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1290 lines
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>From cn577@cleveland.Freenet.Edu Sun May 23 13:45:37 1993
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Copyright 1993, Cyberspace Vanguard Magazine
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================================================================
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| C Y B E R S P A C E |
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| V A N G U A R D |
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| News and Views of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Universe |
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================================================================
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| cn577@cleveland.freenet.edu Cyberspace Vanguard@1:157/564 |
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| PO Box 25704, Garfield Hts., OH 44125 USA |
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----------------------------------------------------------------
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| TJ Goldstein, Editor Sarah Alexander, Administrator |
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| tlg4@po.cwru.edu au001@po.cwru.edu |
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----------------------------------------------------------------
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Volume 1 May 20, 1993 Issue 4
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The Mini Issue
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
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--!1!-- Ramblings of a Deranged Editor
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--!21-- DC Comics' Second Massacre: Batman's Crippling and why Editor
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DENNY O'NEIL Thinks It's a Good Idea
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--!3!-- From Space Opera to the Grateful Dead: LOIS MCMASTER BUJOLD on
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Plot, Character, and Other Things on the Way to Perfection
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--!4!-- Cancellation Time: How YOU Can Use this Medium to Help Save
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QUANTUM LEAP and THE YOUNG INDIANA JONES CHRONICLES
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--!5!-- AND I HAVE TO ADMIT, THE MAN LOOKS GOOD STANDING NEXT TO
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PUPPETS: Joel Hodgson Steps Down From MYSTERY SCIENCE THEATER
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3000 Role
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--!6!-- The Old Comics Curmudgeon
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--!7!-- News and SF Calendar: What's Coming Up in the Near Future
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--!8!-- SPOILERS AHOY -- Your guide to the rest of the season for
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THE YOUNG INDIANA JONES CHRONICLES and TIME TRAX
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--!9!-- Administrivia
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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--!1!-- Ramblings of a Deranged Editor
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Why the mini-issue?
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Simple. It's because what started out as a little thing to
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entertain a few people has grown to something beyond any of our wildest
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dreams. In just six months CV has gone from a couple of interviews and
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snippets posted in a few places to a virtually complete source of news
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read literally around the world on perhaps a dozen networks, never mind
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local BBS's. We even have a section of our own on the Free-Net, and
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hope to be on the Usenet backbone before long. The volume of
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information processed is mind-boggling, and we decided we needed help.
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Earlier in the month e-mail subscribers received a list of things we
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need help with, and we've been slowly but surely getting reorganized.
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We hope to be in full form both electronically and on paper by the end
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of the summer.
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If you didn't get the e-mail appeal, it's not too late. Just drop
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us a note at any of the addresses in the masthead and ask for writers'
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guidelines or let us know you're interested and we'll tell you what
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we're looking for. No skill is too insignificant.
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In the meantime, however, here's what's in this issue. The
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suspense has finally ends in the Batman controversy, and DENNY O'NEIL
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explains why he thought it would be a good idea to so drastically alter
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the Gotham City landscape. Novelist LOIS MCMASTER BUJOLD talks about
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what she looks for in her own writing. We have a news flash on the
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future of MYSTERY SCIENCE THEATER 3000. Then, of course, there's the
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"reader participation" feature. It's coming down to the wire for
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QUANTUM LEAP and THE YOUNG INDIANA JONES CHRONICLES. Here's what you
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can do to help save them, whether you are in New York or Hong Kong. Our
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resident Comics Curmudgeon is back, wondering why comic book companies
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want him to feel his age. Then there's just a little bit of news,
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including the beginnings of the Calendar, a feature we hope will grow as
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time goes by, and Spoilers Ahoy, which in sports a real treat -- all
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upcoming episodes for YOUNG INDY and TIME TRAX. (Actually, in terms of
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size, it's not really "mini." I just doesn't have all the regular
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features.
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So let us know what you think, whether you'd like to help out or
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just let us know what direction you think we should be taking. As
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always we can be reached at
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cn577@cleveland.freenet.edu (comments, questions, FREE subscriptions)
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xx133@cleveland.freenet.edu (submissions, news, maintenance)
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Cyberspace Vanguard@1:157/564 (FidoNet)
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CVANGUARD (Delphi)
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or
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Cyberspace Vanguard
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PO Box 25704
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Garfield Hts., OH 44125
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USA
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The paper version is on hold temporarily while we regroup, hence no
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subscription rates this issue. (No checks have been or will be cashed
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until it gets up and running again.)
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WORLD WATCH: We have received letters from readers in: the United
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States, Canada, Costa Rica, Argentina, Brazil, England, Republic of
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Ireland, Netherlands, France, Spain, Belgium, Germany, Malta, Sweden,
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Iceland, Italy, South Africa, Hong Kong, Austria, Australia, New
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Zealand, Norway, and from one reader who says that Norway is nice, but
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he lives in OSLO. As always, if you're reading this somewhere else,
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particularly via FidoNet file request or local BBS, please drop us a
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line and let us know.
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REPOSTING: Cyberspace Vanguard may be reposted anywhere IN ITS
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ENTIRETY, with all headers and warnings intact. News items may be
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reposted as long as credit is given. For interviews and articles you
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must contact us so that we may obtain permission from the authors, to
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whom all rights revert upon publication. (Articles with no byline were
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written by TJ Goldstein.) We would also appreciate knowing where you're
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reposting, but it's not a necessity.
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Cyberspace Vanguard is registered with the United States Copyright
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Office.
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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--!21-- DC Comics' Second Massacre: Batman's Crippling and why Editor
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DENNY O'NEIL Thinks It's a Good Idea
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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(Denny O'Neil's appearance at MARCON 28 was co-sponsored by Central City
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Comics, East Main St., Columbus, OH (614) 231-1620 4347)
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"You take writing courses and they tell you, 'write what you
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know,'" Denny O'Neil told fans at MARCON 28 in Columbus Ohio. "Well, I
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have never in my life hung out on a rooftop at midnight waiting for a
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maniacal serial killer to show up so I could punch him. Not even once."
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So given this lack of experience, Mr. O'Neil thought that perhaps
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this philosophy was nonsense -- after all, he'd been writing and editing
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the BATMAN comic books for years, and sitting on rooftops occupies a
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great deal of the Dark Knight's time. On the other hand, he did have a
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lot of trouble writing for DC Comics' other megastar, Superman. "I
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finally figured out that it has to do with fantasies. I've never
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fantasized about being omnipotent. I've never fantasized about being
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God, which is what Superman is, in effect. I've fantasized about human
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perfectibility, about running the marathon in less than two hours. I
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never would. Nobody ever would. But it's within the realm of human
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possibility. So it has to do, I think, with dreams, which characters
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you can relate to, and which characters you can't."
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Mr. O'Neil was nice enough to give us a bit of time that evening in
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the lobby of the hotel, though by then it was getting late, and he
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looked like a rooftop might be a little more peaceful. The BATMAN comic
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books are in the midst of "Knightfall," a major plot running through all
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of them which has some of he same feel as the recent "Doomsday" story,
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in which Superman was killed. Aside from wanting to know what happens
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(we'll get to that), fans were asking the obvious question at the panel,
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and he looked like it was far from the first time he'd heard it.
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"Of COURSE it's a marketing ploy," he told them. If there's one
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thing you can say about him, it's that he doesn't pull any punches.
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"We're in the business of selling comic books. We're in the business of
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entertaining as many people as we can. Maybe when I was a long haired
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hippie I would have found that reprehensible, but look at it from a
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slightly different angle. Every storyteller wants to tell his story to
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as many people as possible. We are taking this character, as a
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character, and putting him through hell. But that's one of the things
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fiction writers do. It's what drama's about. I think people are
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responding to the drama, and that pleases me a lot. They're not
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responding to marketing ploys or stunts."
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But ... "'Knightfall' ends with Batman 500," which will have an
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"enhanced cover." Which, of course, brings us back to the subject of
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media hype and, as one reader put it, preying on a financially strapped
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public. "I don't remember ever putting a gun to anyone's head and
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saying 'you've got to by all four covers," he countered in the relative
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quiet of the lobby, referring to the debut of LEGENDS OF THE DARK
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KNIGHT, which sported four different colored covers. "At least at DC,
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we have provided an economical alternative to every enhanced cover. I
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mean, those are for the collector's market. If I were a reader, I don't
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know that I'd be buying them, but we can't begrudge the people for whom
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that is important. Also, we only do it when we're trying to call
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attention to a special story. We don't ever do it indiscriminately.
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"Sure, Batman 500 is going to have an enhanced cover. You bet!
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It's the 500th issue of the magazine. It's also going to have a new
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artist and a major story point and a new costume, so SURE we do cover
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enhancements, but we always have a newsstand edition. Likewise bagged
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editions. I just have a lot trouble wrapping my head around those
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objections. You don't have to buy those things to get the story, but if
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they're important to you we provide them. Again, though, only when
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there's something special inside." The costume change is the only one
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in Batman's history (unless you count Julie Schwartz adding an oval
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around the bat in the 1960's), and the new artist is Mike Manley. "Jim
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Aparo will do half the book, then at a logical break in the story, Mike
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will pick it up. It's a graceful way to make the transition. It's also
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to give Jim some of the royalties on what looks like it will be a
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tremendous seller because he's a great guy and a terrific artist."
