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November Books 15) Beyond The Sun, by Matthew Jones [Nov. 16th, 2009|03:42 pm]

nwhyte
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I only realised after reading this that I had already heard the excellent audio adaptation which includes Sophie Aldred and Anneke Wills. The original book is very good too, and I think would be reasonably penetrable for someone who hadn't previously followed the Bernice Summerfield stories. Nicely observed emotional politics between and among Benny and her students, and the various aliens with whom Benny's ex gets them involved. To a certain extent I felt it was the story that Colony In Space should have been. A good one (only the second Benny novel I have read, the first being the equally enjoyable Walking to Babylon).
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(sorry, just testing something) [Nov. 16th, 2009|05:39 pm]

davidbarnett


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There's not much in a post these days [Nov. 16th, 2009|03:44 pm]

desperance
Weird techno-bewilderment: how do you teach a mobile phone to tell the time? I can change the timezone, but not apparently the actual hours & minutes, it thinks it knows about those - and it is absolutely wrong. I have it set of course to GMT, where the current time is 15:45, and the phone thinks it's 05:39. Is driva me crazy.

In other news, this has been a day for deliveries, because the nice council workiepersons repainted my doorstep with sticky redstuff. Many doubtless-nice deliverypersons have gone away with sticky red bootsoles, possibly disgruntled; but they have left me with copies of many things, including Wilde Stories, in which I have a story; Hellbound Hearts, in which I have a story; and a couple of new Nightside novels by m'friend Simon R Green, in which I don't have any stories at all but he does.

Mac has apparently decided that he needs to sit right by the keyboard, on the MS I'm working from, and headbutt my hand as I type. This is less than productive, and - cute though he is, with his purring'n'all - he is about to find himself evicted.

Meanwhile, because I really have nothing else to say, here's a little chunk of said MS, the novel I am revising:

There needn't be trumpets. Nor fireworks, though there were fireworks almost every night now. They were gaudy and welcome and superfluous.
Triumph could be a quiet thing, Chung had learned. It could be what came after the fireworks, in the absence of trumpets. Slipping into his bed, into his heart; a whisper in his ear, a hidden touch in the dark, contentment. Contentment could be triumph, indistinguishable.
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Random research [Nov. 16th, 2009|02:51 pm]

jemck
What cars do these men drive?

Mid-late 40's IT professional, very good at his board-level job and thus very well paid, got an eye for quality as well as elegance. Not in any sense a show-off but not about to apologise for his success either. Interested in the technical/performance aspects of cars without being a complete petrolhead.

Early 30's regional newspaper journalist, with ambitions but not quite getting up the nerve to try pitching to the London papers as yet. Very aware of his own outward appearance, as far as suits, shoes, haircut etc goes, with an overall effect of perhaps trying a fraction too hard. Would certainly be looking for a car that makes what he considers the appropriate statement.

I just need a few convincing lines for local colour in this here Cotswold book but find myself utterly outwith my areas of expertise.
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Goodness, that was unexpected [Nov. 16th, 2009|11:11 am]

desperance
For those of you who thought there was, who thought there must be a point beyond which even I could not be bullied or harassed or inveigled into something I had set my face definitively against: here is evidence that you are still wrong.

I have a mobile phone.

I don't yet know how to use it, or what to use it for. I don't know whether I will just never carry it, or whether I will carry it but never use it, or whether I will become one of those flibbertigibbets who is always talking to someone else when I'm out with you. If the latter, you have my authority in advance to take stern dissuasive action, because I hate that more than anything.

It is currently charging. The rest is - well, probably not silence in the circumstances, but a mystery certainly.

Coo golly.
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A weekend of two halves - Novacon and Kai Shin Kai [Nov. 16th, 2009|10:53 am]

jemck
I finally made it to a Novacon! First time ever - not through lack of willing. But every time I've had plans, they've been derailed by diary gremlins, disease (self/spouse/sons) or some such. But not this time!

