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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 07/24/98 -- Vol. 17, No. 4

       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 2E-537  732-957-6330 robmitchell@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
       201-447-3652 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.sfwriter.com/.  Lots of authors have
       web sites; Rob Sawyer's is one of the best.  [-ecl]

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

       2. Tolkien Fans: Monday July 27 at 11PM, WNYC-FM (93.9 in New York)
       will  be featuring "new music inspired by Tolkien's classic trilogy
       "The Lord of the Rings" on their "New Sounds" program.  [-ecl]

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

       3. This article is going to be more abstract than some and  perhaps
       even  unpleasant,  what  evil  is and is not.  Admittedly more than
       usual I am thinking  out  loud,  or  more  accurately  thinking  in
       writing.

       Curiously enough, the Turkey trip was the occasion for some  of  my
       thinking about the nature of evil.  This is not a reflection on the
       Turks, I hasten to add.  But Turkey has often been the battleground
       for  warring  ideologies and where you have warring ideologies, you
       have suffering and other people inflicting that suffering.

       It is interesting that in the century of the Holocaust--an event of
       history  which  has  always  figured in my thinking as the greatest
       possible evil--evil has  become  some  sort  of  laughable  pseudo-
       supernatural  concept.  One would think that in this century people
       would have seen the true nature of evil  and  would  understand  it
       like  they  never  had  in the past.  Yet people's understanding of
       evil seems to get further from the mark and not  closer.   Part  of
       the  cause  what  seems  to  me  to  be confusion is that some have
       decided,  for  whatever  reason,  to  personalize  evil.   Evil  is
       personified  by  the Devil, by Lucifer, by Satan.  It has gone from
       being an abstract concept to a being, if not a person, who  can  be
       easily  hated.   And to make this personification of evil even more
       laughable he is often portrayed with a mustache, a goatee,  wearing
       a  red  suit  with  horns  on  his  head  and  a  tail ending in an
       arrowhead.  By this point evil looks more  like  Santa  Claus  than
       like  anything having to do with the Holocaust.  To me there really
       is evil, but it has nothing to do with devils.

       To me evil does not come from a supernatural being, it  comes  from
       humans  and  it  is  constituted of an abandonment of the belief in
       justice for others, humans or otherwise.  One might think  that  it
       is  an abandonment of empathy, but one can be unjust and even cruel
       and still have full empathy and understanding.  We think of empathy
       and  understanding as a preventative of cruelty, but that is really
       vanity for the human race.  We think that humans with  empathy  and
       understanding  cannot  be  cruel.   I  happen  to  think  that  the
       perpetrators of the Holocaust, of any holocaust,  actually  have  a
       great  deal of empathy for their victims and often have a curiosity
       to have more.  They just don't let that get in  the  way  of  their
       selfishness  and callousness.  I think they have a pretty good idea
       of the torment of their victims but don't  really  care.   Did  the
       operators  of  death  camps  not understand what their victims were
       going through?  Would empathy and understanding have stopped  them?
       I  think they imagined all the horrors that they were visiting onto
       people and they did not care.  In a sense the acts  of  people  who
       really  are  evil  are  performed  on  themselves as much as others
       except they can escape the results because it is happening to  them
       only  in  their  imagination.   It  is  in  the callousness and the
       selfishness of their acts that the evil really lies.

       Incidentally, I personally do not believe in evil  without  hurting
       someone  or  something, human or animal.  One corollary of all this
       is that there is no such thing a victimless evil.   Some  religions
       would label things like lustful thought to be evil.  To me if there
       is no victim there is no evil.

