Ralif Redhammer
Legend
I finished reading Sterling's Schismatrix. It was good sci-fi, but I wouldn't necessarily classify it as cyberpunk.
Now I'm reading Richard Kadrey's Metrophage.
Now I'm reading Richard Kadrey's Metrophage.
Digging it so far. I discovered the book when a scan of an article on cyberpunk from the 90s appeared on my Tumblr. Metrophage was barely discernable in the image, but it was only one I wasn't familiar with.I love Metrophage with an unseemly love, even as I recognize its flaws. I apparently startled Kadrey on Facebook in the late ‘00s or early ‘10s by being a continuing fan of the book.![]()
That was a good one imoAfter that, I read (in two days) another book I picked up at the bookstore: Eruption, a new novel by Michael Crichton and James Patterson, which I thought was quite the feat considering Crichton died in 2008. (Apparently he had the unfinished novel and a bunch of notes on his computer and his widow convinced Patterson to finish it.) It's a science thriller involving a major eruption of a volcano in Hawai'i, and a military secret that makes it much more deadly than a normal volcanic eruption would be.
Yeah I think a lot of this comes from authors coming at the issue of worldbuilding "backwards" as it were. I.e. instead of thinking about the society they envision and how it would work, and how things would come to be from that society, and just building things up, they decide on the characteristics of certain organisations/groups and then just slap them in regardless of whether they actually fit with the overall worldbuilding. In longer series you often see some shifts as they gradually backwork the group into the setting more. I think it's fine to have some fixed points you want but it's really good if you can like, work out how they'd naturally exist, rather than just slapping in clunky stereotypes. Definitely agree this is more common in YA but the line between YA and mainstream fantasy has been pretty blurry for a while now.I also am a bit annoyed by this new fantasy worldbuilding trope of castes/social classes that are very strictly defined. Every follower of the fox always behaves like this, every follower of the raven like that. It seems to be the new "elves are always like this and dwarves like that" of modern fantasy books, because I have seen this multiple times now, but normally more in YA (Red Rising comes to mind).
This is a symptom of the same "backwards" approach to worldbuilding - i.e. the author just thinks "What do rich people do for fun?", doesn't even really think historically beyond like, the 1920s very often (let alone do historical research to get any ideas - I mean you don't have to then follow those ideas, but it's good to know), and then puts it pretty much straight into their setting and works around that, rather than the actual worldbuilding approach where you think about the society you've created, and what resources and traditions the nobles have, and what they might be doing because of that (what social benefits and so on).There were moments where the prose or the dialogue felt too modern for the time period I think this setting is inspired from. I remember for example some nobles at a dinner party complaining about their yachting crew. Sailing yacht as leisure for the rich developed in our world in 18th and 19th century, I envisioned the world in the book as older than that. Ofc a fantasy book doesn't need to follow real world timeline, but it felt a bit out of touch with the own worldbuilding, and I had several of these moments.