dreamer_easy: (*feminism)
2016-07-01 02:13 pm

Common sense

Plagued by a scene from Neal Stephenson and George Jewbury's 1994 novel Interface, in which the character Eleanor Richmond delivers a stiff lecture over the phone to another Black woman who doesn't want to report her daughters' sexual assault to the police because their assailant has threatened to murder her if she does so. Furious, Eleanor tells her to call the police and buy a gun to protect herself. Her new employer, Senator Marshall, teases Eleanor that "you changed your position on gun control": "If that woman you were just talking to had to fill out a bunch of forms and get permission from the government to have a gun, she wouldn't be able to take the advice you just gave her, would she?"

We're supposed to give three cheers for Eleanor "pounding some common sense" into the other woman's head. After all, Eleanor is right: the other mother ought to stand up to her daughters' rapist and seek justice for them. But I can only give two cheers. Maybe only one.

Firstly, the anonymous woman on the phone is clearly trying to protect her daughters: the reason she rings the Senator's office is to find out if the rapist can be forced to take an HIV test. Secondly, when Eleanor asks if she has called the police, the woman responds, "Shit no. Why would I want to call them?... I called you for serious advice, girl." What has this woman's experience with the police been that calling them about a serious sexual assault seems pointless? Thirdly, Eleanor asks: "Ma'am, how could being killed possibly be any worse than having your daughters raped?" Orphaning them as well wouldn't be worse?

Violence against women is an overwhelming fact; why shouldn't women be able to use firearms to protect themselves from burglars, rapists, or violent boyfriends and husbands? As Eleanor reminds the Senator: "I have a gun, and I know how to use it."

In the US, in most states, a licence or permit is not necessary to buy a gun; that is, you don't have to know how to use a gun in order to own one. If the woman on the phone can afford a gun and ammunition, will she also be able to train in its basic use (and safety measures - remember, she has "little daughters")? How much will it cost, can she afford to take the time off work (if she is doing casual work this could be a serious issue), and how long will it take?

In short, is "just go and buy a gun" a sufficient response to a woman in a life-or-death situation? Would it make more sense to provide emergency permits, including free and immediate training, to women (or anyone) in danger of violence who choose firearms as a defence? Moreover, rapists routinely threaten their victims with murder if they report the crime. If the police aren't going to protect women who report men's violence, we're back at square one: why report it in the first place?

This has to be seen, of course, in the context of the gun control debate in the US, which is sometimes framed in feminist terms of women's self-defence - while at the same time the National Rifle Association has fought all the way to the Supreme Court for the right of convicted domestic violence offenders to own guns*.

I think the scene is meant to accomplish two things: show that both the "liberal Democrat" Eleanor and the conservative Senator have more in common than Eleanor realises (in fact, Mitchell dismisses liberal/conservative and even Democrat/Republican as meaningless distinctions). They are both "common sense" folks frustrated by people who won't fix their own problems**. And damned if they're going to give them the tools they need to fix those problems. Whether or not we think of the caller as negligent, she certainly sees herself as almost helpless: the HIV test is the only response she's been able to come up with (although how she thinks she can force "that G" to take the test without police intervention isn't clear). A trained advocate could have laid out all her options, legal and medical, and connected her with the support services that could help her and her family try to get justice - or at least survive. Instead, she receives a lecture from a well-meaning but clueless phone jockey.

ETA: Similarly, much later in the book, vice presidential candidates are interviewed about the education of "inner city blacks": "twenty-five years from now, what will life be like for these people, and what will you have done to make that life better?" Two candidates give vague responses, one has a plan for education via television, and Eleanor Richmond has this response:
"Abe Lincoln learned his lessons by writing on the back of a shovel. During slavery times, a lot of black people learned to read and write even though they weren't allowed to go to school. And nowadays, Indochinese refugee kids do great in school even though they got no money at all and their folks don't speak English. The fact that many black people nowadays aren't getting educated has nothing to do with how much money we spend on schools. Spending more money won't help... It's just a question of values. If your family places a high value on being educated, you'll get educated, even if you have to do your homework on the back of a shovel. And if your family doesn't give a damn about developing your mind, you'll grow up stupid and ignorant even if you go to the fanciest private school in America."

