@@@@@ @   @ @@@@@    @     @ @@@@@@@   @       @  @@@@@ @@@@@ @@@
         @   @   @ @        @ @ @ @    @       @     @   @   @   @   @  @
         @   @@@@@ @@@@     @  @  @    @        @   @    @   @   @   @   @
         @   @   @ @        @     @    @         @ @     @   @   @   @  @
         @   @   @ @@@@@    @     @    @          @      @@@@@ @@@@@ @@@

                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 05/30/97 -- Vol. 15, No. 48

       MT Chair/Librarian:
                     Mark Leeper   MT 3E-433  732-957-5619 mleeper@lucent.com
       HO Chair:     John Jetzt    MT 2E-530  732-957-5087 jetzt@lucent.com
       HO Librarian: Nick Sauer    HO 4F-427  732-949-7076 njs@lucent.com
       Distinguished Heinlein Apologist:
                     Rob Mitchell  MT 2D-536  732-957-6330 rlmitchell1@lucent.com
       Factotum:     Evelyn Leeper MT 3E-433  732-957-2070 eleeper@lucent.com
       Back issues at http://www.geocities.com/~ecl.
       All material copyright by author unless otherwise noted.

       The Science Fiction Association of Bergen County meets on the
       second Saturday of every month in Upper Saddle River; call
       201-933-2724 for details.  The New Jersey Science Fiction Society
       meets on the third Saturday of every month in Belleville; call
       201-432-5965 for details.  The Denver Area Science Fiction
       Association meets 7:30 PM on the third Saturday of every month at
       Southwest State Bank, 1380 S. Federal Blvd.

       1. URLs of the week:
                 Lois McMaster Bujold:
                         http://www.herald.co.uk/~dendarii/
                 Elizabeth Moon:
                         http://www.sff.net/people/Elizabeth.Moon/
                 Kim Stanley Robinson:
                         http://euro.net/mark-space/bioKimStanleyRobinson.html
                 Robert J. Sawyer:
                         http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/sawyer/
                 Bruce Sterling:
                         gopher://gopher.well.sf.ca.us/11/Publications/authors/Sterling

       Web sites for the authors of the  five  Hugo  nominees  for  novel.
       I've  used  official  sites  where  they exist and unofficial where
       there are no official ones.  [-ecl]

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

       2. Last week I was comparing the effects of alcohol and tobacco  on
       our  society.  In some ways I don't think that tobacco is nearly as
       bad on innocent bystanders, in  spite  of  its  current  notoriety.
       What  people  are  really  complaining  about  is the discomfort of
       breathing someone else's smoke.  There is the knowledge that it  is
       unhealthy, but the irritation is what causes most of the anger.

       I mean, I live  in  New  Jersey  where  everybody  knows  there  is
       unhealthy  toxic  waste in the water, at least to some degree.  And
       there is some low-level  grumbling,  but  no  overall  panic.   Not
       nearly so much as if the water tasted like acetone, even if it were
       not toxic.  Actually the unpleasant aspects of tobacco are part  of
       the reason I think it constitutes less of a threat.  When I leave a
       building and have to walk through  a  noxious  curtain  of  tobacco
       smoke  that hangs just outside the door of so many public buildings
       these days, I pick up the pace of my walking.  To  me  it  is  good
       that  tobacco  has an unpleasant smell, much in the same sense that
       it is good that an unpleasant odor is added to natural gas.  It  is
       a warning.  And in truth I feel a little sorry for smokers who have
       to go through so much inconvenience for their habit.

