In Which Yr Hmbl Hostess Has Not Had Enough Caffeine
Friday, June 11th, 2010 09:23 amBruce Sterling is trying to make a point over here. Mind you, I’m not sure what his point is. It sorta smacks of the old assurance from A Certain Male SF Writer that his female colleagues didn’t have to write fantasy! They could, with only a little research, learn to write science fiction, too.
Lack of caffeine, right.
Anyhow, Mr. Sterling provides a list, lifted from a Must Read SF posting at The Galaxy Express, with the note that there is not a single male author appearing. One of the authors listed is Steve Miller, who, last time I checked — quite recently, in fact — was male. And an author.
When this was pointed out to Mr. Sterling, he amended his editorial to exclaim that there was a male author of half a book! on the list.
Since there were three books listed by Sharon Lee and Steve Miller, Mr. Sterling clearly can’t do arithmetic, either.
Back to the point of the thing.
If there is only a single male author of SFRomance on the list compiled by Galaxy Express, does that mean there are no men writing SFRomance? I confess that I can’t think of a name — ref. lack of caffeine — but perhaps someone else can?
And! If there are “no” men writing SFRomance, does that automatically make SFRomance an Inferior Form, as Mr. Sterling’s commentary seems to suggest?
Discuss.
Originally published at Sharon Lee, Writer. You can comment here or there.
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Date: 2010-06-11 02:13 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-06-11 03:31 pm (UTC)To be perfectly fair, I don't think that Mr. Heinlein thought was writing SFR, which didn't exist at the time, or even Romance. I think he thought he was writing competent women characters -- which he did. I also think he was trying to expand envelopes -- which he also did. Unfortunately, you can't always expand envelopes without pushing buttons.
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From: (Anonymous) - Date: 2010-06-11 03:45 pm (UTC) - Expand(no subject)
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From: (Anonymous) - Date: 2010-06-14 03:28 pm (UTC) - Expand(no subject)
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Date: 2010-06-11 02:41 pm (UTC)I LIKE emotional entanglements in whatever I read, since most people can't avoid them. However, I felt my eyebrows rising at some of the inclusion on this list of SFR.
1. Kate Elliott's "Jaran" ... This excellent novel is about culture clash, first contact, technology, and - above all - politics. There ARE relationship elements, but not HEA, or even HFN, romance. Kate Elliott writes complex and tightly plotted books squarely in the SF genre, and writes about human emotions as part of the mix. That's not Romance, that's humanity.
2. C. J. Cherryh and Lois Bujold: really? If someone asked me for SFR, neither of these writers would occur to me. Maybe Bujold's Chalion books, but not any of the Cherryh I've read.
3. Ann Aguirre: "Grimspace" hit more SF notes than Romance ones in my lexicon. In fact, it was so relentlessly SF and gratuitously violent that I never read past the first one in the series.
So, I wonder ... what was the criteria for SFR for the person who compiled the list in the first place? Maybe it was SF written by women - for the most part - that involved emotional entaglement. The list felt much more SF, and much less R, imho.
Kristen
who has read "Saltation" from the Library, greatly enjoyed it, and is looking forward to owning and rereading it. when it arrives, no hurry. This weekend: Mouse and Dragon!
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Date: 2010-06-11 02:51 pm (UTC)It looks like Heather's original purpose (http://www.thegalaxyexpress.net/2010/05/what-are-must-read-science-fiction.html) was to woo readers who may be more accustomed to paranormal romances, to edge closer to the SF side of things. I may be reading too much into her explanation, so you might want to take a look for yourself.
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Date: 2010-06-11 02:55 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-06-11 03:22 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2010-06-11 03:29 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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From:Lois Bujold...
Date: 2010-06-11 11:39 pm (UTC)Jim
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Date: 2010-06-11 02:54 pm (UTC)However, I shall always treasure your question because it led to the following dialogue.
Me, scanning shelves in bedroom: Do any of Tim Powers's books have a strong romantic through-line leading to a happy ending? Don't mention Declare, I haven't read it yet and I don't want to be spoiled.
Husband: Tim Powers tends to be more about bodily mutilation than romance per se.
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Date: 2010-06-11 03:33 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2010-06-11 02:56 pm (UTC)ust for fun... what about
Poul Anderson, Operation Chaos
E.E. Smith -- Galaxy Primes, Skylark series?
Christopher Stasheff -- The Warlock in Spite of Himself series
Operation Chaos has a love relationship at its core -- and boy, is their relationship tested!
E.E. Smith -- both of those have some relationships involved. Admittedly, they are not very detailed about what goes on behind the scenes, but...
