Marginalia
Mar. 16th, 2005 01:48 pmFavourable review of Mary Doria Russell's new novel, A Thread of Grace. "Russell's magnificent novel is a testament on behalf of persecuted people, which observes its pledge to testify in a spirit of sympathy and gratitude." *taps foot, impatiently waiting for his review copy*
'Bring on the digital Hugos' says James Patrick Kelly. This seems wrongheaded to me; if the traditional Hugo categories aren't adequately dealing with online content then change them so that they are, don't introduce unnecessary new categories. I'm not convinced, for example, that online fiction sites need a category all their own. That said, it is clear that something needs to be done; the current 'best website' is a stopgap.
Genetically modified Mozart: for the first contemporary Russian Opera at the Bolshoi in a quarter of a century, "They came up with the idea for a story of five cloned composers living in Soviet and post-Soviet time. "The subject of cloning is very close to me," says Sorokin. "I'm sure human beings should not be cloned. However, from an artistic point of view, the idea of cloning is rich with possibilities and implications, allowing us to travel in time and meet long-dead classics." This season, science-aware artists will write about cloning as a demonstration of their engagement with the modern world. Apparently.
Cool tube map, with station names replaced by the titles of films shot at those locations.
Jonathan Franzen on growing up with Peanuts. It must be time for another volume of the collected strips soon, I reckon.
I haven't bought a computer game for about a year, and I've barely played one--except at parties--for about as long. But this might just break my will. I'm not even a car fan, particularly, but the previous Gran Turismo installments were a defining gaming experience (in much the same way that I think Goldeneye was defining for a decent chunk of my friendslist). And the cars are so pretty.
Around LJ: Dan reviews Air, and I argue with him; and
oursin has a couple of posts about the assumptions underling Swallows and Amazons (I love those books).
And finally: Lou Anders has a new blog, and a fun post on Arthur Fonzarelli as the archetypical shaman. No, really.
'Bring on the digital Hugos' says James Patrick Kelly. This seems wrongheaded to me; if the traditional Hugo categories aren't adequately dealing with online content then change them so that they are, don't introduce unnecessary new categories. I'm not convinced, for example, that online fiction sites need a category all their own. That said, it is clear that something needs to be done; the current 'best website' is a stopgap.
Genetically modified Mozart: for the first contemporary Russian Opera at the Bolshoi in a quarter of a century, "They came up with the idea for a story of five cloned composers living in Soviet and post-Soviet time. "The subject of cloning is very close to me," says Sorokin. "I'm sure human beings should not be cloned. However, from an artistic point of view, the idea of cloning is rich with possibilities and implications, allowing us to travel in time and meet long-dead classics." This season, science-aware artists will write about cloning as a demonstration of their engagement with the modern world. Apparently.
Cool tube map, with station names replaced by the titles of films shot at those locations.
Jonathan Franzen on growing up with Peanuts. It must be time for another volume of the collected strips soon, I reckon.
I haven't bought a computer game for about a year, and I've barely played one--except at parties--for about as long. But this might just break my will. I'm not even a car fan, particularly, but the previous Gran Turismo installments were a defining gaming experience (in much the same way that I think Goldeneye was defining for a decent chunk of my friendslist). And the cars are so pretty.
Around LJ: Dan reviews Air, and I argue with him; and
And finally: Lou Anders has a new blog, and a fun post on Arthur Fonzarelli as the archetypical shaman. No, really.
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Date: 2005-03-16 02:27 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-03-16 02:33 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-03-16 02:36 pm (UTC)What station was 'Quatermass and the Pit' set in?
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Date: 2005-03-16 02:38 pm (UTC)Go on, say it. I know you want to. :p
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Date: 2005-03-16 02:41 pm (UTC)I think Air is ultimately optimistic because though it perhaps isn't something necessary, and isn't something that anyone asks for, in the end Air is a Good Thing. Yes, it causes problems, but it also solves them, and others as well.
But I agree that there's a fairly strong vein of cynicism about the competence of the West when it comes to involving itself, however good its intentions, in the affairs of less-developed countries.
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Date: 2005-03-16 02:42 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-03-16 02:50 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-03-16 02:55 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-03-16 02:57 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-03-16 03:02 pm (UTC)But Air is more powerful than the West. It is more than a technology - it is to all intents a purposes a singularity, past which nothing will be the same. It will recreate the world, and it will give power to Mae and her people, and to all individuals. All they have to do is grasp it (and it is here where Karzistani competence becomes more important than Western incompetence). This is why Air is optimistic - because it presents its technology as a kind of messiah.
