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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 05/23/97 -- Vol. 15, No. 47

       MT Chair/Librarian:
                     Mark Leeper   MT 3E-433  908-957-5619 mleeper@lucent.com
       HO Chair:     John Jetzt    MT 2E-530  908-957-5087 jetzt@lucent.com
       HO Librarian: Nick Sauer    HO 4F-427  908-949-7076 njs@lucent.com
       Distinguished Heinlein Apologist:
                     Rob Mitchell  MT 2D-536  908-957-6330 rlmitchell1@lucent.com
       Factotum:     Evelyn Leeper MT 3E-433  908-957-2070 eleeper@lucent.com
       Backissues at http://www.geocities.com/~ecl.
       All material copyright by author unless otherwise noted.

       The Science Fiction Association of Bergen County meets on the
       second Saturday of every month in Upper Saddle River; call
       201-933-2724 for details.  The New Jersey Science Fiction Society
       meets on the third Saturday of every month in Belleville; call
       201-432-5965 for details.  The Denver Area Science Fiction
       Association meets 7:30 PM on the third Saturday of every month at
       Southwest State Bank, 1380 S. Federal Blvd.

       1. URL of the week: http://www.december.org/pg/ns/macon/.  Web site
       for THE BABY OF MACON (reviewed elsewhere in this issue), including
       Peter Greenaway's comments.  [-ecl]

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

       2. Evelyn and I were discussing an article in ENTERTAINMENT  WEEKLY
       about the World-Wide Web of all things.  Actually they were talking
       about report from a watchdog group  called  the  Center  for  Media
       Education  about  tobacco  and  alcohol ads on the Web.  Evelyn was
       curious what I thought about these ads, being like her something of
       an outsider.

       I should explain that I don't smoke or drink.  This is not  because
       I  think  that  they  are  immoral.   If I am a puritan, I am not a
       puritan by choice.  Nor do I keep away from these  vices  for  fear
       for  my health.  I would like to feel that fear for my health might
       keep me away from these pursuits, but I certainly eat more than  is
       good  for  me and health-consciousness does not seem to be powerful
       enough to stop me.  I guess the simple truth is that  I  never  got
       involved  drinking  or smoking out of laziness and esthetics.  Most
       vices are not pleasant when you first  try  them.   Alcohol  has  a
       bitter  flavor.  Smoking feels scratchy on your throat and can make
       you cough at first.  Those with perseverance overcome  the  initial
       unpleasantness  and  learn  to  enjoy  the  vice.   I  was never so
       stubborn that I could overcome my initial distaste for  the  vices.
       Whenever  I tried drinking or smoking it was like starting from the
       beginning and I hates the flavor or the feel.  In remember  when  I
       was   in  graduate  school  and  it  was  quite  legal  I  tried  a
       screwdriver, homemade.  I made it to  the  recipe  and  tasted  it.
       Ugh!   I  added  more orange juice.  Ugh!  Still more orange juice.
       Eventually I flooded it with orange juice  and  got  to  the  point
       where  it didn't taste too bad.  It wasn't as good as orange juice,
       but it wasn't so bad that I didn't want to drink it.  Then  it  put
       me to sleep.  I decided not to repeat the experiment.

       Well, some of us just are not intended to be drinkers  or  smokers.
       And  if  the truth be known, I am not at all unhappy hating alcohol
       or tobacco.  I still have  the  nervous  energy  that  some  people
       channel  into smoking.  I channel it into biting my nails, I guess.
       I would like to stop that, but it is probably harder to stop  nail-
       biting  than  to  stop smoking, in spite of the fact that nobody is
       putting addictive additives in my fingernails.  The problem is that
       you  can put cigarettes out of sight.  You can just make sure there
       is no bottle of alcohol in the house.  But there is a limit to  how
       for   you   can  separate  yourself  from  your  fingernails.   And
       considering the intensity that I put into eating and nail-biting, I
       might  well  have the personality type to be a real boozer or chain
       smoker.

