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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 12/12/97 -- Vol. 16, No. 24

       MT Chair/Librarian:
                     Mark Leeper   MT 3E-433  732-957-5619 mleeper@lucent.com
       HO Chair:     John Jetzt    MT 2E-530  732-957-5087 jetzt@lucent.com
       HO Librarian: Nick Sauer    HO 4F-427  732-949-7076 njs@lucent.com
       Distinguished Heinlein Apologist:
                     Rob Mitchell  MT 2D-536  732-957-6330 rlmitchell1@lucent.com
       Factotum:     Evelyn Leeper MT 3E-433  732-957-2070 eleeper@lucent.com
       Back issues at http://www.geocities.com/Athens/4824
       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://pubpages.unh.edu/~ss1/bookaminute/.  Now
       you can catch up on all that science fiction you wanted to read but
       never had the time for.  [-ecl]

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

       2. At home we are watching STEPHEN HAWKING'S UNIVERSE.   Am  I  the
       only  person  who  thinks that name is strange?  The implication is
       that they are saying which universe it is.  It is Stephen Hawking's
       as  opposed  to someone else's universe.  But a universe is the set
       of all points.  But if there is more than one  universe,  it  could
       not have been the set of all points.  So Stephen Hawking's Universe
       is a contradiction in terms.

       In any case, this is a series that is bound to make it on  American
       TV.   It  is big and spectacular with tremendous photos of the sky,
       probably from the Hubble Telescope.  I heard an interesting comment
       about Americans and science.

       It seems I was flying back to the United States.   This  was  after
       the World Science Fiction Convention was in Glasgow.  We had stayed
       a few weeks more and had toured Wales  and  were  headed  home.   I
       happened to notice the man in the seat in front of me was reading a
       script.  Now me, I am fascinated with films and drama, so I sort of
       eavesdropped  over  his  shoulder  and  what did I see but the name
       Andrew Wiles.  This was the mathematician who had won world acclaim
       by  apparently  proving  Fermat's  Last  Theorem, the Holy Grail of
       mathematics.  Then it was discovered that his proof was bad.  And a
       few  months  later  he once again announced he had a proof and this
       one stood up.  The idea that there would  be  a  play  about  Wiles
       fascinated  me.  So I asked the man about the play and where was it
       being produced.  Well, it turns out  he  was  the  man  behind  the
       British  science series that is like our NOVA.  And in fact some of
       their episodes they do sell to  NOVA.   They  were  doing  an  hour
       program on Fermat and Wiles and then they were going to offer it to
       NOVA.  But the man was not sure the Americans would want it because
       it  was  about mathematics.  It did not have spectacular explosions
       or tornadoes.  It struck me that he was right.  NOVA tend to go for
       sensational  science.   This  would  be  the  first time I can ever
       remember them covering mathematics.  I am kind of sorry about  that
       because mathematics is to me the most beautiful of the sciences--if
       you really can call it a science.  I consider  it  more  basic  and
       co-equal  with  logic.   But  there is little spectacular to see so
       NOVA does not cover  it.   Luckily  this  one  time  they  made  an
       exception, I suppose because Wiles's proof made international news.

       Oh, and a personal note.  Actually I had  another  connection  with
       this  particular  episode.   They  had  some scenes of John Coates,
       Andrew Wiles's thesis advisor at Cambridge.  Coates was one  of  my
       professors  at  Stanford.  I remember even giving him a ride in our
       car once.  That's just a personal note.  So I guess I casually knew
       someone who had taken some part in the proof of Fermat.

       But what makes mathematics too unspectacular to show up on NOVA  is
       what  makes it so approachable.  You don't need millions of dollars
       worth of equipment to do math.  You need a pencil and  some  paper.
       You  can  do  math  just  about anywhere.  You can use the backs of
       envelopes  found  in  a  wastebasket.   And  that  is  pretty  much
       anywhere.  [-mrl]

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

       3. FRAMESHIFT by Robert J. Sawyer (Tor, ISBN  0-312-86325-X,  1997,
       347pp, US$23.95) (a book review by Evelyn C. Leeper):

       The only problem with Robert Sawyer's novels is that they're busier
       than  Shinjuku  Station  at  rush  hour.   This one has a scientist
       working on the Human Genome Project, driven by the fact  he  has  a
       fifty-fifty  chance  of  developing Huntington's disease, mugged by
       neo-Nazis who may be connected to  the  Treblinka  guard  Ivan  the
       Terrible.   Meanwhile  the scientist and his wife arrange to have a
       child by artificial insemination by donor, and this  child  may  or
       may not inherit some of the wife's telepathic powers.  There's also
       the question of whether the scientist can get health insurance  and
       how   the   insurance  companies  try  to  get  around  legislation
       protecting  people  from  being  excluded  due  to   genetic   pre-
       dispositions toward disease.

       All of these are important, and all of these are  interesting,  but
       all  of  these  in a 347-page book makes for a lot of coincidences,
       strange connections, and red herrings (and one whopper  that's  all
       three).

       I found the  parts  about  the  genetic  testing  to  be  the  most
       relevant.    (Of  course,  whether  relevance  is  important  is  a
       subjective decision on the part of the reader.)  I  understand  why
       the rest was there, at least in some sense, and Sawyer does connect
       it thematically.  But as in THE TERMINAL EXPERIMENT, I found myself
       wishing  for  more  concentration  on,  and  examination  of, fewer
       topics.

