THE MT VOID
Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
09/28/12 -- Vol. 31, No. 13, Whole Number 1721


Fred Flintstone: Mark Leeper, mleeper@optonline.net
Wilma Flintstone: Evelyn Leeper, eleeper@optonline.net
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Topics:
        Gimme That Old Time Politics (comments by Mark R. Leeper)
        Turner Classic Movies for Halloween Month (comments
                by Mark R. Leeper)
        Nice Little Problem (comments by Mark R. Leeper)
        THE ROAD TO THE STARS (comments by Mark R. Leeper)
                My Picks for Turner Classic Movies for October (comments
                by Mark R. Leeper)
        Lessons from Harry Potter (comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)
        ADVENTURES IN PLYMPTOONS (film review by Mark R. Leeper)
        SHADOWS IN FLIGHT by Orson Scott Card (book review
                by Joe Karpierz)
        Hugo for Best Dramatic Presentation, Short Form (letters
                of comment from Mike Glyer, Dan Kimmel,
                Gregory Benford, and Chris Garcia)
        Faster-Than-Light Travel (letter of comment
                by Gregory Benford)
        SUPER HERO PARTY CLOWN (letter of comment by Chris Garcia)
        This Week's Reading (MCSWEENEY'S ENCHANTED CHAMBER OF
                ASTONISHING STORIES, and COLD COMFORT FARM)
                (book comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)

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

TOPIC: Gimme That Old Time Politics (comments by Mark R. Leeper)

I have to admit it.  I am old enough that I remember when in
politics if you were called a "Nattering Nabob of Negativism" it
was considered to be a bad thing.  Now it seems to be a party-
loyalty requirement.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: Turner Classic Movies for Halloween Month (comments by Mark
R. Leeper)

I have made up a listing of all the myriad films of some fantasy
interest on Turner Classic Movies in October.  See it at
http://leepers.us/OctoberTCM.htm.  Also see my recommendations
for films to see on TCM in October in my editorial below.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: Nice Little Problem (comments by Mark R. Leeper)

This is a nice little problem (though if I could give you a diagram
it would be nicer.)

You have a square that is 13 units on a side (the sides are
horizontal and vertical).  At the top of it, pointing upward, you
construct a 5-12-13 triangle with the long side being upper
horizontal side of the square.  Similarly at the bottom, pointing
downward, you construct a 5-12-13 triangle with the long side being
the lower horizontal side of the square.  Do it so the whole figure
is symmetrical around the center point of the square.  You now have
a figure whose outer boundary is six-sided.  The sides that make up
the outer boundary are 5-12-13-5-12-13 in order.  The two points
furthest apart are the very highest and very lowest points of the
figure.  How far apart are they?

The usual rules apply.  I will publish a solution next week along
with the names of all the people who got the answer.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: THE ROAD TO THE STARS (comments by Mark R. Leeper)

In 1956 and 1957 the Soviets made a film showing how good Soviets
were going to go to the moon.  For the 50s they do fairly well by
the special effects.  A 25-minute excerpt shows the best special
effects of the film.  It can be found at
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mXt30Ing3Kk.  All the speaking and
narration is in Russian, but it is the visuals you would want to
see and those transcend the language barrier.

If you want to see the whole film (?), about 49 minutes long, it is
at http://www.youtube.com/watch?vixpSsOsnIA.  However, the
shorter version has all the interesting scenes.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: My Picks for Turner Classic Movies for October (comments by
Mark R. Leeper)

Well, it is again Halloween month on TCM, and there are a lot of
good horror and science fiction films that might be recommended.
But considering most readers of this column will have seen a fair
number of these films already there are not that many I am
recommending.  If you have not seen the 1931 FRANKENSTEIN, of
course by all means you should see it.  But you do not need me to
tell you that you should see it.  At one time Turner was able to
turn up a really obscure film or two.  Those have been mostly used
up.  These days there is not much Halloween fare on Turner that is
obscure and certainly little that is both obscure and
recommendable.  They do have one well-rated film that I admit is
new to me.  It is a 1947 French film directed by Maurice Tourneur
(father of the great Jacques Tourneur), CARNIVAL OF SINNERS listed
as fantasy and horror.  The story seems to be a variation on Robert
Louis Stevenson's "The Bottle Imp." (Monday, October 22, 2:15AM)

But with so much of the month being horror and science fiction,
there is less non-Halloween fare and so less recommendable.  All
times are Eastern Standard Time.  First let's look at two non-
Halloween films.

