The first Mage Wars book.
938 S. Andrew Swann The Emperors of Twilight
The second Moreau book, in this one a Frank (a modified human) has
to learn who is trying to kill her and why.
I have a great fondness for genetically engineered people but I
couldn't say why.
939 Zach Hughes Omnificence Factor
I missed this.
940 Mike Resnick & Martin H. Greenberg By Any Other Fame
Introduction Mike Resnick
Farewell, My Buddy Barbara Delaplace
A Night on the Plantation Brian M. Thomsen
Allegro Marcato Barry N. Malzberg
Four Attempts at a Letter Michelle Sagara
The Fifteen-Minute Falcon George Alec Effinger
Dance Track Mercedes Lackey & Larry Dixon
Would He Do Woody? Nicholas A. DiChario
The Wages of Sin Jack Nimersheim
Franz Kafka, Superhero! David Gerrold
If Horses Were Wishes... Ginjer Buchanan
Ars Longa Nancy Kress
A Dream Can Make a Difference Beth Meacham
Under a Sky More Fiercely Blue Laura Resnick
Sinner-Saints Kristine Kathryn Rusch
Out of Sight Janni Lee Simner
Mother, Mae I? Lawrence Schimel
The Defiant Disaster Kate Daniel
South of Eden, Somewhere Near Salinas Jack C. Haldeman, II
Clem, the Little Copper Thomas A. Easton
A Bubble for a Minute Dean Wesley Smith
Space Cadet Janet Kagan
Hitler at Nuremberg Barry N. Malzberg
Elvis Invictus Judith Tarr
A collection of alternatate history stories featuring famous
people.
941 C.J. Cherryh Foreigner
All I can remember about the first Foreigner novel is that the
human protagonist seemed strangely ill-prepared for his job.
942 Andre Norton & Martin H. Greenberg Catfantastic III
Introduction Andre Norton
A Woman of Her Word Lee Barwood
A Tangled Tahitian Tail Clare Bell
Saxophone Joe and the Woman in Black [Newford] Charles de Lint
Teddy Cat Marylois Dunn
Cat o Nine Tales Charles L. Fontenay
Partners P. M. Griffin
...But a Glove John E. Johnston, III
Fear In Her Pocket Caralyn Inks
A Tail of Two SKittys Mercedes Lackey
Hermione as Spy Ardath Mayhar
Moon Scent Lyn McConchie
Cats World Cynthia McQuillin
Snake Eyes Ann Miller & Karen Rigley
One Too Many Cats Sasha Miller
Noble Warrior Meets With a Ghost Andre Norton
Connecticat Raul Reyes & Elisabeth Waters
The Cat-Quest of Mu Mao the Magnificent Elizabeth Ann Scarborough
The Cat, the Wizards, and the Bedpost Mary H. Schaub
To Skein a Cat Lawrence Schimel
Asking Mr. Bigelow Susan Shwartz
A wackload of stories featuring cats.
943 Suzette Haden Elgin Earthsong
The third Native Tongue novel.
944 Marion Zimmer Bradley The Bloody Sun
To the best of my knowledge, I have not read this but I still
disapprove of anything the Comyn may have done.
945 Jack Lovejoy Outworld Cats
No idea what this is.
946 Jo Clayton Serpent Waltz David A. Cherry
The second Dancer novel.
947 Tad Williams To Green Angel Tower, Part I
Part one of the third part of Memory, Sorrow and Thorn #3.
948 Tad Williams To Green Angel Tower, Part II
Williams continues his one-man war on America's trees.
949 Marion Zimmer Bradley Snows of Darkover
Introduction Marion Zimmer Bradley
The Yearbride Lee Martindale
Cradle of Lies Deborah Wheeler
Power Lynne Armstrong-Jones
Upholding Tradition Chel Avery
The Place Between Diana L. Paxson
Kadarin Tears Patricia Duffy Novak
The Awakening Roxana Pierson
Safe Passage Joan Marie Verba
Garrons Gift Janet R. Rhodes
The Chieris Godchild Cynthia McQuillin
Fire in the Hellers Patricia Shaw Mathews
A Matter of Perception Lena Gore
Poetic License Mercedes Lackey
The Midwinters Gifts Jane Edgeworth
The MacAran Legacy Toni Berry
The Word of a Hastur Marion Zimmer Bradley
Matrix Blue C. Frances
Shards Nina Boal
Brianas Birthright Suzanne Hawkins Burke
In the Eye of the Beholder Linda Anfuso
Transformation Alexandra Sarris
Amends Glenn R. Sixbury
A Capella Elisabeth Waters
Another Darkover anthology.
You know, you could build any number of really kick-ass ski resorts
on Darkover.
950 Elisabeth Waters Changing Fate
I missed this.
951 Mickey Zucker Reichert The Unknown Soldier
And this.
952 Gayle Greeno Mind-Speakers' Call
This is the second Ghatti's Tale novel.