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The rumors are flying. "I haven't heard anything that was
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completely true. I've heard rumors that were 70% true, but nobody's
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guessed it exactly. The most prevalent rumor is that Batman is going to
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die. No, no, a thousand times no. Batman is NOT going to die. Nobody
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is going to die. Well, nobody major, anyway."
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That was three weeks ago, and when we asked him about the rumor
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that Bane was going to cripple Batman his face took on a sort of trapped
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quality. He refused to either confirm or deny it then, but a few days
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ago he did confirm it to Mike Sangiacomo of the Cleveland Plain Dealer,
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explaining that Azreal was going to take over as Batman and that Bruce
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Wayne would be in a wheelchair for at least six months, having to "prove
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that he really is the world's greatest detective" while letting other
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costumed heroes do the legwork as he tries to track down the villains
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who have kidnapped the father of Time Drake (Robin) and Bruce's love
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interest (who also happens to be the one doctor who might be able to
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restore his mobility. What a coincidence.)
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After "Knightfall" ends in BATMAN 500, "Knightquest will split into
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two parts, with "The Search" in BATMAN and DETECTIVE and "The Quest" in
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JUSTICE LEAGUE TASK FORCE, SHADOW OF THE BAT and LEGENDS OF THE DARK
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KNIGHT. (CATWOMAN will spin off into her own monthly book from one of
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the last issues of "Knightfall.") But why does a comic book company
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bounce a story around between so many books? "Um ... because we can?"
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He goes on to explain that there were several purposes to the
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"Knightfall" storyline. "The genesis of this was my perception that
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Batman would be running out of steam at about this point. It turns out
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I was wrong. Batman ran out of steam last year. In terms of sales, I
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thought the movie and the TV show would kind of carry us through the end
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of last year. Not true. So I (with some creative people) thought of
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this a couple of years ago on the assumption that Batman would need a
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boost in the arm, so all we tried to do was think of a big, major story
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we could do, and then like Topsy it kinda growed, partially so that I
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could write some of it and put it in magazines that I don't edit. The
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other thing it might do for some of those magazines is help them."
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Of course, taking on a story that can have consequences of such
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magnitude had got huge consequences for the continuity, or "official
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history" of the fictional universe. "As a writer, and also as an
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editor, I'm a little uncomfortable with the idea that continuity is so
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important. However, first of all, it's city hall; we can't fight it.
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The audience demands it.
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"But in another way, in another sort of revelation/realization,
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we're doing something that's never been done before in the history of
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narrative. Narrative in western culture goes back 15000 years to
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Gilgamesh. Nobody has ever tried to do what Mike [Carlin, editor of
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SUPERMAN] and I and some of the other guys are doing, which is to build
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this incredibly complex story that coordinates the efforts of a dozen or
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more creative people, and then integrate it into the DC universe.
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There's this huge megastructure that takes over everything." He adds
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that the computer in his office sports a tight timeline for all the
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Batman and related books and that on it he can find any event "unless we
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specifically label something as out of continuity.
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"It's what makes our jobs the most interesting in all of
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publishing, and also it's why we have grey hairs and twitch a lot."
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The timeline is not, however, ironclad in terms of the future, even
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when it comes to the unfinished sections of the "Knightfall" storyline.
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"I keep a very loose reign on my guys. I want to leave it open enough
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so that if they have a good idea somewhere along the line we can
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accommodate it. Also, I work with very good people. Maybe for the
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first time in my life I am working with all good writers. I trust them
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to write good stories. I don't need to plot everything with them.
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They're very good writers. They know what a story is. They won't ever
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fail me on that."
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And what about his writing? Does he prefer the editing he does
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now? "I found out about four years ago when I didn't have to write
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after doing it for so long to put food on the table that it's pretty
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deep. I've been telling stories since I was maybe seven years old, and
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I finally realized that I would define myself as a storyteller. I
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didn't realize that until a couple of years ago. I hadn't really
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thought about it. It wasn't important to define myself. But I tried to
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figure out what the hell it is I've been doing all these years, and
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that's what it comes down to."
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He also took a little time to answer questions from some of our
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readers. One was about something he wishes he could forget: a little
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known book by Dennis O'Neil called BITE OF THE MONSTER. "Yeah, I wrote
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it," he admits, cringing as a passing fan tells him that he actually has
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a copy of it. There have been stories in the past that he has tried to
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buy back the remaining copies so he could destroy them. "I wish G-d
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would work a small miracle and let me re-write it. I didn't know
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anything about science and damn little about fiction when I wrote that.
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In fact as a result of this book I said, 'you know, it says right here
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that I'm a science fiction writer and I don't know what an atom is.' So
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I started reading books like ONE, TWO, THREE -- INFINITY and I've got
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BIOGRAPHY OF PHYSICS by George Gamow up in my room. I don't have any of
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the math, but I became interested in the part of physics that you can
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get from words. So in a way, that was an educational book for me in
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that it forced me to realize everything that I don't know and to start
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to fill in those gaps."
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And what about the movies? Mentioned specifically was the un-
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Batman-like violence of BATMAN RETURNS, such as Batman's use of the
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Batmobile's jet engine to set a villain aflame. "A lot of people,
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particularly parents, commented on that. What can I say? I have
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nothing to do with the movies. I see the scripts, but that particular
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shot wasn't in the script, so I didn't know about it until I saw the
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movie. It's Tim Burton's interpretation of the character. I read the
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scripts [not because I had input but] because I did the adaptations.
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"Batman is an archetype, and there are different ways to interpret
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an archetype. In the comics there have been at least five different
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versions, all of which I think were the right version for their time.
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Tim Burton is a very bright man who feels that his version is the right
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one for his medium and his time."
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And things do change. As he told the panel, "DC Comics is at a
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very crucial point in its history, and we all recognize that. DC Comics
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has made a lot of mistakes in the last 10 years. Done a lot of GOOD
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things, but in terms of selling comic books, we've made a lot of
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mistakes. Some were mistakes that we could possibly control. But I
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would say that our biggest mistake, and I'm going to bite my tongue and
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not say what it was, but it wassomething that we possibly had no control
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over. ... We've made some enemies in trying to focus those problems.
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Specifically, we've canceled the JUSTICE SOCIETY while it was still
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selling pretty well. Every show I work there are hard core JUSTICE
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SOCIETY fans who want to lynch me, but I'll take one-third
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responsibility for that decision. It was made for this reason: DC
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Comics are the comics your father -- your GRANDfather read. That series
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only reminded people of that.
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"We've made a lot of other mistakes in that area, but we're
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correcting them in slower, more gradual ways. We have to convince the
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13 and 14 year olds that we're not fossils if we're going to survive. We
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have taken steps towards doing that."
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And as he told us, "We're going to redouble our efforts to do what
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DC has traditionally done best, which is to provide the best writing and
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the best stories. Let us know if we're doing it."
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Thanks to Bill_Keir@kumear.apana.org.au, MORROW@FNAL.FNAL.GOV (Greg
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Morrow); ab028@freenet.carleton.ca (Timo H. Jaakkimain);
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castle@ug.cs.dal.ca (JULIAN GUTHRIE CASTLE); djohnson@Willamette.EDU
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(Dane Johnson); arendt@bme.ri.ccf.org (Joe Arendt) and
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vbv@lor.EEAP.CWRU.Edu (Virgilio B. Velasco) for submitting questions.
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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--!3!-- From Space Opera to the Grateful Dead: LOIS MCMASTER BUJOLD
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on Plot, Character, and Other Things on the Way to Perfection
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Lois McMaster Bujold is mostly known for her space opera -- and
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while for some that is a derogatory term, she doesn't mind using it. "I
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call it space opera because it has the trappings of space opera: the
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spaceships, that sort of thing." But what IS her science fiction,
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really?
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Most of those books have been the Miles Vorkosigan adventures,
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about a man who doesn't fit the description of a classic space opera
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hero, who is usually tall, muscular, a straight shooter with a laser
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rifle, able to fight his way out of anything. In contrast, Miles is
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reasonably short, and afflicted with a disease that makes his bones
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brittle. "So as a result of this, he has to think is way out of a
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situation because he can't fight his way out. He can't very well punch
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somebody because he'll break his arm.
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"I don't do too much pushing the envelope of the genre outward
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trying to take space opera and turn it into something else. What I do
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is more of a 'down and in,' doing my experimenting on the inside of the
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genre, depth of characterisation, that sort of thing, coherent themes.
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In a sense, I almost write science fiction as though it were fantasy
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because my concern is character, character development, how do people
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grow and change, how do they deal with moral dillemmas, these type of
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questions rather than technical questions, or futuristic extrapolations.
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My space world is a psychological landscape."
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For her, it seems, character is more than just an abstract notion,
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a necessary evil. It's a goal in and of itself. "I want to make people
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who live inside your head the way certain characters live inside my head
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long after the book is closed. The supreme example I always use for a
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character who has taken on this kind of extra-literary life is Sherlock
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Holmes. This is a character who not only out-lived his author but who
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takes over other writers and makes them write him."
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That may be part of the reason that she writes a series of novels,
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as many science fiction and fantasy novelist do, as opposed to isolated
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stories. "I would read series like Dorothy Lindsey's Peter Wimsey
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stories, or like C.S. Forester's Horatio Hornblower stories. I wanted
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to get into these characters, and one book isn't enough to do a
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character right. I'm an old series fan from way back."
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But, she insists, there's more to a book than just character.
