THE MT VOID
Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
10/27/06 -- Vol. 25, No. 17, Whole Number 1358

El Presidente: Mark Leeper, mleeper@optonline.net
The Power Behind El Pres: Evelyn Leeper, eleeper@optonline.net
Back issues at http://www.geocities.com/evelynleeper
All material copyright by author unless otherwise noted.
All comments sent will be assumed authorized for inclusion
unless otherwise noted.

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Topics:
        Science Fiction Magazine Cover Art
        THE DEPARTED (correction)
        Political Gas (comments by Mark R. Leeper)
        Mathematics and Science Update (comments by Mark R. Leeper)
        THE PRESTIGE (film review by Mark R. Leeper)
        THE SCIENCE OF SLEEP (film review by Mark R. Leeper)
        INFAMOUS (film review by Mark R. Leeper)
        FLAGS OF OUR FATHERS (film review by Mark R. Leeper)
        Technology and CATHOLICS (letter of comment
                by Joseph T. Major)
        This Week's Reading (MISS MARPLE: THE COMPLETE SHORT
                STORIES, THE UNEXPECTED GUEST, NORTHANGER ABBEY,
                and THE PRESTIGE) (book comments
                by Evelyn C. Leeper)

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

TOPIC: Science Fiction Magazine Cover Art

Great images from the 1950s to the present, with over 1500 covers
from the Italian science fiction magazine URANIA at
http://www.mondourania.com/urania/uraniaelencopagine.htm.

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

TOPIC: THE DEPARTED (correction)

In response to Mark's article on the FBI's Ten Most Wanted in his
further comments on THE DEPARTED in the 10/20/06 issue of the MT
VOID, Dan Kimmel writes:

"The Wikipedia article states 'the list itself has no particular
ranking.'  The list in the Wikipedia article is sorted by the date
each person was added to the most wanted list (or by 'sequence
number', which results in the same order).  The list on the FBI
site is presented in two columns of five people each, and is not
in sequence."  [-dk]

Mark replies, "You got me."  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: Political Gas (comments by Mark R. Leeper)

The response to the problem in Iraq breaks down by political
wing.  The difference between a liberal and a conservative is
that if a liberal finds her house has radon gas she will just
complain bitterly that the house should never have been built
where it was.  A conservative would actively try to find the gas
so he could shoot it.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: Mathematics and Science Update (comments by Mark R. Leeper)

This week I wanted to follow up on a couple of previous articles
in the fields of mathematics and science.  In the 07/01/05 issue
of the MT VOID I was weighing in on the question of whether
mathematics is invented or discovered.  The article may be found
at:

http://www.geocities.com/evelynleeper/2005/VOID0701.htm#math

I am recently read Ian Stewart's LETTERS TO A YOUNG
MATHEMATICIAN.  He says some things relevant to that subject,
though he does not really agree or disagree.  Still, he waffles
fairly eloquently:

"A mathematical circle, then is something more than a shared
delusion.  It is a concept endowed with extremely specific
features; it 'exists' in the sense that human minds can deduce
other properties from those features, with the crucial caveat
that if two minds investigate the same question, they cannot, by
correct reasoning, come up with contradictory answers.

"That's why it feels as if math is 'out there.'  Finding the
answer to an open question feels like discovery, not invention.
Math is a product of human minds, but not bendable to human will.
Exploring it is like exploring a new tract of country; you may
not know what is around the next bend in the river, but you don't
get to choose.  You can only wait and find out.  But the
mathematical countryside does not come into existence until you
explore it."

I am not sure I agree with the last statement if what you are
going to find is pre-determined.  Does the world of mathematics
actually exist beyond humanity's collective field of vision?  I
think it is akin to solipsism to say that it does not.  In
addition I rebel at saying that mathematics is all in the
mathematicians' collective mind but physics is really is "out
there."  If it were truly invented it could be invented any way
we want.

The other update is a little more satisfying.  As some of you
might know I have had a long-standing question about DNA that I
would think would be basic to Biology 101, yet surprisingly few
biologists can answer.  DNA is a double helix.  It is like a
ladder that corkscrews.  When it comes time for the DNA to
reproduce each of the rungs of the ladders breaks along the whole
length of the DNA.  The two long strands float apart, each with
the near half of each of the rungs.

