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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 05/18/01 -- Vol. 19, No. 46

       Chair/Librarian: Mark Leeper, 732-817-5619, mleeper@avaya.com
       Factotum: Evelyn Leeper, 732-332-6218, eleeper@lucent.com
       Distinguished Heinlein Apologist: Rob Mitchell, robmitchell@avaya.com
       HO Chair Emeritus: John Jetzt, jetzt@avaya.com
       HO Librarian Emeritus: Nick Sauer, njs@lucent.com
       Back issues at http://www.geocities.com/evelynleeper
       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 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. For those of you interested in reading this year's Hugo nominees
       on-line:
       - the nominated short fiction that appeared in ANALOG is  available
       at http://www.analogsf.com/0107/issue_0107.html
       -  the  nominated  short  fiction  that  appeared  in  ASIMOV'S  is
       available at http://www.asimovs.com
       - David Langford's "Different Kinds of Darkness"  is  available  at
       http://www.sfsite.com/fsf/fiction/dl01.htm
       -   Stanly   Schmidt's   "Generation   Gap"   is    available    at
       http://www.lrcpubs.com/artemismagazine/issue01/gengap1.html
       - I have no information  yet  about  availabilty  of  Ted  Chiang's
       "Seventy-Two Letters"

       [-ecl]

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

       2. So long and thanks for all the books: Douglas Adams died Friday,
       May  11,  at the age of 49 of a heart attack.  A tribute from actor
       Stephen           Fry           is           available           at
       http://www.observer.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,6903,489979,00.html.   [-
       ecl]

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

       3. Some people are complaining that  the  new  National  Budget  is
       cutting  taxes  for  the  rich  but  including  no  new  funds  for
       education.  The Republicans, of course, deny that that is what  the
       budget does.  At the same time US NEWS & WORLD REPORT ran a special
       issue on how to choose a boarding school.  I guess we know how they
       see the budget.  [-mrl]

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

       4. Most people never  visit  the  tourist  attractions  that  bring
       people to the areas they live.  So frequently you hear a New Yorker
       say he has never been to the Statue of Liberty or the Empire  State
       Building.   I try not to do that.  I have been to most of the major
       tourist attractions within a day's striking distance  of  my  home.
       Springtime rolls around, the weather turns pleasant, and Evelyn and
       I feel it would be nice to get on the road and to go see  something
       historic.   A  few weeks ago we went to Valley Forge.  This was the
       campground where General George Washington parked his  troops  from
       late  December 19, 1777, until June 19, 1778.  It is now a National
       Park.

       There is contradictory information about how bad  things  were  for
       the American troops.  Most sources--and the legend--say that it was
       a  horribly  cold  winter  and  the  men  were   near   starvation.
       Nevertheless  they  remained  fiercely  loyal to George Washington.
       That was what the legend says and  within  days  of  their  leaving
       Valley  Forge they took on the British at Monmouth where they had a
       stunning victory.  From that point on  the  war  went  against  the
       British.

       Historian Richard Shenkman, whose best known works try to  puncture
       legends and myths, disagrees.  In his I LOVE PAUL REVERE WHETHER HE
       RODE OR NOT he says that  conditions  were  really  no  worse  that
       winter  than  during the rest of the war.  Washington intentionally
       created the myth of the terrible winter  himself  trying  to  lobby
       Congress  to give more aid to his army and as a defense against the
       criticism that he was not doing  a  very  good  job  as  commander.
       Indeed  when  I  look at an almanac of the American Revolution with
       major events about what was happening at this time, it says  little
       about  Washington  actually commanding the troops or much heroic at
       all being done.   Instead  it  talks  about  a  matter  that  makes
       Washington sound a lot less like a hero and more like a petty child
       involved in a disagreement.  It was this disagreement  that  seemed
       to be occupying Washington's mind at Valley Forge.  Needless to say
       this is not the Washington that the National Parks Service tends to
       present to the public at the park.  [Y

       Of 11000 soldiers in camp, 300 died, mostly of disease.  There were
       268  courts  martial,  and  as  is  often  forgotten,  hundreds  of
       floggings.  A standard punishment was flogging.  Washington said of
       the  winter,  "By  death and desertion we have lost a good many men
       since we came to this ground and have encountered every species  of
       hardship  that  cold,  wet,  and  hunger  and  want of clothes were
       capable of producing."

