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Category: science fiction (Page 6 of 6)

Dancing in the Rain [Flash]

This is a little piece prompted by mon ami Lachlan Atcliffe. I’ve always liked Marybeth, and now I like her more.

Marybeth Delilah Potter loved the thunder, and she loved the rain. She loved it to every drone and cirrus, this wonder God wrought where clean, cool water fell from His sky, even onto the deserts of Arizona. Other kids at school pretended they were too old and too cool, but they secretly tilted their heads back when no one was looking to drink the rain that tasted like communion. Marybeth wasn’t too old to love the rain, and she knew it, but she waited until no one was looking anyway. Marybeth sometimes dropped her human seeming when she danced in the rain, when she threw her head back and drank her fill, and her drones shone purple-green in the lightning while her cirri writhed in the thunder-rich air.

That kind of thing could give the humans the wrong idea.

Besides, Mrs. Hutchinson wanted her foster daughter safe at home during thunderstorms, safe from flash floods and landslides, innocent that Marybeth could survive and even thrive out there. It was only a little naughty to sneak out into the rains to dance and drink and worship God, especially if she was back before morning so Mrs. Hutchinson wouldn’t know.

She was alone, up in the hills where no one would see. She felt no human presence, or dog, on her hive mind, nothing that drove shards into the Hum of psychic harmony she had brought with her from Home. But in the blackened rain, she felt something. Not the jagged shards of Earth minds, something …else.

Slowly, Marybeth Delilah Potter whirled back into humanoid shape, slipped her human face back into place, pink hands and pale cheeks. She stretched her awareness. There was nothing, nothing Earth-like in the rain, not even lizards or coyotes slinking away from God’s rain.

Could it be…?

At Home, the Hum had been her religion, and her foremothers before her. She had come to Earth alone, the only hive being in on this dry planet, the only being with the Hum inside her.

She felt something like the Hum out there, in the rain, in the darkness. A distributed mind, not all trapped and individual like humans. She Hummed in the rain, her thousand golden eyes closed to the darkness.

And Marybeth heard something she’d never heard before.

Marybeth felt dissonance in the Hum, and it nearly tore her soul apart.

She withdrew her awareness furtively, the thousand golden eyes snapping open. She saw nothing, heard nothing but the drumming of the rain and the roaring of the floods. Marybeth stood stock still as lightning tore the sky asunder, revealed nothing.

She’d read about demons and devils in her Bible, but Mrs. Hutchinson explained about metaphors and stories, explained to a frightened foster daughter that they weren’t real like the rain. Now Marybeth wasn’t so sure. God would never make a being that could sound a false note in the Hum, she was certain of that.

She reached out again with the one sense that had felt the …presence. Tentatively, with the psychic sense by which her drones shared sensation and thought, which made Marybeth Marybeth. Marybeth reached out with her soul.

She had to stretch to sense that…dissonance in the Hum now. Was it moving? Where was it moving to?

Her attention trailed down the darkness, down the slick hills, toward town and the school and an old farmhouse on Cuttle Creek Road where Mrs. Hutchinson nuzzled against Mr. Hutchinson as the rain pattered on the window.

She brought her attention back, reached out again. She felt that impossible dissonance again. It was definitely moving toward town, toward all those humans who had no idea what wrongness was coming. They could not feel the Hum, but Marybeth knew they could feel when it was wrong.

But she knew the Hum from Home, among her kin and all the creatures of the wide seas there. And she could make her memories and thoughts known through the Hum. This presence would hear her trumpet-blast.

As the rain splashed against her rubbery skin, Marybeth dropped her seaming. Her true face writhed. She would speak truth.

“Go.” She pushed out into the darkness, and it was all her memories and all her kin’s memories of flight, evacuation, separation. It rang in the Hum.

“I claim this planet. Mrs. Hutchinson is mine. Mr. Hutchinson is mine. The swim team are mine. This town and this place and this whole world is mine! I came from Home as last of my kin. They do not Hum but they have made me their kin anyway. I bear royal eggs and I will bear queens and my daughters and the sons and daughters of Man will share the bounty of God’s green and blue Earth in the days to come! They do not Hum, but they sing. And if you would harm even the least of them, you must go through me!

