May. 7th, 2005

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[livejournal.com profile] avram has been reading Zane Grey, speciifically Riders of the Purple WSage, probably his most important novel. In a comment, [livejournal.com profile] kent_allard_jr pointed out that Grey had a lot of influence on popular fiction writing of the 1910s and 1920s both within and without the Western genre.

Recently, I've been dabbling in the history of the science fiction genre; NYRSF ran a very good article by Darrell Schweitzer about Hugo Gernsback and the creation of the science fiction genre. One point that Darrell didn't mention, that I discovered separately in (I believe) a Sam Moskowitz article in an issue of Fantasy Review that I picked up at the ICFA, is worth mentioning. In the 1910s, Zane Grey had the same position in popular literature that Stephen King had in the 1970s and early 1980s, except more so. For several years, he was unquestionably the most popular writer in America. The fiction magazines--the slicks and especially the pulps--were pulled strongly towards Westerns, and by the beginning of the 1920s, "scientific romance" and other proto-sf had been almost completely crowded out of what had been a wide-open market. When Gernsback launched Amazing Stories in 1926, he was less inventing "scientifiction" than rescuing it from oblivion.

So Zane Grey nearly killed the scientific romance, allowing Gernsback to recreate it in his own image. Those who blame Gernsback for the poor reputation of sf in the US should at least take some consideration of the unpleasant interactions of commerce and art.

(Darrell, by the way, has been writing a lot of terrific pieces for us recently, including an occasional series on interesting and completely forgotten pieces from Argosy, one of the major general-interest pulp fiction magazines. A great deal of proto-sf, including the major works of Edgar Rice Burroughs, appeared in Argosy, and continued to appear there when there was no other venue.)
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[livejournal.com profile] sarah_ovenall had a terrific post last week comparing and contrasting daytime soap operas and the Left Behind novels:

First Impressions
Left Behind: If you take an instant dislike to someone, that's a pretty good indicator that s/he is a minion of the Antichrist.
Soap Operas: If you take an instant dislike to someone, that's a pretty good indicator that you will very soon have sex with him/her.


She also points to the home page for this year's running of the Baltimore Kinetic Sculpture Race, a wonderfully absurd event in which people build and race elaborate art projects across land, sea, and mud.

One Morning Joseph K. Awoke and Discovered Himself At Sea )

She also took her own photos and wrote up the highlights. Go read.

Finally, I've lost track of where I got this link, but the Something Awful cereal boxes competition is terrific.

Breakfast of Something Championish )
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I don't think I ever got around to posting about this. About a year ago, some friends of mine launched a group-authored blog about comics (and occasional other matters), the Howling Curmudgeons. Most of us spent far too much of the 1990s on comics newsgroups on Usenet, so it's got a somewhat confrontational style--one of the most active recent comment threads was about "comic book heresies", which mostly ended up being a list of "this sacred cow really isn't all that good". But it's fun; sometimes the discussion are in-depth and substantia; and and I post there occasionally, so check it out.

My most recent top-level post is just about a reado--a reading error--that I had in response to reading the Curmudgeons before coffee. I also have a comment about Peanuts, my own set of heresies, and a couple of comments in a discussion of Phil & Kaja Foglio.

Mathematics

May. 7th, 2005 11:13 pm
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... is sometimes not a quiz maker's long suit.

I am:
-2%
Republican.
"You're a damn Commie! Where's Tailgunner Joe when we need him?"

Are You A Republican?

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