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"There's a wonderful book by Dorothy Sayers called THE MIND OF THE
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MAKER. It talks about the right relationship of plot, character, and
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theme. Basically, not any plot goes with any character. The example
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she uses is if you dropped Othello down in Hamlet's plot and Hamlet down
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in Othello's plot, in neither case would you get a five act tragedy.
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Othello would run the wicked uncle through in act one, and Hamlet would
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dither around and dither around until maybe he established Desdemona's
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innocence. You might get a mystery out of it, but you wouldn't get
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HAMLET.
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"So you have to have the right character and the right plot. A
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plot should be a test of character, so when I start, as I usually do,
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with the character, I'm looking for a plot that shows who this character
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is, that tests him right to the edge of destruction to find out what
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this guy is made of. It really is 'character torture.' But in the end,
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you've created this live person. You are what you do, so plot and
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character are like this interlocking figure ground thing. You can't
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separate one from the other."
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On the other hand, however, there is a kind of "character torture"
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that's NOT something a writer should engage in. Asked if she ever felt
|
||
bad about what she was doing to her characters, she laughed. "Actually,
|
||
there's nothing worse for the poor reader than when the writer's working
|
||
out their therapy through their fiction. The writer feels much better
|
||
afterwards, but the reader is stuck. You put them on this roller
|
||
coaster and strap them down and push them off the top and say, 'have a
|
||
nice trip,' whereas you, the writer, have some psychological control
|
||
over the material in the course of writing it. So for you it's a
|
||
different trip. You get to pick the curves. The poor reader, who is
|
||
stuck going along with you, has a much rougher ride."
|
||
So, there's character, and there's plot, and that's all there is to
|
||
it, right? Wrong. "There's another level to drop down on to try and
|
||
figure out what's the BEST one, and that's the level of theme. the
|
||
level of what's this story REALLY about, deep down. It's not the plot,
|
||
it's about something. In the case of BARRAYAR, we have this young woman
|
||
making her way on the planet that she's got to marry into and all these
|
||
bizarre political things happen, but the theme of the book is the cost
|
||
of being a mother. What does she have to give up in order to perform
|
||
the act of parenting and become a mother. And in her case she has to
|
||
give up a great deal of what she thought was part of herself. She was a
|
||
pacifist, for example, and in the climax of the book she involves
|
||
herself in a political execution. This was kind of the last part of her
|
||
identity that she had to give up to save the life of her child. There
|
||
were a whole bunch of nice illusions about herself that had to go. It
|
||
was the cost of being a mother for her. So the book is really about the
|
||
cost of being a parent. That would be the theme.
|
||
"There's a level even under theme, which I've come to call 'world
|
||
view.' It's the basic choice about what kind of story to tell. Every
|
||
writer always writes their world view, no matter what else they're
|
||
doing. That's even under the level of theme. It's the choice of what
|
||
to see and what not to see, and that's REALLY insidious. The perfect
|
||
writer would be in control on every level. They would know what theme
|
||
they were working in, they would be conscious of their world view, and
|
||
everything would work like clockwork. You'd get dynamite results that
|
||
way." World view can even, at times, be the reason a reader picks up a
|
||
book. Ms. Bujold says that "one of the fantasy writers that I actually
|
||
pay money to read is Terry Pratchett. He writes a funny fantasy full of
|
||
amusing incidents and funny stuff, but underneath there is this very
|
||
humane world view. I read a Terry Pratchett book when I really need to
|
||
step into that world view for a while and return refreshed."
|
||
So she's obviously no stranger to fantasy, but how is it that she
|
||
came to write her own fantasy novel, THE SPIRIT RING, after all these
|
||
space operas? "The book that really started the fantasy novel was
|
||
something that came down through my family. It was my great uncle's
|
||
Ph.D. thesis, a monograph on the legend of the Grateful Dead. It was
|
||
published in 1907, and it was the story of a young man who goes out to
|
||
seek his fortune and comes across a situation where he finds the body of
|
||
a debtor who lays unburied until his debts are paid. So he forks over
|
||
his grub stake, gets the guy planted, and goes down the road to further
|
||
adventures in which he is helped by the grateful ghost of the dead man.
|
||
This is a story that appears in all these versions in all these
|
||
cultures, and I thought wow, this is one of these basic stories that can
|
||
be told and re-told in a thousand different ways. And it's NOT one that
|
||
people have done a bunch. We've done certain of the tales over and over
|
||
and over again, but this was a folk tale tropy that has not been
|
||
exhausted. So I thought, OK, good, I'll stake this one out and it'll be
|
||
all mine.
|
||
"It was the most researched book I ever did, because I decided to
|
||
make it historical. I originally had the idea that I was going to make
|
||
it a fantasy world with a renaissance flavor, and as I got through about
|
||
the 10th of my background books I thought, wait a minute, I can do this
|
||
too. I'll just make it a real renaissance world, and hopefully I'll
|
||
pick up the historical novel readers too. Broaden the audience.
|
||
"I've recently decided that mainstream literature is the world's
|
||
largest shared universe series. If I'm going to do all that studying
|
||
for a shared universe, let it be one that I can recycle. Why study up
|
||
on a universe you can only use once when you can learn the history and
|
||
use it again?"
|
||
Maybe that's the reason that she does so much studying. "I don't
|
||
read much fiction anymore because I need the nonfiction because I can
|
||
steal it. When I read a nonfiction piece, a historical piece or a
|
||
biographical piece I'm getting new ideas that I can put into my bag and
|
||
take out later and transmute into my fiction. When I read a piece of
|
||
fiction I remove ideas from my bag because somebody else has used it, so
|
||
I can't use it too. So reading fiction subtracts from my pool of
|
||
available ideas. Unless you're stealing techniques or something. Like,
|
||
this is how you handle a flashback. You can take that from other
|
||
writers. Then there's the time factor. Time doesn't exist."
|
||
It's a give-and-take process that seems to be essential not only in
|
||
her work, but in her outlook towards both print and visual media, which
|
||
seem to suffer a well-defined division in the science fiction and
|
||
fantasy universe. "I'm in print media. I write novels because I like
|
||
doing what novels do, which is to get into people's heads. That's what
|
||
fascinates me. Movies move. That's movies job. It's an interesting
|
||
thing the way the reader or viewer helps partake of the creation of the
|
||
story. With print media, you give them what's going on in the person's
|
||
head and they project the image of the motion. It's amazing how much
|
||
you can make the reader make up in terms of exterior view if you just
|
||
give them what's going on in the character's head. That's what the
|
||
reader wants, and that's what they get.
|
||
"Now, it was a belated insight for me to realize that film is just
|
||
like that in reverse. What we see is the visuals and what we make up
|
||
and project onto the screen as a viewer is what's going on inside the
|
||
characters head. We supply the emotional interpretation and project it
|
||
onto this otherwise ambiguous sequence of actions. Something like
|
||
background music can supply emotional cues as to how we're supposed to
|
||
interpret what we're seeing.
|
||
"So both kinds of fiction are interactive, but they're
|
||
complementary in the way they're interactive between what the artist
|
||
presents and what the reader or viewer brings to it. But it's this
|
||
mutual dance, and in neither case do you have art unless you have both
|
||
the artist and the viewer or the reader.
|
||
"I'd like to see my stuff translated to media simply because it
|
||
reaches such a huge audience and it might bring more readers back to my
|
||
books. But the book is where it's at for me. This is where I'm in
|
||
control. It takes an army to make a movie but with a novel you can
|
||
write alone, and I like that."
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
--!4!-- Cancellation Time: How YOU Can Use this Medium to Help Save
|
||
QUANTUM LEAP and THE YOUNG INDIANA JONES CHRONICLES
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
At least when it came to American television, September, 1992
|
||
looked better for science fiction programming than any September had in
|
||
years. STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION had established itself as the top
|
||
rated syndicated program in the country, DEEP SPACE NINE was on its way,
|
||
and a whole slew of programs were set to blast onto the airwaves. Now,
|
||
in mid-May, it doesn't look quite as hopeful. SPACE RANGERS was a
|
||
dismal failure, lasting less than a month. JOURNEY TO THE CENTER OF THE
|
||
EARTH was, in many viewers' estimation, a complete and total waste of
|
||
bandwidth, bordering on the embarrassing. George R.R. Martin's
|
||
DOORWAYS didn't even make it to the screen, despite strong support from
|
||
the few who knew about it.
|
||
But still, TIME TRAX has been holding its own, HIGHLANDER is still
|
||
in negotiations for next fall, and the word is that BABYLON 5 has been
|
||
picked up for next year.
|
||
Unfortunately, it's not all wine and roses. The past weeks have
|
||
brought news of the cancellation of two of the genre's best loved
|
||
programs: QUANTUM LEAP and THE YOUNG INDIANA JONES CHRONICLES. Both
|
||
suffered from network sabotage, either in terms of time slot or
|
||
pre-emptions (or both), and both have the disconcerting handicap of
|
||
being ... well, intelligent.
|
||
But there's no reason that we have to give up on these shows. In
|
||
our last issue we brought you J. Michael Straczynski's broadcasted
|
||
request that viewers who liked the show write to their local TV
|
||
stations. The appeal was carried over many conduits (not just this
|
||
magazine, by any means), and a month later CV was told by Warner Bros.
|
||
that they had not made a decision yet, but "the stations really seemed
|
||
to have liked it." The official announcement has not yet been made, but
|
||
as of now it looks very much like a "go."
|
||
YOUR LETTERS DO HAVE AN EFFECT.
