Science-Fiction Category
The Nature of the Hero, Rowling-Style

A few months ago, I decided to take the plunge: I would burn through the Harry Potter series, now complete, all in one go. It's been... interesting. I've discovered all kinds of things I had not realized before, including the fact that Harry is - to put it diplomatically - not a particularly effective hero.
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Overstuffed vs. Undernourished

How's this for controversial: Harry Potter book 5, clocking in at a massive 900 pages, about 3 or 4 times longer than the first book, is too long and overstuffed, while the movie adaptation, clocking in at just over two hours, is way too short and leaves out all the good stuff. Wait a minute, did I say controversial? I meant contradictory.
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100 Unicorns in the Garden

Strange things happen to the Armitages on Mondays. Sometimes there's a unicorn in the garden, sometimes there are 100. Harriet and Mark, sister and brother, are used to the ghosts, the dragons, the Furies, and so on. Life in their small village, and wacky relatives who come to visit? Much harder to take.
Joan Aiken wrote Armitage Family stories her whole life, and they are a treat.
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Swords and Sorcery of an Old School Nature

Fighting the Thieves' Guild. Beautiful wenches, dazzling swordplay, heaps of treasure, dark spells. Where do all these cliches come from? A lot of them are from people who ripped off Fritz Lieber, who could write circles around just about anybody. And show us a good time doing it too.
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Sequelitis

You'd think that writing a sequel would be down to a science, considering how many get cranked out every year. Three parts more-of-the-same to two parts brand-new-adventure or some such recipe. I recently read two sequels, one that was fantastic, the other not so much. The difference? As far as I could tell, it was because of the books that came before.
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Old Reliable?

Dean Koontz has been on the bestseller list with his books for quite a
few decades now; one of his current series started with a book called
Odd Thomas in 2003. Odd (that’s his first name) sees dead people. I see
an old idea in new clothes.
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The New Frankenstein
Frankenstein was probably scary at one point, but the whole story has been worn down by repetition, robbed of its power and relegated to status as not much more than a pop culture gag. What would it take to resuscitate the cautionary note in the tale of a scientist? After looking at Scott Bakker's terrifying new book Neuropath, I would say: a few hints of what modern science is taking away from us.
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Prince of War
Prince Caspian, a lesser-known entry in the Narnia series, is a book with not much substance. The recent movie actually streamlines the story, eliminating flashbacks and so forth. What fills the running time back up? Why, war of course.
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Hooked Three Times Over

Like a flashback to childhood vacations! I was away on a trip recently, and I read a lot, just like the old days when no holiday was complete without a stack of at least ten books. This time around I had some - gasp! - mainstream books along, but the real treat was a chance to try out three fantasy authors whose books were new to me.
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"A Book's Natural Fate"

So you've written a book that fits the current vogue perfectly - let's say it's a grimy cyberpunk novel in the mid-1980s - does that mean you've guaranteed long-lasting fame for yourself? Probably not. But don't worry, a lot of your compatriots are suffering the same fate.
Oh, and I just happen to have an example at hand: George Alec Effinger's
When Gravity Fails, a perfectly fine book in its own right, and one that happens to have come back into print in a gorgeous trade paperback. But for some reason, I started having melancholy and/or realistic thoughts about the writing life after reading it.
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An Engineer and a Dreamer

Sad news: Arthur C. Clarke, science fiction writer and inventor/scientist, died recently - at the age of 90, he had a full life, but it's still a great loss. To mark his passing, I picked up my favourite of his books,
Childhood's End, and gave it a re-read. Some of his other accomplishments, like his work on
2001: a space odyssey, might be more famous, but
Childhood's End has always hit me hardest.
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Young Man's Burden

It's one of the most successful fantasy series of all time, and the author died while writing the twelfth and final volume. What to do? The show must go on, but who would want to take time out from their own work to finish the damn thing? A young writer named Brandon Sanderson said goodbye to a normal beginning to his writing career... err, rather, said yes to finishing Robert Jordan's mega-selling
The Wheel of Time.
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Spoilerific

I'm the person who hates spoilers, mainly because they wreck a book or movie for me. I'm a stickler for experiencing something in the way that the creator intended (whether this is a smart or helpful habit is quite another question). In the case of, say, a TV show like
Buffy or
Angel that's been off the air for years, keeping free of spoilers is nearly impossible nowadays. What's fair game for spoilers? Everything, apparently.
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Smooth, Smoother, Smoothest

