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Archive for May, 2006

Draft Intro to my Anthology Freestyle SF

Monday, May 8th, 2006

Surfers, skaters, snowboarders, bicyclists, break-dancers, rappers, and graffiti artists use “freestyle” to refer to unscripted and original moves that arise when a highly trained individual interacts with the physical world. Although “freestyle” has different nuances in each context, in every case, the emphasis is on allowing something gnarly, spontaneous, and fresh to emerge from a skillful interaction with the unpredictable flow of realtime events. High skill + reality-based unpredictability = freestyle.

When I talk about freestyle SF, I’m thinking of a science fiction that arises from intense and craftsmanlike use of classic science-fictional tropes to describe events happening in real and imaginary worlds.

I might characterize Freestyle SF by three qualities:

(1) The use of SF power-chords in an extreme and gnarly fashion.

(2) Carrying out thought experiments regardless of their practicality.

(3) Using a deft, light, and witty literary style.

Regarding point (1), when I speak of “SF power chords,” I mean those classic SF topes that have the visceral punch of heavy musical riffs: Blaster guns, spaceships, time machines, aliens, telepathy, flying saucers, warped space, faster-than-light travel, immersive virtual realities, clones, robots, teleportation, alien-controlled pod people, endless shrinking, the shattering of planet Earth, intelligent goo, antigravity, generation starships, ecodisaster, pleasure-center zappers, alternate universes, nanomachines, mind viruses, higher dimensions, a cosmic computation that generates our reality and, of course, the attack of the giant ants.

When a freestylist uses an SF power chord, he or she does something fresh with the trope, perhaps by juxtaposing it with an unfamiliar context, perhaps by describing it more intensely than usual, or perhaps by using it for a novel thought experiment. As mentioned before, skill is of the essence. Here I distinguish SF freestylists from less SFictionally committed writers who might merely be invoking SF power chords for atmospheric effect, without having the skill, or perhaps the will, to do something fresh.

In reference to point (2), thought experiments arise when a freestylist pushes the boundary of an SF trope or, unlikeliest of events, invents an entirely new power chord. The phrase comes from Albert Einstein, who fueled his science speculations with “Gedankenexperimenten.”

Thought experiments are a very powerful technique of philosophical investigation. In practice, it’s intractably difficult to visualize the side effects of new technological developments. In order to tease out the subtler consequences of current trends, a complex science-fictional simulation is necessary; inspired narration is a more powerful tool than logical analysis. If I want to imagine, for instance, what our world would be like if ordinary objects were conscious, then the best way to make progress is to fictionally simulate a person discovering this. Here again I make a distinction. Freestyle thought experiments are quite different in intent and in execution from merely futurological investigations. Freestylists aren’t interested in making useful predictions that businessmen can use. We don’t care about what might “really happen” in someone’s limited notion of the mundane world. The point is to see what could happen in an emotionally meaningful world of if.

In connection with the first two points, I’d like to quote from William Burroughs’s essay, “Remembering Jack Kerouac” (from The Adding Machine: Selected Essays, Seaver Books 1986):

“Many people who call themselves writers and have their names on books are not writers and they can’t write, like a bullfighter who makes passes with no bull there. The writer has been there or he can’t write about it. … [Writers] are trying to create a universe in which they have lived or where they would like to live. To write it, they must go there and submit to conditions that they might not have bargained for.”

The epitome of point (3) was Robert Sheckley. Over the years I got to spend a few golden hours in Sheckley’s presence, and I was saddened to hear of his death in December, 2005. Somewhat gallingly, Sheckley and I are often pigeonholed as “humorous SF writers”.

Our humor, such as it is, stems from uncovering incongruities or inconsistencies in our supposedly smooth-running society. You experience a release of tension when you notice a glitch. Something was off-kilter, and now you see what it was. The elephant in the living-room has been named. The evil spirit has been incanted. The inherent contradictions in our social conventions have become overt enough to provoke the shock of recognition and the concomitant release of laughter. But this essentially satirical process is quite different from the more parodistic and sophomoric kind of work that the “humorous SF” label suggests.

Sheckley puts it this way in his “Amsterdam Diary” (Rudy Rucker, Peter Lamborn Wilson, and Robert Anton Wilson, eds., Semiotext[e] SF, Autonomedia 1997):

“Good fiction is never preachy. It tells its truth only by inference and analogy. It uses the specific detail as its building block rather than the vague generalization. In my case it’s usually humorous — no mistaking my stuff for the Platform Talk of the 6th Patriarch. But I do not try to be funny, I merely write as I write … In the meantime I trust the voice I can never lose — my own … enjoying writing my story rather than looking forward to its completion.”