|
||
So, in the interest of preserving two pieces of the genre, we are
|
||
doing two things: 1) We're giving you some background on the programs
|
||
and how you can help to save them, and 2) we're accepting your
|
||
electronic sentiments and will forward them to the people who need to
|
||
see them. At the end of this article you'll find instructions on write-
|
||
in campaigns in general and submitting letters for forwarding in
|
||
particular.
|
||
|
||
**********************
|
||
|
||
QUANTUM LEAP:
|
||
Some people found it confusing at first. Here was this scientist
|
||
who had "leaped" into somebody else's life. So was he there, or wasn't
|
||
he? Eventually, plenty of people either got over their confusion (he
|
||
was really there) or decided that it really didn't matter. Here was
|
||
intelligent, sensitive television that wasn't afraid to tackle the
|
||
issues of both history and the present, from racism to homosexuality.
|
||
The show garnered plenty of awards, both from professional organizations
|
||
and from viewers.
|
||
However, with the ratings this season as bad as they were (having
|
||
been moved from 10pm to 8pm, when most of the people likely to watch the
|
||
show probably had not yet settled in for the night,) it probably didn't
|
||
come as much of a surprise to many people when they heard that QL had
|
||
been canceled. Add to this the fact that the show has probably been
|
||
pre-empted more than it's actually been shown this season, and it seems
|
||
almost inevitable. The feeling was reinforced by shows with a distinct
|
||
"ratings grabber" feel to them. As it happens, the "celebrity" episodes
|
||
(Marylin Monroe, Elvis, etc.,) were not the idea of the producers, but
|
||
the network, which had hoped to improve the ratings.
|
||
The fans didn't wait for the official decision to act. At one
|
||
point NBC, the network on which QL airs in the United States, was
|
||
receiving 50,000 letters a week, many of them postcards asking the
|
||
network to "Leap us back to Wednesdays at 10," where the shows ratings
|
||
had been great in past years. The show was canceled anyway, and rumors
|
||
are that letters and faxes in support of the show are actually being
|
||
shredded.
|
||
Fans led a march on NBC that was really more of a rally, opting for
|
||
professional dress to show NBC that the demographics of the masses
|
||
outside their door were what advertisers wanted. They gathered
|
||
petitions and lots of attention, but not a change of heart from NBC.
|
||
Finally the effort has turned to Belisarius Productions and
|
||
Universal, who produce the show. They are currently "shopping the show
|
||
around" to find another place for it, either on another network or in
|
||
syndication. Your letters will help Universal to see that there really
|
||
is an audience for the program, and perhaps more importantly, to prove
|
||
it to potential buyers. Here are the addresses to write to:
|
||
|
||
*** Harriet, c/o "Quantum Leap", Universal Studios, Universal City, CA
|
||
91608 Petitions with lots of names should be mailed or faxed to her at
|
||
818-777-0144. This is the production office for QL. They will collect
|
||
letters and forward them, as they don't want Universal to be annoyed by
|
||
a deluge of letters.
|
||
They are collecting letters there because Universal is "shopping
|
||
the show around" for another network. The current plan is for postcards
|
||
saying "Count on me to help KEEP THE LEAP." To let other networks know
|
||
you would like them to pick up the show, write to:
|
||
|
||
Mr. Ted Harbert, Entertainment President, ABC, 2040 Avenue of the Stars,
|
||
Century City, CA 90067
|
||
|
||
Mr. Sandy Grushow, Entertainment President, FOX, Box 900, Beverly Hills,
|
||
CA 90213
|
||
|
||
Mr. Jeff Sagansky, Entertainment President, CBS, 7800 Beverly Blvd., Los
|
||
Angeles, CA 90036
|
||
|
||
and, if you're REALLY idealistic,
|
||
|
||
Mr. Warren Littlefield, Entertainment President, NBC, 3000 W. Alameda
|
||
Ave., Burbank, CA 91523 -- Viewer Relations (212) 408-9100
|
||
|
||
**********************
|
||
|
||
THE YOUNG INDIANA JONES CHRONICLES:
|
||
You might not know it by that name. Besides the United States and
|
||
Canada, the show is being aired in some form in Japan, Spain, Austria,
|
||
Ireland, the Netherlands, Turkey, and Argentina. England will be
|
||
picking it up on Sky One any time now, and Italy will begin broadcasting
|
||
it in June -- and apparently it goes by different names in different
|
||
countries.
|
||
It's the story of the character made famous by Harrison Ford,
|
||
archeologist/adventurer/hero Indiana Jones, before he became any of
|
||
those things. Much of the time it's not quite the adventure you'd
|
||
expect from one of the movies, but it succeeds at creator George Lucas'
|
||
goal of doing for history what STAR WARS did for science -- it's giving
|
||
kids a "hook," some reason to take a closer look at, say, the Russian
|
||
Revolution, or World War I, with a sensitivity and characterization that
|
||
is sadly lacking in most American television, and perhaps even better,
|
||
with accurate research into the real history involved. If you've ever
|
||
wondered what might have happened if Indy had ever talked to Mata Hari
|
||
(or Ho Chi Minh, or ...), this show is for you. Lucasfilm even has a
|
||
study guide for the series, which includes a synopsis, pictures, and a
|
||
short biography of the real people involved in each episode. The
|
||
current guide covers the second season's episodes, and a complete guide,
|
||
which will cover every episode produced, will be available soon. The
|
||
cost for the guide is extremely reasonable: it's free! Send a letter
|
||
requesting your copy to Lucasfilm Ltd., Young Indy Research Dept., P.O.
|
||
Box 2009, San Rafael, CA, 94912.
|
||
Though the show has not been renewed for the fall, it will not be
|
||
disappearing from the airwaves. Put on hiatus during May "sweeps," in
|
||
the United States the remaining 11 episodes will air beginning in June.
|
||
Soundtracks from the series are available now.
|
||
There are two collections available from Varese-Sarabande Records.
|
||
They are: 1) Verdun 1916, Peking 1910, Paris 1916, Barcelona 1917, and
|
||
2) Vienna 1908, German East Africa 1916, Congo 1917, London 1916,
|
||
British East Africa 1909. A third collection will be available June 8.
|
||
It is: Chicago 1920 Parts 1 & 2, New York 1920 Parts 1 & 2, Princeton
|
||
1916. In addition to Varese Sarabande, these collections are available
|
||
on CD and cassette across the United States at stores such as Tower
|
||
Records, The Warehouse, Sam Goody, etc. The CD's line notes include
|
||
individual musician names as well as synopses and color photos from each
|
||
episode. For more information please direct inquiries to: Mr. David
|
||
Hamilton, Customer Relations, Varese-Sarabande Records, 13006 Saticoy
|
||
Street #2, N. Hollywood, CA 91605, USA.
|
||
If you would like to show your continued support of the show, the
|
||
best person to direct your correspondence to is:
|
||
|
||
Mr. Ted Harbert, President of ABC Entertainment
|
||
The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles
|
||
2040 Avenue of the Stars
|
||
Los Angeles, CA 90067
|
||
|
||
(Note that contrary to usual practice, they want you to put the series
|
||
name on the envelope so that it will be processed as quickly as
|
||
possible.)
|
||
|
||
The request comes with an acknowledgment that the science fiction
|
||
community has probably known for quite a while. "I realize that this is
|
||
an unusual request but we are beginning to recognize that keeping
|
||
quality programming on the air requires an unusual effort."
|
||
It also requires an unusual budget. Some viewers have suggested
|
||
taking the show to PBS, the Public Broadcasting System, which
|
||
specializes in educational programming, but PBS simply cannot cover the
|
||
cost of $1.6 million per episode. And that's using the cost-cutting
|
||
techniques of computer animation and editing -- not everything you see
|
||
is real.
|
||
So the network needs to hear from YOU in support of the show to
|
||
convince them that more episodes are worth the effort.
|
||
|
||
Check SPOILERS AHOY for the episode guide to the rest of the
|
||
season.
|
||
|
||
ON THE SENDING OF LETTERS: We at CV recognize that many of you
|
||
receiving the magazine fall into the category of those who will respond
|
||
to e-mail within seconds but wouldn't know a stamp if it sealed your
|
||
mouth shut, so we are providing the following service: Send your letter
|
||
of support for either of these shows to cn577@cleveland.freenet.edu or
|
||
Cyberspace Vanguard@1:157/564 and we will print them out, gather them
|
||
up, and send them to the relevant producers and networks. Please make
|
||
sure the Subject: line identifies your letter, and that you include your
|
||
name, address, and phone number so that they know you're not just a
|
||
randomly generated string of numbers and letters. Also, by popular
|
||
request, we are reprinting Bjo Trimble's rules for a successful letter
|
||
writing campaign. (You know Bjo -- she's the one who organized the
|
||
campaign to save the third season of STAR TREK.)
|
||
|
||
========== HOW TO WRITE EFFECTIVE LETTERS ===================
|
||
1. Write a short, sincere individual letter to EACH network, sponsor,
|
||
what-have-you, in support of the television show in question. When mail
|
||
is counted, your letter will truly make the difference.
|
||
|
||
2. Then, ask 10 people to write letters. They write the letters and then
|
||
ask 10 people to write letters, and on and on (get the idea?). Don't
|
||
be judgmental; there are many "closet" fans out there: fellow workers,
|
||
neighbors, church groups, classmates, civic and other clubs, etc.
|
||
|
||
3. Don't (ever) address a V.I.P. (executive) familiarly, act smart, use
|
||
insulting language, or tell a corporation how to run their business.