       But the question is, why is there evil?  I see evil as  being  done
       for three reasons.  The first reason is instinct arising out of the
       "selfish gene."  I think we all have instincts  to  do  that  which
       will make the most number of genes like the genes that we ourselves
       possess.  A great  deal  of  human  behavior  comes  out  of  these
       instincts.   We  may  not  realize  that that is the purpose of our
       instincts, but we have them nonetheless.  Just as when  we  eat  we
       are  not  really  thinking  of  our  body's  need  for protein, for
       carbohydrates, etc.  When we eat we usually think no deeper than we
       are hungry and it is time to eat.  Sometimes we think only that the
       food will taste good.  But there are deeper biological  reasons  we
       eat  that  lie below the surface.  Similarly, while we do not think
       of it, a great deal of human behavior is aimed  at  protecting  our
       genes  and giving them a chance to reproduce so that they continue.
       A white racist who hires a less qualified white man and not a black
       man  on  some  level  is  doing  so  because he knows the white man
       probably has more genes in common with  him  than  the  black  man.
       Strangers  or  perhaps  people isolated by religion, like Jews, are
       less likely to carry genes in common  than  the  local  population.
       Rape  can  be  seen  as  forcing someone else to help reproduce the
       rapists genes,  etc.   Richard  Dawkins  put  forward  the  initial
       concepts  in  a  book  called  THE  SELFISH GENE and as far as I am
       concerned the idea is right on the money.

       Then there is the second form.  If the Selfish Gene can be seen  as
       a  sort  of  sub-conscious selfishness, there is also the conscious
       level of selfishness.  If I dump toxic wastes to save money,  I  am
       doing  it for personal gain.  I would like to be wealthier and I am
       doing it at the expense of others.   This  is  a  very  simple  and
       straightforward form of evil.

       The third reason for evil to be done is in the name of a  religion.
       This  could  be  genetically motivated, as we have seen, but it can
       also be motivated by ideology.  People will  kill  others  if  they
       think  that  God  or  the  gods  want  them  to.  Generally this is
       accompanied by a belief in an afterlife in which they  hope  to  be
       rewarded for their action.  Their belief is that God controls their
       fate and that He will look with favor on them if they  just  punish
       that  non-believer.   It  is sort of kissing up to the metaphysical
       Powers that Be.

       Now these three forms of  evil  are  actually  inter-related.   The
       first  two  are  similar  since  one  is  stealing in large part to
       protect one's own genes.   By  getting  more  money  one  has  more
       opportunity   to  nurture  and  protect  ones  genetic  strain  and
       frequently it is also to give a greater opportunity  to  reproduce.
       Money  does  that.   The  second  and  third forms of evil are also
       inter-related.  The second is a  striving  for  affluence  in  this
       world; the third is a striving to continue it in the next.

       Well, there it is for your consideration, a unified theory of  evil
       and its causes.  Why do I want to analyze and understand the nature
       of evil?  What is more basic to understanding the world?

       ===================================================================
       4. FACTORING HUMANITY by Robert J. Sawyer (Tor, ISBN 0-312-86458-2,
       1998, 350pp, US$23.95) (a book review by Joe Karpierz):

       We  all  know  the  mantra  of  real  estate:  location,  location,
       location.   Robert  J.  Sawyer  has  his  own mantra: ideas, ideas,
       ideas.  And this is good, since above all else, science fiction  is
       the   literature   of   ideas.    Well,  Sawyer  certainly  doesn't
       shortchange his readers in his latest effort, FACTORING HUMANITY.

       FACTORING HUMANITY is a story  of  first  contact.   As  the  story
       opens,  Earth has been receiving messages from Alpha Centauri A for
       ten years.   Heather  Davis,  a  professor  of  psychology  at  the
       University  of  Toronto,  has been attempting to decipher them with
       little success.  Her estranged husband, Kyle Graves, is working  on
       a  quantum  computer project, also with little success, and also at
       the University of Toronto.  Their marriage turned rocky after their
       daughter  Mary,committed suicide, and they are currently separated.
       The narrative begins with their  other  daughter,  Becky,  accusing
       Kyle of molesting both her and Mary.

       Now that the stage is set, the story takes off.  The messages  from
       Alpha Centauri stop, and Heather eventually discovers the secret to
       the alien message.  Kyle, working on  both  the  quantum  computing
       experiment  AND another project dealing with the idea of developing
       consciousness in a  computer  (the  APE  project,  for  Approximate
       Psychological  Experiences),  is basically just having a tough time
       getting by due to Becky's accusations.  Matters are made worse when
       two  different parties come to him concerning his quantum computing
       project; one wants him to continue his work but keep it hushed  up,
       and  the  other  wants  to  buy  his  services in order to crack an
       encryption code that otherwise would take many lifetimes  to  crack
       due to its complexity (more about this later).