My most immediate reason for going this year was the invitation from Caroline Mullen aka [info]coth, to come and discuss 'Whither the Book Room?'. The particular role of the convention Book Room - or as it now is the Dealers' Room - is an interesting question, as is the question of how it will evolve - or not - as the wider bookselling landscape changes, and as various of those stalwart booksellers we've seen over the years retire.

So we had a discussion group on the Saturday afternoon, with myself, Tom Hunter and Caroline plus various other interested folk. Very interesting it was too, exploring what con-goers want, what booksellers need and how some win-win might be devised, to the wider benefit of conventions as a whole. (Feel free to chip in with thoughts and observations in the comments here.)

I'm pleased to say this was a thoroughly constructive discussion rather than some sterile gripe session coming up with a fanciful wishlist including 'and a pony', with useful input from those present with conrunning experience, not wasting time by getting defensive but pointing out the various realities, practicalities and obstacles relating to various suggestions - which were clearly appreciated, in all senses, by everyone else since it seemed most of those present have event-organising or similarly relevant experience through work or other hobbies/activities.

There was going to be a panel discussion on the Sunday programme and I shall be very interested indeed to see what came out of that. Unfortunately I couldn't be there for that because - see above re diary gremlins - Sunday was the annual black-belt training course for the Kai Shin Kai, the aikido organisation we belong to. So that was five hours of intensive and energetic practise for me there.

Came home, had a hot bath, ate dinner (which had been thrown in the slow-cooker before we went) and then we all sat down as a family and watched Doctor Who, Ray Mears and Top Gear. All good fun.

So today, I feel I am justified in taking some time off. Well, for values of time off that include getting the family laundry situation back on track, doing some housework, having a strategy phonecall with Agent Sam and then going to the dentist with spouse and sons for check-ups all round. Glamorous business, this writing life.
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November Books 14) Nature Girl, by Carl Hiaasen [Nov. 16th, 2009|12:46 am]

nwhyte
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As ever, a reliably hilarious tale of antics in Florida - this time with less political commentary than some of the other Hiaasen books I have read, but compensated by even more vivid characters, only one of whom is too unpleasant to be believable. Excellent stuff.

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Nebula [Nov. 15th, 2009|10:50 pm]

desperance
Just a nudge-in-the-ribs to you SFWA members: the new-style Nebula nomination period is now open. And, um, [info] moshui's Dragon in Chains would qualify, should you happen to have read it and enjoyed it. Should you not happen to have read it, of course, this omission can be swiftly rectified. (And Jay Lake thinks you should...)

Me, of course, I am attractively neutral on the matter...
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November Books 13) Medea, by Euripides [Nov. 15th, 2009|05:54 pm]

nwhyte
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This is a short but tough play. At the opening, Medea resents Jason for bringing her to Corinth and then abandoning her for the local princess: she swears revenge, and using her own children by Jason as unwitting tools, poisons both the king and the princess (and the kids too). It's a horrible but believable scenario, and Medea, despite her monstrous decisions, comes across as a sympathetic character.

If I were ever in the unlikely position of staging this, I think there are three big questions arising from the script. First off, Jason - idiot, philanderer, or Machiavellian? It's not at all clear from what Euripides gives us. I think I would prefer to have him making clear-eyed political decisions, and then devastated by Medea's sabotage. Second, the Chorus - in today's theatre, really you would want her to be a single female character, observing and commenting, but also participating and encouraging. And third, the slightly weird thing is that the entire play takes place in the street outside Medea's house - which therefore becomes not a place of domesticity but a mysterious location which people enter and from which they emerge changed. This may not have fazed the ancient Greeks who expected the three unities to be preserved, but a modern audience will wonder why we never see inside the buildings.

