Archive for the ‘Recommended Media’ Category

Book 2009 #3: Little Brother by Cory Doctorow

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I can’t help but think this book would have had a big­ger impact on me if I had read it before Obama was elected.  It’s a great overblown rant against all the hor­ri­ble things DHS has done in the name of pro­tect­ing us.  It’s a decently writ­ten book with mod­er­ately inter­est­ing geek char­ac­ters fight­ing the good fight and using wire­less to do it (sound­ing sus­pi­ciously famil­iar?).  So Cory’s hot­but­ton issues show more than a lot of other writers–I don’t really mind because I share most of those inter­ests myself.  I wanted to like this book more than I did, and I liked it quite a bit, but the res­o­lu­tion is what even­tu­ally made me put it in the “not sure” pile.  I’m going behind a cut to talk about more in case you don’t want the end­ing spoiled. Continue read­ing ›

Book 2009 #2: The Devil You Know by Mike Carey

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I’ve been aware of Mike Carey for some time now, as the writer of a good run on the Hellblazer comic (which you prob­a­bly only know of as that abor­tion of a movie Constantine) as well as the writer of Lucifer (which I wasn’t a big fan of.  Nothing wrong with it really, just not my bag).  As far as I know, this is Carey’s first novel, and it’s a very good one.

Felix Castor is an exor­cist liv­ing in London.  In his world, it’s just some­thing you’re born to do, or not.  And he was born with the capac­ity.  Felix has some friends, some bad his­tory, and no money.  Sound famil­iar?  Felix is your arche­typ­i­cal down-​​on-​​his luck pri­vate inves­ti­ga­tor, only he gets rid of ghosts instead of solve mys­ter­ies.  At least at first, but even­tu­ally you know he’s gonna solve a mys­tery.  And he does, and it’s quite satisfying.

I often gripe about the mem­o­ra­bil­ity of SF/​F char­ac­ters by chal­leng­ing peo­ple to name ten mem­o­rable SF/​F char­ac­ters by name.  Then I ask them to name ten char­ac­ters from the works fo Charles Dickens.  It’s an exercise–in what, I’m not sure, and I’m pretty sure John Joseph Adams put me onto it.  In any case, Felix Castor has an inter­est­ing name, so he’s got one foot out of the “for­get­table char­ac­ters” grave already.  Through the course of the book, you come to like this schmuck.  He means well. He screws up a lot, he gets the everlov­ing shit beaten out of him (then he gets laid–the gumshoe karmic bal­ance restored), and even­tu­ally he solves the mys­tery and every­one is happy.  Sort of.

If you like hard­boiled detec­tive sto­ries, then you will like The Devil You Know.  If you like super­nat­ural thrillers that don’t nec­es­sar­ily involve peppy blonde women with super­nat­ural tat­toos on their lower backs (per­fect for the book cover), then you’ll prob­a­bly like this as well.  It’s out in paper­back, and a sec­ond book in the series is cur­rently out in hard­back. I don’t think I’m going to be able to make the wait.

Book 2009 #1: Liberation by Brian Francis Slattery

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The first book I have read for 2009  prob­a­bly shouldn’t count.  I started it in 2008.  But I set the rules and I have decided that it is books fin­ished in 2009 that count.  Maybe  I will finally get through War and Peace after all this time.  Unlikely.  The Russian authors have rarely done much for me.  Although, now that I think about it, Crime and Punishment gave me some nasty night­mares in high school.  Something about a bloody ham­mer. No bloody ham­mers here, but there sure was a lot of blood in general.

So I read the rather long titled Liberation: Being the Adventures of the Slick Six After the Collapse of the United States of America by Brian Francis Slattery. I picked this one up after hav­ing seen the really inter­est­ing cover a cou­ple of times at the book store and read­ing the back copy.  I wasn’t quite sold, but then Cory over at BoingBoing posted a glow­ing Doctorowian review and­con­vinced me to give it a shot.  Speaking of  Cory, I think I’ll put Little Brother up on the chop­ping block next.  I’ve been mean­ing to get to that for a while and I sus­pect the­mat­i­cally it’ll go down well after the six course meal of this book.

