72048-1)
- review by Darryl Kenning
-
- This is another "first book" in what the authors and publisher
- obviously hope will become a neverending series using the shared world
- concept. The basic premise and social construct was created by Gordon
- Dickson, who is one of the better qualified authors to do so.
-
- The league of human worlds has long since moved beyond Earth and is
- controlled from the HUB, a large artificial world. To enforce the
- dictates of the government of the League two military forces have been
- created: The Grand Harriers, an elite military force designed to
- protect the power of the government, and the Petit Harriers, a rough
- and tumble group designed to go planetside and mix it up when the bare
- knuckles are needed.
-
- The tension between the two groups is obvious from the start, as is
- the possibility for a wide variety of adventures. This book has three
- stories connected by the shared world, and it is clear that the
- authors enjoyed considerable latitude. This has the potential to
- become a light reading series that will survive for some time.
-
- KQ = 3
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- JULY 1991 TITLES FROM TOR BOOKS
-
- SATI by Christopher Pike ($4.99, ISBN 0-812-51035-6)
- I once knew this girl who thought she was God. She didn't give sight
- to the blind or raise the dead. She didn't even teach anything, not
- really. On the other hand, she didn't expect to be worshipped, nor did
- she ask for money. I don't know, maybe she was God. Her name was Sati
- and she had blonde hair and blue eyes.
- For all who meet her, Sati will change everything. Sati may change
- everything for you.
- Christopher Pike is a bestselling author of young adult fiction;
- SATI is his first adult novel. He currently lives in Los Angeles, and
- when not writing he likes to run, meditate, and study astronomy.
-
-
- THE SHIELD OF TIME by Poul Anderson ($4.99, ISBN 0-812-51000-3)
- Anderson's first TIME PATROL novel in 35 years. The Time Patrol is a
- far-future organization charged with the responsibility of preserving
- history itself from those who would tamper with humanity's timelines.
- Threatening the fabric of history and humanity are the Exaltationists,
- a cult of megalomaniacs who aim to change history and rule the
- timelines forever. Manse Everard, unattached agent of the Time Patrol,
- travels anywhere in time and place where the Exaltationists threaten.
- In THE SHIELD OF TIME, Manse Everard teams up with Wanda Tamberley,
- a Time Patrol recruit from 1980s California. Manse and Wanda's
- adventure ranges from before the Pleistocene era, to medieval Italy,
- to the present. SCIENCE FICTION CHRONICLE called it "an absolutely
- joyous ride through time."
-
-
- TROIKA by Louise Cooper ($4.50, ISBN 0-812-50799-1)
- TROIKA, the fifth volume in Louise Cooper's mystical INDIGO series,
- follows the princess Indigo, who holds the Earth's heart for ransom.
- In TROIKA, Indigo's magical lodestone leads her to the North, and to
- lost love and madness. To survive, Indigo must confront her own worst
- fears, and her greatest challenge. "A far, far above average fantasy
- series." --FEMINIST BOOKSTORE NEWS
-
-
- LIFE ON THE BORDER ed. by Terri Windling ($4.99, ISBN 0-812-50824-6)
- Human power and Elvin magic meet and intermix in Bordertown, once a
- great American city, now a mecca for the dispossessed for both ancient
- races. From the rich mansions of Dragon's Tooth Hill to the mean
- streets of Soho and the bustling wharves of the Mad River, the city
- thrives on surprise. Businessmen deal, artists dream, and the children
- of Men learn Elvin magic while the youth of Elfland flock to the
- allure of rock and roll. Welcome to the Borderlands, but watch your
- step; magic runs wild in the streets.
- LIFE ON THE BORDER includes stories by today's most popular modern
- fantasists. Charles de Lint brings us were-creatures, Ellen Kushner
- tells of a coming-of-age. Also contributing are Craig Shaw Gardner (of
- BATMAN fame), Midori Snyder, Emma Bull, Will Shetterly, Kara Dalkey,
- Michael Korolenko, and Bellamy Bach.
-
-
- HASAN by Piers Anthony ($3.99, ISBN 0-812-51348-7)
- Set in the time of Sinbad the Sailor, Hasan, a naive youth seeking
- riches, falls under the wing of an evil alchemist who enslaves him.
- Escaping to a hidden jungle palace, he falls in love with and kidnaps
- the beautiful Sana, daughter of the king of the jinns. Sana escapes
- him, and while Hasan pursues her, he meets a medley of magical beings.
- A cap of invisibility, a rod of power, an army of jinns, and the
- rousing of the volcano god add to the climactic battle against the
- forces protecting Sana.
-
-
- BERSERKER'S PLANET by Fred Saberhagen ($3.99, ISBN 0-812-50981-1)
- Five hundred years have passed since the combined fleets of humanity
- met and broke the berserker armada at Stone Place. But though the
- human victory was total, one of the killer machines--weaponless, its
- star drive a ruin--managed to limp to secret sanctuary on a planet
- called Hunter's World. Over the years since then a new cult has arisen
- there, a cult dedicated to Death as the only and ultimate Good. For
- Hunter's World has become---BERSERKER'S PLANET.
-
-
- TOR DOUBLE #31 ($3.99, ISBN 0-812-50265-5)
- SILENT THUNDER by Dean Ing / UNIVERSE by Robert A. Heinlein
- In SILENT THUNDER, a new short novel by Dean Ing, the year is 1997
- and the U.S. government is using Nazi technology to manipulate its
- people. Dean Ing is the bestselling author of THE RANSOM OF BLACK
- STEALTH ONE.
- In UNIVERSE, the Ship was all anyone had ever known. Ancient
- writings referred to a "trip" and a "destination", but no one on board
- knew what these strange words meant. The Scientists and Engineers
- dismissed these tales as primitive fables, suitable only for the
- naive. A man was born, lived, died, and went to the Converter--all
- else was superstition. Or so Hugh Hoyland thought. Then a slingshot
- caught Hoyland offguard, and the young Scientist learned about life
- among the Muties--and that there might be life beyond the Ship.
-
-
- CONAN THE UNCONQUERED by Robert Jordan ($3.99, ISBN 0-812-51400-9
- Davinia, the beautiful mistress of the king of Turan commissions
- Conan to steal priceless jewels from the stronghold of the Cult of
- Doom. But the powerful necromancer Ghandar, who leads the Cult of
- Doom, has made Davinia part of his evil plans to seize the throne of
- Turan. Conan must defeat the necromancer and his legions of the dead
- to save the Kingdom, Davinia, and his own life!
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- AUGUST 1991 TITLES FROM TOR BOOKS
-
-
- ORION IN THE DYING TIME by Ben Bova ($4.99, ISBN 0-812-51429-7)
- Third in Bova's bestselling Orion Trilogy, ORION IN THE DYING TIME
- takes our immortal hero and throws him back in time to confront his
- eternal enemy in the ages when the dinosaurs ruled the Earth. Orion,
- an immortal warrior created by the gods, faces the archetype of Satan
- in a tale that moves from the Pleistocene era to a burning distant
- planet, from the Garden of Eden to the farthest future.
-
- HENRY MARTYN by L. Neil Smith ($4.99, ISBN 0-812-50550-6)
- A grand space adventure by the author of THE CRYSTAL EMPIRE, HENRY
- MARTYN is a swashbuckling, star-spanning epic of space piracy set
- against the bloody power struggles of vast interstellar empires. In an
- adventuresome style, L. Neil Smith tells the story of Arran Islay, a
- young man who has declared war upon those who brutally destroyed his
- family. Taking the name of his murdered friend Islay becomes the
- pirate Henry Martyn, inspiring undying loyalty from his followers and
- hatred of those he fights.
