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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 01/16/98 -- Vol. 16, No. 29

       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://www.bway.net/~hunger/ulysses.html.
       James Joyce's ULYSSES for Dummies.  [-ecl]

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

       2. I have over a thousand magazines come for me to read in a  year.
       I  also  get  some unsolicited that I am not interested in reading,
       but there are over a thousand I do have some interest in.  So  that
       my magazines do not get ahead of me, I have cultivated the habit of
       reading a certain number of magazines each day.  I keep track of it
       on  my palmtop so that if I read fewer one day, the next day I have
       more.  But I read just about the right number so that in  the  long
       run  I stay ahead of the number that come in.  However when I go on
       vacation I get far behind and because the processing rate is only a
       bit  faster  than  the  in  come  rate  I can end up with months of
       backlog.  I did some traveling over the summer,  making  it  a  big
       trip  centered around going to the World Science Fiction Convention
       in San Antonio.  So at this point I still have a big backlog and  I
       am  only now getting to a copy of PLOTKA, a British science fiction
       fanzine that in August reviewed  the  MT  VOID.   The  reviewer  is
       Alison Scott.

       One of the things Alison Scott says is that her favourite bit is my
       weekly  editorial.   That  I  find rather interesting because every
       editorial is an act of  sheer  desperation.   I  mean  the  largest
       volume  of  what  I write is film reviews and trip logs.  Well, new
       films come out every week and I keep having vacations.  So I always
       have  a good idea what to write about there.  But I have to come up
       with something new to say  each  week.   I  remember  panicking  in
       Junior  High  School  because I had o go home and write two hundred
       words about a subject of my choosing.  How would I choose?  What do
       I  have  two hundred words to say about?  Now I do that as a hobby.
       And I still have moments of panic.

       You see every editorial you  see  in  an  MT  VOID  is  an  act  of
       desperation.   I  am  using  up  my  last good idea.  The editorial
       column is in the process of  dying  all  the  time.   Then  I  hear
       something on the radio, or I make a joke, or I read something and I
       think that maybe I could write a few paragraphs on this  new  idea.
       I might be able to prolong the column one more week.  My editorials
       survive a week at a time.  There are those who would turn that into
       a  metaphor  for  life.   I  remember  one of my high school poetry
       teachers asked me if it wasn't true that the moment we are born  we
       start  to die.  Not if you are born healthy, I said.  I guess there
       are those who want to look at life  as  a  fatal  disease.   And  I
       suppose  you  can  take  that  philosophy.  Frankly if I want to be
       morbid I watch an old Universal horror film and get it  out  of  my
       system.   (1933's  THE  BLACK  CAT may well be the most morbid film
       ever made.  I love it.  But I am digressing again.)

       But the truth is that the weekly editorial is constantly in a state
       of  dying.   There  are  times  that  I am running out of ideas and
       nobody guarantees that there will be new ones coming along the  way
       we  are  sure  that  there are new films coming out to write about.
       But since Alison was so nice as to write about the MT VOID,  I  can
       answer some of her questions.

       What is the MT VOID?  Is it a clubzine, a fanzine, or  what?   Well
       it  is  by  origin  the  notice  of  upcoming events of the science
       fiction club at Bell Laboratories.  Evelyn and I came to Bell  Labs
       in  1978.   The  Labs sponsored a series of clubs to keep employees
       happy.  They would throw a little money at them to help  keep  them
       going and let the clubs use their conference rooms over lunch hour.
       Now Evelyn and I had been in science fiction clubs in  college  and
       the  three  and a half years previous that we lived in Detroit.  We
       figured at Bell Labs there had to  be  an  active  science  fiction
       club.  Nope.  The closest they had was a bunch of people who pooled
       their money and bought the selections of the Science  Fiction  Book
       Club  and  shared  the  books  through  interoffice mail.  Now this
       struck me as odd.  These are supposed to be people on  the  cutting
       edge  of scientific thinking.  Every World's Fair they set up their
       big bulbous buildings to tell people about the world  of  tomorrow.
       Surely  they  must  have a lot of people reading about the world of
       tomorrow.  Science fiction is part of their stock and trade.

