Science Fiction and Teh Gays

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on the "origins of disco hatred thread" Drew Daniel noted that "proportionally gays are over-represented in sci-fi fandom" - a claim I'm kinda mystified by/curious about. Mostly because I'm a huge sci-fi nerd, yet none of my gay friends/acquaintances share this interest. There's only a handful of gay sci-fi writers I can think of (Delany, Butler, Burroughs), and I can't readily recall many gay-friendly sci-fi icons (uh, Chris Tucker in 5th Element?) so I'm wondering where this comes from and if other people agree/disagree... I can dig it on a *theoretical* level in that I see the obvious connections between gay identity politics and science fiction tropes, but in reality, I don't think there was a disproportionate amount of gay attendees at last year's San Francisco WonderCon, for example...

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 6 April 2005 15:24 (twenty years ago)

Drew's right. A lot of sci-fi crit theory guys and teachers and what not are gay.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 15:28 (twenty years ago)

Did you ever take a class with E4rl J4cks0n at UCSC, Shakey?

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 15:29 (twenty years ago)

I remember asking about this in a modern gay lit class at UCLA and learning that in the prof/students' viewpoints there wasn't as much gay friendly SF as there was fantasy -- but then again I thought this had a lot to do with Mercedes Lackey. I ended up writing a paper on James Baldwin's Another Country and Delany's Dhalgren that got me into grad school (thesis in brief: Baldwin's story is before the apocalypse, Delany's after, but same general setting exploring similar tropes).

Ned Raggett (Ned), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 15:31 (twenty years ago)

who was that fantasy woman who did all those amazonian planet novels? i can't think of her name. but i think they are feminist amazonian planet novels. and my lesbian mother-in-law has everything she ever wrote.

scott seward (scott seward), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 15:39 (twenty years ago)

Andre Norton?

Ned Raggett (Ned), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 15:39 (twenty years ago)

"Did you ever take a class with E4rl J4cks0n at UCSC, Shakey?"

no - tho I did have a great lit professor (name escapes me, but he was younger than most profs) who taught a "Genre Fiction" class that did a great job covering sci-fi, and he was def. gay. "The Time Machine" was the chosen sci-fi text, tho I also got to work "Brazil" into the class. (Not surprisingly, gay disco also came up at one point, I think in relation to some discussion of John Waters...)

Dhalgren, ugh. I wish I enjoyed Delany more than I do.

arrrgh, I know what lesbian fantasy novelist yr talkign about Scott, I just saw some big bio about her on the shelf at City Lights yesterday but fuck, I'm blanking as well...

x-post

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 6 April 2005 15:40 (twenty years ago)

but again - the crit world is one thing, "fandom" at large is quite another, I think...

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 6 April 2005 15:41 (twenty years ago)

Well Drew will have to come back and clarify, but I would imagine that's probably what he was talking about.

The J4cks0n sci-fi class was amazing. I don't think I have the syllabus still, but I remember reading:

The Puppet Masters
Fury
More Than Human
The Stars My Destination
The Fifth Head of Cerebus
The Female Man
Galaxies
A Specter Is Haunting Texas
Dr Adder
"Mimsy Were The Borogroves"
"The Cold Equations"
"The Roads Must Roll"
"Scanners Live In Vain"
"The Girl Who Plugged In"
"Fondly Fahrenheit"

and a whole bunch of other stuff. It was insane.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 15:49 (twenty years ago)

congrats, on the bi-curious joke.

RJG (RJG), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 15:49 (twenty years ago)

no PKD!

still, yeah great list. Some of that stuff I'm unfamiliar with tho (Dr Adder? The Female Man? The Fifth Head of Cerebus? - shouldn't that be Cerberus?)

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 6 April 2005 15:51 (twenty years ago)

"proportionally gays are over-represented in sci-fi fandom"

From my experience in future studies online communities, that is correct, and it is also true for transsexuals and other minorities. The humanist lessons of equity to be found in sci-fi resonates so well with de fandom, concerned about progressive civil rights and liberties, that it creates a welcoming environment for intellectual exchanges.

Sébastien Chikara (Sébastien Chikara), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 15:52 (twenty years ago)

It should be.

Dr Adder is KW Jeter's first book. The Female Man is Joanna Russ. The Fifth Head of Cerebus is the ridiculously astounding good Gene Wolfe novel.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 15:53 (twenty years ago)

I think he didn't teach Dick because he felt 1) like they were hard books for him to teach cuz he loved them too much and 2) cuz he felt like enough people read him without it needing to be in a class.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 15:54 (twenty years ago)

I have no idea why I misspelled Cerberus again. Fuck you Dave Sim.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 15:55 (twenty years ago)

amazon planet woman = joanna russ?

mark s (mark s), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 15:56 (twenty years ago)

http://images.amazon.com/images/P/0807062995.01._AA400_SCLZZZZZZZ_.jpg

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 15:58 (twenty years ago)

didn't delany called his daughter - WHO I'VE MET preen preen - after j.russ's alyx? (i might be confused abt this)

mark s (mark s), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 16:02 (twenty years ago)

It wouldn't surprise me. Who's Delany married to again? Some feminist sci-fi writer, correct?

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 16:03 (twenty years ago)

no, feminist poet, marion something i think (i'm at work or i'd look it up)

mark s (mark s), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 16:04 (twenty years ago)

No my mistake. A poet Marilyn Hacker.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 16:04 (twenty years ago)

i mean she's a feminist writer yes but poems not scifi

mark s (mark s), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 16:04 (twenty years ago)

that's it

mark s (mark s), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 16:05 (twenty years ago)

i haven't met her

mark s (mark s), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 16:05 (twenty years ago)

i can personally vouch for this, so many of my gay friends are obsessed with Dr Who and Star Trek. I dunno where the love for Buffy fits in here or if it does at all.

jed_ (jed), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 16:05 (twenty years ago)

I guess she his ex-wife now too (at least according to this online biography.)

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 16:06 (twenty years ago)

I like the covers on that series. (Okay, so I do occasionally read some fiction. It was actually several years ago that I read anything from that imprint.)

RS £aRue (rockist_scientist), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 16:07 (twenty years ago)

well buffy's not scifi obv but it's coded "sexually transgressive" fanwise (as is slash generally)

xena wz secretly set in neveryona, no? (this is my theory)

mark s (mark s), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 16:07 (twenty years ago)

yeah i think they seperated in like 1969 alex! but they were still good friends

mark s (mark s), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 16:08 (twenty years ago)

"motion of light on water" is one of my all-time favourite books

mark s (mark s), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 16:08 (twenty years ago)

(xx-post)Hahaha that would awesome if it were true.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 16:08 (twenty years ago)

"Fuck you Dave Sim."

haha - indeed. this is totally an unrelated tangent but I'm fascinated by Sim's Michael Jackson-style self-absorption/detachment from reality progression...

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 6 April 2005 16:09 (twenty years ago)

if sam raimi isn't a delany scholar i am the face of boe

mark s (mark s), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 16:09 (twenty years ago)

If he is that only makes Tin Cup that much more upsetting.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 16:11 (twenty years ago)

i don't think joanna russ is it. all this woman's paperbacks have really cool sword and sorcery covers with amazon warriors holding the leashes of their pet slave-men. wait, who wrote the mists of avalon? was that her?

scott seward (scott seward), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 16:46 (twenty years ago)

Marion Zimmer Bradley wrote that.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 16:46 (twenty years ago)

that's her, i think. in fact, i'm sure.

scott seward (scott seward), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 16:47 (twenty years ago)

no - I'm thinking of someone else from a much earlier period. Also MZB's writing is incredibly shitty and boring.

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 6 April 2005 16:48 (twenty years ago)

You aren't thinking of CL Moore are you?

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 16:49 (twenty years ago)

check out how many books she has written!!!!!:

http://www.fantasticfiction.co.uk/authors/Marion_Zimmer_Bradley.htm

scott seward (scott seward), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 16:50 (twenty years ago)

Are you talking about the Darkover books?

