THE MT VOID
Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
01/12/18 -- Vol. 36, No. 28, Whole Number 1997
Co-Editor: Mark Leeper, mleeper@optonline.net
Co-Editor: Evelyn Leeper, eleeper@optonline.net
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Topics:
Noise
on the Line (comments by Mark R. Leeper)
Mini
Reviews, Part 2: THE DINNER, VICTORIA & ABDUL,
and
DARKEST HOUR (comment by Mark R. Leeper)
NEW
YORK 2140 by Kim Stanley Robinson (audiobook review
by
Joe Karpierz)
ABE
& PHIL'S LAST POKER GAME (film review by Mark R. Leeper)
CRAZY
FAMOUS (film review by Mark R. Leeper)
THE
GIFTED (television review by Dale Skran)
The
Traveling Money (letters of comment by David Goldfarb
and
Dorothy J. Heydt)
The
NFA, Top Ten Films of 2017, and ORPHAN BLACK (letter
of
comment by John Purcell)
This
Week's Reading (LETTERS ON LITERATURE AND POLITICS
1912-1972)
(book comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)
===================================================================
TOPIC: Noise on the Line (comments by
Mark R. Leeper)
We are now finding out how much
Abraham Lincoln relied on the
telegraph getting his news of the
Civil War just as the battle was
occurring. But he said that he never understood why
Grant's
dispatches always ended with the same
nonsense string of characters
colon-minus-close_parenthesis. [-mrl]
===================================================================
TOPIC: Mini Reviews, Part 2 (comment
by Mark R. Leeper)
In my last mini-review column I
explained why I get to see films
submitted to the On-line Film Critic
Society for award
consideration. Some of these films will show up at in
popular film
theaters, some in art houses, maybe
some on Amazon Prime or
NetFlix. But frequently nobody yet knows where and
when the movies
will become available. Getting a film reviewed is part of the
process of selling the film to a
distributor. It is like getting
inspected a house you intend to buy.
But at least these reviews
will give my impressions. Each film below is rated on my -4 to +4
scale.
THE DINNER
Two wealthy couples have a very
luxurious dinner while they discuss
their family's problems. Their problems involve mental illness,
but it takes a while to get
specifics. They want to decide what
should their reaction be after a boy
from each immediate family was
involve in a terrible incident. The viewer does not know what the
incident was an it takes a long time
before the viewer gets enough
clues to realize who is who and what
has happened. Stan Lohman
(Richard Gere) is running for
Governor of his state and he tries to
be the leader of the two
families. He is continually stymied by
his cynical and annoying younger
brother Paul (Steve Coogan). THE
DINNER really has a powerhouse cast
including Laura Linney, Rebecca
Hall, and Chloe Sevigny. The film is intentionally confusing as
the audience finds out bit by bit
what had happened. The
characters keep being interrupted,
stretching the film out to a
full to hours. Coogan is good for his role, but listening to
his
rants may be the most painful thing
the viewer will do all day. To
some degree the narrative is
stretched by documentary footage about
the Battle of Gettysburg. (Paul is a history teacher planning to
write a book about the battle.) Oren Moverman, who directs from a
script he based on the novel by
Herman Koch, could have asked his
actors to enunciate more
clearly. The film also uses overlapping
dialog, further obfuscating some of
the speeches. This is a film
requiring some patience, but if one
waits long enough she or he
will be pulled into the moral can of
worms the families face. Then
again, he or she may be seduced by to
descriptions and images of
the marvelous food. This film is available from either of the
NetFlix services. Rating: low +1
VICTORIA & ABDUL
This film is based on a true story
that pitted xenophobia against
xenophilia in the household of Queen
Vitoria. Abdul is a Muslim
living in Agra almost in the shadow
of the Taj Mahal. He is chosen
to take part in a ceremony of the
gratitude of the Indian people
for the Queen. As a foreigner Abdul is bewildered by the
absurd
etiquette required of people dealing
with the Queen. However,
Victoria notices the tall, handsome
Abdul and she chooses to get to
know him. Each develops confidence in the other, and
the two open
up to each other. Abdul's self-taught erudition impresses the
Queen and they begin to spend more
time together. The very elderly
Victoria begins act years younger and
to feel more alive. The
household sees no profit in having
Victoria befriending Indians,
whom they feel are an inferior
people. The court does what they
can to break up the friendship. Victoria is fascinated by foreign
customs and remains loyal to
Abdul. Stephen Frears directs from a
rather pat screenplay written by Lee
Hall based on a book by
Shrabani Basu. The film is above average, but is too
obviously
moralizing polemic, preaching only to
people already convinced. A
little more subtlety and complexity
to the story would have made it
a better film. It is good to see Dame Judi Dench still
present and
acting. Apparently she cannot study printed scripts
and when she
performs she must have her lines read
to her with a Miracle Ear.