       About nine months into our jobs Evelyn and  I  went  to  a  science
       fiction convention in New York City.  On the way home I made one of
       those suggestion that sounds small, but was really a  live-changing
       suggestion  for  the  two  of us.  We could found a science fiction
       club at Bell.  There were some formalities,  but  we  did  it.   We
       could  read  a  book  every  couple  of  weeks and get together and
       discuss it.  Bell Labs insisted for legal reasons that we not  have
       "Bell  Labs"  as part of our name so initially we were the Monmouth
       County Science Fiction Club.  Never mind that the  only  people  in
       Monmouth County who could get to our meetings was people who worked
       at Bell Labs.  These days just about everybody we know socially are
       people  who we met through the science fiction club.  Certainly the
       vast majority of the people who know our names would not  have  had
       we not founded the club.

       Members had to be told what books we were intending to read and  to
       be   reminded   of  upcoming  meetings  so  we  started  a  notice,
       handwritten at first.  There would be an  issue  just  before  each
       meeting  to  remind members to come.  There would be an issue after
       each meeting to tell members  what  book  was  chosen.   Soon  that
       became  dull  so  I  started including a few of my own comments and
       some film reviews.  Evelyn would contribute book reviews.

       We were in Holmdel, New Jersey, a building whose inter-office  mail
       code was "HO."  Soon AT&T built two more buildings nearby, Lincroft
       with code "LZ" and Middletown with code "MT"  Most of  our  members
       came  from  one  of  the  three  locations.   We combined the three
       interoffice codes to rename our club, the Mt. Holz Science  Fiction
       Society.   It  was not named for the mountain and only a year or so
       later we discovered there really is a Mt. Holz, in Switzerland if I
       remember  rightly.   At the time Mt. Holz could be found in a world
       atlas.  These days I don't find it.  Makes me wonder what  happened
       to it.

       In fact, at least  for  a  while  the  name  was  a  joke  and  was
       pronounced  "Empty Holes."  Following that concept we also redubbed
       the notice the "Empty Void."  We are now mostly electronic.  Anyone
       who  can  give  us an e-mail address is welcome to get the MT VOID.
       Of course, due to AT&T splitting and taking the Middletown building
       we  probably  ought  to rename the club and the notice.  We have to
       give that some thought.  We want to give the notice a name that  is
       science  fictional, but that nobody has used.  Right now the front-
       runner for the name is "Last Dangerous Visions."  [-mrl]

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

       3. ILLEGAL ALIEN, by Robert J. Sawyer  [Ace,  hardcover,  copyright
       1997. ISBN 0-441-00476-8, 292pp] (a book review by Joe Karpierz):
       Robert J. Sawyer is rapidly climbing my list of  favorite  authors.
       In  this  age of multibook sagas and massive tomes that tell a 300-
       page story in 500 or 600 pages, Sawyer turns out  standalone  novel
       after standalone novel, none of which require a forklift to pick up
       or a suitcase to take to work to read during lunch hour.   Instead,
       he  tells a nice, tight story with no padding specifically designed
       to keep the publishers happy, and his latest is no exception.

       ILLEGAL ALIEN tackles the issue of a  murder  trial  in  which  the
       defendant  is  an alien from another planet.  An alien species from
       the Alpha Centauri system, the Tosoks, arrive on Earth seeking help
       in repairing their spacecraft, which was damaged in a collision out
       near the edge of our Solar System.  We opportunity grabbing  humans
       cut a deal with the Tosoks for the repairs to their ship.  It seems
       we have the materials and they have the  know  how.   The  deal  is
       simple:  they  get  their  ship repaired, and we get the technology
       that allows those repairs to get made.  So, a contingent of  humans
       and  seven Tosoks treks out to California and takes up residence in
       a new residence hall on the campus of USC.  It  is  here  that  the
       murder  of  one  of the humans take place.  A fellow by the name of
       Cletus Calhoun, a country-hick astronomer from Tennessee who is the
       host  of  a show on PBS called "Great Balls of Fire!" is found dead
       in his room.  One of his legs is severed, he is otherwise  expertly
       dissected, and several of his body parts are missing.  All evidence
       points to the Tosok named Hask.

