
So…be careful out there.
Bwahahahahahaha!
I know, I said no more political posts till after the election, but I couldn’t NOT put this one up. Before you freak out, watch all the way through. Then, I’m sure, no matter who you’re voting for, everyone will have a reason to freak out.
Oh, and one more thing. Check this post by P.Z. Myers. This pretty well sums up my feelings as well. I’ve had a low-level concern about the congressional elections longer and more consistently than the presidential campaign, but really, we ought to be worrying more about local elective offices even more—offices which traditionally get the lowest voter interest.
Anyway, I just wanted to share. See you on the other side.
Hard upon the heals of my previous panegyric, a placeholder.
Last week Donna and I enjoined our first dinner train, the Columbia Star out of—you guessed it—Columbia, Missouri. Here’s a photograph and a promise that I will shortly be writing about it at more length. Meanwhile, have a pleasant next few days.
This past weekend I attended our local convention, Archon. It’s a St. Louis convention that’s not actually in St. Louis, for many reasons too convoluted to go into here, and this one was number 36. Which means, with a couple of exceptions, I’ve been going to it for three decades. (Our first con was Archon 6, which featured Stephen King as GoH, and thus was something of a media circus. I met several writers, some whose work I knew and loved, others of whom I just then became acquainted—George R.R. Martin, Robin Bailey, Charles Grant, Joe Haldeman, Warren Norwood. Some have passed away, others are still working.)
I go now to meet up with friends of long acquaintance, in whose company we have spent relatively little actual face-time, but who by now have become touchstones in our lives. It’s odd having people who feel so close that you see at most one weekend a year. Granted, the internet has helped bridge those gaps, but it’s still a curious phenomenon, one which I kind of dealt with this weekend on at least one panel.
This year, the novel that seems to have garnered the most awards was Jo Walton’s Among Others. It won both the Nebula Award and the Hugo Award, both times beating out what I considered the best science fiction novel of perhaps the last decade, China Miéville’s Embassytown.
Now, please don’t misunderstand—I thought Among Others was a marvelous novel. I enjoyed it thoroughly, was, in fact, delighted by it, and certainly being delighted is one of the chief pleasures of reading. I do not here intend any slight on the work.
But it took two awards that are supposed to honor the best science fiction of the year, and Among Others was barely fantasy. (One of the things I admired about it was the line Walton danced around separating the fantasy from actual occurrence and simple perception on the part of the characters.) It is in the long tradition of English boarding school stories, written as the diary of a girl who is somewhat isolated, who has run away from her mad mother (who may be a witch) after a tragic loss of her sister and a crippling accident. Living with her father now, she is placed in a boarding school where her love of science fiction is one of her chief methods of coping. The novel then chronicles the succession of books she reads over a year or two, many of which were exactly the books I was reading then and loving. It is in that sense an overview of a particular period in SF, one I found myself reliving with immense pleasure.
Embassytown, on the other hand, is solidly SF built on a very meaty idea that plays out with intensity and provokes a great deal of thought—everything SF is supposed to do. It is also marvelously well-written and to my mind was hands down the best of the year, if not, as I said, the last decade.
But it lost to the Walton.
Why?
So I proposed a panel at Archon to discuss the power of nostalgia in a field that is presumed to deal with cutting edge, next level, philosophically stimulating ideas. It’s supposed to take us new places. Granted, most of it no longer does—instead it takes us to some very familiar places (after eight decades of definably “modern” SF, how many “new” places are there really to go?) and in the last couple of decades, it’s been taking us to some very old places, alá Steampunk and alternate history. I’d never given much thought to this before as a nostalgic longing because in both cases the writers are still proposing What If? scenarios that ask questions about the nature of historical inevitability and technological destiny. The story might well be set in 1890, but it’s not “our” 1890 and we have to come to grips with the questions of why “our” 1890 has preference in the nature of human development.
But Among Others didn’t even do that. It was just a recapitulation of one fan’s love of a certain era of fiction.