Eleanor is, naturally, a shoe-in for the role of VP. If "inner-city blacks" have poor grades or drop out of school, it's their own fault, and nothing can be done about it; policy-makers are off the hook, and everyone else can stop worrying. Eleanor has given everyone what they want. Everyone, that is, for the parents and kids living in poverty and struggling in under-funded, unsafe schools, whom she has thrown under the big yellow bus.

I can't decide if the authors believe Eleanor's response is so obviously sensible that the reader will simply nod their approval, or if their whole point is that Eleanor has simply told everyone what they want to hear - which is, after all, the SFnal basis of the book.


* Partly because of legal loopholes, guns are a disaster for women in the US experiencing stalking, dating violence, and domestic violence.

** Cf the AI in the Hugo-nominated Cat Pictures Please. As [livejournal.com profile] secritcrush points out, Bethany doesn't respond to its clueless intervention because she is mentally ill.
dreamer_easy: (*gender)
2016-05-28 10:27 am
Entry tags:

We are fated to find no resting place

I've been reading Judith Halberstam's 1998 book "Female Masculinity" on and off. Right now I'm gripped by a chapter on the "border wars" between trans men and butch lesbians, and all the attendant arguments about who is challenging binary gender and who is reinforcing it and a whole lot of questions around what we would now call trans and genderqueer identities.

I am gender non-conforming, but in my case that's more an absence of femininity than an embracing of masculinity. I have been harassed for being gender non-conforming, and I may be again when I next visit a public bathroom in the US, but I will never face the marginalisation or the active danger that either a trans man or a masculine-presenting lesbian face.

Nonetheless from time to time I will be blindsided by a phrase: "the status of unbelonging".
dreamer_easy: (*books 3)
2016-05-11 08:58 am
Entry tags:

D'Oh

So I was going to buy a copy of Neal H. Walls' "The Goddess Anat in Ugaritic Myth", when I glanced at the pile of books on my desk, and spotted a copy of Neal H. Walls' "The Goddess Anat in Ugaritic Myth". This morning I discovered there are not one, but two copies of Neal H. Walls' "The Goddess Anat in Ugaritic Myth" on my desk. Good thing I didn't buy a third one, then. *facepalm*
dreamer_easy: (snow kate)
2016-05-08 08:37 pm
Entry tags:

"Mindless!"

Something that has bugged me slightly forever is the bit in "Four to Doomsday" where Adric and Nyssa are bitching at each other about mathematics. Tegan is irked about having to wait to get home. Adric suggests that, in the meantime, she reads Alfred North Whitehead and Bertrand Russell's Principia Mathematica. Tegan is less than keen. Adric, with astonishing venom, responds: "That's the trouble with women. Mindless, impatient, and bossy. " Nyssa, who's reading Russell's book, retaliates: "You mean this? Mindless!"

I thought of Nyssa's harsh dismissal of the Principia when I was reading Douglas Hofstadter's I Am A Strange Loop. Obviously she's partly just repeating Adric's words back at him, and partly unimpressed with what, to an alien from an advanced civilisation, must seem like a pretty basic text. I'm not an alien from an advanced civilisation, but luckily Hofstadter had explained it in Gödel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid, which I read many years ago. Very simply put, Russell and Whitehead were trying to lay out the formal logic that underpins all of mathematics, and Russell discovered what Hofstadter punningly calls "a terrible loophole".