Curious George (1/6 Scale Model) (Rock Hardy), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 16:50 (twenty years ago)

one word: chewbacca

hstencil (hstencil), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 16:53 (twenty years ago)

I didn't realize Marion Zimmer Bradley was a lesbian.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 16:53 (twenty years ago)

I didn't realize Chewbacca was a lesbian either.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 16:54 (twenty years ago)

Dude, Chewbacca had a bandolier; that SCREAMS lesbian!

The Ghost of Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 16:55 (twenty years ago)

So wait were all the Sand People lesbians too? Those guys were bandolier crazy IIRC?

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 16:57 (twenty years ago)

Well I huh?

Ned Raggett (Ned), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 16:57 (twenty years ago)

Hi folks, this thread is off and running while I sleep late. Um, I guess my claim could be easily shot down by someone who goes to sci-fi fan events (I haven't so I'm out of my league and clearly talking shit there). I guess my claim was an observation based on the high number among queers that I know of queers who are into sci fi and/or fantasy novels and films, and that, when I look at their take on these things, it isn't just about thinking Wesley Crusher or Adrick is cute, it's that they are into the leverage that imagining a different society, or longing to live in a different place and time, affords. It's inflected with a certain agenda that seems queer to me. Oh, and circumstantially, my younger brother also studied with Mr. J4ckson at Santa Cruz, then TAed for him, and then wound up being his roommate for a while- 3arl is a great example of a theoretically savvy queer reader of sci fi (among other things- does anyone know if he's published his stuff on Patricia Highsmith?)

Drew Daniel (Drew Daniel), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 17:03 (twenty years ago)

okay, after looking at that page i can safely say that my mother-in-law does NOT own everything by Marion Zimmer Bradley. Not even close. (And my M.I.L. has excellent taste in literary fiction. I'm always finding something good on her bookshelves.)

scott seward (scott seward), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 17:05 (twenty years ago)

http://www.scienzagiovane.unibo.it/intartificiale/images/c3po.jpg

latebloomer: strawman knockdowner (latebloomer), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 17:08 (twenty years ago)

When was your brother at Santa Cruz, Drew?

Yeah, E4rl used to have a website detailing what he was up to, but it seems to have disappeared. I haven't heard anything about the Highsmith stuff.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 17:10 (twenty years ago)

About four years ago or so. I think E4rl is in Asia- I know he was in Thailand during the tsunami- I got an email describing a scary close call. But he's okay.

Drew Daniel (Drew Daniel), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 17:15 (twenty years ago)

http://allyourtrekarebelongto.us/theguys.jpg

mark s (mark s), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 17:17 (twenty years ago)

(there must be tons of old-skool k/s on the web but i don't know how to google it)

mark s (mark s), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 17:19 (twenty years ago)

That's good to hear. When I was briefly flirting with the idea of graduate school I contacted him, but that was ages ago and he was talking about some film series he had put together which looked really neat.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 17:22 (twenty years ago)

So wait were all the Sand People lesbians too? Those guys were bandolier crazy IIRC?

They were called the Sand People because they had so much sand in their vaginas that they tried to kill anyone who even came near them.

The Ghost of Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 17:32 (twenty years ago)

ihttp://www.setel.com/~ccprek/pics/hug.jpg

Zebra, Alpha Go! (cprek), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 17:40 (twenty years ago)

the K/S angle is interesting, as that does seem to be more of a popular response than a critical one... that shit cracks me up tho. As a huge original series Trek fan, digging for homoeroticism in the Kirk/Spock/McCoy troika is like shooting fish in a barrel.

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 6 April 2005 17:42 (twenty years ago)

by/curious

EXELSIOR!!!!

stevie (stevie), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 17:49 (twenty years ago)

I love E4rl J4ckson Jr. (in a student-teacher transference kind of way; he was really a key part of whipping me into shape and pushed me, and a lot of the people taking his classes, farther than we thought we could go). I was only able to take 5 classes with him due to the fact that he fell in love with South Korea (and hated being at UCSC due to department and campus politics). That sci-fi class sounds great; when I was there (00-04) he pretty much quit teaching actual literature and devoted himself almost exclusively to cinema (he was doing two screening series a week, plus occasionally he'd have eight hour marathons on weekends). He became stranger as time went on; highlights include playing the last 20 minutes of Ichi the Killer during an in-class midterm and looping the final death scene in Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance (really just the part where the guy gets a note attached to his chest by a knife) for the last five minutes of class while laughing hysterically. That was the class your brother TA'd for, Drew (what is he up to these days? I'm sure you don't know me, but I've been lurking for a few years and occasionally say something, I don't mean to come off sounding stalkerish. I went to his house a few times and talked to him in class occasionally).

The story with the website is that there was a server crash in Feb '04 that erased the entire thing and he couldn't be arsed to do it over. The entire website is still available through archive.org, though [ http://web.archive.org/web/20031231012000/http://www.anotherscene.com/index.html ] (I tried telling him after class one day but I'm not sure he was listening to me, maybe whoever is still in contact with him can reiterate the fact that it [anotherscene.com AND letsdeviant.com, which were two different sites with different material) still exists and he could simply link directly to the archive - it would be a shame to let all that work be stuck in an obscure corner of the internet.

Getting back to the topic, a 30 page essay from his book Strategies of Deviance (which is great, but very dense reading for those not lit critically inclined) "Imagining it Otherwise: Alternative Sexualities in the Fictions of Samuel L. Delany" [ http://web.archive.org/web/19990129040156/wwwcatsic.ucsc.edu/~ltmo115/sod3a.htm ]

Also, here [http://web.archive.org/web/19990219192706/wwwcatsic.ucsc.edu/~ltmo115/115syl.htm ] is the syllabus for that sci-fi class that was brought up earlier in the thread. And I haven't heard anything about a Highsmith book (he did a seminar on Patty Highsmith and Jim Thompson in 02 but I wasn't able to get in, to my chagrin) - when I asked him about his next publication a while back he was working on a book about Japanese film from 1960-present.

D.J. Anderson, loyal pupil, Wednesday, 6 April 2005 18:02 (twenty years ago)

I could never call Patricia Highsmith, "Patty". It would be to forward of me.

scott seward (scott seward), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 18:15 (twenty years ago)

She was a warm and wonderful woman and surely would not mind my pretense of casual familiarity.

And I was wrong, that syllabus isn't the exact one that was mentioned earlier (which I assume was 94), it is from a later class (97). The 94 one is supposedly on the wayback machine (http://web.archive.org/web/*/http://www.slip.net/~ejackson/outthereTP.html) but I can't get any pages to connect and I have a feeling that even if they did only a 404 would be found.

D.J. Anderson, unafraid, Wednesday, 6 April 2005 18:22 (twenty years ago)

also, i'm wondering if it has something to do with 70's science fiction. much 70's science fiction was all about varying things up from what had been traditional sexual relations, much like pop culture was going thru at the time. of course, science fiction being what it is and extending things out(i.e. an extreme form of a straight human guy bedding done somebody other than just a straight human chick), went the route of sex with aliens(as i noted on the 70's pop culture thread). ever read Larry Niven's _Ringworld_?

kingfish, Wednesday, 6 April 2005 18:26 (twenty years ago)

there's no actual sex with aliens in ringworld: the hero is a hefner-type bed-any-cute-chick bachelor's-pad type guy, but there IS an undercurrent of "uh oh, sex just changed, what did i miss?" by virtue of the lottery-shaped girl's breeding-for-maximum-luck genetics

mark s (mark s), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 18:48 (twenty years ago)

well there were the sex-with-aliens guy books, but naming two books by women that used sf as a springboard to imagine complete gender ambiguity: Le Guin's 'The Left Hand of Darkness', Octavia Butler's Xenogenesis trilogy... those books took me for a loop in college, they were both so plausible

milton parker (Jon L), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 18:48 (twenty years ago)

I don't think E4rl actually taught the '97 one (a TA did with some support, but I think E4rl himself had some health problems or perhaps was just being flighty--I liked the guy a lot, but he was um decidedly unpredictable when it came to ya know actually showing up or grading papers or filling out evals.) Due to Websense filtering I can't see the syllabus for it. Can someone paste it in here?