Again, absolutely nothing wrong with that and I say again, Among Others is a fine novel, I unhesitatingly recommend it.
My question in the panel had to do with the potential for exhaustion in SF. Paul Kincaid talks about this here in an examination of two of the best Best of the Year anthologies, Dozois’ and Horton’s. In my own reading, I’ve noticed a resurgence of old models—planetary romance, space opera, etc (Leviathan Wakes by James S.A. Corey for instance)—where we’re seeing writers take these comfortable, familiar forms and rework them with more contemporary sensibilities, broader perspectives, certainly in many instances more skillful prose. But the “cutting edge” seems to be occupying narrower slices of the collective SF zeitgeist. (William Gibson, to my mind still one of the most interesting SF writers, has all but given up writing SF in any concrete fashion and is now doing contemporary thrillers from an SF perspective. Is this cutting edge or an admission that there simply isn’t anywhere “new” to go? Likewise with Neal Stephenson, who opted to go all the way back to the Enlightenment and rework that as SF—taking the notions of epistemology and social science and applying them to the way a period we thought we knew unfolded from a shifted perspective.)
Kincaid’s piece talks about insularity in the field, which is not a new criticism—arguably, the recent upsurge in YA in the field is a direct response to the ingrown, jargon-laden incestuousness of the field in the 80s and 90s, where it seemed that if you hadn’t been reading SF since the early Seventies you simply would not understand what was going on—but I’m wondering if a new element has been added, that of an aging collective consciousness that unwittingly longs for the supposedly fertile fields of a previous Golden Age in publishing, an age before Star Trek and Star Wars and cyberpunk, when it was easier (supposedly) to write an almost pastoral kind of science fiction and you didn’t need a degree in physics or history or cultural anthropology to find your way. (I suspect the tenacity of iconic worlds like the aforementioned Star Trek and Star Wars can be explained by a very common need for continuity and familiarity with a story that you can access as much through its fashions as its ideas.)
Having just turned 58, and feeling sometimes more behind the curve both technologically and culturally, I’m wondering if, in a small way, the accolades given to a work of almost pure nostalgia is indicative of a wish for the whole magilla to just slow down.
(The trajectory of my own work over the last 20 years is suggestive, where I can see my interests shift from cool ideas, new tech, stranger settings, into more personal fiction where the internal landscapes of my characters take more and more precedence. And many of them are feeling a bit lost and clueless in the milieus in which I set them. Not to mention that I have moved from space opera to alternative history, to more or less straight history and into contemporary…)
The panel was lively and inconclusive—as I expected, because I didn’t intend answering my own question, only sparking discussion and perhaps a degree of reflection.
SF goes through cycles, like any other art form, and we see the various subsets rise and fall in popularity. There’s so much these days that I may be missing things and getting it all wrong. The reason I brought it up this time is a response to the very public recognition of a given form that, this year, seems to have trumped what I always thought science fiction is about.
I confess, there are many days I look back to when I first discovered SF, and the impact it had on my adolescent mind (and the curious fact that when I go reread some of those books I cannot for the life of me see what it was about them that did that—no doubt I was doing most of it for myself, taking cues from the works) and when I first thought about becoming a writer. It does (falsely) seem like it would have been easier “back then” to make something in the field. Such contemplation is a trap—you can get stuck in a retrograde What If every bit as powerful as the progressive What If that is supposed to be at the core of science fiction.
“Do you expect me to talk?”
“No, Mr. Bond, I expect you to die!”
The exchange between Bond and Goldfinger may sum up the attitude of many who are tired, offended, or otherwise ambivalent or disinterested in the absurdly long career of the improbable James Bond, 007. Even those of us who have been more or less unable to let go our adolescent attachment to the character have doubtless wondered why he hasn’t just died.
He should have, certainly after the criminal treatment he endured toward the middle and end of the Roger Moore years. All due respect to Mr. Moore (he didn’t write the films, he had probably less control than most leading men), I for one never quite accepted him as Bond. He was always a bit too pretty, a bit too sophisticated, a bit too…light.