       Now, my attitude on alcohol is that having drinkers  around  really
       constitutes  more  of  a  threat  to  me than smokers.  When people
       around me drink, I am not forced to taste their drink.   But  every
       time  I  step  into  a  car,  I am in danger from the prominence of
       alcohol in our society.  I believe that  about  40%  of  fatal  car
       crashes  involve someone who was drinking and in the early 1980s it
       was closer to 60% (yes, there is some improvement).  Then there are
       the people injured or in some cases killed by abusive people around
       them who have been drinking.  I think the reason that this  society
       is  so  lenient on drinkers--and it really is--is that there is the
       feeling among law-writers and law-enforcers  that  they  themselves
       occasionally  abuse alcohol, or might some day, and they don't want
       to make things harder on themselves when they do.  And so they have
       empathy for alcohol abusers.  As an example, one late December when
       I lived in Detroit the police department, trying to  improve  their
       image,  announced  that  if  they found people driving drunk on New
       Year's Eve, they would get them off the roads by sending them  home
       in taxi cabs.  The Michigan State Police (who have access to a much
       richer source of neurons, apparently) responded by announcing  that
       if  they  found people driving drunk on New Year's Eve, the drivers
       would be given a ride to a nice safe jail cell.   I  don't  believe
       that  the  Detroit  Police  ever repeated their kindly offer, thank
       goodness.

       Now I realize that Prohibition was tried at one point.   I  am  not
       advocating  Prohibition.   Everybody  knows  the  Prohibition, when
       tried in the 1930s, was a dismal failure.  Of course like  so  many
       things  that  everybody  knows,  it is a false statement.  Based on
       current day estimates, Prohibition really did cut down on  the  use
       of alcohol in the US.  It did not eliminate it, as we all know, but
       what it was intended to do it did.  The problem was  that  it  also
       did a lot of things not intended like fostering organized crime.  I
       am not suggesting any  particular  course  of  action;  I  am  only
       looking at the problems like traffic accidents created by alcohol.

       The thing is, there are apparently laws in society we intentionally
       do  not enforce.  As a society we just don't want to really enforce
       our  own  drunk  driving  laws.   It  is  not  the  only  laws   we
       intentionally do not enforce.  New York City has a horrible problem
       with gridlock and it also is tolerated.   Go  to  Manhattan  during
       gridlock  hours  and look at the cars entering an intersection when
       they know they cannot leave.  When the light changes to red the way
       is  not  cleared  for  the  legal  traffic,  every car stuck in the
       intersection is driven by a lawbreaker.  I have often said that New
       York  City does not really need to have BOTH a financial crisis and
       a gridlock problem.  One of those two problems should eliminate the
       other.

       Similarly if we all we  want  to  do  is  catch  drunk  drivers  we
       probably  know  where  and when to catch them.  You pick a bar, sit
       there at closing time, and catch cars as they are coming out of the
       parking lot.  How many people leaving at that time are not doing it
       under the influence of alcohol?  You still need  breath  tests,  of
       course.   But  certainly  leaving  a  bar at that time is reason to
       suspect the driver  is  driving  under  the  influence.   I  cannot
       imagine  that  at  closing time there are a whole lot of designated
       drivers in a bar.  Well, there  might  be,  but  are  they  in  any
       condition  to  drive?   You probably would have to pick a different
       bar each night to not harass any particular bar.  But then I  don't
       have  all  that  much sympathy for the bar owners since they almost
       certainly are making a profit by contributing to drunk driving.

       But the point is that cigarette smoke announces itself to  innocent
       bystanders; drunk drivers usually do not.  [-mrl]

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

       3. THE LOST WORLD: JURASSIC PARK (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: Darker in  tone  than  JURASSIC  PARK,
                 this  sequel concerns another island that Ingen
                 has populated with  dinosaurs.   The  film  has
                 considerably more dinosaur effects, though most
                 take place in the dark, possibly as an  economy
                 measure.   The  film  has  more action than its
                 predecessor but less of a sense of  wonder  and
                 amazement.   The  last  half hour is great fun.
                 Rating: high +1 (-4 to +4), 6 (0 to 10).
                 New York Critics:

       Steven Spielberg has fashioned a sequel to his supremely successful
       JURASSIC  PARK  that  in many ways does what a sequel should do: it
       continues the story rather than remaking it.  The film features the
       same  terrific  dinosaur  effects,  but  this time around Spielberg
       changes the tone to make a darker and more somber exercise.  At the
       same  time  has  removed  much of the anti-science sentiment of the
       previous film.  But perhaps the  most  interesting  touch  is  that
       since  it  is  based  on Michael Crichton's novel which borrows the
       title of Arthur Conan Doyle's classic novel, Spielberg  has  played
       up  the  similarities  in plot to the Doyle novel and its 1925 film
       adaptation.  THE LOST WORLD: JURASSIC PARK also borrows  from  KING
       KONG  and  GORGO.  On the negative side the character it builds the
       story around is Dr. Ian Malcolm (played again  by  Jeff  Goldblum).
       This  was  not  a  very good decision since while Goldblum had some
       good lines in the first film, his character  was  never  very  well
       developed and does not have the appeal to carry the sequel.