|
||
You are asking for a favor. The wrong attitude will nullify your letter.
|
||
|
||
4. Be pleasant. Corporations seldom get anything but complaints, so a
|
||
cheerful, upbeat letter can make a CEO more receptive.
|
||
|
||
5. Don't use form letters, mimeographed (photocopied) or multiple
|
||
carbons. Such letters give the impression that only a small segment is
|
||
doing all the writing--but computer letters are OK.
|
||
|
||
6. Sign the letter!! Anonymous mail is sleazy and is either thrown away
|
||
or put in the "nut" file.
|
||
|
||
7. Use company letterhead or club stationery if you have a right to.
|
||
Corporations are sensitive to potential "Pressure groups." But ...
|
||
|
||
8. Don't misrepresent yourself. Corporations are geared to ferret out
|
||
spurious claims. Such tricks will not help your cause and someone may
|
||
check it out for a news story.
|
||
|
||
9. Use petitions to get the names from those who won't bother to write a
|
||
letter themselves. Corporations understand that only a percentage of
|
||
people will get off their fat apathy to write letters; signatures on a
|
||
petition can show how many MORE people want support a television show.
|
||
The petition should have at least one contact address.
|
||
|
||
[Bjo Trimble also runs a great newsletter called SPACE TIME CONTINUUM,
|
||
and can be reached at 713-359-4284. The address is 2059 Fir Springs
|
||
Dr., Kingwood TX, 77339-1701, USA. This list of guidelines was
|
||
originally published in Issue 2 as part of an article about Bjo's part
|
||
in the fight to get the Space, Fantasy, and Adventure Network off the
|
||
ground and onto the cable networks. Several phrases have been changed
|
||
to reflect the slightly different goal of this campaign, but the rest is
|
||
hers.]
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
--!5!-- AND I HAVE TO ADMIT, THE MAN LOOKS GOOD STANDING NEXT TO
|
||
PUPPETS: Joel Hodgson Steps Down From MYSTERY SCIENCE THEATER
|
||
3000 Role
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
by Lisa Jenkins
|
||
|
||
On May 11, 1993, Comedy Central announced in a press release that
|
||
creator and star of the comedy hit series MYSTERY SCIENCE THEATER 3000
|
||
(MST3K), Joel Hodgson, will step down from his on-screen role of Joel
|
||
Robinson. Fans fear not, MST3K's head writer and frequent guest star
|
||
Mike Nelson will continue the role starting midway into the fifth
|
||
season, now in production. Hodgson will remain behind the scenes
|
||
writing, producing and directing.
|
||
Hodgson has considered leaving the role for quite some time. "I
|
||
just feel like there comes a time when I have to just stop," he said.
|
||
"It will live on. I'll still be an executive producer and participate
|
||
with it from a writing standpoint, but I won't be on camera."
|
||
"We are both excited about the creative possibilities that Mike's
|
||
new character will bring to the series and delighted that Joel's
|
||
influence on the show will continue," said Mitch Semel, senior vice
|
||
president of programming at Comedy Central. "We know this will give the
|
||
fans something to look forward to."
|
||
Fans have enjoyed nearly 100 episodes of rubber monsters, bad
|
||
movies and off-the-wall comedy. The character of Joel Robinson and his
|
||
robot companions Tom Servo (voice of Kevin Murphy, associate producer)
|
||
and Crow T. Robot (voice of Trace Beaulieu, set designer) have endured
|
||
the worst of the worst from Hollywood and around the world with box
|
||
office movie bombs such as "Santa Claus Conquers the Martians" and
|
||
"Fugitive Alien." They are subjected to these cinematic horrors by some
|
||
good old-fashioned mad scientists, Dr. Clayton Forrester (also played by
|
||
Trace Beaulieu) and "TV's" Frank (Frank Conniff, writer) in some science
|
||
fiction-like experiment. Joel and his robots provide witty commentary
|
||
throughout their ordeal.
|
||
The role of Robinson will be a hard one to fill. However, Nelson
|
||
is already well-known to viewers in special appearance characters
|
||
including LEAVE IT TO BEAVER's Hugh Beaumont, TIME MACHINE's Jack
|
||
Perkins and pianist Michael Feinstein. Nelson also played a visiting
|
||
Russian astronaut, Sorri Andropoli, who was very much like Joel, stuck
|
||
out into space with no one but his crudely hand-made creations for
|
||
company.
|
||
"Naturally, I'm excited and more than a little frightened," said
|
||
Nelson. "It's my goal to build on what we've done in the past while
|
||
exploring new directions for the show and my role as host. Kind of like
|
||
the new Monkeys."
|
||
"Mike Nelson is a real comic discovery," added Hodgson. "All of us
|
||
at Best Brains are enthused and excited about what he'll bring to the
|
||
position and I have to admit, the man looks good standing next to
|
||
puppets."
|
||
As a kind of precognition, Nelson predicted back in February 1992,
|
||
"We know our licks on the show well enough now that we could move on to
|
||
other things and let someone else take over. MST might even be able to
|
||
continue without Joel. I mean, it's possible, if Joel found the right
|
||
person. This is a show that could go on forever -- like DOCTOR WHO."
|
||
Hodgson has played the role of Joel Robinson since Thanksgiving Day
|
||
1988 when the show appeared on an independent UHF station in
|
||
Minneapolis. The show was picked up a year later by HBO's Comedy
|
||
Channel. MST3K also survived the merger between the Comedy Channel and
|
||
Viacom's HA!, making its four years with Comedy Central very stable
|
||
indeed. The series has even been nominated for an ACEcable Award for
|
||
the past two years, one for best comedy series and another for best
|
||
writing in a comedy series.
|
||
MST3K's new season starts July 17. The change is expected to take
|
||
place during the thirteenth episode to air this fall. MST3K currently
|
||
airs Friday nights at Midnight and Saturdays at 10 AM and 7 PM (all
|
||
times Eastern/Pacific).
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
--!6!-- The Old Comics Curmudgeon
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
by Bill Henley
|
||
|
||
"Aren't you too old to be reading comic books?"
|
||
I heard that a lot in my younger days. Many adults and even some
|
||
of my peers couldn't understand why a reasonably bright kid kept on
|
||
reading and collecting comic books -- then widely assumed to be strictly
|
||
for young children and idiots -- past the age of 10 or so. I shrugged
|
||
the query off, or sometimes tried to explain why I thought the exciting
|
||
new kinds of comics appearing in the '60s and early '70s were worth the
|
||
attention of a young adult. In the years since then, I never have quite
|
||
"outgrown" comic books; as the '70s and '80s went by, there always was
|
||
something new coming out that held my interest, in addition to my
|
||
nostalgic love for the Silver Age comics that I started with.
|
||
But at last, at age 40 minus 6 months and counting, I may finally
|
||
have gotten too old to read comic books. After all, I've been told as
|
||
much -- at least by implication -- by no less an authority than DC
|
||
Comics senior editor Denny O'Neil.
|
||
The reference is to a statement O'Neil made during one of the panel
|
||
discussions at the recent MARCON 28 science fiction convention in
|
||
Columbus, Ohio. He happened to mention the cancellation of JUSTICE
|
||
SOCIETY OF AMERICA, which was one of the last few DC titles I was still
|
||
reading regularly. The JSA is, of course, the very first superhero team
|
||
in comics, dating from 1940; and the most recent take on the characters
|
||
by Len Strazewski and Mike Parobeck emphasized their status as "old-
|
||
time" characters, paying homage to the Golden and Silver Ages in the
|
||
writing and art style, and even depicting the heroes as showing physical
|
||
signs of age. (Not as old as they actually would be in real time, but
|
||
they've been rejuvenated a couple of times.)
|
||
The cancellation of JSA, a fun title, was disappointing, but I had
|
||
at least assumed it was justified by low sales. However, Denny O'Neil
|
||
reported that in fact it was selling well enough to make money and
|
||
justify its publication. But, he said, he and the other senior editors
|
||
decided in a conference to kill the book -- because they feared that
|
||
having a DC book on the stands with "old" heroes would serve only to
|
||
remind DC's 13 and 14 year old "target audience" that "DC comics are the
|
||
comics your father, your GRANDfather used to read". Apparently, those
|
||
gray hairs on the JSA members were contaminating the whole DC line!
|
||
Denny, I'm starting to show a few gray hairs myself. Would you
|
||
rather I stayed out of the comics shops and did not let myself be seen
|
||
buying DC comics, lest I scare away the younger readers?
|
||
Now, this column should not be taken as a personal attack on Denny
|
||
O'Neil, who was very gracious in his panel appearances and personal
|
||
interview with the CV staff at Marcon, and who in fact seems to have
|
||
much more sensible ideas of which way comics should go than a lot of
|
||
other management folks at DC and other comic companies.
|
||
To tell the truth, I myself thought it was possibly a mistake to
|
||
make the JSA members in the recent series physically aged. Since they
|
||
had been rejuvenated anyway (after being rescued from Ragnarok in the
|
||
"Armageddon" crossover series) it might have been just as well to go all
|
||
the way and make them physically young again, while leaving them with
|
||
their years of experience and memories.
|
||
But this decision by the DC editors still shows a disturbing
|
||
attitude. DC used to take pride in attracting older readers and even
|
||
used the slogan "DC Comics: They're Not Just for Kids Anymore". Has the
|
||
company now decided to write off both its older characters and its older
|
||
readers? Someone will perhaps point out that DC still has its Vertigo
|
||
line "for mature readers". May I suggest that "adult" is not
|
||
necessarily synonymous with "cynical, despairing, ultraviolent and near-
|
||
incomprehensible"?