Radio Interview Saturday, 2+2=5, Mathematicians in Love, Perfect Wave

Friday, May 5th, 2006

I'll be intereviewed on the radio from about 10:30 to 11:00 on Saturday, May 6.

The show is Digital Village Radio, Saturdays 10-11:AM PST.

KPFK (90.7 FM & 98.7 FM), Los Angeles.

With Web Streaming Live from KPFK.

This week I went over the copy edits for Mathematicians in Love (Tor, Fall, 2006), and finished my story “2+2=5” with Terry Bisson. I think it'll come out in Interzone.

Today I'm getting started on a story called “The Perfect Wave” that I want to write with Marc Laidlaw; I'm doing stories to beef up my anthology Freestyle SF that I think Thunder's Mouth Press will put out this coming winter.

Infinity, Gosper, UFOs, Amazing Film

Wednesday, May 3rd, 2006

Catching up on links today. I just finished writing a science fiction story called “2+2=5” with Terry Bisson. You might think of the image below as an illo for the story (although I originally painted it with my novel Spaceland in mind.)

A year or two ago I wrote an article on Infinity for the Encyclopedia Brittanica, and now it’s online, although you need to get a membership to read the article. Hey, if you need to know about infinity, I’m the go-to guy. Everything in my article (and more) can also be found in the latest edition of my book Infinity and the Mind. And for those more fictionally inclined, don’t forget my novel White Light.

My friend Bill Gosper likes to discover gnarly mathematical identities; here’s his page with some of his prize equations.

A fan named Felix Turner has posted his ten top reasons for believing in extraterrestrial intelligences. In my last couple of novels, my aliens aren’t from far away in other galaxies, but rather from parallel layers of reality beneath our own.

Rich Bennett of Fairfax, Virginia, has been filming fifteen amazing seconds a day for a year, and now he’s rolled the accumulation together into what promises to be a rather amazing film called Project 15. You can see the Project 15 trailer at his page. It’s so great to see these superficialy-normal-looking people doing such bizarre things. Reminds me of when I lived in Lynchburg, VA.

Visit to LA

Monday, May 1st, 2006

Sylvia and I were in LA this weekend. Big billboards. Big city. Coming back home, San Jose felt like a tiny country town.

We stayed with our friends Kenneth Turan and his wife Patty Williams. Ken and I were roommates back at Swarthmore, 44 years ago, and now he’s a film critic at the L. A. Times. Internally you don’t change all that much after your twenties.

Kenny came to hear my panel at the LA Times Book Festival — only one other panelist showed up, (Sandra Blakeslee, who also got her son Matt to be on the panel), so I got to talk a lot.

I said the missing panelists had snorted nanomachines at a party in Venice Beach and were present in the form of one nanomachine every square millimeter on the room’s walls.

We visited Coop a hotrod/Juxtapoz artist friend whom I met via this blog. He made me happy by saying that my Bruegel novel As Above, So Below resonates with him as a practicing artist. Note the alien orange orb that appeared in this picture of Coop in front of his latest big painting.

Coop is twins, and he’s married (I think) to twins, Ruth Waytz and Ruth* Waytz. Ruth has a knitting blog and Ruth* blogs photos of her daily life, kind of an interesting accumulation.

Coop* made his own hotrod, which I find really impressive. This used to be a Model A Ford.

He also has a large collection of Japanese science fiction action figures, including a number from the Ultraman (?) series. Readers of my book Frek and the Elixir may recognize these as figures of Unipuskers. My son Rudy gave me one of these figures before I started Frek, and when I was casting about for how some particular aliens might look, I used the figure. Coop says that the shape of this figure is in fact designed to represent a boy who was very greedy about hoarding his money that his head turned into a coin purse! I’d always thought of it as a clam-shell.

Sylvia and I drove around LA a bit, we came across an interesting block or two on Vermont Street just south of Hollywood Boulevard. I loved that this store was called SquaresVille.

A mural worthy of the Haight, or, hey, even better, it’s LA, it’s the big time. I love that chrome stellated dodecahedron head. Coop was talking about painting chrome too, which reminded me of a ray tracer program by Nick Chapman that I used the last semester I taught at

I walked on the beach in Santa Monica near the pier, ants in the grid, proud to be Californian.

Bye, LA.


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