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	                Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
	            Club Notice - 04/17/98 -- Vol. 16, No. 42

       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 irregularly; call 201-652-0534 for details, or check
       http://www.interactive.net/~kat/njsfs.html.  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.sfsite.com/lists/ksr.htm.   Kim
       Stanley Robinson page (see next item).  [-ecl]

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

       2. The following notice about James Cameron appeared in the April 9
       LONDON TIMES:

       James Cameron, the director of TITANIC, is  expected  to  turn  his
       back on the cinema in favour of television for his next project - a
       science fiction series on the colonisation of Mars.

       The series will be based on books by Kim  Stanley  Robinson  -  RED
       MARS,  GREEN  MARS  and  BLUE MARS--and will use computer animation
       techniques to chronicle the lives of the first arrivals on Mars and
       how the planet's ecosystem is changed to accommodate human life.

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

       3. I was interested to see in this week's US NEWS AND WORLD  REPORT
       that  journalist  Stephen J. Hedges thought that the biggest legacy
       of Kenneth Starr's seemingly endless investigation of the President
       was  not  action taken against Bill Clinton.  Starr dug so hard and
       so deep that he is finding more dirt about the administration  that
       followed  Bill  Clinton  as governing Arkansas.  "[Kenneth] Starr's
       biggest impact on the state's political culture,  everyone  agrees,
       was the 1995 conviction of Clinton's successor as governor, Jim Guy
       Tucker, on  loan  fraud  charges."   All  that  digging--enough  to
       accidentally  turn  up  enough  to  oust  the then present Arkansas
       governor from office--and Starr did not  find  enough  to  formally
       charge Bill Clinton.  With all this effort he should have been able
       to find enough wrong-doing to smear a Mother  Theresa.   But  Starr
       has  not  been  able  to  find  enough to to pin on Bill Clinton to
       formally charge him with anything.

       H. G. Wells  said  moral  indignation  is  jealousy  with  a  halo.
       Certainly  there  is a lot of haloed jealousy these days about Bill
       Clinton.  Someone expressed how I think a lot of  people  think  of
       it.   "Where  there's smoke, there's fire."  This is a woman who is
       the product of the last 3000 or so years  or  so  years  of  Jewish
       history,  and  she  still  thinks that where there is an accusation
       there is always a grain of truth.  Me, I  want  more  evidence  and
       frankly  it  just is not there in any quantities I find convincing.
       I just saw a big spread on the cover of U.S. NEWS AND WORLD REPORT,
       showing  the  three ladies with whom Clinton it thought to have had
       alliances.  Not to put too fine a point on it, but is it  beginning
       to  look  not so much like an attack on his morals and more like an
       attack on his taste.  I mean, Kennedy was accused  of  an  alliance
       with  Marilyn Monroe at least.  You would think if Clinton is using
       his prestige as the President to get female companionship he  could
       spend it a little better.  What's next?  Any day I expect to hear a
       public announcement saying, "We at Pringles Potato Chips have  been
       abused  Bill  Clinton  long  enough.  He has used his Office of the
       President to get from  us  free  cans  of  Pringles  Potato  Chips.
       That's  spelled  P-R-I-N-G-L-E-S  in  canisters  in the potato chip
       section of your grocery store."  An you know, I bet  Kenneth  Starr
       will immediately add it to the list of accusations.  [-mrl]