       It is four years after the incidents of JURASSIC PARK.  The  entire
       experiment  has  been hushed up.  Ian Malcolm has tried to tell his
       story to the world and has been made to look like a  sensationalist
       kook.   Meanwhile there has been a power struggle at John Hammond's
       company Ingen.  Each faction wants control of an island that was  a
       laboratory  and  breeding  ground for the ill-fated park and where,
       unbeknownst to the world dinosaurs  still  live  and  breed.   John
       Hammond has sent a team of four scientists to the laboratory island
       to document what is there.  Ingen,  now  led  by  Hammond's  nephew
       Peter  Ludlow (Arliss Howard) has sent a team to secure the island.
       The team  leader  is  hunter  and  mercenary,  Roland  Tembo  (Pete
       Postlethwaite).   Tembo's  team is composed of what are supposed to
       be crack mercenaries, but Tembo knows them to be unprepared for the
       situation  they  will  be facing.  The hunter cares little that his
       team is incompetent so  long  as  they  can  provide  him  with  an
       opportunity to kill a T. rex.  As with the earlier film David Koepp
       has adapted the Crichton novel.  His film is mostly dark and somber
       until  the last half-hour when finally the film cuts loose for some
       fun.

       To make Goldblum's Ian Malcolm the tie to the previous  film  seems
       almost  an  act  of  desperation.   Alan  Grant  or Ellie Sattler's
       characters had more appealing personalities.  Malcolm  was  slickly
       obnoxious  and  remains  so  in  this film.  The worst fault of the
       script is its failure to create  a  character  that  that  audience
       really  cares  about.  In this film Pete Postlethwaite's villain is
       almost  as  appealing  as  the  hero.   Of  course  with  dangerous
       dinosaurs  on  the loose, it is not clear the story really needed a
       human villain to start with.

       In contrast to JURASSIC PARK, Spielberg  has  chosen  to  visualize
       this  story  in  muted  colors,  often  with light sources blurred.
       There is intentionally no natural scene that looks as beautiful  as
       the  helicopter landing in the last film.  The new island is not to
       be confused with a paradise.  The film has more time on the  screen
       of  dinosaur effects, but in many it is harder to make out details.
       Also curiously some of the effects sequences are cut short,  as  if
       they  were not completed to save time.  There will be a stegosaurus
       attack and the camera will flash to  Goldblum  who  says  something
       like  "they're leaving," rather than showing them leave.  Spielberg
       does have some feel  for  suspense,  and  this  film  includes  one
       suspenseful  sequence  involving a glass window that is almost sure
       to be borrowed by other films in the  future.   John  Williams  has
       scored  the  film,  but  this  is  sure to be considered one of his
       lesser scores with some  standard  suspense  music  and  no  really
       memorable new themes.

       The most impressive touch in THE LOST WORLD: JURASSIC PARK  is  how
       successfully  it  pulled  together  the  plots of both Crichton and
       Doyle.  It delivers a few thrills, some nice dinosaur effects,  and
       packed  theaters.   I  rate it a high +1 on the -4 to +4 scale.  [-
       mrl]

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

       4. MEMORY by  Lois  McMaster  Bujold  (Science  Fiction  Book  Club
       Edition, 1996) (a book review by Joseph A Karpierz):

       This is the time of the year that  I  look  forward  to  both  with
       anticipation  and dread.  While that combination would apply to the
       start of the baseball season (being a Cubs fan is not necessarily a
       rewarding  experience),  what  I  really  am  talking about is Hugo
       voting time.  Every year at this time, I eagerly await the  release
       of  the Hugo ballot, looking to see whether the stories I nominated
       made it.  Seeing that most of them haven't, I  begin  the  task  of
       reading  all the nominees that I can in order to vote intelligently
       (or some reasonable facsimile thereof).

