Hear all about it, hear all about it!!!

Two great events.  (You’re welcome :D)

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Darkness falls across the land The midnight hour is close at hand Creatures crawl in search of blood To terrorize your neighborhood And whosoever shall be found Without a book or kindle in hand Must stand and face the hounds of hell And rot inside a corpse’s shell…..

RIP (Readers Imbibing Peril) – this is the brainchild of Carl over at Stainless Steel Droppings.  This year The Estella Society will be hosting the event.  Details here.  This is NOT a challenge – it is an event and the accent is purely on fun.  Choose as many books as you want, enter a readalong, whatever.  Dark fantasy, horror, mystery, thriller, chiller – it’s the right time of year to give yourself the goosebumps.  And there’s lovely artwork:

Image by the very talented Abigail Larson

Sci Fi Month 2015: November

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Sci fi Month 2015

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It’s not rocket science …. (pun intended)

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It’s all about great sci fi…

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little green men and spaceships! (or whatever floats your ship)

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Check out the details. Hosted by Rinn Reids and Over the Effing Rainbow.

Details here.

Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury

So, two out of two for Ray Bradbury then so far!  First, Something Wicked – which was just excellent and then the thought provoking and shocking Fahrenheit 451 which has kept me thinking for days!

This is an excellent story, quite serious and very well written.

The setting is a futuristic America, no place specific made mention of exactly (I don’t think).  The main protagonist is Guy Montag, a regular, everyday fireman!  Goes to work and comes home to his loving wife.  Okay, scrap that.  Nothing is ever as simple as it seems and the world in which Guy now lives is a strange dystopian world where the only need for firemen is to burn the few remaining books that have survived this strange world!  Yes, Guy burns books – in fact all the firemen burn books.  Guy then goes home where his wife, headphones placed firmly in her dainty ears listens fixedly to her three tv walls!  She only needs the fourth wall to have a full house (pun intended – and sorry!).  Then, one day, as Guy walks home, feeling feelings that he doesn’t really understand he meets his new neighbour – a young 17 year old girl called Clarisse.  She comes across almost ethereal in this strange world of enforced living zombyism!  She throws Guy’s world seemingly into turmoil by simply asking him if he’s happy.  And from there things start to unravel at quite apace and in a frightening way.

I’m not really going to go into the plot.  This isn’t a new book so I’m sure it’s not possible to really give away spoilers at this stage but I still think this book is best read with little advance warning as basically you start off reading thinking everything is relatively normal.  Then you think ‘hold the phone’ followed swiftly by ‘what’ and ‘no way!’.  This may start off as a narrative of a relatively everyday man, living his life relatively normally until little by little Bradbury deconstructs that idea and tiny piece by piece shows you how completely different this world he has created really is.  People living their small lives, disconnected from each other and reality, soaked in tv with their only reading matter cheap magazines, fueling their unhappy lives behind closed doors, lacking conversation and thought.

I thought this was a really good read.  It’s thought provoking.  I’m not entirely sure whether Bradbury is trying to get across a tale of censorship (and it’s also not clear how this situation was ever reached – other than it appears that ‘they in power’ seem to think reading is troublesome) or whether he was simply expressing through this story his possible concerns about the influence of other forms of media and entertainment and how this would affect people’s lives and reading habits.  It’s certainly easy enough to see the effect that tv has had on Guy’s wife who is almost addicted to her living room walls where the tvs have become her family and all she longs for is a fourth wall of tv – and yet, actually she’s not happy really.

The same with Guy.  He started the story doing his job but with inner remote niggles.  All of a sudden he finds himself longing for the conversations that he imagines his next door neighbours have as they stay awake into the early hours of the morning in their brightly lit and animated house where conversations seem to take place.

Somewhat of a sad read, definitely shocking and incredibly thought provoking.  I’m glad I read this and would have no hesitation in recommending it to others.  A masterpiece of dystopia.

I’m submitting this book as one of my reads for the Little Red Reviewer’s Vintage Sci Fi event and also Stainless Steel Droppings 2015 Sci Fi Experience.

A Princess of Mars by Edgar Rice Burroughs

I finished reading A Princess of Mars just before New Year.  I’ve read this book as one of my reads for the Little Red Reviewer’s Vintage Sci Fi event and also Stainless Steel Droppings 2015 Sci Fi Experience.

I’m glad I finally got round to reading ERB and whilst I don’t think this is going to be one of my all time favourites it was a good read.

This is like an adventure story really, there’s plenty of action and fighting, a damsel in distress, aliens and war – all set on a different planet that is slowly dying.