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

       4. Here are this  year's  Hugo  nominations.   Many  of  the  short
       fiction  works  are  available  on the Web; usually there are links
       from the official Hugo Web site, and I hope to have its URL soon.
	    BEST NOVEL
	        FOREVER PEACE by Joe Haldeman (Ace)
	        FRAMESHIFT by Robert J. Sawyer (Tor)
	        THE RISE OF ENDYMION by Dan Simmons (Bantam Spectra)
	        JACK FAUST by Michael Swanwick (Avon)
	        CITY ON FIRE by Walter Jon Williams (HarperPrism)
	    BEST NOVELLA
	        "The Funeral March of the Marionettes" by Adam-Troy
	             Castro (F&SF July 1997)
	        "Ecopoeisis" by Geoffrey A. Landis (SF AGE May 1997)
	        "Loose Ends" by Paul Levinson (ANALOG May 1997)
	        "Marrow" by Robert Reed (SF AGE July 1997)
	        "...Where Angels Fear To Tread" by Allen Steele
	             (ASIMOV'S October-November 1997)
	    BEST NOVELETTE
	        "Moon Six" by Stephen Baxter (SF AGE March 1997)
	        "Broken Symmetry" by Michael A. Burstein
	             (ANALOG February 1997)
	        "Three Hearings on the Existence of Snakes in the Human
	             Bloodstream" by James Alan Gardner
	             (ASIMOV'S February 1997)
	        "We Will Drink A Fish Together..." by Bill Johnson
	             (ASIMOV'S May 1997)
	        "The Undiscovered" by William Sanders
	             (ASIMOV'S March 1997)
	    BEST SHORT STORY
	        "Beluthahatchie" by Andy Duncan (ASIMOV'S March 1997)
	        "Standing Room Only" by Karen Joy Fowler
	             (ASIMOV'S August 1997)
	        "Itsy Bitsy Spider" by James Patrick Kelly
	             (ASIMOV'S June 1997)
	        "The 43 Antarean Dynasties" by Mike Resnick
	             (ASIMOV'S December 1997)
	        "The Hand You're Dealt" by Robert J. Sawyer
	             (FREE SPACE, Tor)
	        "No Planets Strike" by Gene Wolfe (F&SF January 1997)
	        (There are six items due to a tie for fifth place)
	    BEST RELATED BOOK
	        SPACE TRAVEL by Ben Bova with Anthony R. Lewis
	             (Writer's Digest Books)
	        THE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF FANTASY edited by John Clute
	             & John Grant (St. Martin's Press)
	        INFINITE WORLDS by Vincent DiFate (Penguin Studio)
	        SPECTRUM IV: THE BEST IN CONTEMPORARY FANTASTIC ART
	             edited by Cathy Fenner & Arnie Fenner with Jim Loehr
	             (Underwood Books)
	        REFLECTIONS AND REFRACTIONS: THOUGHTS ON SCIENCE-FICTION,
	             SCIENCE AND OTHER MATTERS by Robert Silverberg
	             (Underwood Books)
	    BEST DRAMATIC PRESENTATION
	        CONTACT
	        THE FIFTH ELEMENT
	        GATTACA
	        MEN IN BLACK
	        STARSHIP TROOPERS
	    BEST PROFESSIONAL EDITOR
	        Gardner Dozois (ASIMOV'S)
	        Scott Edelman (SF AGE)
	        David Hartwell (Tor; YEAR'S BEST SF)
	        Stanley Schmidt (ANALOG)
	        Gordon Van Gelder (F&SF)
	    BEST PROFESSIONAL ARTIST
	        Jim Burns
	        Thomas Canty
	        David Cherry
	        Bob Eggleton
	        Don Maitz
	        Michael Whelan
	        (There are six items due to a tie for fifth place)
	    BEST SEMIPROZINE
	        INTERZONE edited by David Pringle
	        LOCUS edited by Charles N. Brown
	        THE NEW YORK REVIEW OF SCIENCE FICTION edited by
	             Kathryn Cramer, Ariel Hamion, David G. Hartwell
	             & Kevin Maroney
	        SCIENCE FICTION CHRONICLE edited by Andrew I. Porter
	        SPECULATIONS edited by Kent Brewster
	    BEST FANZINE
	        ANSIBLE edited by Dave Langford
	        ATTITUDE edited by Michael Abbott, John Dallman
	             & Pam Wells
	        FILE 770 edited by Mike Glyer
	        MIMOSA edited by Nicki & Richard Lynch
	        TANGENT edited by David Truesdale
	    BEST FAN WRITER
	        Bob Devney
	        Mike Glyer
	        Andy Hooper
	        David Langford
	        Evelyn Leeper
	        Joseph T. Major
	        (There are six nominees due to a tie for fifth place)
	    BEST FAN ARTIST
	        Brad Foster
	        Ian Gunn
	        Teddy Harvia
	        Joe Mayhew
	        Peggy Ranson
	    JOHN W. CAMPBELL AWARD FOR BEST NEW WRITER OF 1996 OR 1997
	        (not a Hugo) [Sponsored by Dell Magazines]
	        Raphael Carter (2nd year of eligibility)
	        Andy Duncan (2nd year of eligibility)
	        Richard Garfinkle (2nd year of eligibility)
	        Susan R. Matthews (2nd year of eligibility)
	        Mary Doria Russell (2nd year of eligibility)