       So I am, and I admit I am, something of an outsider in the  subject
       of  drinking  and  smoking.   Evelyn  asked  me what I think of the
       alcohol and tobacco companies putting web-sites  with  ads  on  the
       Web.   I am actually surprisingly sanguine about it.  People who go
       to a beer company's web site are really requesting a beer ad.   The
       same  goes  for  someone  going to a cigarette manufacturer's site.
       Making available ads on demand is far preferable  to  forcing  them
       onto  someone  in  a  magazine  ad.   You  go to a web site only by
       request.  I frankly think that the web is a good  place  for  these
       people to get their advertising in.  These are ads on demand.

       Then Evelyn asked me a question I had  not  thought  about  before.
       Which  I think does more damage, alcohol or tobacco?  Certainly the
       spotlight these days is on the tobacco industry.   But  I  think  I
       surprised  her  by  saying  I  would  have  to  choose  alcohol  as
       constituting  the  greater  threat.   Tobacco  gets  the  attention
       because  it  is the more obvious when you are around a user.  It is
       like if you had a  choice  between  eliminating  AIDS  or  mosquito
       bites,  the  obvious objective choice would be AIDS.  But I have to
       admit my knowledge of AIDS is academic, my  knowledge  of  mosquito
       bites  is  much  more  personal  and to date for me more physically
       unpleasant.  Most of us non-smokers, I almost would say all of  us,
       have  had  the  experience  of  breathing someone else's secondhand
       smoke.  It is neither pleasant nor healthy.  But I think the reason
       that  there  is  so much tension between non-smokers and smokers is
       that  sitting  in  someone  else's  smoke  for  a   non-smoker   is
       immediately unpleasant.  You can know intellectually that the smoke
       is unhealthy also, the real tension comes out of the discomfort  of
       having to breathe somebody else's smoke.

       Next week I will continue this discussion and look at alcohol.   [-
       mrl]

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

       3. THE PRESTIGE by Christopher Priest (St.  Martin's,  ISBN  0-312-
       14705-8,  1996,  404pp,  US$24.95)  (a  book  review  by  Evelyn C.
       Leeper):

       I have resolved to spend more time pointing out the wonderful books
       that  people  don't seem to hear about, and much less reviewing the
       latest "nth book in a heptology" or whatever.

       And this is a wonderful book.

       Alfred Borden and Rupert Angier were two  Victorian  magicians  who
       through  circumstance  became  not only rivals, but bitter enemies.
       Borden's descendent is a modern-day journalist who has been  having
       strange  "premonitions"  of  a  lost  twin,  and eventually becomes
       entangled in the strange tale of his  ancestor  and  Angier.   Both
       Borden  and  Angier  were masters of deception, and it is this bent
       towards deception and concealment that leads to their  war  against
       each other.  That both perform a trick involving magical bilocation
       is part of their rivalry, but only part.  How  they  perform  their
       magic,  and  the  implications  thereof,  are  only slowly unfolded
       throughout the book.  By the end it all makes sense if one  accepts
       some   science   fictional   conceits   and  a  certain  amount  of
       misdirection.  But then, misdirection is what  prestidigitation  is
       all  about,  and Priest manages his magic trick as neatly as Borden
       and Angier do theirs.

       This is a book that you cannot read only once.   As  with  a  stage
       magic trick, there is a compelling desire after seeing the trick to
       go back and see if one can figure out how it was worked.  (This has
       been  used  to  excellent  effect  in a couple of movies of late as
       well.  After reading it you'll know which ones  I  mean,  but  even
       saying which is giving too much of a hint.)

