James Tiptree, Jr.
James Tiptree, Jr: The Double Life of Alice B. Sheldon (2006) is a biography of a revered science fiction author, written by Julie Phillips. Unlike o
ther female creators that I have heard of, Sheldon took her male Tiptree persona far into her real life.
Tiptree was a science fiction writer, and I have been reading a bit of science fiction lately (
as you can see in previous posts). When I read about Tiptree, it reminded me of the
Omni magazines I read as a child.
Tiptree wrote a number of stories that are still cropping up in recent science fiction (SF) anthologies. He was the type of writer whose work other writers admired.
Sheldon led an adventurous life and had experience that most women of her time may not have had (safari adventurer as a child, psychologist, special services analyst) as she was born in 1915. She found that writing as a man (Tiptree) and cloaking her views under the veil of science fiction allowed her to express what she seemed to find otherwise inexpressible.
The next stop for me is reading some of Tiptreeās works. Sadly I had not heard of (or perhaps had not remembered) Tiptree before reading this biography.
Labels: biography, nonfiction, Phillips, sciencefiction, Sheldon
Patternmaster
Patternmaster (1976) by
Octavia Butler is a science fiction tale of telepaths in the race to suceed their aging leader. Butler
is (was) one of
my favorite SF writers. I have
posted on her books before.
Others love her too. Her books are always interesting and sometimes plainly weird. I love them. I saw her speak a couple of times and am richer for her words.
The Patternmaster is the leader of the Patternists, the telepaths, and he is getting up there in years. In addition to the Patternists, there are the Mutes, people like you and I who are not telepathic (I am not telepathic, but perhaps, dear reader, you are), and there are the Clayarks, who are part human, and part lion, and have great speed and strength. None of the types of beings gets along especially well with any of the others. Two of the Patternmaster's sons, Coransee and Teray find that they cannot both be alive and live in peace and so they struggle to find which of them will take over from the Patternmaster when he dies.
This is a fun and quick read that challenges assumptions about our daily life while entertaining. No shocking surprises here.
Butler writes so that her fictional world is easy to accept, but then you realize that, hey, this is making me think about my world.
Labels: Butler, fiction, sciencefiction, struggle