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Worlds Without End Blog

WoGF Review: The City, Not Long After by Pat Murphy Posted at 2:00 PM by Beth Besse

Badseedgirl

WWEnd Women of Genre Fiction Reading ChallengeWhen Beth Besse (Badseedgirl) is not preparing for the coming zombie apocalypse, or having long, and often bitter arguments with her sister over whether “Night of The Comet” is actually a zombie movie (well of course it is, it even says it in the movie description), she can be found curled up somewhere in her Tennessee home reading SF and Horror of questionable quality. Her guilty pleasure reading almost always involves urban fantasies or Southern Fried Vampires. Her Goal is to be able to someday boast that she has read every title in at least one WWEnd book list. (And finally convince her sister that “Night of the Comet” is a Zombie movie)


The City, Not Long AfterIn the prologue, we are first introduced to a woman who is running away from San Francisco days after the plague. She is about to have a baby. Alone and scared she starts to “hallucinate” an angel. The woman promises the angel that it can name her child. This child grows up on a farm outside a small farming community led by a man called “Four Star”. This self-appointed leader’s mission is to bring back the United States of America, by any means possible including force. Through his actions, the girl’s mother dies, but before she does she sends the girl to San Francisco to warn the people there that Four Star is coming to invade.

The story starts 16 years after a mysterious plague has wiped out most of the population of the world. Small pockets of humanity survived and created what can only be described as a series of city states where the population survives through production of necessities and through foraging through the pre plague leftovers. Each area of, in this case, California seems to have created its own form of government according to the needs of the people. But what happens when one man decides that he is way is the only way?

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The World’s End – Trailer 1 Posted at 8:27 AM by Jonathan McDonald

jynnantonnyx

Wacky Brits against blue-blooded robots. How well will this match up to their previous opponents: zombies and small town committee cults?

Women of Genre Fiction April Review Poll Winners Posted at 9:44 PM by Dave Post

Dave Post

Women of Genre Fiction Reacing Challenge

The Women of Genre Fiction Reading Challenge April review poll is now closed and we have three new winners this month including a tie for second place.  Instead of trying to find a tie breaker we decided to just split the 2nd and 3rd place prizes in half and call it a draw.

Our winners will find an Amazon gift card, $25, $12.50 and $12.50 respectively, waiting for them in their email inbox. We hope they’ll use them to buy books and regale us with more great reviews!

April WoGF Review Poll Winners:

Rhondak101
1st Place: Allie McCarn (Allie)
Ash: A Secret History by Mary Gentle

2nd Place (tie): Rhonda Knight (Rhondak101)
Stranger Things Happen by Kelly Link
Charles
2nd Place(tie): Alexandra P. (everythinginstatic)
The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland in a Ship of Her Own Making by Catherynne M. Valente

Congrats to Allie, Rhonda and Alexandra and thanks to everyone who participated in the poll. There are more prizes up for grabs each month so if you didn’t win this time you still have plenty more chances.

WoGF Review: Grass by Sheri S. Tepper Posted at 2:06 PM by Val

valashain

Women of Genre Fiction Reading ChallengeGuest Blogger and WWEnd member, valashain, reviews science fiction and fantasy books on his blog Val’s Random Comments which we featured in a previous post: Five SF/F Book Blogs Worth Reading. Be sure to visit his site and let him know you found him here.


GrassI was hoping to find the time to take part in the WWEnd Women of Genre Fiction reading challenge this year. Until now that has been a dismal failure. I haven’t had time to research and acquire the book I need for it and have mostly been reading stuff that was already on the to read stack this year. I would be surprised if I could still manage to read the twelve required but I can at least read some of them. After the reading challenge for 2013 was announced I picked Sheri S. Tepper’s novel Grass to be my first read. Tepper is a prolific writer in various genres and this novel is one of the few written by a woman that made the Gollancz science fiction Masterworks series when they were still being numbered. I have absolutely no experience with Tepper’s writing but the premise looked interesting so this novel was a logical place to start. The novel didn’t quite turn out to be what I was expecting but it is a very good read nonetheless.

In a far future, overpopulation and environmental degradation have forced humanity into space. Many planets have been colonized but under the influence of humanity’s main religion the expansion has stopped for the moment. One of the colonized planets is named Grass. Most of its surface is covered with numerous species of a genus that resembles the grasses of old Earth. Despite its position at a galactic crossroad, the planet has remained something of a backwater, governed by a small group of families descended from various noble families in Europe. The ‘bons’ as these families are known would rather be left alone but when a plague strikes humanity for which no cure can be found, eyes turn to Grass anyway. For some reason, the population on Grass appears to be immune. Reluctantly, the bons allow an embassy on the planet to look into the matter.

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Darker Man of Steel Trailer Released Posted at 8:09 AM by Jonathan McDonald

jynnantonnyx

The latest trailer for Man of Steel focuses more on Zod and his plans. All this dark violence and inspirational speeches from Russell Crowe, too?

