THE MT VOID
Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
06/17/11 -- Vol. 29, No. 51, Whole Number 1654


 Frick: Mark Leeper, mleeper@optonline.net
 Frack: Evelyn Leeper, eleeper@optonline.net
All material is copyrighted by author unless otherwise noted.
All comments sent will be assumed authorized for inclusion
unless otherwise noted.

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Topics:
        Point of Law (comments by Mark R. Leeper)
        Why E-Books Aren't There Yet (comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)
        Did Mike Tyson Give Away His Face? (comments
                by Mark R. Leeper)
        More on the Above Editorial (comments by Josephine Paltin
                and Mark R. Leeper)
        Be Careful What You Wish For (comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)
        SUPER 8 (film review by Mark R. Leeper)
        X-MEN: FIRST CLASS (film review by Dale L. Skran, Jr.)
        FUZZY NATION by John Scalzi (audiobook review
                by Joe Karpierz)
        X-MEN: FIRST CLASS and Numbers (letters of comment by
                Jerry Ryan, and Tim Bateman)
        International Space Development Conference and THE GIRL WITH
                THE DRAGON TATTOO (letter of comment by Fred Lerner)
                This Week's Reading (PEBBLE IN THE SKY and WORD PLAY)
                (book comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)

==================================================================


TOPIC: Point of Law (comments by Mark R. Leeper)

If the law treats a corporation like it was a person, does that
mean if it can be found to kill someone it can get capital
punishment?  [-mrl]

==================================================================


TOPIC: Why E-Books Aren't There Yet (comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)

http://www.wired.com/epicenter/2011/06/ebooks-not-there-yet/all/1

My favorite is, "An unfinished e-book isn?t a constant reminder to
finish reading it."  [-ecl]

==================================================================


TOPIC: Did Mike Tyson Give Away His Face? (comments by Mark R.
Leeper)

The editorials I write for the MT VOID generally reflect what I am
thinking at the time I write them.  That is one of the reasons that
sports rarely get (gets?) mentioned in my editorials.  I have
remarkably little knowledge or interest about sports, certainly far
less than the average person.  We live in a society that assumes
people know far more about sports than I do.  (The example I like
to give is that if prime numbers are mentioned in the newspaper, it
will be followed by the phrase "those numbers divisible only by one
and themselves," assuming that people do not know what prime
numbers are.  On the other hand a phrase like "a touchback to the
end zone" is often published under the assumption that of course
the reader knows what that means.  (Now don't go writing in to
explain it either.  I am perfectly happy in my ignorance.)  Anyway,
that is why sports rarely comes up as a subject in the MT VOID.
One odd exception to this rule seems to take place.  The name Mike
Tyson does seem to come up.  I guess the man leads such a bizarre
life that his presence bleeds over into other subjects.

I wrote about Mike Tyson back in 1997 when he lost his temper and
bit each of Evander Holyfield's ears in a fight.   See:
http://www.leepers.us/mtvoid/1997/VOID0704.htm#tyson

Well, Tyson has found his way into another editorial, and this time
it was equally innocent.  It is once again an issue involving human
flesh, but this time it is Tyson's.  It seems a tattoo artist, one
S. Victor Whitmill, tattooed Tyson's face with a large garish
tribal tattoo.  The tattoo in its own way became famous.  So much
so that somebody in the production of the comedy film HANGOVER II
decided that it looked like it should be embarrassing and had the
character played by Ed Helms get a nearly identical tattoo when he
us non compos mentis due to strong drink.  The tattoo shows up in a
lot of promotional material for the film and Whitmill saw his
design being used by Warner Brothers.

Whitmill sued Warner Brothers, trying (but failing) to get an
injunction on the release of the film.  If this tattoo had been on
a portrait in a museum apparently Whitmill might have had a better
case.  The fact is that the tattoo is on human flesh, that of Mike
Tyson.  A work of art in an art gallery is certainly eligible for
copyright protection.  If you want to wear your hair the way James
McAvoy wears his, can McAvoy's hair stylist sue you for stealing
his design.  If this tribal tattoo is copyrightable, can the tribe
sue Whitmill for copyright infringement?  Does it make a difference
that the tattoo is being used to mock the original rather than is
being used as an homage?  And if it is mocking, it is mocking
Whitmill or Tyson?  How different does a tattoo design have to be
before it does not violate?  Mike Tyson was in the original film
HANGOVER and will be in the upcoming sequel.  Apparently he agrees
with Warner Brothers using his tattoo in the film.  Does Whitmill
have a right to say that Tyson cannot give permission to Warner
Brothers to use this feature of his face because it is now owned by
Whitmill?

