I liked Andromeda Strain well enough, but Congo utterly destroyed any positive feelings I had for the man. I will give him some credit for ER I guess. Other than that, let us never speak of him again.
Tried to read Poul Anderson and couldn't hack it. I just found it horribly boring. In the hard SF vein I like Kim Stanley Robinson and Jack Varley - do they count? Titan series was brilliant.
ETClose my dangling italics tag
They totally count, Arby. KSR is very much a hard-sf writer who also understands the social sciences. Although I have to admit I think I like his lighter stuff best -- Escape from Katmandu is great.
ita may be the poster child for "it takes one to know one".
files this away for later
Isn't the Titan series by John Varley?
Having read the whole series, I cast a suspicious eye on the Gabrielle character from Xena. Hmmm, maybe Dahak should have manifested as Marilyn Monroe...
Yup, Matt. So many Jacks and Johns in sf.
Tried to read Poul Anderson and couldn't hack it. I just found it horribly boring. In the hard SF vein I like Kim Stanley Robinson and Jack Varley - do they count? Titan series was brilliant.
Even Three Hearts and Three Lions, Arby? Maybe not, as I never really had much trouble with any of Anderson's stuff. KSR is one of those writers whose talent I admire more than actually enjoying their stuff. The Varley Titan books, I did like quite a lot.
I love Poul Anderson's fantasies like
The Broken Sword
- which tend to be quite dark.
Hard Science: Greg Bear does good hard science, I think. I really enjoyed
Queen of Angels
though it had some flaws in the end (nothing requiring throwing the book at the wall though). Pat Cadigan did great hard science (really well researached) for
Synners
- which I will continue to pimp until all the science fiction fans have read it. Very absorbing, great three dimensional characters with distinctive voices.
Going back to the "said" debate: I'm definitely with ita on this one. "Said" blends into the background for me, unless it's overused. If the word "said" appears after every bit of dialogue, I'm going to notice it and it's going to distract me -- especially if, as in Chrichton's books, he doesn't try in other ways to let us know how the characters are feeling. In that excerpt I posted, we don't know if the characters are frustrated, or annoyed, or worried -- we just know they're saying stuff. That's not good writing.
I'm a journalist, and I realize we're supposed to use "said" almost all the time. We need to write simply and be impartial, and "said" is a very impartial word because it's not at all descriptive. I don't mind it in articles, and usually journalists don't use the word as often as Crichton does, so I don't notice it anyway. I don't like seeing press style in fiction, though; I don't want my fiction to be impartial and simple (or staccato) unless it's on purpose and adds to the story.
I'm a big fan of dialogue-heavy writing, and I've never had an issue with "said" in anything I've read other than Crichton. I think that's because most writers know when to use "asked" or "replied," they don't feel the need to attribute every bit of dialogue to a character (because often it's clear who's speaking), and they can let us know how characters are feeling by describing their actions or expressions (something skilled writers can do without falling into the trap of overusing words like "whined" or "cajoled" or "shrieked"). Crichton does none of that, and that's why I complained about him.
The only Philip K. Dick I've read is his collection of short stories entitled The Philip K. Dick Reader, and I liked most of them a lot.
But raw carrots have that outer/inner ring thing going. I used to love eating the outer ring first and then the inner ring when I was younger.
I thought I was the only one who did this. I've been successful with baby carrots too, but you have to work much harder at it. I'm usually not patient enough.
And
yummy
Betsy. Those ginger carrots sound too wonderful. I'll have to make them next time I visit my mom, who's a ginger freak.
David Brin, whatever his political stance, is known as a hard SF writer as well. I loved Startide Rising and The Uplift War, although the subsequent novels became too self-indulgent hard to follow, and I don't think I ever finished the series.
One or two salient points: Crichton defenders of Polter Cow's ilk are dead to me. Corpses littering the battlefield of science -vs- sensationalistic pseudo-science scare tactics, each of them. Crichton is Stephen King, with a metric ruler.
CJ Cherryh has an amazing ability to invoke science, without committing any. I particularly love how her hyperspace is a
condition
in which metaphysical things may happen in the minds of her people. The key to loving her books is that you have to abandon what you
want
it to be about. A Cherryh novel's "what it is about" will smack you upside the head the next morning, while you are riding public transportation, or driving to work.
He said.