953 Mayer Alan Brenner Spell of Apocalypse
This is the fourth Dance of the Gods novel.
954 Cheryl J. Franklin Sable, Shadow and Ice
I missed this.
955 Esther M. Friesner & Martin H. Greenberg Alien Pregnant by Elvis
Alien Pregnant by Elvis Esther M. Friesner
The Source of it All Dennis McKiernan
The Bride of Bigfoot Lawrence Watt-Evans
Close-Up Photos Reveal JFK Skull on Moon! Barry N. Malzberg
Marilyn, Elvis, and the Reality Blues James Brunet
Those Rowdy Royals! Laura Resnick
My Husband Became a Zombie and it Saved Our Marriage Karen Haber
Rock Band Conjures Satan as Manager -- Group Claims Good
Business Move Deborah J. Wunder
2,437 UFOs Over New Hampshire Allen Steele
Pulitzer Kills Publishing Maggot Mark W. Tiedemann
Elvis at the White House Kristine Kathryn Rusch
The Number of the Beast Jeff Hecht
De Gustibus... Anthony R. Lewis
Is Your Coworker a Space Alien? "Bob" bes Shahar
A Beak for Trends Laura Frankos
Hitler Clone in Argentina Plots Falklands Reprise or Death and
Transfiguration John DeChancie
Group Phenomena Thomas F. Monteleone
Unextinctions Bruce Boston & Roger Dutcher
How Alien He Really Was Bruce Boston
NASA Sending Addicts to Mars! Giant Government Coverup
Revealed! Alan Dean Foster
Vole John Gregory Betancourt
In Search of the Perfect Orgasm or Doing It with a Big Lizard
Can Be Fun Dean Wesley Smith
Saving Sams Used UFOs Kate Daniel
Dannys Excellent Adventure! Greg Cox
Royal Tiff Yields Face of Jesus! Esther M. Friesner
Magnetic Personality Triggers Nail-biters Near-death Ordeal! t. Winter-Damon
Theyd Never Harry Turtledove
Loch Ness Monster Found -- In the Bermuda Triangle! David Vierling
Racehorse Predicts the Future! Josepha Sherman
Printers Devils Gregory Feeley
Cannibal Plants From Heck David Drake
Psychic Bats 1000 for Accuracy! Jody Lynn Nye
Caveat Atlantis Richard Gilliam
Frozen Hitler Found in Atlantean Love Nest G---r G---n
Those Eyes David Brin
Stop Press Mike Resnick
Martian Memorial to Elvis Sighted George Alec Effinger
This is an athology of short stories inspired by lurid
tabloid journalism. The rule here seems to have been to aim at
shorter lengths rather than long, which was probably wise.
956 Katherine Kerr & Martin H. Greenberg Weird Tales from Shakespeare
Introduction Katharine Kerr
Part One
Playbill Bill Daniel
An Augmentation of Dust Diana Paxson
Aweary of the Sun Gregory Feeley
The Will Barbara Denz
Part Two
The Tragedy of KL Jack Oakley
Ancient Magics, Ancient Hope Josepha Sherman
Queen Lyr Mark Kreighbaum
It Comes from Nothing Barry Malzberg
The Tragedy of Gertrude, Queen of Denmark Kate Daniel
Part Three
Alas, Me Bleedin... Dennis McKiernan
The Muse Afire Laura Resnick
Titus! Esther M. Friesner
Swear Not by the Moon Lawrence Schimel
The Summer of My Discontent Mike Resnick
Part Four
Else the Isle with Calibans Brian Aldiss
Face Value Nina Kiriki Hoffman
No Sooner Sighed Katherine Lawrence
The Mercury of the Wise Kevin A. Murphy
A Tempest in Her Eyes [Newford] Charles de Lint
Titania or the Celestial Bed Teresa Edgerton
Part Five
Not of an Age Gregory Benford
The Elements So Mixed Adrienne Martine-Barnes
My Voice Is In My Sword Kate Elliott
Speaking of Shakespearian fan-fic...
957 Marion Zimmer Bradley Star of Danger
I missed this one.
958 Mercedes Lackey Storm Warning
This is the first Mage-Storms book.
959 S. Andrew Swann Specters of the Dawn
The third Moreau book, this features a supporting character
from the first book investigating the death of her stud-muffin.
