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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                     Club Notice - 5/8/98 -- Vol. 16, No. 45

       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/Athens/4824
       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 irregularly; call 201-652-0534 for details, or check
       http://www.interactive.net/~kat/njsfs.html.  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. URL of the week: http://www.primenet.com/~somtow/index.html.  S.
       P.  Somtow's  home page.  His latest, DARKER ANGELS, is reviewed in
       this issue.  [-ecl]

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

       2. Last week I was talking about the nifty free things we  used  to
       get inside boxes of cereal when I was growing up.

       Some Free Insides demonstrated principles of science, assuming  the
       cereal company could do that cheaply enough.  Of course they didn't
       tell the kids that  they  were  learning.   I  remember  Post  Rice
       Crinkles  had  a little plastic pipe like a bubble pipe, but at the
       far end were a little plastic basket and a plastic ball.  You  blew
       into  the  pipe  and the ball would float on air.  Somehow the ball
       would not fall off the column of air demonstrating what I guess  is
       a  Bernoulli Principle.  But Post didn't want to explain physics to
       the kids so they just said something like it was a Magic Pipe.  And
       kids believed it since to a six-year-old the Bernoulli Principle is
       really advanced science.  And any sufficiently advanced science  is
       indistinguishable  from magic, as Arthur C. Clarke has pointed out.
       One wonders how many of those kids grew up to be physicists and are
       out  there doing science.  Now that I think about it, how many grew
       up to believe in magic and are calling the psychic hotlines?

       Another premium was a piece of very bad  photographic  paper  in  a
       little  black envelope.  You were supposed to take an object like a
       key and put it on top of the film and then take it out in  the  sun
       for a few minutes.  The shadow of the key would be preserved on the
       film.  Then there was the time that  Cheerios  was  sponsoring  THE
       LONE RANGER.  The back of the box would be a numbered page of comic
       art in which  the  Lone  Ranger  makes  some  marvelous  deduction.
       Inside  the  box in secret writing told how he did it.  For example
       he is chasing some bad guys by their horses' hoof-prints.  To throw
       him off the bad guys intentionally rode over a path were there were
       a lot of Indian horses through.  Yet the Lone Ranger followed  just
       the  right hoof prints found the bad guys.  All this you could read
       in the store.  But... how did the Lone Ranger follow just the right
       hoof-prints?   The  secret clue was inside the box.  You would pull
       out a piece of paper that looked blank.  You  filled  a  bowl  with
       water  and  dropped the piece of paper into it.  When the paper got
       wet it revealed the writing on it.  There were something like  five
       numbered clues.  This was story number eight so you read Clue Eight
       and it said in verse--I guess verse made it more  mysterious:  "The
       Ranger  got the outlaws because he knew/Indians their horses do not
       shoe."

       Wow!

       That one was simply a piece of treated paper so the  words  changed
       color  when  wet,  but  the  Free  Insides  were often made of real
       materials.  I don't remember any ever being made of wood, though  I
       suppose  that  it  would  not  be  far-fetched for a cereal to give
       something like a pencil.  But they often were made of  plastic  and
       sometimes even metal.  You had to be able to get to them by feel. I
       have heard there were kids who would wait for the  Free  Inside  to
       plop  into  their bowl.  My parents wanted me to wait.  Not me.  As
       soon as I got that box home I would stick my dirty little paw  into
       the  box  and  rummage  around until I felt the cellophane wrapper.
       Some cereal companies would make it easy for you and put  the  Free
       Inside toward the top.  Most would put it toward the bottom so that
       the wait-for-ploppers would be encouraged to eat the cereal quickly
       to get their bonus sooner.

       These are all memories of my formative years.  I will see if I  can
       get  all  these  old memories into a perspective for next week.  [-
       mrl]

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

       3. DARKER ANGELS by S. P. Somtow (Tor,  ISBN  0-312-85931-7,  1998,
       381pp, US$24.95) (a book review by Evelyn C. Leeper):

       Walt Whitman.  Zombies.  Abraham Lincoln's funeral.  Voodoo.   Lord
       Byron.  A panther woman.  Edgar Allan Poe.  And who better to write
       about all this but a Thai writer?

       Only in America.

       Well, yes, but all this makes DARKER ANGELS a hard book to  review.
       I  liked  it  a lot, but much of that may be due to the presence of
       Walt Whitman as a character.  I find Whitman fascinating, not  just
       as  a poet, but as an observer of the Civil War.  And DARKER ANGELS
       has a lot of that sort of observation of the Civil War, even if  it
       is leavened with voodoo.

       But if you're not a Whitman fan, I'm not sure how you'll  react  to
       this.   The  structure is very complex with Griffin Bledsoe telling
       Tyler Tyler telling Jimmy Lee Cox  telling  Zachary  Brown  telling
       Mrs.  Grainger  about  the  strange  goings-on.  (Or something like
       that--I can't be sure this was quite this nested.  There  may  have
       been  some  pops  on the stack I missed.)  The atmosphere is there,
       but the late appearance of Lord Byron and Edgar Allan  Poe  was  in
       some  way  the straw that broke the camel's back, and I have to say
       that there's just too much going on here  to  make  a  satisfactory
       novel for most people.

       But I can't *un*-recommend this either.  Ultimately, all I  can  is
       that  here  is what this.  If you think it sounds interesting, give
       it a try.  If you think it would give you a  headache,  give  it  a
       miss.  [-ecl]

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

       4. DINOSAUR SUMMER by Greg Bear (Warner Aspect, ISBN 0-446-52098-5,
       1998, 325pp, US$23) (a book review by Evelyn C. Leeper):

       This is billed as an alternate history, and it is in the sense that
       its  premise  is  that Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's LOST WORLD was non-
       fiction, and dinosaurs did survive on a  Venezuelan  plateau.   But
       it's  not alternate history in the sense of looking at what changes
       there would be in society because of the change.

       This is not so  much  a  complaint  as  a  warning.   If  you  like
       alternate  histories  for  that  sociological  aspect,  you will be
       disappointed in DINOSAUR SUMMER.  It is more aimed  at  the  person
       who  enjoyed  THE LOST WORLD and wants to read more about dinosaurs
       and the lost plateau.  The story starts out in a  dinosaur  circus,
       but  that  seems  mostly  to  allow  Bear  to  introduce his human,
       reptilian, and avian characters before heading back to the plateau.
       Some  of  the  latter  two are real, others are fictitious, and you
       probably can't tell the players without  a  scorecard,  which  Bear
       provides in an afterword.
       I was  really  looking  forward  to  this  book,  but  found  it  a
       disappointment.   Perhaps  I was looking for more change in society
       than the fact that KING KONG flopped.  As an  adventure  novel,  it
       starts  off very slowly, and doesn't offer the reader much to carry
       hold her interest.  I suppose if you really  like  dinosaurs,  they
       will  carry the book, but I found DINOSAUR SUMMER a disappointment.
       [-ecl]

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

            If law school is so hard to get through...
            How come there are so many lawyers?
                                          -- Calvin Trillin