At least we live in times where amazing things can be done with
digital images.  Warner Brothers says the disputed tattoo will run
only in the theatrical run.  When HANGOVER II goes to DVD it will
be a different tattoo, according to Warner Brothers.  (Again, how
different is different enough?)   And most importantly, does Mike
Tyson no longer have ownership of his own face?

Mike Tyson is once again in a bizarre situation.  [-mrl]

==================================================================


TOPIC: More on the Above Editorial (comments by Josephine Paltin
and Mark R. Leeper)

Attorney Josephine Paltin responds:

In general, creative works are protected by copyright.  It's not
the flesh, but the creative work that is being copyrighted.
Someone I know had a tattoo parlor as a client; the client had
posted some of his designs on a web site as "merchandise" or
offerings available.  A Chinese outfit stole the designs and was
selling them on T-shirts.  The tattoo parlor hired my acquaintance
to help resolve the issue.

This is a bit different because the medium is flesh, but we don't
know all the facts, and it's really not ephemeral.  In general,
though, stealing other people's creative work (appropriating,
copying, distributing, showing, or otherwise profiting from the
work of another, etc.) is really nasty and not funny.  Everyone
likes to make fun of Tyson and his tattoo artist because the
subject is rather déclassé, but I don't really see it that way.
The movie people could easily have used another face tattoo but
they are profiting from choosing that particular one.  [-jp]

Mark replies:

You are right that the facts can make a difference and here I think
they make all the difference.  Mike Tyson is a character in the
film and the previous film.  It is not a case of using this tattoo,
which they happened to see on Mike Tyson.  It is instead a case of
a character borrowing a tattoo, whatever that tattoo looks like,
from the character Mike Tyson and then being embarrassed by it.
Tyson is saying that, yes, in the film another character can
imitate a tattoo he sees on my character in the film.  It seems
unreasonable for the tattoo artist to say he has the power to veto
that plot unless he gets paid.  And the tattoo is a tribal design
that the tattoo artist probably borrowed without recompensing the
tribe.  [-mrl]

Jo responds:

Hmmm.  I'll take the side of the copyright owner anyway, because
(1) we don't know that the artist's design is derivative of an
existing tribal design; if the artist created it, he own the
copyright unless it's derivative (a legal term, not a wishful
interpretation, that jury must decide), and (2) Tyson does not own
the copyright to the tattoo unless he made formal legal
arrangements to do so, so his opinion has no legal standing
whatsoever--the logical extension of that is that people can freely
copy anything they see anyone else using (e.g., hardware, software)
or wearing (e.g., clothes) without regard to the rights of the
creators of these things--that is stealing.  For example, if a
movie plays a song on its soundtrack or in the movie's plot, the
movie producers pay royalties to the musicians/performers involved
--so why is it okay to copy a piece of visual art?  I don't see it.

The bottom line is that copyright law favors the creators because
such works are so easily stolen by others, who often feel a sense
of entitlement or innocence in doing so, but who generally would
side with the copyright owner if their livelihood were freely
appropriated by others.  [-jp]

==================================================================


TOPIC: Be Careful What You Wish For (comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)

In http://tinyurl.com/void-starbucks Starbucks baristas air their
complaints about customers.  Some are reasonable (and predictable):
customers who talk (often loudly) on cellphones, even while
ordering, customers who block the condiments table by having
conversations there, and so on.  But they also have a couple that
make no sense.

