Ethan of Athos, “Survival Instinct”

August 11th, 2002

I enjoyed Ethan of Athos, perhaps because I wasn’t expecting much of my last unread LMB novel and one I knew all along had little to do with Miles. The beginning drew me in; I had no clue about Athos until it was made obvious, and I do love a good alien culture. I liked Ethan, especially his prejudices and his conflicted relationship with Quinn. Of course he was no Miles Naismith Vorkosigan, but who is?

I realized back in the second half of The Vor Game that I don’t particularly like the space-opera side of space-opera, and when Ethan of Athos turned into the usual hide-and-seek in spaceship/spacestation corridors, with arrests, escapes, thugs, interrogations and the whole nine meters, I was ready to write the novel off. It reclaimed my interest at the end, though, first with Quinn’s final contribution, then with the trick ending. I love a good trick ending. But then, I never claimed to have taste.

The latest Analog was good all around. I’d skipped the first part of the current serial until I ran out of the rest of the magazine to read, thinking of my bad experience with “Hominid“, which the letters section wouldn’t let me forget. When I started “Survival Instinct” by Ed Lerner, though, I thought immediately that it was a perfect piece of writing. I’m still not sure why, but that’s my recommendation for the month of October. (Sci-fi - it’s the future in more ways than one.)

Cetaganda

August 10th, 2002

First off, I must confess I’ve been mainlining LMB for a couple of weeks now, ever since Diplomatic Immunity. To get over my mild disappointment with the latest, I started over from Shards of Honor. There’s just something about Cordelia.

I stopped by the library for The Vor Game and hit unexpected paydirt - Miles, Mystery & Mayhem, the latest two-volume edition, and the last two novels I hadn’t read. I found Cetaganda a bit too much like Diplomatic Immunity - Miles running around knowing too much about the Star Creche and trying to keep his accidental discovery from touching off yet another war with the Cetagandans. A novel all about things not happening can hardly compare to a novella where they do happen, such as the weatherman half of The Vor Game, but I’m not complaining. The Cetagandans were interesting, if
something of a still-life, and I’ve always had a soft spot for that-idiot-Ivan. I suppose that’s one of the perils of having started with A Civil Campaign.

Choosy Bloggers Choose Gif

August 9th, 2002

I found the truth about .gif
on the same site as Lori’s Lego link. I’m thinking covetous, copyright-violating thoughts
about his navbar, too. I wonder if I can do that with CSS…

Fun with Font Size

August 8th, 2002

PG

You devilish little tearaway,
you - you require parental guidance. That means mummy should hold
your hand before you do anything. How cool you are…

“Which Movie Classification Are You?”

Test created by Jamie
- take it here.

Most people cheat on the questions - I cheat on the HTML code. If you take
the quiz, it won’t come out that pretty, but feel free to snag my code and
paste your own results in there.

That quiz was made with an ASP script, by the way. (Boo! Windows! Ick!)
I’ll stick to my Perl script, but the idea
of faking an image with cool style or font-size tricks is worth remembering. I
should be rewriting Colony, but I’m way behind on that quiz I promised.
Time to multitask…

Fluff it Up

August 7th, 2002

As usual, I’m late linking the latest
zendom article, on lovin’ fluff.

Jungle Kitty said
something on-list about fanfic shortcuts that I just can’t get out of my mind.
She was kind enough to quote a whole article:
It’s
Like a Movie, But It’s Not
, which otherwise you have to log into the NYTimes
page to read. In it, Neal Gabler claims that movies today skip all the work of
entertaining and expression, replacing it with cues that the audience knows -
so that you get the outline of a movie, rather than an actual movie.

So yes, sometimes you have the outline of a fanfic - formulas that
substitute for a story of a more traditional form. This is where I lost track of the
conversation, though. I’m still not sure what a formula is or how to know one
when I see one. Does shortcut mean that anything classifiable under the
Borg Plot Classification is a formulaic
story? Do you have to write a new plot to avoid formula, or is it enough to
write a certain way?

I gave as an example the
tried-and-true J/C formula of Janeway finally realizing after an unspecified
number of years that she can’t live without Chakotay any longer. I think
those who said that formulas no longer satisfy them would dislike
such a story because of the formula itself. My only criticism of the
Sudden Realization formula story is that the Sudden Realization itself is rarely
justified. If someone makes me believe that Janeway can’t live
without Chakotay any longer, then I consider it a good story, however
popular the plot.

