Who? also (algis budrys) maybe even Rogue Moon
but i think he wanted robots as well
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-4d9IrslaOzQ/Tt_FNDTTDFI/AAAAAAAABSI/zD5dn1VXlgk/s1600/stainless+steel+rat.jpg
― koogs, Tuesday, 5 July 2022 17:07 (two years ago) link
(although i think the robotic-sounding name may be misleading)
― koogs, Tuesday, 5 July 2022 17:08 (two years ago) link
(oh, no, he says SF / detective, not specifically robots)
― koogs, Tuesday, 5 July 2022 17:09 (two years ago) link
I'm not quite sure I ever read the RAT, though I have a Harrison novel on my shelf called TECHNICOLOR TIME MACHINE that I ought to read after all this time.
― the pinefox, Tuesday, 5 July 2022 17:39 (two years ago) link
i enjoyed some of them (there are many) when i was in the sixth form, and the carlos esquerra illustrated run in 2000ad. long time ago now though.
― koogs, Tuesday, 5 July 2022 17:49 (two years ago) link
I thought Harrison hit his peak with Make Room, Make Room.
― immodesty blaise (jimbeaux), Tuesday, 5 July 2022 17:52 (two years ago) link
^ soylent green, i have just learned
was looking for ebook versions and there's a stainless steel rat anthology (first 3 books) but it says "Available 31-12-2035" and i can't wait that long
― koogs, Tuesday, 5 July 2022 18:07 (two years ago) link
I am convinced he was traumatized by a visit to New York City.
― immodesty blaise (jimbeaux), Tuesday, 5 July 2022 18:44 (two years ago) link
2035 !!!
NYC could have robot detectives by then!
― the pinefox, Tuesday, 5 July 2022 23:09 (two years ago) link
Many xposts Yes chuck that is a nice intro collection for Vance.
― covidsbundlertanze op. 6 (Jon not Jon), Wednesday, 6 July 2022 02:36 (two years ago) link
i read Anthem so you don't have to. it's only 50 pages long and it only goes batshit in the last two chapters but when it does it does.
he discovers his individuality only in those last two chapters and ignores the fact that EVERYTHING he does and has is because other people did something before him, all he did was take them
― koogs, Saturday, 9 July 2022 12:25 (two years ago) link
The earliest science fiction crime-solving (not really detective) story I know of was this one by Mark Twain, published in 1896. Not one of his best, for sure---even if he'd stopped with Part I---but here tis:https://www.gutenberg.org/files/3251/3251-h/3251-h.htm#link2H_4_0009 I did come across one with a detective by Fredric Brown, from the 1940s, maybe, but it was sub-standard too. These can't be the only early examples.
― dow, Saturday, 9 July 2022 20:44 (two years ago) link
Re: Jessica Amanda Salmonson. Don't know why I don't use the wayback machine more often because reading her old sites has been a lot of fun and I think I'll be reading them for months or years to come, would be great if much of it came out in a book. https://web.archive.org/web/20110202120339/http://violetbooks.com/Her views on the depiction of warrior women in her time as a writer and editor are interesting. She makes fun of male writers she knew for putting rock lyrics quotations in their stories in the 80s, that's something I've seen a bunch of times but never really noticed as a trend.
― Robert Adam Gilmour, Sunday, 10 July 2022 18:41 (two years ago) link
xpost finally thought to check SF Encyclopedia, and found this typically deep-dive thematic survey, down through the ages:https://sf-encyclopedia.com/entry/crime_and_punishment Sp much here that I'm not actually sure they mention xpost The Demolished Man, which is awesome The Naked Sun is mentioned, picked as Asimov's best robot detective story (reminding me that my local library has his Robots and Murder omnibus, which I may read this summer). They don't get quite as far as John Scalzi's Lock In, which reviewers often mentioned as an updated Asimov steel gumshoe outing: good lively entertainment, if a bit too TV-quippy sometimes toward the end, but with some contemporary political friction too, largely set in the streets of DC. There's a sequel and a backstory (not a prequel), but I haven't read those: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lock_In
Also I usually mention The Yiddish Policeman's Union and (mostly good, if somewhat wobbly) The City and The City when this subject comes up, but somebody always objects. Fizzles got seriously pissed about TCATC, but he also hate-reads Asimov.