 The darkness did not answer. She reached out again.

A memory came to her, one of her own, one she shied away from into physical sensation of the rain on her flesh. A memory of salt in her wounds, when humans were cruel to her like they were cruel to each other, separated and alone.

She whimpered out loud, but stared up into the rain, a writhing mass of squidlike flesh in a modest green pinafore and no shoes. Marybeth drew from her great racial store of memory a fresh one, one which had happened to her, the one that hurt most.

“Leave! My! Planet!” Marybeth burst with the memory, the memory of leaving Home, crossing the Pane that separated Home from Earth, the Pane she could never cross again. Marybeth knew no stronger way to deliver her message, and doubted one existed.

The darkness trembled, but it could have been the rain. Marybeth waited in the darkness, praying psalms from her Book of Common Prayer as she slowly extended her awareness again.

Nothing out there but the jagged shards of Earth minds, separated and alone, and the quiet lonely Hum between her every drone.

She wondered if it had even ever been there, that unearthly dissonance in the Hum. If it was a trial of God’s to test her, or some strange madness covering her from too much pain and fear among the humans. Things like that had happened to her kin, and the suffering hives sadly eaten by their families.

Regardless, she was here, and it was not. She had left her planet and come here, among creatures that could not feel each other’s sensations nor hear each other’s thoughts. She’d left the Hum of her foremothers for the sound of the chorus singing hymns on Sunday.

Marybeth had come from Home, but Earth was her planet now. Her planet, her people, her God.

And soon, even the humans would know that.

Many Returns

Bonjour, everyone.

This is a short note to let you all know that yes, I’m still alive. However, I got hit with the SIP order in early April and barely had time to get my equipment home from the office before I found out I was laid off (along with half my team at work). I know I haven’t spent the worst SIP by a long shot, but the one-two punch has had nasty effects for my mental health. I was unable to even write for most of the month. It’s still difficult now.

It’s for that reason I’ve had to cancel the rest of the short fiction ratings up until the Nebulas. As of this moment, there isn’t the time nor, honestly, the spoons to do those novellas and novelettes justice. I have decided to attend the (online) Nebulas, and am trying to put back together all the things that fell apart in April…including my blog and Patreon.

So, stay tuned to this wavelength.  There’s many more futures to come.

– Roscoe

2020 Nebula Nominees: Short Stories (part II)

Here are the final three stories nominated in the Short Story category. Part I here. Now, we look in the face of storms, go back to the worst of the British Raj, and walk the stacks of alien libraries. Stick around to the end, where I unveil my favorite.


And Now His Lordship is Laughing
Shiv Ramdas

As a rule, I don’t particularly like “wrong and revenge” stories. Death Wish lingers way too long on the horrors of the wrong and then on the horrors of the revenge, and it’s not the only one by a long shot.

But I like this one.

The wrong: The British “Denial of Rice” policy, which was sadly and horrifically real.

The revenge: A doll.

That’s really all you need to know to know why you need to read this story. It navigates the narrow line between the two extremes of this kind of revenge story, it neither forgives its offenders and tries to make them somehow likable, nor does it fetishize either the violence each side does. It doesn’t shy away from it either, the list of trigger warnings is half as long as my arm, but it describes the grim details without lust in its voice. I hammer on this because so, so, so many revenge fantasies fail this, and then you have to shower afterwards.

Instead, “And Now His Lordship Is Laughing” contributes to the ongoing conversation about the British presence in India, especially during World War II, and whether or not they were as bad as the Nazis and fascists they opposed. I can’t weigh in on this conversation, except to say the British in this story are not doing themselves any favors there. But this story is every bit as engaging, and troubling, as Harry Turtledove’s “The Last Article” or Orwell’s obituary of Gandhi.

You should read it.

Moon Phase:
Gibbous

A Catalog of Storms
Fran Wilde

I won’t lie, I didn’t like this story much at first.

I mean, the opening line is excellent:

“The wind’s moving fast again. The weathermen lean into it, letting it wear away at them until they turn to rain and cloud.”

