scottreiner
scott reiner
just bought All the Myriad Ways... thanks
originally posted by Steven Spielmann:
I still don't understand why people say 'wish fulfillment' like it's a bad thing.
I like Niven and the Big Idea science fiction genre, but I always thought Iain M. Banks took what he did and produced better novels.originally posted by MLipton:
originally posted by scottreiner:
anyone have any opinions on ringworld by niven. really more philosophy than sci-fi. i'm a huge fan...
Larry Niven always struck more as a thinker than a writer, which is to say that most of his books trot out some intriguing ideas couched in fairly sloppy writing (wooden characters, simple plot lines, workmanlike prose). By the standards of genre fiction, most especially SF, he was a better-than-average writer who rarely indulged in the adolescent wish fulfillment that plagues the genre. I much preferred the short stories collected in "All the Myriad Ways" than any of his novels as they allowed him to explore those ideas without having to construct the elaborate edifice of a novel.
On Ringworld specifically: the idea for the world was a cool one, and he explores it fairly well, but the main characters (Louis Wu, Teela Brown, Nessus, Speaker) are fairly two dimensional and broadly painted. His characters and the plot always seem to be in service of his central conceit. On the plus side, the book reads fast and you get to learn about how you can generate a stationary eye in the sky on a ringworld, which was way cool to me.
Mark Lipton
originally posted by MLipton:
originally posted by Steven Spielmann:
I still don't understand why people say 'wish fulfillment' like it's a bad thing.
There's nothing wrong with you fulfilling your wishes, Steven, but that doesn't mean that I want to read about them -- page after interminable page.
Mark Lipton
This was miles ago, but whatevs....originally posted by Levi Dalton:
I never read the book. I should. Have you?
Rewatching the film again recently, it was just so obvious that Tarkovsky is one of the greats of all (space and) time.
Of course a lot of people's greatest films were based on somebody else's book. Which isn't to say that Solaris is actually Tarkovsky's best, because it probably isn't.
originally posted by slaton:
This was miles ago, but whatevs....originally posted by Levi Dalton:
I never read the book. I should. Have you?
Rewatching the film again recently, it was just so obvious that Tarkovsky is one of the greats of all (space and) time.
Of course a lot of people's greatest films were based on somebody else's book. Which isn't to say that Solaris is actually Tarkovsky's best, because it probably isn't.
I'm unfit to report; I've not seen The Mirror yet, and I failed to make it through The Sacrifice on the first attempt. But what the hell. I love Tarkovsky and his long shots.
While I love Solaris, yes and the Lem novel as well, I've found Stalker to be the most compelling of Tarkovsky's films. Of the ones I've seen.
It's just a sequence of images, sounds, and ideas that I just can't get out my head, for months after a viewing. The uncanny Chernobyl presentience; the cast-off needles, orthox imagery, and other objects lining the riverbeds; the philosphical quandary of the primary characters. And then there's those final few seconds which seem to change the interpretation of everything we've seen so far. I can never sleep after watching this film.