But the movies were popular, he kept signing on, and we endured, waiting for the next incarnation of Sean Connery.
The iconic Bond image of Connery with the long-barreled Walther (yes, that thing was a Walther, but it was an air gun because the actual prop hadn’t arrived for the photo shoot) which was never seen in any of the Bond films is not the one that summed up the character for me. Rather it was this one:
The first real good look at Bond, at the L’Circle club at the beginning of Doctor No. This is the image that made me want to be Bond— utterly unconcerned, cool, detached, and completely confident within himself. He’s playing a fairly expensive game of bacarat and he obviously could care less whether he wins or loses. (Of course, this is not true—Bond always cared about that, but not over trivial things. The trivial things simple fell in line when he walked into the room, and this was another characteristic that made him, to a clumsy, hormone-laced adolescent, such an enviable figure. How badly I wanted to simply not give a damn and how thoroughly I gave a damn about not being able to do that.)
I saw that first Bond film on first release. I was eight at the time and it wasn’t the women that got me, it was that dangerous cool he had at his disposal. Later, as I reached puberty, the women became important, but till then it was being lethal—and not using it—that was the thing.
And dressing well and talking well and comporting yourself as if you knew why you were there and what you were doing. It was a total package that was the only viable replacement for the stoic gunslinger in the westerns. In the scope of a kid’s imagination, Bond was doable.
I wrote an essay for one of the BenBella Smartpop anthologies, James Bond In The 21st Century riffing on an imaginary history of the films, with a departure from Sean Connery. It could have happened, Fleming was not taken with Connery at first, and there were others who could have filled the role. (Fleming’s choice was David Niven, which, given the physicality of the character, is kind of absurd. But it explains the subsequent choices, I think, of actors.) It was also an alternate history of the franchise had it not been the hit that it was. It was a fun piece to write, but it addressed a serious question.
Why did a franchise that became, for a time, so massively ridiculous continue to be such a big deal?
I think the answer is in the new manifestation. Daniel Craig (and the writers) has gone back to the source in many ways and given us a Bond more in line with Fleming’s original conception of someone who is genuinely dangerous who wears a veneer of polish, culture, and civilization.
Once again, though, we harken back to that first on-screen look at Bond and see its reemergence in Craig’s portrayal. Detached, completely in control, cool, and competent.
But with a difference for the films.
He’s vulnerable.
The last time Bond was vulnerable was in On Her Majestie’s Secret Service and Tracy Bond. After that, he was in all but the Kryptonian origin, Superman. It became the trademark. Nothing got through, not really. He had his empathy boxed up and set to one side, to be taken out on special occasions.
And there’s an appeal to that, to be sure. We have all been undone by our notoriously fickle and sabotaging emotions, made fools of, acted stupidly. What would we give to be able to avoid all that?
Well, the price is too high, but we have fantasy characters through which to pretend.
But I think it goes too far and they become so unlikely—not in their actions, the plots that give them a showcase, but in their emotional lives—that we cannot identify with them at all. All we have then are the toys, the lifestyle, the fashions, and the rollercoaster ride of an action sequence.
Craig has been allowed to open Bond up so we can reconnect, albeit in a small way, with the pathetic human being caged behind the armor. The fact that Craig is a first-rate actor (possibly better than Connery even in his prime) doesn’t hurt.
Bond has survived, though, because at his base he still represents a level of competence in a fickle, dangerous world we would all like to tap into. Bond is always centered, he always knows what he’s about and how to act on that knowledge, and that is a very attractive ideal. When you look at the first three Bond films, you can see that and a slightly vulnerable man, one who doesn’t always get it right, who can become involved, and can therefore be hurt. After Thunderball they became all about the gadgets and some surreal good vs evil drama that actually gave a good shadow-theater representation of the world at large.
The other thing that has carried us through so many really awful Bond films, though, is the myth of the uninvolved sybarite. He comes in, takes his pleasure, kills the bad guy, and leaves unscathed. He’s a moral avenger who gets to party occasionally. His reward for doing the right thing was good food, fast cars, fine clothes, and great sex. Bond never got fat, never caught a ticket or the clap, never left behind a single mom, and always looked good. In return, he saved the world. There was no sacrifice, really—he was a mercenary.
