SF Writers Sting Supposedly Traditional Publisher 474
deeptrace writes "A group of SF writers all submitted purposely awful stories to a publisher that purported to publish only selected high quality works. They created the worst story they could come up with, and it was accepted for publication." Their press release is pretty funny -- and if you'd like a sample of their insane prose, it's available through the book's Lulu site. (Where, Yes, you could also buy the whole thing.)
Nothing new... (Score:2, Interesting)
with the people on one usenet group submitting intentionally
bad manuscripts to some company and get most of them
published?
Oh yeah, not first post!
Re:Nothing new... (Score:2)
Another fake paper was submitted to a humanities magazine deliberately written by a physicist as obstuse as possible.
Re:Nothing new... (Score:5, Informative)
I think you are referring to the Sokal Hoax [wikipedia.org]. The Sokal Hoax was more important, IMO, because it took place in the heart of academia, and was an attack on the abuses of post modernism, or at least on some of the people who practice such abuses. In the words of Alan Sokal (a physics professor at NYU):
If for no other reason, this hoax is important because it points to the deep cultural divide between the Sciences and the Humanities. I think that it's also a terrific flame war, taking place on the pages of the New York Times, newspapers around the world, as well as academic journals. (Sure, the Empire of Meow is great, but did they ever cross post to the NYT?)
Flame war is about right. (Score:5, Interesting)
If for no other reason, this hoax is important because it points to the deep cultural divide between the Sciences and the Humanities.
Sokal's hoodwinking of the editors and readers of Social Text is more complicated than the real split between what C. P. Snow termed "The Two Cultures" of humanites and science. The issue is in fact complicated enough that it does not compress into anything nearly attractive as the sensational claim that postmodern intellectuals don't know their anuses from a hole in the ground. Still, I'm going to try to point out ways that the popular reading of the Sokal affair ignores some important features of the events which led to the publication of Sokal's article as well as some important questions regarding the final signficance of the debate.
To start, one of the features regarding Sokal's hoax and also GLARINGLY ABSENT from the wikipedia entry [wikipedia.org] is the initial efforts by Social Text's editorial board to have Sokal revise his article. Andrew Ross and Bruce Robbins respond to Sokal's hoax in a subsequent issue of Lingua Franca (news of Sokal's hoax was published in May/June 1996 and Ross and Robbins' response in July/August 1996). That response does not seem to be available on the web, but from what I remember it details the dodgy back-and-forth of Sokal and Social Text's editors about publishing the article. Sokal refused to conduct any of the revisions and so the editors of Social Text--perhaps a touch too eager to have a scientist speak on matters normally of interest only to postmodern humanities scholars--published the article without revisions. As Jack Slater would say: "Big mistake."
In other words, the editors of Social Text smelled that the fish was bad, but ate it anyway. It wasn't so much that the article was considered a good one as much as the editors wanted the prestige of publishing a credentialed scientist's views regarding postmodernism, even if those views were a bit cranky.
The issue becomes much more complicated than Sokal's cheer of "egg on your face" circulated by the popular media (especially the web). For one, the editors of Social Text to this day maintain that Sokal's article does in fact have some good points, especially to the extent that it raises problems of authority and validity regarding how disciplines like science produce what is taken as knowledge and fact.
Some of Robbins' articles regarding the aftermath are available on the web, such as his "On Being Hoaxed [nyu.edu]" and a later article entitled "Anatomy of a Hoax. Both were originally published in separate issues of Tikkun"
The real points of this Sokal affair, in my opinion, are 1) a bad editorial decision was made by editors of a humanities journal, 2) Sokal's unethical trick is now enshrined and will probably be his greatest claim to fame as a "physicist," and 3) the primary tenets of postmodernism remain unchanged because it is too easy to see how culture and dogma shape what people perceive as truth, something that is true not only in religion, philosophy, and cultural studies, but also to some extent in the sciences.