But it works and her performances do
not seem to suffer. Rating:
high +1
DARKEST HOUR
I have to say that I like history
films that recreate some historic
decision and all the arguing that
came before the decision. We
have had films like LINCOLN and
SPOTLIGHT not long ago. This year
we have Steven Spielberg's THE POST,
Christopher Nolan's DUNKIRK,
and Joe Wright's DARKEST HOUR. The latter is about Winston
Churchill. Britain has been pulled into the European war
somewhat
before it was ready. The whole British army is on the beaches of
Calais and Dunkirk surrounded by the
German army where the Germans
are picking it off the British Army
at their own pace. Once the
German army gets around to it, it
will drive the English into the
channel. The situation is catastrophic. Churchill arranges the
Dunkirk evacuation. Now Chamberlain and Halifax want to take up
Mussolini's offer to mediate between
Hitler and Churchill on a
possible peace. Of course today we have a good idea how
faithful
Hitler might have been to any treaty
with Britain. Joe Wright
directs with Gary Oldman playing
Winston Churchill. The result of
Oldman made up to look like Winston
really does not look like
either. Rating: +2
[-mrl]
===================================================================
TOPIC: NEW YORK 2140 by Kim Stanley
Robinson (copyright 2017 Orbit,
2017 Hachette Audio, 624pp, 22 hours
34 minutes, ISBN-10:
0316262315, ISBN-13: 978-0316262316,
ASIN: B01NAM793D, narrated by
Suzanne Toren, Robin Miles, Peter
Ganim, Jay Snider, Caitlin Kelly,
Michael Crouch, and Ryan Vincent
Anderson) (audiobook review by Joe
Karpierz)
After I read Kim Stanley Robinson's
Mars Trilogy what seems a half
a lifetime ago, I didn't read a novel
by him until 2312. I did try
to read THE YEARS OF RICE AND SALT,
but after 80 or so pages I
couldn't go one any further and put
it down, never to pick it up
again. I returned to Robinson's work with 2312 and
AURORA,
skipping SHAMAN, which was not my cup
of tea. I eyed NEW YORK 2140
with a sideways glance. I wasn't sure that I wanted to read it,
thinking that once again it might not
be for me, but man did it
sound interesting. The deal was sealed when Robinson appeared on
The Coode Street podcast; his
descriptions of the book and how he
went about researching it and putting
it together were enough to
get me to pick it up and give it a try.
NEW YORK 2140 is not a novel in the
usual sense. There is no real
plot, although there are several
events that are strung through the
book that actually do have a
beginning, middle, and end. There are
also characters that the reader
follows from the beginning of the
novel to the end of the novel, and
their lives do intersect because
those previously mentioned events do
intersect and overlap. And
there is conflict, but not the sort
of conflict a reader is used to
seeing in a novel that is structured
in a typical fashion. Even
the title is a bit misleading, as the
novel starts in 2140 but ends
a few years later after the events
that are recounted within are
complete. What NEW YORK 2140 does provide, as does
2312, is a
snapshot, a snapshot of a few
characters within one of the largest
and most well-known cities in the
world as they--and the city--go
about their daily lives.