       In fact the National Parks people labor under a handicap at  Valley
       Forge that their peers at places like Antietam and at Gettysburg do
       not have.  Their problem is that nothing much  happened  at  Valley
       Forge.   Think  about  what  you know about Valley Forge.  You hear
       about the cold winter and the hardship.  There is no  special  site
       of  hardship.   What do the Parks staff have to show people?  Where
       the troops drilled?  Where they had cabins?  That is all OK, but it
       lacks  the  blood and thunder of a battlefield.  People like to see
       ground sanctified by blood and struggle.

       The park consists of a Visitor Center that  is  mostly  museum  and
       souvenir shop.  Next door is a theater where they have an 18-minute
       film about Valley Forge.  Elsewhere for a two-dollar ticket you can
       see  Washington's  headquarters  which  is  indistinguishable  from
       anybody else's tiny house from the period.  If you are  not  really
       excited  about a bed that can justifiably claim, "George Washington
       slept here" you can save yourself the expense and effort.  So there
       is little really exciting to see.

       They have special events to liven things up.  We got to two special
       events.   One  was  a  demonstration  by  two history reenactors of
       musket  and  rifle.   Mentioned  was  that  prime  targets  on  the
       battlefield  were always the commanders of the other side.  I asked
       them afterward about that.  I said that  there  were  probably  all
       sorts  of errors in THE PATRIOT.  What about the implication in the
       film that the British thought that it was bad sport to aim for  the
       commanding  officers.   They  thought it was a ridiculous thing for
       the script to have Cornwallis say.  Of course  Cornwallis  had  his
       men aim for the Continental commanders and we aimed for theirs.  We
       asked them a little about  historic  reenactment.   Sometimes  they
       follow  a  strict  scenario,  other  times  they  are more like war
       gaming.

       The other special event was a real joy.  One  of  the  rangers  was
       giving  a talk, with short dramatizations, about a nearly forgotten
       gang of outlaws who allied themselves with the Tories  and  against
       the Continentals.  The story of Doane Gang seems to be every bit as
       dramatic as those of the cowboy gangs  a  century  or  more  later.
       Moses Doane headed the gang and terrorized New York and New Jersey.
       The ranger puts on a good show.  He also enjoyed discussing  cinema
       we  later  discovered.  He mentioned that the park authorities were
       not happy with his choice of subject matter for his  presentations.
       Why  talk  about criminals when so many American heroes were around
       then, but the talk added some much needed excitement.

       My chuckle of the day came from a little boy in the museum  in  the
       visitor  center.   There were reprints of three paintings of George
       Washington.  The boy asked his  mother  in  frustration  "How  come
       there aren't any REAL pictures of him?"

       Next week I will continue with Valley Forge, but mostly I will  say
       something  about  an  affair of political intrigue that occurred at
       that time and puts Washington in a new light you probably  did  not
       learn about in school.  [-mrl]

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

       5. A KNIGHT'S TALE (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule:    The    story    is    intentionally
                 anachronistic.   That  would be excusable since
                 it is clearly deliberate.  The tale is a highly
                 cliched  sports  story  devoid  of surprises or
                 interest.  Brian Helgeland writes and  directs,
                 inspired  by  a  story of THE CANTERBURY TALES.
                 Rating:  4 (0 to 10), low 0 (-4 to +4)

       Just a week ago I was complaining that the film THE  MUMMY  RETURNS
       was  severely  damaged by its lack of period feel in the scenes set
       in 1933.  That was a story whose premise was fantasy, so  the  rest
       of  the  film  really  needed  to  be realistic to avoid having the
       proceedings become a total cartoon.  Before I saw the  film  I  was
       getting  ready  to  explain  why  I would give A KNIGHT'S TALE more
       latitude to play with the period feel.  Here the anachronism is the
       point  of the film and is done intentionally.  In fact, there might
       even be a good constructive reason to  introduce  anachronism.   In
       medieval times there must have been a lot of slang expressions used
       in every day conversation.  Few of these  would  be  likely  to  be
       known  today,  particularly  to  non-scholars.  Where we might say,
       "get a life," they might have had some other expression,  something
       we  no  longer  know. So as long as the actors were speaking Modern
       English anyway, they could say, "get a life" and still be authentic
       to  the period.  As long as the writing made clear that was how the
       anachronism was being used, the anachronism would be more  or  less
       acceptable.   So  I  had  this great defense of A KNIGHT'S TALE all
       prepared.  I saw A KNIGHT'S TALE, however, and now I don't want  to
       defend the film.