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 18:48 (twenty years ago)

niven is right on the borderline between golden-age and new-wave sensibilities: the new wave was A LOT A LOT A LOT about sex (even indeed esp. the sword-and-sorcery fantasy-reaction to the ballard/burroughs wing of the new wave) (the sword-and-sorcery wing as noted had a STRONG lesb and leatherman S&M dimension) (delany of course at xroads between golden age, ballardism AND sword&sorcery)

old-skool k/s wz driven by WOMEN fan-writers (with their own modes of distribution, somewhat invisible to nerdboy radar)

post-stonewall gay and lesb culture - as an out real-world political project - is ITSELF a kind of a science-fictional impulse

mark s (mark s), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 18:54 (twenty years ago)

http://www.airguideonline.com/img/design/outland.jpg

!!!

mark s (mark s), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 18:56 (twenty years ago)

that movie's terrible. let's talk about Zardoz' "evil penis" trope instead.

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 6 April 2005 18:56 (twenty years ago)

I remember liking Outland. Silent Running is the king of 70s sci-fi though!

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 18:58 (twenty years ago)

my dad took me to see Silent Running when I was like 6 or 7. Freaked me the fuck out.

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 6 April 2005 18:59 (twenty years ago)

b-but it is called OUTland! zardoz is way gayer tho

mark s (mark s), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 18:59 (twenty years ago)

Just for Sean's facial HAIR alone it is!

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 19:00 (twenty years ago)

Best sex-with-aliens story: Philip Jose Farmer, "Mother."

Curious George (1/6 Scale Model) (Rock Hardy), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 19:00 (twenty years ago)

Tues 1/07 H. G. Wells, The Time Machine; Robert Heinlein, " All You Zombies . . . "; Stephen Baxter, "The Science of The Time Machine; Greg Egan, "Extras" and "Closer". Chapter one and Two, College Connections

See the Guide and the Guide for Week One for details on how to get the texts.

1/14; Tom Godwin, " The Cold Equations; " Lewis Padgett, " All Mimsy Were the Borogoves" Racoona Sheldon, "The Screwfly Solution". Thomas A. Disch, " The Squirrel Cage"; Recommended: John Varley, "The Phantom of Kansas "; Ursula le Guin, " Nine Lives" Chapters 2 and 3, College Connections.

1/21 Alfred Bester, The Stars My Destination; Margaret St. Clair, "Short in the Chest; " Leigh Bracket, TBA; Chapter 4, College Connections

1/28 Theodore Sturgeon, The Cosmic Rape. Philip K. Dick. The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch.Recommended: Sturgeon, The Collected Stories; Argyll. Chapter 5, College Connections

2/04 Thomas A. Disch, "The Planet of the Rapes"; Karen Joy Fowler, "The View From Venus "; Joanna Russ, " When it Changed"; Samuel R. Delany, " Aye, and Gemorrah . . . "; Roger Zelazny, "A Rose for Eccleisastes " Chapter 6, College Connections TAKE AN ONLINE IMAGE RESPONSE TEST (Not Voigt-Kampff I Promise)


2/11 Samuel R. Delany, Trouble on Triton and selected critical writings by Delany from Silent Interviews; Click HERE for Earl Jackson, Jr. "Imagining it Otherwise: Alternative Sexualities in the Fictions of Samuel R. Delany"Chapter Three ofStrategies of Deviance; Chapter 9, College Connections

2/18 James Tiptree, Jr. "The Girl Who Was Plugged In" C. L. Moore, "No Woman Born" ***2/18 EXCHANGE DAY - Monday classes held on Tuesday, Tuesday classes cancelled. Chapters 10 &11, College Connections

2/25 Joanna Russ. The Female Man. Selections from Russ's critical writings. Chapter 12, College Connections

3/04 Jack Womack, Ambient and Elvissey. Chapter 13 and 14, College Connections

3/11 Pat Cadigan, Fools; assorted online texts/interviews; Chapters 15 and 16, College Connections

E4rl could be flaky at times (in 96/97, particularly, due to his head injury, so the story goes), but he was also really dedicated. One quarter I was there he had multiple root canals without painkillers so that he would still be able to make it to class and teach, and there were many times that he'd sleep in his office a few days at a time in order to get work done. There were a few times that Drew's bro had to teach class while he was TAing, but that was a bad and busy quarter for EJ.

I hate to like an apologist but he was really inspiring to me and all my friends (the only friends I had for most of my time at college were the other dedicated fans who also took every class and showed up to the twice-weekly screenings) and we'd back him up against the detractors (one time for fun we passed around a sign-up sheet for "E4rl's 4rmy" swearing our loyalty and willingness to fight the good fight against the admin and presented it to him during a screening of Tarkovsky's Stalker - there was actually a pretty large amount of signatures, around 40)

Sorry to all the non-UCSC people, I'll stop derailing

D.J. Anderson, unable to access password, Wednesday, 6 April 2005 19:12 (twenty years ago)

Chapter 6, College Connections TAKE AN ONLINE IMAGE RESPONSE TEST (Not Voigt-Kampff I Promise)

har har. who was that reporter that administered the Voight-Kampff test to some local mayoral candidates a few years ago?

also, the 2nd ringworld book certainly had plenty of xenohumpin' in it.

kingfish, Wednesday, 6 April 2005 19:44 (twenty years ago)

That's a good syllabus, but to my memory the '94 version was even a little better. That said The Cosmic Rape > More Than Human.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 19:52 (twenty years ago)

yeah i never read the second ringworld - does it have any of the same characters?

mark s (mark s), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 20:01 (twenty years ago)

xpost

Wow, how cool. Earl's Army! Yowsa. I will have to tell Matthew (my brother) about this thread. I like the comment upthread about gay lib being a kind of science fictional agenda- it's weird the way that the "it's not a choice" argument piggybacks on brain research in some ways, though you could maybe also counter that with the way that the cultural capital of ancient Greek and pre-Christian cultures get deployed as a "dignifying" rehtorical move in pleas for acceptance of queers- starting at least during the WIlde trial and carrying on from there.

Drew Daniel (Drew Daniel), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 20:03 (twenty years ago)

E4rl was one of those people who could inspire a lot of folks (and also anger a bunch too--there were A LOT of complaints about him back in the day and the Lit Board could not stand him.) There was definitely an "E4rl's Army" back in my day too (also a little Tr0y B00ne army as well--although he was less controversial.)

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 20:13 (twenty years ago)

has anyone read the new ishiguro novel?

http://www.slate.com/id/2116040/

the prayer impaired, Wednesday, 6 April 2005 21:47 (twenty years ago)

in queer pulp it showed marian zimmer bradleys early dyke pulp

anthony, Wednesday, 6 April 2005 22:12 (twenty years ago)

"also a little Tr0y B00ne army as well--although he was less controversial.)"

Troy Boone!!! That was the genre fiction prof I was trying to remember up-thread. Man, he was great, definitely pushed me and improved my writing. One of the best, most memorable classes I took outside of my major.

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 6 April 2005 22:30 (twenty years ago)

Tr0y was fantastic. He's at Pitt now, I believe.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 22:35 (twenty years ago)

of all the profs I had, him and J4ck Sch4rr were the most entertaining to listen to - just really engaging, larger-than-life lecturers.

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 6 April 2005 22:39 (twenty years ago)

okay, and D4niel W1rls too, but nobody cares about the politics dept at UCSC...

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 6 April 2005 22:40 (twenty years ago)

I like a lot of the lit profs. They had a good mix when I was there.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 22:46 (twenty years ago)

2nd ringworld = ringworld engineers?

yes, it has all the same characters. louis wu and chmee in starring roles. teela brown is there. ok the puppeteer is not the same one, but who can tell the difference anyway?

curious george is correct about the philip jose farmer story. this book seriously warped my mind when i was 12.

http://www.pjfarmer.com/simages/sr1.jpg

vahid (vahid), Wednesday, 6 April 2005 23:00 (twenty years ago)

Hahaha, yes, that's the one. I like the sequel to "Mother" -- a retelling of The Three Little Pigs on another planet.