       Of course, that brings on the dread that I mentioned in  the  first
       sentence.   There  are invariable stories and/or novels that I just
       plain old don't like, and some just be looking  at  the  author  or
       title  that  I  think  I won't like.  Others I know are huge tomes,
       like this year's BLUE MARS, which I enjoy reading but are, at least
       for me, difficult to get through.

       BLUE MARS was already on my  to  read  stack  anyway,  as  was  the
       subject  of  this  review,  MEMORY.   A  new Miles Vorkosigan novel
       always brings anticipation and dread to me.  Anticipation because I
       think that the Vorkosigan novels are well written and entertaining,
       and that Bujold does  an  excellent  job  of  storytelling.   Dread
       because  I'm  afraid that I'll actually like it well enough to vote
       it for Best Novel.

       Why is this so bad?  Well, I, for one, am quite  tired  of  series,
       stories  in one universe, and all that sort of thing.  I think that
       Bujold is a talented writer who can't seem to get out of, for  lack
       of a better word, a rut.  It's a decent rut, but a rut nonetheless.
       A majority  of  the  fiction  she  has  written  has  been  in  the
       Vorkosigan  universe,  and  while  I've  enjoyed  everything  she's
       written there, I wonder if she can do anything else.  I know  she's
       written a fantasy novel (which my wife enjoyed, but I didn't read),
       but that's one out of a bunch.  I want something else from  her  to
       see if she can break out of the rut.

       Having said all that (and keeping my fingers  crossed  that  you're
       still  reading),  I picked up MEMORY for two reasons:  1) it was on
       my to read stack, and 2) it is a Hugo nominee this year.  And after
       it  was  all  said and done, I was not surprised to discover that I
       really enjoyed the book.

       If you remember MIRROR DANCE, the last novel in the Miles  timeline
       (as  opposed  to  CETAGANDA,  which occurred much earlier in Miles'
       life),  Miles was killed and brought  back  to  life  by  something
       called  cryo-regeneration,  or something like that (it's not really
       important, after all.  What IS important is that  Miles  cannot  be
       killed,  apparently,  otherwise the series would be at an end).  An
       side effect of his revival is that he blacks out  under  conditions
       of  extreme  stress.  As we pick up the story, he's just recovering
       from a black out.  The unfortunate effect of this one is that  he's
       severed the legs of someone he was supposed to rescue.  Fearing the
       consequences of the truth, he lies in his report to  Simon  Illyan,
       the  head  of Imperial Security. Unfortunately, the consequences of
       the lie are much worse than he imagined they would be - he is given
       a  medical  discharge  after the lie is discovered (it pays to have
       relatives in high places).

       Shortly thereafter, Illyan falls ill, apparently from a malfunction
       in  his  eidetic  memory  chip,  implanted 30 years previously by a
       prior emperor.  He is experiencing events that have  happened  over
       the past 30 years, and talking about them as if they were happening
       currently.  He seems to have  lost  his  mind.   On  top  of  this,
       Emperor  Gregor  has  announced  that  he  will become engaged to a
       Komarran woman  -  a  security  nightmare.   Nothing  seems  to  be
       progressing  with  Illyan's  diagnosis  and treatment, and Miles is
       very upset and suspicious about this, but can't do  anything  about
       it because he is no longer a part of Imperial Security.

       >From here, the novel turns into a  mystery/whodunnit  that  in  my
       opinion is well done and a lot of fun.  Bujold continues to develop
       her characters, most notably Simon Illyan.  In the past, Illyan has
       been  almost  robotic;  we  knew  nothing  about him, and he was as
       efficient as could be at his job.  There is a wonderful chapter  in
       which  Miles  and  Simon go fishing at one of the Vorkosigan family
       retreats, and they talk over old times and many other things  while
       drinking  copious  amounts of beer.  It is quite wonderful to read.
       We also learn about some other things about  Miles'  past  that  we
       have  never seen before, as he now turns 30 years old (a fact which
       seems to hit him pretty hard).