For example, one is "The woman with the 15-word (or so) drink
order.  "I'd like a Venti, sugar-free, non-fat, vanilla soy, double
shot, decaf, no foam, extra hot, Peppermint White Chocolate Mocha
with light whip and extra syrup."  I bet you would!"  Well,
Mr. Barista, who invented the concept of a Venti, sugar-free, non-
fat, vanilla soy, double shot, decaf, no foam, extra hot,
Peppermint White Chocolate Mocha with light whip and extra syrup?
This order is a product of Starbucks marketing--before Starbucks,
no one would dream of having an order like that!  So it is hardly
reasonable to object when someone orders one.

Another one is "the customer who is defensive about Starbucks
sizes.  'I speak four languages and unfortunately Starbucksese
isn't one of them.'  Since words and reading are tricky for these
folks, I like to have them point to the cup they want."  Well, I am
one of these customers.  On a good day, when I have time, I'll
figure out which Starbuck's size I want.  If I'm pre-occupied or in
a hurry, I'll ask for a small, medium, or large, and assume that
anyone working a coffee shop counter knows the meaning of those
perfectly ordinary English words.  If the clerk tries to insist
that I speak Starbuckese, I'm likely just to leave.  If I'm going
to learn a new language, it had better be useful for more than
ordering coffee in a single coffee chain.

Apparently if you want a Starbucks that calls its sizes small,
medium, and large, you have to go to China.  The non-alphabetic
writing system makes it difficult to create these sorts of
pretentious names for sizes.

More on this at
http://itre.cis.upenn.edu/~myl/languagelog/archives/001677.html.
[-ecl]

==================================================================


TOPIC: SUPER 8 (film review by Mark R. Leeper)

CAPSULE: J. J. Abrams, as homage to the early Steven Spielberg,
writes and directs a pastiche of Spielberg's early juvenile films.
A group of friends making an amateur zombie film one night witness
a train derailment that involved more than meets the eye.  They are
soon caught up in a situation of global proportions.  This would
have been a fun drive-in sort of film, not the deepest film, but
fun aimed at young teen level.  On those terms it is acceptable
family fare.  Spielberg is one of the producers, by the way.
Rating: +1 (-4 to +4) or 6/10

Warning: Very minor spoilers.  I have tried to spoil much less than
most other reviews I have seen, but this review is probably not
spoiler-free.

The year is 1979.  Thirteen-year-old Joe Lamb (played by Joel
Courtney) is still getting over the loss of his mother four months
earlier and having some run-ins with his father, the Ohio town
sheriff's deputy.  Joe likes monster movies and his friends Charles
(Riley Griffiths), Preston (Zach Mills), Martin (Gabriel Basso),
and Carey (Ryan Lee) are making a zombie movie in the old Super 8
film format--the same format that Spielberg used as a boy.
Tentatively joining the group is attractive Alice (Elle Fanning).
As they are trying to film a night scene in a railroad depot they
witness a train derailment right in front of--and, in fact, all
around--them.  The train derails when it hits a pickup truck on the
tracks, but only Joe sees that the pickup's driver intentionally
derailed the train.  Examining the pickup, the band of friends find
it was driven by their school science teacher who warns them they
are in danger for what they have seen and, they must keep it quiet.
But what exactly have they seen?  The mystery deepens when they
discover that the train was an Air Force military transport
carrying tens of thousands of vaguely cube-shaped metal pieces, all
identical.  And there may have been more than that aboard that
train.  The train crash, loud and scary, is the showpiece of the
film.  Nothing after it quite comes up in spectacle.

The film has a lot of touches, especially allusions to Spielberg
films or 1970s films.  There are bits borrowed from E.T., THE
GOONIES, and CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND.  There are also
some touches from J. J. Abrams.  As with CLOVERFIELD, the title
SUPER 8 totally conceals the subject matter of the film.  For one
familiar reference Joe's hobby is putting together Aurora models of
his favorite monsters.  The film takes place in 1979, about fifteen
years after the availability of the Aurora kits that Joe assembles.
But it is possible he finds them in places like flea markets and
yard sales. There are plenty of little details for people who were
horror film nerds in the 1970s.

Some script logic seems a little half-baked.  At one point the Air
Force evacuates the town on the pretext that people need to be
protected from a wildfire.  They then proceed to do things to the
town that will be impossible to explain later.  What are they
planning to tell the people?  But where this film stands out is its
attention in creating characters.  Like Jamie in EMPIRE OF THE SUN,
Joe in this film gets his power from his innocence.  Joe loves
horror films like Jamie loved airplanes.