A final real question which tends to get ignored is what would have happened if Sokal had waited a year or two before revealing his hoax. Would a humanities academic have given the lie to the nonsense? I'm guessing the answer is yes, but given the tendency to cull a quick headline from a very complicated series of events, such a question and many others simply get ignored.
Re:Flame war is about right. (Score:3, Insightful)
The tenets of postmodernism can change or not. From what standpoint are you going to argue that the
Why so angry? (Score:3, Informative)
it's pretty clear that postmodernist attacks on science are just penis envy from a pseudofield which has no purpose except to give people jobs.
You are clearly defensive about what postmodernism has to say regarding science. You need not be because a deeper understanding of what most postmodernist philosophy has to say about science cannot be characterized as "attacks on science." In particular, the postmodernist assertion that all human systems of knowledge, science included, are affected by dogma and c
Re:Nothing new... (Score:2)
Re:Nothing new... (Score:5, Informative)
I think parent is thinking of the Sokal hoax, in which Alan Sokal [nyu.edu], a physicist at NYU, wrote a completely non-sensical physics paper and submitted it to Social Text [jhu.edu], the leading journal of postmodern pseudo-intellectuals. Social Text accepted the paper and published it, thereby demonstrating their complete ignorance of modern science, which they purport to understand and be in a position to critique. Sokal then exposed their foolishness in a piece in Lingua Franca (sadly defunct). He has links to the hoax article, his Lingua Franca article, the statements by the editors of Social Text, and much other material here [nyu.edu]
Re:Nothing new... (Score:3, Informative)
A more accurate characterization is that Sokal, through deliberate fraud,and playing on his legitimate reputation within physics, got the _Social Text_ editors to publish an article that they themselves did not think was of high quality. But the editors felt that allowing a professional physicist to publish positions--which they presumed he was expressing, because he said exactly suc
Nice spin. (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm a graduate student, the lowest rung of professional academic, in a hard discipline. Before I submit a paper anywhere, I submit preprints to experts within whatever field I'm writing about. I do this because I know the journals will do the exact same thing, and it's far better on my reputation if my reviewers find them than if the journal finds them. I know that it doesn't matter if my name is Alan Matheson Turing or Paul Erdoes--whatever I or anyone else submits goes through a formal vetting process which involves having experts pore over my paper with a magnifying glass.
The Sokal Hoax had glaring errors, errors so large that a college senior in mathematics, economics or physics could have spotted them--not only spotted them, but conclusively proven them to be false.
Social Text didn't catch this. Does it really matter if they thought the paper was of poor quality? They published it, and by publishing it put their imprimatur on it. "Here," they said to the academic world, "read this, we think it's worth your time."
Social Text was right. It was worth my time, in that it demonstrated to me precisely why I'm going for a Ph.D. in a discipline where rigor and peer review actually mean something.
Re:Nice spin. (Score:3, Informative)
I wish this were always the case. Unfortunately, there certainly are cases where the senior author is famous and/or well-connected and can get a publication because of his name or connections. These articles range from very good (but might not have been high-profile without that ex
Re:Nice spin. (Score:3, Informative)
Never heard your PhD supervisor saying, "We'll submit it to *****, because my friend $friend is chairing it and they're bound to approve it"? It is a very common occurence. Pretty much the only person I know who doesn't do that is my current PhD supervisor, who's too bright to n
You have mischaracterised the situation (Score:5, Interesting)
The postmodernist literary criticism school of thought held that all forms of human understanding were best understood through the microscope of literary criticism. That is, literary symbols and imagery were supposedly a valuable way to study sociology (especially gender and race relations), politics, and even the 'hard' sciences such as physics.
So you had Jacques Lacan writing:
"Thus the erectile organ comes to symbolize the place of enjoyment, not in itself, or even in the form of an image, but as a part lacking in the desired image. [...] That is why it is equivalent to the square root of minus one of the signification produced above, of the enjoyment that it restores by the coefficient of its statement to the function of the lack of signifier -1."