Sheesh, that’s a lot of words with­out actu­ally talk­ing about the book itself isn’t it?  I was talk­ing with Nick Mamatas about this one and he said he thought it read like bud­get Pynchon.  I’ve never read any Pynchon but I trust Nick knows what he’s talk­ing about.  I’m actu­ally look­ing for­ward to read­ing some Pynchon now based on that com­par­i­son.    (Finally, I address the book itself, eh?)

Yeah, I liked this one for a lot of rea­sons.  The prose is wan­der­ing and wild and full of words that go together like choco­late and peanut but­ter.  Just some great writ­ing here, and it breaks rules of POV and such in lovely ways that just make every­thing slightly sur­real, and yet still grounded.  This is sci­ence fic­tion, but there are ghosts.  Are they metaphor­i­cal? I guess you could say that.  If this weren’t genre, you wouldn’t even ask that ques­tion though.

Post eco­nomic col­lapse America sounds a hell of a lot more ghoul­ish than I imag­ined it per­son­ally.  For one, Slattery sees slav­ery com­ing back.  I had a hard time buy­ing that at first but it does make a kind of grue­some sense.  I hope he’s wrong if things ome to that.

The main char­ac­ter here is really America (post col­lapse, but our his­tory as well).  Everyone else, espe­cially the pro­tag­o­nists, are just sup­port­ing cast.  That’s not to say they aren’t well-​​characterized.  I’ll prob­a­bly remem­ber Marco in par­tic­u­lar for years to come. But I like a book with a broad char­ac­ter like that once and a while.  It’s some­thing I would love to pull off some day, as I work to grow as a writer.

And every­thing here is so fuck­ing cool.  It’s almost Beats cool.  The Slick Six are very slick, very suave and I think there’s almost a comic book atmos­phere at play here.  They’re larger than life in some ways, par­tic­u­larly Marco (espe­cially Marco).   It’s so weird to me that Slattery has made his post-​​collapse America seem cool, but it really is.  Bursting with weird­ness and cool.  There’s a scene in par­tic­u­lar that I am think­ing of, involv­ing a con­fronta­tion between Marco and an assas­sin that is just great and so so cool.

Also, the villain’s name is the Aardvark which may be more ridicu­lous than cool, but I liked that.  What kind of vil­lain goes by that istead of the Hammerhead or the Wolf or some­thing suit­ably fright­en­ing?  Aardvark is not a word that strikes fear in any­one unless you hap­pen to be an ant.

This book will stick with me for a while, I think.  I am def­i­nitely look­ing for­ward to the next one by Slattery.  I may even read this one again, more care­fully this time, to enjoy the prose at my leisure.  I rec­om­mend this one if you like post-​​apocalyptic fic­tion, gonzo style road trip nov­els, or ninjas.

First Story of 2009: Engines of Survival, by Larissa Kelly

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At least, the first one I have read.  My goal is to read at least one a week now that I am writ­ing again.  My think­ing is

Strange Horizons Fiction: Engines of Survival, by Larissa Kelly.

It’s always the lit­tle things in the future that are the hard­est to adjust to. You’ll be walk­ing in the park after mak­ing your deliv­ery, tak­ing amused note of the robot nan­nies and the teenagers rac­ing in their jet har­nesses, soak­ing in the expected nov­elty of the scene. And then all at once, you real­ize that the young man on the path ahead isn’t walk­ing a small dog, as you had orig­i­nally thought, but a raccoon.

Cryptic cap­sule review: like an acci­den­tal brush of an attrac­tive stranger’s hand across your own in a crowded space.

Speaking of short fic­tion, I miss Nick Mamatas over at Clarkesworld.  Damn you Viz!

Clockpunk: The Deadly Mr. Whiskers

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This week was another heavy work week so I was unable to find the time to write a pod­cast script and get every­one together to record it.  With the Hiatus sched­uled now until December 8th, we should be able to get sev­eral scripts writ­ten and recorded.  I’m try­ing to move from writ­ing posts one at a time to writ­ing them in groups of sin­gle sto­ry­lines, and I’m try­ing to keep dif­fer­ent sto­ry­lines run­ning on the blog and on the podcast.