Back when I still bought books, I probably picked this library discard because it incl. Robert Reed (also it probably cost 25 cents)---haven't read it yet:
Resnick, Mike (editor). DOWN THESE DARK SPACEWAYS. [Garden City, NY]: Science Fiction Book Club. [2005]. Octavo, boards. First edition. Original anthology collecting six novella-length noir SF hard-boiled mystery stories: "Guardian Angel" by Mike Resnick, "In the Quake Zone" by David Gerrold, "The City of Cries" by Catherine Asaro, "Camouflage" by Robert Reed, "The Big Downtown" by Jack McDevitt, and "Identity Theft" by Robert J. Sawyer.
― dow, Sunday, 10 July 2022 22:21 (two years ago) link
Stabelford's Granger series is supposed to be detective noir in spaceships and Aliette de Bodard's Xuya series has lots of detective stuff in spaceships
― Robert Adam Gilmour, Monday, 11 July 2022 20:36 (two years ago) link
misspelled Stableford
Poster dow, those look like good tips on this interesting sub-genre subject.
― the pinefox, Monday, 11 July 2022 21:39 (two years ago) link
I'm very much enjoying Semiosis by Sue Burke, emo sf (as I like to think of the loose genre that prefers stories based more around social relations than advanced tech) with intelligent plants.
― dear confusion the catastrophe waitress (ledge), Wednesday, 13 July 2022 12:13 (two years ago) link
Not solely intelligent plants though, most of the characters are human.
― dear confusion the catastrophe waitress (ledge), Wednesday, 13 July 2022 12:17 (two years ago) link
those are good books (first >> second iirc)
― đ đđ˘đ¨ (caek), Wednesday, 13 July 2022 20:12 (two years ago) link
That seems to be the consensus, the second one isn't too long so might give it a go at some point.
I was wondering how many other stories dealt with plant intelligence, there's Day of the Triffids but their intelligence is very basic - I can't bring any others to mind, the sf encyclopedia doesn't have an entry for it and the only other thing I found is this: https://ezinearticles.com/?Intelligent-Plants-in-Science-Fiction&id=813730
― dear confusion the catastrophe waitress (ledge), Friday, 15 July 2022 08:08 (two years ago) link
Would Le Guin's "Vaster Than Empires and More Slow" count?
― and who is not flawed? (Matt #2), Friday, 15 July 2022 09:30 (two years ago) link
Oh yes, I thought there was a Le Guin one but I could only think of The Word for World is Forest, which is a regular forest.
― dear confusion the catastrophe waitress (ledge), Friday, 15 July 2022 09:43 (two years ago) link
Isnât there some Disch book, The Genocides?
― L.H.O.O.Q. Jones (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 15 July 2022 10:59 (two years ago) link
But maybe those plants arenât intelligent.
― L.H.O.O.Q. Jones (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 15 July 2022 12:09 (two years ago) link
Last night I read "The Gardener," in The Best of Margaret St. Clair: metamorphic tree-related intelligence, very precise.
― dow, Friday, 15 July 2022 21:12 (two years ago) link
Desirina Boskovich - Lost Transmissions: Science Fiction and Fantasy's Untold, Underground, and Forgotten History
I listened to an interview with Boskovich around the time this book came out and she was worried people would complain the choices were too well known, but rightly pointed out that the audience for speculative fiction is so wide and fragmented now that there are fewer and fewer common touchstones, so very few people are going to know about everything in this book. Yet I was still disappointed by the literature section but I thought the architecture, music and fashion sections were a good idea.
Many of the writers are extremely important but apparently losing popularity: Mervyn Peake, M John Harrison, Angela Carter, John Shirley and George MacDonald. I know that a lot of younger american fans don't know about M John Harrison but I thought most would know Peake. Couldn't there have been more said about the other Inklings while on the subject? The interviews are decent and they have their own recommendations for often overlooked writers.
A good deal of the essays are about lesser known aspects of popular things: concept artists, strange back stories, promising projects that were never completed and trivia. Somebody really should film Clair Noto's The Tourist screenplay but it's easy enough to find online and there is a novelization.
