Subject: Friday Forum: And we're back.
Author:
Posted on: 2017-09-01 14:46:00 UTC
With effusive apologies for failing at this last week. Hopefully I'm back on the ball from here on out.
Please remember that, when it comes to the state of the world, not everyone will agree with you. You're free to state, discuss, and defend your viewpoint (provided it does not violate the Constitution), but please don't use that fact to attack others.
Fandom News
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Force Friday II is upon us, and myriad Star Wars toys will be flooding into shops near you (and then flooding straight back out again, like as not). Here's hoping they've increased the number of BB-8 toys, and actually bothered to ship some for Rey...
But forget the action figures. The only toy really worth having is the one shown above: the Lenovo Star Wars: Jedi Challenges Augmented Reality system. Let's not mince words: it lets you have a holographic lightsaber duel with Kylo Ren in your living room, which is all you've ever really wanted in life. It's a mere(!) $200, and available for pre-order now.
Silly News
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In a crushing blow to the hearts of fans everywhere, the late, great Sir Terry Pratchett's hard drive has been run over by a steamroller - in accordance with his will. He said that he didn't want any of his unfinished works being published, and so Rob had it smashed at a steam fair in Dorset. Apparently it contained 'up to ten incomplete novels', though on the positive side, Pterry's normal work ethic was to finish one book before he started writing the next, so these were probably mostly just notes. I hope. :(
Serious News
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In a world first, a new cancer therapy where the patient's immune cells are extracted, genetically altered, and put back in as anti-cancer agents has been approved by the USA. Reports are claiming 80+% effectiveness against a specific type of leukaemia. Sadly, it's not so good against more solid tumours (leukaemia is blood cancer), and as with all cancer drugs it can have serious side-effects... but, to my mind, this is the first step towards the disease-killing nanobots scifi has long been promising. Even if these ones are - ugh - biological.
Not News
Fairly arbitrarily, I want to talk about David Eddings. I admit I love his (or their, rather - from all accounts, Leigh was co-author for every Eddings book) novels; I own the entire Belgariad+Malloreon, the Elenium+Tamuli, and the Redemption of Althalus. While his characters are mostly able to be described by a few words each, they do tend to be different words. Even his female characters (we all know male fantasy writers are terrible at them, pun on 'male fantasy' probably intended) aren't all the same - Polgara and Ce'Nedra are very different, and don't line up with Sephrenia, Ehlana, and Aphrael. (Sure, they're filling the same roles, but Sephrenia and Polgara have very different methods of playing guide, for instance.) So that's all good.
But... he really loves his 'lovable criminals'. You've got Platime and Stragen in the Elenium, Silk in the Belgariad, and, uh, Althalus, of course. And that's starting to feel like a problem, because what he doesn't love is portraying crime as bad.
That's okay (to an extent) when it's Althalus, who - possibly in response to criticisms, I don't know - goes out of his way not to kill people. Yes, he bonks them over the head and steals all their stuff, but that's less jarring (and he gets his comeuppance anyway). Silk is (spoilers, I guess?) more of a spy than a thief, so when he does crime, you know it's in pursuit of a larger goal.
But then you get the criminals of the Elenium - which I'm rereading at the moment, which brought this on - and they're... disturbing. The first conversation between criminal overlord Platime and Ehlana, Queen of Elenia is typical of this: Ehlana asks him if he's ever cut anyone's throat, and he says something to the effect of 'Oh, yes - it's a good way to find out what's in their purse, and I've always been very interested in that'. And Ehlana laughs it off.
Haha, this sympathetic character kills innocent people for their money. What frivolity. Sort of like the frivolity when the barbarian horseman Kring laments that he won't be able to rape any women if he joins up with the army rather than just raiding with his clan. Because rape is hilarious, right?
I think the problem I'm having is that Eddings is perfectly happy to admit that crime happens, but steadfastly refuses (especially in the Elenium) to acknowledge its consequences. I can accept a world like Middle-earth where there's no real crime to speak of (other than Bill Ferny swindling the hobbits over a horse). I can accept a world where criminals are bad people, or make bad choices, or are stuck in bad situations. But I'm having increasing difficulty with this one, where being a murdering pimp is viewed as absolutely fine so long as you're charming about it.
hS, grumpy grumble I guess?