Tag Archive: “variantfreq”
More Haiku Reviews
These aren’t really reviews so much as partial summaries (and spoilers).
Fuel Pressure by Dennis Egan (via Variant Frequencies 90)
Fatal asteroid
inspires escape for a few;
justice, undermined.
I view this as a parable about the value of communication and the risks of sabotage. Do you fully understand the actions and intents of those you would oppose, and have you made your meaning clear to those who would oppose you? Sometimes, the aims of rebellion can be achieved through cooperation. And sometimes not.
Naught but Ash by Anne Stringer (via Variant Frequencies 92)
No smell of spilled blood
plants doubts about a hanged man,
death, and those he killed.
Mob rule has no patience for details – and the Devil is in the details.
Got Milk? By John Alfred Taylor (via Pseudopod 160)
In gross communion,
doctor, wife, and world drink;
man’s black milk compels.
Some have asked why men have nipples. Here, the question is what a man should do if he sprouts a third or fourth and it starts to secrete some sinister oily goo. I’m not really sure; seeking medical care seemed like a good idea, but when your condition subverts most sensibilities and exerts dominion over all you know, your options are limited.
What’s realistic about this delightfully perverted dairy tale is that the real fright isn’t the abomination but the actions of the normal people who must confront it.
Chinatown by Greg van Eekhout (via PodCastle Miniature 47)
A thousand-year soup
brings business and greedy fiends;
brothers save the broth.
I love the idea of a soup that’s been kept simmering for generations. Eat some of it and add something to it every day; think of all the experience represented in that concentrated flavor.
Anyway, when the antagonist and his simian aides come to demand the soup, the cafe’s proprietor calls on her many brothers to defend the desired pot. Although they are each introduced with some peculiar power, it is simple smarts that save the day. In this way, the story’s neat delivery of a lesson reminds me of a fable.
Moral: common sense often offers a clever solution.
Wind from a Dying Star by David D. Levine (via Escape Pod 238)
Return home, Old John:
your tribe accompanies you,
in hunger, to Earth.
Here’s a far-future story of spacefaring “humans” who travel back to their place of ancestral origin, enduring hardship in order to provide companionship for their eldest, Old John. Sacrifice and revelations ensue.
What is the balance of material and emotional needs? The characters in Wind from a Dying Star must negotiate physical and social scarcity. As Escape Pod host Steve Eley notes, “the greatest crime in this tribe is to allow anyone to be alone.” Space is big, and it is mostly empty.
The Gambler by Paolo Bacigalupi (via StarShipSofa Aural Delights 121)
Celebrity pap
gives serious news long odds
in blitz media.
Initially I was concerned that this was one of those cyberpunk packets that reads like a gadget blog (you know the type – all hot and bothered about the internet, software licenses, and human interface accessories), but I plowed ahead and found it to be a good – even touching – story.
A gentle Laotian journalist, escaped from an oppressive regime, writes thoughtful environmental articles for a media conglomerate more interested in traffic generated by Russian rap scandals. Chastised, he has an opportunity to cash in on exclusive access to a Laotian starlet. But, annoyed by her complicity in the cycle of trash news, and inspired by his father, a gambler and resistance pamphleteer, he bets on another article about botany.
(Speaking of StarShipSofa, my Hugo post has attracted some discussion. I guess that’s what happens when you write something topical of broader interest than AppleScripts for Yojimbo. Hmm. Anyway, take a look!)
Posted on Sunday, February 28th, 2010.