Anyway, it's a powerful character study of a wronged woman exacting revenge. Rather thrilling.
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The Little Stranger (2009) by Sarah Waters [Nov. 15th, 2009|10:50 pm]

thisplacehere
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The Little Stranger is my first Sarah Waters book, and one about which I’ve heard mixed opinions. But the proof of the pudding is, of course, in the eating (or, in this case, the reading) – and, wouldn’t you know, I’ve ended up with a mixed opinion myself. Thinking about it, though, that’s quite appropriate; because this is, in a quite literal sense, a mixed book.

Our narrator is one Dr Faraday, a GP in rural 1940s Warwickshire, who becomes involved with the affairs of the Ayreses, a family struggling to keep the estate of Hundreds Hall, going; just as they’re struggling to find a place in the modern world. A series of strange events — the family dog biting a young girl, a mysterious fire, and yet others — puts the household under further strain. The occurrences become stranger still: is there a rational explanation for it all, or could Hundreds Hall be haunted?

The Little Stranger is, then, at once two things: a ghost story, and a portrait of the decline of the landed gentry in post-war Britain. Its problem, I think, is that these two aspects sit awkwardly together — and, at times, may even work against each other. As an evocation of a point in history, I find the novel to be very good: Faraday’s rather stiff narrative voice places the reader effectively in the period — I, for one, never caught a whiff of anachronism — and Waters lays bare some of the pressures (social, economic, and otherwise) at work; be they pressure on the Ayreses to sell off land for property development, of the awkwardness and difficulty of moving between social strata, as Faraday did when he became a doctor.

No, it’s the ghost story which is problematic. Waters keeps things ambiguous — which would be fine, except I can’t quite believe in the ambiguity. For it to work, both the rational and supernatural explanations must be plausible and implausible at the same time. The rational explanations put forward by Faraday and others achieve this: they’re plausible enough to account for what’s reported (Faraday never witnesses anything unequivocally supernatural himself); yet they also seem increasingly strained attempts to explain unusual events away.

The supernatural explanations, however, don’t have the same duality. I can believe, from the evidence in the text, that Hundreds Hall isn’t haunted supernaturally; but I can’ t quite believe that it could be. The house is described as decaying, but it never feels (to me) to be as though it’s more than just a decrepit old house — it never feels truly malevolent. And that makes it hard for me to believe that we’re (possibly) dealing with a haunted house.

But there’s more to this than ‘the ghost story doesn’t quite work’, because the issue cuts to the very metaphoric heart of The Little Stranger. I think Waters is trying to set up a structure where the ‘haunting’ of Hundreds Hall is a reflection of the way that the house has become a millstone around the necks of the Ayres family — in other words, the ghost-story aspect of the novel and its decline-portait aspect should intertwine, should work in harmony. However, since the ghost story isn’t as strong, statements like, ‘This house has sucked the life out of [us]…It wants to destroy us, all of us’ (spoken by Roderick Ayres, the son of the household) come across as heavy-handed attempts to drive the metaphor home (I suspect this statement might seem heavy-handed anyway, but it’s particularly so given the circumstances).

I’m not sure how well the ‘haunting’ fits in general as a metaphor for the family’s misfortune, actually. Hauntings perhaps best represent acute problems — exorcise the ghost, and healing can begin. Yet the Ayreses’ troubles are fundamentally chronic: they’re caused by social changes, for which there can be no ‘exorcism’. So, instead of going hand-in-hand with the tale of decline, too often the ghost story seems like a distraction from it. All of which is to say that The Little Stranger doesn’t work for me as an aesthetic whole.

Yet there are still ways in which the novel does succeed. To give one example, I’ve mentioned its historical portrait; to give another, Faraday is an interesting creation, by turns both a rounded individual and an empty vessel. Sometimes he’s barely there, just a window through which we can view the events at Hundreds Hall; yet the halting growth of his attraction to Caroline Ayres (the daughter of the household) takes a convincing course. In some respects, Faraday mirrors the Ayres family, as his life too is threatened by changes in society (he fears that the coming National Health Service spells the end for private practice); and, in the end, he becomes so bound up with Hundreds Hall that Faraday can be seen as ‘haunting’ the place himself, in a way.