Russell had been using set theory to explain maths. You might imagine "the set of all even numbers" or "the set of all pink elephants" (an "empty set"). But what happens if you define "the set of all sets that don't contain themselves"? If that set contains itself, then it doesn't belong to the set of sets that don't contain themselves, but if it doesn't contain itself, then the set is not the set of all sets that don't contain themselves. If it gives you a headache, imagine what it did to Russell. (The paradox which the Doctor gives BOSS in The Green Death is similar: "If I were to tell you that the next thing I say will be true, but that the last thing I said was a lie, would you believe me?")

Russell "solved" this by banning paradoxes, self-references, or loops, whatever you want to call them, from maths. But Hofstadter challenges this in many ways (he might like the sentence "This sentence was not posted on Livejournal"), and more to the point here, he talks about self-reference as being the basis of consciousness. IIUC, we are literally self-aware. He says that a mosquito probably doesn't know it has a head, that a dog probably has a pretty good idea of "that's my tail", "that's my paw", and that human beings know they have brains and minds. That's why the book's called "I Am A Strange Loop".

If self-reference is what makes a mind, and the Principia Mathematica excludes self-reference, then it is literally "mindless". :)

... good gods, I hope this makes some sort of sense to someone else.
dreamer_easy: (refugees)
2016-05-05 10:54 am

Refugee Update

Manus Island detainees launch High Court bid to be moved to Australia (GA, 5 May 2016)

Manus Island: Australian and PNG officials meet to develop 'road map' to close centre (ABC, 4 May 2016)

Immigration Minister Peter Dutton says that refugee advocates are to blame for the self-immolations on Nauru. Sure - just like those Save the Children staff told kids to make up stories about sexual abuse. Right, Peter?

'Asylum seeker boat' arrives in the Australian territory of the Cocos Islands (GA, 3 May 2016) Poor devils got within half a kilometre of shore.

New Manus and Nauru operator signals plans to quit detention centre business (GA, 30 April 2016): "Ferrovial Services, which owns more than 50% of ASX-listed Broadspectrum, formerly Transfield, says these services were not a core part of the valuation."

The winners and losers from Scott Morrison's 2016 budget (GA, 3 May 2016): "Four mainland detention centres are to close, and there’s some extra cash for unaccompanied child refugees, but the big, difficult stuff – ie Nauru and Manus – doesn’t feature." | Northern Territory Chief Minister Adam Giles says government wrong to close Darwin detention centre (GA, 4 May 2016) This is Wickham Point, notorious for self-harm and suicide attempts. | Federal Budget offers no new hope for world’s refugees (Refugee Council of Australia press release, 3 May 2016)

I've almost finished Eichmann in Jerusalem (SPOILER: he dies). In these summaries, I don't usually mention people speaking out against Australia's detention regime, such as Labor MP Melissa Parke, campaigner Shen Narayanasamy, and documentary-maker Eva Orner. Maybe I should change that. Hannah Arendt writes:

"For the lesson of such stories is simple and within everybody's grasp. Politically speaking, it is that under conditions of terror most people will comply but some people will not, just as the lesson of the countries to which the Final Solution was proposed is that 'it could happen' in most places but it did not happen everywhere. Humanly speaking, no more is required, and no more can reasonably be asked, for this planet to remain a place fit for human habitation." (Italics in original)

Australia can hardly be said to be "under conditions of terror", even with the extraordinary threat of jail for speaking the truth; individuals who stood up to the Nazis lost their lives. Nonetheless, Arendt's lesson applies to us as well - it's the only hope we've got.
dreamer_easy: (*feminism)
2016-04-27 09:35 am
Entry tags:

Hugos

The once-more Rabid Puppy-infested Hugo ballot is out, and File770.com is down, presumably from the strain of people slapping their foreheads and grinding their teeth. (Which means that for now I have nowhere to inflict these processes on myself except here.)