       Hask, of course, is arrested and accused of murder.  Attorney  Dale
       Rice  is hired to defend him.  The problem is, after seeing all the
       evidence, Rice is pretty much convinced that Hask is guilty.   What
       follows,  then, is an excellent murder mystery/courtroom drama that
       examines the U.S. system of justice as it attempts to try an  alien
       being  in  its  own court system.  Sawyer weaves the intricacies of
       the justice system with an exploration of an alien culture and  its
       reasons  for  coming  to  earth  in  an  expert fashion, once again
       demonstrating that he has done  his  research  in  preparation  for
       writing  a  novel.   I know that I certainly learned a thing or two
       about our justice system that I never thought  about  before.   The
       most  glaring example of this is the outcome of the trial.  I don't
       want to say anything about it, lest I give away the mystery, but  I
       have  to  say  that  I  was  surprised  when  I read it.  The trial
       resolution also tells us a little bit about human nature,  and  how
       we may not be such bad folk after all.

       There are many, many details about the Tosok culture that  I  found
       fascinating,  but  once  again, anything I write here (if there was
       enough of it, anyway), if pieced together (even  with  blind  luck)
       could give away some of the story (for some reason, I'm immediately
       reminded of monkeys, typewriters, and Shakespeare, but I'm not sure
       the   analogy  applies).   Suffice  to  say  that  the  aliens  are
       interesting.  But Sawyer's  human  characters  are  interesting  as
       well.  We don't need pages upon pages of exposition to learn enough
       about  Dale  Rice,  Cletus  Calhoun,  and  the  other  major  human
       characters to make them alive and relevant to the story, and Sawyer
       doesn't do that.  He weaves enough of  their  background  into  the
       plot  itself  to  make  them come alive for the story.  In reality,
       that's all we really need, and it works well.

       So, I heartily recommend ILLEGAL ALIEN, as an sf  story,  a  murder
       mystery,  and  a  courtroom  drama.   I  feel  you'll be completely
       satisfied without straining your back or arms, or taking a  massive
       amount of time out of your life.  And that's a good thing.  [-jak]

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

       4. ALL-AMERICAN ALIEN BOY by Allen Steele [Ace, ISBN 0-441-00460-1,
       1997 (1996), 267pp, US$5.99 ] (a book review by Evelyn C. Leeper ):

       [Though this also has "ALIEN" in the title it is totally  unrelated
       to  ILLEGAL  ALIEN,  reviewed  above,  which came out from the same
       publisher at just about the same time.]

       There is no story in this  collection  titled  "All-American  Alien
       Boy,"  but  the  subtitle  of  the  book gives us the answer to the
       title: "The United States as Science Fiction, Science Fiction as  a
       Journey:  A Collection." Who is the "All-American Alien Boy"?  It's
       Steele.  But it's also each of us.  (Well,  some  of  us  are  All-
       American Alien Girls, but you get the idea.)

       After all, isn't there something a bit alien in the idea of renting
       out  your  body for science ("The Good Rat")?  Alien, yes, but also
       very capitalist and, well, American.   Whether  it's  the  shopping
       mall,  the  demolition  derby, or Rock City, Steele takes something
       very American, and shows us how alien it is at the same time.

       As if  that  isn't  enough,  Steele's  introductions  actually  add
       something  to  the understanding of the stories.  Too many authors,
       when confronted with the task of  introducing  their  own  stories,
       resort  to  either a bald description of how they came to write the
       story,  or  some  brief--preferably  humorous--anecdote  about  it.
       Steele  uses  this  opportunity  to talk about the ideas behind the
       story--what he thinks about UFO abduction stories, for example.

       What this means is that even if you have all the stories from their
       original publications, this book is still worth getting.  [-ecl]

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

       5. WAG THE DOG (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: What might have  worked  nicely  in  a
                 20-minute  film  does not keep satire going for
                 97 minutes.  To protect  a  President  from  an
                 accusation  of child molestation, a spin doctor
                 decides to create a fictional war with  Albania
                 to  act as distraction for the American people.
                 It  is  fun  for  a  little  while  seeing  the
                 political  image  specialist  and the Hollywood
                 producer brainstorm  epic  images  inspired  by
                 those  of  previous  wars  and  then  see  them
                 actually implemented with 90s technology.   But
                 the  film becomes repetitious with insufficient
                 plot and occasional gaps in credibility.   Both
                 Robert  DeNiro's and Dustin Hoffman's parts are
                 under-written with more of an eye toward satire
                 than  to  character.  Hoffman does a better job
                 of rising above the limitation.  Rating: low +1
                 (0  to 10), 5 (-4 to +4)  There are spoilers in
                 this review, but none  that  were  not  in  the
                 trailer that ran in movie theaters.
                 New York critics: 13 positive,  1  negative,  2
                 mixed