Abrams might have brought his own special style to this story as he
did with STAR TREK.  Sadly no.  It is just the sort of film that
Spielberg might have made around 1979.  The special effects are a
little better.  SUPER 8 seems intended to be little more than a nod
to films like THE GOONIES.  It certainly does not rise above them
in spite of better special effects.  The viewer should see it not
expecting one of the great summer films, but just a minor summer
kids film.  It is good enough to meet that expectation.  I rate
SUPER 8 a modest +1 on the -4 to +4 scale or 6/10.

Film Credits: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1650062/

What others are saying:
http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/super_8/

[-mrl]

==================================================================


TOPIC: X-MEN: FIRST CLASS (film review by Dale L. Skran, Jr.)

Once again, the summer is upon us, and we are spared those tedious
"serious" winter movies!  Except, maybe, in the case of X-MEN:
FIRST CLASS.  Directed by Matthew Vaugh (LAYER CAKE, STARDUST,
KICK-ASS) this prequel to the successful trilogy of "X-Men" films
starring Patrick Stewart as Professor Xavier, takes a darker and
harder edge than the earlier films.  Supported by a strong cast,
FIRST CLASS tells the tale of the founding of the X-Men in what has
been called the Marvel Cinematic Universe to differentiate it from
the Marvel Comic Universe.  Fanboys (and girls) are warned that
although the firm in spiritually fully in line with the "X-Men"
comics, there are so many continuity deviations from the comics
that it must be thought of as an alternative universe version of
the X-Men.

James McAvoy, who portrays Charles Xavier, and Michael Fassbender,
who plays Eric Lensherr (Magneto) do an excellent job, and their
relationship forms the core of the film.  The movie follows two
threads--Xavier's wealthy boyhood and Lensherr's death camp
experiences--to the point where their lives cross and they join
together to battle Sebastian Shaw (played by Kevin Bacon) and his
Hellfire Club.  It turns out that Shaw is the Nazi who killed
Lensherr's mother, and the fires of revenge burn brightly in him.
The weaknesses of young Xavier are on full display as he ignores
his "sister" Mystique (played well by Jennifer Lawrence) while
hitting on every cute girl he meets using his patented pick-up
lines spun from his genetic knowledge.  Meanwhile, Lensherr has
honed himself into a ruthless Nazi-hunting machine, and this is
fully expressed in some brutally violent scenes.

The battle between Xavier and Lensherr for Mystique's soul provides
a lot of dramatic tension, and gives Magneto some extremely
powerful scenes.   Magneto's unconditional acceptance of Mystique
contrasts with Xavier's somewhat patronizing affection for her. The
difference between the leader who, in the defense of a minority,
advocates peace (Xavier/King/Rabin) and the leader who advocates
war (Magneto/Malcom X/Begin) is drawn, and perhaps more clearly
than ever in FIRST CLASS.  The full strengths and weaknesses of
both positions are on display, and Magneto is more understandable,
more sympathetic, and more appealing than ever before.  We are
reminded strongly why Magneto is one of Marvel's greatest villains
and most interesting characters.

There are superhero battles aplenty, and a good bit of pure fun,
but the movie is a bit jarring to the modern sensibility.   Set in
1963 during the Cuban Missile crisis, male sexism is fully
displayed, as is a good deal of female flesh, all in the service of
the plot, of course.  The original X-Men (in the movie, not the
comic!) consist of Banshee (sonic powers, including flight), Havok
(a powerhouse of energy), Darwin, (super-adaptation), the Beast
(animal strength and flexibility), and Angel (flight and acid
spitting).  Along with Xavier (a telepath), Magneto (magnetic
powers), and Mystique (shapeshifter with a blue natural form), they
are arrayed against Shaw (can absorb and send back energy) and his
Hellfire Club, including Emma Frost (telepath, diamond skin, and
skimpy white bikini), Azazel (blue skin, teleportation, agility),
and Riptide (creates tornadoes).  This all has only a little bit to
do with what happens in the comics, but is great to look at and
well played, with a Oliver Platt in a strong supporting role as a
CIA agent leading a black ops division.  The plot is at least
comprehensible, and keeping in mind that super-human powers are
used aplenty, even plausible. One slight annoyance is that there is
no teaser scene at the very end of the movie as is typically the
case for the Marvel films.