You'd be right to ask, "Why
should I care about New York in 2140?".
Well, it's under 50 feet of water. To be fair, not all of it is
under 50 feet of water, but most of
it is. In fact, the book
itself answers the question of why
you should care about New York
instead of any of the other coastal
cities that are under water.
Back to this in a bit.
Or maybe not. It's really a difficult novel to describe.
Structurally, the novel is broken
into parts, and each part has
subsections that follow individual
characters--or, in two cases, a
couple of characters. There is also an additional subsection for a
character called "The
Citizen". Robinson is famously
known for
liberally sprinkling infodumps
throughout his books, and NEW YORK
2140 is no exception. While infodumps are spread everywhere
throughout the book--and I'll have to
say I didn't mind them in the
least, as they were in my opinion
well done, informative, and
entertaining--the best of the lot
come in the sections featuring
The Citizen. It is in these sections that the reader
learns about
the two events--The First Pulse and
The Second Pulse--that put NYC
and the other coastal cities under
water. What's more, we learned
how the Pulses came about in wondrous
detail that should, but
won't, convince any climate change
denier that we have really
screwed up this planet and we'd
better do something about it
yesterday. The Citizen doesn't just tell us about how
NYC got to
be in the state it's in ecologically,
he tells us about finance as
well, how the Pulses affected the
global economy, and how current
(to the novel) solutions to the
problem are no different than what
was done in the past. It's very clear throughout the book that
Robinson has done his research. As a
side note, and in bits that
most readers may not enjoy but I
found amusing, The Citizen, a
snarky resident of NYC, refers to the
text of the book itself,
letting his audience know that he
knows what he's saying is being
read, and is giving those same
readers permission to skip these
sections if they want to, while at
the same time letting them know
that they're going to be ignorant of
many facts if they skim
through his parts.
The thing that is fresh about this
novel is that while it is a
post-disaster novel, it doesn't dwell
on the disaster (or in this
case disasters). The point is not the disasters--the point is
how
a subsection of society deals with
the nasty hand it's been dealt.
Robinson also lets us know that it
really is all about money. Yes,
there is climate change which will
lead to disaster. But money,
really, makes the world go
around. Nearly all of the characters
have either something to do with
finance or are affected by those
that have something to do with
finance. A major plot (there's that
word here) point involves how to
manipulate the global economy in
the aftermath of a hurricane that
hits New York.
The characters here are
secondary. I don't think Robinson means
for the reader to be enamored of
these characters at all. I don't
think there's any character that
grabbed me by the scruff of the
neck and made me pay attention to him
or her--although I did feel
sorry for the two kids that
continually did stupid things and got
into trouble for them. This, like 2312, is a story about ideas,
but ideas based in reality, ideas
that we could find becoming a
reality if we're not careful.
Back to one point I made earlier,
about why we should care about
New York and not any other coastal
city. Don't skip The Citizen
sections. And don't skip any of the rest of the
sections either.
They're too good to pass up.
This is the first audiobook I've
listened to that has more than a
couple of narrators. There are seven of them, and they are all
wonderful. While I haven't taken the time to learn which
narrators
performed which sections (although
it's a safe bet that the female
narrators did the sections centering
on the females, and the same
with the males of course), I'm really
partial to the guy that
performed The Citizen. This was a great cast performing a great
book.
[-jak]
==================================================================
TOPIC: ABE & PHIL'S LAST POKER
GAME (film review by Mark
R. Leeper)
CAPSULE: Abe Mandlebaum (Martin
Landau) has moved with his wife to
a senior living center. He becomes friends with another resident,
Phil.