GT4
Date: 2005-03-16 03:05 pm (UTC)It's not exactly favourable...
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Date: 2005-03-16 03:15 pm (UTC)Re: GT4
Date: 2005-03-16 03:15 pm (UTC)On the other hand, some of his assertions (not necessarily the GT4-specific ones) I just disagree with. I want a game that's fun over a game that'll suck away my life for the next six months, too. Mind you, I always found the tinkering with different models of cars quite fun. :)
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Date: 2005-03-16 03:27 pm (UTC)My assumptions (about the West's role in Karzistan's trials) were simply not referred to in the review, which is, I would assume, why you surmised I did not share them.
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Date: 2005-03-16 04:47 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-03-16 05:04 pm (UTC)That said, Full Metal Jacket is on the Isle of Dogs, which is where it was filmed, but not where it's set.
Quatermass was set at Hobbs End, which doesn't exist. Ditto Walford. Grange Hill does exist.
What there is on the map is pretty shoddy: 'About A Boy', for example, is attatched to Russell Square; the film makes it quite clear that Hugh Grant lives a stone's throw from Smithfield market, which is not near Russell Square, but is quite near to Barbican or Farringdon. Love Is The Devil is supposed to be Soho, but it's attatched to bloody Cannon Street, about a million miles from Soho. London Bridge for Tower Bridge for Agent Cody Banks, Morden for Croydon for Let Him Have It, etc. Virtually all of them are wrong somehow.
-- tom
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Date: 2005-03-16 05:17 pm (UTC)Tomb Raider 3 was set there. I'm surprised the film crews get any work done given the number of killer dogs and uzi-wielding henchmen down there.
I like the way all the ones on the arse end of the Bakerloo line are described as "South East London". Particularly since Nil By Mouth is actually explicitly set in Elephant And Castle. I think. All Or Nothing certainly is.
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Date: 2005-03-16 05:19 pm (UTC)So why did Doubleday send it and why is Vector running it?
Cool Tube Map!
Date: 2005-03-16 07:47 pm (UTC)Digital Hugos...
Date: 2005-03-16 08:30 pm (UTC)The one with all the partial tales interwoven with eachother on a Tube ride?
Moreover, if such a category were to spur on new types of experiments in the very form and thought of literature with the new technology, why not? Even if over half the experiments are failures, wouldn't it be worth it?
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Date: 2005-03-16 08:44 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-03-17 06:49 am (UTC)I can confirm that the review copy was packaged up last night and will be posted as soon as I get to a Post Office.
Re: Digital Hugos...
Date: 2005-03-17 07:49 am (UTC)No, I disagree. 253 is still fiction (and has in any case been published as a book).
Mind you, it wasn't eligible for the Hugos because (a) it's not sf and (b) it's not a novel. But that's beside the point. :)
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Date: 2005-03-17 07:50 am (UTC)Re: GT4
Date: 2005-03-17 01:41 pm (UTC)I'm thinking that Outrun 2 is the game for me.
Re: GT4
Date: 2005-03-17 01:48 pm (UTC)This is clearly a feature, not a bug. :p
(And is one of the things I really liked about GT. Despite what that review says, I have never found that cutting corners saves time--the racing line actually is the fastest line, and I like that. On the other hand, as mentioned, bouncing off other cars works because the physics is, um, innovative...)
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Date: 2005-03-17 07:31 pm (UTC)Clearly, this map has fallen through from a parallel universe - one where the '70s plan to extend the Bakerloo along the railway, via new stations at Walworth and Camberwell Green, to Denmark Hill and Peckham Rye, actually got carried out. This also explains why Full Metal Jacket was filed in Greenwich rather than on the Isle of Dogs, and several other anomalies in the map. I'm going to be paying much more attention next time i go to Sainsbury's ...
And before anyone asks, no, this isn't an old map - it has the Jubilee line extension on it.
-- tom
Re: GT4
Date: 2005-03-18 07:56 am (UTC)Nothing surpasses Diddy Kong Racing. Really, it was perfect. Certainly put Nintendo's Mario racers to shame.
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Date: 2005-03-18 03:56 pm (UTC)