Since this year you-know-who has included some respectable material on his slate, just to fuck with us, the trick will be to pick out the worthwhile from the worthless and vote for it anyway, followed by No Award. No matter what we do, you-know-who will claim victory, so what the hell.

btw, there's tons of fun stuff in the 1941 Retro-Hugo ballot!
dreamer_easy: (*books 3)
2016-04-03 08:20 am

My Hugo noms

My first ever Hugo nominations! omg I made a lot of mistakes. Should've nominated Fantasia for the retro award, Mike Glyer's File 770 for best fanzine, and Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell for Best Dramatic Presentation (Long Form). At least I figured out in time that I'd put a bunch of novelettes in the short story category, which meant I was able to nominate lots more stuff than I first thought. Wish I'd had to time to read Kim Stanley Robinson's Aurora. Why is there no "Best Anthology" category?!

Best Novel:
Seveneves, Neal Stephenson
The Dark Forest, Cixin Liu

Best Novelette:
"Broken Glass", Stephanie Gunn (Hear Me Roar, Ticonderoga Publications)
"The Body Pirate", Van Aaron Hughes (Fantasy & Science Fiction July/August 2015)
"Cursebreaker: the Mutalibeen and the Memphite Mummies", Kyla Ward (Hear Me Roar, Ticonderoga Publications)
"The Deepwater Bride", Tamsin Muir (Fantasy & Science Fiction July/August 2015)

Best Short Story:
"Slow", Lia Swope Mitchell (Apex)
"Wild Honey", Paul McAuley (Asimov's, August 2015)
"Two-Year Man", Kelly Robson (Asimov's, August 2015)
"The Crashing of the Cloud", Norman Spinrad (Analog, September 2015)
"Dustbowl", Kay Chronister (Hear Me Roar, Ticonderoga Publications)

Best Related Work:
Guided by the Beauty of Their Weapons: Notes on Science Fiction and Culture in the Year of Angry Dogs, Phil Sandifer (Eruditorum Press)
Guided by the Beauty of Their Weapons: An Analysis of Theodore Beale and his Supporters, Phil Sandifer

Best Dramatic Presentation (Long Form):
Ex Machina, Alex Garland

Best Dramatic Presentation (Short Form):
Heaven Sent, Steven Moffat / Rachel Talalay (Doctor Who)

Best Professional Editor (Short Form):
Liz Grzyb

Best Fan Writer:
Phil Sandifer

Your nominations for Best Fan Artist:
Euclase
dreamer_easy: (*books 3)
2016-02-18 11:40 am

Yay more Hugo-worthy stories!

Jon brought the July/August issue of Fantasy & Science Fiction magazine home from the US for me, and it contains a couple of gems: "The Deepwater Bride" by Tamsin Muir, and "The Body Pirate" by Van Aaron Hughes. (The whole issue was pretty terrific - I enjoyed Rachel Pollack's "Johnny Rev" and Betsy James' "Paradise and Trout". Antidotes to all the lacklustre writing I have endured in the past year's reading in search of Hugo noms!)

Oddly, there's no Best Anthology category in the Hugos. I'll nominate Liz Grzyb as Best Editor, then, for Hear Me Roar: 17 Tales of Real Women and Unreal Worlds, which is packed with goodies, including Susan Wardle's "A Truck Called Remembrance", Stephanie Gunn's "Broken Glass", Kay Chronister's "Dustbowl", Marlee Jane Ward's "Clara's", Kyla Ward's delicious "Cursebreaker: the Mutalibeen and the Memphite Mummies", Faith Mudge's "Blueblood", and Cat Sparks' "Veteran's Day".

It took me a while to get into William Gibson's The Peripheral, but I'm enjoying it now. But would everyone please stop writing such enormous books - !

ETA: Hell! You can only nominate five short stories. This is gonna be a bloodbath!
dreamer_easy: (*books 3)
2015-12-31 10:34 am
Entry tags:

Books read, 2015

Barbara Baynton. Bush Studies. I hugely recommend this classic Australian anthology.
Catherine Chung. Forgotten Country.
Germaine Greer. On Rage. And Marcia Langton's passionate response.
Jonathan L. Howard. Johannes Cabal the Necromancer.
Ann Leckie. Ancillary Justice.
Liu Cixin. The Three-Body Problem.
The Dark Forest.
Lorrie Moore. How to Become a Writer.
Kim Stanley Robinson. 2312.
Philip Sandifer. Recursive Occlusion: an Unofficial Occultism of Doctor Who. Loved it!
Charles Stross. The Atrocity Archives.
Jill Bolte Taylor. My Stroke of Insight.
Alan Watts. Tao: The Watercourse Way.