-
- THE MISTRESS OF THE JEWELS by Diana L. Paxson ($4.99, ISBN
- 0-812-54866-3)
- From Diana L. Paxson, author of THE WHITE RAVEN, comes the first
- tale of the Westria Saga. After the collapse of technological
- civilization, a magical world has evolved. The medievalists have taken
- over, creating a pastoral culture on the West Coast. Environmental
- consciousness--symbolized by the religion of the Jewels--gives mankind
- the ability to remain in harmony with the natural world.
- When the beautiful young Faris meets King Jehan, they fall in love
- and marry, blessed by the four forces of nature. All is peaceful in
- Westria, until jealousy strikes the king's most loyal counselor.
-
- WHITE WING by Gordon Kendall ($3.99, ISBN 0-812-51770-9)
- The mother of all battles has decimated the Earth. Only a handful of
- humans remain to carry on the fight against the alien Sejeidi. These
- brave men and women are the WHITE WING, an elite force of space
- fighters which takes no prisoners and prefers death over surrender.
- Now a powerful enemy of the galactic League is determined to brand the
- Wing as traitors, discrediting what's left of the human race. But the
- honor of the Wing is not so easily compromised. (Author Gordon
- Kendall, a distinguished analyst of aviation and foreign affairs,
- holds a Ph.D. in Government from Yale. WHITE WING is based on his
- studies of the Israeli Airforce.)
-
- THE MASK OF THE SUN by Fred Saberhagen ($3.99, ISBN 0-812-51357-6)
- Mike Gabrieli isn't surprised when his brother Tom disappears, just
- annoyed. Then Mike discovers an ancient solid gold Aztec mask hidden
- in a can of red paint, and becomes caught up in a terrifying whirlwind
- of action. The artifact uproots Mike from his comfortable 20th century
- life and casts his as a pivotal player in a war being fought from the
- 16th to the 23rd century--and beyond. The mask is the key to victory,
- but the victor remains unknown. Is it the Spanish Pizzaro, the
- unimaginably ruthless 23rd century Tenokas, the 16th century Incas, or
- Esperanza, the reappearing man whose loyalties can only be guessed at?
- What are the secrets of the mask and the fate of its possessor?
-
- CONAN THE FORMIDABLE by Steve Perry ($3.99, ISBN 0-812-51377-0)
- Conan lays dreaming of the wealth he will encounter within the gates
- of the fabled Shadizar, but wakes in the sudden rush of a
- night-shrouded bandit attack. Conan's mighty strength and
- battle-hardened skills are not enough to defeat his attackers, who are
- no regular road-side criminals, but peons of the huge Jatte, a coldly
- logical race which occupies the desolate region near the Karpash
- Mountains. They seek to imprison Conan as part of their quest for
- knowledge of humankind. Those who would bind or slay Conan the
- Cimmerian find that they face an opponent more fearsome than their
- worst nightmare could conjure--they face CONAN THE FORMIDABLE!
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- BOX SCORES
- .....................................
- /: KQ :
- : : THE GATEWAY TRIP :
- : : Frederik Pohl...........3 :
- : : THE GHOST FROM THE GRAND BANKS :
- : : Arthur C. Clarke........4 :
- : : FALLEN ANGEL :
- : : L Niven, J. Pournelle, :
- : : M Flynn.................5 :
- : : THE MERCENARIES :
- : : B. Baldwin..............3 :
- : : THE HARRIERS :
- : : created by G Dickson, :
- : : Dickson, Yarbro, Lewitt :
- : : Perry..................3 :
- : : GO TELL THE SPARTANS :
- : : J. Pournelle and :
- : : S M Stirling...........5 :
- : : THE SHIELD OF TIME :
- : : Poul Anderson..........4 :
- : : WOLF AND IRON :
- : : Gordon R Dickson.......5 :
- : : :
- : : by darryl kenning :
- : :...................................:
- :..................................../
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- ASK UNCLE HAL 9001
-
- Test the enormous RAM database of UNCLE HAL, the new and improved
- model 9001 beta.
-
- Unfortunately, someone left a book of "one-liners" on the scanner
- that UNCLE HAL had been using and now we can't get him to stop
- printing out these things. Does anyone know when the model 9001 D will
- be ready?
-
- --> Reality is for people who can't face science fiction.
- --> Friction is a drag.
- --> Health is merely the slowest possible rate at which one can die.
- --> The problem with the gene pool is that there is no lifeguard.
- --> Clones are people two.
- --> White dwarf seeks red giant for binary relationship.
- --> The attention span of a computer is only as long as its electrical
- cord.
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- TREKOLOGY
- STAR TREK EPISODES
-
- Stardate Title Seq Air Date
- -------- ----- --- --------
- ORIGINAL AIR DATE SEQUENCE:
-
- Unknown The Cage (color) 0 01/01/01 (Pilot - never aired)
- Unknown The Cage (color & b/w) 0 01/01/01 (Roddenberry comments)
-
- First Season:
-
- 1513.1 The Man Trap 6 09/08/66
- 1533.6 Charlie X 8 09/15/66
- 1312.4 Where No Man Has Gone Before 2 09/22/66
- 1704.2 The Naked Time 7 09/29/66
- 1672.1 The Enemy Within 5 10/06/66
- 1329.1 Mudd's Women 4 10/13/66
- 2712.4 What Are Little Girls Made Of? 10 10/20/66
- 2713.5 Miri 12 10/27/66
- 2715.1 Dagger of the Mind 11 11/03/66
- 1512.2 The Corbomite Maneuver 3 11/10/66
- 3012.4 The Menagerie Part I 16 11/17/66
- 3012.4 The Menagerie Part II 16 11/24/66
- 2817.6 The Conscience of the King 13 12/08/66
- 1709.1 Balance of Terror 9 12/15/66
- 3025.3 Shore Leave 17 12/28/66
- 2821.5 The Galileo Seven 14 01/05/67
- 2124.5 The Squire of Gothos 18 01/12/67
- 3045.6 Arena 19 01/19/67
- 3113.2 Tomorrow Is Yesterday 21 01/26/67
- 2947.3 Court Martial 15 02/02/67
- 3156.2 The Return of the Archons 22 02/09/67
- 3141.9 Space Seed 24 02/16/67
- 3192.1 A Taste of Armageddon 23 02/23/67
- 3417.3 This Side of Paradise 25 03/02/67
- 3196.1 The Devil in the Dark 26 03/09/67
- 3198.4 Errand of Mercy 27 03/23/67
- 3087.6 The Alternative Factor 20 03/30/67
- 3134.0 The City on the Edge of Forever 28 04/06/67
- 3287.2 Operation: Annihilate 29 04/13/67
-
- Second Season:
-
- 3372.7 Amok Time 34 09/15/67
- 3468.1 Who Mourns for Adonis 33 09/22/67
- 3451.9 The Changeling 37 09/29/67
- Unknown Mirror, Mirror 39 10/06/67
