XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX I can evade questions without help; what I need is answers. ///reading answers for Christina at the Zaibatsu/// >What is the first book you remember loving? Probably 'A Wrinkle in Time' by Madeleine L'Engle, in the third grade - at least that's the first one I remember. (The first thing I remember, after all of the things I've forgotten, if you will.) > Who are your favourite protagonists? Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser certainly rank high on the list. Steward from 'Voice of the Whirlwind' as well, and Molly from Gibson's 'Neuromancer' (at my last re-reading I was struck by how tolerant and caring she is toward Case despite all of her hard edges). Shevek from 'The Dispossessed' and Estraven from 'The Left Hand of Darkness' surely as well. > What, so far, is the best book you've read this year? Certainly 'The Handmaid's Tale', which lives up to its rather harrowing reputation - a disturbing story done very well and probably something more people should read. I had already seen the first season of the TV series adaptation before I read it and even knowing some of the twists and backstory in advance did nothing to soften its punches. Gentle like a Diane Arbus photo. I am reading Bruce Sterling's 'Schismatrix' now and really enjoying it as well. I'm going to have to go back and pick up some of his other works. > Can you list three to five of your favourite authors? Why are they your favourite? Ernest Hemingway - for the sheer intensity of his love of his craft and his willingness to use every little bit of his life to inform his writing. I really discovered him shortly after I graduated from college, copies of his works bought used because I was broke and needed something to help maintain my sanity, and fell pretty much instantly in love. His absolute faith in his ability to leave so much detail out and still have the reader intuit and know it anyway and the truths behind it all was and is enthralling - trusting in the reader to bring their own truth to the story. That is what all of the greatest artists are able to do. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn - because he made sure that so many of the horrific stories of the Soviet GULAG made it out into the wider light of day, continued to stand up to the authorities and write /after/ he was released from the camps, and wrote it all so well and with so much optimism for humanity learning from it and doing better. I find myself quoting him far too often in online discussions - this does not say good things about how we're doing on learning from the past. William Gibson - his world-building is amazing and he does such a fantastic job of letting you discover them through peeks and hints without spelling it all out in exposition. In worlds with so much technical jargon and so many secretive subcultures an author often spends a lot of time describing and explaining things, not Gibson. He gives you just enough to figure things out yourself from context and character dialog while continuing to move the story along - often with multiple plotlines involving different groups of 'main' characters. Ursula K. LeGuin - for the creation of The Handdarata and all of the explanations of the religions in 'The Left Hand of Darkness' alone LeGuin would be one of my favorite authors. Her ability to ask questions about human society that make you consider our nature while telling compelling stories is unparalleled in my experience. Philip K. Dick - if you want an author to conjure up some truly strange worlds and question the very nature of reality and human experience, well Phil is your guy. Some of his stories have their plot holes and faults, written at a breakneck pace on amphetamines to make a living selling to pulp publishers. Aliens, time travel, vast government conspiracies, people owning outrageously expensive pets in a post-apocalyptic world to prove their empathy, strange religions, alternate realities galore - all of that and plenty of quirks and strangeness as well. Dick wrote in the SF genre because it was the only one at the time that could handle all of the weird ideas he had crashing around inside his head. From "How to Build a Universe That Doesn't Fall Apart Two Days Later"[0]: "It was always my hope, in writing novels and stories which asked the question 'What is reality?', to someday get an answer." Philip K. Dick - Agent of Chaos Thomas Disch's 'The Dreams Our Stuff is Made Of' talks a bit about Dick and the importance of his writing to SF at several points and is a great read. (And if you haven't read 'Camp Concentration' by Disch you're missing out - go get a copy and sit down, seriously.) > What is your favourite film adaptation of a book? 'No Country For Old Men' did a very good job of adapting the book and capturing the atmosphere, the characters, and the dialog that make it such a great book. The rotoscoped film of 'A Scanner Darkly' did a good job of capturing the tone and madness, of the novel and was very faithful to the original. > What books have you read the most times? 'The Dispossessed' and 'The Left Hand of Darkness' by Ursula K. LeGuin - I tend to re-read one of these two when life is particularly difficult and I need a break from stress. I re-read 'The Dispossessed' this year, for example. William Gibson's 'Neuromancer' - it just holds up so well to re-reading because there are so many layers to it. 'Count Zero' and 'Mona Lisa Overdrive' as well, for the same reason. Fritz Leiber's entire Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser series - when I really just need to get away from the real world for a bit these always do the trick, equal parts humorous and gritty. Their world of Nehwon and the city of Lankhmar hold all sorts of strangeness and the pair get into plenty of trouble both mundane and supernatural. They are just a whole lot of fun. 'Voice of the Whirlwind' and 'Hardwired' - Walter Jon Williams - his ability to create a gritty, amoral, future world full of plots and changes going on in the background. > What authors do you think more people should read? Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn - and not just because people need the cautionary tales, either Philip K. Dick - because he opened up so many possibilities and pushed the medium pretty far in crazy directions that a lot of other writers have benefitted from Ernest Hemingway - because the world should listen more to what he had to say about war. [0]: http://yin.arts.uci.edu/%7Estudio/readings/dick/index.html NO CARRIER