Total orderings
Jul. 19th, 2004 12:41 pmWe hates them, precious.
Some people are set up from childhood for total orderings: "Gina is my first best friend and Tina is my second best friend, so you're only my third best friend." I am not that person. I never was that person. I have the kind of life where I don't have to be that person. This is not accidental.
However, sometimes total orderings are demanded, and Hugo Award voting is one of those situations. So I'm thinking about which books are better than which other books. So far I've read three of the five novel nominees. I'm working on the fourth, and I read the first book in the series for which the fifth is second this weekend (got that, or do I need to add more numbers?). So far, the ranking is clear.
However. The book in my current third position was...drab. Mediocre, bland, blah. And I suspect that at least one of the two remaining books will have both higher and lower spots than the current #3.
So what would you do? Would you rather have a book that never ticks you off royally, never makes you want to scream, never seems to just be stupid -- but also never really excites you in a good way, either? Or rather: in what ways are lower-lows so off-putting as to balance out higher-highs for you? If the characters are gorgeously drawn but the plot, when poked, makes no sense? If one of the characters, with apparent authorial approval, spouts some bigoted or otherwise ill-informed notions (and at what length)? If the ending is tacked on and awkward and unsatisfying? Where does mediocrity pass up failed attempts at something better?
(Also, did you know it's my birthday a week from today? Birthday birthday birthday!)
(I do not play the game where I test my friends and family to see if they remember. If I wanted to play Memory, I'd get some cards and have Miss Siri play with me, since she's about the right age. What I want to do is celebrate my birthday. It's much more fun this way.)
Some people are set up from childhood for total orderings: "Gina is my first best friend and Tina is my second best friend, so you're only my third best friend." I am not that person. I never was that person. I have the kind of life where I don't have to be that person. This is not accidental.
However, sometimes total orderings are demanded, and Hugo Award voting is one of those situations. So I'm thinking about which books are better than which other books. So far I've read three of the five novel nominees. I'm working on the fourth, and I read the first book in the series for which the fifth is second this weekend (got that, or do I need to add more numbers?). So far, the ranking is clear.
However. The book in my current third position was...drab. Mediocre, bland, blah. And I suspect that at least one of the two remaining books will have both higher and lower spots than the current #3.
So what would you do? Would you rather have a book that never ticks you off royally, never makes you want to scream, never seems to just be stupid -- but also never really excites you in a good way, either? Or rather: in what ways are lower-lows so off-putting as to balance out higher-highs for you? If the characters are gorgeously drawn but the plot, when poked, makes no sense? If one of the characters, with apparent authorial approval, spouts some bigoted or otherwise ill-informed notions (and at what length)? If the ending is tacked on and awkward and unsatisfying? Where does mediocrity pass up failed attempts at something better?
(Also, did you know it's my birthday a week from today? Birthday birthday birthday!)
(I do not play the game where I test my friends and family to see if they remember. If I wanted to play Memory, I'd get some cards and have Miss Siri play with me, since she's about the right age. What I want to do is celebrate my birthday. It's much more fun this way.)
no subject
Date: 2004-07-19 12:01 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-07-19 01:26 pm (UTC)Also...well, perhaps we shouldn't get into it, but I'm not convinced that Heinlein's sexism is as unidirectional or as prevalent as many people do. He seems to be biased towards parenting in his later works, but that's true of his men as well as of his women -- it's just considered progressive for men and regressive for women. But there are also many cases where the women can run circles around the men in one (non-child-bearing) ability or another and then men know it.
no subject
Date: 2004-07-19 01:43 pm (UTC)Would I enjoy reading him as much as if he were writing the same books now... no, probably not. Context is everything.
heinlein
i can deal with flawed characters. in a few stories, there's a man who misquoted everything with the best of intentions, looking stupid to me but intelligent in his world, who maintained order and civility in a brutal society. lame, but indicative of his flawed upbringing. i don't think every character, even the protagonist, should be idyllic, or should maintain values of today. if there was a character who fought for abortion rights and gay marraige in a story for interplanetary dominance, i would be able to read it and sympathize with the character despite opposing his or her views on contemporary issues.
it's a flawed story i really can't abide. if the wicked witch of the east changed her spots because it was may 15th and everything was going to be honky dory for a week, the story shouldn't end for me. i have contemplated sequals this way. "let's drop her in acid. NO! let's pour water on her and let it act like acid! we'll melt her alive!" tre grimmsian.
anyways, sorry to interrupt. please go about your daily business.
-t-
Re: heinlein
Date: 2004-07-19 05:25 pm (UTC)I think flawed characters and flawed stories are entirely, entirely different issues.
Re: heinlein
Date: 2004-07-19 06:21 pm (UTC)anyways, i wouldn't say that heinlein, from this example, is in any way in need of therapy. this is a fantasy of his. any mental journey is a fantasy. but i don't make a claim that this is a habitual fantasy of his. this "trans" theme of his was workable, and he did it thoroughly, but the conclusions of the characters wasn't worthwhile to me, chiefly because of his sexist views, or maybe something within the last ten pages of the book i still haven't read. i skimmed them, searching for something redeamable, but nada.
as for flawed characters and flawed stories, no. they are too related to me. yes, you can have a character that is allergic to peanut butter without having that in relation to the story line. but you aren't likely to mention that specific weakness or flaw unless it was in direct relation to some at least miniscule corner of the story. and if one might mention it, one risks the complaint that several people have concerning tolkien, too much irrelevant data.
on the other hand, too much irrelevant data is something pleasing to some readers. it has been hailed by a few of my friends.
i feel like themes should fit. in fact, i am working on a backstory that doesn't fit into the main theme of my main characters. the middle east 6000 years ago hardly relates to eastern europe 1000 years ago. so i'm making it as an addendum, an apocrypha, to keep the flow separated and uninterrupted. heinlein sought a theme, and maintained it, but did so with bad results that makes me look badly upon him, as far as i can for one single book.
i have been exposed to the idea that his own character has an evolution. heinlein changed over the decades. at least, this is what's been said about him. i can believe it. though, i just picked up an early short story of his that deals with alot of physical transformation, and adaptation, by most of the characters.
hey, thanks for the response.
-t-