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
--!7!-- News and SF Calendar: What's Coming Up in the Near Future
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
1993 Hugo and Campbell Award Nominees
|
||
|
||
ConFrancisco, the 51st World Science Fiction Convention, has
|
||
released the nominees for the 1993 Hugo Awards and John W. Campbell
|
||
Memorial Award. This year is the 40th anniversary of the Hugo Awards,
|
||
which will be presented at a ceremony in the Moscone Convention Center,
|
||
San Francisco, California, on Sunday, September 5, 1993.
|
||
The nominees that follow were chosen by popular vote by 397
|
||
members of ConFrancisco or MagiCon (the 50th World Science Fiction
|
||
Convention) who submitted valid nominating ballots. In some categories
|
||
more than 5 nominations appear due to tie votes.
|
||
The nomination ballots were counted and verified by the
|
||
ConFrancisco Hugo Administrators, David Bratman and Seth Goldberg. The
|
||
final ballots will be sent to ConFrancisco members in Progress Report
|
||
no. 6, due to be mailed in late May. Only attending and supporting
|
||
members of ConFrancisco are eligible to vote. Ballots must be
|
||
postmarked by July 31 and received by August 6 to be counted, and must
|
||
be mailed to: 1993 Hugo Awards, Seth Goldberg, Voting Administrator,
|
||
P.O. Box 271986, Concord, California, 94527-1986. Until July 16,
|
||
ConFrancisco memberships are available for $125 attending or $25
|
||
supporting from ConFrancisco, 712 Bancroft Road, Suite 1993, Walnut
|
||
Creek CA 94598.
|
||
|
||
BEST NOVEL: CHINA MOUNTAIN ZHANG by Maureen McHugh (Tor)/RED MARS
|
||
by Kim Stanley Robinson (HarperCollins (UK), Bantam Spectra)/STEEL BEACH
|
||
by John Varley (Ace/Putnam)/A FIRE UPON THE DEEP by Vernor Vinge
|
||
(Tor)/DOOMSDAY BOOK by Connie Willis (Bantam)/No Award
|
||
BEST NOVELLA: "Uh-Oh City" by Jonathan Carroll (F&SF June 92)/"The
|
||
Territory" by Bradley Denton (F&SF July 92)/"Protection" by Maureen
|
||
McHugh (Asimov's Apr 92)/"Stopping at Slowyear" by Frederik Pohl
|
||
(Axolotl/Pulphouse, Bantam)/"Barnacle Bill the Spacer" by Lucius Shepard
|
||
(Asimov's July 92)/No Award
|
||
BEST NOVELETTE: "True Faces" by Pat Cadigan (F&SF Apr 92)/"The
|
||
Nutcracker Coup" by Janet Kagan (Asimov's Dec 92)/"In the Stone House"
|
||
by Barry N. Malzberg (Alternate Kennedys)/"Danny Goes to Mars" by Pamela
|
||
Sargent (Asimov's Oct 92)/"Suppose They Gave a Peace ..." by Susan
|
||
Shwartz (Alternate Presidents)/No Award
|
||
BEST SHORT STORY: "The Winterberry" by Nicholas A. DiChario
|
||
(Alternate Kennedys)/"The Mountain to Mohammed" by Nancy Kress (Asimov's
|
||
Apr 92)/"The Lotus and the Spear" by Mike Resnick (Asimov's Aug 92)/"The
|
||
Arbitrary Placement of Walls" by Martha Soukup (Asimov's Apr 92)/"Even
|
||
the Queen" by Connie Willis (Asimov's Apr 92)/No Award
|
||
BEST NON-FICTION BOOK: ENTERPRISING WOMEN: TELEVISION FANDOM AND
|
||
THE CREATION OF POPULAR MYTH by Camille Bacon-Smith (Univ. of
|
||
Pennsylvania Press)/THE COSTUMEMAKER'S ART edited by Thom Boswell
|
||
(Lark)/VIRGIL FINLAY'S WOMEN OF THE AGES by Virgil Finlay (Underwood-
|
||
Miller)/MONAD NUMBER TWO edited by Damon Knight (Pulphouse)/LET'S HEAR
|
||
IT FOR THE DEAF MAN by Dave Langford (NESFA)/A WEALTH OF FABLE by Harry
|
||
Warner Jr (SCIFI)/No Award
|
||
BEST DRAMATIC PRESENTATION: ALADDIN (Walt Disney Pictures)/ALIEN 3
|
||
(20th Century Fox)/BATMAN RETURNS (Warner Brothers)/BRAM STOKER'S
|
||
DRACULA (Columbia Pictures)/"The Inner Light" (STAR TREK: THE NEXT
|
||
GENERATION) (Paramount Television)
|
||
BEST PROFESSIONAL EDITOR: Ellen Datlow; Gardner Dozois; Beth
|
||
Meacham; Kristine Kathryn Rusch; Stanley Schmidt; No Award
|
||
BEST PROFESSIONAL ARTIST: Thomas Canty; David A. Cherry; Bob
|
||
Eggleton; James Gurney; Don Maitz; No Award
|
||
BEST ORIGINAL ARTWORK: Cover of ARISTOI (W.J. Williams) by Jim
|
||
Burns (Tor)/DINOTOPIA by James Gurney (Turner)/Cover of F&SF, October-
|
||
November 1992 (illustrating "Bridges", by C. de Lint), by Ron
|
||
Walotsky/Cover of ILLUSION (P. Volsky) by Michael Whelan (Bantam)/Cover
|
||
of ASIMOV'S, November 1992 (Asimov portrait), by Michael Whelan/No Award
|
||
BEST SEMI-PROZINE: INTERZONE, edited by David Pringle/LOCUS, edited
|
||
by Charles N. Brown/THE NEW YORK REVIEW OF SCIENCE FICTION, edited by
|
||
David G. Hartwell, Donald G. Keller, Robert K.J. Kilheffer, and Gordon
|
||
Van Gelder/PULPHOUSE, edited by Dean Wesley Smith/SCIENCE FICTION
|
||
CHRONICLE, edited by Andrew Porter/No Award
|
||
BEST FANZINE: FILE 770, edited by Mike Glyer/FOSFAX, edited by
|
||
Timothy Lane and Janice Moore/LAN'S LANTERN, edited by George J.
|
||
Laskowski Jr./MIMOSA, edited by Dick and Nicki Lynch/STET, edited by
|
||
Leah Smith/No Award
|
||
BEST FAN WRITER: Mike Glyer; Andy Hooper; Dave Langford; Evelyn C.
|
||
Leeper; Harry Warner Jr.; No Award
|
||
BEST FAN ARTIST: Teddy Harvia; Merle Insinga; Linda Michaels; Peggy
|
||
Ranson; Stu Shiffman; Diana Harlan Stein; No Award
|
||
JOHN W. CAMPBELL AWARD FOR BEST NEW WRITER OF 1991-1992 (sponsored
|
||
by DELL MAGAZINES): Barbara Delaplace (2nd year of eligibility);
|
||
Nicholas A. DiChario (2nd year of eligibility); Holly Lisle (1st year of
|
||
eligibility); Laura Resnick (2nd year of eligibility); Carrie Richerson
|
||
(1st year of eligibility); Michelle Sagara (2nd year of eligibility); No
|
||
Award
|
||
|
||
The category "Best Translator" included on the nominating ballot
|
||
was eliminated due to lack of interest. A few voters commented that a
|
||
knowledgeable vote in this category would require linguistic expertise
|
||
beyond what can reasonably be expected of Hugo voters.
|
||
DINOTOPIA by James Gurney received enough votes to be nominated in
|
||
both the Original Artwork and Nonfiction Book categories. The
|
||
administrators judged that it is a single sequential work of art, and
|
||
thus best placed in Original Artwork.
|
||
Two nominations were withdrawn from the ballot. Michael Whelan
|
||
declined nomination as Best Professional Artist for this year. Boris
|
||
Vallejo declined the nomination for Best Original Artwork for his cover
|
||
of Vernor Vinge's A FIRE UPON THE DEEP, saying that it is against his
|
||
principles to enter in a competition among professionals. Both artists
|
||
thank the voters who nominated them, and feel honored to have been
|
||
chosen.
|
||
Maureen F. McHugh and Poppy Z. Brite received enough votes to be
|
||
nominated for the John W. Campbell Award for best new writer, but were
|
||
ruled ineligible due to professional publications of fiction in the
|
||
science fiction and fantasy field prior to 1991.
|
||
|
||
-!-
|
||
|
||
And from the other side ... The 1992 Science Fiction and Fantasy
|
||
Writers of America Nebula Awards:
|
||
|
||
Novel: Connie Willis, Doomsday Book (Bantam) Novella: James Morrow, City
|
||
of Truth (St. Martin's Press) Novelette: Pamela Sargent, Danny Goes to
|
||
Mars (Asimov's SF) Short Story: Connie Willis, Even the Queen
|
||
(Asimov's)Grand Master: Frederik Pohl
|
||
|
||
--!-- SF Calendar: What's Coming Up in the Near Future
|
||
|
||
This Upcoming Movies list is an abbreviated version of the list compiled
|
||
and maintained by Bryan D. Jones (bdj@engr.uark.edu). Unless we know
|
||
the plot, films are included or excluded by their titles or by actors
|
||
who make them relevant to the genre (ie Harrison Ford in THE FUGITIVE).
