More Recent Reading
Aug. 5th, 2009 12:27 amThe Moon Goddess and the Son
You'd expect a novel focused on the nuclear standoff between the USA and USSR to age poorly. This one has been improving over the past twenty years. The discussions of the continuity among the Mongol, Czarist, and Soviet governments of Russia are useful guides to Putin's regime. The comments on American culture ("Don't try to sell them parachutes, just have the splints ready") also hold true. The space development story line holds up, more because the lack of progress we've made than any prescience on Kingsbury's part. The best reason for rereading is the characters--they're real, and I like them, even when they're being idiots (a small portion of the time).
Rainbows End
Professor Vinge wanted to write a monograph on user interface design given the technology of 2025, but didn't think anyone would read it. So he gave us this novel instead. It'll probably look bad ten years from now but it's a good extrapolation from now. On first read I was put off by the very unsympathetic protagonist. He's another variation of the SF trope of the guy from the present brought to the future so all the characters have an excuse to explain the things they're used to. Instead of freezing him or throwing him through time, Vinge rescues Robert Gu from Alzheimer's-induced senility. He becomes our guide to a very strange--but believable--world. Telepresence, virtual reality, and data overlays over our view of the real world are constant. A big political event is the equivalent of Warcraft and Pokemon fans clashing over whose imagery will be used to decorate a library. Terrorists are empowered even more by the new technology, while the good guys scramble to stay a step ahead of them. The book's biggest danger comes from someone seeking to control us all for our own good.
Highly recommended to everyone planning on living another fifteen years or more.
Watchmen (the comic)
I read Watchmen after the movie came out. Ugh. Comics fans are more nihilistic than I'd feared if this is one of their revered classics. It's an example of Lois Bujold's comment on Ser Galen: "the anguish of making the hard choices always appealed to the romance in his soul." Given Dr. Manhattan's powers there's multiple ways to avert nuclear war if anyone can convince him to bother. Ozy was in a perfect position to convince him, but wanted to reserve playing god to himself. Moore would rather write about horrid situations requiring brutal choices than make the effort to find a solution that doesn't need millions of innocents killed.
Edit: There will be no further discussion of Watchmen here, because it's unpleasant and I've already spent more time thinking about it than I want to.
You'd expect a novel focused on the nuclear standoff between the USA and USSR to age poorly. This one has been improving over the past twenty years. The discussions of the continuity among the Mongol, Czarist, and Soviet governments of Russia are useful guides to Putin's regime. The comments on American culture ("Don't try to sell them parachutes, just have the splints ready") also hold true. The space development story line holds up, more because the lack of progress we've made than any prescience on Kingsbury's part. The best reason for rereading is the characters--they're real, and I like them, even when they're being idiots (a small portion of the time).
Rainbows End
Professor Vinge wanted to write a monograph on user interface design given the technology of 2025, but didn't think anyone would read it. So he gave us this novel instead. It'll probably look bad ten years from now but it's a good extrapolation from now. On first read I was put off by the very unsympathetic protagonist. He's another variation of the SF trope of the guy from the present brought to the future so all the characters have an excuse to explain the things they're used to. Instead of freezing him or throwing him through time, Vinge rescues Robert Gu from Alzheimer's-induced senility. He becomes our guide to a very strange--but believable--world. Telepresence, virtual reality, and data overlays over our view of the real world are constant. A big political event is the equivalent of Warcraft and Pokemon fans clashing over whose imagery will be used to decorate a library. Terrorists are empowered even more by the new technology, while the good guys scramble to stay a step ahead of them. The book's biggest danger comes from someone seeking to control us all for our own good.
Highly recommended to everyone planning on living another fifteen years or more.
