Posts Tagged ‘links’
Vintage Month #SoManyLinks
Posted January 5, 2021
on:All Y’All Vintage SciFi Month-ers have been BUSY! I am IN AWE! So many posts have gone up, the @VintageSciFi_ twitter feed has gone wild, and it is only the first week of January!
Here’s links to SO MANY wonderful Vintage Scifi Month posts! I’m doing my best to keep up with people who have commented here, linked back to Little Red Reviewer, tweeted to @VintageSciFiMonth_ on twitter or used the hashtag #VintageSciFiMonth. if I missed your link, I apologize, and feel free to leave your links in the comments either in this post or in the “Vintage SciFi Month” tab up at the top of the page.
We’ve got a lot of folks already talking about The Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K. LeGuin. Grace LaPointe brought our attention to her acclaimed essay on the novel (spoilers!) that was presented in 2009.
Howling Frog enjoyed the detective/spy adventure (in spaaaaaace!) book Watchers of the Dark by Lloyd Biggle Jr.
Reißwolf reviewed Sailing to Byzantium by Robert Silverberg and New Rose Hotel by William Gibson (aw yeah cyberpunk!)
Lexlingua enjoyed the far future / mythology / secret technology 1968 Hugo winning novel Lord of Light by Roger Zelazny
IzzyReads picked up Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep by Philip K Dick a book that opens in January 2021.
Jim at Classics of Science Fiction has a seemingly never ending list of suggested Vintage Sci Fi short stories for anyone who isn’t sure where to start their Vintage journey
Joe at Eclectic Theist is now finally able to read Anny McCaffrey’s Dragonriders of Pern books in order! He’s up to Dragonflight.
Michael is getting a kick out of his Ace Doubles. it’s a two-fer, literally!
Classic movie fan? Cinemashrew enjoyed the vintage scifi/horror flick Invisible Ray, starring Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosi
Did you know that The Moon is a Harsh Mistress is one of Elon Musk’s favorite books? Me neither! Hullabaloloo decided to give it a try and see what all the fuss was about
Need more classic scifi movies? Warren Watched a Movie has an indepth write up of The Day The Earth Stood Still directed by Robert Wise
apologies if I missed anyone, please throw your links in the comments so everyone can find your link.
Every January, I get to read some cool stuff that isn’t usually on my radar. This year was no different. (ok, well, some of it was on my radar, but my reaction to what I was reading was nice and surprising!)
But? Something happened this January during my Vintage reads that has never happened before. I mean, it has, but not due to reading vintage science fiction.
what happened, you ask?
Reading Vintage Science Fiction this year, more than any other year I’ve done this, made me want to go out and get a ton of biographies. I want to get a biography of Begum Rokheya, Oscar Wilde, and Orson Welles, and I want to know all about Mary Shelley’s world, and what life was like when she grew up. I want to know more cool stuff about these hella cool people!
I’m not a biography reader, so saying that I want to read biographies is a big stinkin’ deal!
Your turn:
What did you get out of Vintage Science Fiction Month this year?
While you’re chewing on that, here’s the latest batch of Vintage links!
Heather at Froodian Slip enjoyed Isaac Asimov’s famous Foundation, and she’s interested to see what happens next in the series. She also enjoyed Ray Bradbury’s The Illustrated Man, a collection of stories that revolve around a man who is so freakish that the freak shows don’t even want him.
WikiFiction celebrates Jack Vance’s novel Emphyrio, which turns 50 years old this year. John didn’t much care for Emphyrio, but he is a huge fan of Asimov’s The End of Eternity.
Howling Frog continues to amaze, with reviews of Star Trek 10 by James Blish (I LOVE these Star Trek episode novelizations!), The Door Through Space by Marion Zimmer Bradley, Ordeal in Otherwhere by Andre Norton, and Little Fuzzy by H. Beam Piper.
Bookforager had a good time with Trader to the Stars by Poul Anderson, and now I am also imagining Rijn as talking with Brian Blessed’s voice!
If audio is more your thing, SFFAudio has an excellent podcast, courtesy LibriVox, of Philip Jose Farmer’s The Green Odyssey. They also have audio of Ray Bradbury’s I, Mars. Their website has a TON of Vintage discussions!
Video more your thing? Head over to Lydia Schoch’s site for a review of the short 1930 scifi film It’s a Bird . Lydia also had a good time reminiscing about The Trouble with Tribbles.
Neal at Gutenberg’s Son has some excellent suggestions, if you’re looking for a new Vintage book to read.
It’s official, Sara Light-Waller has THE BEST garage door!
Kristin Brand recommends Edgar Rice Burroughs’ A Princess of Mars, with a few disclaimers.
Mervi’s reviews reviews Jack Vance’s final Planet of Adventure volume, The Pnume. The aliens are fun and curious, even if some of the scenes were eye-rolling.
Planetary Defense Command gave E.E. “Doc” Smith’s Lensman books a try, with Galactic Patrol. He enjoyed the wackyness, but wasn’t real keen on the telepathy stuff.
SciFi Mind read Frank Herbert’s Destination Void, which asks the questions of how (or why) do you keep a mission alive, when the mission may have been designed to fail? Thanks to John’s review, this book has now become a MUST READ for me!
I get most of these links through our twitter feed and by people leaving their links in the “Vintage Scifi Not-A-Challenge tab up top. Apologies if I missed yours! Please leave your link in the comments, and I’ll do my best to get this post updated with your links.
Thank you everyone, for an amazing Vintage month!!
while I’m stuck at work . . .
Posted March 11, 2011
on:seriously, who scheduled me to work on a Friday!? Raise your hand, I want to glare at you!
however, for those of you who are not raising your hand, here are some goodies for you.
Filed under Totally Awesome, we’ve got
Doctor Who premiers on BBC America on April 23rd at, umm, check your local listings. Or you can attempt to navigate the annoyingly flash heavy and painfully photoshopped BBC America website. That site’s got a lot of weird mumbly jumbly time travelly floaty stuff going on. (now read that paragraph out loud in your best Amy Pond voice, you know you want to)
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