First up is THE FLIGHT OF THE PHOENIX (1965).  Sadly, I cannot tell
you why it is recommended.  What makes it a good film hangs on a
plot twist that you should not be expecting when you first see the
film.  Telling you why this adventure film is so interesting would
spoil some of the story for you.  I am honor-bound to say very
little about the plot but a ramshackle airplane flying over the
Sahara runs into a sandstorm.  There is little that veteran pilot
Frank Townes (Jimmy Stewart) and his co-pilot (Richard
Attenborough) can do but crash-land.  Some of the passengers are
killed immediately.  The rest have to figure how to stay alive
under the intense heat of the desert sun.  Though nobody wants to
admit it the chances of rescue are nil, and the hope of walking to
an oasis is nearly as small.  Then a little German engineer who was
a passenger comes up with a ridiculous and desperate plan for how
they might save themselves.  But even a tiny chance of survival is
better than just giving up and dying.  This is a strong and
suspenseful film with good characters.  It is based on a 1964 novel
by Elleston Trevor who, under another name, wrote the Quiller spy
novels. (Thursday, October 11 8PM)

I was asked once who are my heroes from cinema.  I think the guy
who asked me was expecting something like James Bond.  After a
little thought I said Thomas More from A MAN FOR ALL SEASONS (not
on TCM this month) and John Singer from THE HEART IS A LONELY
HUNTER (1968).  This on is on.  Alan Arkin in a rare dramatic role
plays a deaf mute who moves into a Southern town to be near a
hospitalized friend.  There he becomes involved in the lives of
several people he meets, especially young Mick Kelley (Sandra
Locke).  This film, somewhat along the lines of TO KILL A
MOCKINGBIRD, is based on a novel by Carson McCullers.  Arkin got an
Oscar nomination for his role.  There are good performances from
Percy Rodrigues, Cicely Tyson, and Stacey Keach.)  (Sunday, October
7, 2PM)

On to the Halloween films...

The father of all omnibus horror films--films composed of multiple
stories--is DEAD OF NIGHT (1945).  If you are a horror fan and have
not seen this film you are probably too late, but should see it
anyway.  Why are you too late?  Because this film has been
plundered for ideas that have been used in other films and in TV
shows.  There must be at least three episodes of Twilight Zone that
were inspired by DEAD OF NIGHT.  In the 1960s and 1970s Amicus
films made several omnibus films using DEAD OF NIGHT as a template.
I might add that they never had a wraparound story as good as DEAD
OF NIGHT's.  Counting the wraparound there are probably four good
horror stories.  (October 1, 1:30 AM)

Then there is TCM's experiment with LONDON AFTER MIDNIGHT (1927)
WITH Lon Chaney, Sr.  It is the probably the most celebrated lost
horror film.  The story may be familiar from the 1935 remake, MARK
OF THE VAMPIRE with Bela Lugosi in the Chaney role.  The film is
lost, but TCM was able to recreate it with all but the motion
component.  There are production stills are used to show the
action.  It does not really work, but it is the closest thing to
actually seeing the film.  No less an authority than Forrest
J. Ackerman has said that if the original film was ever found it
would be a disappointment to most of the fans.  He did not think it
was particularly good.  Its high interest value stems from it being
unobtainable.  But it is interesting to see what was made.
(October 31, 6:30AM)

I would claim that Hammer Films' best horror film is QUATERMASS AND
THE PIT (if you count their science fiction films).  The second
best has to be THE DEVIL'S BRIDE (1968).  The European title is THE
DEVIL RIDES OUT, which is also the title of the Dennis Wheatley
novel on which it is fairly faithfully based, thanks to a very good
script by Richard Matheson.  It was made at a time when horror
films with black magic took most of their screen time just
establishing that evil magic is real.  Think ROSEMARY'S BABY, CURSE
OF THE DEMON, or THE DEVIL'S OWN.  THE DEVIL'S BRIDE wastes little
time establishing that there is Black Magic and then takes the
viewer on a wild and complex ride through the world of Black Magic
and devils.  The resulting story is complex and satisfying.
(October 18 at 2:15 AM)