Most of us have seen illustrations of how the two strands
floating apart.  It seems nice and simple.  That is because in
the illustration they show you only a short stretch of DNA.  DNA
is a double helix, a pair of strands twisted around each other
many thousands of turns.  It is like the fibers in sewing thread
twisted around each other.  They seem like they cannot just drift
apart without a whole lot of untwisting.  And the problem is more
complex than that since the strands of the double helix have
kinks.  In fact the kinks may be their own code.  (See the
08/04/06 issue of the MT VOID at
http://www.geocities.com/ evelynleeper/VOID0804.htm#dna).  We
are talking about two strands really tangled together suddenly
just drifting apart.  It seems impossible topologically.

Now, most people with a scientific background I have asked said
that there is no problem.  An enzyme separates them.  And for
them that explains it all.  It is surprising how many people
think that enzymes have the power to suspend the laws of topology
and exempt themselves from the laws of mathematics, in general.

So as a leisure-time activity I have been putting the words
"topology" and "DNA" (if that can be called a word) into Google
and finding who have done published papers on the topology of
DNA.  I would then send the authors e-mail asking how DNA strands
manage to extricate themselves from the tangle.  If I got answers
at all I was told that an enzyme does it.  When I followed up
with the latter group re-emphasizing that somehow these two
strands had to untangle suddenly the line would go dead.  You
would think that this is one of the early questions that people--
including Watson and Crick--would ask.  I was fast realizing that
there are certain issues raised in a standard biology education
and beyond those issues most people do not think about things that
they do not think about," to borrow a phrase from "Inherit the
Wind".

Well, finally I found a biologist who really does think about
things the others don't think about.  I will leave his name off
just because I don't want to bother him further and do not want
to quote him without his permission.  But what apparently happens
sounds almost magical.  There is little if any unwinding.  The
enzyme topoisomerase breaks strands, lets other strands pass
through, and then rejoins the strands.  That answers the topology
question.  As my correspondent's e-mail message is below.  I am
only slightly embarrassed to say he over-estimates my
capabilities.

"Dear Mark,

"In the cell this process (strand separation) would be mediated
by a type I topoisomerase that permits one strand to pass through
a transient break in another strand.  This has been demonstrated
numerous ways.

"However to get at the real quandary you are concerned about, you
might look in the literature to see if people have measured the
kinetics of strand separation of two strands as a function of the
length of the molecules in the absence of a topoisomerase.  This
would be a very hard measurement to make because you would have
to subject the DNA to some force that would separate the two
strands and then measure the rate of the separation.  I have
never heard of such experiments, but that does not mean someone
has not tried and published it.

"If they haven't published this kind of experiment, then it would
be an interesting one to do.  I could imagine both single
molecule approaches as well as population approaches to doing
this experiment.  They would all hinge on pulling one strand in
one direction and the other strand in the other direction under
some molecular force.  Perhaps covalently attaching one strand to
a solid support and attracting the other strand away by an
electostatic field (electorphoresis) under denaturing conditions.

"If you could measure the rate of strand separation as a function
of length (one twist per 10 base pairs) you could get a measure
of how the rate of strand separation depended on the number of
twists in the DNA.

"Try it."

On his last bit, it would have to be one separation per twist or
one separation per ten base pairs.  That seems like a good firm
answer.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: THE PRESTIGE (film review by Mark R. Leeper)

CAPSULE: Toward the end of the 19th century two rival stage
magicians compete and battle for dominance.  This is a thriller,
an education in stage magic, a mystery, and even a bit of a
science fiction film.  Christopher Priest's novel is brought to
the screen by co-writer and director Christopher Nolan in a
wonderful screen adaptation.  This is a film that may be more
enjoyable on the second viewing once you know its secrets.
Rating: +3 (-4 to +4) or 9/10

"Are you watching closely?"

In London near the end of the 19th Century two stage magicians,
once friends, carry on a deadly rivalry.  The cause is
professional competition and an escalating ladder of revenge for
believed wrongs.  At the center of the controversy is one stage
illusion and the attempts to perform it.  The trick gives the
illusion that the performer is instantly transported from the
stage to another part of the theater (like something from THE
FLY).  The film is told in flashback after the death of one of
the feuding magicians, Robert Angier (played by Hugh Jackman),
apparently murdered by his nemesis Alfred Borden (very
effectively played by Christian Bale).

