|  06-26-2019, 02:13 AM | #2866 | |
| Enthusiast            Posts: 41 Karma: 97308 Join Date: Jun 2011 Device: PRS650, Kobo touch, PRS-T1 | Quote: 
 He absolutely _hated_ that film, and excoriated whoever was responsible for that twist. He named the name, but it escapes me now. However I do recall him noting that whoever it was "rapes puppies at midnight". I still, somewhere, have my autographed (and by now very battered) copy of "Bill the Galactic Hero" from that evening. He wrote "Bill Lives!" above his signature. | |
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|  06-27-2019, 11:15 AM | #2868 | |
| Gentleman and scholar            Posts: 11,499 Karma: 111164374 Join Date: Jun 2015 Location: Space City, Texas Device: Clara BW; Nook ST w/Glowlight, Paperwhite 3 | Quote: 
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|  06-27-2019, 03:13 PM | #2869 | |
| Testate Amoeba            Posts: 3,049 Karma: 27300000 Join Date: Sep 2012 Device: Many Android devices, Kindle 2, Toshiba e755 PocketPC | Quote: 
 Bringing up Blade Runner again, I don't know how Philip K. Dick would have felt about the movie, but there was the same sort of philosophical reversal from the book. In the book, androids couldn't empathize and thus could never be genuinely human. Even a mentally slow human was more human and more heroic than a genius android. In the movie, the situation was reversed. Replicants, despite having intentionally short lifespans and incomplete memories, cherished and valued first their own humanity and then, in the twist ending, the humanity of another as much as or more than a genuine human would. "You gotta tell 'em! Soylent Green is made from nonrenewable resources! Nonrenewable!" | |
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|  06-27-2019, 05:35 PM | #2870 | |
| Gentleman and scholar            Posts: 11,499 Karma: 111164374 Join Date: Jun 2015 Location: Space City, Texas Device: Clara BW; Nook ST w/Glowlight, Paperwhite 3 | Quote: 
 Thing is, I agree with what you represent as Harrison's attitude towards government vs. individual decision making. If anything, in Soylent Green, the truth isn't so much kept from the public due to maliciousness, as to protect them from how bleak things have gotten. Much like we take off our shoes at the airport not because it accomplishes anything, but because it makes the public feel like something is being done. All this talk about that movie. I guess I ought to watch it again soon. | |
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|  06-28-2019, 06:04 AM | #2871 | |
| Avid reader            Posts: 897 Karma: 6543210 Join Date: Apr 2009 Location: UK Device: Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 6 / Kindle Paperwhite / TCL Nxtpaper 14 | Quote: 
 Andrew | |
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|  06-28-2019, 09:45 AM | #2872 | |
| Testate Amoeba            Posts: 3,049 Karma: 27300000 Join Date: Sep 2012 Device: Many Android devices, Kindle 2, Toshiba e755 PocketPC | Quote: 
 Jim was (I think) a government agent that had once been a criminal. The bureaucracy was well-meaning, but had too much inertia to react to an evil genius, so there was a secret agency that specifically dealt with them. Jim was the hero because he used his talents to help society rather than for individual gain. Harrison also had a soft spot in general for villains that became good guys and I seem to recall that's how Jim found his wife. I think. Now I need to dig those out and read them again. They were actually my introduction to Harrison's books and I didn't notice the pro-government sentiments the first time I read them. It was one of his short stories (something about airlifting toilets to a non-technological village? I Googled for it, but couldn't find it) where his political thought was much more in-your-face that made me start looking deeper into the other ones. | |
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|  06-28-2019, 10:27 AM | #2873 | 
| Wizard            Posts: 1,224 Karma: 3804496 Join Date: Feb 2012 Location: Ottawa, Ontario, Canada Device: Kobo Libra 2, Lenovo Tab M10 FHD Plus, Lenovo Tab M9 | 
			
			I don't have a lot of the Stainless Steel Rat books, (I have four) but the ones I remember best are "A Stainless Steel Rat is Born" and "The Stainless Steel Rat Gets Drafted." Jim DiGriz becomes a criminal mainly because he's bored. The universe is basically a utopia. Government is basically a force of nature, neither good nor evil. It simply *is*, and the vast majority of the populace have safe (and to Jim, very dull) lives.
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|  06-28-2019, 11:23 AM | #2874 | 
| Gentleman and scholar            Posts: 11,499 Karma: 111164374 Join Date: Jun 2015 Location: Space City, Texas Device: Clara BW; Nook ST w/Glowlight, Paperwhite 3 | 
			
			Speaking of Harry Harrison, I've always wanted to read A Transatlantic Tunnel, Hurrah! There doesn't appear to be a digital version. But I thought there was. Are my memories mistaken, or did it go OOP?
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|  06-28-2019, 11:44 AM | #2875 | 
| Genre Jumper            Posts: 1,070 Karma: 11070900 Join Date: Dec 2015 Device: Kindle paperwhite | |
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|  06-28-2019, 11:49 AM | #2876 | |
| Bibliophagist            Posts: 48,089 Karma: 174315300 Join Date: Jul 2010 Location: Vancouver Device: Kobo Sage, Libra Colour, Lenovo M8 FHD, Paperwhite 4, Tolino epos | Quote: 
 Edit: just checked and Kobo and Amazon.co.uk show it but only for UK. | |
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|  06-28-2019, 12:16 PM | #2877 | 
| eBook Enthusiast            Posts: 85,560 Karma: 93980341 Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: UK Device: Kindle Oasis 2, iPad Pro 10.5", iPhone 6 | 
			
			Unfortunately, most of Gateway’s books are unavailable in the US due to rights issues. Most should be available in non-US countries, however, so I’d be surprised if this book were only to be available in the UK.
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|  06-28-2019, 12:28 PM | #2878 | ||
| Readaholic            Posts: 5,306 Karma: 90981752 Join Date: Sep 2011 Location: South Georgia Device: Surface Pro 6 / Galaxy Tab A 8" | Quote: 
 Quote: 
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|  06-28-2019, 12:28 PM | #2879 | 
| Gentleman and scholar            Posts: 11,499 Karma: 111164374 Join Date: Jun 2015 Location: Space City, Texas Device: Clara BW; Nook ST w/Glowlight, Paperwhite 3 | |
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|  06-28-2019, 08:17 PM | #2880 | |
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 11,546 Karma: 37057604 Join Date: Jan 2008 Device: Pocketbook | Quote: 
 See http://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/ea.cgi?28 In The Collection Stainless Steel Visions My library has around 60 or so Harrison short stories in it. For Harrison's take on Hollywood, read Technicolor Time Machine Last edited by Greg Anos; 06-28-2019 at 08:32 PM. | |
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