- 3715.0 The Apple 38 10/13/67
- 4202.9 The Doomsday Machine 35 10/20/67
- 3018.2 Catspaw 30 10/27/67
- 4513.3 I, Mudd 41 11/03/67
- 3219.4 Metamorphosis 31 11/10/67
- 3842.3 Journey to Babel 44 11/17/67
- 3497.2 Friday's Child 32 12/01/67
- 3478.2 The Deadly Years 40 12/08/67
- 3619.2 Obsession 47 12/15/67
- 3614.9 Wolf In The Fold 36 12/22/67
- 4523.3 The Trouble with Tribbles 42 12/29/67
- 3211.7 The Gamesters Of Triskelion 46 01/05/68
- 4598.0 A Piece of the Action 49 01/12/68
- 4307.1 The Immunity Syndrome 48 01/19/68
- 4211.4 A Private Little War 45 02/02/68
- 4768.3 Return To Tomorrow 51 02/09/68
- 2534.0 Patterns of Force 52 02/16/68
- 4657.5 By Any Other Name 50 02/23/68
- Unknown The Omega Glory 54 03/01/68
- 4729.4 The Ultimate Computer 53 03/08/68
- 4040.7 Bread And Circuses 43 03/15/68
- Unknown Assignment: Earth 55 03/29/68
-
- Third (final) Season:
-
- 5431.4 Spock's Brain 61 09/20/68
- 5031.3 The Enterprise Incident 59 09/27/68
- 4842.6 The Paradise Syndrome 58 10/04/68
- 5029.5 And The Children Shall Lead 60 10/11/68
- 5630.7 Is There In Truth No Beauty? 62 10/18/68
- 4385.3 Spectre Of The Gun 56 10/25/68
- Unknown Day Of The Dove 66 11/01/68
- 5476.3 For The World Is Hollow And... 65 11/08/68
- 5693.4 The Tholian Web 64 11/15/68
- 5784.0 Plato's Stepchildren 67 11/22/68
- 5710.5 Wink Of An Eye 68 11/29/68
- 5121.0 The Empath 63 12/05/68
- 4372.5 Elaan Of Troyius 57 12/20/68
- 5718.3 Whom Gods Destroy 71 01/03/69
- 5730.2 Let That Be Your Last Battlef'ld 70 01/10/69
- 5423.4 The Mark Of Gideon 72 01/17/69
- Unknown That Which Survives 69 01/24/69
- 5725.3 The Lights Of Zetar 73 01/31/69
- 5483.7 Requiem For Methuselah 76 02/14/69
- 5832.3 The Way To Eden 75 02/21/69
- 5818.4 The Cloud Minders 74 02/28/69
- 5906.4 The Savage Curtain 77 03/07/69
- 5943.7 All Our Yesterdays 78 03/14/69
-
- 5928.5 Turnabout Intruder 79 06/03/69
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- MATCH THE AUTHOR WITH HIS/HER PET
-
- 1-d Michael Bishop/Spud the gerbil
- 2-e Eleanor Arnason/Seymour the stuffed sheep
- 3-b Ellen Datlow/Leroy the 'gator (deceased)
- 4-a Lew Shiner/Liz the cat
- 5-c James Blaylock/Pomeroy the carp
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- FUTURE FICTION:
-
- ANVIL OF STARS by Greg Bear (sequel to THE FORGE OF GOD)(Warner)
- THE MERI by Maya Kaathryn Bohnhoff (Baen)
- FOOLS by Pat Cadigan (Bantam)
- WORLDS ENOUGH AND TIME by Joe Haldeman (Morrow/Avon)
- COVER PLAN by James Hogan (Bantam)
- RESURRECTION by Katharine Kerr (Pulphouse/Bantam)
- THE EXILE OF ANA by Michael P. Kube-McDowell (Ace)
- PEOPLE OF THE MESA by Ardath Mayhar (Berkley Diamond)
- SONGSMITH by Andre Norton & Anne C. Crispin (Tor)
- HUNTERS OF THE DAMNED by Nick Pollotta (Ace)
- LAST CALL by Tim Powers (Morror/Avon)
- SPIRAL DANCE by R. Garcia Y Robertson (Avon)
- THE FIRST BOOK OF CHAOS by Michael A. Stackpole (Roc)
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- COMING IN RFP #19:
-
- THE DRAGON REBORN (sequel to THE GREAT HUNT) by Robert Jordan (Tor)
- STREET MAGIC by Michael Reaves (Tor)
- THE ADVENTURES OF DOCTOR ESZTERHAZY by Avram Davidson (Owlswick Press)
- THE INFINITE KINGDOMS by Michael Rutherford (Owlswick Press)
- ANITA by Keith Roberts (Owlswick Press)
-
- Plus 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.
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- BRAM STOKER AWARDS NOMINEES
-
- The Stoker awards are given out by the Horror Writers of America. This
- makes a mighty good reading list.
-
- NOVEL:
- Savage Season by Joe R. Lansdale (Ziesing/Bantam)
- Funland by Richard Laymon (Onyx)
- Mine by Robert R. McCammon (Pocket)
- Reign by Chet Williamson (Dark Harvest)
-
- FIRST NOVEL:
- The Revelation by Bentley Little (St. Martin's)
- Nightblood by T. Chris Martingale (Warner)
- Dark Father by Tom Piccirilli (Pocket)
- Blood of the Children by Alan Rodgers (Bantam)
-
- NOVELLA/NOVELETTE:
- "Bestseller" by Michael Blumlein (F&SF Jan 1990)
- "The Langoliers" by Stephen King (FOUR PAST MIDNIGHT, Viking)
- "Stephen" by Elizabeth Massie (BORDERLANDS, Avon)
- "Entropy's Bed at Midnight" by Dan Simmons (Lord John Press)
- "Pelts" by F. Paul Wilson (Footsteps Press)
-
- SHORT STORY:
- "The Loneliest Number" by Edward Bryant (PULPHOUSE #7)
- "The Calling" by David Silva (BORDERLANDS, Avon)
- "Back Windows" by Steve Rasnic Tem (GAUNTLET)
- "But You'll Never Follow Me" by Karl Edward Wagner (BORDERLANDS, Avon)
- "From the Papers of Helmut Hecher" by Chet Williamson (LOVECRAFT'S
- LEGACY)
-
- COLLECTION:
- The Brains of Rats by Michael Blumlein (Scream/Press)
- Four Past Midnight by Stephen King (Viking)
- Prayers to Broken Stones by Dan Simmons (Dark Harvest)
- Houses Without Doors by Peter Straub (Dutton)
-
- NONFICTION:
- Horror Literature: A Reader's Guide edited by Neil Barron (Garland)
- Joe Bob Goes Back to the Drive-In by Joe Bob Briggs (Delacorte)
- The Weird Tale by S.T. Joshi (University of Texas Press)
- Hollywood Gothic by David J. Skal (Norton)
- Dark Dreamers: Conversations With the Masters of Horror by Stanley
- Wiater (Underwood-Miller/Avon)
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- CAFE PURGATORIUM
- Three Novels of Horror and the Fantastic
- by Dana Anderson, Charles de Lint, Ray Garton
- (Tor, July 1991, $18.95, ISBN 0-312-85180-4)
- review by Annie Wilkes
-
- The dust jacket of CAFE PURGATORIUM says that "Experts and writers
- agree that the short novel length is the ideal form for the horror
- story, allowing the writer to maintain the demanding intensity of
- terror while developing a gripping tale." You can prove the truth of
- that theory by reading these three novella-length bits of dark
- fantasy.
-
- Dana Anderson's "Cafe Purgatorium" tells of an abandoned night club
- that serves as a sort-of halfway house for the dead. When Jack Bellows
- buys the building to open a restaurant, he discovers his new tenants,
- falls in love with one of them, and then all Hell breaks loose. It's a
- dreamlike story in which the laws of reality are constantly shifting.
-
- The next novella is "Dr. Krusadian's Method" by the dynamic Ray
- Garton, whose first novel, LIVE GIRLS, has become a cult classic.