I get sucked in very easily by books that are smooth on the surface. If a book has glossy enough writing and a well-paced storyline, then I'm almost always a sucker for it. But when a book also has something intriguing going on underneath the surface, then I feel like my optimism has been rewarded - and that's when I really love a book. Enter Megan Whalen Turner's
The Thief.
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A Decade Later

The dinosaur craze seems to be over, sorry to say. One last hurrah: Dinotopia: Journey to Chandara, the latest entry in the Dinotopia series, is out now. James Gurney wrote and illustrated the original 3 books in the 90s, and returns to the scene of his triumph just about ten years later. Is the magic still there?
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I Read Adventure Novels for the Historical Exposition

From a purely critical standpoint, Louis L'Amour's
The Walking Drum is a gruesome mess. It's a historical novel that constantly hits the reader on the head with blocks of exposition. The hero, Kerbouchard, is not only a nigh-invulnerable fighter, he's one of the finest scholars of the twelfth century. And Kerbouchard falls in love with so many women that he's almost in
Tek Jansen territory - hundreds of girlfriends indeed!
But The Walking Drum (1984) is a sentimental favourite of mine, and while the gruesome aspects are still there - clunky writing, unbelievable protagonist, etc - I owe it a great debt.
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A Locked Room
Here's a mission: write a series for young adults that is six books long, competes with all the digital distractions of current life, and keeps the kids coming back for each new entry. Sounds hard! A lot of series break down just on the issue of writing sequels that don't suck.
Timothy Zahn is five books into his Dragonback series; I've read four, and Zahn comes pretty close to pulling off what sounds like an impossible mission.
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Pieces
I have a tendency to overdose on authors once I discover their books. I get really excited, read way too many of their books in a row, and then gradually lose interest once I realize that my idol has feet of clay. And since no author is perfect, very few of them survive this process of overdose/disenchantment.
Kim Stanley Robinson is one of the writers I always kept reading, and I thought that he could do no wrong... at least until I read Forty Signs of Rain and came away entirely confused. What was this book trying to do?
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We the People (Are Robots)
Robots! They are some of the most durable figures in pop culture — action movies have used everything from the robots who terminate to the robots who are in disguise, but not all robots show up in big budget Hollywood cheesefests. Some thoughtful stuff goes on here too. A good example is the protagonist with a heart on a sleeve in Sue Lange’s We, Robot.
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Sauron For the Win
When a writer puts a story down on paper, one version of all possible outcomes becomes the final version. The ending is part of a carefully constructed framework of theme and comment and all that good literary stuff, and it's never going to change. For example, the evil lord Sauron is never going to win in Tolkien's Lord of the Rings, since that's integral to what the story means.
But what happens when the same story gets retold in a different format? Does Sauron get a break? Does it still mean the same thing if that happens?
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Evil Will Not Enter the World Through Me
Fantasy novels are filled with war, and maybe that's a default because human history is also filled with war. And violence is exciting, right? But I start to wonder: can't we imagine a different way of telling a story? Fantasy is an imagined world after all.
After reading Laurie J. Marks' Water Logic, I've come to the conclusion that writers use war and violence in fantasy novels partly because it's the easy thing. Marks sets out to do the hard task, not the easy one. Trying to resolve a conflict in an alternate way is in fact incredibly hard; characters have to be stubborn and smart and there's no simple-minded heroics in the task. Frankly, it's mind-bending stuff, and refreshing.
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The Well is Dry
How many times do you read a book? For myself, I read the vast majority of books only once -- it's a simple case of too many options, too little time. When I was a kid, I often re-read books over and over again. My options were limited, but that's not the only reason: when I found something good, I would become obsessed -- it was like nothing else existed.
That's what happened with Tolkien's books. I estimate that I re-read the famous trilogy about 20-25 times, and The Hobbit probably in the neighbourhood of a dozen times. I couldn't get enough, at least back then.
When I recently re-read The Hobbit, I had a strange reaction. All of the good stuff - adventure, magic, peril, treasure, monsters, unlikely heroes, and so forth - was still there, but simply didn't have the same bite for me anymore.
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So Awesome, Then Churned Out by a Factory
This has been the biggie: I've started re-reading the Pern series by Anne McCaffrey. Wow, talk about a trip! I had almost completely forgotten the series and its impact on me years ago. I think this was due to the excessive sequels that tarnished the creativity of the project.
