(urth) Change of Topic: Latro

James Wynn crushtv at gmail.com
Mon Nov 3 18:13:58 PST 2008


Actually, I don't think Latro will ever get home until he passes through India, Micronesia, Columbia, Ireland, Britain, Germania, and Slavakia. I asked Wolfe once if he anticipated a wrap-up to the series and he said no.
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: PMorris33 at aol.com 
  To: urth at lists.urth.net 
  Sent: Monday, November 03, 2008 7:56 PM
  Subject: (urth) Change of Topic: Latro


  Does anyone know if a fourth book in the Soldier series is being contemplated?  After all, Latro has not been returned to his home.  

  In a message dated 11/3/2008 5:09:14 P.M. Pacific Standard Time, urth-request at lists.urth.net writes:
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    Today's Topics:

       1. Re:  AEG: Is AEG Lovecraftian? (Bryan Alexander)
       2.  Stingray (Nigel Price)
       3.  Stingray (Nigel Price)
       4. Re:  Stingray (James Wynn)
       5.  AEG: Is AEG Lovecraftian? (Nigel Price)
       6.  Stingray (Nigel Price)
       7. Re:  Stingray (Matthew Keeley)


    ----------------------------------------------------------------------

    Message: 1
    Date: Mon, 3 Nov 2008 17:10:48 -0500
    From: "Bryan Alexander" <bryan.alexander at gmail.com>
    Subject: Re: (urth) AEG: Is AEG Lovecraftian?
    To: "The Urth Mailing List" <urth at lists.urth.net>
    Message-ID:
        <a55c3dff0811031410h6cd912e8t9690b7f7b5bd81ba at mail.gmail.com>
    Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"

    I admit to bringing a Lovecraftian perspective to my reading of AEG.  That
    was due in part to various things I'd heard about the novel, which were then
    brought to mind with the HPL inscription.  So I suspected far more cosmic
    horror from various quarters, including the flapping creature, than I ended
    up with.
    My Phil Dick-style expectations were confirmed instead.

    On Mon, Nov 3, 2008 at 3:55 PM, Dave Tallman <davetallman at msn.com> wrote:

    > Kieran Mullen wrote:
    >
    >>  That needs a bit of explanation.   For a work to be Lovecraftian I  don't
    >> think it is simply sufficient to stick in Hastur and Cthulu and  call it
    >> that. Lovecraft (IMO) came up with a truly original  ontological horror
    >> premise for his fiction:  the universe is dominated  by inhuman forces which
    >> we don't have a hope of understanding or  defeating.  At best we can only
    >> hope that they ignore us.   (We can't  even pray that they do - there is no
    >> God, only atoms and a void).    Humanity is a minor irrelevance in a dark
    >> and hungry universe.  Any  attempt to try to change that will only draw the
    >> attention of forces  that will destroy the inquirer.
    >>
    >>
    > Given that Wolfe is a Christian I doubt very much that he would write a
    > work consistent with such a nihilistic Lovecraftian premise. But other
    > writers, such as August Derleth (also a Christian), have expanded the
    > Lovecraft universe to include a more classical view of good vs. evil. To me,
    > true horror cannot exist in a universe where our ideas of sanity and
    > goodness are a mere fluke, a cosmic joke. The efforts of the protagonists
    > become simply silly.
    >
    > But I don't think the Lovecraft parts are simply tacked on. From the
    > beginning Reis announced his intention to retire to the South Seas (p. 14).
    > This cannot be a coincidence. Reis may have learned something during his
    > time as ambassador to Woldercan. He may have realized there was a connected
    > menace on Earth and determined to fight it. To some degree his provoking a
    > fight between Squiddy and the Navy seems to have been a success. At the very
    > least the storms took out many Cthulhu worshipers on the neighboring
    > islands.
    >
    > Even Lovecraft allowed the forces of good to succeed sometimes, for example
    > in "The Dunwich Horror." Even he could not help rooting for humanity against
    > the monsters.
    >
    > _______________________________________________
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    -- 
    Bryan Alexander
    http://infocult.typepad.com/
    http://twitter.com/BryanAlexander
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    Message: 2
    Date: Mon, 3 Nov 2008 22:33:59 -0000
    From: "Nigel Price" <nigelaprice at talktalk.net>
    Subject: (urth) Stingray
    To: "Urth List" <urth at lists.urth.net>
    Message-ID: <AFEFKBJKJDDJOMBNACBNGEEMDNAA.nigelaprice at talktalk.net>
    Content-Type: text/plain;    charset="iso-8859-1"