960 Marion Zimmer Bradley Sword and Sorceress 11
Introduction Marion Zimmer Bradley
Call the Wild Horses Bunnie Bessel
Keepsake Lynn Michals
Spirit Singer Diana L. Paxson
Final Exam Jessica R. Lerbs
The Stratmoor Bear Charley Pearson
Grumble Snoot Vaughn Heppner
Tales Javonna L. Anderson
Maggots Feast Jo Clayton
Moonriders Lynne Armstrong-Jones
Thief, Thief! Mary Catelli
Healing Hannah Blair
Virgin Spring Cynthia McQuillin
The Haven Judith Kobylecky
Savior Tom Gallier
Bad Luck and Curses Jessie Eaker
The Mistresss Riddle Karen Luk
Rusted Blade Dave Smeds
Images of Love Larry Tritten
A Fate Worse than Death Diann Partridge
Power Play Sandra Morrese
Fenwitch Sarah Evans
Green Eyed Monster Vicki Kirchhoff
Snowfire D. Lopes Heald
Ancient Warrior Stephanie Shaver
Barbarian Legacy Lawrence Schimel
Mist Laura J. Underwood
Songhealer Tammi Labrecque
The Sows Ear Kathy Ann Trueman
Poisoned Dreams Deborah Wheeler
Night-Beast Cynthia Ward
The Gift Rochelle Marie
The Crystal Casket Kristine Sprunger
Ringed In Mildred Perkins
Another anthology of heroic fantasy.
961 Charles Ingrid The Downfall Matrix
This is the third Pattern of Chaos book,
962 Jo Clayton Dance Down the Stars
And this is the third Dancer book.
963 Mike Resnick, Martin H. Greenberg & Loren D. Estleman Deals
with the Devil
Introduction Mike Resnick
A Later Date Jack C. Haldeman, II
Winter Michelle Sagara
Pitch Jane Yolen
Red Heart Terry McGarry
Another Damn Deal Dean Wesley Smith
The Party of the First Part Jody Lynn Nye
Discounts Jack Dann
The Seminar from Hell David Gerrold
Confessional Laura Resnick
The Ultimate Compliment John C. Bunnell
For Value Received Lawrence Watt-Evans
Jealous Gods Kristine Kathryn Rusch
Bargaining Chip Esther M. Friesner
The Turing Test Anthony R. Lewis
Infernal DRAMnation Jack Nimersheim
Rent-to-Own Mark C. Sumner
The Easy Way Down from Avernus Dave Smeds
Small Print Mercedes Lackey & Larry Dixon
Stanley, the Eighteen-Percenter Mike Resnick
Good Night, Duane Allman George Alec Effinger
Moishe in Excelsis Barry N. Malzberg
Nobody Wins in a Deal with a Devil Brian M. Thomsen
Mending Souls Judith Tarr
Just Do It Nicholas A. DiChario
A Deal Is a Deal Marie A. Parsons
Good Intentions Charles Von Rospach
Passion for the Souls Below Gregory Feeley
Connections Barbara Delaplace
Not Just Another Deal Pat Cadigan
Devildeal Robert Sheckley
Free Will, Baby Janni Lee Simner
Dealers Choice Frank M. Robinson
Jelly Reds John Lutz
A Girl for Ronald Jeff Waldmann
The Hack Loren D. Estleman
To Walk the Earth Thomas Sullivan
This seems self-explanatory. I didn't know Estleman did
F&SF.
964 Rosemary Edghill The Sword of Maiden's Tears
eluki bes shahar under a pen-name, this is the first
of the The Twelve Treasures books.
965 Kate Elliott The Law of Becoming
I missed this.
966 Melanie Rawn The Ruins of Ambrai
This is the first Exiles book.
967 Marion Zimmer Bradley The World Wreckers
In which we learn how it is that some factions within the Terran
Empire prepare worlds for trade and also some details of ancient history.
968 Karl Edward Wagner The Year's Best Horror Stories #22
But Is It Horrific? Karl Edward Wagner
The Rippers Tune Gregory Nicoll
One Size Eats All T. E. D. Klein
Resurrection Adam Meyer
I Live to Wash Her Joey Froehlich
A Little-Known Side of Elvis [The Dog Park] Dennis Etchison
Perfect Days Chet Williamson
See How They Run [For You to Judge] Ramsey Campbell
Shots Downed, Officer Fired Wayne Allen Sallee
David Sean Doolittle
Portrait of a Pulp Writer F. A. McMahan
Fish Harbor Paul Pinn
Ridi Bobo Robert Devereaux
Adroitly Wrapped Mark McLaughlin
Thicker Than Water Joel Lane
Memento Mori Scott Thomas
The Blitz Spirit Kim Newman
Companions Del Stone, Jr.
Masquerade Lillian Csernica
The Price of the Flames Deidra Cox
The Bone Garden Conrad Williams
Ice Cream and Tombstones Nina Kiriki Hoffman
Salt Snake Simon Clark
Ladys Portrait, Executed in Archaic Colors Charles M. Saplak
Lost Alleys Jeffrey Thomas
Salustrade D. F. Lewis
The Power of One Nancy Kilpatrick
The Lions in the Desert David Langford
Turning Thirty Lisa Tuttle
Bloodletting Kim Antieau
Flying into Naples Nicholas Royle
Under the Crust Terry Lamsley
The final volume in this series because Karl Edward Wagner died
in October of 1994.