       Earlier I talked about an abundance of  ideas.   How  does  quantum
       computing,  psychology, group minds, computer consciousness, Necker
       cubes, the nature of consciousness,  hypercubes,  and  the  end  of
       humanity  sound?   The  fun in all of this for me is that I spend a
       good portion of the  book  trying  to  see  how  it  will  all  fit
       together--just  as I did with STARPLEX and FRAMESHIFT.  As a matter
       of fact, it can be argued that there are TOO  many  ideas  in  this
       book:   couldn't  the  story  have been told with a few fewer loose
       ends to tie up?  For instance, I mentioned the encryption code that
       a  consortium  wants  Kyle to crack.  It turns out that whatever is
       encoded holds the contents of yet another message from  the  stars,
       received several years earlier.  What does that have to do with the
       rest of what's going on?

       But no, I think these ideas all fit together.  I said that this was
       a  novel  of  first  contact.   I  guess  I  lied.  It's a novel of
       contact, period.  Not just with the  Centaurs  (as  our  characters
       call  them),  but  of  contact  with  ourselves,  our families, and
       indeed, the whole human race.  It's about what we can  learn  about
       ourselves  and our fellow man if we just pay attention.  So what if
       we need a little help getting there?  The  important  part,  Sawyer
       tells us, is that we do make contact with ourselves and the rest of
       humanity in order to make the world a better place.

       Do I have any problems with the book?  No, not really.  There is  a
       little  ground that Sawyer has covered before.  He seems to like to
       use a couple having relationship troubles as a  way  to  help  move
       things  along  (if  memory  serves,  THE  TERMINAL  EXPERIMENT  and
       STARPLEX were the same way, though I could be wrong), and  many  of
       his  main  characters have some ties to Canada, one way or another.
       I suppose that's okay, because it is said  that  you  should  write
       what  you  know  about,  and  since  Sawyer  lives  in Canada, that
       certainly applies.  He's also used the first contact thing  before,
       back  in  GOLDEN  FLEECE,  where  once  again  someone is trying to
       decipher a message from the  stars  in  much  the  same  manner  as
       Heather does in FACTORING HUMANITY.  But I don't think any of those
       things take away from just how  good  this  novel  is.   They  just
       strike  me  as  happening  a little more often than I'm comfortable
       with.  Maybe I'm just picking nits because it's fashionable to have
       to find something wrong with a book even though it's good.  I don't
       know.

       The upshot is that I feel that this is Sawyer's best novel to date,
       certainly  better  than  his  last effort, ILLEGAL ALIEN.  And it's
       gotta be good:  it contains the title to the third  installment  of
       the  upcoming  second  trilogy of "Star Wars" movies as well as the
       real secret to writing good "Star Trek" episodes.

       I think you'll enjoy it.  [-jak]

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

       5. FACTORING HUMANITY by Robert J. Sawyer (Tor, ISBN 0-312-86458-2,
       1998, 350pp, US$23.95) (a book review by Evelyn C. Leeper):

       After the relative simplicity of his  last  book  (ILLEGAL  ALIEN),
       Sawyer  is  back to his typical high-density story.  A. E. Van Vogt
       claimed one show write by having a  plot  twist  every  600  words;
       sometimes  I  think Sawyer has decided to throw in a new idea every
       few thousand words.  I mean, I would  think  that  deciphering  the
       messages  from  our first alien contact and building a machine from
       their  instructions  with  the  functionality  of  the  machine  in
       FACTORING  HUMANITY  would  be enough without adding an entire sub-
       plot of artificial intelligence, suicides,  accusations  of  abuse,
       and  repressed/manufactured  memories.  Yes, they all tie together,
       but they make for a very busy novel.   (And  it's  all  the  busier
       because Sawyer keeps his novels to a reasonable length.  He doesn't
       take a thousand pages to cover all this--he does it in  350.   Hang
       on to your hats.)

