455 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
455 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
Bruce Sterling
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bruces@well.sf.ca.us
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CATSCAN 5 "Slipstream"
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In a recent remarkable interview in _New
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Pathways_ #11, Carter Scholz alludes with pained
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resignation to the ongoing brain-death of science
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fiction. In the 60s and 70s, Scholz opines, SF had a
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chance to become a worthy literature; now that chance
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has passed. Why? Because other writers have now
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learned to adapt SF's best techniques to their own
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ends.
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"And," says Scholz, "They make us look sick.
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When I think of the best `speculative fiction' of the
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past few years, I sure don't think of any Hugo or
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Nebula winners. I think of Margaret Atwood's _The
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Handmaid's Tale_, and of Don DeLillo's _White Noise_,
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and of Batchelor's _The Birth of the People's Republic
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of Antarctica_, and of Gaddis' _JR_ and _Carpenter's
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Gothic_, and of Coetzee's _Life and Times of Michael
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K_ . . . I have no hope at all that genre science
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fiction can ever again have any literary significance.
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But that's okay, because now there are other people
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doing our job."
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It's hard to stop quoting this interview. All
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interviews should be this good. There's some great
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campy guff about the agonizing pain it takes to write
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short stories; and a lecture on the unspeakable horror
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of writer's block; and some nifty fusillades of
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forthright personal abuse; and a lot of other stuff
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that is making _New Pathways_ one of the most
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interesting zines of the Eighties. Scholz even reveals
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his use of the Fibonacci Sequence in setting the
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length and number of the chapters in his novel
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_Palimpsests_, and wonders how come nobody caught on
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to this groundbreaking technique of his.
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Maybe some of this peripheral stuff kinda dulls
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the lucid gleam of his argument. But you don't have to
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be a medieval Italian mathematician to smell the reek
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of decay in modern SF. Scholz is right. The job isn't
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being done here.
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"Science Fiction" today is a lot like the
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contemporary Soviet Union; the sprawling possessor of
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a dream that failed. Science fiction's official dogma,
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which almost everybody ignores, is based on attitudes
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toward science and technology which are bankrupt and
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increasingly divorced from any kind of reality. "Hard-
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SF," the genre's ideological core, is a joke today; in
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terms of the social realities of high-tech post-
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industrialism, it's about as relevant as hard-
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Leninism.
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Many of the best new SF writers seem openly
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ashamed of their backward Skiffy nationality. "Ask not
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what you can do for science fiction--ask how you can
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edge away from it and still get paid there."
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A blithely stateless cosmopolitanism is the
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order of the day, even for an accredited Clarion grad
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like Pat Murphy: "I'm not going to bother what camp
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things fall into," she declares in a recent _Locus_
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interview. "I'm going to write the book I want and see
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what happens . . . If the markets run together, I
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leave it to the critics." For Murphy, genre is a dead
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issue, and she serenely wills the trash-mountain to
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come to Mohammed.
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And one has to sympathize. At one time, in its
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clumsy way, Science Fiction offered some kind of
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coherent social vision. SF may have been gaudy and
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naive, and possessed by half-baked fantasies of power
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and wish-fulfillment, but at least SF spoke a
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contemporary language. Science Fiction did the job of
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describing, in some eldritch way, what was actually
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*happening*, at least in the popular imagination.
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Maybe it wasn't for everybody, but if you were a
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bright, unfastidious sort, you could read SF and feel,
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in some satisfying and deeply unconscious way, that
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you'd been given a real grip on the chrome-plated
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handles of the Atomic Age.
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But *now* look at it. Consider the repulsive
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ghastliness of the SF category's Lovecraftian
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inbreeding. People retched in the 60s when De Camp and
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Carter skinned the corpse of Robert E. Howard for its
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hide and tallow, but nowadays necrophilia is run on an
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industrial basis. Shared-world anthologies. Braided
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meganovels. Role-playing tie-ins. Sharecropping books
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written by pip-squeaks under the blazoned name of
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established authors. Sequels of sequels, trilogy
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sequels of yet-earlier trilogies, themselves cut-and-
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pasted from yet-earlier trilogies. What's the common
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thread here? The belittlement of individual
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creativity, and the triumph of anonymous product. It's
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like some Barthesian nightmare of the Death of the
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Author and his replacement by "text."
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Science Fiction--much like that other former
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Vanguard of Progressive Mankind, the Communist Party--
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has lost touch with its cultural reasons for being.