969 Carol Serling Return to the Twilight Zone
Introduction Carol Serling
Survival Song Ray Russell
Night of the Living Bra K. D. Wentworth
The Kaleidoscope Don DAmmassa
Big Roots Pamela Sargent
The Midnight El [Sidney Taine] Robert Weinberg
Maybe Tomorrow Barry Hoffman
The Food Court John Maclay
The Garden Barbara Delaplace
Gordies Pets Hugh B. Cave
Lady in the Cream-Colored Chiffon Elizabeth Anderson & Margaret Maron
The Praying Lady Charles L. Fontenay
The Cure Phillip C. Jennings
Still Waters Barry B. Longyear
Messenger Adam-Troy Castro
The Duke of Demolition Goes to Hell John Gregory Betancourt
Salt P. D. Cacek
Always, in the Dark Charles Grant
Afternoon Ghost Jack Dann & George Zebrowski
The Sole Survivor Rod Serling
An anthology of stories told in the style of the Twilight Zone
TV show.
970 Tanya Huff Sing the Four Quarters
The first Quarters novel.
971 Irene Radford The Glass Dragon
The first in the Dragon Nimbus series.
--
http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/immigrate/
http://www.livejournal.com/users/james_nicoll
http://www.cafepress.com/jdnicoll (For all your "The problem with
defending the English language [...]" T-shirt, cup and tote-bag needs)
Holy cow - I supposed this was bound to happen the way things were going.
I didn't read one thing DAW published this year, not even a short story.
I did own one of the Lackey novels for a while.
> 955 Esther M. Friesner & Martin H. Greenberg Alien Pregnant by Elvis
>
> The Bride of Bigfoot Lawrence Watt-Evans
If they'd gone for LWE's "Monster Kidnaps Girl at Mad Scientist's Command!"
instead, I'd be 1 for 1994.
> Is Your Coworker a Space Alien? "Bob" bes Shahar
I assume this is eluki bes Shahar/Rosemary Edghill(?)
> Frozen Hitler Found in Atlantean Love Nest G---r G---n
This is also eluki bes Shahar/Rosemary Edghill, right?
Sheesh,
Tony
>James Nicoll <jdni...@panix.com> wrote:
>>
>> <snip darn near everything>
>>
>> 955 Esther M. Friesner & Martin H. Greenberg Alien Pregnant by Elvis
>>
>> The Bride of Bigfoot Lawrence Watt-Evans
>
>If they'd gone for LWE's "Monster Kidnaps Girl at Mad Scientist's Command!"
>instead, I'd be 1 for 1994.
Except I'm pretty sure I'd sold that to Pulphouse before Esther asked
for a story. Besides, that was pulp cover, not tabloid.
"The Bride of Bigfoot" was inspired by an actual Weekly World News
headline: "Bigfoot Stole My Wife!" Totally different story beyond
the headline, though.
It was fun -- so much fun that I began coming up with dozens of
tabloid headlines and inflicting them on people, such as:
Scales from Loch Ness monster cure cancer!
Woman has baboon baby, sues banana-diet doctor!
Hitler found alive in Tel Aviv!
Space aliens looted stores during L.A. riots, took only baby powder
and Pop-Tarts!
Vatican reveals secret five-day miracle diet, banned centuries ago!
Baby born holding Elvis' guitar!
I hope it's twins, says 103-year-old mother of Liberace's unborn baby!
Adolf Hitler has sex-change operation, Argentine doctors worried about
leaking silicone implants!
I also started another story, "Space Aliens Ate My Baby's Brain!" that
I still haven't finished because it ran into an insurmountable
marketing problem: With that title, it has to be a parody, and the
story insisted on coming out a serious one about media abuses.
--
My webpage is at http://www.watt-evans.com
The fourth issue of Helix is at http://www.helixsf.com
The tenth Ethshar novel has been serialized at http://www.ethshar.com/thevondishambassador1.html
How about a short-short with a trick ending: the narrator is Barbara Bush.
Cute, but not the story I wanted to write.
Well, now that I've given you the idea, you can write it, and we'll split
the ..
Ow! That hurt!
Probably - I don't know the usual timeline or rights arrangements
for anthologies, but I read "Monster Kidnaps..." in your 1992
_Crosstime Traffic_ collection, and the copyright page there says
Pulphouse published it in 1992.
> Besides, that was pulp cover, not tabloid.
Surely it could fit both! Think of a third usage, and you'd
have your own Unicorn Variation(s) story.
> "The Bride of Bigfoot" was inspired by an actual Weekly World News
> headline: "Bigfoot Stole My Wife!" Totally different story beyond
> the headline, though.
>
> It was fun -- so much fun that I began coming up with dozens of
> tabloid headlines and inflicting them on people, such as:
>
> Scales from Loch Ness monster cure cancer!
> Woman has baboon baby, sues banana-diet doctor!
> Hitler found alive in Tel Aviv!
> Space aliens looted stores during L.A. riots, took only baby powder
> and Pop-Tarts!