Curious George (1/6 Scale Model) (Rock Hardy), Thursday, 7 April 2005 01:02 (twenty years ago)

Holy shit - halfway through Dr. Adder right now, really blown away. Tossed off references Peter Camejo! And a PKD character who runs a German opera radio station! awesome. Thx for the recommendation (also got Wolfe's "Fifth Head of Cerberus", will read that next, and then on to Joanna Russ)

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 20 April 2005 18:31 (twenty years ago)

http://www.bbc.co.uk/cult/classic/tripods/reviews.shtml "This is the gayest thing ever!"

Jaunty Alan (Alan), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 19:55 (twenty years ago)

Where did you find a copy, Shakey? Have you been to Borderlands? That place is just incredible.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 20:23 (twenty years ago)

oh yeah - of course they were the only bookstore that had copies of all three books I was looking for. I go there all the time, great great place. and they have a cool mascot w/the furless cat and all...

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 20 April 2005 20:26 (twenty years ago)

Well after you finish those three you should read Jeter's The Glass Hammer.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 20:28 (twenty years ago)

is that his only other book? there's a blurb for it in my copy of Dr. Adder (which is, of course, a shredded pocket paperback from 1984 - I can't believe this has gone out of print)

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 20 April 2005 20:31 (twenty years ago)

No he ended up doing a bunch of other stuff and then he wrote the Blade Runner sequels.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 20:33 (twenty years ago)

"Blade Runner sequels" = yikes.

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 20 April 2005 20:34 (twenty years ago)

Dr Adder was apparently pretty controversial when it came out. Apparently Jeter had written it in college in the early 70s and then sent it to Dick and then spent the next dozen years trying to find someone who would publish it.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 20:34 (twenty years ago)

yeah, that's what I gleaned from the afterword (which I, um, read first) - I'm not *that* surprised it wasn't published, its incredibly graphic and brutal, perhaps needlessly so in some places, which is bound to put people off. doesn't bother me much, but then I'm just coming off a fairly lengthy Burroughs kick...

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 20 April 2005 20:41 (twenty years ago)

It's amazing what floats in and out of print in the sci-fi world too. If The Stars My Destination can be out of print for twenty some odd years, anything can.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 20:51 (twenty years ago)

Apparently James Tiptree's best short stories have been re-collected and reprinted and a new snazzy TPB so it's all good right now.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 20 April 2005 20:54 (twenty years ago)

yeah, the Bester situation was really ridiculous. Before those came back into print I'd been looking for them for several years because Moorcock always mentioned him as a big reference point/inspiration for New Worlds (along w/Burroughs and Dick of course - I'm a huge Moorcock fan if that wasn't obvious already).

I saw some Tiptree poetry collection from '67 in Dog-Eared Books just the other day that had a great psychedelic printjob - I almost got it but poetry isn't my main interest w/him...

Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 20 April 2005 20:57 (twenty years ago)

(Tiptree's a her)

I should totally know more about this, since I just set up as a sci-fi book dealer at a gaming convention this past weekend. but no, all I can say is there were many funny-looking nerds there.

Fetish and sci fi are like peanut butter and jelly- John Norman "gor" series, Piers anthony.

-rainbow bum- (-rainbow bum-), Thursday, 21 April 2005 00:44 (twenty years ago)

Technically, Tiptree is a pseudonym. Alice Sheldon was definitely a her though.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Thursday, 21 April 2005 01:28 (twenty years ago)

Read all the Russ you can! Dunno if they've been reprinted recently in the age of PC, but my mum's 70s paperback copies' covers always got me funny looks on the bus due to excessive exploitative nipple count, which is odd for such a feminist writer. Better than anthropomorphic (for which read 'tits') alien princesses entangled in tentacles, I guess.

From the above syllabus: Zelazny is an interesting one. All about the transgressive and whatnot, people as gods, dragons as people, and in the Amber series there's a lot of incest. Fetishistic literary nymphomania, classic or dud?

Liz :x (Liz :x), Thursday, 21 April 2005 09:46 (twenty years ago)

three weeks pass...
two things about Joanna Russ:

1) Read "Picnic on Paradise" first (as that was easily locatable for a mere $1.50), not bad but not exactly impressive. Run-of-the-mill 60s sci-fi on a par with Pohl, Ellison, etc. Started in on "The Female Man" yesterday and I confess I am having a *much* harder time with it than I expected. If the basic premise wasn't spelled out on the back of the jacket I would be even more lost. The main issue is the mutability of the first-person narration, the ever-shifting "I". I tend to really enjoy non-linear plot structures and multiple narrative voices, but the shifts between viewpoint and even simple things like characters names in this book are so abrupt and (often) for no apparent reason that I'm having trouble following the most basic plot points. Joanna Russ herself seems to play an intermittent role - sometimes appearing as some kind of "spirit"? but also interacting/speaking with the characters...? I'm 90 pages in...

2) I had an odd interaction with the clerk at Stacy's while buying "The Female Man", he was a bear-ish older guy, took an unusual interest in the book - asking me what it was about, if it was like "Left Hand of Darkness", etc., smiling reasurringly at me all the while. I left kinda abruptly when someone else barged up to ask a question. Only much later did I recall that the last time I saw this guy I had been buying a copy of "The World of Normal Boys", and that he was probably gay, and that maybe he was chatting me up just to be flirty. Which made me think of this thread. (ps. I love San Francisco.)

Shakey Mo Collier, Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:36 (twenty years ago)

flirty book nerds!

kingfish maximum overdrunk (Kingfish), Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:42 (twenty years ago)

if anyone has any helpful words re: The Female Man please chime in, because so far there have been entire sections that have made NO SENSE at all to me.

Shakey Mo Collier, Thursday, 12 May 2005 20:45 (twenty years ago)

Haha I need to re-read it actually. It's been over a decade since I last picked it up. Mark?

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Thursday, 12 May 2005 21:23 (twenty years ago)

okay, well here's an example - there are a couple isolated instances early on referring to a female character "becoming a man" at a cocktail party. Said cocktail party scene occurs a bit later in the book, but it is not clear WHO "becomes a man", nor is the significance or method of this transformation elaborated upon. There are numerous instances of the narrator referring to herself as "I" on one line, "we" a few lines later, and then to three separate characters (Joanna, Jeanine, and Janet) a few more lines later. I don't get it. Is this all cleared up at the end or something? Is the book just a collection of randomly thrown-together feminist "thought pieces" that are not meant to cohere into a standard plot w/identifiable characters, motivations, conflicts, etc.

Shakey Mo Collier, Thursday, 12 May 2005 21:30 (twenty years ago)

Okay yes I believe that will be clearer by the end.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Thursday, 12 May 2005 21:33 (twenty years ago)

that's reassuring, I will soldier on...

so are Wolfe's New Sun books worth checking into? I'm wary of the whole sci-fi "series" trope where everything's a trilogy/tetrology/ooglology. Apart from Moorcock, almost none of my favorite SF writers do it.

Shakey Mo Collier, Thursday, 12 May 2005 21:44 (twenty years ago)

I've never read the New Sun books. Actually I've never read anything by Wolfe other than the Fifth Head.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Thursday, 12 May 2005 21:45 (twenty years ago)

ah yes, thanx for that recommendation as well, really dug Fifth Head of Cerberus.

Shakey Mo Collier, Thursday, 12 May 2005 21:47 (twenty years ago)

Yeah that's like the book I force anthro majors who want a good entry into sci-fi to read. Do you like Silverberg?

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Thursday, 12 May 2005 21:48 (twenty years ago)

man, I haven't read any Silverberg since jr high/high school. I can't even remember what I read though... at that age I pretty much just read anything in the sci-fi dept at the library that caught my eye.

