May Science Fiction Releases

To begin with, I wasn’t sure how often the Press would want me posting here.  Others seemed to be sporadic and usually about books.  So I finally emailed and asked, saying, you know, usually blogs are posted to rather often.  They said go ahead.  So, as last week was an indication, I’ll be checking in more often. 

And since this isn’t all book review format anymore, I should tell you some things that the press is coming out with.  That’s part of what a press blog is for, isn’t it?  So here it is, new in May:Last_man_3

The 2nd edition of Mary Shelley’s The Last Man.  I already have my hot little hands on it.  It was the
 
first thing I requested when they told me they’d give me books.  So expect a discussion on it later.  Perhaps a bit later.  Shelley is dense reading. This is not the sort of book you take to a beach.  It is the sort of book you curl up in bed with while a thunderstorm rages around you and you can feel the emotions and torment of the romantic poets.

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Science for Science Fiction

t one point I was a writer for a television pilot.  I got into a heated discussion with the producer regarding whether the bay doors of the space shuttle would rip off if they were opened while the shuttle was moving in space. I contended there was no need to be aerodynamic in an environment with no air. He said the door would rip off just like if you drove your car with the hood up.  "Basic physics really," he told me. The argument only ended when another writer said we could worry about the science details later.  (This was … Continue reading Science for Science Fiction

Gone Gaming

y husband and I married under slightly false pretenses.  Yes, he already knew I was a science geek.  Our first conversation had included the Shoemaker-Levy comet and the dust it kicked up on Jupiter.  And he already knew I read science fiction.  In an example of how pathetic geeks in love can be, we wound up at a bookstore on one of our first dates, where we held hands and perused the sf section pointing out favorites and exclaiming about overlaps in our reading lists.  (well, hey, dinner and a movie is pretty dull too.)  And he knew I liked … Continue reading Gone Gaming

The Fortune Teller’s Kiss by Brenda Serotte “The Fortune Teller’s Kiss is an eloquent brief on the transformative powers of stories, giving us  permission to enter a private territory and offering the limitless interpretations to which a good memoir lends itself.” —Tara Kai, Sun-Sentinel (May 14) "Poet Serotte relives a childhood cataclysm in this culture-rich, affecting memoir, part of the American Lives literary nonfiction series. In 1954 she contracted polio, mere months before Jonas Salk perfected his vaccine-a coincidence that struck her Sephardic Jewish household as especially cruel. . . . She explores the identity that confounds her: first, her … Continue reading

Writing Brave and Free by Ted Kooser and Steve Cox “If you’ve yearned for the courage to put pen to paper, or hands to keyboard, after reading Writing Brave and Free, you probably will.”—Marge Pellegrino, Tucson Weekly (May 25) “What a treasure to have a second how-to book of this caliber enter the world for developing writers. . . . [T]his is a practical, down-to-earth, advice-driven collection of smart, unpretentious chapters on the work of becoming a writer. . . . The section on self-publishing and electronic publishing will be especially important to today’s younger writers. . . . The … Continue reading

Black Gun, Silver Star by Art T. Burton “[This] biography is more statement of fact than tribute to Reeves and no punches are pulled. Bass  had an exceptionally long tenure as a Deputy U. S. Marshal and made a few mistakes along the way. These are covered. But, so too, are the remarkable feats he accomplished. . . . No critic, then or now has been able to show that Bass did not do good and bring law and order to the frontier. Art’s rendering takes on all comers and their questions. The book is a heck of a good … Continue reading

Some random thoughts

he guys over at SF Signal picked up on my last post and put up their own.  This is very cool, since I’ve been reading their blog for awhile and like it.  It is also uncool, since I now know they are looking and have to give up on my plan of stealing from them.  Oh well. I’m stepping a bit more comfortably into blogging shoes.  And I think Jay is permanently not going to be joining me as the other sf blogger.  Too bad.  I was looking forward to reading what he had to say, but apparently real life … Continue reading Some random thoughts

The Golden Age of Readers

f you look at the top sellers in science fiction at Amazon.com, and subtract any books that have tie-ins to movies or television, what you’ll see is largely what you have seen before: Fahrenheit 451, Brave New World, 1984, Slaughterhouse Five.  Only a few will be new books with no tie-ins to other media.  Tonight it was The Time Traveler’s Wife, another Dan Brown book called Digital Fortress, and some self-help book masquerading as fiction called The Alchemist.  Otherwise the top sellers on Amazon in the science fiction category were books over fifty years old and tie-in books for V … Continue reading The Golden Age of Readers

Century of Locusts by Malika Mokeddem “Mokeddem’s novel is a gem, brimming with beautifully rendered scenes . . . that remain indelible in the reader’s memory.”— Booklist “Many of Mokeddem’s sentences have the breath of poetry upon them. . . . Indeed, a question worth asking of literature in translation is whether it does not give us an unfamiliar English with powerful new shapes and cadences—the expressive possibilities of another language reinvigorate our own. One believes this to be true of the work of Laura Rice and Karim Hamdy here, as also of Erdag Goknar’s striking translation five years ago … Continue reading

Tarzan Alive by Philip José Farmer “The old vine swinger is one of a handful of fictional characters to rank a biography. Such books give the authors the opportunity to expound on the characters, providing background, side stories, and updates not offered by their creator. Farmer’s 1972 volume borrows from Edgar Rice Burroughs but also adds to the legend by tracing Tarzan’s lineage . . . and extends his exploits beyond the African jungle as an RAF pilot in World War II. Great fun.”—Library Journal, Classic Returns (May 15) Continue reading