But now that I've re-read Dragonflight, the book that started the whole Pern deal way back in 1968, I feel like I've discovered a lost chunk of my brain. The first book is completely crazed - it's got dozens of science fiction ideas thrown into a wild mix of melodrama, and it explodes in six different directions at once.
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I Don't Remember, I Don't Recall
Robin McKinley's The Hero and the Crown, a young adult fantasy novel from the early 1980s, always stood out in my memory as a formative read from childhood. Unfortunately I couldn't really say what the book was about! Over the years, everything about it had faded.
The Blue Sword, which McKinley wrote earlier but is set later in the same fantasy realm, does have a scene that I remembered: it's a sex scene, the first that I could recall reading as a kid. At least I thought it was in The Blue Sword...
Now that I've reread the two books, I was shocked to discover that the racy stuff actually took place in The Hero and the Crown!
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Starting a Series at Book 8
Now for some obvious advice: don't start a ten book series by reading book 8!
I was well aware of this when I was a kid and I happened to pick up the eighth book in Roger Zelazny's Amber series. But I didn't have money to buy lots of books back then, and my local library didn't stock much science fiction or fantasy, my main interests at the time.
So this solitary Amber book on the library shelf looked nifty and I dove right in. I admire my younger self for the sheer insanity of such a move, but I still wouldn't recommend it.
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All-Star Childhood Memories
Nowadays I can pick up any pop cultural obsession that I want - hey, it's the internet age and my nerdy disposable income goes a long ways. But when I was a kid, it was almost always hard to find cool stuff.
I ended up reading a whole lot of crap, since I didn't have as much control over what I could find. In a situation like that, the formative moments are not always the ones you'd want them to be, looking back as a grown-up.
I was persistent enough, though, to find a few gems along the way, like Patricia A. McKillip's The Riddle-Master of Hed.
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Expectations Shattered
Let's say you're reading a book about a boy who grows up to be a wizard. That's a very familiar story... so do you want exactly what you're expecting? Or are you prepared for something new and interesting?
Ursula K. Le Guin's famous Earthsea series started with a boy wizard, but even the first book, A Wizard of Earthsea, was unusual. Each subsequent book in the series got more iconoclastic -- it's surprise after surprise, but if you're up for it as a reader, Le Guin will win you over.
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A Pair of Killers
What makes a compelling book tick? Sometimes I find it hard to tell, especially if the story works so well that I don't even think about the craft involved. A good way to get to know a book, especially for an otherwise quick reader like myself: listen to the audiobook.
That happened to me recently. While I always knew that I liked Philip K. Dick's The Man in the High Castle, I could never quite identify the book's brilliance before. Now that I've listened to the audiobook version, I know Dick's secret weapon: intensely subjective buildup and consequences for two brief moments of violence.
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All People Are Sheep... Except You, Dear Reader
Flatter your reader. That sounds like a pretty solid narrative strategy! Make your audience think they are really smart, and they'll probably come back for more. Books can do this automatically, just by the virtue of taking us into the thoughts of other people - not so easy in real life.
Some stories take us into the minds of super-smart people destined to rule everything. Funny though... it's usually true that the masses, who are us, tend to identify with the top of the pyramid and not the bottom, the rulers and not the downtrodden. R. Scott Bakker's The Thousandfold Thought takes this tendency and plays with it in nifty ways.
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"This Book is Too Long!"
I know of many fantasy readers (myself sometimes included) who pick what book to read next based on how long it is - for epic fantasies, the longer the better. Books like this are a huge commitment though, and so for a lot of people, the fact that Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell is over 800 pages long outweighs everything else about it. Does Susanna Clarke tell a good story? Is there any neat magic? If the book is too long for you to get past the first 100 pages, you might never know.
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Tracing Traditions
A Soviet cosmonaut gets thrown through a strange portal in space; she ends up on a planet filled with jaguar men, stranded Earthers, sentient metal trees, lost temples and cities, buried treasures, immortal androids, extreme peril and dashing escapes.
Does all this sound vaguely familiar? It should, because Chris Roberson's Paragaea deliberately looks back at the pulpy stuff that worked best in science fiction's past. He tries to make it all his own too... how does that work out for him?
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Breaking Taboos