A Catalog of storms

That’s some “clocks were just striking thirteen”-grade opening material.

But that seemed to be where this particular cli-fi/fantasy stopped. Characters came and went, we danced between lists and narrative, it was very emotional, but it just didn’t seem to go anywhere, even when it finally went somewhere.

So what changed my mind? The power of names, and how Fran Wilde uses them, the way A. C. Wise did with titles in “How the Trick is Done“, only more developed? The weird, off-kilter, Bioshock: Infinite air? Or maybe just the power of that opening line?

It was the way I kept hearing snatches of narrative, a day later. The way I could see Lillit go in my mind several days later. The way I started making lists of social and spiritual storms as my prayer beads sat to one side.

Good stories stick with you. Good stories stick with you long after the title and author have fled your mind, so much detritus in the wind and weather. I don’t particularly like this story, still, but I have to admit it is a good story.

Moon Phase:
Quarter

Give the Family My Love
A. T. Greenblatt

I’ve saved this one for last, because I think this story is going to win the Nebula. It sure as Hell deserves it.

It’s an epistolary little tale, all one-sided, from Hazel “the last astronaut” to her brother Saul (and his wife Huang) as she treads across a barren planet and into an alien Library. She talks about the barren planet, and about the aliens, and about her research, and about the information she’s looking for and why.

She also talks a lot about how badly humanity has doomed itself, because she’s an anthropologist and has read a lot of history. She watched the Great Plains burn and the Pacific Northwest with it. She’s the last astronaut, not because she wants to, but because she was the only one qualified and because there’s not enough resources for astronauts. She doubts whether there’ll be resources for a government in the near future.

And she talks about hope, because in the end, that’s what this story is about. Whenever anyone talks about ‘hopepunk,’ they can refer to this story as their Exhibit A. It treats Saul’s hope as a subversive stance, Hazel’s pessimism as the only sound and sensible approach. We don’t get to hear Saul’s side, but we hear his influence, feel the shadow of his long arm.

And in the end, it might just save the world. Might. Ya gotta have hope.

And, honestly, it’s stories like this that made me read science fiction in the first place.

Moon Phase:
Full

Next time: Novelettes, the forgotten length. Tune in next week, same time, same channel!

2020 Nebula Nominees: Short Stories (pt. I)

We’ll start off the Nebula nominee reviews with three of the short stories, ranging from a threadbare-elbow tale of Las Vegas to Edwardian schoolgirl cannibals to blood-stained generation ship cathedrals.


How the Trick is Done
A. C. Wise

This first story on my Nebula reading list is a strange one. It seems to take place on a Vegas on the edge of the horizon, slightly tilted, slightly too real to be real, a Vegas where Resurrectionists bring potted plants back to life and Assistants falling off the Hoover Dam grow sequined wings and, most importantly, where titles have power.

The story is how the Magician died, how the Magician’s Girlfriend/the Resurrectionist, the Magician’s Stage Manager, the Magician’s current Assistant and the Magician’s former Assistant all play a part in it. “How absurd,” the narration notes as two of them first meet, “that they should define themselves solely in relation to the Magician.” These two have had names for some time, but as they introduce themselves, their titles fall away. Similar moments of transformation happen for everyone, except the nameless rabbit called Gus (and his lack of a name is important) and the Magician himself.

Watching the way Wise played with titles and names, names and titles, who’s called what when, was its own delightful little magic show. And I thank her for breathing new life into a whole set of tired old tropes about ledgerdemain, making something new of them. I’m sure Meg and Becca, in particular, would appreciate that trick.

Moon Phase:
Crescent

Ten Excerpts from an Annotated Bibliography on the Cannibal Women of Ratnabar Island
Nibita Sen

I remember reading this little gem when it came out last May, I was quite pleased to find it the same story that I remembered. A ghoulish academic summary revolving around distant Ratnabar Island and an unspeakable supper in a girls’ boarding house in rural England, Nibita Sen has a keen awareness of how close academia and cannibalism really are.

