Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta Hugo Awards. Mostrar todas as mensagens
Mostrar mensagens com a etiqueta Hugo Awards. Mostrar todas as mensagens

segunda-feira, agosto 15, 2016

Cognitive SF: "Savages" by K. J. Parker (aka Tom Holt)



‘“Right,” Joiauz said, in a rather high voice. “Let’s start with the war, shall we?”’

I’m not sure whether all writers consciously play with SF using specific materials or not. Do they all know where the story is going or do they just make it up as they go along? Sometimes we get clever writers; sometimes intellectuals, and sometimes emotional ones. My kind of writer is the one we get the feeling does not know where things are headed. This kind of writer when starts out to write, a lot of times does not know where things are going to go and is not clear what the lead character’s voice has to say. Art, and writing in particular, is the means the writer has of reaching transcendence. When I’m reading J. K. Parker’s work I always get the feeling the right tone of voice (and sometimes the ending), is a matter of emotional focus, imposed by the needs of the story rather than by considerations of publisher expectations or markets, or by conscious attempts to subvert those expectations. K. J. Parker (Tom Holt in high-revving mode), market or publisher demands become essentially irrelevant to the way the story is being told. In my mind, the best SF is not straight fantasy, straight Science Fiction, straight Dark Fiction, or Mundane Fiction. The writers that are able to transcend either genre are the ones who recombine or tease out elements of all those genres to really good effect. Parker writes, seems to me, as if there are no conventions to be followed; rather only the cognitive and emotional effects of his stories are important. This fact alone is what makes Parker write superior SF and not the crap that we see coming out of the Nebula and Hugo ballots.

After getting that out of the way, this is not the best Parker has ever written. He has written much better stuff, but even 2nd rate Parker is better than some of SF fodder being published nowadays under the speculative label. Where did Parker start missing the train? When he relied a little too strongly on coincidence or unbelievable setups, as well in some of the info-dumps in which, for instance, the Aram Chantat political system is explained. The operative phrase here is “not at his best.” Even so and in today’s SF landscape not many writers are able to write the way Parker does, even when he’s not at his best: a particular passage comes to mind when some of the characters are passing through the countryside in a carriage and there's a bit about how the land looks so long after the devastating effects of the war, i.e., the way it changed the landscape in a way that all traces are obscured and in some cases utterly obliterated. I can't do the prose justice; you just have to read it. Parker is almost always able to weave the meticulous details of world building into the Story without turning it into pulp fiction. Thank God, Parker is still resisting introducing magic into his books. Let’s see how long it lasts…  


SF = Speculative Fiction.  

quinta-feira, abril 14, 2016

Simple-Minded SF: "The Three-Body Problem" by Liu Cixin, Ken Liu (translator)


"The thin curve [when Ye was watching a waveform on a screen supposedly from an alien civilization], rising and falling, seemed to possess a soul."

Metaphor only takes me so far...When I’m reading a supposedly hard SF book I must put into action my non-suspension-of-disbelief-hat. That’s the only way I can read this kind of SF. I’ve heard from some friends of mine, that some books are all metaphor when the physics part of them are utter crap…. Excuse me? It's like saying, "look here, this is my universe, but try not to concentrate too much on it, look at all the beautiful metaphors I wrote instead." Don’t tell me this is me being pedantic. One thing is getting the physics right from scratch, the other thing is to do the extrapolation stuff the “right” way. In this case, base physics is quite off base, i.e., dead wrong   in several key areas of the book. They’re so wrong that I only finished it because I wanted to pin-point the rest of the so-called errors. I know, I’m mean…The above-mentioned example is one of the most glaring examples. A wave form where one’s able to see something behind it just by looking at it! Even with poetical license in play, this is quite a bit of a stretch. I could mention another examples, but this one is one of the most obvious examples in showing that Cixin’s storytelling leaves a lot to be desired.

Show-not-tell is quite absent throughout the book as any good SF vintage book would. Unfortunately, this book was originally published in 2008. So we’re neither in the 30, 40 nor the 50s…It’s my firm believe that because this work was translated from “China's best SF author” by one of the well-read and writers of SF nowadays (Ken Liu) there may be a propensity to interpret poor form as some sort of interesting (aka exotic) nuance. If this book had been self-published on Amazon it wouldn't be getting any attention at all. Instead it’d be getting a lot of stick!

I'm usually not willing to roll with a lot of nonsense when it comes to a Hard SF book, and in this case, because getting the science right is at the core of it, I cannot read past the crappy science.

When I was actively reading SF as if there was no tomorrow, I’d be quite surprised to have been told that a book like this would’ve won an Hugo Award, but in this day and age this book did really win the 2015 Hugo Award! “Ancillary Justice” by Ann Leckie is another good example of crappy SF having won a Hugo Award the previous year, 2014. What’s happening to SF Fandom? Is everyone going bonkers??? A book with this kind of info-dumping to explain the key points of the plot and it wins a Hugo Award? It reads like tenth-rate Stephenson. On top of that, the characters were so incredibly flat that by the end of it I couldn’t remember any of them. Everything is so damn flat that at times I kept saying to myself: “My God, why do I keep on reading this kind of crap?” Alas, one is always on the look-out to be proven wrong. It didn’t happen once again unfortunately. I’m quite sure we won’t see the likes of Le Guin's “The Dispossessed”, Susanna Clarke's “Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell”, Frederik Pohl's “Gateway”, to name just a few, in the next few years on the Hugo ballot.

2 stars only for allowing me to understand certain popular school of thoughts in China. Null stars for the rest of the book. Average: 2 stars.

NB: The Hugos’ output in this day and age 100% suck. The books are so fucking simple-minded. Worse than that, they're all simple-minded in the same way, so I’m unable to distinguish those meant for grown-ups from those meant for 10-year-olds...

SF = Speculative Fiction.