- Richard and Dani Campbell have many problems--life has been a
- disappointment, which gives them an excuse to drink too much and take
- their frustrations out on those around them. Their son Jason has only
- two problems: his mother and his father. Sometimes their frustrations
- put Jason in the hospital. But that was before Dr. Krusadian came to
- help. In one night Dr. Krusadian will change the lives of all three
- Campbells--permanently. Just wait till you hear about Dr. Krusadian's
- method. A wonderful story.
-
- Bringing up the rear is my favorite of the three: Charles de Lint's
- "Death Leaves an Echo". I read the entire story at 90 mph; I just
- couldn't turn the pages fast enough. Michael Shiel wakes up from a
- nightmare to find his wife Annie gone. But it's not just Annie, it's
- everything in the house that was connected with her. Their king-size
- bed has changed into his old double bed, her toothbrush is missing as
- well as her dresser, her magazines, her favorite frying pan. The entry
- for Annie's parents is missing from Michael's phone book, as are those
- of all her friends. A fevered call to his best friend elicits the
- information that Michael has never been married. But he can remember
- all six years of his relationship with Annie... Anyone who can put
- down a story that begins like this is unreachable.
-
- CAFE PURGATORIUM is definitely a Best Buy. Highly recommended.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- * Stephen King has been having trouble lately. First he gets sued by
- Anne Hiltner, who claims that he stole MISERY from her. Then some nut
- breaks into his house and claims to have a bomb. King and his children
- were out at the time, but Tabitha King was there. She fled to a
- neighbor's house and called the police, who arrested the man. (The
- bomb turned out to be fake.) According to King's assistant, Shirley
- Sonderegger, the man had been around before claiming that King stole
- the idea for MISERY from him, and that it is the real-life story of
- his aunt, Anne Hiltner. Just in case you figured this story was about
- to make sense I have to tell you that Anne Hiltner claims not to be
- related to the fake-bomb wielder.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- SAINT PETER'S WOLF
- by Michael Cadnum
- (Carroll & Graf, June 1991, $19.95, ISBN 0-88184-728-3)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- "Perhaps if a person lived as a werewolf for a long time, he would
- evolve into a new sort of being, neither typically human nor a
- beast..."
-
- Once again award-winning poet and novelist Michael Cadnum illuminates
- a horror archetype, this time tackling the shape-shifter, or werewolf.
- Most storytellers use archetypes as a convenient shorthand; they say
- "werewolf", then all they have to think about are battle pyrotechnics
- and a heartrending way for the werewolf to get killed in the end.
- Cadnum has used the werewolf as a canvas for his own painting about
- the meaning, structure, and purpose of life.
-
- Benjamin Byrd has been chased by a recurrent nightmare since
- childhood, a dream of being tracked by some unseen beast of the night.
- That dream finally catches up to him in the form of a beautiful set of
- silver fangs, an artifact with a dreadful history and an irresistible
- lure. Once Ben gives in to the fangs, his evolution has begun, and
- soon he is no longer entirely human.
-
- "I was in my garden when I woke. There was no confusion. I knew what I
- had done. I knew it all, the feeding in Golden Gate Park, the romp
- with the wolves. There was no horror, now, because what had been human
- in me was diluted. I was no longer what I had been. I was changed."
-
- On a superficial level, SAINT PETER'S WOLF is classic werewolf drama;
- a bit more complex than we're used to, more emotional depth, but the
- physicality we expect to find is there, along with the convulsive
- transformation scenes. At night he experiences the expansion of his
- sensory organs as a wolf, and during the day he falls back into the
- narrow, half-conscious life of an average human being. But on another
- level there is only one large transformation, and it lasts for over
- 300 pages--the slow evolution of Benjamin Byrd into something
- "neither typically human nor a beast". In slow, subtle stages Ben
- changes, and must not only adapt to his new identity, but must forge a
- new relationship with all members of the animal kingdom. At one point
- he decides, "A human is such a slight thing, really." Slight, maybe;
- but also deadly.
-
- SAINT PETER'S WOLF is a sensual experience disguised as a novel,
- magical and unforgettable. It is a werewolf story, a love story, and a
- maturation story. Don't miss it. Michael Cadnum is one of the finest
- writers to work in the horror field in the last couple of years. You
- should also look up his 1990 novels, NIGHTLIGHT and SLEEPWALKER. (If
- you've already read those, you may pick up a couple of oblique
- references to them in SAINT PETER'S WOLF.)
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- REPRISAL
- The Second of a Three Book Thematic Sequel to THE KEEP
- by F. Paul Wilson
- illustrated by John & Laura Lakey
- (Dark Harvest, July 1991, $19.95)
- commentary from the publisher
-
- In THE KEEP, F. Paul Wilson introduced us to a timeless evil entity.
- That same entity returned to us in embryonic form in REBORN.
-
- Now it is twenty years later. The sensational horrors in the Hanley
- mansion have been forgotten by the public, but their effects linger,
- spreading like slow ripples across the surface of a lake, echoing down
- the years to today. For REBORN was only the beginning. The entity is
- still at work, destroying anyone it touches, dragging them down to
- death and ruin...
-
- Will Ryerson, a man with a mysterious past, seeks out a new life at
- Darnell University in North Carolina and safety from the horrors that
- once pursued him. Graying, bearded, pony-tailed, highly educated, he's
- found peace as a groundskeeper, a peace that is about to be shattered
- as his past seeks him out.
-
- Lisl Whitman, blond, brilliant, an associate professor in the math
- department at Darnell, finds her low self-esteem bolstered by a torrid
- love affair with Rafe Losmara, a darkly handsome graduate student.
- Even when their lovemaking takes a sadomasochistic turn, she finds it
- impossible to say no.
-
- Others are inexorably drawn into an ever-expanding web of violence,
- deceit, eroticism, and death: Everett Sanders--Lisl's friendly rival
- in the department who has his own secrets; Renny Augustino--a New York
- cop still obsessed with a five-year-old murder case--the brutal
- mutilation of a child; and Mr. Veilleur--now pushing ninety, the old
- man finds himself involved once again in an age-old battle he thought
- he had ended half a century ago.
-
- REPRISAL is F. Paul Wilson's darkest vision yet, a nightmarish tale
- that plumbs the nether regions of the human soul.
-
- A deluxe, slip-cased, limited edition of 450 numbered copies signed by
- both author and artists is $39, if any are left. A specially-bound
- edition of 26 copies, lettered A thru Z, in a hand-made solid mahogany
- slip-case is $125, if any are left.
-
- Postage: Add $2 for first book, $1 for each book thereafter.
-
- Dark Harvest, PO Box 941, Arlington Heights, IL 60006
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- OBSESSED
- by Rick R. Reed
- (Dell Abyss, July 1991, $4.50, ISBN 0-440-20855-6)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- Joe MacAree is obsessed with the taste of human blood and has already
- murdered five women when this novel begins. He's married to a
- beautiful model whom he loves, but the barrier he has erected between
- his new life and his tortured past is wearing very thin. And despite
- the brutal nature of his crimes, Joe's largest fear is that he may no
- longer be entirely human.
-
- In case you hadn't noticed, this is the year of the psycho killer,
- thanks mostly to Thomas Harris, his novels RED DRAGON and THE SILENCE
- OF THE LAMBS, and the recent hit movie of the latter. I've come across
- more crazed killers on the written page in the last 10 months than in
- the previous 5 years. As you might expect, some are obviously written
- in haste to take advantage of a fad. But others, like OBSESSED, use
- the psycho killer story to communicate some penetrating ideas about
- modern life.