       A film needs at least to have either an  interesting  and  original
       story  or  an  interesting  background.  For example, the film DEAD
       CALM has what was a fairly cliched slasher story at  least  had  an
       interesting  nautical background.  If the viewer get bored with the
       main plot there is enough else that is of interest.   This  is  not
       the  case  with  A  KNIGHT'S  TALE.   The  background atmosphere is
       intentionally  murdered,  and  the  foreground  story  is  boringly
       obvious.  Even the jokes are not very funny.

       The year is 1356--well sort of.  More like  a  21st  century  1356.
       When a knight dies of natural causes, his squire William (played by
       Heath Ledger of THE PATRIOT) substitutes for his master.  Will wins
       and  discovers he has some unexpected skill as a jouster.  With two
       associates as his crew, and a third poet he finds on the road, they
       become a team.  The poet is one Geoffrey Chaucer (Paul Battany) who
       helps William forge the noble origins necessary to  be  a  jouster.
       The  fraudulent  nobleman soon falls in love with a beautiful woman
       he has seen in passing, Jocelyn (Shannyn Sossamon).  And the knight
       has  a  rival for Jocelyn's hand as well as a rival in the field in
       person of Count Adhemar (Rufus Sewell).  From there the plot  is  a
       standard,  not  to  say  tiresome,  sports success story.  The only
       halfway interesting character is Kate (Laura Fraser  of  TITUS),  a
       woman blacksmith whom the group pick up along the way.

       Of course, none of this is allowed to in any way  feels  much  like
       1356.   Audiences  at  the  joust sing, "We Will... We Will... Rock
       You" while doing the Wave.  The modern music and the  21st  century
       gestures  all  give the film a sort of semi-whimsical surreal feel,
       much like some of the scenes in MONTY PYTHON AND THE HOLY GRAIL.

       Brian Hanson who produced, directed, and wrote  the  screenplay  is
       probably best known for his writing the screenplay and co-producing
       the much better L.A. CONFIDENTIAL.  He also co-wrote the screenplay
       for  the  under-appreciated  THE  POSTMAN.   Each had a much better
       plots than A KNIGHT'S TALE.  The film's  production  design  is  by
       Tony Burrough.  Burrough also did production design on nice looking
       films like 1995's RICHARD III and 1998's GREAT EXPECTATIONS.   This
       film generally has a good look if not much substance.  A few places
       model-work is not well integrated  with  live  action.   Also  some
       scenes  seem  to  be  shot  at  twelve  or perhaps eight frames per
       second.  A similar effect was used in GLADIATOR.  I personally find
       this style jarring and having very little positive effect.

       With a plot older than, well, CANTERBURY TALES and an  unconvincing
       background,  this film just totally misses its mark.  Still, nearly
       all its sins would be excusable if  the  plot  had  been  a  little
       better.  I  rate  this film a 4 on the 0 to 10 scale and a low 0 on
       the -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

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

       6. THE LUZHIN DEFENCE (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule:  John  Turturro  stars  as   Alexandre
                 Luzhin,  a  chess  Grand  Master and genius who
                 seems nearly an idiot savant.  At an  important
                 championship,  he  briefly  meets  a  woman and
                 decides  he  wants  to  marry   her.    Through
                 interwoven  flashbacks we see how he became the
                 chess genius that he is and get a  little  feel
                 for  how  he thinks.  It is so enjoyable to see
                 one film in which  the  competition  is  on  an
                 intellectual  plane rather than a physical one.
                 Rating: 9 (0 to 10), +3 (-4 to +4)

       Somehow I think of the works of Vladimir Nabokov as being deep with
       psychological  and  Freudian meanings.  I have never read his books
       but have not been greatly impressed by the film versions of LOLITA.
       So  I  am  not  sure  what  I  expected  from  THE  LUZHIN DEFENCE.
       Certainly what I expected was not a delectable comedy-drama about a
       near-autistic chess genius, his courtship, and the intrigue against
       him at a chess championship.  But what makes the film most  fun  is
       the  view  into how a chess master thinks, how the driving need for
       chess has disordered the rest of his mind, and how he copes in  the
       world  because  of  it.   It may be an odd coincidence, but the two
       best films I have seen this year, MEMENTO and  THE  LUZHIN  DEFENCE
       both  deal  with people with damaged minds and how they cope in the
       "real" world.

