Wednesday, December 11, 2024

2024 read #151: High Times in the Low Parliament by Kelly Robson.

High Times in the Low Parliament by Kelly Robson
157 pages
Published 2022
Read from December 4 to December 11
Rating: 3.5 out of 5

In my little corner of the writing world, a lot of people have become besotted with the trope of disaster gays. The trend didn't begin with Lana Baker, scribe and protagonist of Low Parliament, but she could be cited as a prime specimen of this archetype. She's a drunk and a flirt who can be relied upon to make a foolish choice for a pretty face. She lets some kissing cloud her judgment and winds up exiled to Parliament, a sort of Doggerland EU chamber of human and fairy politics, where she faces drowning (along with the rest of people who reside there) should the politicians remain deadlocked.

High Times is a delightfully horny number that builds its world with an admirably light touch. Unfortunately, about halfway through, the narrative loses some of its initial momentum and gets lost (like its protagonist) in a repetitive series of rooms and botched liaisons that don't add much to the story. I expected the meat of the story to involve backroom talks and roguish scheming, as Lana figures out how to use her charisma to avert catastrophe. Instead, we get an unusual amount of what felt like filler for a book this short, only settling back into a solid groove again for the final third of the book. 

All in all, though, High Times is an enjoyable romp and a fine allegory of class solidarity in the face of supernatural Brexit.

Wednesday, December 4, 2024

2024 read #150: The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, July 2008 issue.

The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, July 2008 issue (115:1)
Edited by Gordon Van Gelder
162 pages
Published 2008
Read December 4
Rating: 2 out of 5

Ah, the summer of 2008. A wonderful time in my life. When this issue was on newsstands, I was vacationing with my polycule in Florida, preparing to help one then-partner move to New Mexico for grad school. I was flourishing in undergrad, and looking forward to the election, when surely Obama would finally put an end to the fascist Bush regime and solve America once and for all. At least for me, it was a simpler time, before I really knew anything.

I wasn’t writing short fiction, wasting my time instead on a massive and unpublishable novel. I wasn’t really reading SFF magazines back then, either. I wish I had been; maybe I’d be a better writer today.

If I had picked up this issue at the time, I wonder if I would have been encouraged or jealous that someone else was getting a dinosaur story published by Gordon Van Gelder, the editor who had told me nine years previously that he didn’t really care for dinosaur stories.


“Fullbrim’s Finding” by Matthew Hughes. Hughes was a mainstay in this era of F&SF; it seems like half the ’00s and ’10s issues in my collection feature a story by him. The first one I actually read was “The Mule” in the March/April 2022 issue, which I praised for its early modern esoteric magic setting. Imagine my surprise to learn, via today’s story, that Hughes’ “discriminator” tales began in a technological Old Earth setting, chock-full of spaceships and quantum physics and wan attempts at sci-fi humor, which became the subsequent fantasy setting via cosmological “cycling” of the universe. It all has a 1970s fantasy serial vibe to it. I like fantasy serials in theory, but after a certain point, just write a standalone story in a standalone setting, you know? All that aside, this tale is mildly entertaining. C+


“Reader’s Guide” by Lisa Goldstein. So much has happened since this issue was printed, and so much in the culture has shifted, that it’s difficult to remember that 2008 wasn’t that long ago. I was startled to find a metafictional list story here, but I guess it isn’t that surprising, really; a lot of the threads that comprise contemporary genre fiction were gathering throughout the ’00s. “Reader’s Guide” is an interesting prototype of the list stories that have proliferated in our time. A fantasy story about the metaphysics of storytelling would have been well-trodden ground even in 1988, let alone 2008, but I liked it all the same. It’s charming. B


“The Roberts” by Michael Blumlein. The editorial introduction calls this novella “edgy,” and the story opens with the protagonist content in his mother’s womb. What masculine hell are we in for?

Sure enough, we’re treated to just about the most banal 20th century upper-middle class white boy checklist imaginable. Our hero Robert gets born, goes to college, has a fling with art, finds a first love, switches to architecture, has a first heartbreak, needs to work to “feel like a man,” loses an eye in a freak accident likened (what a surprise!) to castration, then finds another love, a professional contact whom he nags and wears down until she finally goes on a date with him. And that’s just by page three.