Horror stories make people uncomfortable or scared in many ways. The most basic has always been fear of death and/or physical destruction. For example, I don't want my body torn to shreds by zombies, so I'll be scared if it happens to a character I empathize with.
In another sense, taboos are what's being broken -- taboo behaviour such as violence and all the other things that happen in a horror movie but not (constantly) in real life. But what happens when a zombie story breaks taboos that are unusual? If the zombies don't eat very many brains, are they still scary?
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Too Many Dragons
Fantasy fiction is overrun by dragons. The fiery beasts have become a way to spice up an otherwise standard book -- just add dragons. When I first heard about Naomi Novik's Temeraire series -- the Napoleonic Wars, a la Hornblower, except with dragons -- I sighed to myself: hasn't this been done before? Isn't this tired out?
But I should have taken the example of two other books I've looked at here on the Gutter: Butler's Fledgling, which took a new look at vampires, and Walton's excellent Tooth and Claw, which appeared to be a Victorian novel with dragons plopped in haphazardly, but at closer appearance had some rationale for it. A careful plot and some excellent storytelling will take you a long way, even if you're reusing common props like vampires or dragons.
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A Faster Pace
Is it possible to have a book with a pace that is too fast? A book with too much action? Sure, since it's relatively easy to jettison all of the hard-to-write stuff like character and description, and just dump in a lot of violence (ironically, I think a lot of writers who set out to do this blow their chance, since you get careless if you're writing, deliberately, at less than your best).
The hard part is a combination of fast pace with some glossy writing and intriguing characters. And I've noticed that this is a skill that science fiction writers are picking up. Case in point: the debut novel from Tobias S. Buckell, Crystal Rain.
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Explaining Vampires
I don't care that much for vampire stories. It's a reflexive dislike that's hard to define -- basically, I'm not part of the target audience of the whole vampire fascination.
Another pet peeve of mine is the amnesiac protagonist. What an absolutely lame excuse to explain everything to the audience! When I see that a book features memory loss, I put it down with scarcely another glance.
So it's a good thing that I ignored my prejudices and read Octavia E. Butler's Fledgling, a story of a young vampire girl named Shori who wakes up in the forest with no memory of her previous life or how she got there.
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Tundra Horror
I see writing for kids as one of the most difficult creative tasks to do well. How to judge what might appeal to a younger audience? How to make the tone convincing yet not condescending?
The difficulties seem multiplied when you add horror to the mix. It intensifies the question of age appropriateness, and then there's the matter of taste, or in this case, what scares you. For example, try all you might, but stories of vampires and werewolves don't scare me, but add some zombies and I'll have nightmares for weeks.
Two books from the small Canadian imprint Tundra demonstrate this fine line.
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Smooth Meets Convoluted
When I talk about a book, I often feel like I'm comparing it to some ideal (and non-existent) book, with features that get checked off on my list. Like a formula, or like a conformist's view of art. But should every book resemble every other book? The answer is no, obviously, and somewhere in between the two extremes is a way of judging books on their qualities, yet not cramming them into a cookie-cutter.
I thought of this because of two wildly different books I read recently: East by Edith Pattou and Hexwood by Diana Wynne Jones, two YA fantasies. Each are enormously frustrating books in their own way, but that might be a mark in their favour. For one thing, they're not Harry Potter clones.
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Cheerfully Lecherous and Unabashedly Lazy
If you had unlimited power - magical power as a wizard, or even unlimited built-in power like Superman - what would you do with it? Would you act responsibly and protect us regular folks? Or would you become greedy and try to take over the world, like a super-villain?
Pop culture takes those two extremes as the only options, and also dictates that anyone who is all-powerful has a flaw or limitation, again like Superman, with Kryptonite. It just doesn't seem possible to tell a story any other way. What would the conflict be if there were no obstacles in the heroine's way?
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Retold
Familiar tales, like Hans Christian Andersen's The Little Mermaid or The Snow Queen, have been reused and retold countless times. Sometimes the result is a mindless rip-off, and sometimes the familiarity of the structure lets a writer riff on the story in creative and surprising ways. It's a constant cycle, always fascinating but at times out of fashion.
Here are two award-winning revisions of The Snow Queen, one that slyly takes the story at face value, and a second that expands it into the basis for a galactic civilization, written by Eileen Kernaghan and Joan D. Vinge respectively and with the same title.