Enjoy Halloween month on Turner Classic Movies.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: Lessons from Harry Potter (comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)

There are some good lessons in the "Harry Potter" books (and
movies), but there are also some that you may not feel should be
presented to young readers:

- Bloodlines are everything.  Harry Potter is worthy of respect
bordering on worship from the very beginning because of his
bloodline, not because of anything he has ever done himself.  This
has traditionally been the English attitude towards questions of
class, so it is not entirely surprising, but it is distressing.

- Some children are irredeemably evil even from age 11 (or
possibly earlier).  The school apparently does nothing to try to
control them.  Indeed, for some reason the school puts them all
together and lets them run wild

- Sports are very important.  No, sports are ridiculously important,
even to the extent of having a multi-school competition in which
the participants (and some observers!) are placed in deadly peril.

- Everyone celebrates Christmas.  While the students appear racially
diverse, they are apparently all nominally Christian, since they
wish each other "Happy Christmas".  (Admittedly they probably are
closer to Wiccans than anything else, but why "Christmas" rather
than "Yule"?)

- In competitions, if your side loses on points, it is okay for the
supposedly impartial judges to randomly assign more points (i.e.,
change the rules after the game is over) so that your side wins.
(No wonder Slytherin hates everyone else--they all cheat and
conspire if Slytherin would actually win anything.)  I see this in
many masquerades, when there appear to be categories created for
the sole purpose of giving someone a prize (e.g., "Best Use of
Chewing Gum Foil").

- Girls have to be good-looking to count for anything.  If there is
an unattractive girl, she is there for comic relief or as a villain
(or possibly an early victim).  Boys apparently do not have to be
good-looking, though,  (This is more true of the movies than the
books.)

- If a boy is the victim of a love potion, it has to be counteracted
immediately.  If a girl is the victim, though, she can be left to
just suffer from the effects.  [-ecl]

[Hogwarts is distressingly as unfair as the real world -mrl]

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

TOPIC: ADVENTURES IN PLYMPTOONS (film review by Mark R. Leeper)

CAPSULE:  Many animators make films that give the impression that
anything could happen.  But Bill Plympton's cartoons (a.k.a.
Plymptoons) make that what-could-happen the anythingest.  Bill
Plympton makes reality-pulverizing animated films.  His friends,
his peers, and some celebrities delve into Plympton's life and his
art in this documentary study of the life and art of Bill Plympton.
Rating: high +1 (-4 to +4) or 6/10

I started trying to characterize Bill Plympton by arguing with
myself how to describe him.  I was going to characterize him just
saying he was "anarchic."  Well, taken literally that means wanting
to escape the restrictions of government.  But Plympton's cartoons
are not at all political.  Really what I meant was that he was
escaping the usual self-imposed restrictions of the animated film
medium.  But there are many cartoonists who do that.  Well, perhaps
what he is refusing is the physical reality of the world.  But when
the Coyote runs off a cliff and does not fall for several seconds
that is counter to reality too.  But clearly when a Plymptoon has
the individual features of a face run around the head like
cockroaches on a kitchen floor and then the head just pops off,
this is a profoundly deeper form of anarchy.  (Actually that film,
"Your Face", earned him the first of his two Oscar nominations.)
Plympton attacks our assumptions that nobody even realized were
assumptions.

ADVENTURES IN PLYMPTOONS is not just a collection of Plymptoons
(his animations), though we do see plenty of them.  It is an
anarchic study of who this fellow Bill Plympton is.  ADVENTURES IN
PLYMPTOONS tells the history of who he is going back to his getting
into trouble for the salacious campaign posters he created for his
high school student body President campaign. (Okay, there he was
political.  Just not very.)