That was my first Sarah Waters book, then: how did it go? I don’t think she achieves everything she set out to in The Little Stranger; but what she does achieve suggests to me that Waters is a very good writer when at her best — so I’ll be reading more of her work in the future.
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November Books 12) Where Late The Sweet Birds Sang, by Kate Wilhelm [Nov. 15th, 2009|05:35 pm]

nwhyte
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This is a rather unusual Hugo winner. It's a curious amalgam of the great post-holocaust novels Earth Abides and After London on the one hand, and the suspicion of clones latent in Brave New World on the other. The depiction of sexual politics as humanity tries to reinvent itself is core to the narrative: the clones' society turns out to be intellectually and biologically sterile, and their sequestration of fertile women to drug-addled maternity is pretty appalling. I felt that Wilhelm was asking some pretty serious questions here, if not necessarily providing the answers; in any case, as an author rather than a politician, the former rather than the latter is her responsibility.

For once I have actually read all of the other Hugo nominees that year - Mindbridge by Joe Haldeman, Children of Dune by Frank Herbert, Man Plus by Frederik Pohl and Shadrach in the Furnace by Robert Silverberg. I must say I would have found this a difficult choice: all of them are somewhat difficult and disturbing books, none of them obvious classics but all memorable in a certain way. In the end I would probably have voted for Mindbridge since the sex scenes are more entertaining than those in Shadrach in the Furnace (though of course in the counterfactual situation where I actually had a vote that year I would have been 10, so that particular factor would not have mattered so much to me). I think this was one of those rare years where the Hugo went to a somewhat unlikely candidate, and was all the stronger for it.
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November Books 11) Notre Dame de Paris, by Victor Hugo [Nov. 15th, 2009|04:03 pm]

nwhyte
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I love Les Miserables, both the novel and the show (NB to those who know only the latter - Gavroche is the Thenardiers' son and therefore Eponine's sister), and of course everyone knows the stereotype of the Hunchback, so I was looking forward to reading this. It's a novel of biting social commentary, though set far in the past (1483); the innocent Esmeralda is exploited, persecuted and condemned by the ruling classes, her only defenders the unreliable denizens of the underworld and a disabled bell-ringer. (And her pet goat.) It starts awfully slowly - Hugo takes a very long time to clear his throat, as it were - but the characters are largely engaging, and the action accelerates towards the climax. Knowing that it had been made into a Disney film, which presumably must have a happy ending though I haven't seen it, I was in a state of considerable suspense as to how Hugo would resolve the situation and save the central characters.

It hadn't occurred to me that Disney might have changed the story, so the ending came as a rather brutal shock.

I must say that I still think Les Miserables is the better book, but Notre Dame de Paris is very interesting in the way it takes a lot of the same themes and puts them together with rather different effect.
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Aminatou Haidar update [Nov. 15th, 2009|07:34 am]

nwhyte
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She has been deported to Spain, apparently because she wrote "Western Sahara" rather than "Morocco" as her country of residence on her immigration form and refused to change it. In terms of international law she is entirely correct, but to assert that the people of Western Sahara should have their country back is in violation of the Moroccan constitution.
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Sunday morning, coming down [Nov. 15th, 2009|11:39 am]

desperance
It is eleven-thirty: and no, I may not go to the pub yet. I am not expected there for an hour and a half. I shall go on working. One more hour, I can at least manage that, despite the ouchie. Alcohol shall be anaesthetic later. Also dim sum, also tea. Yum cha!

I keep stumbling over infelicities in this text and thinking "How did [anyone at all] ever let that by - oh, wait. Nobody's read this yet, except me. How did I ever...?"

On the other hand, there are occasional felicities to leaven the lump of it. Today's favourite thus far: "There were no secrets left, only things that had not yet been said." I like that. Betrayal: it's all about the bitter.
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(no subject) [Nov. 14th, 2009|09:36 pm]

dakegra
just finished reading pTerry's latest, Unseen Academicals.