“The Roberts” compiles 55 pages of numbingly rote masculine concerns and (literal) objectification of women. A quote: “[Robert] needed a woman. In the past it had never been hard for him to meet women, and it wasn’t hard now. Women liked him, and what was not to like in a man so charming, so attractive, so victimized by circumstance and so willing — indeed so poised — to put it all behind and reestablish himself?” It only gets grodier from there; soon enough, Robert is employing a parthenogeneticist to engineer a woman for him.

Edgy, my ass — it’s the same color-by-numbers bullshit pampered male writers have been regurgitating for decades, for centuries, while congratulating themselves on their originality and their fine perceptions. It’s literally the cultural default. “The Roberts” could have been published in F&SF in 1978 and no one would have batted an eye.

One might even conclude this is all a vicious satire of how certain men view themselves as main characters and how they view women, categorically, as muses, helpmeets, accessories, mommy-maids, “miracle workers,” anything other than fully fledged and autonomous human beings with their own fully developed interiority. But if so, it’s one of those satires that cuts alarmingly close to seeming sincere. F


“Enfant Terrible” by Scott Dalrymple. After that mess, this slight sketch of a brain parasite run amok in a classroom is blessedly forgettable. C 


“Poison Victory” by Albert E. Cowdrey. An alternative history piece set in a world where the Nazis won and serfdom has been reestablished in Russia under a new German aristocracy. “Nazis won the war!” has always been an oversaturated theme, especially when in retrospect we realize the Nazis won the peace and have been entrenched in our power structures this whole time. “Victory” is well-written and atmospheric, a solid enough story of its type. B-


“The Dinosaur Train” by James L. Cambias. I’ve only read two dinosaur stories published in the pages of F&SF, and both of them involved trains. (“I’d have two nickels,” etc.) This one is much better than Ian Watson’s “In the Upper Cretaceous with the Summerfire Brigade” (published in the August 1990 issue), but that’s an incredibly low bar. Essentially, “Dinosaur Train” steals the idea of a traveling dinosaur circus from Dinosaur Summer (no shame there, I plan to do the same someday). Cambias even replicates Greg Bear’s pairing of old-timey filmmakers and the lost world. It’s unabashed Dinosaur Summer fanfic, which would have made my 2008 self especially jealous. Cambias’ story hits a pleasing mix of family drama and dinosaur zookeeping — nothing revolutionary, but solid enough to put it in the upper echelons of dinosaur fiction (which is also a very low bar). B


And that’s it! I’m happy to report that “The Dinosaur Train” — the sole reason I read this issue — was worth reading. “Reader’s Guide” was also quite good.

Tuesday, December 3, 2024

2024 read #149: The Bridge of San Luis Rey by Thornton Wilder.

The Bridge of San Luis Rey by Thornton Wilder
133 pages
Published 1927
Read from December 2 to December 3
Rating: 3.5 out of 5

Growing up a white child in the 1980s and ’90s, one with a particularly controlling and paranoid parent at that, I subsisted on a steady diet of “canon” classics. The authors were comprehensively white and overwhelmingly male, though one Shelley did sneak in among the Wellses, Vernes, Twains, and Doyles. I also had a clear sense that there was another layer of “classics” awaiting me in adulthood, a stodgier and more respectable “canon” from the early twentieth century, books that might get referenced or parodied enough in cartoons for me to be aware of them, but with a vague sense that they weren’t “for” me.

The Bridge of San Luis Rey fits into this category. As a kid, I knew of it by name, but I had no inkling of its plot — or its length, which is one reason I decided to check it out — until I found it the other day while browsing the library. If you didn't know it either, Bridge is a series of interconnected character sketches that converge upon the titular footbridge and its fatal collapse. A Franciscan monk who happened to witness the collapse investigates the lives of the victims, seeking to prove the justice of his god in their fates.

The theological detective angle turns out to be little more than a framing device. The individual stories are about what you'd expect for a lauded 1920s literary outing, delicately teasing apart the victims' obsessions and unhealthy attachments, with a moderate amount of ethnic stereotyping (though less than one might expect). The prose is crisply modernist, detached and faintly ironic. On the whole, I’d say Bridge holds up pretty well. Unlike a certain bridge.

Monday, December 2, 2024

2024 read #148: The Practice, the Horizon, and the Chain by Sofia Samatar.