> Vatican reveals secret five-day miracle diet, banned centuries ago!
> Baby born holding Elvis' guitar!
> I hope it's twins, says 103-year-old mother of Liberace's unborn baby!
> Adolf Hitler has sex-change operation, Argentine doctors worried about
> leaking silicone implants!
Face of Ghandi appears on can of Spam!
Second Coming cut short - Third will be the real deal!
Bigfoot to replace Mick Fleetwood on next tour!
Yeah, I see where that could be a ton of fun.
> I also started another story, "Space Aliens Ate My Baby's Brain!" that
> I still haven't finished because it ran into an insurmountable
> marketing problem: With that title, it has to be a parody, and the
> story insisted on coming out a serious one about media abuses.
Wasn't there an Asimov short where aliens took up residence in
people's spinal columns/brains? Something about them getting
the upper hand as you aged and/or as you slept.
Argh - can't call it up. Maybe something is eating _my_ brain
(and the poor thing is starving).
Tony
Couldn't have anything to do with Evelyn (a modified dog), could it?
>954 Cheryl J. Franklin Sable, Shadow and Ice
> I missed this.
Set in a different fantasy setting than the Network/Taormin novels. Vague
recollections that the magic system involves getting marks of various sorts
implanted in your skin? I remember liking it, but have not read it in long
enough that currently I neither like nor dislike it. If you know what I mean.
>964 Rosemary Edghill The Sword of Maiden's Tears
>
> eluki bes shahar under a pen-name, this is the first
>of the The Twelve Treasures books.
And, so far, there were only three of them I know about, not twelve. Hmf.
>966 Melanie Rawn The Ruins of Ambrai
> This is the first Exiles book.
I keep thinking there's supposed to have been a third one written, but it's
never turned up anywhere I know of.
Dave
--
\/David DeLaney posting from d...@vic.com "It's not the pot that grows the flower
It's not the clock that slows the hour The definition's plain for anyone to see
Love is all it takes to make a family" - R&P. VISUALIZE HAPPYNET VRbeable<BLINK>
http://www.vic.com/~dbd/ - net.legends FAQ & Magic / I WUV you in all CAPS! --K.
Who?
I think I managed a complete miss of this year. Hm.
>938 S. Andrew Swann The Emperors of Twilight
> The second Moreau book, in this one a Frank (a modified human) has
>to learn who is trying to kill her and why.
This is an odd one, since I know I read the first Moreau book
and found it reasonably enjoyable, but that somehow never quite impelled
me to buy another Swann book.
> I have a great fondness for genetically engineered people but I
>couldn't say why.
I do too. Can't give any good reason for it, just that a clever
bit of modification to the basic human form strikes me as fun. The most
recent science fiction novel I read includes a distant-future setting
with some pleasant turtle-humans. (The cat-humans had gotten so self-
absorbed nobody else had anything to do with them.) You didn't really
*feel* the turtle-ness, but it was a nice touch.
>955 Esther M. Friesner & Martin H. Greenberg Alien Pregnant by Elvis
I remember looking at this and thinking it was a sort of humor
that I could take, but not in doses as large as the book. I honestly do
have a sense of humor; it's just that there's kinds of it that make my
teeth preemptively hurt. (My apologies to Mr Watt-Evans for the implied,
but not intended, insult.)
(In theory I might have bought the book as nightstand reading or
to poke around with reading a story here and there, but in practice I
read books straight through, and reserve for piecemeal reading things
like Robert Benchley essays or collections of comic strips.)
>963 Mike Resnick, Martin H. Greenberg & Loren D. Estleman Deals
> with the Devil
> This seems self-explanatory. I didn't know Estleman did
>F&SF.
Have there been any breakthroughs in deal-with-the-devil stories?
The most recent one I read was in an anthology of game show science
fiction stories that began with the notion that Chuck Woolery was the
Devil, and proceeds like that to raise every hackle I have.
>969 Carol Serling Return to the Twilight Zone
I *think* that I *might* have bought this, but it's all gone
from my memory at this reserve.
>Night of the Living Bra K. D. Wentworth
Maybe I didn't; I'd think I would remember a title like that.
--
Joseph Nebus
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> 939 Zach Hughes Omnificence Factor
>
> I missed this.
I have a weakness for Zach Hughes (Hugh Zachary) for amusing, silly,
semi-mindless pulp novels, my favorite being _For Texas & Zed_. Texians
vs. the Galactic Empire! Who? Will? Win?
But none of the DAW ones have rung any bells, nor drawn any responses
(that I've seen). Any other closet Zach Hughes fans here?
Cheers -- Pete Tillman
Guess not then. (She's from a Frank Zappa song, off One Size Fits All.)
There are a couple of aspects to that. On the translation side I think
Bren is about as good at the atevi language as it's humanly possible
to be, but the language itself is far enough from human patterns to
create problems. Note that his replacement, in theory the second-best
candidate available, makes embarassing mistakes when speaking atevi.