       This is a magical book, and the one mystery is how it's managed  to
       remain  as  invisible  as  it has, especially given that it won the
       World Fantasy Award.  It would be a better trick to materialize  it
       on  everyone's  night stand (though of course that would bypass the
       royalties for  it).   So  I'll  settle  for  giving  you  a  strong
       recommendation for this book.  [-ecl]
       ===================================================================

       4.  DISTRESS  by  Greg  Egan  (Phoenix,  ISBN  1-85799-484-1,  1996
       (1995c), 342pp, L5.99) (a book review by Evelyn C. Leeper):

       I believe this is scheduled for United States  release  later  this
       year,  but if you're ordering books from Britain, you could as well
       add this to the list and not have to wait.

       As usual, Egan packs a lot of  ideas  into  a  single  novel.   Our
       protagonist, Andrew Worth, is a 21st century science journalist who
       seems to concentrate on the sensational.  But rather than  doing  a
       story  on  Distress  (a  new  mental  disease in which the patients
       display, not surprisingly, extreme distress), he decides to cover a
       conference at which leading scientists will present their competing
       Theories of Everything.  This conference is being held  on  a  bio-
       engineered  renegade  island called Stateless.  That's already five
       science fiction ideas, and we haven't even gotten to the main  part
       of the book.

       Egan also has Violet Mosala,  a  brilliant  African  physicist  who
       serves  as  both  the apparent target of assassins and a mouthpiece
       for some decidedly "politically incorrect" ideas.  I  do  not  mean
       this  negatively.   When  asked,  "It  seems  to me that your whole
       approach to these issues reflects a  male,  Western,  reductionist,
       left- brained mode of thought.  How can you possibly reconcile this
       with  your  struggle  as  an   African   woman   against   cultural
       imperialism?"  Mosala  replies,  "I have no interest in squandering
       the most powerful intellectual tools I  possess,  because  of  some
       quaint  misconception  that  they're the property of any particular
       people: male, Western, or otherwise."

       Although the interplay of politics and  science  is  part  of  what
       makes this book fascinating, the somewhat straightforward political
       intrigue centering around Stateless does seem like piling  Ossa  on
       Pelion.   Everything  else  ties together reasonably well, but that
       seems somewhat detached.  The core of this book is similar  to  the
       core  of  many  of Egan's other works (including his Hugo-nominated
       "Luminous," and his latest, "Reasons for Feeling  Cheerful,"  which
       is  already  on  my  Hugo  list  for  next  year):  does knowing or
       understanding something, whether a single phenomenon or  the  whole
       universe,  change  it,  or  our reaction to it?  Does a "law" exist
       before it's understood?  To what  extent  do  our  perceptions  and
       understandings control the universe?

       Not being a physicist, I can't judge the physics, but there  are  a
       couple  of  small  errors I did note.  There are no pyramids in the
       Valley of the Kings and at one point  someone  is  described  as  a
       "loose canon."

       This is another great Egan novel.  Yes, I  know  that's  redundant,
       but  I  want  to  make  sure  you  realize  this is a very positive
       recommendation.  I'm sure there's a good reason that it's taken two
       years to get this book published in the United States; I just can't
       imagine what it is.  [-ecl]

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

       5. THE BABY OF MACON (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: A vitriolic and razor-sharp attack  on
                 Catholic  theology,  this  film  was never even
                 released in the United States until now.   What
                 may  be  a  second  Messiah is born in the 17th
                 Century in a time of pestilence.  The ignorance
                 of  the  people  and  the Church turn the event
                 into a far worse disaster.  Rating: low +2  (-4
                 to +4), 7 (0 to 10)

       I think I always have one  of  two  reactions  to  Peter  Greenaway
       films.   Either  I dislike the film or I like it but feel it is un-
       recommendable.  In the latter category were THE  COOK,  THE  THIEF,
       HIS  WIFE,  AND  HER LOVER and PROSPERO'S BOOKS.  His BABY OF MACON
       [there is a circumflex over the "a" in  "Macon"]  also  falls  into
       that  category,  but I do not have to worry about people not liking
       it as much as I did,  at  least  in  the  United  States.   It  was
       considered  either so controversial, so revolting, or both, that it
       just never found a United States distributor.

