That's SF as in science fiction, not San Francisco. But you knew that, right? In his weblog today, Greg Costikyan writes about "Elfy-Welfies, War Bores, Decadent Vamps and Licensed Crap":
Costikyan takes his typical pull-no-punches approach. As is also typical for him, his observations ring very true to me, and explain a lot of why I don't come home with much written in my supposedly chosen genre -- and why I almost never get involved with open-ended series.
Categories ... exist for readers who do not want to be challenged. They like sinking in to the warm familiarity of something they know they like. The problem is that I do want to be challenged. I want to be challenged with interesting ideas, distinctive writing styles, unconventional ways of looking at things, and transportation to a world very different from our own.
Costikyan takes his typical pull-no-punches approach. As is also typical for him, his observations ring very true to me, and explain a lot of why I don't come home with much written in my supposedly chosen genre -- and why I almost never get involved with open-ended series.
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Date: 2004-03-22 04:34 (UTC)I find it funny that someone who belittles other people who buy easily-classified books for their own convenience also can't be bothered to go out of his way to actually look through the bookshelves for the books in the section that aren't standard fantasy epics or military SF operas. Shall we create a new subsection of the section for him? Perhaps we can title it the 'Different From Everything Else' section.
So not impressed.
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Date: 2004-03-22 06:54 (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-03-22 07:21 (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-03-22 11:47 (UTC)But I tend to follow specific authors that I have either enjoyed before, had recommended to me, or enjoyed listening to/seeing at a convention.
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