On this read-through, I noticed how interesting it was to watch the names and narratives change over time, and watch the Gaurs start elbowing their way back into their own story amidst Rainiers and Cliftons and Schofields. And my God does Sen command the tones! I could place each excerpt’s academic era within a sentence or two, each one distinct and ringing true to its sources. And everyone, from the Angloest Anglo to the Gaur cousins, wants to take Regina Guar and the never-explicitly-stated Churchill Dinner, and carve them up for themselves, for their theories and their narratives.

One has the rather sickening feeling, afterward, that one has just seen the Churchill Dinner all laid out with ten separate diners all commenting on the delicacy of the meat.

It is a delicious sensation.

Moon phase: Quarter

The Dead, In Their Uncontrollable Power
Karen Osborne

At first, I thought I was reading a fantasy story – a cathedral, a sin-eater, a cup of sin and a cup of virtue, a dying cleric, and a bomb. But it quickly became clear that we were cooped up in one of science fiction’s hoariest of hoary stock plots: the generation ship gone bad.

But the trappings are just that, window-dressing for the two cups, the cup of virtue and the cup of sin, and the two women who drink from them: the captain, and the sin-eater. The one contains all the dead captains’ fine and regal memories, desires, impulses, the other all their…well, all their sins. All the slain mutineers, all the spaced excess, all the foul deeds decided. And Karen Osborne would like you to take a minute and consider what the souls of the unquiet dead can do to people. Especially their virtues.

What I love about this story is how Osborne twists the ending. You know how this story is, you’ve seen it a hundred times on the news and a thousand times in fiction. You can already smell the iron tang and viscera. And Osborne barrels down toward that fetid, horrifying climax…and what she does instead made me cheer.

Read it, if only to see for yourself.

Moon Phase:
Gibbous

Didn’t see your favorite story? Part II is here, including my choice for this year’s Nebula-winning short story.

Moon images courtesy of Emoji One.

2020 Nebula Nominees: Mathieu Takes the Nebulas!

Well, takes on might have been more accurate…oh well. Because that’s right, R. Jean Mathieu is going to the Nebulas!

For those of you just tuning in at home, the Nebulas are the professional award of science fiction, SF’s version of the Oscars, given each year by our union, the Science Fiction & Fantasy Writers of America. The Nebulas rival the Hugos for prestige, and this year they’ll be awarded in Woodland Hills, CA on May 31.

Like WorldCon two years ago, I’ll be going for professional reasons, but keeping my eyes open to wonder and strangeness. And in the countdown to May, I have something for you. Here, at Tor.com, is the complete list of Nebula nominations (including the special awards for YA, media, and game design).

Everyone is gonna be issuing their reviews of the novels. Everyone. But you folks know me, you know how I feel about short fiction. So in the leadup to the Nebula Conference, I’ll be reviewing all the short works of SF, all the nominees for Short Story, Novelette, and Novella. When and where able, I’ll link you directly to the story, otherwise, to the Amazon.com or publisher page.

In addition to crowning my choice in each field to win their respective Nebulas, I’ll be rating each story on its merits, measuring in moons from new to full.

Stay tuned as the reviews for your favorites go live! Which one will win? Which one will I push? You’ll just have to find out.


Short Story
“Give the Family My Love” – A.T. Greenblatt (Clarkesworld)
“The Dead, In Their Uncontrollable Power” – Karen Osborne (Uncanny)
“And Now His Lordship Is Laughing” – Shiv Ramdas (Strange Horizons)
“Ten Excerpts from an Annotated Bibliography on the Cannibal Women of Ratnabar Island” – Nibedita Sen (Nightmare)
“A Catalog of Storms” – Fran Wilde (Uncanny)
“How the Trick Is Done” – A.C. Wise (Uncanny)


Novelette
“A Strange Uncertain Light” – G.V. Anderson (F&SF)
“For He Can Creep” – Siobhan Carroll (Tor.com)
“His Footsteps, Through Darkness and Light” – Mimi Mondal (Tor.com)
“The Blur in the Corner of Your Eye” – Sarah Pinsker (Uncanny)
Carpe Glitter – Cat Rambo (Meerkat)
“The Archronology of Love” – Caroline M. Yoachim (Lightspeed)