Or, from Katherine Hayles, a proponent of the philosopher Luce Irigaray:
"The privileging of solid over fluid mechanics, and indeed the inability of science to deal with turbulent flow at all, she attributes to the association of fluidity with femininity. Whereas men have sex organs that protrude and become rigid, women have openings that leak menstrual blood and vaginal fluids... From this perspective it is no wonder that science has not been able to arrive at a successful model for turbulence. The problem of turbulent flow cannot be solved because the conceptions of fluids (and of women) have been formulated so as necessarily to leave unarticulated remainders."
In short, you mischaracterising Sokal's complaint and the whole point of his hoax.
For more details, please see this book review [stephenjaygould.org] by Richard Dawkins.
Re:Nothing new... (Score:3, Insightful)
An intellectually honest journal will NEVER rely upon the credentials or reputation of a paper's author.
What Sokal did was actually science: he formed a hypothesis ("The _Social Text_ editors don't know what they're talking about"), made a prediction ("so they will accept bogus papers"), and tested that prediction. And then he published his results, much to the _Social Text_
Re:Nothing new... (Score:5, Insightful)
Just for the record, Social Text is not peer reviewed, nor did it ever claim to be. Quite the opposite. However, they could still have checked the science.
The only thing that Alan Sokal's credentials got him (and should have gotten him) was his foot in the door of Social Text. The reason they published his parody was because it pandered to their ideological bias.
The grandparent poster unfortunately has let the academic apologists of Social Text brainwash her (or him), rather than examine the evidence objectively.
Had the _Social Text_ editors not been charlatans, they would not have even been harmed by this experiment.
Had they not been charlatans, they would have admitted their goof and engaged in some self reflection. Instead, they circled the wagons.
Re:Nothing new... (Score:3, Interesting)
_Social Text_ is not peer reviewed for a reason. They believe (and still do) that by not having a peer review process they will get more creative and innovative articles published, because the peer review process is just a mechanism for protecting and extending current scientific orthodoxy.
Re:Nothing new... (Score:5, Interesting)
It's true that Sokal doesn't really understand modern science studies and postmodernism.
He apparently understood enough to fool the editorial collective at Social Text and demonstrate their intellectual dishonesty. They were the real frauds in this case, which was proven not so much by the publishing of the parody, but by their responses afterwards. And by supporting and repeating the accusation that Sokal is the fraudster, you've brought your own intellectual honesty into question. You're buying into ideological fundamentalism that is just as corrupt as the Christian or Islamic equivalents.
Social Text was hoisted on it's own (Lacanian) absence of the Father, if you will.
I am a legitimate expert in a number of things, for example. I could certainly get journals or magazines concerned with other subjects to publish my deliberately misleading characterizations of those subjects I know, particularly if they were journals in other areas that had an interest in cross-discipline discussion. So what?
So maybe those journals lack integrity? Besides which, Sokal didn't write "misleading characterizations", he wrote things which were blatantly and obviously and absurdly (to even an undergraduate) false as part of his parody.
Perhaps you are so blinded by the text that you cannot read the words.
Re:Nothing new... (Score:3, Insightful)
They deferred to someone who really was in a position to share expert knowledge, and put it in a context of postmodernist theory.
But that's the whole point of peer review: you find someone who is expert enough to judge the new work.
Your drivel is written like a true postmodernist. On the one hand, you feel in a position to make pronouncements about subjects you know nothing about. And on the other hand, you deflect all criticisms of postmodernism, on the grounds that they are made by non-experts. Funn
Re:Nothing new... (Score:3, Insightful)
As other posters have already shown, my characterization of the Sokal Hoax was entirely accurate. The only deception on the part of Sokal was that he did not explicitly inform the editors of Social Text, at the time he submitted the paper, that he did not sincerely believe in its content. That was of course necessary in order to carry out his experiment. Since the good of demonstrating that the emperor has no clothes outweighs a minor and temporary deception, I consider his behavior to have been ethical. T
From the site (Score:2)
Re:From the site (Score:3, Funny)
Do they mean the manuscript or Slashdot?