The two compete to win the affections of a nurse to whom
they are attracted and another nurse
long ago orphaned who has
unfinished business with the
past. The script intertwines two
plots, one a moving drama on aging
and one a sort of geriatric sex
comedy. The film has its moments, but is it the film
Martin Landau
deserved as his farewell
performance? Howard Weiner directs from
his own screenplay. Rating: low +2 (-4 to +4) or 7/10
It should be remembered that barring
other films waiting to be
released, this will probably be the
final film of a great actor.
Martin Landau died last July 15 (at
age 89). He had a long and
impressive career. In 1959 he played a (probably) gay henchman
of
a master spy played by James Mason in
NORTH BY NORTHWEST. He
played the central character in Woody
Allen's best film (in my
opinion), CRIMES AND
MISDEMEANORS. He played Bela Lugosi in
ED
WOOD.
Now his final film is ABE & PHIL'S LAST POKER GAME.
As the film opens, Dr. Abe Mandlebaum
(Martin Landau), is leaving
his last home, and going to live in a
senior living center to be
near his wife Molly who suffers from
dementia. Abe knows the move
is necessary, but it is a blow to his
dignity to be forced to live
with other elderly people. He grasps at shreds of his self-esteem
by correcting anyone who calls him
"Mister" and insists he be
called "Doctor."
Soon Abe meets Phil (Paul Sorvino,
aged 78), who brags about the
large number of women he has slept
with. The two discuss at length
their sex lives and how much they
hate their current dysfunction.
The film takes on some of the aspects
of a teen-age sex comedy.
They are both befriend a nurse, new
to the center, who it turns out
has a hidden agenda. The two balance these youthful urges against
their acceptance of aging and the
inevitability of death. Abe
compromises his dignity and talks on
Phil's level about his
attempts to rekindle the dying flame
of sexuality.
The story has vulgarities that seems
unlike Landau's usual screen
persona. On the other hand, we get very few movies
about the aged
living out the last chapters, or
perhaps paragraphs, of their
lives. The subject of they elderly is rarely treated
in films,
much less if the subject is elder
sexuality. The treatment of
either sex or death and the elderly
is not a topic likely to
attract a wide audience.
Are Abe's and Phil's observations on
sex and death credible? They
seem to be. But ask me again in twenty years and I will
have a
better idea. Currently I rate ABE & PHIL'S LAST POKER
GAME a low
+2 on the -4 to +4 scale or
7/10. The film will have a limited
release beginning January 12.
Film Credits:
<http://www.imdb.com/title/tt5175636/reference>
What others are saying:
<https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/abe_and_phils_last_poker_game>
[-mrl]
==================================================================
TOPIC: CRAZY FAMOUS (film review by
Mark R. Leeper)
CAPSULE: Bob Marcus believes that a
life lived in obscurity is not
worth living. Bob's goal in life is simple. He wants his name to
be a household word. He tries a stunt that is calculated to make
news reported all across the
nation. All he succeeds in doing is
having himself committed to a mental
facility. There he finds his
fellow detainees are real screwballs
but he also finds a new chance
to become famous. This is a low-budget comedy with screwball
characters, something rarely seen in
such an economical film.
Rating: +1 (-4 to +4) or 6/10
Electronic media have changed the
world so that people can become
celebrities in hours. This also means that fame-seekers who want
to draw attention can do so in
minutes. The social networks allow
people who want to attract attention
a venue to broadcast their
questionable views. Our main character has his own quest for
fame.
But that is not really all this film
is all about.
Gregory Lay plays Bob Marcus, the man
who would be famous. As the
film starts he is executing a plan,
with the aid of a trampoline,
to jump the fence into the
President's Camp David retreat. Won't
that make him famous? No, it just gets him committed to a mental
facility. Perhaps this fame stuff is elusive. The patients seem
just a little more rational than the
patients in ONE FLEW OVER THE
CUCKOO'S NEST. Bob is one of four patients who form a little
(just
a little) dysfunctional group. Yes, the main character has a mania
to become famous, but that mania will
put him with three other
eccentric friends on a quest with
startling results. The jokes are
a bit hit or miss, but it is limited
by the budget of the film.