Novella
“Anxiety Is the Dizziness of Freedom” – Ted Chiang (Exhalation)
The Haunting of Tram Car 015 – P. Djèlí Clark (Tor.com Publishing)
This Is How You Lose the Time War – Amal El-Mohtar & Max Gladstone (Saga)
Her Silhouette, Drawn in Water – Vylar Kaftan (Tor.com Publishing)
The Deep – Rivers Solomon, with Daveed Diggs, William Hutson & Jonathan Snipes (Saga)
Catfish Lullaby – A.C. Wise (Broken Eye)

2312 – Kim Stanley Robinson

2312

I really, really want to like Kim Stanley Robinson. I do. His ideas are beautiful. The Mars trilogy is the most in-depth analysis of Martian terraforming ever committed to print; Mark Watney couldn’t have planted potatoes without it. The Years of Rice and Salt combines a staggering scope (alternate world history, 1300-present) with a thoroughly original structure (following the reincarnations of a jati, a group of souls fated to meet again and again). In my middle-school years, he and Ursula LeGuin seemed to be the only voices for the earth and the wretched of the earth amidst a sea of gung-ho libertarians like Heinlein, Bradbury, and Frankowski.

But then you actually read the book, and your hopes are dashed. His characters are forgettable, his plots meandering, his prose wooden. I can’t remember which initial from Years of Rice and Salt is supposed to be the angry one, I or B. I recall a few passages of Red Mars, and one character because he was a sympathetic Frenchman at a time when we frogs were all “cheese-eating surrender monkeys” and one because he up and disappeared halfway through the book and I kept wondering when he’d come back.

I started 2312 full of the apprehensive hope that the last twenty years have made a better storyteller of this brilliant, idiosyncratic Author. I’m afraid Anne Rice was correct: we don’t really change, we only become more fully what we are. Kim Stanley Robinson is the Arthur C. Clarke of the 21st century: a consummate idea man who isn’t about to let mere writing get in his way.

2312 is full of absolutely amazing ideas: the Mondragon that has superseded capitalism, leaving “capitalism [as] the residual on Mars, as feudalism [as] the residual on Earth,” the art-world of Mercury and its capitol at Terminator, mutually-hermaphroditic sex, and, of course, the terraria.

terrarium.jpg

“Terrarium” for this style of vessel/colony, hollowed out of an asteroid and filled with biosphere, seems destined to enter the SF lexicon alongside terms like “ansible,” “waldo,” “hyperspace,” and “robot.” And Robinson’s inventive new ideas don’t stop at content, he has some brilliant literary strokes as well: the interstitial lists, extracts, and quantum walks are not only elegantly-presented exposition, they further the feeling of balkanization that Robinson characterizes his future with. 2312 has one of the very, very few examples of future works of art that effectively influences the story without being the focus of it, both Swan’s art installations on Mercury and those of other artists through the Solar System. Speaking of art, he even inverts the Famous Famous Fictional Trek trio near the end and lists “I Met Her in a Phobos Restaurant,” “Lovely Rita, Meter Maid,” and “We’re Off to See the Wizard” as drinking songs in that order.

But his characters. His plotting. It opens with a funeral and closes with a wedding, in fitting comic theater fashion. There’s terrorist attacks, two survival trials as Swan and Wahram are marooned, a romance that takes you from behind, the possibility of emergent AI turning against their masters, and the secret machinations of various factions…but none of them seem to connect to anything. Indeed, it’s hard to connect much of anything to anywhere. As one not-a-reviewer noted, “Swan Er Hong and Wahram prefer to run away from problems they don’t understand,” and the whole book feels less like a book, less even than a patchwork story, than it does like a picaresque. Our Heroes finish up one adventure (or, more often than not, leave it dangling like the worst Stephenson novel, as they did in Africa) and are whisked off by terrarium to the next one. Which is great! I’ve enjoyed a great many novels exactly like this, and even written a couple myself. Except, Robinson wants us to see a bigger picture and a greater drama to this balkanized novel, and it just doesn’t seem to work.