    As I was writing about evil undersea cities and civilisations in AEG and the
    Urth Cycle, one part of my mind facetiously wandered and wondered whether
    Gene Wolfe had ever watched the Gerry Anderson puppet show "Stingray" in the
    1960s. As I thought whimsically about it, the parallels scattered through
    his books became stronger and stranger. Was Seawrack inspired by Marina? Was
    the idea of the US Navy attacking the Storm God inspired by the sight of
    Troy Tempest and the WASPs attacking Titan and his aquaphibian minions?

    No, of course not, it's a silly idea. It's not as if Wolfe ever refers to
    puppetry in his stories.

    Hang on there, wait a minute...

    What about that dream Severian has of the toy theatre and the marionette
    versions of himself and Baldander?

    Goodness! If I'm right, anything can happen in the next half hour...

    Nigel (in a playful mood)



    ------------------------------

    Message: 3
    Date: Mon, 3 Nov 2008 23:00:41 -0000
    From: "Nigel Price" <nigelaprice at talktalk.net>
    Subject: (urth) Stingray
    To: "Urth List" <urth at lists.urth.net>
    Message-ID: <AFEFKBJKJDDJOMBNACBNOEEMDNAA.nigelaprice at talktalk.net>
    Content-Type: text/plain;    charset="iso-8859-1"

    Weird but true: Gerry Anderson and Ray Harryhausen were both speakers at the
    1987 WorldCon in Brighton, England, which Gene and Rosemary Wolfe also
    attended.

    Did Wolfe hear Gerry Anderson talk about his work?

    Then again, for anyone interested in creating submarine squid deities,
    Harryhausen's amusing account of animating the six-limbed giant octopus in
    "It came from beneath the sea" might well have been inspirational. (The
    octopus only had six limbs because Harryhausen was on a tight budget and an
    even tighter timetable. Animating extra limbs takes time, and time is
    money!)

    Nigel (who is trying to write a serious analysis of AEG - coming soon - but
    keeps getting distracted by whimsical notions)



    ------------------------------

    Message: 4
    Date: Mon, 3 Nov 2008 17:57:00 -0600
    From: "James Wynn" <crushtv at gmail.com>
    Subject: Re: (urth) Stingray
    To: "The Urth Mailing List" <urth at lists.urth.net>
    Message-ID: <8349DBE9E74F4391A5D742992EE9395D at GATEWAY>
    Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed; charset="iso-8859-1";
        reply-type=original

    > No, of course not, it's a silly idea. It's not as if Wolfe ever refers to
    > puppetry in his stories.

    In The Book of the Short Sun, Horn remembers the following from his 
    childhood:

    "I once had a toy, a little wooden man in a blue coat who was moved by 
    strings. When I played with him, I made him walk and bow, and spoke for him. 
    I practiced until I thought myself very clever. One day I saw my mother 
    holding the two sticks that held his strings, and my little wooden man 
    saluting my youngest sister much more cleverly than I could have made him do 
    it, and laughing with his head thrown back, then mourning with his face in 
    his hands. I never spoke of it to my mother, but I was angry and ashamed."
    On Blue's Waters, pg. 158

    Soon he after he was assaulted by the triple-jawed leatherskin---an obvious 
    reference to Pinnochio's Dog-fish.

    J.




    ------------------------------

    Message: 5
    Date: Tue, 4 Nov 2008 00:04:01 -0000
    From: "Nigel Price" <nigelaprice at talktalk.net>
    Subject: (urth) AEG: Is AEG Lovecraftian?
    To: "Urth List" <urth at lists.urth.net>
    Message-ID: <AFEFKBJKJDDJOMBNACBNCEENDNAA.nigelaprice at talktalk.net>
    Content-Type: text/plain;    charset="iso-8859-1"

    Kieran Mullen asks...