       I guessed the culprit reasonably early on, but was never quite sure
       if  I  was  right until the characters confirmed it for me, but the
       fact that I guessed right didn't take away from my enjoyment of the
       book.   It  is  a  good  entry  in the Vorkosigan saga, and I would
       recommend that you pick it up and give it a read.  Where it ends up
       on my Hugo ballot is another matter.

       Next up is BLUE MARS.  Stay tuned, but be patient.  This  one  will
       take awhile.  [-jak]

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

       5. ALTERNATE TYRANTS edited  by  Mike  Resnick  (Tor,  ISBN  0-812-
       54835-3,  1997,  337pp,  US$11.99)  (a  book  review  by  Evelyn C.
       Leeper):

       I'm a big fan of alternate history, but even I have my limits,  and
       I think I've reached them.  In fact, I have problems with this book
       on two levels, both its contents and its format.  Since in  general
       people care more about the content, I'll start there.

       The first two  Resnick  alternate  history  anthologies  (ALTERNATE
       PRESIDENTS  and  ALTERNATE  KENNEDYS)  were  quite  good  and their
       stories  garnered  several  award  nominations.   The  third   book
       (ALTERNATE  WARRIORS) was passable but definitely a step down.  And
       ALTERNATE TYRANTS is  still  more  disappointing.   Of  the  twenty
       stories,   only   the  Maureen  McHugh  ("The  Lincoln  Train")  is
       noteworthy.  It was, in fact, a Hugo nominee.   I  found  the  rest
       surprisingly unengaging, even the Kathe Koja and Barry N. Malzberg,
       who can usually be relied upon.   But  stories  of  rock  stars  as
       President  (shades  of "Ike at the Mike"?), gangsters as President,
       Einstein as the leader of Israel, and so  on,  while  they  *sound*
       promising,   decline   rapidly   into  cliche  and  predictability.
       Example: "Jubilee" by Jack C. Haldeman II and Barbara Delaplace  is
       set  in  a  957  C.E.  in  which  the  turning point was the failed
       assassination of Julius Caesar.   The  characters  speculate  about
       what might have happened had the assassination succeeded.  Okay, it
       is the millenial celebration, but why have a millenial  celebration
       of  a failed assassination anyway?  And why have a spaceship called
       a spatiumnavis, when other  vehicles  are  called   freighters  and
       vans?

       Realizing that it is a capital mistake to theorize without data,  I
       suspect  the method of constructing this anthology may be partially
       to blame.  It appears (from the introductory notes)  that  in  many
       cases  writers  were  given  scenarios  (or  at  least premises) to
       develop into stories.  It is of course possible to  write  to  spec
       (television  writers do it all the time), but I can't help but feel
       that it is not the way  to  get  the  most  creative  results  from
       fiction writers.  And the fact that the stories are all copyrighted
       1996 even though the anthology didn't appear until  April  of  1997
       makes  me  wonder  if  perhaps it was decided to give the authors a
       chance to sell the first publication rights elsewhere first.   This
       is okay, but the reference to "new stories" leads one to think this
       is an  original  anthology,  while  the  copyright  dates  indicate
       perhaps not.

       As for the format, this book  has  the  worst  of  both  the  trade
       paperback   and   the  mass  market  paperback  formats.   (It  is,
       technically, a mass market paperback.)  It has the higher price and
       larger,  more-difficult-to-  store  size  of  a  traditional  trade
       paperback,  but  the  cheap  paper  and   environmentally   unsound
       strippability  of  a mass market paperback.  When I spend $12 for a
       book, I don't want it to feel like paper toweling.

