Showing posts with label Theodore Sturgeon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Theodore Sturgeon. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 7, 2007

The Good, The Bad, and the Tardis

In short, the straw of a manufactured realism with which the sf writer makes his particular literary bricks must be entirely convincing to the reader in its own right, or the whole story will lose its power to convince.
- Gordon R. Dickson
The future depicted in a good SF story ought to be in fact possible, or at least plausible.
- Frederik Pohl

A lot of the definitions of science fiction that I've read tend to deal with what makes for good science fiction - not a bad thing to have definitions that concentrate on quality, although I think that some of the motivation for that sort of definition comes from a kind of defensiveness about the genre, as per Sturgeon's Law

For a perfect example of the line that divides good SF from bad SF, let us turn to the popular media - okay, the BBC, but still - and take a look at the reborn Doctor Who

In the first season, with the excellent Christopher Eccleston capably filling the Doctor's shoes, there was a two-part episode: The Empty Child and The Doctor Dances. Set in WWII London, the Doctor is presented with the odd phenomenon of an inhumanly powerful child, wandering the streets in a gas mask while looking for his mother. Even odder, the child's condition appears to be contagious - people are mysteriously changing into gas-mask faced entities requesting their mummy. 

This is explained as being the work of military medical nanobots from a crashed spaceship, nanobots that have no idea that the model they are using to rebuild the population of London is in fact a flawed one (people not normally having gas masks for faces, even in London) and the boy's powers being the result of being brought up to alien military spec. 

This would qualify as "good" SF by my standards: an apparently inexplicable situation which is logically explained within the context established by the plot. 

Sadly, David Tennant, Mr. Eccleston's equally gifted replacement, is not always as ably supported by plotline. In The Idiot's Lantern, once again people are falling prey to a mysterious ailment, this time in 1953 London: after watching television, their faces vanish. (I've often thought that might happen.) 

After seeing a sort of corral full of faceless victims, the Doctor finds a room full of TVs, each one containing a missing face. Apparently this is because an alien entity known as the Wire is stealing energy from people. 

What? Why in the world would that cause their faces to vanish? How do these faceless, mouthless, noseless remnants breathe? Shouldn't they all be dead in about four minutes? Sadly, this episode rings the bell for bad SF, where the science fiction element is really just for show, intended to create an interesting visual effect but with nothing in the plot to explain why and how such a thing would happen. 

And, as a postscript to the whole thing, it really does make me wonder if I'd feel safe living in London.

Monday, February 26, 2007

"Happy birthday, dear Ted..."

Today is February 26th, and we commemorate the birthday of Theodore Sturgeon (1918-1985), perhaps best known for "Sturgeon's Law", the short version of which is:
Ninety per cent of everything is crud.
For some odd reason, it's almost always quoted as "crap" rather than "crud", but the concept is still clear.

Less well known is the fact that Sturgeon's Law is pulled from a defense of science fiction, although a somewhat backhanded defense:
When people talk about the mystery novel, they mention The Maltese Falcon and The Big Sleep. When they talk about the western, they say there's The Way West and Shane. But when they talk about science fiction, they call it 'that Buck Rogers stuff,' and they say 'ninety percent of science fiction is crud.' Well, they're right. Ninety percent of science fiction is crud. But then ninety percent of everything is crud, and it's the ten percent that isn't crud that is important. and the ten percent of science fiction that isn't crud is as good as or better than anything being written anywhere.
Hmmm...the picture above is the better part of my science fiction and fantasy library, and I can't really consider 90% of it to be crud (or crap). Mr. Sturgeon's comment dates from the 1953 World Science Fiction convention, and it's possible that the genre has progressed a bit since then, but it's equally possible that I've just avoided the 90% that fails to meet the critical standard below which lies crud - or crap. It's an interesting question: for every Dune, Left Hand of Darkness, or Neuromancer that gets published, how many Gor novels (or the equivalent) make their way onto paper?
- Sid