Watchmen (the comic)
I read Watchmen after the movie came out. Ugh. Comics fans are more nihilistic than I'd feared if this is one of their revered classics. It's an example of Lois Bujold's comment on Ser Galen: "the anguish of making the hard choices always appealed to the romance in his soul." Given Dr. Manhattan's powers there's multiple ways to avert nuclear war if anyone can convince him to bother. Ozy was in a perfect position to convince him, but wanted to reserve playing god to himself. Moore would rather write about horrid situations requiring brutal choices than make the effort to find a solution that doesn't need millions of innocents killed.
Edit: There will be no further discussion of Watchmen here, because it's unpleasant and I've already spent more time thinking about it than I want to.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-05 05:44 am (UTC)To this day I can't hear 'LA Woman' without also thinking about the chapter that opened with that song. And ships boosting for Leoport from the Pacific.
And theme restaurants in orbit.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-05 05:47 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-06 05:13 am (UTC)Unless 1) you expected the millions of people to otherwise die in the next few months anyway and/or 2) you are counting on the bluntness of the plot to be seen as out of character for you and therefore have more deniability.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-06 05:43 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-06 06:15 am (UTC)Meanwhile, Ozy already basks in the adoration of the world, and he did take credit for his plot to his peers, no doubt planning on word eventually getting and establishing his fame/notoriety for the ages.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-06 06:24 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-06 10:45 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-06 05:26 pm (UTC)The arc gives no clear answers as to what they should have done. The world might have backed down from nuclear war, had Ozymandias not acted; it might still run into nuclear war despite his act. All of the characters could have made a different choice here and there, and the story is constructed so that those choices might not matter in the grand scheme, even while posing arguments that those choices might be important nevertheless.
Overall, the story gives people fodder for a lot of debate and discussion, and I like that. Add in some of the sci-fi and literary niftyness, and I can truly understand why many regard it as classic.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-06 05:50 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-06 06:11 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-07 12:28 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-07 01:08 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-07 05:47 am (UTC)(frozen) Who Swatches® the Swatchmen®?
Date: 2009-08-05 08:48 am (UTC)And I don't see the market for godlike AIs that instantly render humanity obsolete. What kid of ROI could such a development project offer? "The good news is that we can pull it off, Mr. Investor. The bad news is that you, your fellow investors, and all mankind will become extinct." Yeah, I'm signing a check for THAT project.
(frozen) Re: Who Swatches® the Swatchmen®?
Date: 2009-08-05 05:49 pm (UTC)(frozen) Re: Who Swatches® the Swatchmen®?
Date: 2009-08-06 12:58 am (UTC)expensesforce obsolete, thus enabling massive increases in profits.Any BoD that tried to nix such a purchase would be sued, successfully, for breach of fiduciary responsibility.
It's only when there's some critical number of them that all of humanity becomes obsolete. And it wouldn't be any particular person or corporation's "fault", even if one could make the legally-dubious claim that a corporation had some obligation to humanity as a whole that overrode its obligation to its investors/shareholders.
(frozen) Re: Who Swatches® the Swatchmen®?
Date: 2009-08-06 03:23 am (UTC)And will be, probably.
(frozen) Re: Who Swatches® the Swatchmen®?
Date: 2009-08-06 05:06 am (UTC)(frozen) Re: Who Swatches® the Swatchmen®?
Date: 2009-08-06 05:10 am (UTC)(frozen) Re: Who Swatches® the Swatchmen®?
Date: 2009-08-06 05:20 am (UTC)(frozen) Re: Who Swatches® the Swatchmen®?
Date: 2009-08-06 05:48 pm (UTC)(frozen) Re: Who Swatches® the Swatchmen®?
Date: 2009-08-06 11:47 am (UTC)Unlike all other forms of communication one can opt out of with little or no consequences?
no subject
Date: 2009-08-06 05:09 am (UTC)He hides his true capabilities because he needs the word to think he can't stop the nuclear exchange so that the leaders won't risk an escalation.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-06 05:47 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-07 12:58 am (UTC)The hundreds of millions of probably casualties from a conventional World War III, and up to a billion of their dependents?
no subject
Date: 2009-08-07 05:48 am (UTC)