RichardAbbott
About
- Username
- RichardAbbott
- Joined
- Visits
- 6,069
- Last Active
- Roles
- Member, Administrator, Moderator
- Games I like
- Sundry, mostly board
- Books I like
- Science fiction, fantasy, some historical fiction
Comments
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I loved it - the blend of solving problems in the modern era while getting illumination from (and shedding light onto) the ancient world story worked very well for me. So yes, it was fun to read. I guess there's a drawback in story terms in that …
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Category for Mirrorshades now set up
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I'll set up the monthly stuff for Mirrorshades - I'm assuming it's the anthology edited by Bruce Sterling rather than any other book of the same name! If not please let me know before the weekend...
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Sounds cool to me
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Hi all, a few days until @Apocryphal starts the discussion off for The Jason Voyage, then in May it'll be @NeilNjae - any ideas for a selection yet? After that me in June (I have an idea but not certain yet) and @clash_bowley in July
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Cool That sounds fun, thanks for tracking it down
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You've gotta love a story that opens with there dwelt during times of yore :) A fun little tale told - as has been noted - in a very different style that Searle. But it made me wonder whether Asimov was familiar with The Arabian Nights - "a Hu…
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I'd never come across it either, so looked it up and found that it is an Italian term, with the only British use as a rough fantasy slang for a goblin... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gobbo... but it does, apparently, mean hunchback
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Discussion area with blurb and about-the-author now set up
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I think it's @Apocryphal and I have a vague memory he proposed something, but I don't actually recall what it was
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> @clash_bowley said: > I don't think anyone WANTED to mention it. A very ugly incident... Yes, I agree that the characters would not have wanted to mention it... but why didn't the _author_ follow it up? Now I look back at the book it …
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Wow that is a seriously nerdy effort on somebody's part...
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(Quote) Very true... consider my question suitably modified... and I suppose this was potentially another way of separating April and August, though this particular way never got explored (in fact part of my original thinking was that the whole preg…
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Another thought about quite an early episode in the story, viz all the women in the group becoming pregnant and then going through a kind of back-street abortion. All in all a fairly horrific episode and I wasn't sure if we were meant to be more hor…
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Something that I wondered about was the way the (transformed) crew kind of stumbled into the conflict between the centaurs and the angels and tried to broker a peace, only to find that in fact warfare had been programmed into them so that Gaia could…
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I did feel disappointed by this, I'm afraid - the switch from story to setup of the next bit seemed forced to me, and as mentioned before I'd have been happy for a stand-alone novel. Right now I don't feel drawn to read the next bit but that could e…
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Arguably the ability of Cirocco and Gaby to travel all the way up the cable was a transformation from their original condition. (As well as the language stuff, and some changes in sexuality). In passing, I found this journey the least convincing par…
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Agreed - his writing was competent and fluent, but not exciting or memorable. The most interesting departure from some SF was the conscious and creative inclusion of Greek mythology into the mix. I didn't find it dull, and was never at any risk of g…
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Yes very Ringworld like, and my impression was that some of the descriptions were nearly verbatim (though it's a long time since I read RW so that might be mistaken). But... one big difference was the introduction of the Greek mythic elements. S…
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Turning up late to the party :) I kind of agree with what has been said. The crew in their original personas were OK but not overwhelmingly convincing... but then they were all changed in one way or another, and the changes were (IMHO) more interest…
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Hey @clash_bowley any thoughts when you'll be setting up discussion starters for Titan?
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(Quote) That's a great point, and reminded me a bit of how early musical notation didn't bother to show details of (say) the bass continuo line, the assumption being that any skilled person rooted in the tradition would know exactly what was intende…
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Yes I agree these stories were very abbreviated, to the point where it was sometimes hard to see how a "proper" story version might build up from these. My best guess (going back to the transmission of oral tradition) is that the "wor…
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A few days ago I finished Queen of Candesce, the next in the series. Unlike the first it follows just one character throughout rather than multiple storylines, but the person is Venera Fanning. You get to find out what happens after she cuts loose f…
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Yes, totally agree. I'm more interested as a lay reader in how faithful Galland was to his source, rather than the accuracy of the next stage on. I suppose the only exception to that would be if Galland used some idiomatic word of his time that had …
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I agree: not a great deal to stay except the mild curiosity of seeing what features of the story were thought important as a bare-bones summary. In the world of games, how do players / GMs balance the two levels of character involved, viz their own…
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Yes I agree with this. The tales felt a lot more like shorthand notes than stories. However, it did make me wonder about the process of transmission of these stories. A few years back I read up on oral traditions, mainly focusing on Alfred Lord's bo…
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Maybe add that cleverness and plot resolution are often accomplished by female characters despite operating within superficially strict social constraints? Also, disguises are a Big Thing and often used by Goodies and Baddies alike.
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I'm with @Apocryphal on this in that I would like to finish the book. However, I also think you're right @NeilNjae about diminishing returns. How about we stick to the planned schedule as regards sections? This takes us, I think, up to the end of th…
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I should also have said that it made me wonder how many of the "talking creatures" stories of our own culture owe a debt to this - Wind in the Willows, Heather Hill, Narnia etc? Or is it just such an obvious thing that pretty much everyone…

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