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Instead, SF has become a self-perpetuating commercial
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power-structure, which happens to be in possession of
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a traditional national territory: a portion of
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bookstore rackspace.
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Science fiction habitually ignores any challenge
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from outside. It is protected by the Iron Curtain of
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category marketing. It does not even have to improve
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"on its own terms," because its own terms no longer
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mean anything; they are rarely even seriously
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discussed. It is enough merely to point at the
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rackspace and say "SF."
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Some people think it's great to have a genre
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which has no inner identity, merely a locale where
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it's sold. In theory, this grants vast authorial
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freedom, but the longterm practical effect has been
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heavily debilitating. When "anything is possible in
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SF" then "anything" seems good enough to pass muster.
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Why innovate? Innovate in what direction? Nothing is
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moving, the compass is dead. Everything is becalmed;
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toss a chip overboard to test the current, and it sits
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there till it sinks without a trace.
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It's time to clarify some terms in this essay,
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terms which I owe to Carter Scholz. "Category" is a
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marketing term, denoting rackspace. "Genre" is a
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spectrum of work united by an inner identity, a
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coherent esthetic, a set of conceptual guidelines, an
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ideology if you will.
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"Category" is commercially useful, but can be
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ultimately deadening. "Genre," however, is powerful.
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Having made this distinction, I want to describe
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what seems to me to be a new, emergent "genre," which
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has not yet become a "category."
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This genre is not "category" SF; it is not even
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"genre" SF. Instead, it is a contemporary kind of
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writing which has set its face against consensus
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reality. It is a fantastic, surreal sometimes,
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speculative on occasion, but not rigorously so. It
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does not aim to provoke a "sense of wonder" or to
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systematically extrapolate in the manner of classic
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science fiction.
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Instead, this is a kind of writing which simply
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makes you feel very strange; the way that living in
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the late twentieth century makes you feel, if you are
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a person of a certain sensibility. We could call this
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kind of fiction Novels of Postmodern Sensibility, but
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that looks pretty bad on a category rack, and requires
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an acronym besides; so for the sake of convenience and
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argument, we will call these books "slipstream."
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"Slipstream" is not all that catchy a term, and
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if this young genre ever becomes an actual category I
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doubt it will use that name, which I just coined along
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with my friend Richard Dorsett. "Slipstream" is a
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parody of "mainstream," and nobody calls mainstream
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"mainstream" except for us skiffy trolls.
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Nor is it at all likely that slipstream will
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actually become a full-fledged genre, much less a
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commercially successful category. The odds against it
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are stiff. Slipstream authors must work outside the
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cozy infrastructure of genre magazines, specialized
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genre criticism, and the authorial esprit-de-corps of
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a common genre cause.
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And vast dim marketing forces militate against
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the commercial success of slipstream. It is very
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difficult for these books to reach or build their own
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native audience, because they are needles in a vast
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moldering haystack. There is no convenient way for
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would-be slipstream readers to move naturally from one
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such work to another of its ilk. These books vanish
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like drops of ink in a bucket of drool.
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Occasional writers will triumph against all
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these odds, but their success remains limited by the
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present category structures. They may eke out a fringe
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following, but they fall between two stools. Their
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work is too weird for Joe and Jane Normal. And they
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lose the SF readers, who avoid the mainstream racks
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because the stuff there ain't half weird enough. (One
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result of this is that many slipstream books are left-
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handed works by authors safely established in other
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genres.)
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And it may well be argued that slipstream has no
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"real" genre identity at all. Slipstream might seem to
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be an artificial construct, a mere grab-bag of
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mainstream books that happen to hold some interest for
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SF readers. I happen to believe that slipstream books
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have at least as much genre identity as the variegated
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stock that passes for "science fiction" these days,
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but I admit the force of the argument. As an SF
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critic, I may well be blindered by my parochial point-
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of-view. But I'm far from alone in this situation.
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Once the notion of slipstream is vaguely explained,
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almost all SF readers can recite a quick list of books
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that belong there by right.
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These are books which SF readers recommend to
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friends: "This isn't SF, but it sure ain't mainstream
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and I think you might like it, okay?" It's every man
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his own marketer, when it comes to slipstream.
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In preparation for this essay, I began
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collecting these private lists. My master-list soon
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grew impressively large, and serves as the best
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pragmatic evidence for the actual existence of
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slipstream that I can offer at the moment.
