My Problem With SF
Mar. 26th, 2014 09:50 amOnce again I pick up an SF novel (in this case Ian M Banks' Excession) only to be reminded that I don't like SF novels because everyone in them is so boring. I don't think it can be an inflexible rule of the genre that real people and space ships don't mix because Wells breaks it- but where are the other SF writers who give you characters you can care about?
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Date: 2014-03-26 11:18 am (UTC)Having said that, the appeal of a certain type of SF is the background, setting and situation rather than the characters. Odd characters in an odd setting with odd things happening ends up as Too Much Odd, so sometimes the characters tend towards the bland to avoid this problem.
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Date: 2014-03-26 01:35 pm (UTC)Not my thing at all.
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Date: 2014-03-27 08:48 am (UTC)Yes, I'm not a big fan of tentacles.
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Date: 2014-03-26 01:30 pm (UTC)LOL Otherwise known as "that lovely person whose post shows up just above mine!"
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Date: 2014-03-26 01:37 pm (UTC)I've very much enjoyed what I've read.
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Date: 2014-03-26 04:59 pm (UTC)The best new novel I've read so far this year just happens to be SF - Ancillary Justice by Ann Leckie - very strong characterisation, and thoroughly involving.
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Date: 2014-03-26 05:11 pm (UTC)Thanks for the suggestions.
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Date: 2014-04-02 10:23 pm (UTC)Non-boring SF
Date: 2014-03-28 08:37 am (UTC)I think it's a bit of both.
I recently (well, about 10 years ago -- checks -- more like 15) re-read Aldous Huxley's "Brave new world". I loved it when I was 17, but on rereading it I found it rather shallow and pedestrian.
I recall some short stories in anthologies that I read, and some I would like to re-read, but I fear I might find them dull too. There was one called "The last monster", which had some interesting throughts about colonialism. There was one called "The new reality" by Charles Harness, which introduced me to the notion of paradigm shifts and solipsism. But none of them could be said to have had real characters. They were all about things or forces rather than about people.