       In summary, much as I wanted to like this book, I cannot  recommend
       it.  [-ecl]

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

       6. NIGHT FALLS ON MANHATTAN (a film review by Mark R. Leeper):

                 Capsule: Police corruption, degrees of justice,
                 compromises,  and  conflicts of personality all
                 mix in a relatively straightforward  but  still
                 engrossing  story  of a new man in the District
                 Attorney's office  uncovering  corruption  that
                 could  involve  his  own  father.  Sidney Lumet
                 gives us in another strong set in the New  York
                 City justice system.  Rating:  +2 (-4 to +4), 7
                 (0 to 10)
                 New York Critics: 10 positive,  4  negative,  5
                 mixed.

       Sidney Lumet, whose early work for film included the now classic 12
       ANGRY MEN, has built up a major body of sharp films, frequently set
       in New York and frequently about the criminal justice  system.   In
       spite  of  a little violence, and that mostly off-screen, this is a
       low-key ironic look at how the system works and where it chooses to
       fail to work.  While in the final analysis the film may not deliver
       a whole  lot  more  than  some  of  the  better  television  police
       procedural  programs, it is an intelligent and adult alternative to
       this season's fluff and "blow 'em up real good" films.

       Sean Casey (played by Andy Garcia) is a  new  investigator  in  the
       office of District Attorney "Morgy" Morgenstern's.  He is something
       of a straight arrow who expects to go it on his own  and  stick  to
       the  letter  of  the  law.   His  father  Liam  (Ian  Holm)  is  an
       experience-hardened cop who has encouraged  his  son  to  pursue  a
       career  in  law.   The  plot  thickens  as Liam is on a stakeout of
       Jordan Washington (Shiek Mahmud-Bey), a local drug  pusher  on  his
       way  to  being a drug lord.  An attempted arrest goes very wrong as
       three different precincts send in backup, two policemen are kill by
       Washington  and  a  third  policeman  is accidentally killed in the
       confusion.  Liam himself is very nearly killed.  District  Attorney
       Morgenstern, who is having a bad time with his public image and who
       is being betrayed by his own ambitious assistant, decides  to  give
       the job of prosecuting Washington instead assistant.  This in spite
       of any conflict of interest or emotional  entanglement  Sean  might
       have  prosecuting  the man who nearly killed his father.  And there
       is  a  further  complication  as  the  defense--led  by  the   Alan
       Dershowitz-like  Sam  Vigoda  (Richard  Dreyfuss)--implies that the
       police involved in the attempted arrest may have been on the  take.
       In  specific suspicion falls on Liam and his long-time partner Joey
       (James Gandolfini).  Lumet wrote the screenplay himself, basing  it
       on  the  novel  TAINTED EVIDENCE by Robert Daley.  Daley also wrote
       the novel that was the basis for Lumet's PRINCE OF THE CITY.

       When one actor in a film gives a good performance, he is probably a
       good  actor.   When  there  are  many good performances in the same
       film, some from almost unknown actors, it probably  is  because  of
       the  talent of the director.  One of the better performances in the
       film is James Gandolfini as the partner of Liam.   He  has  just  a
       scene  or  two, in which he is an important character, but he seems
       very believable in those scenes.  Holm and Garcia  play  reasonably
       well  off  of  each  other  though they do not give much feeling of
       being father and son.  The most memorable performance  is  probably
       that  of  Ron  Leibman  as  the District Attorney, played with what
       could be called "an excess of personality," to borrow a phrase from
       JURASSIC  PARK.   Richard  Dreyfuss  underplays  just  a  bit  as a
       celebrated defense attorney who does not reveal the  dimensions  of
       his  character until the end of the film.  Rounding out the cast is
       Lena Olin the attractive but somewhat dispensable  character  Peggy
       Lindstrom, assistant to Vigoda who has an affair with Sean.

       This is not Lumet's best film and its final irony is more a  subtle
       point  than  a  hard-hitting  one,  but  it is an intelligent adult
       story.  I rate it a +2 on the -4 to +4 scale.  [-mrl]

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

            These days the news media feels comfortable only
            when they are covering a major trial.  That is
            because it is exciting to some, it sits in one place,
            and there only too rarely is shooting.
                                          -- Mark R. Leeper


               THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT ALMOST BLANK