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Category Archives: SF

Farewell, Ray Bradbury

06 Wednesday Jun 2012

Posted by spookymoonbeam in Art, Science, SF

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Dave McKean, Ray Bradbury

Ray Bradbury passed away yesterday. His works, especially Something Wicked This Way Comes, Dandelion Wine and The Illustrated Man made a big impression on me as a child.

I was privileged to see him talk when I was very young (thanks to my father), and will always remember his tales of dinosaurs and Mars.

The edition of his story The Homecoming illustrated by the incredible Dave McKean (who warrants a post of his own) is a treasured part of my collection, along with my ancient and battered copy of SWTWC.

His voice will be missed.

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Robert Sheckley and the Store of the Worlds

10 Thursday May 2012

Posted by spookymoonbeam in Media, SF, Uncategorized

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excellent science fiction, Jonathan Lethem, Robert Sheckley, Store of the Worlds

I’m delighted to see the release of a new Robert Sheckley collection, Store of the Worlds: The Stories of Robert Sheckley. Curated by Jonathan Lethem and Alex Abramovich and part of the New York Review Books Classics series, this is a very well done collection of a seriously overlooked SF author. I got my copy at Borderlands the other day, and its a lovely addition to my Sheckley collection.

I was lucky to have a few vintage pocketbook collections of Robert Sheckley’s stories handed down to me as a child and have been a fan ever since. He wrote over 400 incredible short stories and 15+ novels, and was a huge influence on the New Wave of SF in the 60′s. Sheckley is well-known inside the SF community, but much of his work has fallen long out of print, and since most of my old pocket books are now mostly held together with tape or stored in ziploc baggies, I’ve been really excited with the recent reprints put out by NESFA and especially excited by this collection, which focuses on his work from the 1950′s.

Lethem and Abramovich describe his style better than I ever could in the introduction -

Sheckley’s stories operate as irresistible language artifacts, like extended puns or paradoxes: off-kilter, provocative, unsettling even if partly silly. They’re like psychedelic lamps that cast an eerie light in one room where they’re encountered, but then turn out to transform one’s view of all subsequent rooms. These are the kind of stories which, if young or otherwise inattentive at first encounter, you may forget the titles and the author’s name, only to rediscover them in some anthology many years later, with a sense of recognition akin to discovering someone else recounting a dream that you yourself once had.

- Store of the Worlds: The Stories of Robert Sheckley, pg. viii

Highly recommended and available at fine bookstores everywhere.

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Charlie Stross and the nature of augmented memory

21 Wednesday Mar 2012

Posted by spookymoonbeam in Education, Media, Science, SF, Technology

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Accellerando, Charlie Stross, memory, nmfs_s12, Science Fiction

There was a lot of discussion in last week’s New Media seminar about augmented memory and the evolution (or de-evolution, depending on your viewpoint) in the use of non-human memory storage (smart phones, Google, etc.) for remembrance of all sorts of everyday information like phone numbers, trivia,reference materials, etc.

This discussion made me want to bring up Charlie Stross, blogger and SF writer extraordinaire. Charlie’s blog (http://www.antipope.org/charlie/blog-static/) is a vital resource for discussion of near and far futurist concerns, political and technological trends and SF in general, and I highly recommend making it part of your reading list.

Between 2001 and 2004, Charlie wrote a series of linked short stories and novelettes that were published in Asimov’s. These have since been collected as Accellerando, which is available for free here - http://www.jus.uio.no/sisu/accelerando.charles_stross/. Each section of Accellerando extrapolates the evolution of technology starting from a near-future perspective and ending up in a post-singularity, post-scarcity world.

Of particular interest to this conversation is Chapter 3 – Tourist, which extrapolates the use of augmented memory to a place perhaps beyond where it should be and demonstrates not only the potential uses, but also the potential pitfalls. It begins as follows -

Spring-Heeled Jack runs blind, blue fumes crackling from his heels. His right hand, outstretched for balance, clutches a mark’s stolen memories. The victim is sitting on the hard stones of the pavement behind him. Maybe he’s wondering what’s happened; maybe he looks after the fleeing youth. But the tourist crowds block the view effectively, and in any case, he has no hope of catching the mugger. Hit-and-run amnesia is what the polis call it, but to Spring-Heeled Jack it’s just more loot to buy fuel for his Russian army-surplus motorized combat boots.

