• (review) Disgraced Return of The Kap's Needle by Renan Bernardo

    From James Nicoll@3:633/280.2 to All on Tue Jun 17 22:58:52 2025
    Disgraced Return of The Kap's Needle by Renan Bernardo

    When the target world proves too inhospitable for colonization,
    colonists make a desperate bid to return to Earth on a failing starship.

    https://jamesdavisnicoll.com/review/all-around-i-see
    --
    My reviews can be found at http://jamesdavisnicoll.com/
    My tor pieces at https://www.tor.com/author/james-davis-nicoll/
    My Dreamwidth at https://james-davis-nicoll.dreamwidth.org/
    My patreon is at https://www.patreon.com/jamesdnicoll

    --- MBSE BBS v1.1.1 (Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: Public Access Networks Corp. (3:633/280.2@fidonet)
  • From quadibloc@3:633/280.2 to All on Thu Jun 19 02:50:30 2025
    On Tue, 17 Jun 2025 12:58:52 +0000, James Nicoll wrote:

    Disgraced Return of The Kap's Needle by Renan Bernardo

    When the target world proves too inhospitable for colonization,
    colonists make a desperate bid to return to Earth on a failing starship.

    https://jamesdavisnicoll.com/review/all-around-i-see

    Oh, dear. The author made the mistake of making Reva the protagonist,
    instead of the villain in whose defeat the reader is supposed to
    vicariously triumph?

    But the whole situation seems so depressing that... oh, well, it's
    suitable for "real literature" instead of cheap space-opera melodrama,
    like sci-fi fans are conditioned to expect. So it's one of those darned
    New Wave stories!

    Genuine literary merit and science fiction are not incompatible.

    However, readers seeking profound explorations of the human condition...
    often see no need to have them complicated with flashing lights and
    flying cars and spaceships. Readers who are attuned to the future and technology... often want diverting and optimistic entertainment; they
    seek hope, not to be reminded that human flaws mean no real change will
    ever happen.

    This is why the science fiction genre in English-speaking countries has
    been stubbornly resistant to the commercial success of works that
    combine science fiction with the highest levels of genuine literary
    merit. The readership for the two kinds of stories doesn't have enough
    overlap.

    Or the real problem is perhaps a lack of imagination on the part of
    authors.

    How to ask a real question about the human heart... that can only be set
    in a future with technologies beyond what we now have? If such a story
    were written, and it was good enough, it would find an audience.

    Barring "other factors" that could get in its way, of course, and I
    suspect those other factors are legion enough to explain why this hasn't already happened. Because even if the story reviewed - handicapped by
    the other factor of not being originally written in English - isn't it,
    no doubt in the non-English speaking world there perhaps are already
    lots of very good science-fiction stories of genuine literary merit that
    are being ignored.

    Which explains very well your nontraditional choice of material to
    review, so instead of complaining about it I should wish you good luck.

    John Savard

    --- MBSE BBS v1.1.1 (Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: novaBBS (3:633/280.2@fidonet)
  • From quadibloc@3:633/280.2 to All on Thu Jun 19 03:05:21 2025
    On Wed, 18 Jun 2025 16:50:30 +0000, quadibloc wrote:

    Which explains very well your nontraditional choice of material to
    review, so instead of complaining about it I should wish you good luck.

    The Big Three of science-fiction are usually Clarke, Asimov, and
    Heinlein.

    But while they are all of merit, I've tended to feel that, for me, at
    least, Clarke rises above the other two in what I seek from a
    science-fiction story.

    In fact, thinking about it, I wonder if, in a "critic's choice" version,
    one might get a different Big Three. Say Clarke, Bradbury, and Simak,
    perhaps? Maybe #3 would be someone else; my memory isn't great enough to
    know offhand all the best science fiction authors.

    But Clarke didn't write that much science fiction.

    In any case, though, it seems to me that it *ought* to be possible for
    someone to write science fiction of such merit that it would blow even
    Clarke out of the water. The future is where we will, after all, live
    the rest of our lives, as someone once said.

    Ah, well. C. P. Snow may have explained why it's hard to find authors
    with the right overlapping skill sets - the "Two Cultures" of the arts
    and the sciences.

    Oh, wait a moment. 1984 is science fiction, among other things. So a
    science fiction novel of great and profound literary merit _has_ already
    been written. (And Bradbury with Fahrenheit 451, and Heinlein with If
    This Goes On... took stabs in that direction too which did very well.)

    John Savard

    --- MBSE BBS v1.1.1 (Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: novaBBS (3:633/280.2@fidonet)
  • From Titus G@3:633/280.2 to All on Thu Jun 19 14:11:24 2025
    On 19/06/25 05:05, quadibloc wrote:

    The Big Three of science-fiction are usually Clarke, Asimov, and
    Heinlein.
    snip

    The Big Three of science-fiction WERE usually Clarke, Asimov, and
    Heinlein. I preferred Vonnegut, Dick and Asimov.

    Before that, Enid Blyton, Richmal Crompton and someone else were my Big
    Three.

    Ah, well. C. P. Snow may have explained why it's hard to find authors
    with the right overlapping skill sets - the "Two Cultures" of the arts
    and the sciences.

    C P Snow died in 1980. His "Two Cultures" was dated 1959. He never read
    Banks, nor Reynolds, nor Vinge, nor David Mitchell, nor Herbert, nor
    Leckie, nor dozens of others that have developed skills in both Cultures
    in the sixty five years since. I argue for Pantheism.


    --- MBSE BBS v1.1.1 (Linux-x86_64)
    * Origin: A noiseless patient Spider (3:633/280.2@fidonet)