The Amazing Spider-Man #36 - one of the most heartfelt tributes to 9-11, from people who knew what heroes were when they saw them.

Comments and observations on science fiction and fantasy.
Where's Michael Moorcock? He first introduced the character of Elric, his haunted albino kinslayer, in 1961, and his books regarding Elric and the rest of the Eternal Champion characters such as Erekosë, Corum Jhaelen Irsei, and Dorian Hawkmoon are considered to be classics. The same with Fritz Leiber's Fafhrd and the Grey Mouser stories, which he started writing in the 1930s but I was able to purchase in collected form in the 70s. I've already mentioned Ursula K. Le Guin and her first Earthsea trilogy from the late 60s and early 70s, which I suspect have won every award there is - and they still didn't show up on Amazon.ca until page 11.
The challenging Thomas Covenant series hit the fantasy industry like a bomb in 1977, but,
unlike Star Wars: A New Hope, which also debuted that year, apparently Stephen Donaldson's work hasn't retained its fame. The Thomas Covenant books are described as "demanding" in The Encyclopedia of Fantasy, and it's hard to improve on that description, but Donaldson's flawed, bitter protagonist broke completely new ground in the genre. Patricia McKillip's clever and lyrical Riddlemaster of Hed series from the same era is equally unique, if less deconstructionist, but may actually be out of print at this point.
I feel I could sit here and list authors and books all day - Garth Nix's Sabriel, K. J. Parker (Tom Holt in disguise), Tad Williams, Canadian author Guy Gavriel Kay and his breakout Fionvar Tapestry series from the 80s, Karl Edward Wagner's Kane stories, Charles De Lint (also Canadian), Mary Stewart's historical fantasy, and so on - and no sign of them in terms of public recognition on Amazon, which I think is more than a little sad. It's a shame there isn't some equivalent of the aforementioned Golden Oldies radio stations to keep the classics in the public eye.
I think it would be fun to sit down and have a conversation with Chenoa about some of these books, but I don't think that's likely to happen - we only know her professionally, and as you can tell from photos of me that that have appeared here, I'm not exactly in need of a lengthy visit to a hairdresser.
- Sid
* Highlights have varied from aqua to caramel.
**
Unsolicited endorsement: Chenoa does great work. If you live in the
greater Vancouver area and you're thinking about getting coloured hair,
she is definitely the person you want to see.
*** Amazon's Sort By feature has always made me a bit crazy. Why
is there no ALPHABETICAL ORDER BY AUTHOR - how hard would that be? It's
the way brick and mortar stores do it, how bad would it be to be able
to do that online?
**** This is an interesting analogy, because it also acknowledges the way
in which styles and preferences change over time. Some people listen to
a wide range of music, whereas other people will be stuck in the 80s
forever. Using this approach, J.R.R. Tolkien is Beethoven, and George
R.R. Martin is...Metallica, perhaps? Freddy Mercury? No, I think that
maybe Michael Moorcock is Freddy...hmmm...I'll have to give this some more thought.
A long long time ago
In a galaxy far away
Naboo was under an attack
And I thought me and Qui-Gon Jinn
Could talk the Federation in
To maybe cutting them a little slack
But their response, it didn't thrill us
They locked the doors and tried to kill us
We escaped from that gas
Then met Jar Jar and Boss Nass
We took a bongo from the scene
And we went to Theed to see the queen
We all wound up on Tatooine
That's where we found this boy...
Oh my my, this here Anakin guy
May be Vader someday later - now he's just a small fry
And he left his home and kissed his mommy goodbye
Sayin' "Soon I'm gonna be a Jedi"
"Soon I'm gonna be a Jedi."
Weird Al Yankovic, The Saga Begins.
"Revolution is everywhere, in everything. It is infinite. There is no final revolution, no final number.
- Yevgeny Zamyatin