|
||
|
||
May 28: CLIFFHANGER, MADE IN AMERICA, SUPER MARIO BROS.
|
||
Spring: BODY SNATCHERS, DEADFALL, THE GIVING, NEMESIS, STARFIRE
|
||
Jun 11: JURASSIC PARK, THUMBELINA
|
||
Jun 18: DENNIS THE MENACE, THE LAST ACTION HERO, ONCE UPON A FOREST
|
||
(animated)
|
||
Jun 25: METEOR MAN
|
||
June : THE WITCHING HOUR
|
||
Jul 2: ROBIN HOOD: MEN IN TIGHTS, SNOW WHITE AND THE SEVEN DWARVES (re-
|
||
release), SURF NINJAS
|
||
Jul 9: GHOST IN THE MACHINE
|
||
Jul 23: THE CONEHEADS, TOM & JERRY: THE MOVIE (animated)
|
||
Jul 30: A TROLL IN CENTRAL PARK (animated)
|
||
Aug 6: THE FUGITIVE, HEART AND SOULS, SO I MARRIED AN AXE MURDERER
|
||
Aug 13: JASON GOES TO HELL: THE FINAL FRIDAY (WAS FRIDAY THE 13TH PART
|
||
IX), NEEDFUL THINGS
|
||
Aug 20: THE CROW, JUDGMENT NIGHT, THE MAN WITHOUT A FACE
|
||
Aug : FATHER HOOD, JOHNNY ZOMBIE
|
||
Summer: CARNOSAUR, ENCHANTED FOREST, WIZARDS 2, THE SPEED RACER MOVIE
|
||
SHOW
|
||
Oct 1: WILDER NAPALM
|
||
|
||
Upcoming Books:
|
||
|
||
All books in the list at this time are from DEL REY:
|
||
|
||
June: THE FALSE MIRROR [The Damned], by Alan Dean Foster (SF); LADY OF
|
||
MERCY [The Sundered], by Michelle Sagara (F); DEPARTURES by Harry
|
||
Turtledove (SF); KNIGHTS OF DARK RENOWN, by David Gemmell (F)
|
||
|
||
July: POWERS THAT BE, by Anne McCaffery & Elizabeth Ann Scarborough
|
||
(SF); THE LOST PRINCE [Wolfking], by Bridget Wood (F); DOMES OF FIRE
|
||
[The Tamuli], by David Eddings (F); MINING THE CORT, by Frederik Pohl
|
||
(SF); THE SPELL OF THE BLACK DAGGER, by Lawrence Watt-Evans (F); STAR
|
||
TREK LOG 4/LOG 5/LOG 6, by Alan Dean Foster (SF); DEL REY DISCOVERY:
|
||
BRIGHT ISLANDS IN A DARK SEA, by L. Warren Douglas (SF)
|
||
|
||
--!-- Space News -- by Micael McAfee
|
||
|
||
* JPL has announced the Clementine mission, which will orbit the
|
||
moon and visit an asteroid. In January, 1994, the small spacecraft will
|
||
be launched, then orbit the moon for a couple of months, then make its
|
||
way to the asteroid Geographos, reaching it in late August 1994.
|
||
* The Japanese moon probe Hiten apparently crashed onto the moon's
|
||
surface on April 10, 1993. Further information as to the cause has not
|
||
yet been posted.
|
||
* Data from NASA satellites show that gamma ray bursts may originate
|
||
far beyond the Milky Way galaxy. The Ames Research Center reports that
|
||
the bursts seem to be evenly distributed in space. One of these bursts,
|
||
dubbed the Super Bowl Burst since it was seen on Super Bowl Sunday, had
|
||
10 times as much energy and was 100 times brighter than any known source
|
||
outside our galaxy. This data has put two popular theories of gamma
|
||
burst origin in question. The first, that bursts come from neutron
|
||
stars, would not explain the even distribution. The second, that
|
||
explosions, collisions, or black holes are responsible, would not
|
||
explain the kinds of energy from the Super Bowl Burst. The data is
|
||
being shared by scientists around the world to help unravel the puzzle.
|
||
* Some preliminary results of the ATLAS-1 probe are available from
|
||
NASA. Increases in hydrogen fluoride and hydrogen chloride match
|
||
predictions of the effects of chlorofluorocarbons in the stratosphere.
|
||
Predictions about solar radiation output and the number of sunspots
|
||
observed also matched up with the data. Results concerning movement of
|
||
molecules will be compared with the Venus and Mars missions. Some
|
||
artificial aurorae were created by the shuttle which carried out the
|
||
ATLAS mission, which the probe recorded. Most of the data will be
|
||
correlated with other projects, the results of which will be available
|
||
at a later date.
|
||
* The Tucson Amateur Astronomy Association has announced the third
|
||
annual Grand Canyon Star Party, to be held June 12-19, 1993. They will
|
||
be setting up on the South Rim near the Yavapai Museum. For more
|
||
information call (602) 293-2855 between 8 and 10pm Mountain Standard
|
||
Time, or e-mailing ketelsen@as.arizona.edu.
|
||
* From an article in the Astronomical Society of the Atlantic comes
|
||
an article by Robert Bunge about the need for control of "light
|
||
pollution." Much of the lighting used for security and safety reasons
|
||
is "wasteful," in that much of the light escapes upward without
|
||
providing useful illumination. This not only uses up fossil fuels, but
|
||
ruins views of the night sky in many urban areas. This can also affect
|
||
telescopes located in desolate areas far from cities, causing some
|
||
telescopes to be shut down as they can no longer ignore the constant
|
||
glow. Fortunately, communities are starting to combat this problem
|
||
through educating companies of alternatives in lighting. Unnecessary
|
||
lighting is discouraged, and better light fixtures, such as the
|
||
"shoebox," are becoming more popular as they reflect more of the light
|
||
downward to where light is needed. Also, monochromatic low pressure
|
||
sodium lamps are recommended unless it is necessary to differentiate
|
||
colors. Lights are also often installed improperly, so a quality
|
||
consultant should inspect lighting systems. Those who are interested in
|
||
more information can contact:
|
||
International Dark-Sky Association
|
||
Dave Crawford, Executive Director
|
||
3545 N. Stewart
|
||
Tucson, Arizona 85716
|
||
U.S.A.
|
||
Telephone: 602-325-9346 Fax: 602-325-9360
|
||
Internet Address: crawford@noao.edu or dcrawford@noao.edu
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
--!8!-- SPOILERS AHOY -- Your guide to the rest of the season for
|
||
THE YOUNG INDIANA JONES CHRONICLES and TIME TRAX
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
As promised ...
|
||
|
||
THE YOUNG INDIANA JONES CHRONICLES
|
||
|
||
Movie of the Week: "Young Indiana Jones and the Mystery of the Blues":
|
||
As a student at the University of Chicago in 1920, Indy is more
|
||
interested in the world of jazz than in his studies. He meets jazz
|
||
greats Sidney Bechet and Louis Armstrong in the legendary jazz clubs of
|
||
Chicago, and gains insight into the racial problems of the times.
|
||
In the second part of this two hour movie of the week, while Indy
|
||
is working his way through college as a waiter in a famous Chicago
|
||
restaurant, its owner, Jim Colosimo, is murdered. Indy, along with his
|
||
college roommate Eliot Ness and fledgling reporter Ernest Hemingway,
|
||
tries to solve the case.
|
||
|
||
Paris, 1908: Ten-year-old Indy meets a young American art student named
|
||
Norman Rockwell at the Louvre. While sneaking out to comb the cafes of
|
||
Paris, they find themselves caught up in an elaborate scheme devised by
|
||
a brash new artist, Pablo Picasso, to prove a point to Edgar Degas.
|
||
|
||
Vienna, 1908: Ten-year-old Indy feels the pangs of first love when he
|
||
meets Sophie, the daughter of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria. When
|
||
the royal family prevents Indy from seeing Sophie, he turns to two of
|
||
his father's acquaintances, noted psychoanalysts Jung and Adler, to help
|
||
him understand his strange new feelings.
|
||
|
||
France, 1916: Sixteen-year-old Indy visits Paris on leave from the
|
||
front in World War I and learns about the erotic side of love from the
|
||
infamous dancer, Mata Hari. He becomes acquainted with the subtleties
|
||
of self-deception through his relationship with her.
|
||
|
||
Benares, 1910: Ten-year-old Indy meets Krishnamurti, then a boy of
|
||
Indy's age, at a cricket match in India and travels with him throughout
|
||
the sacred city of Benares. Along the way, Indy gains profound insight
|
||
into several of the world's great religions.
|
||
|
||
Paris, 1919: Indy serves as a translator at the Paris Peace Conference
|
||
and witnesses history being made through his own eyes and those of
|
||
several notable participants, including T.E. Lawrence and fellow Arabist
|
||
Gertrude Bell, historian Arnold Toynbee, and Prince Faisal of Arabia.
|
||
Indy is taken with a Vietnamese waiter he encounters, a young Ho Chi
|
||
Minh, and uses his connections to enable Ho to make a presentation to
|
||
the conference on behalf of his people for their civil rights.
|
||
|
||
Prague, 1917: Indy goes undercover as a women's lingerie salesman to
|
||
Prague where he is to await an important phone call from a double agent.