The plot – in a very summarised way is: John Carter is a gentleman and soldier out of Virginia who, at the conclusion of the war turns to prospecting and then in the most unusual circumstances finds himself transported to the planet of Mars (Barsoom). Here he falls into the captivity of a strange race of aliens called Tharks.  The Tharks are a tall race, up to 15 feet apparently, with green skin.  They value fighting and strength above all and have little value for feelings, compassion or love.  Carter befriends one of this race called Tars Tarkas and in fact begins to gain a reputation as a warrior as his muscles and strength are greatly increased upon Mars due to the change in gravity.  Carter, at first bides his time.  He learns a little more of this race from Sola – a member of the race who is charged with looking after him, and also guarding him along with a strange, dog like creature called Woola.  As time progresses Carter’s standing within the community changes and he almost has free will to roam (within reason) but all changes when the Tharks capture a young woman, a princess of Helium called Dejah Thoris.  Helium is populated by a human like, red skinned race who appear to be the dominant factor on Barsoom.  They live in great cities and appear organised unlike the Tharks who are portrayed as uncivilised, savage and warlike.  Carter finds himself rather enamoured of the Princess and following this the main thrust of the story is one of rescue, escape and recapture!  I won’t go overly much into the plot as it’s already fairly well discussed elsewhere.

The story takes the form of a travelogue narrated by Carter.  I enjoyed the writing and particularly the detail concerning the planet and it’s inhabitants.  There was certainly never a lack of action and the story was taken forward at a fairly rapid pace swiftly moving from one fairly unique situation to the next.

In terms of the characters I confess myself a little perplexed.  I wouldn’t say they made a great impact on me really which is an unusual feeling to have – particularly when the main aim of the story revolves around our hero of the piece rescuing the object of his affection – I just felt oddly detached from both characters.  I’m not saying I disliked them, because I didn’t, they just came across a little bland somehow – in fact that’s probably a little harsh sounding as I think that the plot and the adventure feel definitely took centre stage.  For me personally, I felt like Tars and Sola came across with more personality and I found I enjoyed their personal stories.  Curiously I also found myself liking and caring for the strange dog like creature called Woola who had become very attached to Carter during the time he was in the Thark’s captivity.

On the whole I found this an enjoyable and easy story to read. I think you need to pick this up with the age it was written clearly in mind as the writing and storytelling that we are now used to has definitely evolved.  And, curiously, if you normally avoid sci fi stories – as I tend to do a little, usually because I think they’ll go over my head! – well, you’ll have to forgive me for saying the sci fi element is a tad skimpy, I mean, okay, it’s set on Mars and there are different races involved but if you’re expecting any eye openers in terms of different technology – or for that matter the whys and wherefores of how and why Carter found himself mysteriously transported to Mars – then you may be disappointed.  I can’t say I suffered the lack of such detail but just thought I’d chuck this in there for your general consumption.

Overall I thought this was an entertaining read, I didn’t love it but I enjoyed the narrative style and I certainly had no problems in completing the book.  I would definitely recommend this – I think it’s worth reading for a number of reasons, not least of all the impact it has since had on sci-fi fiction.

Be there or be E = mc2

As one door closes another one opens up…  Sci Fi November comes to an end today.  A great event run by Rinn Reads and Oh, the Books! and The Sci-fi Experience over at Stainless Steel Droppings begins tomorrow.  This event also coincides during the month of January with Little Red Reviewer’s Vintage Sci Fi.   So, I console myself with the fact that even though I didn’t read everything I intended during the month of November I can continue with my sci-fi exploration during the next couple of months.

Both of these events are very relaxed  There are no real rules – well, the only real rule is that you enjoy yourself!

I’ve made some lists:

Reading that I completed for Sci-Fi November:

  1. Ancillary Justice by Ann Leckie
  2. Ellie Quin in Wonderland by Alex Scarrow

Reading lined up so far for the Sci-Fi Experience:

  1. Fortune’s Pawn
  2. Leviathan Wakes by James S A Corey
  3. The Time Traveller’s Almanac – I probably won’t read all of this but thought I’d take a look at some of it; and maybe
  4. Dust by Hugh Howey – try and finish the Wool Trilogy

Reading lined up so far for Vintage Sci-Fi:

  1. Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
  2. A Princess of Mars by Edgar Rice Burroughs
  3. Starship Troopers by Robert A Heinlein
  4. The Lost World by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

Let’s face it – I’m probably not going to manage all of that but I like the look of lists – they just seem so orderly and organised!

Anyway, lots of sci-fi goodness awaits on the horizon – all that you need to do is jump on board.

That’s it for me – over and out!

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