Which, despite my misgivings concerning the subject matter, ie. football, is really rather good.

Now. What to read next? Had a couple of book parcels through today - one from the lovely folks at Rocky Nook, Photography Unplugged by Harald Mante, which I shall gush forth about later (it's very *very* beautiful)

and one from Borders. Finally. Ordered them a week and a half ago and the entire order has been marked 'ready to ship' since friday 6th.

Anyhoo, that parcel contained David Benioff's City of Thieves, Matt Seaton's Two Wheels, and a graphic novel, The New Brighton Archeological Society

I suggested to EB that he might enjoy the latter, and he's spent bits of today with his nose firmly stuck in the book. I shall point him at my Tintin collection next. :-)
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Aminatou Haidar [Nov. 14th, 2009|08:30 am]

nwhyte
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I don't often post work-specific stuff here but this is so outrageous that I must.

Aminatou Haidar is a human rights activist from the Western Sahara, most of which has been occupied by Morocco for the last thirty years. Last year she was given the Robert F Kennedy Human Rights Award; last month she was in New York to receive the Train Foundation's Civil Courage Prize. On her return to the Western Sahara yesterday morning, she was arrested by the Moroccans, purportedly for failing to complete her immigration form on landing.

This was pretty much announced in advance by King Mohammed VI of Morocco in a speech a week ago, when he announced that "it is time to stop outlaws taking advantage of civic freedoms to agitate from within". This in turn was probably helped by Hillary Clinton the week before endorsing the Moroccan policy on the illegal occupation of other people's territory.

I know some of you guys are fans of Hillary's, but really this is disgusting. The EU is not much better. It can put out a statement condemning Azerbaijan's treatment of bloggers, but I haven't heard a peep from them on the arrest of someone who happens to be awkward for the Moroccans. It is a shameful performance.
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For those who hadn't already heard... [Nov. 14th, 2009|08:10 am]

nwhyte
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...Michael Moorcock to write Doctor Who book.

Of course, he has already included the Doctor and a Dalek in one of his earlier works!
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(no subject) [Nov. 13th, 2009|10:31 pm]

dakegra
I've finally joined the Cult of Apple. I now have a lovely shiny black ipod nano.

which needs a name.

Oooh! and it does video! What should I do a video thingy about? I know some of you do Talk To Me Tuesday. Quick, hiveMind, suggestions!
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There's more than one way to bake a loaf [Nov. 13th, 2009|03:21 pm]

desperance
Sourdough generally needs much, much longer to rise than a dough made with the standard brewer's yeast. It's not at all uncommon to knock the dough back several times during the first rise - my last loaf, my current preferred process, I gave the dough a five-minute knead and then knocked it back every hour on the hour for the next four hours, before I shaped it and set it to rise for baking.

Right now I am trying a whole nother method, where it starts out mixed but not kneaded at all, and then gets ten or fifteen seconds of kneading every ten minutes for the first half-hour, then on the half-hour, then on the hour.

For some people, I guess this would be intolerable. For me, at the moment, it's all but ideal. I work from home anyway, so being around for four hours is no burden; I'm working revisions, which calls for no great extended periods of concentration; I really, really need to take a lot of breaks from the computer just now, so being constantly called away to fidget with bread is nothing but a blessing to my body.

And it's a fascination to my mind. Bread without hard kneading? What is this about? Will it, y'know, work...?

Also, I knead need a breadmaking icon, if I'm going to go on talking about it. But I need more cooking-icons anyway, 'specially now that I no longer grow chillies. I must take more photos...
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UnDonne [Nov. 13th, 2009|01:26 pm]

desperance
Send not, to ask for whom the sossidge fries; it fries for Barry.

Apparently.

Even he doesn't quite have the nerve to hook one out of the sizzling pan, but he doesn't think he needs to. He reckons he can hook one out of my quivering conscience.

I am made of sterner stuff, I tell you. I tell him, I tell myself. I am.

*is firm of purpose*

Umm...
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