So, The Deadly Mr. Whiskers was a fun photo to shoot and chal­leng­ing to boot.  The model in this case is our cat Gildenstern (his brother’s name is Rosencrantz).   The toy was some­thing I spent the morn­ing mak­ing, and I have some behind-​​the-​​scenes pho­tos of it before the cats sav­aged it. It doesn’t really read very well in the cat photo unfor­tu­nately, but it’s made up to look like a lit­tle faery.  It had wings, but the cats demol­ished those early in the shoot, and they weren’t read­ing very well any­way, so we snipped them off.

Taking staged pic­tures of ani­mals is a pain in the ass.  Keeping the cat in the lights was impos­si­ble.  Getting him to play with the toy involved copi­ous amounts of cat­nip and even then, I couldn’t get him to attack it the way I wanted him to.  I have more pic­tures of my cats now than I ever really wanted.  This one was pretty much the best for what I was aim­ing for.  And with that, I’ll save fur­ther details for a members-​​only post on the Clockpunk site.

I hope you all have a won­der­ful week.

Mad Men: Sadomasochism For the Enlightened Modern Person

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This week­end, Sarah and I tucked into the first sea­son of the AMC series Mad Men.  The con­cept of the show is in essence a look at the lives of Madison Avenue adver­tis­ing exec­u­tives, their office staff, and their fam­i­lies.  Oh, and their mis­tresses.  Infidelity is the fuel that ran Madison Avenue, appar­ently.  The show begins in 1960—one the back­ground plots is the elec­tion of Kennedy vs. Nixon and the focal agency has to work for Nixon (with­out being paid).  In the first episode, the audi­ence wit­nesses enough social injus­tice in the form of sex­ism and racism to erase all ide­al­is­tic notions of the time period.  It almost crosses the line into par­ody ter­ri­tory, and per­haps for some it will.  I found myself rolling my eyes by the end of the first episode.  As the sea­son goes on, they tone this down a lit­tle bit (while crank­ing up the existentialism).

Much of the show’s appeal is the self-​​righteous indig­na­tion I feel when I see African Americans being treated like 3rd class cit­i­zens, chil­dren being slapped around by the neigh­bors, or women being com­manded by their hus­bands like ser­vants.   I sus­pect self-​​righteous indig­na­tion for the lib­eral may be in short sup­ply with our side tak­ing over things for a few years.  I rec­om­mend pick­ing up the DVD to every­one look­ing to keep the flames indig­na­tion burn­ing so as to not real­ize that your anger is all that makes you feel alive and fill the hole inside your soul!  It’s work­ing great for me so far.

Beneath the obvi­ous “oh my god, they were SO prim­i­tive and evil” aspect of the show, I sym­pa­thize with the exis­ten­tial dread that much of the cast feels.   No one is happy, despite hav­ing it all and liv­ing the American Dream.  The cen­tral the­sis of this show at least early on is that the American Dream is hol­low and mean­ing­less and has noth­ing to do with our true happiness.

I didn’t really have any inter­est in the show until I saw it par­o­died on Saturday Night Live in some of the bet­ter sketches they’ve done in the past few years.  Despite never hav­ing seen the show, and even through the layer of par­ody, I was intrigued by the premise of the show.  For me, it’s the best thing to come out of Saturday Night Live in years.

Some Recent Reading: Michael Chabon and Adam-​​Troy Castro

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I thor­oughly enjoyedThe Yiddish Policeman’s Union .  The com­bi­na­tion of alt-​​history, exotic-​​to-​​me jew­ish and Alaskan cul­ture, and noir detec­tive thriller was just the kind of thing I needed to read right now.   But more than the con­cept, I was engaged by the char­ac­ters of Landsman and Berko Schemets.   Science fic­tion has been accused of not hav­ing mem­o­rable char­ac­ters, and I sup­port that opin­ion.  I can name the num­ber of mem­o­rable SF/​F char­ac­ters on one two hands.  It takes both my hands and feet just to name the mem­o­rable char­ac­ters from Dickens.  There’s a def­i­nite dif­fer­ence there. For the strong char­ac­ters alone, I’m inclined to say this is more lit fic than sci fic.

The sec­ond book I read in October was Emmissaries for the Dead by Adam-​​Troy Castro.  This was a free­bie at WorldCon, snatched up at the same party I got the Chabon book.  I for­get the pub­lisher hold­ing that party, but I owe JJA for get­ting me in.  It was the best event I attended at the con, and not just because I got eight books out of it.  I had some nice con­ver­sa­tions with some really sharp people.