The film then traces the relationship of these two one-time
friends and concurrent apprentices to a veteran illusionist
Milton (a cameo by Ricky Jay) and his designer called just Cutter
(Michael Caine).  With reckless ambition Borden is convinced,
somewhat justifiably, that he is a great magician.  Then perhaps
unintentionally in one quick stroke he destroys Angier's life and
Milton's career.  From there an epic feud starts.  Angier is
suave and looks really good in front of an audience, but he is
second rate at inventing new illusions.  Borden is brilliant but
lacks the panache to exploit it.  Between them they could make
the perfect stage illusionist.  Instead they want each other out
of the way, but even more than that they want the secret of each
other's tricks.

The feud will embroil the stage assistant Olivia Wenscombe
(Scarlett Johansson) who will be the confidante to both men
consecutively.  It will also involve a real wizard--not one of
fiction--the great engineer Nikola Tesla (played with surprising
Eastern European charm by David Bowie), who may have his own
electrical magic, and who is himself involved in a historic
parallel feud with Thomas Alva Edison.

The hostility between Angier and Borden, a study in obsession,
will be dangerous to both.  The life of a stage illusionist often
ends in sudden death.  The tightness of a knot or the placement
of a prop can mean the difference between life and death.  A
button falling into the wrong place can be deadly.  Another
magician can turn a stage performance into an undetectable
murder.  And the coveted secrets of tricks can be the motive for
murder.  A magician's audience can be unaware that they are
witnessing a deadly battle.

"Are you watching closely?"

Through some of the script may seem to be only slowly advancing
the plot, that is part of the illusion.  Between Christopher
Priest's plot from the novel and Jonathan and Christopher Nolan's
adaptation, little if anything is wasted in the plot or dialog.
On a second viewing many of the lines of dialog will take on
whole new meanings. A second viewing may well be a very different
experience than a first viewing.  As a bonus, along the way this
film is as much an education about the stagecraft of legerdemain
as MASTER AND COMMANDER was of early 19th century seafaring.

Two films on the subject of late 19th century stage magic being
released only weeks-apart invites comparison.  The film THE
ILLUSIONIST also deals with stage magic about the same period.
THE PRESTIGE is a somewhat longer film, but it is considerably
more intricate and more satisfying.  THE PRESTIGE is taken from a
very good book, but where the Nolan brothers have deviated from
the book they have worked their own magic.  Both films include
plot elements that were impossible for the period.  THE PRESTIGE
is honest in its fantasy elements and THE ILLUSIONIST is not.  I
thing that gives THE PRESTIGE another edge.  I recommended THE
ILLUSIONIST a few weeks ago, and I still do, but in many respects
it pales next to THE PRESTIGE.  I rate this complex and clever
puzzle story a +3 on the -4 to +4 scale or 9/10.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: THE SCIENCE OF SLEEP (film review by Mark R. Leeper)

CAPSULE: What sounded like a promising premise turns into a
gratuitous exercise in not-very-interesting surrealism.  There
may or may not be a complete story underneath all of this, but if
there is, it is probably dull and not worth digging for.  A young
man returning to France after many years in Mexico finds his
dreams mixing with reality until we lose interest sorting one
from the other and putting together his story.  Writer/director
Michael Gondry bets his film that the viewer will be so engrossed
in his characters and images, they will not mind having the rug
pulled form under them time and again.  He loses that bet.
Rating: 0 (-4 to +4) or 4/10

It is certainly possible to have a story in which it is sometimes
difficult to know what is dream and what is reality.  But as soon
as there are dream images in a sequence one must assume we are
seeing a dream.  However, nearly all sequences of THE SCIENCE OF
SLEEP have something to indicate that sequence is a dream.  It
becomes a tiresome effort to sort dream from reality and even if
one succeeds and there is enough non-dream to piece together a
story, the best we would have for a plot is a tiresome romance.
Lovers break up and get back together.  It is hardly worth the
effort.

Writer/director Michael Gondry (director of the much better
ETERNAL SUNSHINE OF THE SPOTLESS MIND) does not even seem to
understand how dreams work.  Dreams are frequently surrealistic,
but not all surrealism is necessarily dreamlike.  I am reminded
of Peter Dinklage's character's complaint in LIVING IN OBLIVION.
He has been cast to play in a dream sequence being filmed but
walks off the set complaining that they feel they need a dwarf
for a dream sequence.  He himself is a dwarf, but says that even
he does not dream about dwarves.  However, films rarely get the
real feel of dreams, at least my dreams, correctly.  Maybe some
people do have weird dreams like something out of Fellini or
Cocteau or Dali, but I know I do not.  My dreams may have some
strange situations, but the surroundings do not look visually
very surreal.  Perhaps your dreams are different.