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I myself don't pretend to be an expert in this
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kind of writing. I can try to define the zeitgeist of
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slipstream in greater detail, but my efforts must be
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halting.
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It seems to me that the heart of slipstream is
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an attitude of peculiar aggression against "reality."
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These are fantasies of a kind, but not fantasies which
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are "futuristic" or "beyond the fields we know." These
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books tend to sarcastically tear at the structure of
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"everyday life."
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Some such books, the most "mainstream" ones, are
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non-realistic literary fictions which avoid or ignore
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SF genre conventions. But hard-core slipstream has
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unique darker elements. Quite commonly these works
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don't make a lot of common sense, and what's more they
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often somehow imply that *nothing we know makes* "a
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lot of sense" and perhaps even that *nothing ever
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could*.
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It's very common for slipstream books to screw
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around with the representational conventions of
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fiction, pulling annoying little stunts that suggest
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that the picture is leaking from the frame and may get
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all over the reader's feet. A few such techniques are
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infinite regress, trompe-l'oeil effects, metalepsis,
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sharp violations of viewpoint limits, bizarrely blase'
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reactions to horrifically unnatural events . . . all
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the way out to concrete poetry and the deliberate use
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of gibberish. Think M. C. Escher, and you have a
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graphic equivalent.
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Slipstream is also marked by a cavalier attitude
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toward "material" which is the polar opposite of the
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hard-SF writer's "respect for scientific fact."
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Frequently, historical figures are used in slipstream
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fiction in ways which outrageously violate the
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historical record. History, journalism, official
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statements, advertising copy . . . all of these are
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grist for the slipstream mill, and are disrespectfully
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treated not as "real-life facts" but as "stuff," raw
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material for collage work. Slipstream tends, not to
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"create" new worlds, but to *quote* them, chop them up
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out of context, and turn them against themselves.
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Some slipstream books are quite conventional in
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narrative structure, but nevertheless use their
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fantastic elements in a way that suggests that they
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are somehow *integral* to the author's worldview; not
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neat-o ideas to kick around for fun's sake, but
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something in the nature of an inherent dementia. These
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are fantastic elements which are not clearcut
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"departures from known reality" but ontologically
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*part of the whole mess*; "`real' compared to what?"
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This is an increasingly difficult question to answer
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in the videocratic 80s-90s, and is perhaps the most
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genuinely innovative aspect of slipstream (scary as
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that might seem).
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A "slipstream critic," should such a person ever
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come to exist, would probably disagree with these
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statements of mine, or consider them peripheral to
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what his genre "really" does. I heartily encourage
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would-be slipstream critics to involve themselves in
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heady feuding about the "real nature" of their as-yet-
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nonexistent genre. Bogus self-referentiality is a very
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slipstreamish pursuit; much like this paragraph itself,
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actually. See what I mean?
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My list is fragmentary. What's worse, many of
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the books that are present probably don't "belong"
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there. (I also encourage slipstream critics to weed
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these books out and give convincing reasons for it.)
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Furthermore, many of these books are simply
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unavailable, without hard work, lucky accidents,
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massive libraries, or friendly bookstore clerks in a
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major postindustrial city. In many unhappy cases, I
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doubt that the authors themselves think that anyone is
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interested in their work. Many slipstream books fell
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through the yawning cracks between categories, and
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were remaindered with frantic haste.
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And I don't claim that all these books are
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"good," or that you will enjoy reading them. Many
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slipstream books are in fact dreadful, though they are
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dreadful in a different way than dreadful science
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fiction is. This list happens to be prejudiced toward
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work of quality, because these are books which have
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stuck in people's memory against all odds, and become
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little tokens of possibility.
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I offer this list as a public service to
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slipstream's authors and readers. I don't count myself
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in these ranks. I enjoy some slipstream, but much of
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it is simply not to my taste. This doesn't mean that
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it is "bad," merely that it is different. In my
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opinion, this work is definitely not SF, and is
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essentially alien to what I consider SF's intrinsic
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virtues.
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Slipstream does however have its own virtues,
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virtues which may be uniquely suited to the perverse,
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convoluted, and skeptical tenor of the postmodern era.
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Or then again, maybe not. But to judge this genre by
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the standards of SF is unfair; I would like to see it
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free to evolve its own standards.