Overall, I'd rate this at least a +1, possibly a +2 on the -4 to +4
scale.  I keep coming back to some of Magneto's lines--he is pretty
convincing, and in many ways the better man than Xavier.  The movie
is what I would call a hard PG-13. The F-Bomb is used in one funny
scene, and there is a good bit of suggestive material of the
playboy club type, as well as some cold, violent scenes of torture.
There is also an extended beginning in the death camps that some
may find too disturbing for their taste.  The first few minutes of
this segment is a scene-for-scene re-shoot of the first three
minutes of the first "X-Men" movie but with different actors,
followed by new material also set in the death camps.  Hence,
recommended for older teens and adults who know what they are
getting into.  [-dls]

==================================================================


TOPIC: FUZZY NATION by John Scalzi (copyright 2011, Audible
Frontiers, 13hr 48min, narrated by Wil Wheaton and introduced by
John Scalzi) (audiobook review by Joe Karpierz)
Many of you out there probably have me at a disadvantage; I've
never read H. Beam Piper's LITTLE FUZZY.  I never had the urge or
the inclination to do so.  However, I do like everything I've read
written by John Scalzi.  So, I decided, "What the heck, let's check
this thing out and see how it is."  After all, because I haven't
read LITTLE FUZZY, I have no preconceived notions about FUZZY
NATION, Scalzi's reimagining of Piper's novel. I wouldn't fall into
the trap of "oh, he got this wrong, what is he *doing* here?", etc.
So, it was with high expectations that I started listening to the
novel.

Jack Holloway is independent mining contractor working for ZaraCorp
on Zarathustra 23, with his dog Carl, whom he has taught to set off
explosives with the push of a button.  One fateful day, Jack is out
doing his thing, setting some explosives on a cliff face, after
which Carl does the deed.  The good news is that indeed the
explosives go off and a HUGE seam of valuable jewels called
sunstones is uncovered.  This can make Jack rich, since all
contractors get a cut of the take.  The bad news is that the
explosion caused the collapse of the cliff, which is bad under
current ecological law. Chad Bourne (going with the movie spelling
here, given that I don't have the book in front of me), his
contractor rep for ZaraCorp, knows about the cliff collapse and is
in the process of cancelling Jack's contract when Jack pulls a
legal fast one on him.  You see, Jack was a lawyer in a previous
life, and has since been disbarred, which he doesn't like to talk
about.  The problem for ZaraCorp is that Jack has them over a
barrel over some legal technical issues regarding some of those
self-same ecological issues and how they relate to independent
contractors.  Jack gets his contract renewed, and cuts ZaraCorp
back into the action.

But Jack is a pain in the behind to ZaraCorp because it turns out
that the seam of sunstones, which he now owns the rights to, is
bigger than anybody thought--probably the biggest sunstone find
EVER.  And ZaraCorp wants him out of the way.  And there's another
problem.  Jack and Carl go back to Jack's home/shelter in the trees
(you can't live on the ground because of all sorts of nasty
critters that will eat you, unless you have special technical
equipment to keep them away) and discover a little furry critter in
the house.  Not only does the critter, which Jack dubs a "fuzzy"
appear to be smart, it is incredibly cute.  Soon he has a family of
them in the house.  He calls a biologist friend of his, Isabelle,
to show her what he's found.  You see, the other piece of the
puzzle is that a planet cannot not be mined and exploited if it is
home to a sentient species.  Up until now, only two other species
have been found sentient--are the fuzzies a third?

And thus the battle between Jack and ZaraCorp begins.  Isabelle
believes they are sentient based on her limited knowledge of these
things.  Neither Jack nor Zaracorp want the creatures to be
sentient.  If they are, then all mining must stop, and both Jack
and the company stand to lose a fortune.  Things get sticky when
someone tries to kill Jack--and this leads to all sorts of
political skullduggery including bribes, threats, and all sorts of
other mean nasty stuff.  And Jack slowly but surely sees things in
a different light, such that his life will be changed forever.