Except that’s not what Fleming wrote. And when they rebooted the franchise and chose to do Casino Royale, they put that in there. It may be ignored in subsequent films (I hope not, it’s what elevates Bond above the common), but it was there—Bond is sacrificing his soul.
That first novel, Casino Royale, was about that. Bond was a new agent, freshly-minted with a 007 license, and fully a third of the book is him in hospital, working through the emotional and moral calculus of continuing to do this ugly, brutal job. To their credit, the makers of the first Craig film kept that in. We were even, dimly, shown its conclusion in Quantum of Solace, where at the end Bond has made his choice, and put on the armor.
It will be interesting to see if they continue to keep him human, if only slightly, or if they’ll do what they did before and turn him into the Road Runner getting one over on all the coyotes on the planet.
Happy birthday, Mr. Bond.
I went back to the gym this morning. First time in almost two months.
For those just coming upon this site, I suffered an attack of appendicitis on August 10th. Three weeks later, there were complications resulting in another hospital stay and further weeks of recovery.
The surgical wound is now, for all intents and purposes, healed. So sayeth my primary physician.
But the doctors at the hospital said no lifting anything over 10 lbs for six weeks. Donna decided that the second visit for the complications reset that clock, though most of the physicians involved disagreed. Well, I have to live with Donna, so…
But this morning we walked the dog—one mile (we have a pedometer now)—and went to the gym. Donna watched me like a hawk.
Yes, I lifted more than 10 lbs, but not by much. Compared to what I was doing in July, today’s workout was pathetic. But I got through a truncated routine without injury. We aren’t going for records here, folks, just reestablishing a routine and carefully, oh so carefully, working my way back to something like good shape.
It hasn’t hurt that I dropped 21 lbs since surgery. My stomach has shrunk as well, so I’m eating less, and I intend to keep it that way.
It’s hard. I’m feeling better, so naturally I feel like I can do more. And my appetite has definitely returned. Keeping myself inside new limits is difficult. The urge to do more, do as much as I think I can, is very strong, and I know I should not. I should listen to Donna, who has been very good about taking care of me. And I am. I held back. I restrained myself.
This is not natural for me.
I’ve been told that it takes the better part of a year to fully recover from major surgery. There are times I believe it. But I also believe that you have to push yourself a little. Becoming comfortable with limits that should only be temporary is a sure way to lose ground, to settle for less.
Not gonna do that.
But, hey, I went back to the gym today and nothing hurts!
It’s a start.
I downloaded a new plug-in for my blog Wednesday, a little something called Jetpack from WordPress. I’d seen other sites with a traffic bar showing visits, and I wanted one. The urge to know, not necessarily who, but how many people are reading your stuff runs deep.
The first day of its existence was both gratifying and slightly disappointing. So far this morning, no one has come to visit. Oh, well.
But I ran almost immediately into a snag last night. I received the notice on my task bar of an update for Jetpack, so I dutifully clicked it—
—and promptly lost the whole thing. It informed me that the upgrade failed and the plug-in had been deactivated. I couldn’t find it in my list of available plug-ins, so I tried to reinstall it. Which it also would not let me do. It kept informing me that the folder already existed. But I couldn’t find the folder in order to expunge it, so I was locked out of downloading the new version of Jetpack.
Not to worry. I found something else very much like it, but with fewer features—which is fine, I only wanted the stat function.
This has happened before. With maybe two exceptions, every time I’ve changed my blog theme it has been because an upgrade has been offered and when I accepted it, it trashed my files and I lost my theme and had to go get a new one. This is most annoying, because an inevitable consequence has been that attempts to reinstall the trashed theme result in the “you already have this” message, which bars me from having a theme I really like.
I have sworn off accepting upgrades. The only ones that work (knock on particle board) have been the WordPress upgrades.
