(urth) The Distant Suns of Gene Wolfe
Joel Sieh
joel.sieh at gmail.com
Fri Jun 1 13:08:21 PDT 2007
I'm glad I came back to read this thread after checking out that article.
It left me cold, and I was hoping I wasn't the only one.
New Sun is what got me into GW, and I discovered so much more when I started
reading this list years ago (just resubscribed and started reading it
again). The Soldier books didn't hold me quite as well as all the Sun
books, but I really enjoyed Soldier of Sidon.
I've talked up Wolfe to a number of people, and I've come across some people
who just didn't get tBotNS.... I was originally confused by them, but I
guess it just comes down to how hard you want to think about what you're
reading. For a while I thought that Gene Wolfe was a writer for writers.
I'm an aspiring sci-fi author, so this fit nicely with my world view.
However, when I tried to write like Wolfe in my creative writing classes in
college, I found that my fellow classmates and teachers missed all of the
clues in my stories that might imply an underlying idea or theme. I
determined that I was being too subtle, or just writing poorly in general.
However, it's also possible that I was wrong about Gene Wolfe being a writer
for writers. He's more than that. He's a writer for puzzle solvers. :)
--Joel
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