The victim sits on the cobblestones clutching his aching temples. What happened? he wonders. The universe is a brightly colored blur of fast-moving shapes augmented by deafening noises. His ear-mounted cameras are rebooting repeatedly: They panic every eight hundred milliseconds, whenever they realize that they’re alone on his personal area network without the comforting support of a hub to tell them where to send his incoming sensory feed. Two of his mobile phones are bickering moronically, disputing ownership of his grid bandwidth, and his memory … is missing.

A tall blond clutching an electric chainsaw sheathed in pink bubble wrap leans over him curiously: “you all right?” she asks.

“I -” He shakes his head, which hurts. “Who am I?” His medical monitor is alarmed because his blood pressure has fallen: His pulse is racing, his serum cortisol titer is up, and a host of other biometrics suggest that he’s going into shock.

“I think you need an ambulance,” the woman announces. She mutters at her lapel, “Phone, call an ambulance. ” She waves a finger vaguely at him as if to reify a geolink, then wanders off, chain-saw clutched under one arm. Typical southern émigré behavior in the Athens of the North, too embarrassed to get involved. The man shakes his head again, eyes closed, as a flock of girls on powered blades skid around him in elaborate loops. A siren begins to warble, over the bridge to the north.

Who am I? he wonders. “I’m Manfred,” he says with a sense of stunned wonder. He looks up at the bronze statue of a man on a horse that looms above the crowds on this busy street corner. Someone has plastered a Hello Cthulhu! holo on the plaque that names its rider: Languid fluffy pink tentacles wave at him in an attack of kawaii. “I’m Manfred – Manfred. My memory. What’s happened to my memory?” Elderly Malaysian tourists point at him from the open top deck of a passing bus. He burns with a sense of horrified urgency. I was going somewhere, he recalls. What was I doing? It was amazingly important, he thinks, but he can’t remember what exactly it was. He was going to see someone about – it’s on the tip of his tongue…

Charlie Stross – Accellerando, Chapter 3 – Tourist

Check out the rest of the story to find out if Manfred gets his memory back. It’s well worth the read, as is the entirety of the collection. Charlie is a great writer, and I think Accellerando is a pretty important work that’s very relevant to many of the topics we’ve been discussing.

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R.I.P. Moebius (a bit late)

15 Thursday Mar 2012

Posted by spookymoonbeam in Art, Film, Media, SF

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Comics, Heavy Metal, Jean Giraud, Moebius, Science Fiction

 Earlier this week, incredible comic artist and creator Jean Giraud (more commonly known as Moebius to us SF people) passed away. Moebius was extremely influential to the visual aesthetics of science fiction throughout the 70′s and 80′s, and was a founding member of Métal Hurlant (Heavy Metal to us Westerners.)

For me, Moebius and Heavy Metal were an oasis of transgression and innovative art in the wasteland that was most of the 80′s comics scene. The Heavy Metal film played every Saturday night at the Dream Theater in Monterey when I was a teen, and cheesy as the content was, I always loved the art style of the penultimate Taarna sequence which was based on Moebius’ Arzach stories.

The Sony Metreon in San Francisco featured a lovely video game arcade designed by Moebius and based on his Airtight Garage comic. L and I used to always try to make time to play a few games there when we would go there to see films and while the Metreon is kind of dilapidated and Target-infested now, definitely stop by if you happen to be in downtown SF sometime, if only to check out the design.

Tor.com’s Tim Maughan has a much more extensive and thoughtful overview of Moebius and his influence on SF culture over the last 40 years here. I highly recommend reading it.

#Moebius #nmfs_s12 #JeanGiraud #HeavyMetal

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More China Miéville on London! with pics!

08 Thursday Mar 2012

Posted by spookymoonbeam in Art, Media, Politics, SF

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China Miéville, London, nmfs_s12, Olympics

The expanded and illustrated version of China Miéville’s excellent article on London has been up for a couple of days at www.londonsoverthrow.org. Check it out!