       Somewhere lost in WAG THE DOG's 97  minutes  is  a  bright,  funny,
       pointed,  and even frightening 20-minute film.  The film makes some
       good points about the state of political images, about  technology,
       and  about the American public.  But the film says it all concisely
       fairly quickly, then says it again, then for good measure  says  it
       again.   Eventually  the  movie  which  from the outside would seem
       short out-stays its welcome.  It is surprising that Barry  Levinson
       thought  that he could get by with one-dimensional characters in so
       repetitious a story however engaging and important the central idea
       was.   Levinson  knows  the value of good characters.  He built his
       reputation with DINER and he directed AVALON.  Both are films  with
       very  real,  very  believable  characters.  This instead is an idea
       film, but it gives us the same idea over and over.  The  script  is
       by Harry Henkin and David Mamet based on the novel AMERICAN HERO by
       Larry Beinhart.  It tells us that what we remember from the wars of
       our past are images and ceremonies.  For example, from World War II
       we remember the raising of the  flag  at  Iwo  Jima  and  a  sailor
       kissing  a  girl  in New York City when the war is over--the visual
       images of that war that had power.   From  Vietnam  we  remember  a
       young  girl  running  screaming  in a street after a napalm attack;
       then there is the  illegal  pistol  execution  in  another  street.
       These  images could always have been orchestrated and many probably
       were.  And as time has passed the creation of these images has only
       become easier and less expensive with techniques like digital image
       processing.  The government feeds us images rather than  facts,  or
       at least such is the implication of WAG THE DOG.

       It is less  than  two  weeks  to  the  national  election  and  the
       President  is  in  big trouble.  It seems he is accused of sexually
       abusing a Firefly Girl,  part  of  a  troop  visiting  the  Capital
       Building.   (I know that our current President is unpopular in some
       quarters, but even  so  this  seems  like  a  somewhat  exaggerated
       premise.)  An image expert, Conrad Brean (Robert DeNiro), is called
       in protect  the  President  from  the  accusation  and  after  some
       deliberation  he  determines  that the best strategy is to give the
       President a military victory in the few days before  the  election.
       A  war has to appear to start up and the President has to appear to
       win the war in just the short period of time before  the  election.
       Brean  determines  that  the winning approach is to fabricate a war
       with Albania.  To bring off such a war he needs the help of  a  top
       Hollywood  producer.   His  choice is the handsome, graying Stanley
       Motss (Dustin Hoffman).

       From there the film goes  into  a  series  of  repetitious  cycles.
       First there is the brainstorming session where Brean and Motss talk
       in understated tone about what  sort  of  an  image  they  need  to
       impress the public.  Not surprisingly, this sounds almost like they
       are planning for the production of a film.  They hit on  some  idea
       upon which they can agree.  The suggestion is actually produced and
       we see a few of the steps that go into the production  to  make  it
       seem  possible.   Finally  we  see  the final implementation as the
       public would see it and it is some variation  on  some  image  that
       inspired  the  public in some previous war.  A song will sound very
       much like a song we remember, or some monument to  the  war  heroes
       will  look  like  some  famous monument, aut cetera.  Binding these
       cycles together is a bit of a plot, but not much of one.

       The film offers two good actors in the lead roles,  Dustin  Hoffman
       and  Robert  DeNiro.  But there is little in this film to give much
       of a clue to who these people really are  beyond  what  their  jobs
       are.   However,  DeNiro plays his role a bit suppressed and Hoffman
       takes advantage of this to  appear  a  much  more  outgoing  person
       amused  by the political machinations and his new-found power.  The
       two are accompanied by Anne Heche, who seems to have been added  to
       this film as an after-thought.  She has little to do but tag along.