In interviews friends and celebrities talk about Plympton's past
and his creations.  The celebrities (like Keith Carradine, Ed
Begley Jr., Terry Gilliam, Matthew Modine, and Al Yankovic) are
there too frequently only for attempted humor.  Peers (like Ralph
Bakshi) and friends have more interesting things to say.  The
interviews are illustrated with classic Plympton cartoons and home
movies.

Plympton is the dean of independent animation and we hear in the
interviews how that was not his plan.  He had hoped to be hired by
Disney Studios and would work for the giant (or is it the Mouse?).
His plans went badly askew when he got a million-dollar offer from
Disney.  Suddenly he found that he did not want to give up his
independence and have someone else telling him what to do.  So with
mixed emotions he remained an independent filmmaker.

Plympton, we are told, hand-makes his cartoons, and they look it.
His usual technique is to draw each frame without aid of computer.
Still, we hear he is fast both in getting his ideas and in
implementing them in realized animated films.

Like the Plymptoons themselves, this documentary directed by Alexia
Anastasio is uneven, slightly out of balance, made on the cheap
side, and has some rough edges to show for it.  But the material is
definitely compelling.

The film has ample examples of the anarchic ideas of Plympton.  One
of his "Guard Dog" animations has the title beast deciding that a
squirrel has homicidal intentions toward the dog's unsuspecting
master.  That cute exterior and fluffy tail hides the mind of a
pure evil genius and an arsenal of unsuspected weapons.  Here at
last is an explanation if why dogs bark at squirrels.  We can see
what is going on in the crazy mind of the squirrel.  Or more
accurately we can see what is going on in the crazy mind of man
with a unique genius for bringing impossible ideas out from his
subconscious and onto the theater screen.  I rate ADVENTURES IN
PLYMPTOONS a high +1 on the -4 to +4 scale or 6/10.  The film came
out on DVD on September 25 from Cinema Libre.

Film Credits: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1691448/

What others are saying:
http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/adventures_in_plymptoons/

[-mrl]

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

TOPIC: SHADOWS IN FLIGHT by Orson Scott Card (copyright 2011, Tor,
$21.99, 237pp, ISBN 978-0-7635-3200-4) (book review by Joe
Karpierz)

So, in preparation for this review I went back and read my review
of the last Ender "Shadow" book, SHADOW OF THE GIANT, to see what I
had written there.  I had some vague recollection of things I'd
said, but here are a couple of relevant excerpts:

"It appears that with this book Card finally brings the Shadow
series of books to a close, but not without an escape hatch for
more books in the Ender universe if he wants to write them.  Quite
frankly, as nicely as this thing finished up, I think it's time to
put Ender and his friends to rest and move on to other things."

"Again, it doesn't have to be over.  Readers will see for
themselves what the escape hatch is, and realize that there's a
whole bunch more that can be written.  But no more Ender books
should be written.  It should end right here, while I'm still
feeling good about it, and before the series is cheapened even
more."

And, more than *seven* years later--that review was indeed written
in August of 2005--I feel the same way.  This book should never
have been written, the series has been cheapened, and Ender and his
friends should *still* be put to bed.

Ah yes, that escape hatch.  Card used it.  Bean, known as the
Giant, and three of his children with Petra that have had Anton's
Key turned--Ender (yes, named in honor of Bean's friend), Carlotta,
and Sergeant--left Earth travelling at relativistic speeds in an
effort to allow scientists back on home to find a cure for the
malady which has them super intelligent, but also inflicts them
with gigantism so they die in their twenties because their bodies
are too big for their hearts to support.  The story opens with Bean
laying in the cargo hold of the Herodotus because he's too big to
be able to stand up and walk around.  Ender continues research into
finding a way to reverse Anton's Key, Carlotta cares for the
hydroponics and other things in an effort to keep them all alive,
and Sergeant studies the ship, weapons, and war. A meeting of the
three is called by Sergeant, and the three of them gather in place
in the ship where Bean cannot monitor them.  Sergeant proposes that
since Bean is near death, and he's using up valuable resources,
they should kill Bean. Up until this point, Sergeant has been the
bully, with Carlotta siding with him and Ender just giving in.  But
not this time.  Ender breaks Sergeant's nose, and just like that
the balance of power has turned.