       In the late 1930s  Natalia  Katkov  (played  by  Emily  Watson)  is
       meeting  her  parents  for  a stay at a ritzy and beautiful Italian
       resort.  Natalia's parents hope she will meet a wealthy husband  at
       the  resort and they have a particular count in mind.  Just at this
       time the resort is the site of an international chess championship.
       A grand master at the contest is the strange Alexandre Luzhin (John
       Turturro).  Luzhin seems to have devoted every useful neuron of his
       mind  to  chess  at  the  expense of his ability to function in the
       normal world.  He is known for his weird behavior, like dancing  to
       music  that  nobody  else  hears,  but  still held in awe.  The man
       perpetually looks as if he was just awakened from a deep sleep  and
       finds himself in the middle of a brass band.

       After a short chance encounter with Natalia, Luzhin  surprises  her
       by  proposing  marriage.   Natalia's mother was hoping her daughter
       would find a husband, but this social misfit was not what  she  had
       in  mind.   The  young  woman,  however, is unhappy with suitors of
       great style and lessor substance.  This chess master has  no  style
       so  all  there  is to see is his substance.  Before Luzhin has time
       for Natalia he must win the current championship and  at  the  same
       time must deal with the demons of his youth.

       Through interwoven flashbacks we learn about Luzhin's boyhood,  one
       which in some ways parallels his present.  He is the son of parents
       who do not get along, and he does not get along with his  teachers.
       When his father shows him chess to focus his mind it works only too
       well, but then his mind is focused only on chess.  The results  are
       reminiscent of the film SHINE.  One montage seems to imply he is so
       consumed by his love of chess that he cannot even make love without
       his mind returning to the game he loves.  Yet there is little about
       the great game he can explain to Natalia other than that there  are
       what  he  calls "strong" moves and "quiet" moves.  The strong moves
       are obvious and show power.  But the quiet  moves  are  subtle  and
       actually  make it possible to exercise power.  But working to bring
       him down is a mysterious man who is master of both kinds of move in
       a larger game than chess.

       The resort created for this film is sumptuous, especially the  room
       designed  for  chess  competition.   It  invites  comparison to the
       similar room at the  beginning  of  FROM  RUSSIA  WITH  LOVE.   The
       costume   work   is  complex  and  appears  accurate.   The  camera
       repeatedly returns to images of crystal, through which we  see  the
       same  world  we  see with our eyes, but distorted.  This is much as
       the distorted view Luzhin has of our world.

       Marleen Gorris, who directed this film, is fifty years old and  was
       born  in  Holland.  Her previous films include a didactic ANTONIA'S
       LINE from 1995 and MRS. DALLOWAY in 1998.  The production design is
       by  Tony  Burrough  who also did the design for RICHARD III (1995),
       GREAT EXPECTATIONS (1998), and A KNIGHT'S TALE (2001).

       THE LUZHIN DEFENCE is an unexpectedly likable film about a man  who
       has given his whole mind and life over to the passion of chess.  It
       is part thriller, part character study.  I rate it a 9 on the 0  to
       10 scale and a +3 on the -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

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

       7. SHADOW OF THE HEGEMON, by Orson Scott Card (Tor, Copyright 2000,
       ISBN  0-312-87651-3,  hardcover,  $25.95)  (a  book  review  by Joe
       Karpierz):

       In my review of the previous book in this series, ENDER'S SHADOW, I
       wrote the following:

       I have mixed feelings, however.  Is this novel as good as  I  think
       it  is  because  it's  well  crafted, telling the same story from a
       different perspective, making it fresh all over again?  Or is  this
       novel good only because the original was good, and it's essentially
       the same story?