#nmfs_s12 #chinamiéville #London #Olympics

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China Miéville on London

04 Sunday Mar 2012

Posted by spookymoonbeam in Art, Politics, SF

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China Miéville, London, Olympics

China Miéville, one of the most fantastic SF authors around, has a piece today in The New York Times Magazine about the current state of London and the inequities of the current British social policies in regards to the Olympics and the recent economic protests there. Miéville’s fiction often revolves on the archetypes and subcultures of the city and urban environments, especially London, and I can think of no one more suited to ruminate on the current situation that England’s 99% are currently facing.

Stratford, East London, is being reconfigured on a biblical scale. It’s December, and from the acres of mud and blue wrapping of the Olympic Park juts the city’s new monument, the ArcelorMittal Orbit, by the artists Anish Kapoor and Cecil Balmond, a vast sculpture of knotting girders like a snarled Gaian hernia. Its name is a corporate grandiosity on the part of its donor, Lakshmi Mittal, the richest man in Britain. Near it is the stadium, its post-Olympic future a question mark, with bickerings and legal shenanigans ongoing. There’s Zaha Hadid’s aquatic center, its celebrated lines ruined by temporary seating.

At the southern end of the development site, the walkway is on the path of an old sewer. Oh, London, you drama queen. You didn’t have to do that. We watch from the route of effluent.

The Olympics are slated to cost taxpayers $14.7 billion. In this time of “austerity,” youth clubs and libraries are being shut down as expendable fripperies; this expenditure, though, is not negotiable. The uprisen young of London, participants in extraordinary riots that shook the country last summer, do the math. “Because you want to host the Olympics, yeah,” one participant told researchers, “so your country can look better and be there, we should suffer.”

The full NYT article is here – ‘Oh London, You Drama Queen’ (via BoingBoing)

#nmfs_s12 #Olympics #London #ChinaMiéville

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Brave New Worlds – Dystopian SF through the ages

24 Friday Feb 2012

Posted by spookymoonbeam in SF

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I just finished up John Joseph Adam’s recent anthology Brave New Worlds, a superb collection of old and new dystopian SF stories. There’s some very powerful and amazing work in this anthology, including, but by no means limited to, Sarah Langan’s “Independence Day”, Adam-Troy Castro’s “Of a Sweet Slow Dance in the Wake of Temporary Dogs” and “Pop Squad” by Paolo Bacigalupi, along with work by JG Ballard, Harlan Ellison, Philip K. Dick, Joe Mastroiani, Ursula K. LeGuin and many others.

Many of the stories present unique and unsettling extrapolations of where society and human nature can travel to when circumstance and/or extremity intervene, and while its not going to be for everyone, it really is an eye-opening anthology. Lots more info, free stories and author interviews are available at John Joseph Adam’s website here.

Again, really great stuff, and a comprehensive overview of the evolution of dystopian SF over the past century. Highly recommended!

I am a strong advocate of supporting your local independent bookstores if you can (especially Borderlands in SF!). However, if you must purchase from Amazon, here’s a link - Brave New Worlds at Amazon.

#nmfs_s12 #bravenewworlds #dystopia

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New Media, Neal Stephenson and “getting big things done”

16 Thursday Feb 2012

Posted by spookymoonbeam in Education, Media, Science, SF

≈ 2 Comments

I should have posted something about Neal last week after our conversation in the new media class. I saw this Solve for X talk he gave recently linked over on Boing Boing yesterday and it reminded me to do so.

For the non-SF nerds, Neal Stephenson is a fairly important figure in modern SF. Pretty much everything he’s done has been a “major” work, both in size and genre significance. ;) He wrote one of the prescient “cyber” novels, Snow Crash, in 1992 that dealt with virtual reality, language, networking and Sumerian mythology, which is what was referenced in last week’s discussion. Other novels of note are The Diamond Age (about nanotechnology and post-scarcity economy), Anathem (math, monasteries and aliens) and the Baroque Cycle (Newton, Leibniz, pirates, cryptography, revolution, alchemy, and much, much more.)

He’s cool. Read him.

(Solve for X is new to me, but looks super cool – www.wesolveforx.com & Boing Boing is required reading for me – www.boingboing.net) #nmfs_s12 #Cal

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