Wednesday, March 04, 2009

WOOOOOooooOOOOO/Sci Fi Reading


Remember this post about my tour through sci fi classics? I haven't forgot. I'm just lazy. So far, I've waded through three and a half short stories, two of which I'd already read, and one-half a graphic novel.

"The Veldt" & "Zero Hour"/Ray Bradbury - I'd read both of these before, more than once as a matter of fact. Luckily, I'm on borderline Alzheimer's status, so I enjoyed them as if they were new. Also, I had luckily kept The Illustrated Man, the book in which they appeared, checked out on October 16, 1989 from The Ray School library. That's right, while you were playing and having fun, I was stealing books from school libraries. I'm BAD!






Both stories deal with the private worlds of children and their potential dangerousness when left unattended or ignored. Bradbury's writing has always struck me as very sensitive and lyrical. His description of scenery is so vibrant, characters so seemingly realsitic (even his Martians in The Martian Chronicles are "normal") that you often forget that you're reading fantastical tales. Both are recommended, fun tales that aren't mindblowing but are entertaining.

"Nightfall"/Isaac Asimov - I don't know how I've never read this one. Pure Asimov, an interesting concept brought to life through well-written dialogue and an incredible use of tension/suspense. No spoilers: The story centers on the concept of a planet bathed in sunlight as the result of having multiple suns, a once millennial eclipse, and the effects of darkness on a people who have never experienced it. Incredible story. Read it!

In the middle of Heinlein's "The Roads Must Roll."

Started The Watchmen last night in anticipation of Friday's movie debut. Got half way through. So far, it's busy but compelling, if only because I want to see how the characters' threads and the many asides come together.

4 comments:

Foofa said...

Crap! I totally forgot about sci-fi reading. I'll have to get on that one. I stole Lolita from the library when i was 12 because after I read it I was too embarrassed to return it. I still have the copy.

atrackbrown said...

Yeah, get on it. That way we can discuss and stuff.

Do you have any idea what you're gonna read first?

Traveling Matt said...

my 35 year ellison retrospective should be arriving soon. i think we should read dhalgren though. can we read dhalgren?

atrackbrown said...

Dhalgren is fine, but I already have The Einstein Intersection and haven't read it. What about that one?