Not many films could deliver this
much humor on this small a
budget.
None of this could be confused with
any sort of realistic portrayal
of real mental derangement, but
people who are deranged are one of
the last minorities whom it is
acceptable to lampoon. Some of the
humorous bits really are humorous
bits and if there are not enough
it is at least in part because the
film runs a brief 78 minutes.
There are moments that are reminiscent
of Arthur Hiller's THE IN-
LAWS.
The film would be better with more such moments, but I will
take what I can get.
The film feels a bit incomplete and
imperfect, but it is a first
feature film written by Bob
Farcas. The director is Paul Jarrett.
I rate CRAZY FAMOUS +1 on the -4 to
+4 scale or 6/10. CRAZY FAMOUS
was released on DVD January 9th.
Film Credits:
<http://www.imdb.com/title/tt3832126/reference>
What others are saying:
<https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/crazy_famous>
[-mrl]
===================================================================
TOPIC: THE GIFTED (television review
by Dale Skran)
Fox has a new "X-Men" TV
series that is loosely connected to the
various X-men movies. The premise
seems to be that "the X-men have
disappeared" and a motley band
of mutants carry on the fight
against "Sentinel
Services." It is left deliberately
vague whether
this TV series occurs before some of
the movies, after them, or
just on a different timeline.
Sentinel Services has been using
robots, although they have yet to
appear in the series, but have
recently turned to "hounds"
- mutants enslaved via drugs and mind
control - to hunt other mutants.
The general setup is that two
young teenagers, Lauren Strucker
(Natalie Alyn Lind, who you may
recall as Silver St. Cloud in
GOTHAM and as Dana Caldwell in THE
GOLDBERGS) and Andy Strucker
(Percy Hynes White), discover that
they have mutant powers, air-
based force fields and a kind of
destructive telekinesis,
respectively. After they destroy their local gymnasium,
they come
to the attention of Sentinel
Services, and soon they are on the run
with their non-powered parents, Reed
Strucker (Stephen Moyer) and
Caitlin Strucker (Amy Acker). Amy Acker is a fan favorite perhaps
best known as for her portrayal of
Ilyria, an "old god" from the TV
series ANGEL. She was a recurring
character in ALIAS as a bad girl
spy, and also did stints in DOLLHOUSE
and PERSON OF INTEREST.
One thing GIFTED does very well is
subtly tie the story into the
larger Marvel universe without using
most of the well known Marvel
characters. If you are a comic fan, you may have figured
out that
having the main characters named
"Strucker" might mean something,
and indeed it does. The series starts out as a kind of World War
II Jews vs Nazis resistance
story. Everything is grim, hopeless,
and downbeat, with a lot of yelling
and screaming. The first group
of episodes is mostly depressing.
Eventually Lauren and Andy find out
that they are descendents of
the original Strucker twins,
sometimes known as Fenris, the Wolf.
Alone each is dangerous, but if they
hold hands, their powers are
vastly increased. They now have to struggle with whether they
wish
to take up the mantle of their evil
ancestors, or fight for good
instead. Also, their combined powers
are not especially controlled
at this point, making them a weapon
of mass destruction. Their
parents so far as mostly trying to
avoid the war and escape to
Mexico, but one suspects that in time
Lauren and Andy, or at least
one of them, will embrace the war as
the only path forward for
them.
The main "X-characters" are
Macros Diaz/Eclipse (can control
light), Clarice Fong/Blink (can
teleport), John
Proudstar/Thunderbird (super-hunter
and fighter), and Lorna
Dane/Polaris (can control
magnetism). Eclipse is created for the
series, but Blink, Thunderbird, and
Polaris are pretty much
straight out of the comics. This Polaris is the daughter of
Magneto, just like in the comics, and
just like in the comics, she
is a green-haired bargain basement
Magneto, lacking his raw power.
Another character from the comics -
Sage - appears as the brains of
the mutant underground using her
computer-like brain and perfect
memory to help them avoid Sentinel
Services.