Shakey Mo Collier, Thursday, 12 May 2005 21:50 (twenty years ago)

I made Adam buy Dying Inside for like $2 recently. I don't think he's read it yet though.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Thursday, 12 May 2005 21:51 (twenty years ago)

haha - the whole time I was reading "Fifth Head" I was thinking of that Maya Deren line "when the anthropologist arrives, the gods depart".

x-post

Shakey Mo Collier, Thursday, 12 May 2005 21:51 (twenty years ago)

Re: The Female Man, yes, the err 'plot' threads eventually sort of cohere. The general premise (I think) is that all the J-named women are versions of Russ in different universes/planets, and they get hoicked into each others' worlds and interact and stuff. So it's kind of semi-autobiographical (as are a couple of her short stories) but in that wacky experimental 60s way.

Liz :x (Liz :x), Friday, 13 May 2005 07:14 (twenty years ago)

thx Liz - after reading a bit more last night and this morning on the bus yeah, I was starting to piece that picture together (specifically when I spotted that two of the different characters each said their first words as a child were "See the Moon"). I hadn't been expecting anything quite so pomo after reading "Picnic on Paradise" (tho admittedly these books are 10 years apart).

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 13 May 2005 15:21 (twenty years ago)

Gene Wolfe's "New Sun" books (or the 1st 4 at least, I saw a furter series, which I haven't read) are absolutely wonderful.

Great thread, people.

Pashmina (Pashmina), Friday, 13 May 2005 15:58 (twenty years ago)

seven months pass...
REVIVE!

So have since read Gene Wolfe's "Book of the New Sun" trilogy - a bit of a slog and a little too many of the trappings of fantasy for my liking, but ultimately very rewarding, great page-turner, a lot of interesting ideas (particularly taken by the whole concept behind the Autarch, and the weirdo Soviet-sorta culture that can only speak in approved phrases). I've had a more enjoyable time with his short story collections ("Endangered Species" - read during my trip to India, and "Strange Travellers", which I just started last night).

So, more suggestions please, I need some new reading material, new authors to be come enamoured of (there are only so many PKD and WS Burroughs books, ya know)

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 13 December 2005 19:58 (twenty years ago)

I don't particularly recommend it, but as I recall Harry Harrison's Star Smashers of the Galaxy Rangers has the two main male characters revealing to the main female character, who can't decide between them, that they're gay - on the final page.

So you won't need to read that. But it's vaguely on topic.

angle of d... (tingo), Tuesday, 13 December 2005 20:56 (twenty years ago)

The wierdest experience I had selling books at a flea market was when I gave my email to some guy interested in buying Gor books and then like a month after I forgot the whole thing he wrote me a really suggestive email asking to be my daddy. I replied "errr sorry I just sell books and I found some you want" but the email bounced.

-rainbow bum- (-rainbow bum-), Tuesday, 13 December 2005 21:15 (twenty years ago)

Shakey read Barry Malzberg! Start with Beyond Apollo and Galaxies and then see if you can find his awesome collection of essays/meditations on sci-fi The Engines of the Night. Also Kornbluth and Pohl esp. the incredible Space Merchants. And I renew my recommendation of Silverberg.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Tuesday, 13 December 2005 21:20 (twenty years ago)

oh yeah, went through a big Pohl/Kornbluth phase awhile ago (prompted by the wife's copies of the Space Merchants, Jem). Pohl can be a bit of a hack, but his good stuff is great - Jem is probably my favorite projection of human space colonization to date (next to maybe KSR's "Red Mars"). Never heard of this Malzberg guy, I'll have a look...

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 13 December 2005 22:02 (twenty years ago)

unrelated aside: I tried to start "Altered Carbon" by Richard Morgan, what a boring load of half-baked film noir-as-cyberpunk crap. When is there going to be a NEW movement in sci-fi (or is there one already happening that I don't know about...? I guess there's a lot more Octavia Butler-style weirdo multi-culti stuff lately, but none of it seems particularly interesting...)

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 13 December 2005 22:05 (twenty years ago)

I don't know of anything that Pohl did individually actually. I've only read the books he wrote with Kornbluth whose Syndic is also fantastic btw.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Tuesday, 13 December 2005 22:20 (twenty years ago)

I think even the weakest Pohl is well worth reading - a real big favourite of mine among mainline SF writers.

Martin Skidmore (Martin Skidmore), Tuesday, 13 December 2005 22:31 (twenty years ago)

Some of Pohl's 50s stuff is a little too psychoanalysis/Freudian-obsessive but yeah, he can be relied to have at least a couple interesting ideas and a plot that moves along briskly. The Heechee stuff seems to have been his biggest success, tho I only got through the first couple books. Still, when I saw the ending to "Contact" my first thought wsa TOTAL POHL RIPOFF.

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 13 December 2005 22:41 (twenty years ago)

Some silly fan-gushing about "Jem" (which really is great): http://www.scifi.com/sfw/issue236/classic.html

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 13 December 2005 22:44 (twenty years ago)

The thing that saves any of his stuff from worthlessness, that means it's always better than 80% of the genre, probably 90%, is that he could write. Not Updike/Fitzgerald grade, plainly, but he could do all of it pretty well, and that's more than so many.

What sort of stuff are you looking for, for recommendations?

Martin Skidmore (Martin Skidmore), Tuesday, 13 December 2005 22:44 (twenty years ago)

Pohl as a parallel to McBain, anyone?

Martin Skidmore (Martin Skidmore), Tuesday, 13 December 2005 22:45 (twenty years ago)

um, what am I looking for - well, in general I think I like the more experimental end of sci-fi. I like writers that mess with conventional structures of form and narrative; I like writers who are adept at projecting the problems of today into the future; I like writers who love to play with language; I like writers that can sustain a mood of jaundiced psychedelia; I like writers who can incorporate all sorts of other reference points (music, mythology, mysticism, politics, etc) into sci-fi... Moorcock, Noon, Bester, PKD, Burroughs, Disch, Lem are probably my favorites. I don't have much time for latter day cyberpunks (Gibson and Sterling really dropped the ball, I find Stephenson's obsession with money really boring, etc.). Delaney I've read and had a hard time with. The more conventional sci-fi stuff - military sci-fi, humans vs. aliens, galactic empires - puts me to sleep.

So suggest away!

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Wednesday, 14 December 2005 00:02 (twenty years ago)

How about Ted Chiang? Just bought "Stories Of Your Life and Others," after a friend photocopied "Liking What You See: A Documentary" for me and I loved it. Short story about the consequences on a college campus of somebody figuring out the technology to neutralize the part of the brain that decides how physically attractive people are.

I don't know if Kelly Link's stuff quite counts as science fiction, & suspect it doesn't--fantasy, more like?--but "Catskin" is the best story I've read all year, and most of Magic For Beginners is pretty close to that good.

Douglas (Douglas), Wednesday, 14 December 2005 00:35 (twenty years ago)

Shakey seriously read Malzberg. It's exactly what you are looking for.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Wednesday, 14 December 2005 00:38 (twenty years ago)

I really dug Kelly Link's "Stranger Things Happen". Is "Magic For Beginners" new? I think I saw a new hardback of hers, maybe that was it... I didn't get it cuz I'm cheap.

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Wednesday, 14 December 2005 00:50 (twenty years ago)

You might like "Amnesia Moon" by Jonathan Lethem, it seemed to me like it owed a lot to Philip K. Dick.

Also if you like Gene Wolfe you should really really read "The Death of Doctor Island." It might be in one of the short story collections you listed, I can't remember.

31g (31g), Wednesday, 14 December 2005 01:01 (twenty years ago)

hmm, don't know how I left Lethem off my initial list there, that's an odd omission. I've read all his sci-fi stuff, most of his non sci-fi stuff, found "Fortress of Solitude" surprisingly stiff and largely pointless, fearful of his future projects (tho his latest short story collection "Men and Comics" is fucking amazing).

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Wednesday, 14 December 2005 01:03 (twenty years ago)

I like writers that mess with conventional structures of form and narrative; I like writers who are adept at projecting the problems of today into the future; I like writers who love to play with language; I like writers that can sustain a mood of jaundiced psychedelia

wait wait wait - this is what you want and you had a hard time w/ delany?!?!?

vahid (vahid), Wednesday, 14 December 2005 01:34 (twenty years ago)

did you try "triton"?

vahid (vahid), Wednesday, 14 December 2005 01:34 (twenty years ago)

Best new SF writer since the '60s, for me, is China Mieville. Start with Perdido Street Station, as his first book was not great. Imagine someone who writes prose like M. John Harrison, with characters like Delany and compelling ideas like Dick, but with hugely exciting rollercoaster stories as well - he's astonishing.