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His Dark Ending
I call it a bait and switch. The first book in Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials trilogy, The Golden Compass, was an adventure fantasy that was fast-paced and written in an incredibly smooth style. Intrigue, danger, children in peril, armoured polar bears, witch clans at war with each other, and above all, a girl named Lyra as a feisty, smart heroine. The next book, The Subtle Knife, had some worryingly bad moments but still kept my interest and sympathy.
Things go really bonkers in the third book, The Amber Spyglass, which ruins everything that came before. Worst of all, Pullman really means it. Instead of the flawless and exciting story that came before, Pullman ends with a Big Message.
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The Never-Fail Recommendation
I get a lot of people asking me for book recommendations. That's not all that strange, considering how much I read, and that I write a lot of reviews. All the same, I still find it hard to know what to say sometimes... tastes are so different. And I've been burned before by bad feedback.
I have one book that has never failed me yet. Friends, family, genre fans, non-readers, the dubious... it doesn't matter, they all fall under the spell of this particular title.
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Reading Backwards
I've always known that my reading habits are a bit odd. That was confirmed by the way I came across The Jane Austen Book Club by Karen Joy Fowler. Most people heard of it by word of mouth or because it was on bestseller lists -- the book had a lot of buzz. I found out about it because Fowler has stayed loyal to her scifi-writing friends, newfound success and all, and continues to write blurbs for the types of books I read.
Jane Austen and science fiction? As Fowler mentions in the book, the fans aren't necessarily that different.
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The Bandwagon
Ursula K. Le Guin is one of the most respected names in fantasy and science fiction. She doesn't need to boost her career by cheap gimmicks or by following current trends.
So I was a bit shocked to read about how Le Guin's editor had suggested she write a young adult fantasy novel -- not necessarily a Harry Potter clone but for same reasons that all those other Potter clones exist -- and that Le Guin agreed to take on the challenge.
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Revealing the Consequences
John Brunner's The Shockwave Rider has a fantastic ending: an unstoppable computer virus reveals all secret information. If you've bribed the food inspectors to ignore mad cow disease in your factory farm, now the whole world knows about it. Gone to war under false pretences? Selling designer clothes made in hidden sweatshops? Passing along government money to friends? The truth is spilling out to whoever asks for it.
Actually, I think about Brunner's reveal-all virus quite often, because I damn well want one!
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Crashing the Party
Neal Stephenson's Snow Crash is a book that requires some warning for unsuspecting readers: it's so wacked out and demented that it's beyond over-the-top and way beyond anything you can take seriously. The book works because you eventually realize that Stephenson's approach suits the future that he is talking about. By throwing literary caution to the winds, Stephenson somehow hits on an effective voice for a freaky, violent world. Nobody else has written a book quite like this, and Stephenson himself never wrote a sequel.
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Two from Tachyon
Publishing is a wacky world, with huge conglomerates controlling the big imprints, return policies that see half of all published books destroyed as a matter of course, and only a small fraction of authors making a living at what they do. Why would any sane person get involved in such a madcap enterprise, either on the business or creative end of things?
It must be love, because small presses like Tachyon of San Francisco continue to put out interesting stuff.
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The Grouchy Snob
When people find out that I like science fiction (and write about it), they often try to find a familiar example to talk about. This is a better reaction than to say, "Oh, that crap?" or something along those lines. But recently, the example has inevitably been Star Wars -- and what was up to that point a conversation motivated by polite interest threatens to go sour. Have you ever seen someone become a grouch and a snob at once? That's me on the topic of George Lucas.
The thing is, I'm a huge fan of spaceships and lasers and stuff blowing up in space.
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The Trouble with Endings
I've noticed recently that otherwise good stories have been let down by their endings. It's partly due to the expectations of the audience: you can imagine any kind of ending you want, but when the ending finally arrives, it's been narrowed down to a single one of those possibilities and it might not be as good as the one in your head (I argued this was the case for Stephen King's Dark Tower series).
The other reason for a bad ending: nobody in charge thought about it. And in the case of Minority Report, the filmmakers clearly had no freaking idea what to do with the conclusion of the story, and decided to just keep throwing more and more junk at the screen.