-
- What distinguishes Rick Reed's treatment of the serial killer theme is
- the way in which he enlarges the scope of the story to include many
- others touched by Joe MacAree's mental illness. We come to see that
- the victims of a killer are not all in the morgue; that the ripples in
- the pond flow out to change many people's lives. We meet Joe's wife,
- the family of one of his victims, a private detective hired by his
- wife to track him, and the policeman in charge of catching him. We
- also meet another wounded soul: a wheelchair-bound woman whose
- injuries are nevertheless mostly within her mind. A woman whose mental
- illness will be attracted to and will resonate with Joe's.
-
- All of these people are victims, and they are all victimizers. They
- feel pain and they cause pain. Is mental illness catching? Is it all
- just a matter of degree? Is the problem not within the psycho killer's
- mind but rather loose in the streets of our modern civilization?
- OBSESSED is a fascinating exploration of a serial killer and his
- extended family of victims. The enlarged scope deprives the story of
- the claustrophobic intensity of a Thomas Harris novel, but gives the
- reader much more to think about. It's scary, and disturbing.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- TOPLIN
- by Michael McDowell
- (Dell Abyss, August 1991, $4.50, ISBN 0-440-20886-6)
- review by Cindy Bartorillo
-
- Here's another thoughtful dark fantasy from Dell Abyss. The nameless
- narrator of TOPLIN is a psychiatrist's delight: he's obsessive,
- compulsive, paranoid, delusional, and probably 15 other things that I
- don't know enough psychology to pick up. He only wears black and
- white, has six nearly-identical suits which he refers to as S-1, S-2,
- etc. He has twelve shelves of cookbooks, a combination lock on his
- front door, and he can't see colors. The story begins when he needs a
- special spice for Today's Recipe, and decides to stop in a store that
- he passes going to and from work every day. For the first time,
- however, the store is closed, with a sign that says: "Death In The
- Family. But Come Back Soon." Obviously this is a lie, and the lie
- disconcerts our narrator to such an extent that he decides to eat in a
- nearby restaurant that he's never been in before, the Baltyk Kitchen.
- In the restaurant he finds Marta, a very ugly foreign woman who works
- there. Our narrator realizes that Marta wants to die. She's so ugly,
- of COURSE she wants to die. And he must help her. It is now obvious to
- him why the grocery store pretended to be closed, forcing him to come
- to the Baltyk Kitchen so he could help Marta.
-
- Every word of TOPLIN is told in the first person, through the eyes of
- our disturbed narrator. This gives the story a surreal texture, and
- prevents the reader from getting any kind of psychological bearing. In
- most stories about psycho killers, the author allows you to see just
- how demented the killer is by contrast with the perspective of the
- "normal" characters. But Michael McDowell denies the reader this
- safety line, and the only recourse is to float along beside the
- narrator, uneasily looking for details that may indicate where
- delusion stops and reality begins.
-
- The narrator shuns human company, and yet seems surrounded by
- grotesques: his girlfriend Annie, who constantly reinvents her life;
- delivery boy Howard, who shoots small animals and life-size cutouts of
- women; the hermaphroditic maintenance man; a drunken priest; and the
- Fuggits, a street gang with 'Tempus Fugit' on their leather jackets.
- Even the stray street people he meets are crazy. Is the entire city
- populated by lunatics, or is it only our narrator? Which way is up?
- TOPLIN is a disquieting story from a delusional mind, and the eerie
- black & white photographs of Harry O. Morris are a nice accompaniment.
- Very good reading.
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- Is your Dell Abyss collection complete? Here's a list:
-
- THE CIPHER by Kathe Koja (February 1991)
- NIGHTLIFE by Brian Hodge (March 1991)
- DUSK by Ron Dee (April 1991)
- SPECTERS by J.M. Dillard (May 1991)
- PRODIGAL by Melanie Tem (June 1991)
- OBSESSED by Rick Reed (July 1991)
- TOPLIN by Michael McDowell (August 1991)
- MASTERY by Kelley Wilde (September 1991)
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- * HOWLING MAD by Peter David (Ace), a romantic comedy about
- werewolves, is being made into a movie called MOONLIGHT BECOMES YOU.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- THE WITCHING HOUR
- by Anne Rice
- (Alfred A. Knopf, 1990)
- review by Robert A. Pittman
-
- If you have enjoyed reading any of Anne Rice's books from the vampire
- series, you will move to a new level of spellbinding story telling as
- her tale of witches unfolds. In writing about witches, she follows her
- usual practice of creating characters with such care and detail that
- they easily become real and reasonable deviations from humanity's
- norm. The reader quickly accepts the premise of the existence of
- witches and does not resist their presence as a plausible part of a
- broad history of a family and an organization. The family around which
- the story develops is the Mayfair family and the organization is The
- Talamasca.
-
- The first of the Mayfair witches appears in Scotland in the late
- sixteen hundreds. She is followed by a second generation witch who
- lives in France and a third generation witch who lives in the
- Caribbean. The fourth generation of the Mayfair family moves to New
- Orleans in the early eighteen hundreds where they quickly establish
- themselves as prominent, powerful, wealthy, and peculiar members of
- the community. We know the Mayfair family through the eyes, ears, and
- writing of the Talamasca, an organization founded in the thirteenth
- century and dedicated to tracking and investigating paranormal
- individuals and activities. In the vampire series, there are brief
- references to the Talamasca as observer and recorder of vampire
- activities, but in THE WITCHING HOUR, it takes on a major role as the
- primary story teller through its history of consistent study of the
- Mayfair family members.
-
- Anne Rice has a skilled capacity for making her supernatural
- characters attractive and believable by investing in them the physical
- and emotional strengths and weaknesses that are common to a normal
- sample of humanity. The reader gets to meet a range of Mayfair
- witches; a playful witch, an ethical witch, an amoral witch, a witch
- who is a business management expert and even a witch who is physically
- handicapped. We are also introduced to a strange force or presence
- which "lives" in association with each of the witches across several
- centuries. Its existence is sustained with the acquiescence of the
- witches, but it also augments and compliments the special powers that
- are characteristic of witches.
-
- When you finish reading THE WITCHING HOUR, you will feel that you are
- somewhat of an expert on witchcraft and you will feel comfortable but
- still a bit cautious in dealing with witches. You will not, however,
- feel complacent. Anne Rice ends her story with a surprise bang! She
- entwines the witch, The Talamasca and the "strange presence" in a
- cliff hanger dilemma that demands a sequel. I am certain it will be
- written and I can hardly wait to read it!
-
- **************************
-
- AUDIO CASSETTES
-
- THE GUNSLINGER
- written & read by Stephen King
- commentary by Robert Pittman
-
- Recently a friend sent me a recorded book written and read by Stephen
- King titled THE GUNSLINGER. The cassette jacket describes it as the
- first part of a much larger work called THE DARK TOWER and mentions
- that THE DARK TOWER was "previously available only in a limited hard
- cover edition." The implication is that in the future, other parts of
- the series will be issued in audio format. The story is recorded on
- four cassettes, has a total playing time of six hours sixteen minutes
- and retails for $29.95. No recording date is given, but I suspect it
- has been on the market for several years.
-
- I have thoroughly enjoyed reading many of Stephen King's novels and
- stories and admire his ingenuity and the creative uniqueness that he
- displays in crafting his tales of horror. In listening to THE
- GUNSLINGER however, I had to struggle to find even the slightest
- kinship to the usual standards one expects in the works of Mr. King.
