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Monday, January 31, 2011

Quick Update: Currently Reading Asimov

I started reading Foundation by Issac Asimov last night. It's interesting so far. He has such scholarly diction, I have to read a little more slowly to make sure I absorb everything. I will for sure post a review when I am finished with it, but I haven't decided yet if I'll move on to the next book in the series or read something different. I have a very long list of stuff to read before May of this year.

Thoughts on Syfy's Blastr

When Syfy rebranded themselves away from Sci-Fi Channel, they also rebranded their Sci-Fi Wire news feed, which is now called blastr. I guess they wanted to send a huge "eff you" to people who care about grammar and spelling.

I've been following blastr since before the change of name, and when it was rebranded, the content basically stayed exactly the same, which I suppose is a good thing. It mostly features daily news about sci-fi films, comics, television, and occasionally books. Since it's run by Syfy, it is pretty heavily biased toward their own programming, but they do cover anything that falls under the umbrella of the science fiction/fantasy/horror genres.

If you want the latest news on upcoming sci-fi projects, especially films and TV, then blastr is perfect to you. They do feed into the annoying trend of posting a billion spoilers months and months before these forms of media are released to the public, so do keep that in mind. Given the amount of spoilers, gossip and sometimes unfounded conjecture they like to post, I appreciate that they aren't hesitant to let their readers know when they're way off base.

The main criticism that I have of blastr is that they mostly cater to a readership that they believe is predominantly 18-34 year old males. It has been a huge (incorrect) stereotype for decades that sci-fi fans are almost all young males. I don't feel that any of blastr's content really speaks to women; as a matter of fact, they tend to post a lot off "geek eye candy." After a while, seeing girls in Leia's slave bikini or dressed as a slutty astronaut gets a little old. I wouldn't ever blame blastr, or the Syfy network for that matter, for perpetuating this stereotype, but I would be tickled pink if their rhetoric trended a little more gender-neutral.

Obviously, this isn't enough to make me give up on blastr completely. I check the app on my iPhone almost every day. They have seemed to fixed the massive bugs that the app previously had, so while a few months ago content didn't load more often than it did, now the app runs slowly but smoothly.

All in all, if you're a sci-fi junkie and particularly a fan of sci-fi TV and movies, then blastr is definitely worth a look-see. Go to blastr by Syfy now!

Sunday, January 30, 2011

Book Review: Parable of the Sower by Octavia E. Butler

Parable of the Sower by Octavia E. Butler; Photo from amazon.com

Brief Synopsis: The story follows Lauren Olamina, someone cursed with "hyperempathy", through her troubled world and eventually out into the wilderness. Lauren's hyperempathy stems from her birth mother's abuse of a legal drug; it causes her to feel the pain of others around her, sometimes to a crippling degree. She lives in a near future suburb of Los Angeles in a walled community to protect her tiny neighborhood from the poverty and depravity outside. The wall, however, isn't really effective at keeping the decay out, so in a moment Lauren's world is literally burnt to the ground. She decides to leave, something she had been planning anyway, to head north in search of something better. Through a stunning stroke of luck, Lauren meets two other survivors from her little walled village and takes them with her, forming the core of her group, a group that will be based on the new religion Lauren worked out called Earthseed. As the group travels north through California, they take on more refugees with stories similar to their own (or worse) and finally reach the land that will be the new home for the group and the Earthseed community.

(NOTE: SPOILERS AHOY!!)

Review: I am a big fan of Octavia E. Butler, and I think she was an amazingly talented writer as well as a pioneer in science fiction. It is really a shame that she wasn't more prolific, but that's neither here nor there. Parable of the Sower was written in the latter half of her career, and most of the other things I have read from her are from earlier in her career. The earlier works do share a lot of the same themes as Parable, especially slavery. Butler's dystopian view of the near future is wholly believable and frightening in it's possibility. (Aside: In my opinion, a dystopia only works if the world is believable or possible, and good writers are able to make them both.) Parable is well-written and solid, and the narrative style really lends to the type of story that Butler is telling. It wasn't hard to follow the journal-entry style, and most readers won't miss the transitions that other novels told in a straight-forward narrative style would have. Overall, the very personal style of narration makes Lauren a much more human character and seeing the experiences in a broken-down world through her eyes really adds to the credibility of the world that Butler created. My only REAL criticism of this novel is that I felt rather uneasy with 18-year-old Lauren shacking up with 57-year-old Bankole, especially considering the seeming lack of closure with losing her father, whom Bankole has a lot in common with. Otherwise, Parable is a solid novel and I look forward to reading the follow-up, Parable of the Talents. It would have made a really great three- or five-part epic sci-fi series, so it is sad that Butler passed away before she could write more of the Earthseed saga.

Bottom Line: B+
Recommended for: Fans of solid dystopic worlds, fans of female-centered sci-fi

Introduction and all of that

I have been mulling over starting a new blog for some time, but I wasn't sure what I wanted to write about. Finally, it hit me--I could write about one of my passions, the world of science fiction. In particular, I really enjoy Golden Age sci-fi novels.

My love affair with sci-fi (and related genres) started when I first learned to read. Most books for small children are fantasy, of course, but I wasn't one of those kids who simply grew out of the escapism and the richly plotted other worlds. As I grew, I started reading all of the teeny-bopper horror stuff that was all the rage (like good old R.L. Stine.)

By the time I was in high school, I began to eschew the science fiction and fantasy that I had loved so much because it frankly was not "cool" for a teenage girl to like books and movies about space and dragons and things like that. In the late '90s and early '00s teenage girls were expected to go to the mall every day and giggle about boys, not watch Star Wars or play XBOX.

During my senior year of high school, my English teacher selected Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury as one of the novels we would read and discuss in class. I was completely shocked by how much I loved this brief, amazing novel that is loathed by high school students everywhere. In the same class, we also read Bradbury's short story "There Will Come Soft Rains," which moved me to tears and remains one of my favorite short stories of all time.

From that point on, I was a die-hard sci-fi addict, critics be damned. I don't consider myself an expert by any means, but I do love the genre. I will say, there is a veritable ton of shitty sci-fi out there (hello, Transformers movie franchise), but if you know where to look, you can also find a lot of really amazing, high-quality science fiction that will test the limits of your imagination and show you something about yourself at the same time.

I will leave you, kind reader, with a list of some of my favorite sci-fi-related things. These aren't ranked in any kind of order, they're just so that you can get a feel of what type of sci-fi I am a fan of.

  • Most things by Ray Bradbury
  • The Twilight Zone
  • Star Wars (films, video games, CCG, etc.)
  • Dystopian and post-apocalyptic novels
  • female sci-fi writers (ie Ursula K. Le Guin and Octavia E. Butler) and feminist sci-fi