Spoiler Alert--Spoiler Alert--Spoiler
Alert--Spoiler Alert
Towards the mid-season a new blond
telepath is introduced, and it
should not come as a big surprise
that she turns out to be one of
the Stepford Cuckoos, a hive-mind of
identical telepaths straight
out of the comics. This development takes the series in a new
direction, as it turns out that the
Cuckoos work for the Hellfire
Club, and they want to use the Mutant
Underground as a tool to
destroy Sentinel Services.
All in all, THE GIFTED is reasonably
entertaining Marvel spinoff,
but for 13 and up due mainly to dark
thematic elements. This is
just a grim story with a lot of
realistic fascism. Characters die.
Betrayal is everywhere. The triumph
of good seems distant. It can
be hard to watch since it reminds us
all of how easily our lives
can be flushed away on a tide of
paranoia and hate. However, now
that things have had a chance to
develop it is getting more
interesting. [-dls]
===================================================================
TOPIC: The Traveling Money (letters
of comment by David Goldfarb
and Dorothy J. Heydt)
In response to Evelyn's comments on
the puzzle involving the
counterfeit bill in the 01/05/18
issue of the MT VOID, David
Goldfarb writes:
Evelyn writes: "The Hatter finds
a $50 bill. He went to the
butcher and pays him the $50 he owed
him. The butcher bought a pig
from the farmer for $50. The farmer paid the carpenter $50 he owed
him.
The carpenter paid the King $50 in taxes. The King paid the
Hatter $50 he owed him for a
hat. Then the Hatter recognized the
bill as the original $50 bill and
realized it was fake. What was
lost in this and by whom?"
I'm reminded of a Poul Anderson story
called "Fairy Gold", which
follows a very similar plot: a young
man does a favor for Oberon,
the king of Faerie. Oberon rewards the man with a valuable gold
coin.
The man uses it to purchase a passage to the New World; then
the captain ... well, I don't
remember exactly what the captain
did with it; maybe he paid off his
bar tab. But at any rate we
follow the coin through a whole bunch
of various transactions that
cancel a bunch of debts; and in the
end it comes to the young man's
intended bride. She and he board the ship to enter their new
life
....
.... and with the dawn, the coin
turns, as fairy gold turns, to a
dead leaf that crumbles away. [-dg]
Dorothy J. Heydt adds:
There's also Asimov's
"Gold", whose details I now forget, but a
sum of money is invested and benefits
a series of people in turn,
and is later returned to the
investor. Asimov, being a chemist,
notes that gold is a catalyst,
enabling chemical processes to
proceed while remaining itself
unchanged. [-djg]
Evelyn notes:
If anyone is interested, the story
"Fairy Gold" appeared in the
collections THE UNICORN TRADE, THE
ARMIES OF ELFLAND, and DOOR TO
ANYWHERE. "Gold" appeared in the September
1991 issue of ANALOG,
and was collected in GOLD: THE FINAL
SCIENCE FICTION COLLECTION and
THE NEW HUGO WINNERS, VOLUME IV. [-ecl]
===================================================================
TOPIC: The NFA, Top Ten Films of
2017, and ORPHAN BLACK (letter of
comment by John Purcell)
In response to Mark's comments on the
NFA in the 01/05/18 issue of
the MT VOID, John Purcell writes:
You know, 1996 was a good year for
me. But you don't want to hear
about that; instead, you want
comments about the 1996th issue of MT
VOID.
So be it.
Once again, your little lead-in drips
with sarcasm. This is a
trend that I approve of. Like many people, I have no fondness for
guns in the hands of the general
public, and believe that any time
is the right time to discuss the
creation and implementation of
reasonable gun laws in America. What the NRA and GOP have been
doing is keep putting off this very
necessary discussion as long as
they possibly can while both entities
reap vast financial rewards
in the process. America is beyond the
time for finding the "proper
time to discuss firearms
regulation." My guess is that
they'll
start saying "something"
reasonable a month before the mid-term
elections because that will make the
NRA and GOP look responsible.