Stasheff, again, is based around a relationship -- between the interstellar agent and a witch (but it is not fantasy, exactly).
I know, I'm probably pushing the edges of what people consider SFR, but...
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Date: 2010-06-11 07:44 pm (UTC)Tanya
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Date: 2010-06-11 03:16 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-06-11 03:26 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-06-11 03:30 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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From:Me too
From: (Anonymous) - Date: 2010-06-11 06:23 pm (UTC) - ExpandHonor
From: (Anonymous) - Date: 2010-06-12 12:37 am (UTC) - Expand(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2010-06-11 04:09 pm (UTC)Bonus points for "Loverbirds" being
[SPOILER]
m/m!
no subject
Date: 2010-06-11 04:28 pm (UTC)Or Philip Jose Farmer's The Lovers?
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Date: 2010-06-11 10:02 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-06-11 05:56 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-06-11 07:58 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2010-06-11 06:48 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-06-11 07:54 pm (UTC)That said, I just went downstairs to our fiction library and pulled all the sf books written by men which have romance or relationships woven through the plot.
Gordon Dickson None by Man, Tactics of Mistake
Randall Garrett (with Vicki Ann Heydron) The Steel of Raithskar series
Joe Haldeman The Forever War
John G. Hemry A Just Determination (excellent hard military sf, very well written)
Arthur H. Landis A World Called Camelot series (soft sf with fantasy elements - a bit silly at times)
H. Beam Piper Lord Kalvan of Otherwhere, Space Viking
Chiming in on the Heinlein issue, I don't think that what he wrote were romances, more like fantasy. Sex fantasies.
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Date: 2010-06-11 09:56 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2010-06-11 08:58 pm (UTC)"I prefer an SF plot to a mystery plot, whether or not romance is built in."
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Date: 2010-06-11 10:19 pm (UTC)Ohfercryinoutloud.
"I prefer an SF plot to a mystery plot, whether or not romance is built in."
Well said. Did he win his point?
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From:no subject
Date: 2010-06-11 09:48 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-06-11 10:01 pm (UTC)I've looked through a few "greatest SF books of all time" lists, and they're 95% stuff that bored me to sleep or pissed me off (mainly related to how women were treated in them). About the only book tending to show up on those lists that I like is Ender's Game.
If short story writers count, James H. Schmitz could be added to the list? They were pretty Nancy Drew-ish, but there was some good romance in there as well as a lot of the stories just kicking butt in general, in their charming old-school way.
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Date: 2010-06-11 10:09 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2010-06-12 12:42 am (UTC)Randall Garrett (with Vicki Ann Heydron) The Steel of Raithskar series
Date: 2010-06-12 02:58 am (UTC)I’ve moved from the Bay Area and lost contact with most of that gang. But what I heard at the time was that Vicki and her publishers used Randall’s name to increase sales, since she was an unknown writer. Standard hearsay warnings apply.
Raymond
Re: Randall Garrett (with Vicki Ann Heydron) The Steel of Raithskar series
Date: 2010-06-12 09:06 am (UTC)Tricia
Re: Randall Garrett (with Vicki Ann Heydron) The Steel of Raithskar series
From:Re: Randall Garrett (with Vicki Ann Heydron) The Steel of Raithskar series
From: (Anonymous) - Date: 2010-06-12 08:03 pm (UTC) - Expandno subject
Date: 2010-06-12 06:01 am (UTC)Randall Garrett (with Vicki Ann Heydron) The Steel of Raithskar series
Date: 2010-06-12 02:13 pm (UTC)Writing tone is a tricky issue. On one infamous occasion, John Campbell Jr.’s story list for Amazing/Analogue was overcrowded with Randall Garrett stories. So Garret submitted a story under a nom de plume. He was delighted when Campbell pointed it out and told him, “Look at this story by a brand new writer. I wish you could come up with something that fresh and good.”
Personally, I never felt the Raithskar books tasted like Randall’s work. Not that that says much…see above.
As for joint authorship, look at the dates:
The Steel of Raithskar 1981
The Glass of Dyskornis 1982
The Bronze of Eddarta 1983
The Well of Darkness 1983
The Search for Ka 1984
Return to Eddarta 1984
The River Wall 1986
What professional writer will write a six book series entirely on speculation, without publishing them as soon as possible? (Yes, Lee and Miller did, during the interregnum. But that was because they couldn’t get them published. This was not Randall Garrett’s problem.) Invest all that effort in a series that may never bring in any money? Write six or seven books in the seventies and make no push to publish any of them until the eighties?
Writers don’t make a living that way.
Raymond