Stéphane (played by Gael García Bernal of Y TU MAMÁ TAMBIÉN and
THE MOTORCYCLE DIARIES) returns from many years in Mexico to
Paris to live in the apartment house his mother (Miou-Miou) owns
and to get a job as a creative artist.  He gets a job in a
company that makes calendars.  The work is drudgery and not at
all what he wanted.  His boss feigns some interest in his
creative calendar designs but wisely are not willing to commit to
using those ideas.  His big idea is a calendar that commemorates
great disasters.  Along the way he discovers that he is attracted
to his neighbor and a friend of hers.  The neighbor is Stéphanie
(Charlotte Gainsbourg) and her friend is Zoe (Emma de Caunes).
The similarity of names suggests that Stéphanie may be just some
part of Stéphane if this is all a dream. But then maybe she is
not.  Both have the same hobby of making homemade stuffed
animals, and that is a foundation for a firm friendship.

It is hard to tease even this much story from the film because we
keep discovering what we are seeing is one dream after another.
Stéphane dreams repeatedly that he is the host of a television
show that is about his life.  The name of the program or perhaps
the station is Stephanet.  Each night he sees his life from the
vantage point of this television show.  Some scenes we know are
dream sequences and some we are not sure.  Much of the film seems
to be made up of little skits involving the characters.  Suddenly
Stéphane will have hands that are three feet long.  His friends
from work are fairly surreal even in scenes that may not be dream
sequences.

What does this film all mean?  What has really happened in the
real world of the film?  To paraphrase Freud, sometime a
self-indulgent, disorganized collection of scenes is just a
self-indulgent, disorganized collection of scenes.  I rate THE
SCIENCE OF SLEEP a 0 on the -4 to +4 scale or 4/10.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: INFAMOUS (film review by Mark R. Leeper)

CAPSULE: This is an account of Truman Capote's investigation of
the "In Cold Blood" murders.  Capote maneuvers people and events
for his own purposes.  The film is as strangely unfocused as its
title is.  Several of the artistic decisions weaken the film.  A
good performance by Daniel Craig is perhaps the film's major
asset.  Rating: low +1 (-4 to +4) or 5/10

This is the story of Truman Capote (played by Toby Jones) writing
his "non-fiction novel" IN COLD BLOOD about the 1959 murders of
the Herbert Clutter family from Holcomb, Kansas.  Capote
manipulates people and events to make the book better, but with
apparently little real care for the people involved in the crime
and its solution.  Capote dresses in a near-feminine style and
talks in an almost baby-like manner, but he is able to play
people to get the results he wants.  Here he wants to get to know
the captured killers of the Clutter family: Perry Smith (Daniel
Craig) and Dick Hickock (Lee Pace) and to know the police who
caught them.  The story is of Capote using charm to be admitted
into the inner circle of the people important to the story and
using them.

It seems that director Douglas McGrath wanted to make a movie of
substantial length, just a minute or two short of two hours, but
did not have enough story to fill that time, as incredible as
that seems.  Much of the film seems like time filler.  The film
opens with Kitty Dean (Gwyneth Paltrow) singing a sad version of
Cole Porter's "What is This Thing Called Love".  In the middle
she pauses as if pondering some sad memory, after a pause she
regains her composure and starts singing again, finishing the
song.  What is her sorrow?  What does this have to do with
anything?  Well, shortly we see that she is a friend of Capote,
but we do not even hear their conversations.  Then she drops out
of sight not to be heard from again.  Why are we shown this?
Later we see Capote's elite friends trying this new dance, The
Twist.  Anything positive that this sequence could have added
could have been added with a line of dialog.  Watching middle-
aged celebrities doing The Twist--and the film seems to cast
modern celebrities as the celebrities of that time--speaks of a
director stalling.