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Unlike the "speculative fiction" of the 60s,
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slipstream is not an internal attempt to reform SF in
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the direction of "literature." Many slipstream
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authors, especially the most prominent ones, know or
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care little or nothing about SF. Some few are "SF
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authors" by default, and must struggle to survive in a
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genre which militates against the peculiar virtues of
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their own writing.
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I wish slipstream well. I wish it was an
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acknowledged genre and a workable category, because
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then it could offer some helpful, brisk competition to
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SF, and force "Science Fiction" to redefine and
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revitalize its own principles.
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But any true discussion of slipstream's genre
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principles is moot, until it becomes a category as
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well. For slipstream to develop and nourish, it must
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become openly and easily available to its own
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committed readership, in the same way that SF is
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today. This problem I willingly leave to some
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inventive bookseller, who is openminded enough to
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restructure the rackspace and give these oppressed
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books a breath of freedom.
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THE SLIPSTREAM LIST
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ACKER, KATHY - Empire of the Senseless
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ACKROYD, PETER - Hawksmoor; Chatterton
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ALDISS, BRIAN - Life in the West
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ALLENDE, ISABEL - Of Love and Shadows; House of
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Spirits
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AMIS, KINGSLEY - The Alienation; The Green Man
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AMIS, MARTIN - Other People; Einstein's Monsters
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APPLE, MAX - Zap; The Oranging of America
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ATWOOD, MARGARET - The Handmaids Tale
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AUSTER, PAUL - City of Glass; In the Country of Last
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Things
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BALLARD, J. G. - Day of Creation; Empire of the Sun
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BANKS, IAIN - The Wasp Factory; The Bridge
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BANVILLE, JOHN - Kepler; Dr. Copernicus
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BARNES, JULIAN - Staring at the Sun
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BARTH, JOHN - Giles Goat-Boy; Chimera
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BARTHELME, DONALD - The Dead Father
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BATCHELOR, JOHN CALVIN - Birth of the People s
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Republic of Antarctica
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BELL, MADISON SMARTT - Waiting for the End of the
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World
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BERGER, THOMAS - Arthur Rex
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BONTLY, THOMAS - Celestial Chess
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BOYLE, T. CORAGHESSAN - Worlds End; Water Music
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BRANDAO, IGNACIO - And Still the Earth
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BURROUGHS, WILLIAM - Place of Dead Roads; Naked Lunch;
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Soft Machine; etc.
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CARROLL, JONATHAN - Bones of the Moon; Land of Laughs
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CARTER, ANGELA - Nights at the Circus; Heroes and
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Villains
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CARY, PETER - Illywhacker; Oscar and Lucinda
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CHESBRO, GEORGE M. - An Affair of Sorcerers
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COETZEE, J. M. - Life and rimes of Michael K.
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COOVER, ROBERT - The Public Burning; Pricksongs &
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Descants
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CRACE, JIM - Continent
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CROWLEY, JOHN - Little Big; Aegypt
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DAVENPORT, GUY - Da Vincis Bicycle; The Jules Verne
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Steam Balloon
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DISCH, THOMAS M. - On Wings of Song
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DODGE, JIM - Not Fade Away
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DURRELL, LAWRENCE - Tunc; Nunquam
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ELY, DAVID - Seconds
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ERICKSON, STEVE - Days Between Stations; Rubicon Beach
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FEDERMAN, RAYMOND - The Twofold Variations
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FOWLES, JOHN - A Maggot
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FRANZEN, JONATHAN - The Twenty-Seventh City
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FRISCH, MAX - Homo Faber; Man in the Holocene
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FUENTES, CARLOS - Terra Nostra