Martin Skidmore (Martin Skidmore), Wednesday, 14 December 2005 13:47 (twenty years ago)

I'm not sure I agree with you about his storytelling gifts and his prose is a little too purple for my taste. But the fecundity of his imagination is amazing and his characters are compelling.

ps There are a number of post-60s sf writers I can think of who are as good as if not better than Mieville; John Crowley for one.

Stone Monkey (Stone Monkey), Wednesday, 14 December 2005 13:55 (twenty years ago)

I've read Delany's "Nova" and started "Dhalgren" but couldn't finish it. Mieville I started one of his novels but I don't remember which one - I remember that it had to do with a character who's wings had been cut off or mutilated or something. It was all a bit too goth-y in style for me... I have a buddy who's really into him though, I could stand to borrow something and give him another shot. One new writer I stupidly left off my list that really impressed me was Matthew Derby. His "Super Flat Times" collection was great, but I don't think he's done anything since.

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Wednesday, 14 December 2005 17:07 (twenty years ago)

Well, try sticking to Delany's pre-Dhalgren novels, maybe?

Casuistry (Chris P), Wednesday, 14 December 2005 17:30 (twenty years ago)

Hmm, I couldn't get through Super Flat Times but I do have the new Kelly Link on my reading list and her short story in that McSweeney's YA comp is chillingly good, too.

Laurel (Laurel), Wednesday, 14 December 2005 17:49 (twenty years ago)

this thread title sounds like the nominations for this years golden globes.

slow jamz and white guy indie acoustic shit (Chris V), Wednesday, 14 December 2005 17:50 (twenty years ago)

The Guy With The Golden Globes is the name of upcoming gay Bond movie.

Casuistry (Chris P), Wednesday, 14 December 2005 18:55 (twenty years ago)

The Mieville book you started was "Perdido Street Station," which is probably his best...imo Mieville's really good at worldbuilding, but his plots could use some work (and he is pretty goth/cyberpunk/"gritty" in style).

31g (31g), Wednesday, 14 December 2005 18:58 (twenty years ago)

Coincidentally, two of the main characters in his last book are gay (or one of them might be bi, I can't remember). The book is pretty weak tho.

31g (31g), Wednesday, 14 December 2005 19:15 (twenty years ago)

"super flat times" is the shit

vahid (vahid), Wednesday, 14 December 2005 19:21 (twenty years ago)

two months pass...
revive!

Reading Malzberg's "Galaxies" at the moment - took a break from reading for awhile (apart from some Roman history stuff, Suetonius and Tacitus, etc.) and am getting back into the pile of sci-fi stuff I got on my last trip to Powell's in Portland... "Galaxies" is pretty good, but I'm not blowing through it as I expected I would for such a short book. It doesn't hold my attention for extended lengths of time, perhaps due to the dryness and detached-ness of the narrative. I can't say I've read anything quite like it (tho several of po-mo Lem experiments spring to mind) and while it engages ideas I'm interested in, something is lacking in terms of drama. Still, will finish it soon, then on to Gene Wolfe's "The Island of Doctor Death" (which has a character named Captain Babcock!!! Allright!)

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Tuesday, 21 February 2006 19:29 (twenty years ago)

I am reading Delany's Fall of the Towers. So far it is amazing. My favorite thing of his I think.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Tuesday, 21 February 2006 19:50 (twenty years ago)

i have an endless appetite for clive barker style PERSECUTED BSDM MONSTERS ARE ACTUALLY THE HEROES stuff

,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Tuesday, 21 February 2006 19:54 (twenty years ago)

To the degree that it's sci-fi -- which it sort of is, dealing with cellphone-delivered brain-scrambling signals -- Stephen King's new Cell has a gay lead character, which I believe is a first for him.

phil d. (Phil D.), Tuesday, 21 February 2006 20:35 (twenty years ago)

three months pass...
revive (again)!

Schwantz lent me Margaret Atwood's "Oryx and Crake" which, while probably not strictly sci-fi, definitely seems to stem from the dystopian school of sci-fi and contains numerous ideas found in trad sci-fi authors' books (primarily Pohl, Ballard, and Vonnegut - why does everyone rip off Pohl's ideas and yet the guy gets no respect, seems almost totally unknown, etc.? I know I mentioned this earlier but I see concepts from "Jem", "Gateway", and "The Space Merchants"/"Merchant's War" popping up ALL THE TIME) "Oryx and Crake" was well-written if conventional - the pacing and gratuitous telegraphing of plot points was all pretty stndard - but there was something smug about its nihilism, an air of self-congratulation about all the half-formed concepts Atwood was tossing out; she seemed to relish recounting her horrific predictions, even when some of them seemed downright silly and highly unlikely to me (ie, pretty much anytime the subject of entertainment/media/arts was delved into). It wasn't bad, but I don't think I'll be rushing around to her other stuff anytime soon.

Maybe I'll get the Delany "Fall of the Towers" next... at the moment the only thing I am absolutely dying to read is Moorcock's final Pyat novel "The Vengeance of Rome", which won't be out in the US for some time (and also is not, strictly speaking, sci-fi).

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 8 June 2006 21:04 (nineteen years ago)

If you haven't read any Delany, I'd say start with Nova.

The Jazz Guide to Penguins on Compact Disc (Rock Hardy), Thursday, 8 June 2006 23:33 (nineteen years ago)

Cordwainer Smith was the pen name of a CIA agent who seems to have escaped from one of Burroughs' books, with at least some of Burroughs' brains(Dr. Bill had a collection, which he left to--well, somebody special). He was much more successful a writer than Charles Spender, the "Cancer Man" of X Files imfamy, but not very prolific, alas. David Lindsay (Lindsey?) wrote a A Voyage To Arcturus, which is very Space Age Rococo, maybe a bit Lovecraft, as misogynistically scientific as Burroughs, but too hyper to harp on any one point for too long (kind of like Edgar Rice Burroughs x William, or at least he's read the former and anticipates the latter, though doesn't do cutups, unless you count some of his warped insights/outsights)Also: Alfred Bester,(although his short stories all seem to have the same theme, he's hip); Fritz Leiber; Ellison-edited Dangerous Visions and Again, Dangerous Visions (Final Dangerous Visions never came out, right?); Michael Swanwick's The Iron Dragon's Daughter,Karen Joy Fowler's Sarah Canary (they can't or won't plot for shit, but compelling bits)

don (dow), Friday, 9 June 2006 01:28 (nineteen years ago)

Rudy Rucker: don't know if you'd find him all that much stylistically, but imaginative and fun as hell (and his Forced Exposure interview was one of their best ever, which is saying a lot)

don (dow), Friday, 9 June 2006 01:54 (nineteen years ago)

I've read Bester, Lieber, and at least one of Rucker's books (also read Delany's "Nova" and never finished "Dhalgren" as mentioned above) - Voyage to Arcturus sounds kinda familiar, I'll have to look that up...

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Friday, 9 June 2006 14:43 (nineteen years ago)

I found a copy of KW Jeter's "The Glass Hammer" - which looks like some good amped up Death Race 2000-type story. Really enjoyed "Dr. Adder" so hopefully this will deliver as well - highly skeptical about the rest of his output, to say the least...

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Monday, 12 June 2006 18:03 (nineteen years ago)

You can't go wrong with Thomas Disch! I had forgotten him because he hasn't written much lately. Fundamental Disch is one of the best short story collections I've ever read, and among his early novels, I remember liking The Genocides best. (On Wings of Song also has a big rep.)

The Jazz Guide to Penguins on Compact Disc (Rock Hardy), Monday, 12 June 2006 18:20 (nineteen years ago)

the Disch I've read I REALLY liked - "Camp Concentration" and "3344" (or whatever that numbered one is - really inventive multiple-storyline structure in that). Was tipped off to him by his story in Moorcock's "New World" collection (which is amazing). I haven't picked up the Genocides or Wings of Song yet, as the premises don't grab me as immediately as the other two did, but I'll probably get around to them.