The other goal of the mission is to find a planet where the three
of them can live, and one is coming right up, but it's already got
visitors.  It turns out that the ship is a Formic vessel, and now
the crew of the Herodotus has to decide what to do about this.
Eventually they get around to deciding that the Formic ship must be
investigated and boarded.  Finally, our heroes (as it were) make
contact with the occupants of the ship, and the final scenes come
about as a result of that contact.

I really don't know that there's much to say about this book.  I'm
not quite sure why Card took the time to write it.  There is a lot
of talking--a whole lot--discussing family dynamics, the Formics,
war, science, Anton's Key, and more.  But nothing much *actually
happens*.  Oh, there is a sort of big event near the end, but I'm
not sure that it's not forced.  Maybe it's not.

My understanding is that this is the first half of yet another book
that was broken into two because it was too big.  This book is
small enough, and not enough happens, that I'm betting both halves
of the book could have been published together as one book and it
would have been just fine.

Go back and look at the paragraphs from my previous review.  The
statements still stand. I feel like I'm reading another version of
DUNE, where the author(s) won't give up; instead, they keep
grinding out more novels, presumably for more money.  This needs to
stop now.  It really does.  [-jak]

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

TOPIC: Hugo for Best Dramatic Presentation, Short Form (letters of
comment from Mike Glyer, Dan Kimmel, Gregory Benford, and Chris
Garcia)

In response to Dale Skran's article on the Hugo for Best Dramatic
Presentation, Short Form, in the 09/21/12 issue of the MT VOID,
Mike Glyer writes:

Loved the guest editorial about the Dramatic Hugo and Mark's reply.
[-mg]

Mike also reported on it in his zine (FILE 770) and asked for
comments there; the URL is http://file770.com/?p283.

Dan Kimmel writes:

I'm with Dale.  I was involved in some of the discussions at the
time of the split in the dramatic category (although not on the
committee that actually formulated it).  To me it was obvious: best
film and best TV series.  However dealing with SMOFs is like
herding cats.  They are easily distracted and will go their own
way.  The fear was that some play or radio broadcast would be the
best science fiction of the year and could not be nominated in
either category.  Therefore it was turned into "Dramatic Work, Long
Form" and "Dramatic Work, Short Form."  For all the rules on time
to determine whether something is "long" or "short," they have been
applied haphazardly.  A short feature length film went into "long
form" even though its running time should have indicated otherwise.
And we have the complete failure of the short form category by
turning it into "best Doctor Who episode."

I'm not a "Doctor Who" fan but I have nothing against the show and
have many friends who enjoy it.  However like Dale I refuse to
believe it is the best science fiction on television year after
year after year.  By changing the category to best TV series,
"Doctor Who" would have to compete with other shows, not simply
take over the category.  Perhaps the short form category should be
split into "best series" and "best episode."

As for other categories like  "best related work," I'll keep
my feelings to myself.  I did, after all, get the nominee's lapel
pin. :-)  [-dk]

Gregory Benford writes:

Good comments on DR WHO winning so much.  Alas, this is just
another example of how the Hugo, once the best award in SF, maybe
next to the Nebulas, has eroded until it is a sorry sight.  Both
awards have been gangbanged by groups so much, they lost in the
1980s any commercial clout in publishing.  Now they've done that in
the lesser, non-print awards.  When a "Harry Potter" novel wins the
Hugo, you're in trouble.  When gang voting confers honors, there is
little honor.  Fantasy wins most supposedly SF awards now.  Best
not to look that way...  [-gb]

Mark replies:

I agree with you and Dale on the Hugos, but as I said I do not
think the we should think of the Hugos as the ultimate tool for
choosing the best piece of science fiction.  All polls are
popularity polls by definition.  [-mrl]

And Chris Garcia writes:

I'll confess, I don't read MT VOID as often as I should. Every time
I'm reminded, often by notes on File 770, I'll hop over and go "You
know, I should read it more often."

And, of course, I seldom do...

Enough! On to comments on Contents.