The Probably Unwise "Man's Inhumanity to Man" Reading List Project:
Anna Funder. Stasiland.
Mark Isaacs. The Undesirables: Inside Nauru.
George Orwell. Nineteen Eighty-Four. I also finally watched the excellent movie version, directed by Michael Radford and starring John Hurt.
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. Cancer Ward.

Manga etc
Kamio Yoko. Boys Over Flowers, volume 1.
Ven. Miao You (story), Yan Kaixin (art). Wind and Rain: the Life of Ikkyu.

Notable short stories
Charlotte Armstrong, "Miss Murphy"
Barbara Baynton, "Squeaker's Mate"
Kim Tongni. "A Descendant of the Hwarang"

Books bought and borrowed )
dreamer_easy: (snow kate)
2015-05-29 12:30 am
Entry tags:

Off one's trolley

(Been trying to get back to this for days!)

I'm reading a fascinating book called Incognito: the Secret Lives of the Brain, by David Eagleman. Weirdly, I came across not just an anecdote germane to yesterday's Thursday's posting about unclaimed bodies and medical research, but a bunch of relevant stuff about decision-making.

First, the anecdote, which Eagleman used to illustrate the idea that the brain has "circuits" which process short-term gain and loss, and others which process the long term. A university offered students $500 to leave their bodies to medical science. "It's an easy sell for the school: $500 now feels good, while death is inconceivably different." The detail which grabbed me was this: the students were given an ankle tattoo saying where to send their bodies after they'd died. Talk about a memento mori!

Second - well, first I need to explain the Trolley Problem, if you're not already familiar with it. (It's not a trick question, and you're not allowed to come up with clever solutions to get around it!)

You're standing on a railroad bridge beside a switch. Below, you see an out of control trolley hurtling towards five unsuspecting workers. You realise that if you throw the switch, the trolley will go down a different track - where there's only one unsuspecting worker. Do you throw the switch?

This time, there's only one track, and instead of the switch, there's a large stranger also standing on the bridge. You realise that if you push him off the bridge and onto the track, he'll be killed, but the trolley will be stopped and the workers will be saved. Do you push him off?

For the average brain, the first version is a rational problem - one life vs five lives - and logical decision making parts of the brain light up in a scanner if you ask the poor bugger in there to answer the question. But the second version is an emotional problem, and those brain bits light up. More variations on the puzzle led researchers to conclude that what switches on the emotional circuitry is when you have to touch (or imagine touching, at least) the other person.

As Eagleman points out, this was once pretty much our only way of killing someone - with our bare hands. He mentions a law professor who suggested implanting The Button inside a human being.

With me so far? Here's where we come back to the question of what to do with unclaimed bodies. I think the irate New Scientist letter-writer, who thought using them for medical research was obvious and couldn't believe than a "educated" person didn't agree, was judging the situation rationally. And I think I was judging it emotionally . Which is not to say my judgement was automatically wrong (think of the Button example) - just that it was proceeding from a different basis.

Perhaps I was even imagining touching the unclaimed body myself - or at least imagining touching it. It'd be interested to know if the letter-writer would change their opinion if they'd have to do the dissecting themselves. Come to think of it, does medical training and work inure people to that emotional response to touching bodies? If so, is that necessary for them to stay rational - or could it be bad for their (living) patients?
dreamer_easy: (*books 3)
2015-05-03 09:50 pm
Entry tags:

A Plague of Locus

Having perused it on the treadmill, I am now going through the latest issue of SF news-and-reviews magazine Locus, picking out the stories and books which appealed... and just beginning to realise the vastness of the task I have set myself in nominating stuff for next year's Hugo awards.