Toby Jones's performance as Capote is just insufficient to carry
this film.  In the early parts of the film it should convey
comedy, in the latter parts tragedy, and Jones just is not able
to make us feel either.  He may be a good character actor, but in
this film he is out of his depth.  His short stature and his
peculiar voice kept reminding me of the mad scientist in
children's cartoons.  Sandra Bullock as Nelle Harper Lee seems to
fade into the background.  The strongest performance is by Daniel
Craig who is by turns fragile and mean.  I remember him best as
Paul Newman's cynical, trouble-making son in THE ROAD TO
PERDITION.  He frequently plays roles well and has a hard edge,
though I liked him as poet Ted Hughes in SYLVIA.  He is, of
course, James Bond in the upcoming CASINO ROYALE.  Juliet
Stevenson is supposedly playing Diana Vreeland but her mannerisms
were what I thought could have been an extremely good impression
of Lauren Bacall.

The title INFAMOUS is a peculiar choice since at this point
nobody in the film is particularly infamous.  Capote was known
more for eccentricity than for infamy.  The killers were not
particularly well-known yet either.

I have gone this long without mentioning that this is, of course,
the second film to cover this subject matter.  I did not want
that to influence this review, but some comparison should be
made.  INFAMOUS was doomed by bad luck since the inception of the
production.  Had this been the only film on the subject of
Capote's actions it would have been a reasonably interesting
account, though still very flawed.  The fact that well into the
production the producers found that there was another film being
made on the same narrow subject and that it would be a first
class production had to have given the producers some bad nights.
The release of INFAMOUS was delayed a year so as not to be too
close to the release of CAPOTE.  The producers could not beat
CAPOTE to release so the best they could manage was the year
delay.  I think the fact that CAPOTE got the first release first
helped that film to some small degree, but it was an absolute
disaster for INFAMOUS.

Toby Jones's performance here as Capote seems more of a
caricature.  Philip Seymour Hoffman in CAPOTE created a much more
interesting character.  Where characterizations are different
they are less believable here.  Perry Smith is almost an
intellectual and a frustrated artist in INFAMOUS, inconsistent
with all other versions to this point.  Daniel Craig had his work
cut out for him trying to play both an artist and a cold-blooded
killer.  Most accounts say that Capote really did have a sort of
charm.  In this film he cannot get people interested in him until
he starts name-dropping.  Then people are not so much interested
in Capote as in the Hollywood stars he knows.  This film delivers
far less than CAPOTE did with much less of a feeling of
plausibility.  I rate it a low +1 on the -4 to +4 scale or 5/10.
[-mrl]

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

TOPIC: FLAGS OF OUR FATHERS (film review by Mark R. Leeper)

CAPSULE: A film that I expected to enjoy strikes me as 132
minutes of little more than diatribe and violence.  This is the
story of how the Marines took Iwo Jima in World War II and
specifically how the picture of planting the flag was taken and
became a classic image.  We are told repeatedly that it made
heroes out of the wrong people.  Also it is the story of how the
public fell in love with the famous photograph and how the United
States government exploited that appeal.  The film is
stylistically directed and filmed, but the anger and cynicism of
the script, even if accurate, is just unpleasant.  With more
restraint this could have been a much better film.  Rating: 0 (-4
to +4) or 4/10

This is the story of the men who fought on Iwo Jima in the last
part of the Pacific War.  One of the most famous photographic
images of the war was the raising of the American flag on Mount
Suribachi.  The United States government used that image to sell
war bonds and to stir patriotism.  This film goes back and forth
showing us how terrible the fighting was and showing the story of
the three men who were elected heroes for the raising of the
flag.  They were used on a Bond Tour.  It also tells us what
happened to these men in later years.  The film begins by saying
that history can be very wrong in the people it chooses to be
designated heroes (and its villains).  It then spends the rest of
the film making that point repeatedly.  We are also told that one
picture can win a war.  Certainly the film demonstrates that one
visual image can have a powerful effect, even if it is a false
symbol of victory.  None of this is so surprising that it needs
so much proof.

I am going to go out on a limb on this one.  I have a lot of
respect for Clint Eastwood as a film director, and I know that a
lot of people are going to like FLAGS OF OUR FATHERS.  I had very
high expectations, which may not have been entirely fair.
Further, my natural opinions are probably little cynical about
the military and government, though I have a great deal of
respect for the common soldier in the wars we have fought. I
agree with the politics of this film all the way.  But I think
Eastwood could have used a subtitle 43 REASONS *NOT* TO BE PROUD
OF THE IWO JIMA IMAGE.