-
- The story is constructed around an extended chase (primarily on
- horseback) across a desert-like area of the southwest. The gunslinger
- is chasing a character defined by the author only as the "Man in
- Black." During the chase, the gunslinger encounters other characters
- and his relationships and interactions with them provides the
- sustaining story line. Among these other characters is a hermit-like
- subsistence farmer who offers the gunslinger lodging for several days,
- and at the same time, imposes on him with lengthy philosophical
- posturing. He also visits a small isolated town which is populated
- with a mixture of greedy, grasping people and the listener is treated
- to a variety of heroic encounters during the stopover. We find still
- other characters along the way, some of whom are difficult to
- understand in relation to the total story. There is a young boy, for
- instance, who the gunslinger finds along the trail. The story
- grudgingly reveals that the boy comes from the near future where he
- was killed in an auto accident. It does not, however, make clear how
- or why the boy arrived in the time/space dimension of the gunslinger
- or just what purpose he serves in the story.
-
- Somehow, close to the sixth hour of listening, the gunslinger is
- successful in his chase and comes face to face with the "Man in
- Black." For the listener, it was a disappointing climax - there was
- little in their final encounter to give meaning to the chase or value
- of the catch.
-
- THE GUNSLINGER is fantasy and in this format, the reader or listener
- should be prepared to accept the unusual and different and should put
- his own imagination to work as a means of building bridges to new
- possibilities and potential realities. Listening to this story did not
- trigger my imagination - the plot was too thin to follow. The
- definitions of time and space were vague and elusive. The supporting
- characters often seemed inconsequential or unrelated to the story. It
- is by no means clear, but I believe that Mr. King meant this work to
- be an allegory, with the gunslinger representing good, the "Man in
- Black" representing evil, the young boy representing innocence, the
- town population representing greed and violence and so on. An allegory
- requires a moral, but even though I listened intently, I could find no
- moral concepts arising from the interactions between the gunslinger
- and the "Man in Black."
-
- As a reader, Stephen King is a mixed bag. His enunciation is faultless
- and his pace is easy to follow and understand. A somber, somewhat
- mournful style of delivery though, leads the listener to frequent
- states of inattention. At times I found it necessary to reverse the
- tape and recapture the narration at a point where my daydreams had led
- me astray. Often Mr. King would read in character; that is, speak the
- passages in the voice of a woman, a boy, or any other who might be
- obviously identified by sound. Using this technique, he was less than
- successful - his effort was more parody than mimicry. In this
- recording he could by no means be judged a bad reader; he was just not
- up to the standards of the experienced professional one usually hears
- on audio tapes.
-
- To summarize, when the last tape clicked off, I felt a sense of
- relief. It was almost like finishing an unpleasant chore - you're glad
- it is over with and would like to forget it!
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- BONE THROWER
- written & read by Richard Sutphen
- (Spine-Tingling Press, $9.95, ISBN 0-87554-475-4)
- review by Annie Wilkes
-
- For the first time I can really appreciate how enthralled people were
- by radio dramas in the 1930s and 1940s. As a Babyboomer I missed all
- that and generally figured that radio dramas were only popular because
- there wasn't any television. Now I think I was wrong. BONE THROWER is
- a captivating 90-minute audio drama, with lavish 3-D sound effects. I
- meant to listen to it in several stages, but couldn't bring myself to
- turn it off. The story begins with Hannah and Jeffery driving through
- the Arizona desert. We know immediately that something isn't quite
- right with Hannah, because she's squatting on the passenger seat of
- the car humming along with Indian drums on the radio. Forcing Jeffery
- to stop next to something dead in the road, she does something pretty
- disgusting, then shoots Jeffery for not being more cooperative. Soon
- we find out that Hannah had recently bought a turquoise bracelet that
- formerly belonged to an old Indian shaman. Now Hannah (or is it
- Hannah?) is loose on the Arizona highway, and no one who crosses her
- path is safe. The sound effects are nicely varied and well-integrated
- into the story. Riveting.
-
- Richard Sutphen has written 12 psychic investigation books, and after
- years of exploring actual occult horrors he is now writing fiction
- about the dark side of real potentials. BONE THROWER's premise is
- based on a true case history from Sutphen's book UNSEEN INFLUENCES
- (Pocket Books, 1982).
-
- NOTE: Parents should be aware that, while BONE THROWER makes a very
- enjoyable story for all ages, the end of the tape contains an excerpt
- from another Spine-Tingling Press tape, FREAK LINK. This excerpt
- contains some explicit sex and a touch of profanity, making it at
- least something you should review first.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- FREAK LINK: Two Erotic Horror Thrillers
- written & read by Richard Sutphen
- (Spine-Tingling Press, $9.95, ISBN 0-87554-474-6)
- review by Annie Wilkes
-
- The two dramas on this tape, while not quite as enthralling as BONE
- THROWER, are enjoyable and provide the listener with further variety
- in audio drama. FREAK LINK concerns a type of mental link achieved by
- participants at a psychic seminar. Each member of the audience has
- been paired off with a stranger, taken into hypnotic trance, and
- "linked" psychically. Susan, married and a mother, has been linked
- with Frank, a recently-divorced trucker. The psychic bonds are
- dissolved by the man conducting the seminar, but at the crucial moment
- Susan has a coughing fit and "wakes up" without have the link broken.
- Soon she's scratching her armpits, belching in public, using foul
- language, and just generally not acting like the respectable lady she
- is. More like, oh, say, a truck driver. Funny at first, the humor
- wears off quickly when Frank's personality is found to have a much
- darker side. I didn't care for the ending much, but the story had a
- lot of intensity. (The package says that "The mental link described in
- FREAK LINK is an actual group hypnosis process Sutphen has conducted
- with over 30,000 people in psychic seminars. It works for over 90
- percent of the audience.")
-
- GREATER GOOD is the story on the flip side, about Mitchell and Amanda
- and a mountain in Arizona. Mitchell, you see, has studied the record
- and determined that aliens will land on this specific mountain in
- Arizona at midnight on a specific night. He convinces girlfriend
- Amanda to ride out there with him to greet them when they arrive. When
- asked what he will say to the aliens, Mitchell altruistically says
- that he wants to get the answers to Earth's major problems, which
- should be easy for such obviously advanced beings. Not only does
- getting to the Arizona mountain prove unusually difficult, in the end
- Mitchell gets more logic than he really wanted to hear. It's funny,
- and the sound effects are very good.
-
- If your local store doesn't have BONE THROWER and FREAK LINK, write
- to: Spine-Tingling Press, Box 186, Agoura Hills, CA 91376.
-
- **************************
-
- --->--->--->---> PETER QUINT READS THE MAGAZINES
-
- HAUNTS
- Spring 1991
- Editor: Joseph K. Cherkes
-
- This was another good issue of the very reliable HAUNTS. Here's a
- quick take on the stories included:
-
- "The Web On Creque Bayou" by Tom Elliott -- Man vs. mutational beastie
- in the Louisiana Bayou. Nice rendering of setting, and icky too.
-
- "The Dream Chair" by Bob Brown -- Two pages of depression.
-
- "Darkling" by Robert E. Cook -- If you think your life has been ruined
- by your mother, wait till you hear about Gordon.
-
- "Archangel's Song" by K.A. Harbour -- Supernatural tale of Ireland
- with a terrific illustration by Judith Holman.
-
- "Nemesis" by Frank Ward -- A clever idea about God and Satan, but I
- can't help thinking it could've been given a less contrived treatment.
-
- "The Tethered Goat" by Miklos Hunyedi -- Another supernatural story
- that evokes legendary themes. How do you feel about sex with a goat?
-
- "There Are Faeries" by J.J. Pettijohn -- Affecting sentimental tale
- that recaptures the emotional intensity of Tinkerbell's near-death in
- PETER PAN. (Remember? "Clap if you believe in faeries!")