Shakey Mo Collier (Shakey Mo Collier), Monday, 12 June 2006 18:24 (nineteen years ago)

eleven months pass...

Interview with Sam Delany about this stuff from June 2001

(the site is NSFW, so i'm reposting it here)

Samuel R. Delany may have dropped out of college at nineteen, but he's become the darling of the academy — not to mention a literary superstar with a cult following, critical acclaim and over thirty books to his name. A true product of the sixties, he lived on a commune in the East Village, maintained a merrily promiscuous gay sex life (he and lesbian poet Marilyn Hacker were married for a time, but divorced in 1980) and emerged as a force in science fiction, dominating the major awards and commanding unprecedented advances. In 1974, he published Dhalgren, an epic novel whose graphic descriptions of homosexual, polysexual and sadomasochistic relationships alienated many of his supporters within the field, but enthralled mainstream audiences to the tune of a million copies sold.

Here, Delany discusses the history of sex in science fiction — from the heros of the pulps to the wild experimentation of the sixties and seventies — and explains how his literary creations reflect his own legendary sexual life. — Scott Westerfeld, guest editor of Speculative Sex: The Science Fiction Issue.

SW: You've written about alien anal sex, kinky threesomes, shit-eating and pedophilia — unusual topics for science fiction. What are the experiences in your own life that inform the sex in your writing?

SD: I'm a gay man on the verge of sixty. That means I lived the first twenty-seven years of my life before Stonewall, and I have nothing but good to say of the gay rights movement. Still, paradoxically, there were far more opportunities for sex among men before Stonewall than since. When I was writing my early science fiction novels and living on the Lower East Side in the early sixties, I could get up in the morning, work until noon, then take a walk a few blocks down to the Second Avenue subway station, in the bathroom of which I would have sex with, say, three different guys. Then I'd grab a sandwich across Houston Street at Katz's and be back home by quarter past one. I'd get back to work till five. Then I'd take a stroll up to Tompkin's Square, in the men's room of which I'd have some sort of sexual encounter with, say, another five guys. And I'd be home by six-thirty. At about eight-thirty, I'd take another walk down to the Williamsburg Bridge, where I'd hang around for maybe an hour and half or two hours, and have sex with another six men.
Now, on that day, I'd gotten in a full day's work — ten hours worth. So if you asked me what I'd done, I'd tell you: I worked all day. I mean, I haven't even mentioned the docks — where, nightly, orgies went on from sunset to sunrise, involving a hundred or more men (three or four hundred on a holiday weekend) — or the baths or bars like the famous Mineshaft. But that's the kind of sexual availability I grew up with — that I had available to me from age nineteen to, say, twenty-eight or twenty-nine.
I was married at nineteen to Marilyn Hacker. But it was very easy to combine a highly satisfactory gay life with married life, since my wife was aware that I was gay. As long as my gay activity didn't interfere with our domestic situation, there wasn't any problem. And because of its all-but-ubiquitous availability (my general perception was that, within the confines of New York City, I was rarely more than twenty minutes away from an orgasm with another man, whenever I wanted one), it didn't.

SW: It's curious that you were devoted to science fiction, a genre that had such sexually repressed roots, historically speaking. Sf really became a genre in the '20s and '30s with the advent of pulp magazines. The pulps were pretty clearly divided between the Amazing Science Tales genre and True Detective. How come the gumshoes got the sex and gore, but sf wound up so chaste?

SD: Many of the early greats of sf — Hugo Gernsback (publisher of Amazing Stories) in particular — saw themselves as educators. The didactic thrust of science fiction got the genre initially pegged as children's fare. It was seen, at its best, as an extension of school and, at its worst, as teenage wish fulfillment.
The pulp hero, though he may be a renegade, is a guy who doesn't feel. Anything. Ever. And for the adolescent male — pummeled by emotions left and right, whether arising from sexuality or resulting from his necessary encounters with authority — this hero is a blessing, a relief and a release. The world he lives in, where feelings are totally under control, looks to the adolescent boy like heaven! This hero's lack of feeling — like Star Trek's Spock — is what allows him to be a genius, or allows him to shoot the bad guys and/or aliens, without a quiver to his lip.
But what starts as a relief and a release, you eventually recognize as a distortion: it doesn't reflect the real world. Precisely what gave you a certain pleasure is also a restraint. Thomas Mann said that every philosophical position exists to correct the abuses of the previous one, often to the other extreme. You could make a reasonable argument that it is the alien Spock who carves out the space of desire that is eventually filled with sf's explicitly erotic characters — everyone from my own Kidd in Dhalgren to Maureen F. McHue's gay character, Zhang, in her extraordinary China Mountain Zhang, not to mention all the Kirk-slash-Spock fiction.

SW: "Slash" fiction is surely the opposite extreme from the logical alien.

SD: Yes — Kirk-slash-Spock fiction, written by fans of Star Trek, is usually gay pornography in which Kirk and Spock and other members of the Enterprise crew get it on.

SW: Or relative newcomers like the X-Files' Mulder/Scully (or Mulder/Skinner) — also hyper-competent characters who rarely show their emotional side. Science fiction's ur-audience is adolescent males, but slash fiction is generally written and read by women, is it not?

SD: Slash is usually written by straight women, yes, and I think it appeals to straight women in the same way lesbian sequences in commercial pornography appeal to straight men. I always say that if gay men and women didn't exist, straight men and women would have had to invent us.

SW: So the emotionless, sexless pulp hero of the '30s personifies sf's celibate period. How did that come to an end?

SD: Take a story like "The World Well Lost," written by Theodore Sturgeon in 1950. Two alien lovers come to Earth, one larger than the other, and everyone assumes that they're male and female. The story is told from the point of view of two security men who guard their starship, themselves close friends. Eventually, the guards discover that the aliens are both male, and indeed are gay. They've taken flight from their home planet because of terrible homophobia there. One guard, a typical 1950s Earth male, is disgusted by this and doesn't know what to do, he even suggests killing the aliens. But the other talks him out of it. At the end of the story, the first guard goes to sleep back in their quarters. His friend remains awake, looking at him, and we realize that he's in love with him.
I read it in an anthology when I was about fourteen or fifteen and broke out crying, exactly as I was supposed to. I was quite touched by it, and it certainly helped make it possible to talk about those things later on in my own work, like the gay, human characters in the story, "Time Considered as a Helix of Semi-Precious Stones." Historically, I guess that's how science fiction works: you start by using aliens to think the unthinkable — and then, eventually, another writer, having grown a little more comfortable with the earlier notion, brings it into the human.
Of 1970s sf, The Female Man by Joanna Russ left the biggest impression on me. It's a three-panel portrait of the female condition: Jeannine, Janet (everyone's favorite) and Jael — three women who share the same genes but each of whom has been raised in an entirely different environment, who summate to create Joanna. That's the first time I remember reading anything in sf that talked about the terror of sex. It foreshadowed the terror of rejection, something that writing about sex must talk about, or it becomes mere wish fulfillment. That terror is such a large part of people's sexual lives. It is why we don't go up to perfect strangers and say, "Hey, you're gorgeous, let's go to bed." To put that part of you out there makes you very vulnerable. Russ' book gave me the permission to focus on fear of rejection in Trouble on Triton and the Neveryon series, in which "The Tale of Memory and Desire" is really my homage to The Female Man.

SW: Do you think the alternate worlds of science fiction create a space for alternate sexualities?

SD: I think that's a question that, even in its formation, pretty much answers itself — that is to say, the question acknowledges that one's sexuality is, indeed, part of one's reality. The late John Preston wrote an essay in which he goes to an SM function, and there encounters many of the same people he's seen previously at sf conventions. There's a certain kind of person who wants to be in a rich semiotic environment that talks about what you desire, rather than an impoverished semiotic environment. In the "real world," all you get is a yellow handkerchief to show what you want.