This is a long film and a large part of it is a barrage of
attacks on the poor benighted souls who venerate the famous image
of raising the flag on Mount Suribachi that was used to rally the
American people.  I was not alive at that time and I never was
all that impressed by the image.  In this film we learn among
other things:  (1) The image we see was not from the real raising
of the flag but was merely part of a ploy to keep the original
piece of fabric.  (2) The people who were supposedly in the
picture are not the same set of people identified by the press.
(3) The raising of the flag was not at the point of victory on
Iwo Jima but actually early in the battle.  (4) The people who
raised the flag were less heroic and in less danger than the
people fighting down below were.  (6) The United States
government exploited the popularity of the image to earn money
for the war.  (7) Once the government used the people in the
picture, they were more or less discarded.  And the list goes
could go on.

If our minds were not already numbed by that list of charges, it
is by the violent images of the terrifying fighting that was
going on in the taking of the island.  The realistic and intense
horror of warfare was a revelation when we saw it in SAVING
PRIVATE RYAN and in BAND OF BROTHERS.  But both of those films
showed the viewer the horrors in a relatively short sequence
which then ended, the point being made, and the story continued.
[Interestingly, this film and those two were all at least
produced by Steven Spielberg.]  Perhaps that is not realistic,
but it allows the audience to breathe a sigh of relief when it is
over.  FLAGS OF OUR FATHERS has its horrifying and intense scenes
peppered throughout the film and seems forever returning to show
us the carnage at unpleasantly close range.  The gunfire also was
very loud--at least in the theater I attended.  This is a darn
unpleasant film to watch.

When we are not on the battlefield we see how the government
exploited the so-called heroes and then essentially threw them
away, all the while using the famous image over and over for its
effect.  I certainly hope that some of the images Eastwood uses
have some basis in fact, like the serving of ice cream molded in
the shape of the image and then doused in blood-red strawberry
syrup.  If that was an invention for the film, it is an egregious
one.  In any case, I thought this film was 132 minutes of mostly
diatribe relieved by only one sequence in which we are told why
the War Bond Drive that exploited the flag-raisers was
desperately needed for the war effort.  The film also makes some
very valid points the maltreatment of Ira Hayes (played by Adam
Beach of WINDTALKERS) and Native Americans in general.

Director Clint Eastwood seems to go overboard in using a
stylistic color palette.  The film always uses muted colors.  In
the battle scenes they are muted all the way down to a near
monochrome.  Only objects to be emphasized appear in fuller
color.  This will usually be the flame of an explosion.  Even off
the battlefield, sets are under-lit, at times giving a film noir
effect.  Visually the effects strike me as manipulative and
perhaps a bit pretentious.  Scenes of the armada of the American
forces look as digital as I am sure they had to be.

FLAGS OF OUR FATHERS made many valid points.  I cannot fault it
on that.  But it just makes too much of a muckraking case too
well for too much screen time.  Less diatribe, less violence, a
more restrained color palette manipulation and this could have
been a good film.  It just overdoes everything that it does.  The
same case could have been made with a little more finesse and
style.  Stanley Kubrick's PATHS OF GLORY, for example, is just as
cynical and is more powerful.  This film makes its points in the
first five minutes and then just keeps repeating them with little
restraint.  I rate FLAGS OF OUR FATHERS a very disappointing 0 on
the -4 to +4 scale or 4/10.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: Technology and CATHOLICS (letter of comment by Joseph
T. Major)

In response to Mark's article on the mystique of 1950s science
fiction films in the 10/20/06 issue of the MT VOID, Joseph T.
Major writes:

Having movies reflect that science had changed the world was not
unprecedented.

In 1870, technology changed the world--the Prussian army
decisively defeated the French army.  It had been universally
accepted that the French had the best army in the world.
Certainly it was larger than its opponent's.

But the Prussian army was superior both in "hard" technology--its
rifles and artillery--and "soft" technology--staff coordination,
use of trains, and so on.

This created a realization that technology did matter.  So,
others started imagining how that might affect their world.
Colonel George Tomkyns Chesney of the Bengal Engineers wrote a
book about how those advances in technology might overcome
Britain's natural advantages: THE BATTLE OF DORKING (1871).  It
was one of the first of many "future war" books.