On the political side, the nature of the job changed without warning
and, for most of the book, without Bren being aware how or why.
Quoted somewhere in one of Brin's Uplift books.
Dorothy J. Heydt
Albany, California
djh...@kithrup.com
I'm not a Zappa fan. I just never could get into his music.
I read that long before I moved to Texas. I should reread it and see
how that experience will change it.
Of course, in Canada "Zed" is the last letter of the alphabet, so I
was rather surprised that it was the protagonist's name (I didn't read
the blurb since I just bought it when I saw it as Hughes was not on
the small list of authors I had learned to avoid).
Texians
Ah, the correct spelling. Don't see that enough.
> Any other closet Zach Hughes fans here?
That's the only book of his I have read. I liked it, though.
William Hyde
The one thing that's stopping me recommeding _Foreigner_ to all my SF-agnostic
friends is that it's got two huge great pointless prologues. The two (quite
long) stories of how the colony ship got lost and how the humans met the atevi
convey absolutely nothing to the plot --- all the information we need is
repeated later, in a rather more palatable guise --- and occupies about a
third of the entire novel.
The actual *story* starts when Bren finds someone in his bedroom, and that
scene and the couple following it make an excellent introduction to the atevi.
I've heard rumours that Cherryh was forced to add those two introductory
sequences; certainly, with them there, the pacing is unusually clunky for a
Cherryh book. Does anyone know anything about this?
--
┌── dg@cowlark.com ─── http://www.cowlark.com ───────────────────
│
│ Uglúk u bagronk sha pushdug Internet-glob bbhosh skai.
│
> Guess not then. (She's from a Frank Zappa song, off One Size Fits All.)
Great -- now I've got "whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, San Berdino!" stuck.
James: Frank Zappa did a lot of different kinds of stuff. The quality
varied but the top 20% was excellent.
If you like Aaron Copeland? Boxy American-sounding classical-jazz
synthesis type stuff? Find an mp3 of Zappa's "Peaches en
regalia" [sic]. An instrumental, no lyrics. You can argue whether
it's his best, but it's very... listenable.
"Evelyn" is an odd little piece of absurd poetry set to (not much)
music. Works better than it should.
Doug M.
> Guess not then. (She's from a Frank Zappa song, off One Size Fits All.)
Great -- now I've got "whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, San Berdino!" stuck.
James: Frank Zappa did a lot of different kinds of stuff. The quality
varied but the top 20% was excellent. (He was also an interesting
character in his own right, and I'm mildly surprised he hasn't popped
up in SF at all.)
If you like Aaron Copeland? Boxy American-sounding classical-jazz
synthesis type stuff? Find an mp3 of Zappa's "Peaches en
regalia" [sic]. An instrumental, no lyrics.
"Evelyn" is an odd little piece of absurd poetry set to (not much)
I know that and I have sampled his stuff but thus far it jsut
doesn't do anything for me.
>If you like Aaron Copeland?
Yeah, did I mention being raised in a sound-proof box? Because
effectively, I was.
> >963 Mike Resnick, Martin H. Greenberg & Loren D. Estleman Deals
> > with the Devil
>
> > This seems self-explanatory. I didn't know Estleman did
> >F&SF.
>
> Have there been any breakthroughs in deal-with-the-devil stories?
> The most recent one I read was in an anthology of game show science
> fiction stories that began with the notion that Chuck Woolery was the
> Devil, and proceeds like that to raise every hackle I have.
The Pseudopod horror podcast just ran a story in which a guy is seduced
by a succubus and is then sued for child support in the courts of Hell:
<http://pseudopod.org/2007/05/18/pseudopod-038-hells-daycare/>
The payoff wasn't very satisying to me but it was a plotline I don't
think I had encountered before.
-jwgh
--
"Only in America could something like that not happen in America."
-- Matt McIrvin, 29 November 2005
To make matters worse, your brain got it wrong.
Come on with me
Come on with me
Come on with me
Down in San Ber'dino
Just 60 miles, 60 miles
Down the San Ber'dino freeway
They got some dark green air
An' you can choke all day
That's right!
The song "San Ber'dino" is on the 1975 "One Size Fits All" album.
http://globalia.net/donlope/fz/lyrics/One_Size_Fits_All.html
> James: Frank Zappa did a lot of different kinds of stuff.
> The quality varied but the top 20% was excellent. (He was
> also an interesting character in his own right, and I'm
> mildly surprised he hasn't popped up in SF at all.)
>
> If you like Aaron Copeland? Boxy American-sounding
> classical-jazz synthesis type stuff? Find an mp3 of
> Zappa's "Peaches en regalia" [sic]. An instrumental,
> no lyrics.
Zappa and Copeland? Zappa is closer to Spike Jones--another L.A.
bandleader and creator of comedy music. Both died prematurely in
their early fifties. Admittedly, Zappa had a greater musical range
than Spike Jones.