The Practice, the Horizon, and the Chain by Sofia Samatar
127 pages
Published 2024
Read from December 1 to December 2
Rating: 4.5 out of 5

Sofia Samatar became one of my favorite authors thanks to exactly one book: A Stranger in Olondria. I’ve wanted to read The Winged Histories for years, but just haven’t done so, for various reasons. One of the reasons: It’s become increasingly difficult for me to focus, so the lush density of Samatar’s prose requires me to be in a certain headspace, which I just haven’t found that often lately. A novella is the perfect opportunity to savor her writing once more, as I slowly build back my attention span.

This is a beautiful yet harrowing examination of caste, class, captivity, exploitation, and community aboard a mining ship in endless orbit. It is a story about making sense of the conditions we’re born into, about ways of looking. It is about systems of control and patterns of resistance, patterns of survival, the cruel math of the pampered classes. It is a tale immense beyond its page count.

Having read so much sci-fi from the sixties and seventies, all those smug white men writing tales of white boy messiahs who bridge the cosmic links between ordinary people, it’s a revelation to read a story that actually does something meaningful with that framework, a story that finds the substance beyond the stale platitudes. 

Sunday, December 1, 2024

2024 read #147: A History of Dinosaurs in 50 Fossils by Paul M. Barrett.

A History of Dinosaurs in 50 Fossils by Paul M. Barrett
160 pages
Published 2024
Read from November 30 to December 1
Rating: 3 out of 5

Much like A History of Plants in Fifty Fossils, this is a coffee table book illustrated with photographs of the namesake fifty fossils, presenting a brief, glossy overview of dinosaur science. Unlike Plants, I went into Dinosaurs knowing quite a lot about the subject matter. The state of science publishing is dire, however, so I’ll take what I can get at this point. And I’ve been out of the loop with dinosaur science long enough that I might learn things even from a pop science book.

Considering the limitations of its structure, A History of Dinosaurs does a fair job at doling out beginner information: what defines dinosaurs, their evolutionary origins, their diversity and adaptations, and so on. The illustrations include paleo-reconstruction artwork as well as fossil photos, which was nice. While I do wish popular science books would return to trusting their audience instead of spoon-feeding them printed listicles, this one wasn’t a bad effort.

Saturday, November 30, 2024

2024 read #146: So Far So Good by Ursula K. Le Guin.

So Far So Good: Final Poems: 2014-2018 by Ursula K. Le Guin
90 pages
Published 2018
Read November 30
Rating: 4 out of 5

Rhyming descriptive poetry about nature and spirit has been a mainstay for so long that you could, at best, call it a worn-out cliché. Yet Le Guin's deep compassion and enduring humanity infuse these short poems with the urgency of life. 

Seemingly simple lines stagger, as in "Come to Dust": "All earth's dust / has been life, held soul, is holy." Everything connects; the universe flows from star to spirit and out again.

Her meditations on mortality, aging, and the business of being alive transcend old forms and invest in them something vital: "the grace / of water to thirst" ("Lesser Senses").

2024 read #145: Songs of a Sourdough by Robert W. Service.

Songs of a Sourdough by Robert W. Service
99 pages
Published 1907
Read November 30
Rating: 1ish out of 5

Maybe I first heard of Robert Service through a stray reference in a Robert Macfarlane book, or maybe “Service poem” cropped up somewhere as a shorthand for manly-man-in-the-manly-wild poetry. Either way, I found a pdf of this book under its American title, The Spell of the Yukon. Now, I haven’t read much old poetry, and almost none written before 1970. (When you reach the era of obligatory rhyme, it all gets a bit musty.) But I want to change that, so here we are.

Some of the poems are almost okay, especially in the early pages. I can put myself in a mindset to appreciate what its original audience found in it, even if, for me, it reads like a calculated grind of commercial exotica, peppered with clichés, exemplified by the opening of “The Heart of the Sourdough”:

There where the mighty mountains bare their fangs unto the moon. 
There where the sullen sun-dogs glare in the snow-bright, bitter noon,
And the glacier-glutted streams sweep down at the clarion call of June.

If I thought I could escape with nothing worse than some over-wrought description, alas, I was wrong. “The Law of the Yukon” is multiple pages of Social Darwinism, with the land, personified, ranting about how virile men are awesome and should rule, and how much the “enervated” urban poor suck and should die. That poem singlehandedly brought down my opinion of this book from bemused indifference to active dislike. Subsequent poems extolling Empire and the glory of colonial warfare and the like served only to reinforce this.