Which brings me to Swan.

I will probably remember Swan Er Hong a long time, if only because she consistently aroused vague disgust, which is probably not what you want in a viewpoint character. She’s over a century old but behaves like a bratty teenager – a smart one, but still emotionally immature and bizarrely inexperienced. She’s apparently never seen poverty on Earth before, nor been in love (despite a medical history in the middle of the book describing past loves and children), nor even lost a parent. She imperiously declares what is best for whatever planet she’s standing on or in, endangers her friends at least twice, and is generally an unpleasant person to be around and to read about. Her companion, Wahram, by contrast, is merely boring. In Kim Stanley Robinson’s oeuvre of forgettable characters, Wahram’s phlegmatic plodding is something even Robinson specifically notes as boring. Maybe this is why their romance seems more formal than real: on the one hand, you have the man who’s never perturbed even by losing his own leg, and on the other, the woman who constantly reacts to whatever’s in front of her. What kind of spark could you have there?

Kim Stanley Robinson has never been easy reading. I got that all the way back in seventh grade. But getting through it has always been interesting, even if I argue with myself about whether it was worth it. The sheer scope of Years of Rice and Salt still dazzles me, the meditations on humanity as cultivator or humanity as witness (Green vs. Red) in the Mars trilogy is some of the best philosophy in commercial fiction. Despite the meandering plot and the forgettable characters, despite the mannered prose and the hollow dialogue, I think 2312 was worth it. In 2012, when the book came out, the vision of a future where hope could be found, a future where humanity increases in genetic, cultural, and artistic diversity while still being human, a future where even Earth could be terraformed, was as alien to the omnipresent Singularity or Apocalypse as the liberal-green philosophy of Red Mars had been at the tail end of cyberpunk. Other authors have since taken up the call, dusted off the terraria, grappled with the intersexed and transcender implications, and explored other ways to terraform Earth. We wouldn’t have Sunvault and Reckoning without 2312, we wouldn’t have Ecopunk! without 2312, we wouldn’t have solarpunk without 2312. For that alone, the book is worth it.

(edited versions of this review have been crossposted to Goodreads and to Amazon.com)

On the Hugos and Positive Censorship

“As the Americans learned so painfully in Earth’s final century, free flow of information is the only safeguard against tyranny. The once-chained people whose leaders at last lose their grip on information flow will soon burst with freedom and vitality, but the free nation gradually constricting its grip on public discourse has begun its rapid slide into despotism. Beware of he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart he dreams himself your master.” – Commissioner Pravin Lal, Sid Meier’s Alpha Centauri

I have two enemies in this world: the zealot and the censor. The only difference between the two is that the censor is too squeamish to burn writers along with their books. I have wary respect for the zealot with matches in hand, I have nothing but disdain for the censor.

This fellow, Matthew David Surridge, speaks my mind, regarding my opinion on the Sad Puppies and their pathetic attempt to control the Hugos. They have attempted to form a slate around their ideology, to exclude any other nominations for any reason but agreement with their ideology. That this is completely legal is a fault in the Hugo nomination and voting system. Do not bother me with protestations as to its legality, it is still wrong. In building a slate around their ideology, Vox Day and Brad Torgerson and all their butthurt, simpering followers have declared themselves my enemy.

This image seemed appropriate, because a bunch of dildos have the whole thing spinning out of control.

This image seemed appropriate, because a bunch of dildos have the whole thing spinning out of control.

I have heard rumblings that those most offended by the odious ideology of Torgerson et al should assemble their own slate, fight fire with fire, in the 2016 Hugos. Fingering their matches. If you agree with this logic, you are also declaring yourself my enemy.

This is where it gets involved. TL;DR: “There is more than one way to burn a book, and the world is full of people running around with lit matches.” And they’re standing in the room with you.