       I'm sure I could work up an explanation of how this novel  ties  in
       with  Sawyer's  Canadian-ness and hence feelings of isolation, etc.
       (as Clute did  with  fellow  Canadian  Robert  Charles  Wilson  and
       DARWINIA), but I don't think that has anything to do with it.  I do
       think that this does deal with isolation, but  on  the  level  that
       everyone  feels  when  they  are  trying  to  communicate  with  or
       understand someone else.  [-ecl]

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

       6. THE MASK OF ZORRO (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule:   Perhaps   the   greatest   of    all
                 swashbuckling  heroes  is  back  on the screen.
                 The  new  story  offers  us  not  one  but  two
                 different  Zorros played by Anthony Hopkins and
                 Antonio Banderas  as  the  mask  and  cape  are
                 passed  to a new generation.  THE MASK OF ZORRO
                 may not all make sense, but it is great to have
                 a  big,  brash historical adventure back on the
                 wide screen. Rating: 7 (0 to  10),  +2  (-4  to
                 +4).   Spoiler Warning: some comments about the
                 plot follow the main  review.   They  could  be
                 spoilers.

       I think I qualify as a Zorro fan.   When  I  finally  finished  the
       serial  SON  OF ZORRO last month I had seen every live-action Zorro
       film or serial ever released in the English  language.   And  I  am
       one-up  on even some of the most confirmed Zorro fans, having found
       and read THE CURSE OF CAPISTRANO by Johnston  McCulley  years  ago.
       [It  was nearly impossible to find until its paperback reprint this
       year as THE MARK OF ZORRO.]  The legend of El Zorro, the Fox, began
       when  Johnston  McCulley's  story  was  serialized  in  five  parts
       starting August 9, 1919, in ALL-STORY WEEKLY.   In  the  story  the
       character  of  Zorro,  dashing  outlaw  on  the side of good hiding
       behind the guise of the effete fop, was almost a direct steal  from
       the  Baroness  Orczy's  Scarlet  Pimpernel,  created  in 1904.  The
       following year the story was made into the film THE MARK  OF  ZORRO
       with Douglas Fairbanks, Sr.  The 1920 film was very faithful to the
       novel, but it revealed much sooner who was behind the  mask  so  it
       would better show off Fairbanks's talents.  Through the years Zorro
       has graced  several  English-language  films,  serials,  and  a  TV
       series.   Zorro  was  the original "Caped Crusader" of American pop
       culture and undoubtedly was part of the inspiration for Batman.  As
       popular as he is in America, he is even more popular abroad and has
       been portrayed in an astounding number of Italian, French, Spanish,
       and  Mexican  films.   The  most  recent  film version was the 1980
       ZORRO, THE GAY BLADE, a strained comedy starring  George  Hamilton.
       Now  Tristar  Pictures has brought back Zorro in a (mostly) serious
       film adventure.

       The film THE MASK OF ZORRO might more aptly be called THE RETURN OF
       ZORRO.  Departing from the canon of the earlier stories Diego de la
       Vega (also known as Zorro and played here by  Anthony  Hopkins)  is
       captured  by  an  arch-enemy  Rafael  Montero  (Stuart Wilson), the
       Spanish Governor.  In the process Esperanza, Diego's wife whom both
       men  loved,  is  killed.   Rafael  takes  Diego's  daughter  Elena,
       adopting her as his own, and  returning  to  Spain.   Twenty  years
       later  the  real  story  begins with Rafael returning to California
       where Diego is still  imprisoned.   Diego  escapes  and  runs  into
       Alejandro  Murrieta  (Antonio Banderas), a young man that Diego had
       known before his imprisonment.  Murrieta has turned into a somewhat
       incompetent  bandit  with  a vendetta against Captain Harrison Love
       (Matthew Letscher) who happens to be an  ally  of  Montero.   Diego
       decides not just to befriend this enemy of his enemy, he decides to
       make the young man  into  a  new  Zorro.   Completing  the  set  of
       principles  is  Elena  (Catherine  Zeta  Jones),  a grown woman and
       returned from Spain to be with Montero, whom she believes to be her
       father.