I wouldn’t mind so much except there’s this little reminder on my task bar when I have one of these pernicious thingies waiting and I feel annoyed and irritated because I can’t find a way to just say No to them and make the reminder go away.
If there is one thing about the computer age that is one of the most irritating and cost-inefficient—and hugely expensive for business, I might add—it is this continual upgrading. I know progress is important, I know things get better with work, I know improvements are made all the time, but damn, give it a rest! I wonder how many people not directly involved realize just how much systems upgrades and changeovers cost in terms of time and lost productivity. Even a tiny, tiny enterprise like mine, one guy writing stories. Hours have I wasted when finally forced to change a software system or configure a new machine or learn a new template.
The other day I complained about MicroSoft Word. I dislike Word. I’ve been using WordPerfect for almost 25 years and for my money, WordPerfect 5.1 is still the gold standard. Simple, intuitive, did everything I wanted or needed. Why fuck with it? But I am now on Version 11.
The problem is, the publishing industry operates on Word, which is not nearly as easy to use or intuitive. And there are translation problems converting WP to Word which annoys my agent.
Also, I am still using Windows XP, which seems to be a very stable platform. (I still wonder what was so wrong with Windows 98—please, no litany of its sins, it was a rhetorical comment.) I am told we are now up to Windows 8 and some day I will be forced to junk my current machines, buy all new, and learn a new system.
Give it a rest. I mean, seriously. I know we have to keep the economy going, but this is ridiculous. It is not the same as the automobile industry. You can still drive a ’38 DeSoto on today’s roads, and having learned to drive that you can, with one or two minor adjustments, drive a brand new car. Your old model does not cease to function because the new upgrade won’t allow it to interface with other drivers.
Still. I manage. I’m just cranky. This is not Luddism, do not for a minute think I am anti-cool tech. But I also do not have a cell phone*. What I resent is the overcomplications involved in getting “up to speed” with what it au courant.
I have to go back to work now. At least English doesn’t go through upgrades that require us to learn, from the ground up, an entirely new language.
_________________________________________________
*Yes, it’s true, I have no cell phone. Donna has one, but it was purchased exclusively for emergencies when she took a job in West Jericho. I refuse. When I’m not home, you don’t have to reach me. This may sound selfish, and I agree to an extent, but we managed quite well being “disconnected” for significant parts of the day. I realize eventually I will have to cave in, but for now I will not participate in the Tech For Tech’s Sake culture. You want to talk to me, send me an email or leave a message on my answering machine, I’ll get back to you.
I’m finally able to sit in front of my computer for more than five minutes at a stretch. (Nothing painful, just really uncomfortable.) I suppose I’m progressing. My patience abandoned me weeks ago, but since I have almost no energy, it’s not an issue.
Next Tuesday I have my follow-up at the various clinics to see if I’m doing well enough to be “unplugged” and go on my own. Which only means that afterward I have to be vigilant for a couple of months in regards to fever, etc. Last night I discovered I’ve lost 15 pounds, which under normal circumstances I wouldn’t mind terribly much.
Meantime, I’m doing some reading. I have a few books going at the same time. I’m finally reading the first Aubry/Maturin novel, Master and Commander. This has been recommended to me by so many people whose taste I trust and I have been so utterly put off by it till now that I feel a bit embarrassed. The big problem is the plot—which proceeds at a snail’s pace. But I’ve given it the major attention it clearly deserves and I can appreciate what O’Brian was doing. Not sure I’ll continue on with it, but I can now declare that it is indeed a fine piece of work.
A couple of history books, and I’m reading Leigh Brackett’s The Long Tomorrow. Yes, this is a reread, but since my first time was forty-plus years ago, it’s virtually a new book, and I guarantee I missed a lot back then. I’ll be doing a long post about it soon.
Anyway, I’ve booted up my novel again and I’m noodling with it. I’m only three or four chapters from done with it, which makes this past month a real annoying waste in my mind. But the downtime has given me the space to rethink a couple of things, which is all to the good. A better book will emerge from this.
So, till later…