On the other hand, you can fail to motivate an original plot - it’s not only
formulas that get sent out into the ether without sufficient verisimilitude. I’m
rewriting Colony because it’s the outline of a novel, rather than the novella
I wanted it to be. Yet some people liked it - sci-fi fans more than others, I
suspect, because sf is a genre where originality vs. formula has long been more
important than showing vs. telling. You can, in other words, tell
all you want as long as the story you’re telling is new - Foundation,
a novella-long set of dialogues, is a good example of just what you could
get away with once upon a time.

Well, that was a roundabout and oxymoronic way of saying I can’t blog
right now because I’m busy rewriting Colony.

404 Without Pity

August 6th, 2002

Content eludes me today, so how about a few links?
Plumb the depths of 404 at the
404 Research Lab. Read a
Jim Wright-style review of the classic TOS episode “Mirror Mirror” at
Television Without Pity.
Find that elusive C/7 masterpiece at
Perfection, home of the C/7 Story
Index.

“Protocol”, Promised Land, K-19

August 5th, 2002

The date inflation at Analog never ceases to amaze me. I’m over a month behind on this one, but the date on the cover is September 2002. Anyway, my favorite story this time was “Protocol” by Timothy Zahn. It’s listed as a novelette; I would have called it a short story. The aliens were appropriately alien.

Promised Land was an experiment for me, and one that failed. If I had to guess, I’d say Connie Willis was the co- and Cynthia Felice was the author of this sci-fi/romance crossover. The romance side won. Nothing significant would be changed by transporting all the characters and plot events to the Wild West: the city girl returning to the family farm, the quiet but dependable cowpoke boy, the devilish rake, the flirt with a heart of gold, etc. Down to details of canning fruit, sewing sleeves and prairie fires, it’s a Western, not a sci-fi novel. The natives are fire-monkeys rather than Apaches; only the city girl’s alien pet is necessary to the plot, and you can see that resolution coming from three territories away.

Yes, I was warned by the back cover, but when I think of “an all-new novel that is not just sweeping science fiction, but an engaging romantic story as well” I think Shards of Honor. I don’t think Harlequin Romances set in space. There are genres and there are genres. Romance is one that drops anvils on your head every chapter or so. Ouch. Ouch. Ouch! The plot turns on the heroine’s slow, explicit, and stereotypical realization that the hero is her One True Love and not the neanderthal she thought. On the side, her guilt for flirting with the local Lothario dawns upon her - and I never even noticed she was flirting with him.

I don’t object to romance conventions per se, not even ones like the flirting issue that I just don’t grok. I firmly believe in a woman’s right to write off her education and spend the rest of her life on a farm pickling vegetables, baking compotes and reproducing. But that’s not science fiction. The genre is more than a sprinkling of spaceships and cute alien pets - there is a kind of story that is a sci-fi story and Promised Land isn’t that kind.

On the other hand, “K19: The Widowmaker” had a sci-fi plot, even though it was set in the past. I couldn’t help thinking of Spock in “The Wrath of Khan” when the sailors braved the reactor chamber. I’m not saying K19 was a great movie (Liam Neeson aside), but it was about the science. You could transport all the characters and plot events to a spaceship, and nothing significant would be changed.

Club Tattoo

August 4th, 2002

What if you had to put together a list of Chakotay fic? It would be hard,
wouldn’t it? Translate it into Japanese and you get
Club Tattoo.
(I’m dying to know what they’re saying about me.)

Seema Spores

August 4th, 2002

I’d be interested to know just how much Trek fanfic has resulted from
dares and challenges issued by Seema. Here’s the latest entry in the rolls of
Seema-incited fic, a post-Endgame comedy of obscure pairings:
Than Fade Away. I thought the
muse was dead, but it turns out she’s just been busy baking.

Also new on-site is Jade’s latest J/C fic,
Layered Logic.

Meet the Press

August 1st, 2002

For previous Blog War entries, see the wiki.

“They want us to hold a press conference.” Jemima sounded less than enthused.