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

       5. SLIPPAGE by Harlan Ellison (Houghton  Mifflin,  1997,  303  pp.,
       ISBN  0-395-35341-6,  Hardcover,  $22.00)  (a  book  review  by Joe
       Karpierz):

       I've been reading Harlan Ellison for a very long time.   I  cut  my
       Ellisonian  teeth  on  classics  like  "Repent, Harlequin, Said the
       Ticktock Man", "I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream", and "A Boy  and
       His  Dog".  Ellison is considered a master storyteller.  The inside
       flap of SLIPPAGE says that the LOS ANGELES  TIMES  called  him  our
       "twentieth  century  Lewis  Carroll".   He's  been involved in more
       television shows than you can count, including his current role  as
       "Creative  Consultant"  for  BABYLON  5.   He's  been a television,
       movie, and social critic for a long time as well.  You can see  him
       making semi-frequent appearances on "Politically Incorrect".  He's,
       well, everywhere.

       And he's all over the map again in  his  new  collection  of  short
       stories  called SLIPPAGE.  The book contains stories that have been
       written over the last several years and collected in one spot  here
       for  the  first  time.  There are also a couple of essays thrown in
       for good measure, including the usual  interesting  and  insightful
       introduction.  The theme of the book, according to Ellison, is *pay
       attention*.  You never know when something is going to hit you, and
       he  supports  his point by talking about his heart attack last year
       and the earthquake he was in the middle of in 1994.

       I think that Ellison does a reasonable job of getting our attention
       in  SLIPPAGE.   There  are only a couple of pieces in SLIPPAGE that
       aren't very good, in my opinion.  The best is  "Mefisto  in  Onyx",
       which  won an award or two a couple of years ago.  It's the tale of
       a telepath who is asked to go into the mind of a serial killer  who
       has  committed 56 or so of the most gruesome murders in the history
       of mankind.  It's a powerful story, not only in the relating of the
       telepath's  anguish over his special ability, but in the twist that
       comes at us in the end.  Another good one is  "The  Man  Who  Rowed
       Christopher  Columbus Ashore", about a time traveller from some far
       future agency who goes around  visiting  various  time  periods  in
       earth's history and making little changes here and there, which was
       selected for Best American Short Stories.

       Those two stories probably are latter day equivalents to the  early
       stories  I  mentioned, and also rank up there with "Shatterday" and
       "Jeffty  is  Five".   Other  good  pieces  are  "Crazy  As  a  Soup
       Sandwich", a teleplay for the New Twilight Zone series, "The Museum
       on Cyclops Avenue", which we've really seen before  in  many  other
       guises,  but  is still pretty neat anyway, and a couple of personal
       pieces, "Anywhere But Here, With Anybody But  You",  taken  from  a
       failed marriage, and "Where I Shall Dwell In the Next World", about
       how Ellison comes up with story ideas.

       Heck, as I look up and down the table of contents, yet another  one
       that  catches  my  eye  is  "Keyboard", which I'm sure is Ellison's
       little lesson to us on our evergrowing fascination with  technology
       (he still writes on a manual typewriter).

       Having said all that, I realize that Harlan is not for  everyone  -
       he  can  be  disturbing  (as  in  "Jeffty  is  Five" and "I Have No
       Mouth...), but he can also be very powerful, as in "The Paladin  of
       the  Lost  Hour".   Above  all, he can make you stop and think, and
       this book is no exception.  I highly recommend it.

       Well, the Hugo Nominees list showed up in my email  box  late  last
       night.   The  next three novels I review will be from that list, as
       I've already reviewed two of them already (FRAMESHIFT and THE  RISE
       OF ENDYMION).

       Till then....  [-jak]

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

	    College football would be more interesting if the
	    faculty played instead of the students--there would be
	    a great increase in broken arms, legs, and necks.
	                                  -- H. L. Mencken