2012-01-04

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2012-01-04 02:35 am

2011: Non-fiction


The non-fiction I read in 2011 was a small and somewhat mixed assortment.


William H. Patterson, Jr., Robert A. Heinlein: In Dialogue With His Century, The Authorized Biography, Volume I: Learning Curve

This was somewhat interesting but essentially unsatisfying. Patterson does not appear to have the detachment or the analytical bent (at least when discussing this subject) to provide more than a highly detailed but ultimately superficial look at Heinlein as man or as writer, and both his accuracy and his treatment of sources is open to question. A biography must be more than a collection of everything one could find about the subject, set down without comment even when the various sources are contradictory.


Sarah Schulman, Ties That Bind: Familial Homophobia and its Consequences

Schulman makes an interesting but not completely convincing argument that lack of full acceptance and support of queer people by their families is the basic cause, not only of social intolerance of queer people, but also of all the ills that can be found within the queer community. I think she has a point - that being that if families would fight for the rights of their queer members, both within the family and within the greater society, then much positive change would occur - but I think her argument simplifies the situation somewhat. But still, she poses some very interesting ideas and points out how easily gay men, lesbians other members of the queer community settle for the most modest shows of acceptance from their families of origin, and how much more many parents, siblings and other family members need to go in supporting, encouraging and defending the queer people in their lives just to provide the same kind of support that is automatically given to the straight people in their lives.


Arundhati Roy, An Ordinary Person’s Guide to Empire

Roy is one of the most eloquent critics of the global imperialist project. These essays are from the periods of the Bush administration in the US and address issues having to do with the Iraq war as well as challenging imperialism and its effects around the world and in her own country.


Lee Maracle, I Am Woman: A Native Perspective on Sociology and Feminism

Maracle's book is part personal narrative, part history of the development of the movements of resistance and change among First Nations peoples, and part sociological analysis of the situation of First Nations peoples, and First Nations women, in their own communities and within north American mainstream society.


Carolyn G. Heilbrun, Writing a Woman’s Life

A fascinating examination of the ways that women's lives are chronicled, and how the ways that biographers and women writing personal narratives structure and organise their work differs from traditional approaches taken toward the writing of the lives of men.


Jennifer K. Stoller, Ink-stained Amazons and Cinematic Warriors

Stoller offers the reader an interesting and lively survey of many of the fictional heroines that have become part of popular culture over the past 70-odd years, from Wonder Woman to Buffy and Xena.


Barbara Ehrenreich, Bright-sided: How Positive Thinking Is Undermining America

Ehrenreich looks at the history, the current manifestations and the effects of the positive thinking and self-help movements in American culture, and demonstrates how what appeared to be a beneficial response to the restrictive culture of Calvinist thought in the 19th century has become a dangerous mass delusion in the 21st.


Stephanie Coontz, A Strange Stirring: The Feminine Mystique and American Woman at the Dawn of the 1960s

Coontz does three things in this book, all of which are quite interesting - perhaps especially to someone like myself who remember when The Feminine Mystique was first published. First, she looks at the book itself. Second, she presents narratives of women who read the book and have described how it affected them. Third, she looks at the social history of women and the the women's movement in the US using the book as a touchstone.


And finally, a book that is not really classifiable, but which I am including here because taken in whole, it is an example of writing about a woman's life, and is hence no more a fiction than are the lives of any of us.

Karen Joy Fowler & Debbie Notkin (eds.), 80! Memories and Reflections on Ursula K. Le Guin

To celebrate the occasion of Ursula Le Guin's 80th birthday, editors Fowler and Notkin invited contributions of many kinds from a variety of writers. Here are reminiscences of Le Guin, personal accounts of what her books have meant to various writers, poems and short stories presented in her honour, pieces of critical analysis, a brief biographical sketch by Julie Phillips (who wrote the definitive biography of Alice Sheldon/James Tiptree Jr.) and a few other kinds of things that one might produce in order to celebrate a most extraordinary woman.