As to the book itself, it was trans­par­ent to me that this is a fresh­man out­ing.  I’ve been read­ing Castro’s short fic­tion for some time, but I don’t think he has found his foot­ing in the novel realm yet.  I picked this one up because it too had a noir murder-​​mystery pitch on the back cover, but with the added appeal of a strange con­structed ecosys­tem with sen­suwunda appeal.  Unfortunately, the narrator’s per­son­al­ity grated on me.  Andrea Cort, but I don’t know that I will remem­ber her six months from now. I don’t want to go into too much detail about this book because I would rather you read some of it your­self and decide whether it’s for you than go on my opin­ion.  It undoubt­edly suf­fers from fol­low­ing so closely my read­ing of the Chabon, which is a lit­tle unfair.  But I fin­ished it, which is more than I can say about the last half-​​dozen SF nov­els I’ve tried to read.

The New Sound

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I’ve often won­dered when a new genre of music would come along that would shake the foun­da­tions of our soci­ety in the way that rock and roll did in the 1950s.  Where is that new sound that par­ents and elders will demo­nize while the youth move to its rhythms.    Who is my generation’s Elvis?  I will laugh at you if you say Kurt Cobain.  His was a vara­tion, not a true invention.

I don’t know why it came to me today, but I real­ized how much of an idiot I have been ask­ing myself that ques­tion.  What is the new genre, the genre of the late 20th cen­tury, early 21st?  What comes after rock and roll in the pro­gres­sion of pop­u­lar music?  Duh, you idiot, hiphop.

This generation’s Elvis Presley is a com­bi­na­tion of Jay Z, 50 cent, and Eminem.

I’ve been slowly open­ing to the notion of hip hop since leav­ing col­lege.  There, the musi­cian you were most likely to hear echo­ing across the log­gia was Ani DeFranco.  Grinnell was a fairly insu­lar bub­ble when it came to music.  Not a lot of new things pen­e­trated its exte­rior shell, at least while I was there.  It’s not neo­pho­bic by any means, but the stu­dents have more impor­tant things to focus on, and music that makes them think is just one thing too many ask­ing for brain power.  Through Grinnell, I mostly lis­tened to what I loved in high school.  The mp3 rev­o­lu­tion brought me not new things, but old things in a new format.

Then in Wyoming, I had noth­ing but time to think.  I joined Emusic when it was still buf­fet style, and I down­loaded things that I would have never con­sider pay­ing $15 for an album, just to try out and find some­thing that hits my ear dif­fer­ently. I dis­cov­ered all man­ner of music from around the world, but still I failed to appre­ci­ate hiphop.

It took a suc­ces­sion of three artists to open my ears to what was going on.  Kanye West, Pigeon John, and MC Frontalot.   My ini­tial dis­like of hiphop was that all I ever heard about was gang­ster rap. Misogynistic, vio­lent stuff–certainly valid art, but not some­thing with which I con­nected.  Then I began to hear more sub­ur­ban hiphop, even nerd­core.  Music that comes from places not quite so urban.  It took lis­ten­ing to those artists for me to go back and real­ize what I was miss­ing by not lis­ten­ing to Jay Z and others.

I used to think techno was the future, the next rock and roll.

In my teens, when I dis­cov­ered techno music thanks to a after dark radio pro­gram on the local alter­na­tive sta­tion, I thought that the elec­tronic beats would be the sound of the future.  Everything I heard on that radio pro­gram sounded cyber­punk.  I remem­ber one track in par­tic­u­lar that actu­ally sam­pled heav­ily from Blade Runner.  I would lay on my bed after mid­night on a Sunday night with the radio next to my ear and soak in that new sound.  I read sci­ence fic­tion then–nothing so good as what I read now, but enough to have this vision of a future where com­put­ers were impor­tant.  What could sig­nify that more than a genre of music made on the computer?

I still lis­ten to quite a bit of elec­tronic music.  I’m not a fan in the sense that I can actu­ally label all the sub­gen­res.  I like tracks selec­tively.  Some down­beat, some drum and bass, some indus­trial, a lit­tle bit of every­thing really.  Artists like Prodigy, Chemical Brothers, and Fatboy Slim are what I turn to when I want to con­cen­trate on some­thing in an upbeat man­ner.  I find it dif­fi­cult to feel down with those kinds of beats danc­ing around my head.