       People who are nearer to either the film industry or the  political
       process may find that there is much in this film that is on-target,
       but for many viewers this film will be an argument  that  there  is
       still a place for the short film and perhaps it should be used more
       often.  I rate this film a 5 on the 0 to 10 scale and a low  +1  on
       the -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

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

       6. THE SWEET HEREAFTER (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: An opportunistic  lawyer  comes  to  a
                 rural  Canadian  town  in  which  a  school bus
                 accident  has  killed  many   of   the   town's
                 children.   With a smooth sincere-sounding line
                 he turns grief  into  anger  in  the  hopes  of
                 building a class action lawsuit.  Atom Egoyan's
                 non-linear telling gets in the  way  a  little,
                 but  this is a powerful statement about the law
                 and about grief.  Rating: 8 (0 to 10), high  +2
                 (-4 to +4)
                 New York Critics: 17 positive,  1  negative,  1
                 mixed

       Atom Egoyan makes complex that often  fit  together  like  puzzles.
       His  EXOTICA  was a complex story that was never complete until the
       final scene made sense of things.  THE SWEET HEREAFTER  is  not  so
       tightly wound, but it is very tightly bound emotionally and still a
       puzzle.  With this film Egoyan takes a close hard look  at  a  cold
       British Columbia town in mourning after almost an entire generation
       of its children was wiped out in a tragic school bus accident.   As
       the  community  tries to heal itself and carry on after the loss it
       is visited by a  smooth  and  vaguely  sinister  lawyer.   Mitchell
       Stephens  (played  by  Ian  Holm)  implants  in  the  minds  of the
       townspeople that what is called for is not  peace  but  a  vengeful
       class action lawsuit.  He convinces the locals that their should be
       no forgiveness for  the  guilty  and  that  whenever  there  is  an
       accident  of  this  sort,  there  is always somebody who is guilty.
       There is always somebody who should be made  to  pay.   He  is  the
       lawyer  that  they  want  to get them that payment and he will keep
       only a third for himself.

       In the hands of a lesser director Mitchell could easily be  reduced
       to  being  a one-dimensional devil.  The script, written as well as
       directed by Egoyan, based on the novel by Russell  Banks,  dissects
       that  character  of Stephens.  Stephens has a daughter on drugs and
       willing to do any self-destructive action to spite her father.  For
       this  daughter  Stephens  feels  an  icy helplessness and a sort of
       frozen rage.  Icy and calculated are all of  his  reactions  in  an
       Oscar-worthy  performance.   In  the  course of the film we learn a
       great deal about him and where and how he  lost  his  emotions.   A
       major theme explored in this film, and there are several, is things
       that  are  out  of  people's  control   and   feelings   of   utter
       helplessness.   There  is some fascination with the understated way
       that Stephens does his job.  He searches for the  parents  who  can
       best  make  a  winning case for him and are the most susceptible to
       being won over.  He also carefully checks them out  for  weaknesses
       that could harm his case.

       Egoyan has some nice stylistic moves.  The  bleak  Canadian  winter
       seems  to  pervade  the entire film and reflect the coldness of the
       people  in  the  town  who  have  isolated  themselves  from  their
       emotions.   The  icy  weather acts upon people and performs its own
       mischief including the central tragedy of the film.   Conversations
       in  the  film  are anything but volatile.  People seem to think out
       their next response with notable pauses in  the  conversion.   Then
       the  film  returns  again and again to the theme of the Pied Piper.
       On one level the town has lost its children, disappearing not  into
       a  hole  in a mountain that closes up but into a hole in the ground
       that also closes.  On another level the grief of  the  parents  has
       made  them  vulnerable  to  the outsider who wishes to lead them to
       where they might not otherwise not want to go.  Egoyan holds off on
       showing  the viewer the actual accident until late in the film.  He
       shows it with a frightening simplicity.  No  dramatic  music.   The
       school  bus  just  skids  over  the curb on a hill and out of sight
       slips down a hill onto a frozen pond where it slowly sinks.  But it
       has  a  greater  emotional impact than some of the fiery crashes we
       have seen elsewhere this year.

       This is a film I expect to see on several best of the  year  lists,
       including  my  own.   I  suspect  that it will not be remembered at
       Oscar time, being a modest Canadian film, but it certainly  is  one
       of the best of the year and will be on my top then list.  I rate it
       a +8 on the 0 to 10 scale and a high +2 on the -4 to +4 scale.   [-
       mrl]

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

            Television is democracy at its ugliest.
                                          -- Paddy Chayefsky


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