> "Evelyn" is an odd little piece of absurd poetry set to (not much)
> music. Works better than it should.
That song is just before "San Ber'dino" on "One Size Fits All."
Evelyn, a dog, having undergone
Further modification
Pondered the significance of short-person behavior
In pedal-depressed panchromatic resonance
And other highly ambient domains . . .
Maybe you can answer a question that I asked earlier: Is Zappa
mentioned in The Transmigration of Timothy Archer?
--
http://www.well.com/user/silly
darn your sock puppets
>On Tue, 22 May 2007 14:11:03 -0700, "Mike Schilling"
><mscotts...@hotmail.com> wrote:
>
>>"Lawrence Watt-Evans" <l...@sff.net> wrote in message
>>news:q8m6539v6i1eh3kt0...@news.rcn.com...
>>>
>>> I also started another story, "Space Aliens Ate My Baby's Brain!" that
>>> I still haven't finished because it ran into an insurmountable
>>> marketing problem: With that title, it has to be a parody, and the
>>> story insisted on coming out a serious one about media abuses.
>>
>>How about a short-short with a trick ending: the narrator is Barbara Bush.
>
>Cute, but not the story I wanted to write.
You know, there IS a magazine that would take the story you wanted to
write.....
--
Amy "not that I plan to mention HelixSF in this post" Sheldon
Amy Sheldon
Amy.S...@gmail.com
>On Tue, 22 May 2007 17:55:41 -0400, Lawrence Watt-Evans <l...@sff.net>
>wrote:
>
>>On Tue, 22 May 2007 14:11:03 -0700, "Mike Schilling"
>><mscotts...@hotmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>>"Lawrence Watt-Evans" <l...@sff.net> wrote in message
>>>news:q8m6539v6i1eh3kt0...@news.rcn.com...
>>>>
>>>> I also started another story, "Space Aliens Ate My Baby's Brain!" that
>>>> I still haven't finished because it ran into an insurmountable
>>>> marketing problem: With that title, it has to be a parody, and the
>>>> story insisted on coming out a serious one about media abuses.
>>>
>>>How about a short-short with a trick ending: the narrator is Barbara Bush.
>>
>>Cute, but not the story I wanted to write.
>
>You know, there IS a magazine that would take the story you wanted to
>write.....
Huh.
Now, that IS an interesting thought. Of course, another problem with
the story was that it wasn't SF or fantasy. Will tends to be pretty
loose about that, but maybe not THAT loose.
Still, it's an idea, and one I hadn't considered. Thank you.
According to http://www.cherryh.com/www/univer.htm#Foreigner:
"I didn't plan to have the first two sections on the first Foreigner
novel, but my editor said put them in. So I did"
Ha! Thought so.
I wonder if she's planning a Director's Cut version?
> Paul Clarke wrote:
> [...]
> > According to http://www.cherryh.com/www/univer.htm#Foreigner:
> >
> > "I didn't plan to have the first two sections on the first Foreigner
> > novel, but my editor said put them in. So I did"
>
> Ha! Thought so.
>
> I wonder if she's planning a Director's Cut version?
That's the great thing about a book: You can take a scissor and cut it
yourself.
> 941 C.J. Cherryh Foreigner
>
> All I can remember about the first Foreigner novel is that the
> human protagonist seemed strangely ill-prepared for his job.
Insert sarcastic C.J. Cherryh-related comment here.
--
William December Starr <wds...@panix.com>
> The one thing that's stopping me recommeding _Foreigner_ to all my
> SF-agnostic friends is that it's got two huge great pointless
> prologues. The two (quite long) stories of how the colony ship
> got lost and how the humans met the atevi convey absolutely
> nothing to the plot --- all the information we need is repeated
> later, in a rather more palatable guise --- and occupies about a
> third of the entire novel.
>
> The actual *story* starts when Bren finds someone in his bedroom,
> and that scene and the couple following it make an excellent
> introduction to the atevi.
Any reason not to recommend it to them with a specific caveat about
skipping the prologues?
> 938 S. Andrew Swann The Emperors of Twilight
>
> The second Moreau book, in this one a Frank (a modified
human)
> has
> to learn who is trying to kill her and why.
> I have a great fondness for genetically engineered
people but I
> couldn't say why.
Because they make a hell of a lot more sense than
shapeshifters?
> 941 C.J. Cherryh Foreigner
>
> All I can remember about the first Foreigner novel is
that the
> human protagonist seemed strangely ill-prepared for his job.
That's because he was the first person who could really handle
it.
> If you like Aaron Copeland? Boxy American-sounding
classical-jazz
> synthesis type stuff? Find an mp3 of Zappa's "Peaches en
> regalia" [sic]. An instrumental, no lyrics. You can argue
whether
> it's his best, but it's very... listenable.