This is a fine book, and one that many of today's authors ought to
look at as an example of something that is extremely fun to read
and that doesn't beat you over the head with a message.  Oh, there
are messages there, but the reader/listener is too engaged in the
story itself to may that much attention to them.  It's well
written, moves at a fast pace, and has the reader both laughing and
crying.

I cannot possibly say enough good things about the narrator of the
book, Wil Wheaton.  We all remember him as Wesley Crusher from Star
Trek:  The Next Generation (most of us not too fondly).  He is,
however, a FANTASTIC narrator for FUZZY NATION.   He keeps the
tempo appropriate, speeding up when he should, slowing down when it
calls for it.  He had me in stitches at times when Jack was dealing
with the fuzzies, and he (I'm not ashamed to admit it) had me in
tears in a few places.  He doesn't try to do female voices, but it
never seems to matter.  The only voice that was not his own
occurred later in the book, and I will not spoil it for you by
teling you about it.  Wheaton is masterful here.

I really do highly recommend this audiobook.

The running time I've listed above is a bit misleading, as it
includes the original LITTLE FUZZY by H. Beam Piper.  I did not
listen to it, as I did not want to essentially listen to the same
story twice in succession, although it might have been interesting
to compare the two side by side.  Maybe another time.  In anycase,
FUZZY NATION is a tad longer than LITTLE FUZZY here in audiobook
form--FUZZY NATION coming in at around 7 hours.  [-jak]

==================================================================


TOPIC: X-MEN: FIRST CLASS and Numbers (letters of comment by
Jerry Ryan, and Tim Bateman)

In response to Mark's review of X-MEN: FIRST CLASS in the 06/10/11
issue of the MT VOID, Jerry Ryan writes:

Just saw X-MEN: FIRST CLASS last weekend with my son, who is a bit
more of a fan than I am.

His review was that "I'd read that it was the best superhero movie
made, better even than DARK KNIGHT. It's not. But it's definitely
in the top tier." I agree with him.

Originally I thought that Shaw wanted a nuclear war because his
mutation allowed him to absorb and redirect all energy ... if he
could absorb a nuke then he would be all powerful, no?  In which
case, why didn't he steal a nuke ... or go stand near a nuke being
tested?

But then I remembered there's a bit of dialog where they talk about
nuclear energy causing mutations ... didn't they hope to wipe out
non-mutants and accelerate the creation/evolution of more mutants?
[-gwr]

Mark responds:

If he wipes out all the non-mutants there would be nothing to watch
on television.  Seriously how does he know that extreme radiation
will not kill off mutants as well?  What kind of a world will be
left for mutants if all the non-mutants are killed?  They certainly
did not make much of a case that a post-nuclear holocaust would
really improve the lot of the mutants.  [-mrl]

Tim Bateman writes:

"I am told that most of the team of mutants were not in the X-Men
at the time the story takes place. Apparently only The Beast is
authentic to that time," writes Mark. On a point of pedantry, none
of the characters "is authentic to that time" as the film is set
around the time of the Cuban missile crisis, which took place in
October, 1962. The first issue of "The X-Men" is cover-dated
October, 1963. For the record, if anyone's interested, the
membership at that point was Professor X, Cyclops, the Beast, the
Angel, Iceman and, joining in that very issue, Marvel Girl.

I do wonder, I must say, that a film about which you have so many
quibbles, of varied sizes, still manages to attain the mark of
7/10.

On a different topic: thank you for the explanation of integers,
complex numbers and the like--useful to me as a layman (even if I
didn't get the more complex stuff).  [-tb]

==================================================================


TOPIC: International Space Development Conference and THE GIRL WITH
THE DRAGON TATTOO (letter of comment by Fred Lerner)

In response to Dale Skran's report on the ISDC in the 06/10/11
issue of the MT VOID, Fred Lerner writes:

I really enjoyed Dale Skran's report on the International Space
Development Conference.  It would never have occurred to me to
attend one of these things, but after reading Dale's account I'd be
sorely tempted. In any event it cheered me up considerably to know
that such a thing exists.