-
- "I Think That I Shall Never See" by Scott Edelman -- A man overcomes
- his grief over his wife's suicide with the help of the tree she hung
- herself from.
-
- "Gotcha!" by Joyce H. Swenson -- A practical joke on mom that would
- have made a great "blackout" skit on Rod Serling's NIGHT GALLERY.
- (Remember that? What was your favorite story?)
-
- "The Librarian" by Lance Shoeman -- Kenny knows that the horror that
- killed his two brothers is pretending to be the new town librarian. A
- good short story, but I think it would make an even better novel. Sort
- of Clive Barker by way of Lovecraft with a lengthy stopover at Ray
- Bradbury.
-
- "They Swim Upstream" by Gregory Nyman -- Wally's babysitter has
- convinced him that alligators prowl toilets for food, just waiting for
- someone to come close enough to bite. Now Wally won't use the
- bathroom. The humor of the situation is offset by Wally's very real
- anguish, which is nicely balanced by the ending.
-
- The "Sinister Cinema" column by Lisa Lepovetsky discusses the
- transition of a story from book to screen, using as examples THE
- SHINING by King/Kubrick and THE HAUNTING by Jackson/Wise.
-
- You can get the next four quarterly issues of HAUNTS by sending $13 to
- HAUNTS, PO Box 3342, Providence, RI 02906-0742. Send $3.95 plus $1
- postage for just one issue.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- INIQUITIES: The Magazine of Great Wickedness and Wonder
- Spring 1991 Vol. 1 No. 2
-
- The fiction in this second issue isn't *quite* up to the standards of
- the first, but it's close, and the variety is still good.
-
- "Another World" by Ramsey Campbell -- Another of his depressing
- stories of religious insanity and a decayed near-future society. Good,
- but a downer.
-
- "The Slimelight and How To Step Into It" by Robert Hood -- The only
- story I can think of that can make you laugh and puke at the same
- time--and is enjoyable throughout. Has a cute illustration drawn by
- Craig Spector.
-
- "The Last Snowman" by John B. Rosenman -- A pleasant tale about the
- power of religion. The author writes well from a child's perspective.
-
- "A Short Guide to the City" by Peter Straub -- I got all the way
- through this before it hit me that there was no plot.
-
- "Getting Dead" by William F. Nolan -- A vampire is trying to die.
- Humorous, but a bit weightless.
-
- "Turf" by Brian Hodge & William Relling, Jr. -- A powerful story about
- street gangs with a horror twist.
-
- "Hot Orgy of the Caged Virgins" by Elizabeth Massie -- Good evocation
- of back-country Virginia, but sadism doesn't bear the weight of a
- story as far as I'm concerned.
-
- "Place of Meeting" by Charles Beaumont -- This is the best story in
- the issue, an old Beaumont tale dusted off for their "Resurrections"
- feature. If this is your introduction to Beaumont, enjoy. There are a
- whole lot more where that came from, and George Clayton Johnson
- mentions a few sources in his introduction.
-
- Now to the nonfiction. The first issue had an extensive interview with
- John Skipp, and this issue has the promised interview with his
- partner-in-splatter, Craig Spector. Like Skipp, Spector is good at
- coming up with quotables:
-
- "Someone once asked me, 'don't you have nightmares writing that kind
- of stuff?' and I replied, 'No. YOU have my nightmares.'"
-
- "...the fact that REALITY ITSELF is little more than a default setting
- in the delicate chemical balance of the brain."
-
- "Personally, I'm not writing horror because it's this year's favorite
- flavor. I feel like I'm tapping into something vital, both in myself
- and in the culture...Besides, fear is a renewable resource. Last time
- I checked, it was still pretty damned scary out there."
-
- If you've been running out of ideas at the video store, Bill Warren
- has some suggestions for you in his "Slaughter" column. "Lansdale
- Raves!" filling 6 pages with opinions, pulpwooders, and weird stories.
- Included is the origin of his story, "The Phone Woman", from NIGHT
- VISIONS 8. J.K. Potter contributes not only the cover of this issue
- (talk about 'eye teeth'!), but two full-page scenes from his
- forthcoming graphic novel, LOUISIANA BREAKDOWN. Tom Elliott edits a
- page of horrific items from the news and Linda Marotta has a nice book
- review column. S.P. Somtow's column "A Certain Slant of 'I'" is great;
- he seems to have Harlan Ellison's ability to ramble on forever and be
- absolutely fascinating. Finally, there's a pretty lame article about
- the connection between rock 'n' roll and horror. Other than a few book
- suggestions and a few good quotes from Schow, Skipp, Spector, and R.C.
- Matheson, this piece doesn't have much to say. The conclusion reached
- in the article is that books and music are qualitatively different,
- which I think I could have figured out anyway. I'll forgive
- everything, though, if it gets a few more people to read George R.R.
- Martin's ARMAGEDDON RAG.
-
- How does this magazine manage to pay the bills? They print Ramsey
- Campbell, Peter Straub, interviews with top names, and put all (almost
- 100 pages) on heavy slick paper with loads of illustrations. This is
- phenomenal for a brand-new magazine. Remember the cheap paper and poor
- design quality we put up with for years in TWILIGHT ZONE? The guys
- that do INIQUITIES will either get rich or go out like a white dwarf
- gone nova. I sure hope they can hold it together, because INIQUITIES
- seems to be our best bet for a big-time horror magazine. (Next issue
- will have Ray Bradbury, Douglas Winter, Steve Rasnic Tem, R.C.
- Matheson, and David Schow!) To get your INIQUITIES, send $4.95 (one
- issue) or $19.95 (four issues) to: INIQUITIES, 18030 Brookhurst St.,
- Suite 14, Fountain Valley, CA 92708.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- WEIRD TALES
- Summer 1991, Ramsey Campbell Issue
- Vol. 52, No. 4 Whole No. 301
-
- Of course, after I make a fuss about INIQUITIES having big names,
- WEIRD TALES comes along with Ramsey Campbell, Robert Bloch, and
- Stephen for-gods-sake King in one issue. Of course WT isn't really a
- horror magazine, it's more of an odd fantasy anthology. Sort of, I
- guess you could say, weird tales.
-
- There are four Campbell stories here: "The Same in Any Language",
- "Bait", "The Change", and "A Street Was Chosen". If you've managed to
- avoid Ramsey Campbell so far, this is a great way to give him a try.
- There is a good interview with him too. Robert Bloch updates the
- vampire story once again with his "The Bedposts of Life". And the
- Stephen King entry is "It Grows On You", an older story and not one of
- his best, but worth reading all the same.
-
- Filling out the issue are stories by Charles D. Eckert, John R.
- Little, Andrew Seawell, Bruce Bethke, Darrell Schweitzer & Jason van
- Hollander, Juleen Brantingham, James Irving Ross, and Keith Taylor.
- There is also poetry, a book review column by John Betancourt, and a
- great drawing of Cthulhu done by Allen Koszowski. I'm particularly
- looking forward to issue 302, which will be a special William F. Nolan
- issue, and also will have a Brian Lumley story. (#303 will be the
- Thomas Ligotti Issue and #304 will be the John Brunner issue). Get
- WEIRD TALES by sending $24/$46 (for 6/12 quarterly issues) to: WEIRD
- TALES, PO Box 13418, Philadelphia, PA 19101-3418.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- THE IMMORTALS
- by Andrew Neiderman
- (Pocket Books, July 1991, $4.95, ISBN 0-671-70454-0)
- review by Peter Quint
-
- Drake and Cynthia Edwards are a happily married couple with two
- incredibly wonderful children. Drake works hard as an insurance agent,
- a job which he doesn't particularly care for, but tolerates because it
- supports the family he loves. He is also beginning to suffer the first
- real onslaught of the aging process. This makes it easy for Paul
- Stoddard to recruit him into Leon Enterprises, a company which markets
- only one product, a miracle cosmetic cream called Youth Hold. Youth
- Hold not only erases wrinkles, when used regularly it actually stops
- the aging process.