WoGF Review: Geek Love by Katherine Dunn Posted at 8:30 AM by Melanie Ross

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WWEnd Women of Genre Fiction Reading ChallengeMelanie Ross (mellyn) discovered science fiction, fantasy and horror novels in her early teens. During the late 1990’s and early 2000’s, she maintained a (probably unhealthy) obsession with Robert Jordan’s Wheel Of Time. Since emerging from that void, she has made an effort to continually widen her reading horizons. The WoGF Reading Challenge seemed a perfect way to further that aim. Her blog can be found at http://books.mellyn.net.


Geek LoveThe word that comes to mind, when it comes to Geek Love, is disturbing.

Binewski’s Fabulon is a traveling carnival owned by Aloysius ‘Al’ Binewski. It was originally founded by his father, referred to only as Grandpa, who has long since been cremated. His ashes continue on, though, as the silver urn containing them is bolted to the hood of the carnival’s generator truck.

Al’s wife, Lillian ‘Crystal Lil’ Binewski, was a Boston debutante. A pretty young woman, she joined the carnival as a geek, gleefully biting off the heads of live chickens before swallowing them. She’d always wanted to fly, though, so when given the chance she attempted to become a trapeze artist. When she fell, breaking her nose and collarbone, Al got the nerve to propose.

Carnival life not always being a steady stream of income, Al and Lil decided to give their children an inbuilt ability to provide for themselves in a way not available to ‘norms’ like themselves. Through each of Lil’s pregnancies, she took a wide variety of supplements to ensure the best results possible. Arsenic, pesticides and drugs, you name it, Al prescribed them and Lil happily gobbled them down. And the results paid off.

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WoGF Review: The Female Man by Joanna Russ Posted at 5:42 PM by Daniel Roy

Triseult

WWEnd Women of Genre Fiction Reading ChallengeDaniel Roy (Triseult) is a writer, slow traveler, backpack foodie, endurance runner, and SF junkie. He has lived in Canada, China, and India, and currently resides in South Korea.


The Female ManStill Relevant and Powerful

If I taught SF literature in high school, I’d make The Female Man mandatory reading, knowing my students would hate me for it. It’s not an easy book by any means; its structure is complex and obfuscated on purpose, and its subject matter is uncomfortable and necessary. But really, this is why SF exists in the first place.

The book has been heralded as the quintessential feminist SF, and it saddens me to know that this automatically reduces its reach. It’s true that the book is singularly concerned with subjects articulated by feminism, but I think it should be required reading for everyone of either gender. I wish I could go back in time and force fifteen year-old me to read this. And boy, is there a lot of piss and vinegar in this book. Sometimes the anger just radiates off the page. It’s a visceral book of raw nerves and flayed skin. It’s amazing.

The SF elements are more than merely allegorical. Ms. Russ spent a lot of energy building her woman-only utopia of Whileaway. The result is fascinating in its own right, and not entirely as one-sided as a feminist polemic would imply. Likewise, Alice’s dystopia is fascinating SF in its own right, even as it serves as allegory for our world.

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Star Wars Filibuster… Animated! Posted at 2:25 PM by Dave Post

Dave Post

This is too cool! Someone took Patton Oswalt’s rant on Parks and Recreation and added a bit of animation to that sucker.

WoGF Review: Sarah Canary by Karen Joy Fowler Posted at 10:29 PM by Jonathan Thornton

thrak

WWEnd Women of Genre Fiction Reading ChallengeJonathan Thornton (thrak) is a long-time science fiction and fantasy reader, but has only just started writing reviews on his blog Golden Apples of the West. Outside of reading, his interests are music and insects. His new year’s resolution is to review more of the books he has read on WWEnd and maybe finally get round to writing his own SF novel that he’s always talking about.


Sarah Canary“It might even be true. It was not for him to know. A man says something. Sometimes it turns out to be the truth, but this has nothing to do with the man who says it. What we say occupies a very thin surface, like the skin over a body of water. Beneath this, through the water itself, is what we see, sometimes clearly if the water is calm, sometimes vaguely if the water is troubled, and we imagine this vision to be the truth, clear or vague. But beneath this is yet another level. This is the level of what is and this level has nothing to do with what we say or what we see.”

Sarah Canary is one of SF’s most powerful explorations of the Other. Fittingly for a book about First Contact, it deals with alienation. But Sarah Canary doesn’t act as a filter to give us a fresh perspective on humanity as much as a focal point that draws in the novel’s motley crew of disenfranchised. Sarah Canary isn’t really the protagonist; she doesn’t actually do much, we never find out anything about her motivations or thoughts, and Fowler deliberately leaves her true nature ambiguous. She’s a walking Outside Context Problem, and how the various characters perceive and react to her reveals the prejudices, concerns and fears of the 1870’s America she mysteriously appears in.

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2012 Nebula Award Winner! Posted at 12:17 AM by Dave Post

Dave Post

2312Nebula AwardsThe 2012 Nebula Awards were announced last night at the Forty-Eighth Nebula Awards Weekend in San Jose, CA, hosted by the SWFA. The winner for best novel is Kim Stanley Robinson’s 2312. The other nominees were:

Congrats to KSR and all the nominees. Good company, indeed. The complete list of winners in all categories can be found at Locus Online.

This is the first win for 2312 which has been nominated for a whopping 6 awards. What do you think of this result? With all those noms it can’t be much of a surprise. Anything on the ballot that you would have preferred to have won?