And in response to Dale Skran's review of THE GIRL WITH THE DRAGON
TATTOO in the same issue, Fred writes:

I also found Dale's review of THE GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO very
thought-provoking.  I read all three of the books, and saw all
three of the (Swedish) movies, and enjoyed them all thoroughly.
(It did take me a bit of effort to get through the first couple of
chapters of DRAGON TATTOO; the translator's command of idiomatic
English wasn't all it could have been.) But while Dale's
reservations about the book didn't persuade me that I shouldn't
have enjoyed it, he certainly made me think again about my
experience with it.  [-fl]

==================================================================

TOPIC: This Week's Reading (book comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)

I recently listened to an audio book version of PEBBLE IN THE SKY
by Isaac Asimov (read by Robert Fass) (ISBN 978-1-602-835931).
People have been saying for a long time that Asimov was not very
good at writing female characters, and in this they are right; Pola
Shekt is barely one-dimensional and is more a walking stereotype
than a character.  But the fact is that Asimov's male characters
are no better.  Dr. Shekt, Joseph Schwartz, and especially Bel
Arvardan are just as one-dimensional and just as stereotypical as
the female characters.  This was the first Asimov work in a long
time not published in ANALOG, supposedly for two reasons.  One,
Asimov wanted to show that his writing was *his*, not John W.
Campbell's.  And two, Asimov was distressed at the direction ANALOG
was taking with the Dean Drive and various paranormal concepts.
The latter reason is why it is ironic that what brings about the
solution in the novel is a pseudo-scientific process that gives
Joseph Schwartz all sorts of psychic powers: telepathy, mind
control, and so on.  The "Foundation" series has its problems, but
it is much better than this.  I probably loved it when I first read
it, but it has not aged well.

WORD PLAY: WHAT HAPPENS WHEN PEOPLE TALK by Peter Farb (ISBN
0-679-73408-2) is old enough that some of theories expounded in it
have since been discredited--in specific Benjamin Lee Whorf's
theories about the Hopi language and theory of time.  Of others I
am not sure of their status.  For example, the ways languages
divide the color spectrum are many, but there appears to be a
consistency.  Languages start with words for black and white.  Next
to come is red, followed by green then yellow, or yellow then
green.  Then comes blue, followed by brown.  Eventually other terms
may be added--orange, pink, gray, purple, violet, and so on--but
these are much less common.

(Farb refers to these as terms in the color spectrum, but that is
not, strictly speaking, accurate.  White and black are not elements
of the spectrum, nor is brown.)

Other statements, too, are outdated, such as, "almost no one speaks
Mandarin Chinese outside western and northern China and Taiwan."
He says English is spoken as a first or second language by 750
million people, or 20% of the world's population, and Mandarin
Chinese by 450 million (12%).  The current figures are 950 million
English speakers (14%), and 1,365 million Chinese speakers (20%).
However, the nature of the written languages makes English more
adaptable to computers, a factor that was nowhere in Farb's view in
1973.

The section on how different languages, or rather different
cultures, round numbers is, I think, just wrong both in terms of
cause and in terms of being outdated.  Farb says that we have the
9-second 100-yard dash, and the French have the 10-second 100-meter
dash.  But it is not a function of the English and French
languages, even though Farb talks about "the French speech
community" and "English-speaking peoples."  In 1973, when the book
was written, metrication had not yet taken hold in Britain,
Australia, etc.  Now that it has, and assuming metrication included
sports, I am sure the British et al refer to the 10-second
100-meter dash.  (And I doubt that in 1973 the French-speaking
Quebeçois referred to metric units, though they do now.)

And after spending most of the book explaining why no language is
inherently more difficult or easy, since children learn any of them
at about the same speed, he then writes, "If some accident of
history had made Celtic rather than English the language of Great
Britain and if Britain had similarly risen to prominence, the
peoples of the world would have had to learn an extremely difficult
language, judging from present-day Welsh."  [-ecl]

==================================================================

                                           Mark Leeper
 mleeper@optonline.net


          The gods are amused when the busy river
          condemns the idle clouds.
                                           --Rabindranath Tagore