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GADDIS, WILLIAM - JR; Carpenters Gothic
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GARDNER, JOHN - Grendel; Freddy's Book
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GEARY, PATRICIA - Strange Toys; Living in Ether
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GOLDMAN, WILLIAM - The Princess Bride; The Color of
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Light
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GRASS, GUNTER - The Tin Drum
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GRAY, ALASDAIR - Lanark
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GRIMWOOD, KEN - Replay
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HARBINSON, W. A. - Genesis; Revelation; Otherworld
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HILL, CAROLYN - The Eleven Million Mile High Dancer
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HJVRTSBERG, WILLIAM - Gray Matters; Falling Angel
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HOBAN, RUSSELL - Riddley Walker
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HOYT, RICHARD - The Manna Enzyme
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IRWIN, ROBERT - The Arabian Nightmares
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ISKANDER, FAZIL - Sandro of Chegam; The Gospel
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According to Sandro
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JOHNSON, DENIS - Fiskadoro
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JONES, ROBERT F. - Blood Sport; The Diamond Bogo
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KINSELLA, W. P. - Shoeless Joe
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KOSTER, R. M. - The Dissertation; Mandragon
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KOTZWINKLE, WILLIAM - Elephant Bangs Train; Doctor
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Rat, Fata Morgana
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KRAMER, KATHRYN - A Handbook for Visitors From Outer
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Space
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LANGE, OLIVER - Vandenberg
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LEONARD, ELMORE - Touch
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LESSING, DORIS - The Four-Gated City; The Fifth Child
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of Satan
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LEVEN, JEREMY - Satan
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MAILER, NORMAN - Ancient Evenings
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MARINIS, RICK - A Lovely Monster
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MARQUEZ, GABRIEL GARCIA - Autumn of the Patriarch; One
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Hundred Years of Solitude
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MATHEWS, HARRY - The Sinking of the Odradek Stadium
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McEWAN, IAN - The Comfort of Strangers; The Child in
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Time
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McMAHON, THOMAS - Loving Little Egypt
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MILLAR, MARTIN - Milk, Sulphate and Alby Starvation
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MOONEY, TED - Easy Travel to Other Planets
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MOORCOCK, MICHAEL - Laughter of Carthage; Byzantium
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Endures; Mother London
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MOORE, BRIAN - Cold Heaven
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MORRELL, DAVID - The Totem
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MORRISON, TONI - Beloved; The Song of Solomon
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NUNN, KEN - Tapping the Source; Unassigned Territory
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PERCY, WALKER - Love in the Ruins; The Thanatos
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Syndrome
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PIERCY, MARGE - Woman on the Edge of Time
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PORTIS, CHARLES - Masters of Atlantis
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PRIEST, CHRISTOPHER - The Glamour; The Affirmation
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PROSE, FRANCINE - Bigfoot Dreams, Marie Laveau
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PYNCHON, THOMAS - Gravity's Rainbow; V; The Crying of
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Lot 49
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REED, ISHMAEL - Mumbo Jumbo; The Terrible Twos
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RICE, ANNE - The Vampire Lestat; Queen of the Damned
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ROBBINS, TOM - Jitterbug Perfume; Another Roadside
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Attraction
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ROTH, PHILIP - The Counterlife
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RUSHDIE, SALMON - Midnight's Children; Grimus; The
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Satanic Verses
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||
SAINT, H. F. - Memoirs of an Invisible Man
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||
SCHOLZ, CARTER & HARCOURT GLENN - Palimpsests
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||
SHEPARD, LUCIUS - Life During Wartime
|
||
SIDDONS, ANNE RIVERS - The House Next Door
|
||
SPARK, MURIEL - The Hothouse by the East River
|
||
SPENCER, SCOTT - Last Night at the Brain Thieves Ball
|
||
SUKENICK, RONALD - Up; Down; Out
|
||
SUSKIND, PATRICK - Perfume
|
||
THEROUX, PAUL - O-Zone
|
||
THOMAS, D. M. - The White Hotel
|
||
THOMPSON, JOYCE - The Blue Chair; Conscience Place
|
||
THOMSON, RUPERT - Dreams of Leaving
|
||
THORNBERG, NEWTON - Valhalla
|
||
THORNTON, LAWRENCE - Imagining Argentina
|
||
UPDIKE, JOHN - Witches of Eastwick; Rogers Version
|
||
VLIET, R. G. - Scorpio Rising
|
||
VOLLMAN, WILLIAM T. - You Bright and Risen Angels
|
||
VONNEGUT, KURT - Galapagos; Slaughterhouse-Five
|
||
WALLACE, DAVID FOSTER - The Broom of the System
|
||
WEBB, DON - Uncle Ovid's Exercise Book
|
||
WHITTEMORE, EDWARD - Nile Shadows; Jerusalem Poker;
|
||
Sinai Tapestry
|
||
WILLARD, NANCY - Things Invisible to See
|
||
WOMACK, JACK - Ambient; Terraplane
|
||
WOOD, BARI - The Killing Gift
|
||
WRIGHT, STEPHEN - M31: A Family Romance
|
||
|
||
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