       I now have an answer to that question.   ENDER'S  SHADOW  was  good
       only  because  the original story was good (ENDER'S GAME), and it's
       essentially the same story.

       To be fair, that may still not be true.  However,  judging  by  the
       latest  entry in the series, SHADOW OF THE HEGEMON, it certainly is
       true.  This book is nowhere near as good as ENDER'S SHADOW, and the
       reason  can  be found in the afterword.  Some readers may know that
       Card was going to write a prequel  trilogy  to  the  Ender  series.
       Well,  we  find  out that the story has expanded from three to four
       books because of a comment made by one of his pre-readers  (if  you
       will),  who suggested a change be made (which I will describe a bit
       later).  This stretching out of this book, which in turn caused  an
       extra  book  to  be written (sort of like Douglas Adams writing the
       fifth book in the Hitchhiker's Trilogy), causes this novel to  slow
       to an absolute crawl.

       In short, I was bored.

       This is  a  military  novel,  a  political  novel,  a  novel  about
       diplomacy.   Which,  I suppose, is all well and good if that's what
       you're interested in and looking for.  The novel  takes  place  not
       long  after the end of the Formic War--the war against the buggers.
       Humanity has won, led by the children in the Battle School,  as  we
       have  seen  in  ENDER'S GAME and ENDER'S SHADOW.  The Battle School
       has been disbanded, Ender has gone off  to  participate  in  events
       chronicled  in SPEAKER FOR THE DEAD, and all the rest of the Battle
       School kids have gone home to be with their families.  The  nations
       of   the  world  now  want  to  re-exert  their  sovereignty  after
       temporarily uniting with each other  to  fight  off  the  invaders.
       What better way to gain an advantage by kidnapping and using Battle
       School children for their own purposes?  So, one by  one,  all  the
       kids are kidnapped.

       Except Bean.  They (there's always a "they", isn't there?) want him
       dead  instead.  It turns out that Achilles, Bean's old nemesis from
       Battle School, is behind the kidnappings.  It turns out he wants to
       rule  the  world  himself.   Then  there's  Peter  Wiggin,  Ender's
       brother--he sees what Achilles is doing and wants to stop it.   And
       he  asks Bean for help.  The other major player in our little drama
       is Petra, the Battle School cadet who fell asleep while fighting  a
       battle  during  the  formic  war.   She  is kept closely guarded by
       Achilles himself, who is using her in a gigantic real life game  of
       Risk, in which he sees himself as the winner.

       Ah, Petra, it's not your fault that this book went wrong.  You see,
       Petra's  escape  was  meant  to be quick and early on in the novel.
       However, as it turns out, via recommendation from that  pre-reader,
       her  escape  is  made  the  focal point of the novel.  Card says he
       would be cheating his reader if her escape occurred  early  in  the
       book.   I say he's boring his readers by drawing the story out like
       that.  I say he's stealing my valuable reading  time  by  extending
       this story like that.

       Now  maybe  you  like  military,  political  novels,  novels  about
       diplomacy.   I might too, if I read a good one.  I didn't like this
       one at all.  Which of course begs the question of whether I'm going
       to  read  the  next one.  Well, of course I am, because among other
       things I'm a completist.  And I also have this insane desire to see
       if  it  will get any better.  Don't continue on your own--it should
       only be done by a trained professional.

       Which means that I shouldn't be doing it either.

       Moving on to other things, as readers of this erstwhile publication
       already know, the Hugo nominations are out.  Evelyn has asked me if
       I was going to review the nominees for best novel again, as it  has
       become  somewhat of a tradition.  The answer is yes.  In looking at
       the nominations, it's  going  to  be  a  tough  road,  because  I'm
       predisposed against fantasy novels, and I see two on the list.  But
       I'll give it my best shot.  I promise.

       In any case, my next review will be of HARRY POTTER AND THE  GOBLET
       OF  FIRE.   It was easy to get a hold of a copy--I just walked into
       my daughter's room and asked if I could borrow it.   I  was  almost
       hoping she's say no.  :-)  [-jak]

                                          Mark Leeper
                                          HO 1K-644 732-817-5619
                                          mleeper@avaya.com

           Racism is not widespread among most of British society, 	   but it permeates every nook and cranny of the race
	   relations industry.
                                          -- Lord Norman Tebbit


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