Yeah, right... And monkeys might fly out of my butt. [-jp]
Mark replies:
I agree, but I am glad you said it
and not me. [-mrl]
In response to Mark's "Top Ten
Films of 2017" in the same issue,
John writes:
Of all those Top Ten Movies of 2017
you list, I have not seen a
single one. I do, though, want to see THE POST and BLADE
RUNNER
2049 (still haven't done so) just
because the first simply sounds
like a good movie, and the second
because I want to personally
compare both BLADE RUNNER
movies. But the movies I *really* want
to see are DARKEST HOUR and THE SHAPE
OF WATER. While I was in
London last summer during my TAFF
trip, I went through the
Churchill War Museum with Claire
Brialey. Fascinating place,
meticulously recreating the
conditions and paraphernalia (such as
maps, typewriters, communication
center, living quarters, etc) of
living underground during the Nazi
bombing of London. I am a bit
of a military history buff, so I
found it all quite amazing; in
fact, I'd like to see DUNKIRK,
too. Lots of good movies these
days, and that is definitely good.
[-jp]
Mark replies:
I didn't think either THE POST or
BLADE RUNNER 2049 was
spectacularly good, but each has its
moments. It will be good if
you can see DUNKIRK and DARKEST HOUR
near to each other. I am
surprise you did not see the Imperial
War Museum, though Evelyn
says it is more about WWI. Her memory is better than mine. She is
also cuter. [-mrl]
John answers:
Rob Jackson and I did spend time
exploring the maritime museums in
Portsmouth Harbour in late July--part
of the TAFF trip again--which
had a lot of photographs, maps, and
ship models from WWI. That was
a very interesting afternoon,
too. [-jp]
In response to Dale Skran's review of
ORPHAN BLACK in the same
issue, John writes:
As for ORPHAN BLACK, now that series
is kaput. No more episodes,
but it was definitely a very worthy
series to watch. We have the
complete run saved on Direct TV. Now we are waiting for WESTWORLD
to return. More good stuff awaits. [-jp]
Mark replies:
I have said everyone agrees that not
one but the two BEST science
fiction programs ever are running
right now. But nobody agrees on
which two they are. [-mrl]
===================================================================
TOPIC: This Week's Reading (book
comments by Evelyn C. Leeper)
The first book by Edmund Wilson I
read was PATRIOTIC GORE, a study
of the literature surrounding the
Civil War. Since then, I have
read several of his collections,
diaries, etc., and nothing has
quite lived up to it. LETTERS ON LITERATURE AND POLITICS 1912-1972
by Edmund Wilson (ISBN 0-374-18501-8)
is no exception--interesting
in parts, but also boring at
times. Still, there are some great
excerpts.