As a guy who lost to DOCTOR WHO this year, I don't mind the
dominance.  I do mind that excellent short films such as "The
Fabulous Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore" (2012 Oscar winner
and a film I programmed for Cinequest which I believe was it's
festival debut), "Time Freak" and "The Tragorical Historie of
Guidolon: The Giant Space Chicken" all failed to make the ballot
over the years.  Maybe it's just that I see a lot more shorts than
most folks because I programme with Cinequest, but it's sad that
it's so difficult to get one on the ballot.  I did enjoy "F**k Me,
Ray Bradbury" on the ballot, but still, it would have been nice to
see s a great short on the ballot.  Of course, if we had declined
the nomination for the "Drink Tank's Hugo Acceptance", "The
Fabulous Flying Books" would have been on the ballot, so mea culpa.

I will argue that with the exception of TORCHWOOD season 2 and
LOST's final season, none of those listen shows produced an episode
that was better than the episodes of DOCTOR WHO that got on the
ballot (with the possible exception of "A Good Man Goes to War",
which I thought was very weak).  Now, COMMUNITY has had two
episodes that should have been on the ballot, and one of them ended
up on the ballot ("Remedial Chaos Theory") and one that
didn't even come close ("Basic Epidemiology").  Either of those
were better than any of the DOCTOR WHO episodes nominated in the
last three years.  I don't understand the aversion towards great SF
that happens in non-SF shows for Hugos.  Meh.

Good stuff. I should be reading more often...  [-cg]

Mark replies:

Thank you for the kind words about the VOID, but there is no
"should" about reading the VOID.

Readers can find "The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore
(2011)" at:
     http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LBz6PZXsyIU
"Guidolon: The Giant Space Chicken (Director's Cut) at:
     http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MteAVvr_wrU
and "F*** Me, Ray Bradbury" at:
     http://www.youtube.com/watch?váIxOS4VzKM

The problem is that a lot of good short films are unavailable or
unknown.  As for unavailable the system is a lot better now than it
was years ago.  Of the four nominees you mention, three of them I
can give links to on YouTube.  It may have been possible in time
for nominations but people did not know to look for them.  That is
where reviewers can help.  I try to let people know what I think is
or is not good and, if possible, where to find it.  And there the
situation is getting better because more current videos are
available to people than ever before because they are going up on
YouTube and Vimeo.

But as I said in my comment, the Hugo is intended to choose the
work with the best potential to please the audience, but of
necessity it chooses instead the work that actually has achieved
already pleasing the greatest number of voters.  That is an
important distinction.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: Faster-Than-Light Travel (letter of comment by Gregory
Benford)

In response to Mark's comments on faster-than-light travel in the
09/21/12 issue of the MT VOID, Gregory Benford writes:

Many relativity theorists don't take seriously the entire field
theory constructs on which the experiment you mention are based;
they're mathematically unstable solutions, i.e., not even plausible
equilibria. I predict the experiments will fail.

I always read MT VOID, recalling my own VOID of lo! over half a
century ago...  [-gb]

Mark responds:

As for the physics and mathematics comment--I assume this is about
the possibility of faster-than-light travel; sure, I think that
this will not pan out.  It is unlikely that that this will turn out
to make FTL travel possible.  Mathematics makes some predictions
about physics, but the real world may not fit those predictions.
When I think of mathematical predictions that turn out to be untrue
I think of a waffle maker.  You take the waffle iron and pour some
batter onto it and it cooks your waffle.  The batter I pour may or
may not go all the way to the boundary on the waffle grid.  If it
does go out that far, I can mathematically predict just exactly
where the waffle will have the little square holes.  But the batter
may or may not have cooperated and slopped out that far.  Similarly
the matter in the universe may or may not have slopped over into
creating tachyons, for example.  But if there are tachyons, we can
mathematically predict how they will behave.  The universe is built
on a grid of mathematics, but it does not fill up the grid.  [-mrl]

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

TOPIC: SUPER HERO PARTY CLOWN (letter of comment by Chris Garcia)

In response to Mark's review of SUPER HERO PARTY CLOWN in the
09/21/12 issue of the MT VOID, Chris Garcia writes:

SUPER HERO PARTY CLOWN first showed at Cinequest this year!  I
watched a bit of it, didn't enjoy it much, and as I had another
movie to watch, I left after twenty minutes or so.  It wasn't
strictly me walking out of a movie, I was waiting for another film
and when you've got a full access pass, sometimes you'll catch only
a few minutes of a flick while waiting and if it catches you, you
stick around.  [-cg]

Mark responds:

Your assessment is right on the money as far as I am concerned.  I
got the pleasure of seeing the film before most people did being
able to tell people about it.  In this case it was to warn people
that it was not very interesting in spite of the "Super Hero" in
the title.  [-mrl]

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

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

MCSWEENEY'S ENCHANTED CHAMBER OF ASTONISHING STORIES edited by
Michael Chabon (ISBN 978-1-4000-7874-5) is a follow-on to
MCSWEENEY'S MAMMOTH TREASURY OF THRILLING TALES.  The cover is from
FANTASTIC NOVELS magazine, January 1949, in keeping with the retro
idea.  But the stories are by current authors, few of whom were
even alive in 1949.  I must be out of touch, because they have
names on the front cover that I have never heard of (David
Mitchell, Heidi Julavits, and Roddy Doyle) while leaving off better-
known authors (Margaret Atwood, Poppy Z. Brite, Jonathan Lethem,
and China Mieville).  The stories themselves are fantasy (including
dark fantasy, or horror), not science fiction.  I cannot say that I
loved every story, but as with the magazines it is patterned after,
it has enough to satisfy to make it worthwhile.

COLD COMFORT FARM by Stella Gibbons (ISBN 978-0-241-95151-4) is of
a sub-genre I might call "You can't believe everything you read--or
can you?"  It also includes such works as NORTHANGER ABBEY by Jane
Austen and MERTON OF THE MOVIES by Harry Leon Wilson.  In COLD
COMFORT FARM, Flora has formed her opinions of rural English life
based on popular novels of the time.  So she is convinced that her
cousin Judith will have a husband "who is almost certain to be
called Amos" and sons named Seth and Reuben, because "highly sexed
young men living on farms are always called Seth or Reuben."  And
in all these ridiculous suppositions she turns out to be correct.
There is also an itinerant preacher cousin, a crazy aunt, and a
variety of bizarre locals.  Flora finds none of this at all odd--in
fact, she would find it odd were it otherwise.

In this COLD COMFORT FARM differs somewhat from NORTHANGER ABBEY,
in which Catherine Morland keeps expecting something like what she
reads in novels (in her case Gothic thrillers).  When she discovers
an old locked chest, she forces the lock expecting to find an old
will or other valuable documents.  Instead, she finds a discarded
laundry list instead.  And in MERTON OF THE MOVIES, the situation
is that Merton Gill thinks everything he has read about movie stars
is true, and everything he sees on screen is done with no tricks.
The difference is that Catherine and Merton are humorous because
they are wrong in what they expect, while Flora is spot on.

There is some question as to when COLD COMFORT FARM takes place.
At the beginning we hear that Flora's parents died of the "annual
epidemic of influenza or Spanish plague," and although they say
"annual" we can't help but think that this takes place shortly
after the 1918-1919 epidemic, and indeed the technology seems
accurate to that or maybe a few years later--cars, private
airplanes of the sort flown by King Westley in IT HAPPENED ONE
NIGHT or in early Agatha Christie novels.  But towards the end
someone refers to the "Anglo-Nicaraguan wars of '46" and we realize
that this is actually a science fiction novel, set twenty years in
the future from when Gibbons wrote it (1932).  As such, it does a
fairly abysmal job of predicting the future--though if you miss
predicting World War II, it is a good bet your other predictions
will be off base as well.

(There is apparently an abridged version of COLD COMFORT FARM
published by BN Publishing floating around--avoid it at all
costs!)  [-ecl]

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

                                           Mark Leeper
mleeper@optonline.net


           The social sciences, I thought, needed the same kind
           of rigor and the same mathematical underpinnings that
           had made the "hard" sciences so brilliantly successful.
                                           --Herbert Simon