Should have let them publish it.... (Score:2)
Great preview, but (Score:2)
"just monitor his sign's". Ha ha. Soooo sexy.
Re:Great preview, but (Score:2)
http://critters.critique.org/sting/
Re:Great preview, but (Score:3, Informative)
http://critters.critique.org/sting/ [critique.org]
Re:Great preview, but (Score:3, Informative)
I think we're cheating 30-odd authors out of their hard-earned five cents or so of royalties each if we get the PDF instead of buying the book. Think how many milliliters of Starbucks Coffee that represents, and buy a copy or ten to support pranks everywhere.
And Starbucks.
oh thats easy (Score:5, Funny)
Re:oh thats easy (Score:5, Funny)
Re:oh thats easy (Score:4, Insightful)
It may have seemed plausible, but man was it ever fucking boring. I'm glad I didn't pay to read any of them. I only read the third one because of inertia, something that will never be repeated for the third Dune prequel.
No surprise here. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:No surprise here. (Score:5, Funny)
I know! I know! The correct answer is: "multiple times", right?
Slashdot editoral process ? (Score:5, Funny)
Weird acronym use (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Weird acronym use (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Weird acronym use (Score:2)
Re:Weird acronym use (Score:2)
SF is broader than sci-fi (Score:2, Interesting)
The abbreviation "SF" for speculative fiction arguably includes fantasy as well.
Re:SF is broader than sci-fi (Score:5, Funny)
Re:SF is broader than sci-fi (Score:2)
Re:Weird acronym use (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Weird acronym use (Score:2)
Re:Weird acronym use (Score:5, Informative)
To understand, think "Linux" vs. "GNU/Linux".
Re:Weird acronym use (Score:5, Funny)
When you put it that way, it makes me really care what the sci-fi community wants to be called.
Because traditionaly it is SF (Score:2)
Re:Weird acronym use (Score:2)
Re:Weird acronym use (Score:5, Interesting)
A few old timers still feel the same way, but those who were still in diapers when the original "Star Wars" first appeared on the big screen have grown up with "sci fi". "SF", though, is still easier to say and shorter to write.
Re:Weird acronym use (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Weird acronym use (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Weird acronym use (Score:4, Interesting)
Why ever not? "SF" as a term is an Americanism. Over here in Blighty the term "SciFi" is almost exclusively used (I can certainly never remember anyone I've met using the term "SF" with repect to Science Fiction, and I've reading Sci-Fi for over 30 years). I know what it means through exposure to US culture, but is someone in the street asked me "Did I like SF?" I'd assume that they were taking about my visit to San Fransisco, mainly because you'd expect someone talking to you to have the same cultural context.
As far as the headline goes, without the context of "writers" and "publishers" then the headline would have been confusing to me. What would the average slashdotter have made of "SF Group Sting Supposedly Traditional Business"? My parsing would have been to do with San Fransisco, and not to fiction. "Sci-Fi group
So I hope that this post has been the dog's bollocks and you have given a monkey's and got to the end. I still think it is odd that the mere use of a term can give some people the screaming abdabs - it's not particularly chav. I'd suggest that they relax, skin up a fag, and perhaps roast some faggots. It's not like we're all from north of Watford.
Pip pip old bean
Editorial quotes... (Score:3, Informative)
My Review of "Atlanta Nights" (Score:2, Funny)
Precedent (Score:5, Informative)
Follow a publishers formula = get published. (Score:5, Insightful)
Like here at slashdot there isn't a variety of styles mingling. One theory has won the darwinian battle and thus realising it they have gamed that system.
Entropy is a law after all.
Re:Follow a publishers formula = get published. (Score:2)
Re:Follow a publishers formula = get published. (Score:2)
Re:Follow a publishers formula = get published. (Score:3, Insightful)
Today's statistics:
Karma-whore: 377
Genuinely thoughtful post: 104
Troll: 305
Whine: 27
Rejected due to not fitting into the above categories: 2055
Please note that your vague reference to the article nearly got your post rejected. Try to be more like the other people in your category in the future.