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The Cost of Creativity
What does it cost to be an artist? A writer? Any creative type?
If you are into the written word, you need, at minimum, a pencil and several pieces of paper. You could write a play or a whole book for about ten bucks. If you dance or sing, you just need a practice space. Playing music would require buying an instrument, which in most cases would be under a thousand dollars. Leaving aside the issue of distribution for the moment, it seems that artsy endeavours can be pursued on the cheap. If you want to be creative, all you have to do is go after it.
Except if you want to make movies.
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Most Honoured, Word for Word
At first, I resisted reading Life of Pi by Yann Martel. A guy is stranded on a raft - it sounded like a concept that had been done before. But my friends raved about the book constantly, and when I finally broke down and read it, I found that it had some of the smoothest writing I'd ever encountered. Writing that managed to convey a lot of information but still was entertaining and gorgeous.
I said to myself: if only there were a science fiction writer whose prose could live up to the standard set by Martel. Someone who could recycle an idea just like the castaway and make it readable and interesting. Science fiction is filled with ideas that get lazily reused and it's tiring to read such half-baked stuff. Not long after, I found an answer to my dilemma. His name is Ted Chiang.
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Stories Never Fail Us
She's eighteen and she's getting a little impatient with life at her boarding school. She doesn't see her stepdad very often. She knows more about magic than the teachers at Wyverly College, but even though the school is within twenty miles of the Wall that separates mundane from magical lands, she's never been in the Old Kingdom. Her name is Sabriel.
Then one night a dead creature stalks into the dormitory. This is a messenger, who brings her father's magic bells and Charter-marked sword. If her dad's not already dead, then he's being held somehow near one of the nine gates that separates life from death. Sabriel has to find her father's body, somewhere in the deadly Old Kingdom, and then retrieve his spirit. All in a day's rite of passage.
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Kicking Ass, Literary Style
I don't have much patience for vampire stories, so I never felt much attraction to the Buffy and Angel universe. I could see how people would get pretty wrapped up in it: ongoing storylines, smart characterization, constant action, snappy one-liners, reportedly the whole bit. When Joss Whedon, Buffy creator, decided to do a science fiction show called Firefly, I was interested, but I could never find when it was on, and then the show got cancelled before even one season was completed.
Goodbye for good?
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Not So Happy Ending
Talk about a long journey. Stephen King wrote the first line of a short story called "The Gunslinger" in 1970, at the beginning of his career, and the first volume of the Dark Tower series was published in 1982. Nearly 35 years after its humble beginnings, the series has come to its conclusion with the nearly 900 pages of the seventh volume, simply called The Dark Tower. Fans have been waiting for this book for a long time, and you'd think they'd trust King to wrap things up properly. Some readers like the ending, but an equally large proportion detest it.
What's the fuss?
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Fahrenheit the First
Fahrenheit 451 is one of Ray Bradbury's most famous books, and it reads like a fever dream -- intensely cinematic, directed by its own weird dream logic, and full of the quality of images that haunt you for days. The book is a cautionary tale about what happens when books are forgotten or actively suppressed, and Bradbury's work here forms one of its own best arguments in favour of "the book" as a keystone to intellectual freedom. Fahrenheit 451 is a deceptive book too; it's a quick read, and it seems to be about people burning books.
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Interstellar Empathy
Tolerance. Understanding. Empathy. Lack of prejudice towards people who are different in some way. These are all wonderful things, but they can be deadly for fiction. Or, at the very least, dry and boring. And science fiction, especially written science fiction, on top of all of its other perceived or real flaws, tends to go on about tolerance for the other. It takes a strong writer to use this theme as the basis for an entertaining story.
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Love Letter to NYC
Timothy Zahn is the author of the bestselling Star Wars novel of all time, which to a certain kind of critic sounds like winning a contest to be the stupidest person on the block. The book in question, Heir to the Empire, was published in 1992 and attracted so much attention that it revived what was then a near-dead Star Wars franchise. Make of that what you will, but Heir to the Empire and its two sequels proved that you can do intriguing/memorable things with pulp-based material (or at the very least, that George Lucas and his crummy prequels have lost touch with the roots of this kind of stuff).
Zahn also writes his own books, and some of them are quite good.