But I’ve added no small amount of hiphop to the mix. I’m even more igno­rant of the genre than I am of elec­tron­ica.  I don’t have the time I used to have to explore music and to really seek out new sounds any­more.  These days, dis­cov­er­ies are purely accidental.

I used to think that old people’s tastes cal­ci­fied as a process of grow­ing older, and per­haps they do.  Our brains do tend to become less plas­tic over time.  But I’m not so sure that our tastes don’t stag­nate more because we aren’t exposed to any­thing new, or at least weren’t, because we’re so busy work­ing and rais­ing fam­i­lies.  And by the time our chil­dren bring new sounds in, all it does is remind us of how we’ve grown older, and so we instinc­tively reject the sound of youth.

Maybe my gen­er­a­tion will be dif­fer­ent.  I’m sure every­one has said that about their gen­er­a­tion since Socrates, but the inter­net changes things.  Tools like Pandora and Last​.fm appar­ently intro­duce new music to peo­ple quite well–albiet music that is algo­r­thymi­cally related to music they already like.  It’s rare that any­one makes a leap from one from of music to some­thing so com­pletely dif­fer­ent.  Change in taste is a steady pro­gres­sion of bread crumbs through a back cat­a­log of tracks.

Now that I work from home and can lis­ten to loud music with no regard for the health of my ears or the tastes of cubi­cle mates, I really must con­fig­ure last​.fm again and start explor­ing music again–if not actively, then at least pas­sively as I work.   I’m afraid of my brain grow­ing rigid.  I’m afraid of turn­ing becom­ing that cliche of the old man who shouts at teenagers to turn down that racket.   It’s part of being afraid to grow old, and yet it’s some­thing dif­fer­ent.  Afraid of sta­sis, afraid of stag­na­tion.  If I’m not mov­ing for­wards, I might as well be mov­ing backwards.

Recommended: WALL-​​E

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Do you remem­ber that Disney CG film Dinosaurs? It’s orig­i­nal con­cept involved a fea­ture length movie with ani­mals that only emoted, and never spoke.  Having always been a big fan of com­puter ani­ma­tion, I was excited at the early rumors of the film.  Unfortunately, Disney execs got involved and the result was the talky-​​travesty that we even­tu­ally saw.  Okay, so maybe “trav­esty” is a strong word.  It wasn’t a bad film– It just failed to live up to it’s poten­tial as a work that stretched the bound­aries of its format.

WALL-​​E suc­ceeds in many, many ways, but the most fas­ci­nat­ing aspect for me was the extent to which Pixar relied on non­ver­bal com­mu­ni­ca­tion to con­vey the story.  I have a strong feel­ing that in prepa­ra­tion for this film, the ani­ma­tors watched reels and reels of silent com­edy films; Buster Keaton and Charlie Chaplin espe­cially.  Watch the move­ments of WALL-​​E, and I think you will see some of the exag­ger­ated man­ner­isms of those silent film stars.  Wall-​​E is all angles, but angles that can change their com­po­si­tion to one another, so he meets the basic prin­ci­ples of com­puter char­ac­ter ani­ma­ton estab­lished by John Lasseter so many years ago with Luxo.  He can squash and stretch.

(This review con­tains spoilers.)

Continue read­ing ›

Recommended Web Comic: Freak Angels

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Warren Ellis is the mad SF prophet of the comics indus­try. The man lives on the edge of the now, and has a vora­cious appetite for new things. This makes read­ing his blog a must. His comics range from gonzo SF future sto­ries like Transmetropolitan to noir detec­tive sto­ries like Desolation Jones. And right now, you can read his lat­est piece, Freak Angels, for free.

Freak Angels is about purple-​​eyed psy­chic peo­ple who ended the world when they were teenagers.  Now they hold a small civ­i­liza­tion together in Whitechapel London.  This is a quiet and thought­ful comic, mov­ing at a very leisurely pace, and I love it.  I love the hints at their pow­ers and I love the steam tech. There are hints of very bad things to come.  One of their for­mer mem­bers is out to kill them all.  Did I men­tion that London is under water?

It’s free, and it’s good, so you should read it, okay?  Let me know if you like it or even if you don’t.  I’m curi­ous to see what oth­ers think of it.