       More than usual with a Greenaway film,  it  is  difficult  to  tell
       exactly  what is going on.  Presumably the story is of a play being
       performed and/or set at the 17th Century Court of the Medici--it is
       hard  to  tell  which  since  events in and out of the play seem to
       blend together.  As would have pleased  Philip  K. Dick,  how  many
       levels  of  play-within-play  there are is impossible to determine.
       The story is a sort of burlesque of the birth  of  a  new  Messiah,
       twisting  as  many of the traditional Catholic symbols as possible.
       It is a time of multiple pestilence's and  all  the  women  of  the
       region  are  sterile.   When  an obese old hag actually succeeds in
       giving birth to a beautiful baby, the  local  women  see  it  as  a
       miraculous  birth,  even to the point of asking for the baby's spit
       to use as an elixir.  The baby's sister (played by  Julia  Ormond),
       sees a good thing and claims the baby as her own child and "proves"
       the birth to be miraculous by proving she is still a  virgin.   The
       son  of the Bishop (Ralph Fiennes) is a scientist and a skeptic who
       does not believe in the purported new  Messiah  and  in  trying  to
       disprove  the  ersatz Virgin Mary is pulled into the symbolism as a
       latter-day Joseph.  As Ormand's  character  tells  him,  "Too  many
       proofs spoil the truth."

       Somehow all this does not convey the throat-biting  viciousness  of
       this  satire.   By  any  objective  measure, THE LAST TEMPTATION OF
       CHRIST was by comparison a gentle and reverent jibe.  Greenaway  is
       a Howard Stern for intellectuals and he keeps revealing that he has
       stores of untapped acid and bile still in  him.   While  he  has  a
       right to express himself as he wishes, I think if I were Catholic I
       would be very uncomfortable with this film.  As interesting as  THE
       BABY  OF  MACON is, Greenaway makes it a real trial to sit through.
       He uses a stodgy, mock-neo-classical,  dry  style  that  sucks  the
       interest  out  of a scene like fluids out of a baby.  It is hard to
       imagine another director who  could  make  so  dull  a  scene  that
       features  full-  frontal  nudity  from  both  Ormond  and  Fiennes.
       Perhaps the reason Greenaway gets away putting so much nudity in is
       films is that in doing so he completely sidesteps eroticism.

       The production design skillfully makes each frame fascinating while
       at  the  same  time  making so many full scenes seem endless.  This
       film had  four  reasonable  endings  and  gave  the  impression  of
       finishing  all afternoon.  Greenaway often tries to build to a sort
       of twist ending, but here the twist is much more expected  than  it
       was  in  THE  COOK,  THE  THIEF,  HIS WIFE, AND HER LOVER.  Fans of
       Masterpiece Theater in the 1960s will no doubt recognize  the  main
       musical theme as well as an unsurprising plot twist near the end.

       Julia Ormond could well prove herself the  Ingrid  Bergman  of  her
       generation.   Like  Bergman  she  is a B+ actress with an A+ screen
       charm, even in what is in  this  case  a  rather  detestable  role.
       Ralph  Fiennes, on the other hand, completely submerges his ENGLISH
       PATIENT charm and plays the rather pasty-faced son of  the  Bishop.
       The  Bishop, incidentally, is played by veteran actor Philip Stone.
       I first noticed Stone in UNEARTHLY STRANGER, a great (but sadly now
       very  rare)  science fiction film from 1963.  It is good to see him
       still acting.

       The best Greenaway film is really a mixed bag of quality, and  this
       one  is more mixed than most.  I would give THE BABY OF MACON a low
       +2 on the -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

                                          Mark Leeper
                                          MT 3E-433 908-957-5619
                                          mleeper@lucent.com

            Humor is emotional chaos remembered in tranquility.
                                          -- James Thurber