I think this book is probably best suited to teenagers who are wanting to branch out. Boskovich said there would be another book with more genuine obscurities if this one succeeded but I guess it's not going to happen but I would have liked to see the sequel. Maybe the hardcover and thick glossy paper made it too expensive and I think very few of the pictures really benefitted from it, the exceptions were Paul Lehr and Syd Mead's lovely paintings (they could've just had a glossy section for the nicer pictures).
https://clairnoto.wixsite.com/thetourist
― Robert Adam Gilmour, Monday, 18 July 2022 21:54 (two years ago) link
Time for some Tanith Lee today I think... pic.twitter.com/JaZcb104jy— Pulp Librarian (@PulpLibrarian) July 19, 2022
― dow, Tuesday, 19 July 2022 19:25 (two years ago) link
Damn. Click on pic to see whole cover.
― dow, Tuesday, 19 July 2022 19:26 (two years ago) link
Several more in that thread.
― dow, Tuesday, 19 July 2022 19:29 (two years ago) link
Probably told y'all before about the time I want to the SF convention at a hotel near LGA and there was some talk about Tanith Lee and some older lady said: "My query? Tanith Lee perplexeth me/Might she be/A Romany?"
― L.H.O.O.Q. Jones (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 19 July 2022 19:39 (two years ago) link
Brian Stableford - The Empire Of Fear
An Alternate history set in the 17th century, scientists and revolutionaries are rebelling against the vampire rulers that include a handful of real life historical figures who would have died centuries earlier. Stableford has said he thought it was a more logical approach to vampires and that this was an attempt to broaden his audience (he's never really stopped writing about vampires for long, so it doesn't seem like much of a compromise) and I guess it worked because while it isn't his best selling book, it seems to be his most acclaimed one (keep in mind most of his books have been read by a very small audience, so there has been no opportunity to decide his best book by broad consensus, I hope this will change).
It becomes clear later on why this is considered a science fiction book, but it might appeal to readers of historical fantasy more than anything else. It is extremely violent at points but it's never supposed to be scary in the way other stories of vampires in castles often are. I sometimes found it padded out with over-explanation and the travels in the middle section went on a bit long, but all in all it's an absolute belter. I found it very unpredictable and the ending is fantastic. It has something of the spirit of Matheson's I Am Legend but with a completely different aesthetic and ten times more ambitious (it is a much thicker book too).
I love the edition with the Sanjulian painting, it captures the book better than the others.
― Robert Adam Gilmour, Friday, 22 July 2022 18:28 (two years ago) link
Woke up this morning: To find out my novelisation of @GreatDismal âs unproduced screenplay for Alien 3 won the Scribe Award for best adapted novel, announced Friday at the San Diego Comic Con.& thatâs my day! In yr face, Mortality!— Pat Cadigan (@Cadigan) July 23, 2022
@GreatDismal being William Gibson---not one of my faves, but Cadigan is.
― dow, Saturday, 23 July 2022 17:08 (two years ago) link
Will there be a novelization of Vincent Ward's version?
― Robert Adam Gilmour, Saturday, 23 July 2022 17:44 (two years ago) link
speaking of Gibson, Johnny Mnemonic was on Great Movies Classic (classic!) during the week. keanu, Rollins, ice-t, autechre on the soundtrack, 80s VR...
― koogs, Saturday, 23 July 2022 18:38 (two years ago) link
Dolph Lundgren has just turned up. beat takeshi also.
― koogs, Saturday, 23 July 2022 18:41 (two years ago) link
autechre?? (pvmic)
― dear confusion the catastrophe waitress (ledge), Saturday, 23 July 2022 20:35 (two years ago) link
um. not listed on the soundtrack. did i confuse it in my paying-half-attention with the orbital track?
yeah, it's orbital, the autechre-sounding one, "SAD BUT TRUE"
― koogs, Saturday, 23 July 2022 20:51 (two years ago) link
Prob right, but songs in the movies don't always make it to the soundtrack albums, for whatever reasons (prob financial?): I know this too well from having worked in a CD-DVD store
― dow, Saturday, 23 July 2022 20:59 (two years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kCzOahgur3M
― Robert Adam Gilmour, Tuesday, 26 July 2022 01:13 (two years ago) link
From two years ago but still good
started the Elizabeth Bear books that are currently cheap on amazon.
but it increasingly reads like this
"Yes, space doesnât have directions, exactly, but letâs be honest here: prepositions and directions are so much easier to use than made-up words, and itâs not like the first object somebody called a phone involved a cochlear nanoplant and a nanoskin graft with a touch screen on it, either. So those of us who work here just pretend weâre nice and know better, and commend the nitpickers to the same hell as people who hold strong and condescending opinions about the plural of the word octopus."
so many asides and opinions, just get on with the exploring already. and there's 470 pages of this in book 1.