When this article made the rounds a few months ago, I was chatting via Messenger on a Facebook group I am no longer a member of. She asked if I, as a writer, would be following the recommendation. No, I replied – I reread Gabriel Garcia Marquez about once a year, I love Octavia Butler and Ursula LeGuin, and I was at the time working my way through Samuel Delany’s Dhalgren. I chose these examples as they were relevant to the recommendation, which is mostly centered on speculative fiction. She accused me of being elitist and provincial. I pointed out, at this, that I was the only person of any color I knew who had read the Dao De Jing, the Analects of Confucius, the Doctrine of the Mean, the Mengzi, the Chuangzi, Lao She’s Teahouse, Eileen Chang’s Love in a Fallen City, Sun Tzu’s The Art of War, the I Ching, and the Little Red Book of Mao Zedong. In addition to reading the Dhammapada in the original Pali and Baital Pachisi in the original Sanskrit.

The next words from her message box were “I refuse to accept this intellectual colonization.”

I have no idea what she wanted me to read, if neither whites nor (by inference from her disapproval of reading Chinese and Indian authors) anyone else. I do know she would happily light a bonfire of vanities, if not an auto-da-fé. And she will almost certainly vote the Anti-Puppy Slate in 2016.

There are zealots and censors in every group, among every nation, in every creed and for every cause. Yes, even yours. They’re the ones who sensibly advocate stripping Republicans of their voting rights or demand armed uprising against O-Islama-Commu-Social-FASCIST-ism, the Kenyan Usurper.

Both groups, the already-organized wrong-side-of-the-bedsheets-but-lily-white Sad/Rabid Puppies, and the coalescing Anti-Puppy brigade, are my enemy, because they put ideology over aesthetics.

There are places where this is the right thing to do – voting for government elections, for instance. Changing the law, which is always ugly no matter what you do to it. Raising consciousness, although their the rules of marketing and social dynamics start affecting you, and it’s illegal for either of those to marry aesthetics in most states.

Nominating the best short story, magazine, and novel of the year in a given genre in ostensibly a plebiscite of “dedicated” fans of that genre? No. Like the Olympics, that is a matter for aesthetics, not ideology – and I’m well aware how far short the Olympics falls in this goal, but hell, at least they have it as a goal.

The Hugo voting base has clearly dispensed with such petty notions in favor of pure ideological conflict, now and forever. I seem to be the only person who’s noticed that aesthetics as a concern for what the best short story of the year should be have been quietly dropped. Edit: Other than Charlie Jane Anders’ excellent piece on io9. Thank you to the one who pointed me to it!

It doesn’t matter if they tell you to vote against someone because of ideology, or vote for someone because of ideology. Positive censorship is still censorship. If they are telling you to systematically exclude anyone rather than vote your conscience and your taste, they are attempting to censor somebody.

Besides, I’m a white, cisgendered, heterosexual, middle-class American male who writes about a superpowered Mexican Catholic who married a white chick and hangs around with a bisexual mixed-race atheist and a Korean atheist. If you’re voting a slate, Puppy or Anti-Puppy, you already hate my guts for some damn reason or another.

But, I hear you say, some people and their ideologies are so odious that aesthetics shouldn’t trump ideology! You don’t read Vox Day do you?

No, and neither do I read Matthew David Surridge. Because I haven’t gotten around to them yet.

The only saints I know are St. Joan of Arc, Abraham Lincoln, and Friend Bayard Rustin. Robert Heinlein was a warhawk, Thomas Jefferson owned slaves, Martin Luther King, Jr. stole chunks of his PhD wholesale while philandering up a storm, Woody Allen diddles (diddled?) children, Orson Scott Card has politics slightly to the right of Atilla the Hun. Orson, I am absolutely sure, would happily light an auto-da-fé as long as all the Wrong People were strapped to it.

This does not stop me from reading and even enjoying Ender’s Game, Pastwatch: The Redemption of Christopher Columbus, and Hart’s Hope. Nor does it stop me from watching Vicki Christina Barcelona or Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Sex, reading Dr. King’s speeches, reading the Declaration of Independence (while fully aware of the hypocrisy), or …frankly my Heinlein collection is too long to list here.