SW: Hell, straight people don't even get that. I was recently at Norwescon in Seattle, and there was a huge showing of latex, leather, fairy wings and slave gear among the broadswords and Klingon costumes.

SD: SF cons are places that are just saturated with signs about what you are — or what you could be. There's all this stuff that makes it easier to express desire, and attendant narratives that anchor you socially.

SW: Can you think of another way to say "rich semiotic environment"? The Nerve editors are nervous about this sounding jargon-y.

SD: Oh, a little jargon will do them good.
This is what my book Times Square Red, Times Square Blue is about, organizing places for desire. Until a decade ago, Times Square porn theaters were spaces organized around gay male sexuality. The cascade of symbols on the movie screen created an environment of sexual signs.
Part of this, I think, is good. But there's also the fact that that's not the way the world is structured ordinarily. Do you have to create this artificially saturated space in order to deal with sexuality, or can you deal with it in the real world? Can you come out and simply say, "I have a difficult question to ask you: I'd really like to take you back and tie you up and leave small red marks just between your third and fourth vertebrae," and not to be absolutely crushed if you get the somewhat common negative response?

SW: But ideally, the of convention or porn theater, or the alien in sf literature, serves as a way to make the strange a bit more familiar — a bit less terrifying, don't you think?

SD: When I went to my very first sf convention, which was Worldcon in 1966, I'd already published six or seven novels. A very young man came up to me and said, "You wrote a book called Babel-17?" I said "Yes, indeed I did." He said, "That stuff, where three people get together and they all do it at once . . . is that possible?" I said, "Yes." And he gave an immense sigh of relief and turned around and walked away.
At which point I thought, "I am doing something right." This relationship between fantastic literature and real world desire has been around for a while. Christina Rosetti's "Goblin Market" is a book-length Victorian poem about two sisters who find a heap of fairy fruit. They roll around in it, and then they lick each other clean. And it has lines like, "And she licked and licked and licked and licked and licked and licked and licked."

SW: Porn does love repetition. But that fantastic element provided a space for sexuality, given that we're talking about a poem published in the 1870s. The fairy fruit is an excuse, like "I was drunk."

SD: Yes. That's what is liberating about alternative or alien sexualities — they are new and fantastic. And in the same way that young man found Babel-17, I'm sure that many Victorian — and more recent — readers have found that poem and thought, "A-ha, so anything is possible."

kingfish, Saturday, 19 May 2007 23:59 (eighteen years ago)

It foreshadowed the terror of rejection, something that writing about sex must talk about, or it becomes mere wish fulfillment. That terror is such a large part of people's sexual lives. It is why we don't go up to perfect strangers and say, "Hey, you're gorgeous, let's go to bed."

Really? Not because that would be a terrible technique?

Casuistry, Sunday, 20 May 2007 01:19 (eighteen years ago)

pretty good British doc about Bladerunner/PKD

Shakey Mo Collier, Sunday, 20 May 2007 01:44 (eighteen years ago)

And Sam Delany now:

http://www.raintaxi.com/online/2000winter/images/delanydent.jpg

kingfish, Sunday, 20 May 2007 02:08 (eighteen years ago)

I have been reading M. John Harrison's "sequel" to this book, called Nova Swing. One of the better new sci-fi books I've read in the last few years - combines a lot of ideas and styles without being too slavishly endebted to any of them.

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 1 June 2007 16:15 (eighteen years ago)

one year passes...

I would just like to say that I am reading KW Jeter's "Noir" and it is fucking amazing, tons of great ideas. Still got that slimy-creepy-perverted tone to it though, I guess that's his thing...

Shakey Mo Collier, Thursday, 30 October 2008 16:25 (seventeen years ago)

three weeks pass...

lolz this book has some absolutely ridiculous fantasies about enforcing copyright/intellectual property rights in it

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 21 November 2008 16:41 (seventeen years ago)

Such as?

Ned Raggett, Friday, 21 November 2008 16:53 (seventeen years ago)

well you see, in the future, copyright violators will be hunted down by hitmen from ASCAP and have their spines and brain tissue forcibly removed and turned into trophies (toasters, stereo cables, clothing, etc.) for the owners of the violated copyrights. This is because in the future the only thing that is worth money is ideas/intellectual property, ergo stealing someone's ideas is akin to robbing them of their livelihood and is thus akin to murder, hence brutal punishment of any and all copyright violations is justified (this argument is, as far as I can tell, advanced in all seriousness and the brutal punishment meted out is described with a level of grotesque detail that can best be described as "loving").

There are a lot of great ideas in this book but I gotta say this is not one of them. Granted the book was written in 1998.

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 21 November 2008 17:03 (seventeen years ago)

"With all intellectual property merchandized or archived on the wires, and accessible with a few keystrokes - it became obviously necessary to find a way to take thieves, copyright infringers, off-line for good. When survival is at stake, no second chances are allowed. Which was why, even back before the last century had ticked over into this one, a general maxim had gone the rounds: There's a hardware solution to intellectual property theft. It's called a .357 Magnum"

bold is the authors

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 21 November 2008 17:07 (seventeen years ago)

(hope Jeter's not gonna hunt me down and rip out my spine for posting a paragraph of his on the internets....]

Shakey Mo Collier, Friday, 21 November 2008 17:07 (seventeen years ago)

two years pass...

is sci fi dead?

currently digging Silverberg's late 60s-early 70s stuff

twat dust and ego overload (Shakey Mo Collier), Monday, 20 December 2010 16:46 (fifteen years ago)

He's amazing in that period. Which ones are you reading?

Fig On A Plate Cart (Alex in SF), Monday, 20 December 2010 17:05 (fifteen years ago)

I've been reading China Mievelle whose books are almost ridiculously long and probably qualify more as fantasy than sci-fi, but he's pretty good stuff.

Fig On A Plate Cart (Alex in SF), Monday, 20 December 2010 17:09 (fifteen years ago)

Guess I should read Dhalgren.

Gus Van Sotosyn (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 20 December 2010 17:10 (fifteen years ago)

The World Inside
A Time of Changes

moving on to The Man in the Maze, Stochastic Man, Dying Inside, whatever else the library has

I've never read Dhalgren, started to years ago but couldn't get into it. Only other Delany I read was "Nova", but I can't say that I was really impressed by it.

twat dust and ego overload (Shakey Mo Collier), Monday, 20 December 2010 17:14 (fifteen years ago)

samuel delany's beard continues to blow my mind

I'm not really into sci-fi at all though - only Delany I've read is his non-fiction/academic work Times Square Red, Times Square Blue

no hipster hats (The Brainwasher), Monday, 20 December 2010 17:17 (fifteen years ago)

also finally getting around to James Tiptree

twat dust and ego overload (Shakey Mo Collier), Monday, 20 December 2010 17:21 (fifteen years ago)

I've never been able to finish Dhalgren either, but I like all of Delany's earlier space operas (Babel-17, Jewels of Aptor, Empire Star, Falling of the Towers, etc).

Those are two great ones, Shakey. Dying Inside is better than the other two (although Man in the Maze is quite good IIRC). I've read these as well:

Shadrach in the Furnace
Thorns
Hawksbill Station
Nightwings
Tower of Glass

And these are on my list:

Up the Line
The Book of Skulls

Also Silverberg was a great short story writer. Definitely worth picking up a collection from that period.

Fig On A Plate Cart (Alex in SF), Monday, 20 December 2010 17:25 (fifteen years ago)

I really liked the structure and ambivalent tone of The World Inside - there was no big hard science "reveal" about how the society REALLY worked or anything like that, just a lot of solid, well-developed character sketches strung together, a very clear-minded execution of the standard "what if...?" story variety. Obviously the population explosion fears that it was grounded on now seem kinda quaint, but that really didn't get in the way of the overall thought-experiment nature of the book.

twat dust and ego overload (Shakey Mo Collier), Monday, 20 December 2010 17:32 (fifteen years ago)

four years pass...

re-posted from ILB sf thread cuz relevant:

http://www.laassubject.org/index.php/monomania/kepner

Οὖτις, Friday, 12 June 2015 22:48 (ten years ago)


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