Very little of Copland qualifies as "classical-jazz
synthesis" (despite Benny Goodman having commissioned it, that
includes the clarinet concerto.) None of it seems very much
like Zappa's excursions into the classical realm to me.
>
>
> 945 Jack Lovejoy Outworld Cats
>
> No idea what this is.
>
Forgettable froth. Fun so long as you turned off all brain activity
while reading it. Going from my one reading of this book (which was
some years ago, so my memory may be off on some of the details), you
had:
1. The title cats: the ancestors of these two cats (evidently a
telelpathic sub-species of regular small cats) were found on Earth
thousands of years ago by alien visitors, who found this species of
small cat made the perfect maintenence crew for their interstellar
exploration cratfs, and captured them all for that purpose. (Though
if the aliens really wanted a small Earth animal to breed/manipulate/
pressgang into being a matainence crew, they should have started with
one of the monkey species, but what do I know? ;) I'm just the reader
here.)
2. Stock heroine: atheletic (possibly a weightlifter), tanned,
smart, searching for her twin brother (who was dedfinatly a
weightlifter), who was part of a Greenpeace-style group who ran afoul
of the main villians, and paid the price for it.
3. Stock hero: decent fellow, also atheltic, student at the business
college owned and operated by the main villian's corperation (training
the next generation of soulless cubicle drones for company profits),
first person to befriend the outworld cats.
4. Supporting character #1: celebrity occult/strange happenings
writer/investigator, who gets dragged into the mystery of the 'alien'
cats, and ultimetly helps stop the main villian and his henchmen.
(This character also held crowded public lectures in his home several
times a week (month?), leading to a bizarre observation of mine during
this scene: would a character with this kind of a lecture schedule,
be asked the two following questions EVERY time he had a Q&A session
-- "If a tree fell in the forest and no-one was around to hear it,
would it still make a noise?" and "Which came first, the chicked or
the egg?" In the book he was asked that every lecture.)
5. Supporting character #2: extremely powerful preteen pyschic, who
had no memory of her life before waking up a few years previous in a
shaman's magic circle, and becoming his student to learn how to
control her awesome powers.
6. Supporting character #3: old actress who was a major movie star
waaaay back in Hollywood's Golden Era. Native of Sicily, meaning she
put greater value on land than she did anything else, meanig if her
many suitors wanted her affection, they brought her property titles
instead of jewlery and flowers. Meaning she owned property that the
main villian wanted, and refused to sell to at any price.
7. Main villian: best way to describe this guy is as either Rupert
Murdoch (the Fox-TV guy) or Bill Gates crossed with Howard Hughes as
he was at the end of his life. One of the richest men in the world
(supposedly he came in #2 wealth-wise in the world), he was Eeeeeeevil
with no redeeming qualities at all. All his corperate buildings
(including the college mentioned earlier) were literally soulless
concrete boxes, the only employees allowed were @$$kissers and yes-
men, where EVERYTHING was caught on tape, and the only means of
advancement was through blackmail and betrayal. A favorite
'punishment' in this company was to take an offending employee and
literally lobotomize him, turning him into a 'brainer', a docile
uncomplaining obediant person who no longer had interest in a life
outside the company. In other words, the villians' preferred worker.
8. The henchmen: the not-too-bright-but-unquestinably-loyal-to-the-
main-villian thug named Angel, and the villian's chief spy, who was
having an affair with the villian's wife. (The spy was one of the few
characters who I found remotely interesting, oddly enough.)
9. The villian's wife: in her prime she ranked #3 in the Miss
Universe pagent, and was so insulted by the fact that two other women
were judged more beautiful than her that she had her lover plant drugs
on the pagent winner (resulting in a lengthy jail sentence for that
victim), and arranged to have the runner-up's husband driven to
suicide and ultimately fixed matters so that the only job this victim
could get was as a waitress at a resturant the wife occasionally ate
at. Interestingly enough, she became one of the good guys by the end
of the story.
10. The villian's secret base: introduced in the last third of the
book, this was a tropical Pacific island where the US government
conducted nuclear tests in the 1950-60's. Decades later, the local
ecology had only three animals left in it: giant mutated rats, who
were the sole inhabitants in the island's jungles; giant mutated
seagulls, who lived in the island's mountains as its sole inhabitants;
and giant mutated crabs, who lived on the island's beaches and waters
as its sole inhabitants. All three species preyed on each other in a
rock-paper-scissors relationship, with the occasional human side dish
when availible. The island was the most interesting thing in the
whole book.
One thing I should mention is that Outworld Cats was clearly meant to
be the first of a series of books set in this universe, with the many
mysteries set up in this book (like where the cats really came from,
and the true origins of the preteen pyschic) to be explored in later
books. So far as I know, no other books in this series ever came
out. Then again, I wasn't looking for them, so I could have missed
the sequels easily.
Overall, I found Outworld Cats the literary equivilent of a so-bad-
it's-almost-good movie. YMMV, of course.
Chris
Yeah, but they look awfully funny as gifts.