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Let's All Panic
Six million people listen to a radio broadcast, and a quarter of them run screaming from their houses. Their frenzy and fear infect many other people who have no idea what's going on. Mass panic! Are the Martians really invading? The streets are crowded with people who all believe it.
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Sideways Storytelling
If you're the kind of reader who wants to know what happens next, then China Mountain Zhang by Maureen F. McHugh might not be the book for you. This debut novel from 1992 has intriguing characters and a few strands of plot, but overall it operates a little more abstractly than most novels. The main character is a Daoist architect and as his graduating project he has to hold the entire plan of a house in his mind at once without getting lost in the details. It's a pretty good analogy for how the book works.
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One War, Every War
You get drafted in the year 1997, your brain tortured out of its pacifism by hypnotic compulsion to kill. Many of your troopmates die in training on the icy planet of Charon, past Pluto. You spend the next thousand years, fighting a skirmish then sleeping through a trip that takes place at relativistic speeds - on your way to the next battle of course. You can't go home because Earth society has changed too much. And why are humans fighting these alien Taurans anyway?
This is indeed the forever war.
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Greed and the Fourth Dimension
Joe Cube is a regular Silicon Valley guy, worried about his relationship with his wife and the upcoming Y2K crisis. One day a fourth-dimensional being named Momo manifests in his house and she wants to make a deal: she'll supply 4D antennae, and Joe can market cellphones that communicate instantaneously anywhere in our world. Momo also attaches a third eye to his brain, which lets him see into the fourth dimension. Joe and his wife take off to Vegas to make big bucks with his newfound powers. But soon the demon-red Wackles, also from the fourth dimension, are stealing the ill-gotten money out of his briefcase and giving him cryptic warnings. Could Momo have an ulterior motive? Is Joe caught in a transdimensional conflict?
Welcome to the world of Rudy Rucker, a mathematician in love with the trashiest elements of science fiction.
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Biology is a Harsh Mistress
Tooth and Claw by Jo Walton is about dragons and, to be perfectly honest, I had low expectations for this book. Too many fantasy novels have been written about dragons, and the subject has been beaten quite to death. Could it still be possible to write something interesting about these winged fire-breathing creatures of myth and legend? And Tooth and Claw is a story where all the characters are dragons, which could have been even more disastrous. But this is an ambitious book that is also quite strange and cruel. It's essentially a Victorian novel where biology is always destiny, with dragons who are there to express the violence inherent in the society.
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In the City
Toronto's downtown has been abandoned by government and police. The rich have fled to the suburbs, and put up a barrier to keep all those nasty poor people from leaving the middle of the city. Nalo Hopkinson's first book, Brown Girl in the Ring, takes this simple and believable premise and shows us what life might be like in the Burn (as part of downtown Toronto is now called) for those either stuck there or too stubborn to leave.
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We Don't Want Your Revolution
Yevgeny Zamiatin was an enthusiastic supporter of the Russian Revolution in 1917 but by 1924 and the publication of a book ironically entitled We, he was worried that the revolution had brought not freedom but repression and conformity. After being persecuted for many years, he wrote an angry letter to Stalin himself, demanding the right to leave the Soviet Union. Incredibly, Stalin agreed, but in exile Zamiatin never wrote anything as memorable as this cheerfully deranged dystopia.
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Bloody Culture
With his new book Ilium, Dan Simmons has written an exciting work of science fiction that is partly based on Homer's Iliad. At first it would seem that Simmons is writing Ilium in the shadow of the Iliad -- a dry and dull piece of literature, right? -- as a way of garnering respect not otherwise inherent in writing science fiction (fairly or unfairly). But the situation becomes more complex when the Iliad itself is examined closely. The Trojan War has an abducted wife, feuding gods, countless deaths, betrayal and backstabbing, and just about every lurid element that has been complained about in modern lowbrow culture. If the Iliad is more violent than, say, Kill Bill, what to make of this?
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Easy Prey
Prey is the latest science fiction thriller from perennial best-selling author, Michael Crichton. It's been a few years since I read any Crichton novels so I was curious to see if my memory of his work - topical, easy to read in the way that bestsellers have, but flat and unoriginal - holds true for his current writing. Crichton used to be a guilty pleasure for me. Does he still fulfill that function in his new book?
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