       This probably all  sounds  negative,  but  given  that  I  plan  on
       nominating  FRAMESHIFT for the Hugo this year, perhaps I should say
       something positive.  Okay: Robert Sawyer is  the  one  of  the  two
       authors  I  first think of when I think about who the successors to
       Asimov, Clarke, Heinlein, and the other Golden Age authors in  this
       "literature  of ideas" are.  (Greg Egan is the other.)  So maybe my
       complaints about too many ideas seem a bit odd.  If  what  you  are
       looking  for  are  ideas, and consequences of science, and all that
       sort of stuff, Sawyer is definitely high on my recommendation list.
       [-ecl]

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

       4. THE WINGS OF THE DOVE (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: One of  Henry  James's  lesser  novels
                 makes  one of the more entertaining films based
                 on his works.  A woman whose guardian will  not
                 let  her marry her poor lover plots to have the
                 lover seduce a dying heiress so he will inherit
                 her  money.   The story meanders a bit in going
                 where the viewer knows it eventually will,  but
                 the  view  is nice along the way.  Rating: 7 (0
                 to 10), +2 (-4 to +4)

                 New York Critics: 18 positive,  1  negative,  2
                 mixed

       The characters that  Jane  Austen  writes  about  are  almost  from
       another  world.   Perhaps  that is part of their appeal.  An Austen
       heroine may spend the best part of a novel wondering if she  should
       make  her  move  and  profess her love for some man, or if she will
       instead follow the conventions of her society.  That helps us get a
       better feel for early 19th century British society, but it makes it
       a little harder for the viewer  or  reader  to  identify  with  her
       characters.   Henry  James's  characters,  coming  from  a  world a
       century later, are  far  more  modern  and  they  get  involved  in
       situations  the modern viewer can more easily recognize.  While set
       in 1910, THE WINGS OF THE DOVE might have taken place in the middle
       or  maybe  even  the  late  20th century.  Certainly the characters
       could be ones from a much more modern novel.

       Years ago Kate Croy's mother married for love a man  from  a  lower
       class.   The  mother is apparently dead and her father has returned
       to the lifestyle of drinking away what little money  he  has  left.
       Kate  (played  by  Helena  Bonham  Carter)  now lives with her aunt
       (Charlotte Rampling), who wants to protect her from making the same
       mistake  her mother did.  And protect she must because Kate loves a
       poor journalist, Merton Densher (Linus Roache).  Kate's  Aunt  will
       not  allow  Kate  and Merton to even see each other.  Kate wants to
       marry Merton, but they cannot live on the small salary that  Merton
       makes.   Kate  has  a friend who is an heiress from America, Millie
       Theale (Alison Elliott).  Millie is a fresh young woman who appears
       to  enjoy  life,  but  as  Kate discovers Millie is actually dying.
       Millie is being courted by Lord Mark, who has breeding, is  of  the
       noble  class,  and otherwise is a consummate jerk.  Kate would much
       prefer to see Millie leave her money to her Merton.  That will make
       him  acceptable  to  her class and will give them both the money to
       live on.  She sets about trying to act as matchmaker for her friend
       and  her  lover.   The story unfolds on a backdrop of Kate's native
       London and Venice where she visits.

       To be frank, I have liked many of  the  films  that  Helena  Bonham
       Carter  has  been  in but never been particularly fond of her as an
       actress.  Her trademark has seemed to  be  an  indelible  indignant
       pout.   She  has  too often played the woman who knows all too well
       what is wrong with society and has every right to pout.  Ironically
       she  is much more likable as an actress when she is playing someone
       who is essentially a deceitful schemer and who is betraying one  of
       her  closest  friends.   I liked her in this film as much as I ever
       have in any role.  My one complaint is that the screen was probably
       just  not  ready for a Helena Bonham Carter nude scene.  Nor was I.
       Much more captivating is Alison Elliott as the dying heiress.   She
       is   brash   yet   unassuming,   representing   all   the  positive
       characteristics that the British used to think Americans had.   She
       is   a  very  flattering  stereotype.   Neither  Linus  Roache  nor
       Elizabeth McGovern (as Theale's friend and nurse) make much  of  an
       impression.   Both are a little bland, though the film suffers more
       from Roache's blandness.

       Under Iain Softley's  direction  Eduardo  Serra's  camera  captures
       memorable  views of both London and Venice.  London is usually seen
       in business-like blues and grays, often showing the coming  of  the
       modern  age.   The  film  starts  on an underground train and often
       shows us streets choked with cars and busses.  Venice on the  other
       hand  is  usually  shot  in  earth  tones.   Most of what we see is
       centuries old.  Is there some ironic comment that Kate's aunt  with
       her  old  school  ideas  of  class  remains behind in a very modern
       seeming London, while the more  modern  seeming,  cigarette-smoking
       Kate  and  her  modern-thinking  friends  gravitate  to the antique
       splendor of Venice?  One remarkable scene is captured by Serra  has
       Kate's  face lit up and framed in an oval mirror so that the subtle
       conniver looks a lot like the witch from SNOW WHITE.

       THE WINGS OF THE DOVE surprises the viewer in several ways.   While
       the  ending  is not much of a surprise, the film is creative in the
       ways it get there.   I  think  people  will  find  this  film  more
       approachable  than they expect.  I rate it a 7 on the 0 to 10 scale
       and a +2 on the -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

                                          Mark Leeper
                                          MT 3E-433 732-957-5619
                                          mleeper@lucent.com

            Life is a hospital in which every patient is possessed
            by the desire of changing his bed.  One would prefer
            to suffer by the fire, and the other is certain he would
            get well if he were by the window.
                                          -- Charles Baudelaire


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