-
- Not surprisingly, every employee of Leon Enterprises, including Mr.
- Leon himself, is young and energetic. When Cynthia notices the
- dramatic change in her husband's appearance and behavior, she decides
- to check on some former Leon Enterprises employees, particularly the
- man who supposedly recommended Drake to the company. What she finds
- are a series of mysterious deaths and soon she fears for her entire
- family.
-
- THE IMMORTALS is a rousingly well-told variation on the old Fountain
- of Youth story, with a considerable dash of STEPFORD WIVES thrown in.
- The 1950s-style family was a strain on credibility, as was the
- old-fashioned gender roles portrayed here. When supermom is faced with
- superdad's bizarre and insensitive behavior, she spends much too long
- just waiting for his mood to improve, teary-eyed and wondering if he's
- having an affair. This is a story of a male fantasy clashing with
- female paranoia: the men, represented by Drake, are having WAY too
- much fun; which is suspected by the women, represented by Cynthia.
- (There are female characters enjoying the benefits of Youth Hold, but
- they are either bimbos or men in dresses.) Andrew Neiderman's
- narrative skill carries the day, though, as it did with his other
- great stories like PIN and THE DEVIL'S ADVOCATE.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- RECENT RELEASES FROM TOR BOOKS
-
- VAMPIRE JUNCTION by S.P. Somtow (July, $3.99, ISBN 0-812-52596-5)
- With his snow-white skin, black hair and eyes, vampire Timmy
- Valentine becomes rock's newest sensation and pop icon. His album
- rockets to the top of the charts; his concert tour is a huge success.
- But Valentine's two thousand years as an eleven-year-old is beginning
- to weigh on him. Unknown to him, a group of sorcerers hunger for his
- destruction, and Valentine will need all of his supernatural strength
- to combat them.
- ("The most fun I've had with vampires since Ray Garton's LIVE
- GIRLS!" ---Drew Bartorillo)
-
- TOR SF Double #36:
- CONJURE WIFE / OUR LADY OF DARKNESS by Fritz Leiber
- (August, $4.99, ISBN 0-812-51296-0)
- CONJURE WIFE: A junior-grade academic, awash in university
- politics, discovers that his wife Tansy's hobby ISN'T perfumery (as
- he'd thought), but magic. Actually, she thinks she's a witch, and
- furthermore believes that her spells are all that come between him and
- spells cast upon him by the other faculty wives. He convinces her to
- throw away her hexes and charms. But the other wives are not affected
- by his superstition...
- OUR LADY OF DARKNESS won the World Fantasy Award for Best Novel upon
- its first publication in 1978. In it, Leiber tells the story of a
- recovering alcoholic who is mourning his dead wife in a San Francisco
- residential hotel. After he falls in love with a young flute player
- downstairs, he and the flutist become enmeshed in an unexpected legacy
- of strange and terrible magic, in a haunting spell embedded in the
- street plan of San Francisco.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- HOWLING GOOD BOOKS
-
- If SAINT PETER'S WOLF by Michael Cadnum (see our review this issue)
- has got you slavering for more werewolf drama, just check out a few of
- these bestial books:
-
- THE WEREWOLF OF PARIS by Guy Endore (1933). A classic novel of an
- unlucky lycanthrope, a victim of circumstance and bad genes. He is
- given a chance at redemption by his lover's self-sacrifice, but things
- still don't work out too well.
-
- GREY SHAPES by Jack Mann (1937). This was the second novel in Mann's
- Gees series, with a lycanthropic theme.
-
- THE WHITE WOLF by Franklin Gregory (1941). A Pennsylvania perfumer
- learns that his daughter has become a werewolf, and a boy who loves
- her is in similar danger, unless she can be caught and killed.
-
- DARKER THAN YOU THINK by Jack Williamson (1948). A second human
- species, Homo lycanthropus, is trying to take over. The plot concerns
- an investigative reporter who is charmed by a female werewolf.
- Considered by many to be one of the classic werewolf stories.
-
- INVADERS FROM THE DARK by Greye La Spina (1960). A widow
- knowledgeable in the field of the occult battles a female werewolf for
- the soul of a young man. Published by Arkham House in 1960, this was a
- revised version of a 1925 serial from WEIRD TALES. The paperback
- edition was retitled SHADOW OF EVIL.
-
- THE WOLFEN by Whitley Strieber (1978). Wolfen are not quite
- werewolves, but are a separate species of carnivorous humanoid wolves
- who balance society's scales by preying on the corrupt and evil. The
- plot deals with a homicide investigation of one of the wolfen kills.
- This was Strieber's first novel, and was made into a decent movie.
-
- THE NIGHTWALKER by Thomas Tessier (1979). An American Vietnam veteran
- living in London discovers that he is slowly changing into a werewolf.
- Told from the perspective of Bobby Ives, the shapeshifter himself,
- this is one of the best werewolf stories, and is too often overlooked.
-
- THE HOUSE OF THE WOLF by Basil Copper (1983). Another great period
- piece from Basil Copper and published by Arkham House.
-
- THE GODFORSAKEN by Chelsea Quinn Yarbro (1983). Yarbro had a very
- successful historical series about her vampire Saint Germain; this is
- a similarly historical rendering of a werewolf: Rolon, heir to King
- Alonzo. Set during the Spanish Inquisition, it's large and lavish, but
- sometimes a bit slow.
-
- THE TALISMAN by Stephen King & Peter Straub (1984). This
- collaborative novel covered a lot of ground, but one of the most
- memorable characters was a childlike good-natured werewolf named Wolf
- (Right here and now!).
-
- THE DARK CRY OF THE MOON by Charles L. Grant (1986). The second
- volume of a trilogy set in Grant's fictional small town of Oxrun
- Station (the others were THE SOFT WHISPER OF THE DEAD, 1982, and THE
- LONG NIGHT OF THE GRAVE, 1986). All three were published by Donald M.
- Grant.
-
- THE WOLF'S HOUR by Robert R. McCammon (1989). A horror novel set
- during World War II concerning one Michael Gallatin, British spy and
- werewolf, who can infiltrate enemy lines better than any mere human.
- One of McCammon's most popular novels.
-
- *--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*--*
-
- COMING IN RFP #19 -- THE HALLOWEEN ISSUE!
-
- The Big Four:
-
- Stephen King--Robert R. McCammon--Dan Simmons--Dean R. Koontz
-
- Plus++++
- Choice titles like:
-
- HANGMAN by Christopher A. Bohjalian
- BOY'S LIFE by Robert R. McCammon
- UNDER THE FANG edited by Robert R. McCammon (The first anthology from
- The Horror Writers of America)
- THE SHAPE UNDER THE SHEET: THE COMPLETE STEPHEN KING ENCYCLOPEDIA by
- Stephen J. Spignesi
- THE STAKE by Richard Laymon
- DESCENT by Ron Dee
- MASTERY by Kelley Wilde
- HORROR COMICS: THE ILLUSTRATED HISTORY by Mike Benton
- SOMETHING STIRS by Charles L. Grant
-
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