I have discovered that most of the Valiant Sixty, the original Quakers, were anti-Semite, Islamophobic, and anti-pagan. But they, too, like Dr. King, Bob Heinlein, Orson Scott Card, Tom Jefferson, and Woody Allen, like, if you wish, Malcolm X and Confucius and Sun Tzu and Gandhi, have an inner light. And while corrupted by their frailties, their work can and does transcend them, so that Jefferson can write “all men are created equal” and Card can write Petra and Barclay and Penington and Penn and Fox can write that “all who are brought into the world have that of God inside them, whatever their externals in creed or color.” Transcending the writer and the reader is what writing is for.

When Ender’s Game hit stores, I watched the very female clerk recommend it to a family, speaking knowingly of both the book and the movie. When I asked how she could, she shrugged and said “if I only read people I could agree with, I wouldn’t have anything to read.” Knowing her politics later, I concurred that she was right.

I do not care what the author has done, or what she believes, I care about the work. Is the work good? Does the author destroy the work by injecting ideology, as Heinlein does after Stranger in a Strange Land (and even Stranger gets iffy)? Does the author’s ideology befog their minds, so that Jack London can only write worshipful, inferior Peoples of Color or “credits to their race”? Does the author commit both errors at once, and so write Perdido Street Station?

I accept no other criteria than aesthetics for judging a book as a book. And I have a sneaking suspicion that ideology can only have an adverse effect on a work’s aesthetic quality (consider Tolkien’s rebuke of C. S. Lewis on the strength of allegory versus [reader] application). Then again, I may be wrong – and I am certainly guilty of smuggling Zen and Taoist themes, Quaker testimonies, the way of Mastery, and liberal politics into my work.  I seem unable to leave a story without it smelling faintly of soy sauce and frying oil.

Ray Bradbury put it best in the Coda of Fahrenheit 451.

“For it is a mad world and it will get madder if we allow the minorities, be they dwarf or giant, orangutan or dolphin, nuclear-head or water-conversationalist, pro-computerologist or Neo-Luddite, simpleton or sage, to interfere with aesthetics. The real world is the playing ground for each and every group, to make or unmake laws. But the tip of the nose of my book or stories or poems is where their rights and my territorial imperatives begin, run and rule. If Mormons do not like my plays, let them write their own. If the Irish hate my Dublin stories, let them rent typewriters. If teachers and grammar school editors find my jawbreaker sentences shatter their mushmild teeth, let them eat stale cake dunked in weak tea of their own ungodly manufacture. If the Chicano intellectuals wish to re-cut my “Wonderful Ice Cream Suit” so it shapes “Zoot,” may the belt unravel and the pants fall.

[…]

In sum, do not insult me with the beheadings, finger-choppings or the lung-deflations you plan for my works. I need my head to shake or nod, my hand to wave or make into a fist, my lungs to shout or whisper with. I will not go gently onto a shelf, degutted, to become a non-book.”

So what am I asking you to do? If you have read the Hugo entries, and are so inclined to part with your forty dollars, vote. Vote for the good stories, the stories that move you, the stories that shock you, the stories that force you to understand another person…whether the writer or his unappointed, ideology-driven fanbase was transcended by the work or no. If it moved you, vote it. If it did not, or if you have not read them…don’t vote in this year’s awards, or go ahead and vote ‘no award’ if you feel you’ve already wasted your two twenties.

But do, in any case, do vote to change the rules of nomination and of voting so that slates cannot happen again. So that aesthetics, rather than ideology, reigns supreme in judging a work of art…or at least can be a hopeful contender, rather than dismissed from the ring with a sneer and a sigh.

And then, if it offends you so terribly that I condemn both censors instead of just the one you hate, go rent a typewriter. Submit that story to Escape Pod, Solstice Literary, Strange Horizons, and other markets that are consciously diversifying to overcome the historical systemic exclusion of women, authors of color, and the QUILTBAG. If it offends you that I slammed the Sad Puppy slate, just go to the markets that are still publishing Campbell-approved “white (hu)man conquers universe” stories and  make a faint whining sound when you squeeze them. You already know which ones they are.

Light me on fire in the story, if you like. Show some goddamn guts. But let me know who you are. As a writer, I consider it good business to know exactly who and where the censors are.

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