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2012-01-04 06:13 am

Where no man has gone before


Like many science fiction fans of my generation, the appearance of Star Trek on my television screen in 1966 was a pivotal moment (these days, people call it ST: The Original Series, but for me there is only one Star Trek, which cannot ever be confused with The Next Generation, or Deep Space Nine, or any of the others). I watched it faithfully. I and several of my friends began writing fan fiction, something that had never occurred to any of us before then, but which was something we could no more not do than we could choose not to breathe. Something about Star Trek demanded that we join as co-creators, that we find ways to explore the consequences of what we were watching in the universe where they had happened, that we give those mesmerizing characters more to do, that we put ourselves into the world of Kirk and Spock and Scotty and Uhura and all the others.

So I wrote genfic and Mary Sues, and slash, and all the kinds of fanfic that everyone in fandom knows about today - but were almost completely new in the late 60s.

And something else happened then - other people started writing new stories set in the Star Trek world and getting them published. And I read those just as avidly as I had watched to show itself.

Every once in a while, I still get in the mood to read - or re-read - official star Trek novels, though I'm rather picky - I only read novels set in the original Star Trek setting. The Star Trek novel-reading itch hit me again in early 2011, and these are the books I picked to satisfy it, almost all of them re-reads:


Dave Galanter, Star Trek: Troublesome Minds
Melinda Snodgrass, Star Trek: Tears of the Singers
Barbara Hambly, Star Trek: Ishmael
Margaret Wander Bonanno, Star Trek: Strangers from the Sky
Jean Lorrah, Star Trek: The Vulcan Academy Murders
A.C. Crispin, Star Trek: Time for Yesterday
Diane Duane, Star Trek: Doctor’s Orders

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2012-01-04 06:39 am

2011: Anthologies


I read three anthologies in 2011, all of them theme-based and all quite enjoyable.


Mercedes Lackey (ed.), Under the Vale and Other Tales of Valdemar

What can I say? Lackey's world of Velgarth, and her stories about Valdemar, and its Heralds and their Companions are irresistible to me. I know, telepathic talking horses. But so what?


John Joseph Adams (ed.), The Improbable Adventures of Sherlock Holmes

Holmes is another literary creation that I find irresistible. so if you give me an anthology of stories about Sherlock Holmes facing adversaries more fantastical than most of those Arthur Conan Doyle created, who am I to say no? A really excellent collection (to be expected, given Adams' track record as an editor).


John Pelan & Benjamin Adams (eds.), The Children of Cthulhu

And yet another irresistible topic - the Cthulhu mythos created by H. P. Lovecraft. These are stories inspired by the mythos, and not necessarily drawing directly on elements of the canon, but there are some excellent horror stories here, with all the distinctive flavour of the Lovecraft originals.

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2012-01-04 06:54 am

Return to the world of Paksenarrion


I loved Elizabeth Moon's books about Paksenarrion, the sheepfarmer's daughter who ran away from an ordinary predictable life to become first a mercenary and then a paladin. It's been a long time since Moon wrote those, but she has returned to the richly detailed world of Paksenarrion with a new series focused on Kieri Phelan, a key figure in the original books.

Kieri Phelan, homeless orphan who became leader of a mercenary company and later a Duke, was revealed in the first series to be the long-lost half-elven heir to the kingdom of Lyonya. Moon's new series follows King Kieri's efforts to establish himself in his new role, defend his country against dark plots within and invasion without, and restore his lost elven heritage so that he can be a whole person and the kind of king that Lyonya, a kingdom of both humans and elves, desperately needs.

Naturally, in preparation for the new series, I had to re-read all of the earlier books in this world.

Paladin's Legacy
Oath of Fealty
Kings of the North


The Deed of Paksenarrion
Sheepfarmer’s Daughter
Divided Allegiance
Oath of Gold


The Legacy of Gird
Surrender None
Liar’s Oath


The third volume in the Paladin's Legacy series comes out next month, and I am very much looking forward to reading it. Moon cannot write these books quickly enough to please me - but I'm so happy she is writing them that it doesn't matter.