    >>So what do you think?   Is AEG just  a romp
    >>through different genres or is it really meant
    >>to be a horror novel?

    No, I don't think that AEG is a Lovecraftian horror story in the sense that
    you define. As far as I understand - which is not very far at all - it
    borrows some Lovecraftian elements, but does not share their underlying
    philosophy, their "ontological horror premise" (great phrase!).

    I've read back through all the posts here on AEG and I've reread bits of the
    story but I still don't really understand how all the parts of the book fit
    together. I'm trying to work it out. The nature of Gideon Chase seems to be
    key. That in turn, because Gideon was born there and is probably a
    human-Woldercanese hybrid, is tied up with the moral status of the planet
    Woldercan.

    Wolfe depicts Woldercan as a place which has talking fish, dangerous
    forests, alchemy and different physics. The inhabitants superficially
    resemble humans but are subtly different. They can breed successfully with
    lower animals, including humans, and male Woldercaners try to seduce and
    mate with human females. All in all, Woldercan sounds more like Fairyland
    than a conventional science fiction alien planet. If it is a sort of SF
    Fairyland, that would make the Wolders fairies, or fairy analogues anyway.

    The moral status of fairies and Fairyland is moot in the European tradition.
    Sometimes they are morally equivalent to humans, with the "good" and "bad"
    fairies familiar in children's stories. Often, though, they are depicted as
    being amoral and "other", outside human schemes of morality and, when their
    stories get merged with the Christian tradition, outside the divine scheme
    of salvation.

    Yet another tradition, evident in stories like that of Tam Lin and some
    versions of Thomas the Rhymer, has Fairyland as a subsidiary dominion of
    Hell to which it pays tax (usually every seven years) in the form of human
    souls. Fairies in this tradition become similar to devils or demons.

    In the opening chapter of AEG, Gideon tells the President that there is no
    such thing as good and evil. His position seems to be that there is no such
    thing as absolute good or evil, only things that we ourselves disapprove of.
    If he means that no person is ever wholly good or wholly evil, he must
    surely be right. If he means that good and evil do not themselves exist,
    then, from Wolfe's perspective as a Christian, he must surely be wrong. He
    seems to mean both, which is confusing!

    Gideon's perspective is either that of an amoral alien, analogous to the
    amoral fairies I described above, with no human sense of good or evil, or he
    himself is evil and is deceiving others with his untruths, which makes him
    more of the "demonic" type of alien/fairy.

    Wolfe has stated in interviews that his starting point for AEG was the idea
    of a detective who was a wizard. Gideon is a wizard, and certainly the
    archetypal wizard, Merlin, is half-human and half-devil in some accounts of
    his parentage.

    By this account, Gideon is at best amoral and at worst positively evil.

    At the start of AEG, the President of the United States attempts to recruit
    Gideon to work with the FBI in catching Bill Reis. In many stories,
    certainly in the 1930s pulp stories which Wolfe is pastiching, this would
    make Gideon the good guy, an untouchable science fictional Eliot Ness. But
    there's a strong element of satire in AEG. The USA over which the President
    presides is a place where abortion has become legalised child murder, and
    where the various federal agencies fight an endless turf war against each
    other, possibly under the manipulative influence of demonic submarine
    aliens. The moral status of the President in this story is pretty cloudy,
    especially as we later come to see that Bill Reis himself may be far from
    being the evildoer the President claims. As the President's agent, Gideon's
    moral status is equally suspect.

    That's at the start of the story. Does Gideon change?

    I'm not clear in my own mind whether Bill Reis starts off bad but is changed
    by the transforming power of his love for Cassie, or whether he was always
    good and it just takes Cassie and the reader a long time to find the correct
    moral orientation within the confusing landscapes of AEG. I think that
    there's at least an element of the former because Bill Reis learned his
    alchemy and other tricks on the morally dubious Woldercan.