― koogs, Thursday, 28 July 2022 14:59 (two years ago) link
I just read Philip K. Dick's first novel SOLAR LOTTERY (1955).
Pretty bonkers, in that the elements of the plot are divergent (it ends with a spaceship discovering a distant planet, but this has been a subplot!). A load of action-adventure shoot-em-up stuff in the middle. A theme of chance as the driver of politics and society - which should be interesting, but isn't really worked through: the social and governance issues *don't* actually seem to have much to do with chance. And even insofar as there is a lottery, it's not solar!
Strikes me that PKD has a noir element - that he wants to write hardbitten heroes and femmes fatales.
― the pinefox, Thursday, 28 July 2022 19:07 (two years ago) link
Don't know that one---Disch wrote an essay on PKD as intro to this edition, making some good points about what it takes to get into his books, and about SL in particular, Disch says that the title and space opera elements were mandated, not really Dick's interest. His main pulp reference or role model, says Disch, seems to be A.E. Van Vogt, whosebooks make the productions of such other founding fathers of proletarian pulp as Hammett and Chandler look like mandarin poetry. His prose rises above the rules of rhetoric and approaches the condition of phatic noise, the direct communication of emotional states by means of grunts and groans.Also cites detectable influence of "more sophisticated" writing, especially The Demolished Man, also The Space Merchants, which will be more nurturing later, but right now, in this journeyman work, it's much more Van Vogt, especially "his most characteristic work, The World of Null-A." The .pdf won't let me paste, but anyway it's 10 pages, worth a look (may (mentions a "mutilated" 1956 UK edition, as The World of Chance, with the "most inspired" parts unerringly removed, so beware of that w original title restored, as sometimes happens with bootlegged book posts) Here's the UMichPress post of Disch's opener: https://www.press.umich.edu/pdf/9780472068968-25.pdf">chrome-extension://efaidnbmnnnibpcajpcglclefindmkaj/https://www.press.umich.edu/pdf/9780472068968-25.pdf
― dow, Thursday, 28 July 2022 20:20 (two years ago) link
Amazon synopsis, apparently from Mariner Books edition (2012):
From the Back CoverIn 2203 anyone can become the ruler of the solar system. There are no elections, no interviews, no prerequisites whatsoeverâit all comes down to the random turns of a giant wheel. But when a new Quizmaster takes over, the old one still keeps some rights, namely the right to hire an unending stream of assassins to attempt to kill the new leader.In the wake of the most recent change in leadership, employees of the former ruler scurry to find an assassin who can get past telepathic guards. But when one employee switches sides, troubling facts about the lottery system come to light, and it just might not be possible for anyone to win.
― dow, Thursday, 28 July 2022 20:26 (two years ago) link
Announcing the Shortlist for the Inaugural Ursula K. Le Guin Prize for Fiction
― mookieproof, Thursday, 28 July 2022 23:24 (two years ago) link
P.S. In the middle of all of this b.s. about local politics, I might've gotten kicked off a fb nature group for this comment. Can I get some love? I need some love. pic.twitter.com/4ddftrHhDz— Jeff VanderMeer (@jeffvandermeer) July 30, 2022
― dow, Saturday, 30 July 2022 23:44 (two years ago) link
I'm reading Stephen Baxter's Galaxias about the sun being kidnapped by the titular entity and it's as boring a book about such a thing as one could imagine.
― dear confusion the catastrophe waitress (ledge), Tuesday, 2 August 2022 15:20 (two years ago) link
.
― My Little Red Buchla (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 2 August 2022 15:45 (two years ago) link
https://ansible.uk/writing/sfxbc01.html
― My Little Red Buchla (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 2 August 2022 15:56 (two years ago) link