Categories
Science Fiction and Fantasy

M. John Harrison on Fantasy

M. John Harrison on writing Fantasy:

Hi, I got your book. You ask me how to make it different.

Substitute imagination for exhaustiveness, and inventiveness for research. As a reader I’m not interested in a “fully worked out” world. I’m not interested in “self consistency”…

When I read fantasy, I read for the bizarre, the wrenched, the undertone of difference & weirdness that defamiliarises the world I know. I want the taste of the writer’s mind, I want to feel I’m walking about in the edges of the individual personality. I don’t want to read a story misrepresented from some other culture’s folklore, or a story in which mainstream ideology of the last fifty years is presented as myth. Go read Clive Barker. Go read Kenneth Patchen, who was reportedly an unlikeable man but who could write you a fantasy in a couple of lines. Or put “The Gates of Eden” on repeat.

Go away & write me a fantasy like that. Wait twenty years before you start. Write it out of some emotion of yours you never understood, or some decision you made you’re not sure if you regret; but never once name that emotion or let me see the decision. I want what’s underneath.

Categories
Blather

Encoding restaurant reviews in your tips

Ian Hickson’s new blog post demonstrates why he’s a geeks’ geek:

One day I looked at my bank statement and it was something like:

POS Trans ZIBIBBO PALO ALTO CAUS $76.00
POS Trans CHEESECAKE PALO ALTO CAUS $40.00
POS Trans OUTBACK #0514 CUPERTINO CAUS $210.00
POS Trans BROOKFIELD’S REST #2 SACRAMENTO CAUS $34.00

Look at all those zero cents… there are data bits there, lying unused! It struck me that with every single restaurant transaction I could set the cents field to some number under my control, thus allowing me to communicate with myself at a later date!

So he develops a system of annotations about each meal which he tries to insert into the cents value of his credit card charges, by adjusting the tip he writes in. Turns out that no restaurant actually charged him what he wrote…

Categories
Blather Science Fiction and Fantasy

Politicians as D&D Nerds

A fine rant from Peter Watts on how politicians’ disdain for science shows how dismally disconnection from reality most policy makers really are:

In other words, both Law and Economics are human artifacts. They’re like Gibsonian cyberspace, a consensual hallucination that only works because everybody agrees to stay inside the playground. They’re Klingon Summer Camp, they’re Dungeons and Dragons for geeks with MBAs: beautifully arcane, deeply developed, honed and crafted by decades of game play. But they’re arbitrary. Lo, the DM changes The Law, tweaks interest rates: watch all the PCs dance to the rules of the new edition!

Try that in the real world, though. Try repealing photosynthesis or gravity and see where it gets you. Anyone who talks about The Economy as though it reflects any fundamental aspect of the real world is an idiot.
So, why is it always suits? Why so few scientists in politics? Why isn’t the real world governed by those practiced in studying the real world, instead of geeks who can’t admit that Klingons don’t actually exist?

I think it’s because science is nasty. It is a methodology that recognizes the prejudices and blind spots of its practitioners, and it is designed to take those weaknesses into account and use them to its own ends. It drags us kicking and screaming to unpleasant truths we’d rather not recognize, it’s the only approach that is designed to be self-correcting

Peter Watts, All elected officials must speak fluent Klingon

Categories
Blather Science Fiction and Fantasy

Cutting it close

Ah, deadlines. I thrive on them, but abuse them mercilessly. Case in point:

From: Dotan Dimet Date: 09/15/2007 11:54 PM To: pras.einat@gmail.com

Categories
Blather Comics

Comics vs Animation vs Festival

The Israeli Animation, Comics and Caricature festival starts today. It runs Saturday to Tuesday, 25th-28th of August. My brother and his wife’s short animated film, JRA is showing as part of the אסיף 2007 segment.

Looking for info using Google, I found a lot of talk about “the Comics and animation festival”, but only when you look for “animation and comics festival” do you find useful links to the site with the full program. It looks to me like there are two (or more) worlds here, the organizers with the strong ties to the Cinematheque being animation-establishment folk, and the younger indie, anarchist, zine-making comics guys in their big tent who have the cool blog cred. And you also have people like Okay who represent comics fans and people who like actual commercial comics. Clearly these crowds aren’t talking about the same event, but it would help if they at least called the Con using the same name, like the way roleplayers, Trekkers, Sci-Fi folk, Rocky freaks, Buffy fans, etc. all know that ICON is the same con.

Maybe this con actually has a name (rather than the blah blah and blah festival) – the anemic “AniCom”. It would help if anyone used it.