Seema, however, was in her element. “Set up the soapboxes, boys!” she called out to the poolboys sunning themselves on the deckchairs. Sean in his speedo bumped into Jemima’s new poolboy, Liam Neeson, overdressed in a Soviet naval uniform. Words in funny accents were exchanged. Liz, to keep up her battered image of aloofness, had Snape move her soapbox a little farther away from the others, closer to the pool. Spike and Liam unfolded a few rows’ worth of the resort folding chairs, lining them up in front of the soapboxes.

“Let ‘em in!” Seema pointed the way to their seats. “Aren’t you folks supposed to be at the White House? What brings you all to our humble pool?” They weren’t poolboy material, that much was certain.

The reporters all answered at once, drowning each other out. “War,” one said, after the others had grown silent. “Stone Electrons,” he introduced himself, “reporting for the Blog News Service.”

“Never heard of it,” Liz muttered.

“You’re a little late,” Seema said. “The blog war started, oh, about eight months ago. You should have stopped by when we were at the Death Star.”

“Which Death Star?” Stone asked.

Seema shrugged. “They all look alike to me.”

Stone shifted uncomfortably in his seat; Snape stood nearby, looking innocent. “I believe this is a different blog war,” Stone said, leaning over to scratch his legs.

“There can be only one blog war,” Liz said, slipping momentarily into Highlander fandom in her unique multi way. She loosened her longsword in its scabbard.

“So that’s what’s under the cloak,” Lori whispered to Christine.

Stone was speechless, but another reporter filled in the gap. “Is Jemima going to apologize for her inflammatory remarks?”

“Which ones?” Lori asked.

“‘A story should have a beginning, a middle, and an end,’” Seema quoted. “Do you mean that one?” The reporters looked at her blankly. “I was there for that one - it was messy.”

“I remember when she said a mailing list with no email on it was dead,” Christine said. “That didn’t go over well, either.”

“I know,” Lori said, “it must have been ‘Sex does not advance the plot.’ The resort was in an uproar for days over that one.” The White House press corps was nonplussed. They didn’t seem to know much about Jemima, after all.

Liz shook her head. “It must be that she called people without muses ‘museless’. Now, that was a blog-wide scandal.” No response.

“What exactly did Jemima say this time?” Seema asked.

Stone Electrons stopped scratching for a moment. “Jemima is a C/7 fan.” One of the reporters fainted, but the figures on the soapboxes were unmoved. “She thinks she’s better than J/C writers.”

“When did Jemima ever say that?” Christine asked. “Do you have a source, Mr. Electrons?”

“Several bloggers have said–”

“I meant a reliable source,” Christine interrupted. “Or is defamation the standard policy of the Blog News Service? You’d better get your story straight - it’s all going in my docket.”

Stone leaped out of his seat, but it wasn’t the specter of the law that had frightened him. The fire ants had finally reached his derriere. Unable to shake them off, he ran out of the Zen Resort in a mad panic. Snape’s self-satisfied expression wasn’t lost on the other reporters, who began to collect their notepads and edge away.

Jemima cleared her throat. “I would like to make it perfectly clear that I have never claimed to be better than other J/C writers. Honestly. I mean, Penny is a J/C writer.” There was a general hush as an angel of light appeared over the pool, walking towards them across the water and playing an unearthly melody on a golden harp. “Monkee is a J/C writer.” The angel vanished and the ABBA appeared in her place, wearing six-foot platform shoes which kept them above water. They broke into a rousing rendition of ‘Dancing Queen.’

“Do you admit that your website is yellow?” one last reporter shouted over the din.

Jemima clapped her hands together. “That reminds me! This month marks the two-year anniversary of Jemima’s Trek, proving fanfic and entertainment in lovely TOS technicolor and standards-compliant html since August 2000. We need to celebrate.” She turned to Lori. “Do you think the ABBA would sing ‘Fernando’ with my lyrics?”

“It’s your blog.”

“Indeed.” She had Sean run off four sunshine yellow copies of ‘Chakotay’ on Lori’s color printer and swim out to the ABBA to deliver them. Spike chased out the press and let in the members of CSFic. Snape handled the drinks, Jade brought cookies and Jemima hummed along.

Can you hear their guns Chakotay?
I remember long ago another starry void like this
In the firefight Chakotay
You were humming to yourself as I was cursing Gul Evek
I could hear his pompous threats
And sounds of phaser fire coming through the deck…