Chesney was punished for his impudence by being promoted,
eventually to full general, given several honours, capped by a
Knighthood of the Bath (K.C.B.), and was elected to Parliament in
1892.  [-jtm]

And in response to Evelyn's review of CATHOLICS in the same
issue, Joe writes, "I saw CATHOLICS when it was first shown.  As
I recall, the Catholic Church in the movie/book was considering a
merger with a Buddhist sect.  You couldn't do that these days."
[-jtm]

[You pretty much remember correctly, though whether it was an
actual merger or just joining with them in a sort of association
a la the United Nations was not clear.  I had the impression it
was more the latter, with the each remaining in charge of its
internal affairs, but an over-arching governing body also
exercising some control.  -ecl]

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TOPIC: This Week's Reading (book comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)

I just read MISS MARPLE: THE COMPLETE SHORT STORIES by Agatha
Christie (ISBN 0-425-09486-3).  I had probably read most, if not
all, of these before, but it had been a long time ago.  What
struck me most was how different the Miss Marple of the stories
was from how she has been portrayed on screen.  Margaret
Rutherford was completely different--too large, too athletic, and
so on.  But even the portrayal in the 1980s BBC series by Joan
Hickson is way off.  In "The Blue Germanium", Christie describes
Miss Marple thusly: "Mrs. Bantry ... fixed her gaze on the very
upright old lady sitting on her husband's right.  Miss Marple
wore black lace mittens; an old lace fichu was draped round her
shoulders and another piece of lace surmounted her white hair."
Hickson dresses in a much more modern fashion, and does not
ramble on about her knitting as much as she does in these
stories.  Admittedly, the latter characteristic does not appear
in the novels, where Miss Marple takes a much more active role.
The short stories, however, are entirely "thought exercises"--a
group of people sitting around trying to solve a mystery they
have been told.  And even Christie seems to acknowledge that the
image of Miss Marple has to be modified to allow her to be an
effective main character in a novel.  The Miss Marple of "The
Blue Germanium" could never do what is done by the Miss Marple of
(say) A MURDER IS ANNOUNCED.

THE UNEXPECTED GUEST by Agatha Christie and Charles Osborne (ISBN
0-312-97512-0) is not actually by Christie--it is by Osborne,
based on a play by Christie.  As such, it is much "thinner" than
most Christie novels, and the solution is actually fairly
predictable.  Because it started out as a play, it has a much
smaller cast of characters than the usual Christie novel, which in
turn makes solving the mystery a bit easier.  And because Osborne
does not flesh it out very much, it is only about 50,000 words
long--very short for a novel these days.

Our discussion group read NORTHANGER ABBEY by Jane Austen (ISBN
0-375-75917-4) this month.  Although the basic plot is very
similar to other Austen works, the style is not--it is a send-up
of all the conventions of the Gothic novel, and to some extent
those of her own novels.  For example, when our heroine s forced
to sit out a dance for lack of a partner, Austen writes:

"She could not help being vexed at the non-appearance of Mr.
Thorpe, for she not only longed to be dancing, but was likewise
aware that, as the real dignity of her situation could not be
known, she was sharing with the scores of other young ladies
still sitting down all the discredit of wanting a partner.  To be
disgraced in the eye of the world, to wear the appearance of
infamy while her heart is all purity, her actions all innocence,
and the misconduct of another the true source of her debasement,
is one of those circumstances which peculiarly belong to the
heroine's life, and her fortitude under it what particularly
dignifies her character."

The one question none of us could definitely answer was how
"Northanger" was supposed to be pronounced.  Is it "north-anger"
or "nor-thanjer" or what?

In preparation for the upcoming movie, I re-read THE PRESTIGE by
Christopher Priest (ISBN 0-312-85886-8).  The movie has many
changes from the novel, yet the basic structure and underpinnings
are kept intact.  What changes were made to the script were made
to tighten up the story (hence, for example, the elimination of
all but the first generation of Angiers and Bordens), or to make
it more visually understandable, or to add additional twists.
What is important to note is that in spite of the changes, the
film will not disappoint fans of the book.  I do not want to say
too much, because I want those unfamiliar with the book to go
into the movie fresh, so I will just say that I highly
recommend both.  [-ecl]

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

                                           Mark Leeper
                                           mleeper@optonline.net


            Impossible is a word only to be found
            in the dictionary of fools.
                                           -- Napoleon Bonaparte