       The script for THE MASK OF ZORRO was written by Terry  Rossio,  Ted
       Elliott,  and  John  Eskow,  who seem most familiar with the Disney
       version of Zorro.  At least, when they need to coin new names, they
       use  Garcia and Bernardo, taken from the Disney version.  The score
       by James Horner makes heavy use of  crisp  flamenco  rhythms.   But
       Horner  had  his  work  cut  out  for him to try to match the great
       Alfred Newman score of the 1940 film THE MARK OF ZORRO.

       Anthony Hopkins proves once again how versatile an actor he  is  as
       Diego de la Vega.  He does a decent job playing a dashing swordsman
       considerably his junior.  It is obvious that he has  a  double  for
       some  of  the most vigorous scenes, but he is apparently doing much
       of his own swordplay.  Antonio  Banderas  is  to  the  best  of  my
       knowledge  the  first  Hispanic  to  play  El Zorro on the American
       screen.  The character Zorro has always been played with some  wit,
       though  a little less might have been more.  Catherine Zeta Jones's
       Elena has more than sufficient fire for the role.  Perhaps the best
       scene  in the film is a quiet conversation between her and Hopkins.
       The film was directed by Martin Campbell, best known for  directing
       GOLDENEYE.

       Perhaps not everything works, as I relate in the spoiler section to
       follow.   But as a Zorro fan I just know that had they called me in
       as a consultant I could have fine-tuned this  film  to  perfection.
       There  was a lot that bothered me, but I still hope it makes a mint
       and we get some more.  After all, you  just  can't  have  too  many
       Zorro  films, can you?  I rate THE MASK OF ZORRO a 7 on the 0 to 10
       scale and a +2 on the -4 to +4 scale.

       Spoiler... Spoiler... Spoiler... Spoiler...

       Some random comments:

       There is one very big hole in the plot. Rafael Montero  intends  to
       buy   California  from  Santa  Ana  in  the  name  of  the  Spanish
       government, but actually for himself.  I strongly doubt that  Santa
       Ana  would  sell  in  the first place even to the Spanish.  The US-
       Mexican War, 1846-8, was fought to force Santa Ana  to  sell  Texas
       and other territories to the United States.  Santa Ana did not want
       to sell  off  his  country.   But  if  Santa  Ana  agreed  to  sell
       California  to  Spain,  then  what?  When he discovered the Spanish
       government knew nothing about the transaction he would declare  the
       sale  null  and  void.   He  would field an army (probably with Don
       Rafael's own gold) and retake California.  If Don  Rafael  had  had
       the strength to defend California he would not have needed the gold
       in the first place.  If he did not have the strength the fact  that
       had  given  Santa  Ana some gold and lied about whom he represented
       would have amounted to no more than a political contribution.

       The climactic explosion would have  killed  all  the  laborers,  at
       least  the way the sequence is edited.  In most films that would be
       a problem.  Here I will consider it a nod to the impossible escapes
       in the Zorro serials.  Another problem with the plot is that at the
       end of the film a lot of people know that there is sufficient  gold
       in  California  to make mining highly profitable.  California would
       have had a very different history if that information  were  public
       so early.

       But not all my comments will be negative.  Usually the scripting of
       this  sort of film is straightforward and not very subtle.  I would
       like to point out what I found a clever piece of plotting.  It  was
       going  to  come  down to one man's word against another who Elena's
       father was.  A  lessor  script  might  have  left  it  strictly  an
       emotional decision.  The double coincidence that Diego is here with
       such a hatred for her father and that Elena so resembles  Esperanza
       is  just  too  much coincidence.  She might not know who her father
       is, but logically Esperanza has to be her mother.

       The ending of the McCulley's Zorro was never quite satisfying.   He
       was  to become a wealthy landowner and "raise fat children."  There
       is something satisfying in having Zorro not  go  gently  into  that
       good night.  [-mrl]

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

            Fashion is a form of ugliness so intolerable we have