    Either way, Gideon's transforms Cassie into a star (her name, after all, is
    that of an astronomical star) and its her loveliness which captures both
    Gideon and Bill Reis' hearts. Somehow, this love helps to orientate all
    three of them. Cassie chooses to marry Bill and Gideon goes to work for him,
    although he doesn't seem to break his agreement with the President so much
    as suspend it.

    That seems to be one half of the story. Bill is inspired to self-sacrifice,
    Cassie loves the Christ-like Bill and Gideon is working, at least for the
    moment, for the good guys. Gideon may have transformed Cassie into a star in
    order to trap Reis, but the her power of beauty has transformed all three of
    them for the better.

    But the other half of the story seems to involve putting the bad guys into a
    properly inverted hierarchy of wickedness.

    Cassie's story of how she came to love the neighbour's dog is instructive in
    this context. Scared of the neighbour's dog but even more scared of her
    violently abusive father, she finds herself sheltering with the animal and
    accepting its protection. Her clear perception of the greater source of
    danger enables her to accept the dog just as she later accepts the help of
    the bat creatures which would otherwise have terrified her in order to
    escape the agents of the evil Storm God.

    The US Navy act as agents of the bad American President and pursue Bill Reis
    for his gold. Reis uses that gold, however, to direct them against the Squid
    God. If the US President, his navy and other agencies are not made virtuous
    as such, they are at least properly directed against the greater evil of the
    malevolent underwater alien.

    I still don't fully understand the ending. Why does Gideon return to
    Woldercan? Because it is his true home? Perhaps it's because the spell of
    Cassie's star quality has been broken and without it he has fallen from
    virtue back to his old immoral/amoral ways. I don't know what Cassie is
    looking for.

    As an allegory, AEG is confusing. But I don't think it is an allegory any
    more than it's Lovecraftian horror. It uses allegory, or has an allegorical
    dimension, but there's a lot more going on and the correspondences between
    characters and qualities seem to be dynamic rather than static.

    Nigel



    ------------------------------

    Message: 6
    Date: Tue, 4 Nov 2008 00:10:14 -0000
    From: "Nigel Price" <nigelaprice at talktalk.net>
    Subject: (urth) Stingray
    To: "Urth List" <urth at lists.urth.net>
    Message-ID: <AFEFKBJKJDDJOMBNACBNGEENDNAA.nigelaprice at talktalk.net>
    Content-Type: text/plain;    charset="iso-8859-1"

    Thanks for that, James. I'd forgotten about that marionette reference in
    OBW.

    There's the story "The Toy Theater" in TIoDDaOSaOS too. That's all about
    marionettes.

    I started this thread as a sort of joke on myself, but now I'm really
    beginning to wonder!

    Nigel



    ------------------------------

    Message: 7
    Date: Mon, 3 Nov 2008 20:08:43 -0500
    From: "Matthew Keeley" <matthew.keeley.1 at gmail.com>
    Subject: Re: (urth) Stingray
    To: "The Urth Mailing List" <urth at lists.urth.net>
    Message-ID:
        <44fb53d10811031708s57a39c09k508af7025e14b5bd at mail.gmail.com>
    Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1

    On Mon, Nov 3, 2008 at 7:10 PM, Nigel Price <nigelaprice at talktalk.net> wrote:
    > Thanks for that, James. I'd forgotten about that marionette reference in
    > OBW.
    >
    > There's the story "The Toy Theater" in TIoDDaOSaOS too. That's all about
    > marionettes.
    >
    > I started this thread as a sort of joke on myself, but now I'm really
    > beginning to wonder!
    >
    > Nigel
    >

    And "Strange Birds" from the chapbook of the same name. Have we ever
    discussed those two stories here? I thought they were pretty good, but
    I'm not sure how many people actually ordered the chapbook. Well at
    least Mr. Gevers read it:
    http://slaughterhousestudios.blogspot.com/2006/05/strange-birds-indeed.html

    Minor spoiler
    -
    -
    -
    -
    -
    -
    -
    -
    -
    "Strange Birds" actually features the return of Stromboli [sic?] from
    "The Toy Theater". I guess Wolfe does have a thing for puppets and
    puppeteers.

    -Matt


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