(Fortunately I am an incredibly picky reader and can and will abandon anything after a page if I'm not gripped.)
dreamer_easy: (*writing)
2015-04-30 06:50 pm
Entry tags:

Liberating Earth

I am aghast to discover that I never announced here the publication of Liberating Earth - the all-women Faction Paradox anthology I edited for Obverse Books. Behold the beauteous cover:



I edited the collection for small press Obverse Books, contributing a linking story which deals with the anthology's premise: two Cousins from Faction Paradox, manipulators of space, time, and magic, who compete in creating alternative universes in which the human race are not the Earth's dominant species. I'm extremely pleased with the resulting stories and their very varied settings and styles, and especially proud to have got some of the writers into print for the first time.

The anthology is available from Obverse Books as a beautiful little hardback, and as an electronic book too.

(Ye gods, what else have I overlooked in all the chaos?)
dreamer_easy: (*books 3)
2015-04-22 11:39 pm
Entry tags:

Recursive Occlusion

A proper review will follow, but I just wanted to quickly recommend Philip Sandifer's brilliant mad book Recursive Occlusion, which will be particularly delicious to Who fans with an interest in magic, Kabbalah, Wicca, etc, if only because you'll get more of the jokes. :)
dreamer_easy: (*books 3)
2015-04-19 12:49 pm
Entry tags:

Concidentally

On Wednesday, Marko Kloos withdrew his novel "Lines of Departure" from the Hugo ballot because it was on the Rabid Puppies slate. (Respect is due.) On Friday, the novel "The Three-Body Problem" by Chinese writer Cixin Liu was moved up into the resulting empty slot. And yesterday, Saturday, I picked up a copy of Fred Pohl's 1984 "Pohlstars" anthology at a book fair, in the Introduction of which he talks about his trip to China and how he "spent a lot of time" with Chinese SF writers.

This is not in itself SF, he assures us: "Science fiction is being read, written, and published in the Peoples' Republic of China." He compares the contemporary SF scene with American SF in the thirties, being produced by "young, energetic, idealistic, not very sophisticated" writers, and with a low "social standing" and "economic situation", ie it pays peanuts and is "disdained". "Of course," he remarks, "it would take a braver man than I to predict how widespread science fiction will become in China."

The English language translation of Cixin Liu's novel - the first of a trilogy, and about to be made into a movie - came out thirty years later. Blimey. I must try to find out more about how SF has progressed and is progressing in China. (I've been looking for Korean SF in translation for some time, without much luck, except for the movie "Natural City", which wasn't much chop. "Snowpiercer" is still in the rental queue.)
dreamer_easy: (*feminism)
2015-04-11 09:55 pm
Entry tags:

Heh heh heh

When Chicks Dig Time Lords was published, it was difficult to enjoy the pride and pleasure I should have at being involved in such a cool project. Not only did I feel that my contribution was not my best work, but my bad breakup with Doctor Who fandom was still in progress, with some ugly results - another contributor was anonymously attacked for being "associated" with me. But it was delightful to watch as the book succeeded brilliantly and broke new ground - and now I have a whole new reason to be pleased to have been involved: according to Alexandra Erin's analysis, the Sad Puppies debacle was triggered by Chicks Dig Time Lords winning the Hugo. Hee hee hee.
dreamer_easy: (*books 3)
2015-04-08 02:55 pm
Entry tags:

Hugo the Duck

I was reluctant to vote in this year's Hugos for a number of reasons, but what the hell, I can cast a meaningful ballot in good conscience even if I don't vote in every single category. Thank goodness for the voters' packet of stuff! I'd never be able to track down and sample everything in time if I had to do it myself.
dreamer_easy: (*ZOMG!!)
2015-04-08 09:54 am
Entry tags:

Reed Ducks

They're - we're - going to have to change the nominations rules too, to block bloc voting. Maybe something like, if 10% of nominations are 75% identical to a published slate, those nominations are rejected. There must be tons of voting systems for things which have rules like this. ETA: Or, as Elizabeth Bear suggests, would the cheats just come up with new workarounds for any solution?
dreamer_easy: (*feminism)
2015-04-07 06:43 pm
Entry tags:

Redux redux

I'm sure I'm not saying anything here that hasn't been or isn't being said by wiser and more deeply involved people elsewhere. It's just that it's coincided with my desire to start reading much more contemporary SF. So bear with me (or ignore me :) as I try to think this through.

Hugo Awards Become A Joke After Ballot Stuffing Affects Nominations

Technically I think "ballot stuffing" is the wrong term, but this article explains how the Hugos were successfully gamed: by asking voters in an already small pool to pick specific works. Immediately, the problem for anyone who wants to oppose them either for political or for general fairness reasons runs smack into the question of whether to push a different specific set of works. And then of course there'd be multiple selections, and a fight over whose was the right one, dogs and cats living together, etc. Even just voting for whatever stuff the Sad Puppies didn't push is kind of dubious.

I guess opposition has to take a two-pronged approach. One, increase the size of the voter pool, thus making it harder to game the system. That would mean getting more people who are eligible to go ahead and vote (but how to instill in them the necessary "breathtaking fervor"?); and getting more people to become members of Worldcon so they can vote.

Two, seek out the kind of work that the Sad Puppies eschew; if it's good, make it known. This is something that can be done with the help of a library and blog, if you don't happen to have fifty bucks lying around. So here's where it overlaps with my project to read more contemporary SF. (I'd already subscribed to Locus with this goal in mind.) If all goes well you can expect some reviews here as the year goes on.
dreamer_easy: (*books 3)
2015-04-06 10:43 am

Braindump Redux

Ah fuck it, I think I'll get a Worldcon supporting membership and read a bunch of stuff and nominate and vote.
dreamer_easy: (*gender)
2015-04-05 02:27 pm
Entry tags:

Braindump

Thinking just now about how my professional interest in catching up on what people are doing in SF these days has coincided with the Sad Puppies backlash, and how that in turn overlaps with my attempt to make half the fiction I read the work of women or of men of colour. Which probably sounds try-hard, but has been invaluable in opening up my reading, widening my knowledge of history, etc, and discovering writers and works which I might otherwise never have tried. (It's similar to just trying to read outside your usual genre - lots of discoveries to be made.) A useful side-effect has been that even when it comes to white male authors (dead or alive :), I'm still reading more widely: saving favourites - Neal Stephenson, for example - as treats, rather than powering through their oeuvres to the exclusion of all else. Comparably, because I have to save room for non-white and non-male writers, I'm also more choosy about who I read: which is fine, there are a jillion classic novels written by white guys which I want to get under my belt, including the rest of George Orwell's stuff (I've never read "Animal Farm"!). I'm currently reading Solzhenitsyn's "Cancer Ward" - wonderfully black and funny - and I'm pretty sure I picked that up because I came across "One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich" at Eastwood library and it was thin. So random chance still plays its role as well. :) Anyway, what I sat down to type was this: both last year's Hugo winners and this year's anti-SP voting suggestions provide numerous possibilities for additions to the groaning "read me" shelf. (Partly groaning because William Gibson's fat "Peripherals" is still on it.) I read Ann Leckie's Hugo-and-everything-else-winning "Ancillary Justice" because a Sad Puppy said it won because it was written by a woman. It reminded me of nothing so much as the Larry Niven stuff I adored as a teen. :) So if those guys hate something lauded by others, it's a pointer that there might be something worth checking out. I'd like to be more involved, more political about all this, but right now it's more self-interest than anything else. I guess what I'm looking for these days is as much variety as possible, and listening to less-often-heard voices is a great way to do that.