For example, it is clear that even
(or perhaps especially) the
intelligentsia did not understand
Stalin back in the 1930s:
"And Stalin, however he may want
to maintain his power, is
certainly a good deal different from
Napoleon. Stalin is a
convinced Marxist and old Bolshevik;
Napoleon cared nothing about
the principles of he French
Revolution and betrayed it. Also, he
had megalomaniac imperialist
ambitions which one can hardly imagine
Stalin entertaining. Stalin, whatever his limitations, is still
working for socialism in
Russia." [11 Jan 1935, to John Dos
Passos]
Nor did they understand Hitler:
"[Charles Rumford Walker and
Adelaide Walker] had been in Russia
and Germany since I'd seen them and
were very interesting on the
subject. They say that they got the impression in
Germany that the
industrials were now running things
more or less openly without
paying much attention to Hitler and
his friends, on whom they were
quietly bringing pressure to pipe
down." [31 Jan 1935, to John Dos
Passos]
A couple of years later they had a
better, though still incomplete,
picture:
"[In Russia] the gap between the
well-informed and intelligent and
the ignorant and dumb is still so
great that the latter are always
treated like children by the
former. IZVESTIA and PRAVDA now--
which are what the ordinary
read--haven't a word of news or sense
in them. They are as bad as the Nazi papers. The real papers are
those of the privileged groups, like
the RED ARMY STAR and the GPU
bulletin--just as it is only the
specially privileged people who
are allowed to use the
libraries." [15 Apr 1937, to
Malcolm
Cowley]
And by 1950 Wilson was completely
disillusioned:
"When I was writing about Lenin
in the FINLAND STATION, I tended to
accept the memoirs published in the
Soviet Union. I hadn't
realized how early the deliberate
mythmaking had been begun. Now I
am not at all sure that some of my
details of his return to Russia
were not made up out of the whole
cloth for the purposes of a
volume of Eulogies, of the
authenticity of which I was convinced by
the proletarian status of the
supposed witnesses, but by which I
may well have been taken in. Trotsky, whose first volume of a life
of a Lenin is one of the best things
on the subject, does not even
believe in the memoir published by
Lenin's sister, which I decided
to accept. ...
[It] is always an awful nuisance to try to get at
the truth behind conflicting
accounts..." [4 Apr 1950, to Arthur
Mizener]
One of the most shocking revelations
of Wilson's beliefs was:
"From a non-legal point of view,
though, the whole discussion of
mental responsibility seems rather
idle. In my opinion, the great
reform needed is a law to authorize
the chloroforming of imbeciles
and hopeless psychiatric cases. Of course, mistakes would be made,
and the people would have to be very
carefully checked, but we
already put a lot of other matters in
the hands of Boards of
Health, etc., and it would be better
than shutting up such cases in
miserable asylums." [17 Jan 1952, to John Biggs]
That Wilson could say this, after all
that had come out about the
Nazis' "euthanasia"
programs, and the long history of governments
deciding that certain racial groups,
religious groups, socio-
economic groups, or political parties
were "imbeciles and hopeless
psychiatric cases," indicates
that he had no concept of history.
And while we put lots of matters in
the hands of Boards of Health,
that does not include killing people
on their own say-so. (Has
Wilson actually read the Bill of
Rights? If so, it does not appear
to have sunk in.)
On another topic, Wilson had very use
for fantasy. I have
previously quoted him on Lovecraft;
here he is on Tolkien:
"I am enclosing a review of
Tolkien. Do you know his work? I
think it is awful." [12 Apr 1856, to James Branch Cabell]
"I have never read THE HOBBIT,
but Helen, when she was younger,
read it or had it read to her
innumerable times, so it must be a
good children's story. I can't imagine it in an English course,
though." [14 Jan 1966, to Cecelia Carroll]
He also had a strong opinion on Carl
Sandburg's biography of
Lincoln:
"But in my opinion Carl Sandburg
is the worst thing that has
happened to Lincoln since Booth shot
him, and I can't imagine
either Grant or Lee getting through
JOHN BROWN'S BODY..." [30 Apr
1953, to John Dos Passos]
Regarding this, when we visited the
Abraham Lincoln Presidential
Library and Museum in Springfield,
Illinois, this year, there was a
list of recommended biographies; Carl
Sandburg's was not on it.
However, this does not necessarily
mean that Sandburg's biography
is bad. If I remember correctly, all the recommended
biographies
were much more recent than
Sandburg's, which might indicate either
improved research over the years or
just a tendency to prefer the
new to the old. For example, reading groups seem to emphasize
current or recent best sellers over
classics dating back fifty
years or more.
Wilson's letters, in short, have some
interesting passages, but one
must pick and choose, because there's
a fair amount of
uninteresting daily minutiae as
well. [-ecl]
===================================================================
Mark
Leeper
mleeper@optonline.net
I do not believe in revealed
religion--I will have
nothing to do with your immortality;
we are miserable
enough in this life, without
speculating on another.
--Lord Byron, 1778-1824