eldritchhobbit (
eldritchhobbit) wrote2007-08-24 08:59 am
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Entry tags:
"what the world actually did"
* I highly recommend this fantastic podcast: The Classic Tales Podcast. These are unabridged, classic short stories by the likes of Mary Shelley, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Edgar Allan Poe, Thomas Hardy, and H.G. Wells, read by professional actor B.J. Harrison. (Thanks to
sword_gryff.)
* For those who love The Dark is Rising books by Susan Cooper and are looking forward to the film adaptation this fall, there is disheartening news.
* This month's Locus includes "Yesterday's Tomorrows: Robert A. Heinlein" by Graham Sleight. Although I disagree with Sleight in some ways, I found the article to be thought-provoking and well worth reading.
I'm more than prepared to believe that Heinlein established, pretty much singlehandedly, the language in which modern science fiction is told. The tragedy of his later career is, visibly, that of seeing the gap between what he had believed in and what the world actually did.
- Graham Sleight, "Yesterday's Tomorrow's: Robert A. Heinlein"
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* For those who love The Dark is Rising books by Susan Cooper and are looking forward to the film adaptation this fall, there is disheartening news.
* This month's Locus includes "Yesterday's Tomorrows: Robert A. Heinlein" by Graham Sleight. Although I disagree with Sleight in some ways, I found the article to be thought-provoking and well worth reading.
I'm more than prepared to believe that Heinlein established, pretty much singlehandedly, the language in which modern science fiction is told. The tragedy of his later career is, visibly, that of seeing the gap between what he had believed in and what the world actually did.
- Graham Sleight, "Yesterday's Tomorrow's: Robert A. Heinlein"
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Okay, I loved Eccleston as The Doctor, but after reading that I want to beat him repeatedly about the head and shoulders with the Past Watchful Dragons book.
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The podcasts are lovely - Interesting voice/style the actor has.
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"Heinlein had a sweet tooth for knowingness, for demonstrating smartness, especially when it upsets conventional wisdom."
But I was a bit disappointed; from the title I thought it would compare how the future turned out vs. what Heinlein imagined. I actually just re-read "The Door Into Summer", and it was a blast looking at how he imagined 1970 and 2008. The biggest thing that hit me was the absence of the computer and the internet. Being an engineer, he had a very Newtonian view of things, a very nuts-and-bolts imagination about what would be created in the future. So, when he came up with a way of making drafting easier in the future, it ended up being a drafting machine that works like a typewriter: press certain buttons and it daws lines for you. Interesting how it turned out instead!