|
||
Upon arrival, Indy discovers there is no phone in the apartment and he
|
||
must arrange for a new phone to be installed before the deadline. His
|
||
quest for the phone turns into a bureaucratic nightmare, a comedy of
|
||
errors, in which he meets an insurance clerk named Franz Kafka.
|
||
|
||
Peking, 1910: While visiting the Great Wall with his mother and tutor,
|
||
ten-year-old Indy falls deathly ill. They are forced to seek shelter
|
||
with a peasant family isolated in the countryside, and Indy's mother
|
||
must rely on Chinese medicine.
|
||
|
||
Petrograd, 1917: At a time when the Allies are trying desperately to
|
||
learn if and when the Czar will be overthrown in war-torn Russia, Indy
|
||
is working for Allied intelligence. In Petrograd, Indy is living with a
|
||
group of friends active in the Bolshevik movement, dramatically dividing
|
||
his loyalties.
|
||
|
||
Princeton, 1916: While in high school, Indy and his girlfriend -- the
|
||
daughter of pulp adolescent fiction author Edward Stratemeyer, famous
|
||
for his Tom Swift and Nancy Drew novels -- witness a kidnapping at
|
||
Thomas Edison's laboratory and find themselves in the middle of a
|
||
mystery adventure worthy of Nancy Drew herself. Clues lead them to
|
||
discover a plot involving secret government documents.
|
||
|
||
New York, 1920: During Summer vacation from college, Indy travels to
|
||
New York where he finds work as an assistant stage manager on Broadway.
|
||
He mixes in theatre, bohemian, and high society circles, bringing him
|
||
into contact with the young George Gershwin. His life becomes
|
||
increasingly complicated when his falls in love with three different
|
||
women and tries to deal with the consequences.
|
||
|
||
Ireland, 1916: Indy and Remy have arrived off the boat from Mexico with
|
||
no money and find themselves stranded in Dublin. While working in a
|
||
local pub, Indy meets Sean Lemass, a young member of Irish Volunteers.
|
||
The two idealistic 16-year-olds argue over political philosophies, and
|
||
Indy witnesses the Easter Rebellion for Irish independence in which
|
||
Sean was involved.
|
||
|
||
Northern Italy, 1918: While working as a spy in the mountains of Italy,
|
||
Indy falls in love with a local girl and soon discovers he has serious
|
||
competition. His pal Ernest Hemingway, then an American Red Cross
|
||
ambulance driver, explains how love is a battle and encourages Indy to
|
||
fight for her affections. A comical situation arises when the two
|
||
suitors are mistakenly invited to the same dinner party and each tries
|
||
to outdo the other to prove his love.
|
||
|
||
Florence, 1908: During a tour of Florence, Italy, nine-year-old Indy is
|
||
fascinated by opera composer Giacomo Puccini and his generous attention
|
||
to the family. Indy becomes frightened and confused when he realizes
|
||
his mother is receptive to Puccini's romantic overtures.
|
||
|
||
British East Africa, 1916: Indy and Remy arrive in Mombasa and are told
|
||
to report to the location of the Belgian Army about 1000 miles inland.
|
||
The two get lost in transit and find themselves in the camp of Frederick
|
||
Selous and the British 25th Royal Fusiliers, a colorful group of elderly
|
||
adventurers known as the "Old and the Bold." Selous recruits Indy for a
|
||
mission to find two large phantom German guns which are inflicting
|
||
serious damage to British positions.
|
||
|
||
German East Africa, 1916: After their adventure with Selous, Indy and
|
||
Remy must now cross German lines to reach their unit. Selous suggests
|
||
they disguise themselves as Boer settlers and travel cross-country in
|
||
covered wagons. They are taken by the Germans and then discover it was
|
||
all a plot by Selous to capture the brilliant and undefeated German
|
||
General Von Lettow-Vorbeck.
|
||
|
||
Istanbul, 1918: While working undercover for French intelligence as a
|
||
Scandinavian journalist in Istanbul, Indy falls in love with a stranded
|
||
American schoolteacher named Molly. After a series of murders, Indy
|
||
finds a missing file and discovers a Turkish plot to kill all of his
|
||
French agents. He meets the future leader of Turkey, Mustapha Kemal.
|
||
|
||
Beersheba, 1917: Indy receives orders to assist the British in an
|
||
attack on the ancient mid-east town of Beersheba, known as the Place of
|
||
Seven Wells. His undercover mission includes escorting Mia, a beautiful
|
||
spy disguised as a belly dancer, to Beersheba to obtain vital
|
||
information from the Turks who hold the town. The story culminates in a
|
||
daring cavalry attack by Australian Light Horsemen, a key turning point
|
||
in the downfall of the Ottoman forces. [Editor's note: Science fiction
|
||
fans may recognize one of the Turkish officers as COLIN BAKER, formerly
|
||
of DR. WHO.]
|
||
|
||
Transylvania, 1918: On a spy mission in the eastern part of the Austro-
|
||
Hungarian Empire, Indy comes upon a castle in Transylvania filled with a
|
||
strange army of soldiers from different nations. When Vlad the Impaler,
|
||
the leader of this army and master of the castle, tries to force Indy to
|
||
join his army, Indy realizes Vlad rules by an evil power, the spell of
|
||
which can only be broken by driving a stake through Vlad's heart.
|
||
|
||
|
||
TIME TRAX
|
||
|
||
Show 11: DARROW FOR THE DEFENSE: A female lawyer from 2193 comes back
|
||
to tell Darien that a fugitive has been found innocent and she wants to
|
||
find him and make sure he gets "home" alive.
|
||
|
||
Show 18: BEAUTIFUL SONGBIRD: Darien discovers that beautiful country
|
||
singer Kaitlin Carlyle, a legend in his time, is gaining her popularity
|
||
faster than history indicates. He and Selma learn that Kaitlin is
|
||
getting unexpected help from a mysterious "guardian angel" who also
|
||
happens to be a murderous fan of hers from the future who wants to
|
||
control her career and life.
|
||
|
||
Show 19: PHOTO FINISH: When Darien detects tampering on a successful
|
||
string of wins for a racehorse, he learns that a fugitive has been
|
||
injecting horses with a futuristic steroid which gives them an
|
||
incredible -- yet fatal -- burst of energy.
|
||
|
||
Show 20: ONE ON ONE: Darien catches up with his arch nemesis, Dr.
|
||
Mordicai Sahmbi, who has invented a dangerous mind controlling device
|
||
and is intent on using it on Darien, forcing the two into a deadly
|
||
showdown.
|
||
|
||
Show 21: A WANTED MAN: Darien is framed for the murder of a noted FBI
|
||
agent by a dangerous fugitive, who is planning to take over the Bureau.
|
||
|
||
Show 22: THE IMPOSTER: Darien is led in circles by an unemployed actor
|
||
from the future who wreaks havoc upon unsuspecting marks in the 20th
|
||
century with intricate con games and elaborate disguises.
|
||
|
||
STAR TREK
|
||
|
||
The season finale of STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION will have a very
|
||
special guest star: physicist STEVEN HAWKING. He will play himself, in
|
||
the holodeck, playing poker with Data, Albert Einstein, and Isaac
|
||
Newton. A fitting tribute to his genius. Hawking has been a Star Trek
|
||
fan for years, and the producers were only too happy to give him a part
|
||
on the show. It will reportedly involved the return of the Borg, who
|
||
have been somewhat humanized since the Hugh incident from "I Borg."
|
||
Instead of softening them, however, they become even MORE dangerous, as
|
||
they have discovered the power of rage. Unfortunately, Data suffers the
|
||
same fate, and eventually sides with a returned Lore against the
|
||
Enterprise.
|
||
On DEEP SPACE NINE, look for episodes involving crew conflict
|
||
between supporters of Sisko and Kira, Odo stuck in a turbolift with
|
||
Lwaxana, and Keiko having problems with Bajoran religious
|
||
fundamentalists over what she teaches.
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
--!9!-- Administrivia
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Just a few acknowledgments and reminders. We'd like to thank Bjo
|
||
Trimble for her letter writing tips. [The address for SPACE TIME
|
||
CONTINUUM is 2059 Fir Springs Dr., Kingwood TX, 77339-1701, USA]
|
||
Also, many thanks to Adrienne Biggs and Carol (wangc@cpsc.ucalgary.ca)
|
||
-- couldn't have done it without you!
|
||
|
||
As for reminders, Cyberspace Vanguard can be reposted anywhere IN ITS
|
||
ENTIRETY, but if you are reposting individual articles (except for the
|
||
news) you MUST contact us for permission from the authors FIRST.
|
||
|
||
FREE electronic subscriptions are available from
|
||
cn577@cleveland.freenet.edu.
|
||
|
||
To have your club or convention listed, send the relevant information to
|
||
xx133@cleveland.freenet.edu.
|
||
|
||
If you are not on Internet and are using the Fido or Delphi accounts to
|
||
contact us, you may send ALL correspondence to the same address.
|
||
|
||
The logo contest is now underway. Contact us for details.
|
||
|
||
Last but not least, don't forget to send us your letters in support of
|
||
QUANTUM LEAP and THE YOUNG INDIANA JONES CHRONICLES. They can go to any
|
||
of the e-mail addresses, but should have a clear Subject: line and must
|
||
be mailed soon.
|
||
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
CYBERSPACE VANGUARD MAGAZINE
|
||
News and Views from the Science Fiction Universe
|
||
TJ Goldstein, Editor | Send submissions, questions, comments to
|
||
tlg4@po.cwru.edu | cn577@cleveland.freenet.edu
|