John Scalzi's Agent to the Stars
Oct. 28th, 2008 10:44 amThis is another review copy kindly sent me by Tor, and while I don't have as close a friendship with
scalzi as I do with
matoqicuala or
papersky, I do feel cordially about him. Disclosure taken care of. So.
The thing about Agent to the Stars, in contrast with Half a Crown or All the Windwracked Stars, is that many of you have had a chance to read it already. It was online for quite some time, and then it was out in hardcover from Subterranean Press. But if I didn't avail myself of those methods, I suspect some of you didn't, either. Now it's out in trade paper from Tor.
And it is fun. This is not a book that
scalzi wrote to cure cancer or bring about peace in our time or even to explore the deepest recesses of his innermost soul. He wrote it to see if he could, more or less, and it turns out he could. Which must have been a relief. Agent to the Stars walks an extremely fine line: it neither demands a great deal of the reader nor insults the reader's intelligence. One of my great pet peeves is when people think there is no critiquing light or comic work because "it's just for fun." Stupidity is not fun. Having to beat your brain back with a 2x4 in order to keep reading/watching: not fun. So books like Agent to the Stars are a great relief, because, no, it doesn't have the world's most complex and innovative plot, and yes, it's full of small jokes and bits of silliness--but it's doing well with what it's doing.
A lot of people compare
scalzi to Robert Heinlein, but I don't think someone Heinlein's age could have written this book this way. I think it required someone who grew up in a world with the level of media saturation we have now. The natural next question to ask, the logical progression, is different than it was fifty years ago. This is a good thing. This is what we do.
Also I am left with a weird craving for a tuna sandwich and some red Jell-o, which is probably not what
scalzi had in mind.
The thing about Agent to the Stars, in contrast with Half a Crown or All the Windwracked Stars, is that many of you have had a chance to read it already. It was online for quite some time, and then it was out in hardcover from Subterranean Press. But if I didn't avail myself of those methods, I suspect some of you didn't, either. Now it's out in trade paper from Tor.
And it is fun. This is not a book that
A lot of people compare
Also I am left with a weird craving for a tuna sandwich and some red Jell-o, which is probably not what
no subject
Date: 2008-10-28 11:11 pm (UTC)Tor also sent me a review copy and I'm looking forward to re-reading it, see if my impressions changed.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-29 02:38 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-29 04:15 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-29 04:55 am (UTC)