Thank
Re:Follow a publishers formula = get published. (Score:3, Funny)
Vanity publishers (Score:5, Informative)
I always felt bad, though, because he put together a book and found some vanity publisher to publish it for him. He apparently didn't know how the publishing business worked, though, because he was convinced that he was being published for real, and that the book would be his ticket to fame and fortune. I remember him being very excited when they "accepted" his book, and would publish it as soon as he came up with $4000. He then started hitting up everyone he knew to "invest" in his book, which he was sure would be a bestseller. I never had the heart to explain to him that real publishers pay you when they put out your book.
Naked Came The Stranger (Score:5, Informative)
The funny thing was that the book was published and then became so popular and the money grew so much that they spilled their guts and told the world about the hoax.
preview (Score:3, Informative)
Whispering voices.
Pain.
Pain. Pain. Pain.
Need pee--new pain--what are they sticking in me? . .
Sleep.
Pain.
Whispering voices.
"As you know, Nurse Eastman, the government spooks controlling this hospital will not permit me to give this patient the care I think he needs."
"Yes, doctor." The voice was breathy, sweet, so sweet and sexy.
"We will therefore just monitor his sign's. Serious trauma like this patient suffered requires extra care, but the rich patsies controlling the hospital will make certain I cannot try any of my new treatments on him."
"Yes, doctor." That voice was soooo sexy! Bruce didn't care about treatments. He cared about pain, and he cared about that voice, because when he heard the voice, the pain went away, just for a few seconds, like.
Re:preview (Score:5, Funny)
Whispering voices.
Pain.
Pain. Pain. Pain.
Need pee--new pain--what are they sticking in me? . .
Sleep.
Pain.
Whispering voices.
Woah.. slow down... is this a preview of the story, or a first hand account of reading the front page of Slashdot?
Re:preview (Score:3, Funny)
The initial few; a mere trampling by a few hundred people, commenting amongst themselves before the story goes live to the masses
The slashdotting. Lots of people, the server is trampled into jelly
until the admins pull the plug.
Afterwards, a few people looking at the site, some commenting, the se
Re:preview (Score:2, Funny)
Re:preview (Score:2)
Oh well, Slashdot, Vogons it's all the same.
Except that on Slashdot you keep coming back for more. Addictive Vogon poetry. That will be the day
Re:preview (Score:5, Funny)
Aieee!!! Feral apo'strophes. Oh noe's th'ey're spr'ead'ing !!!'!' G'et the'm o'ff!!''!'
TH'E'Y'RE A'LI''V'E''''''''''''''''''''''
Re:preview (Score:3, Funny)
I've seen better writing from bad high school students. Though, on the flip side, it's likely on par with most of the romance novels out there.
Oh, what suffering.
Ironically... (Score:2)
You know how dumb the average american is, just remember, statistically, half of them are even dumber.
Re:Ironically... (Score:2)
Re:Ironically... (Score:3, Insightful)
more information (Score:3, Informative)
Re:more information (Score:2)
Love the name... (Score:2, Funny)
Karma Ho'in (Score:2)
--------------
Atlanta Nights
by
Travis Tea
Chapter 1
Pain.
Whispering voices.
Pain.
Pain. Pain. Pain.
Need pee--new pain--what are they sticking in me? . .
Sleep.
Pain.
Whispering voices.
"As you know, Nurse Eastman, the government spooks controlling this hospital will not permit me to give this patient the care I think he needs."
"Yes, doctor." The voice was breathy, sweet, so sweet and sexy.
"We will therefore just mon
coming soon (Score:3, Funny)
it dosen't hold a candle... (Score:2, Informative)
I can't wait (Score:2)
Here's another explanation... (Score:2, Funny)
Actually, I'll amend that: reading nearly any science fiction is like eating flan, but reading Neal Stephenson is like eating flan from between Jennifer Connelly's breasts while you're high.
Re:Here's another explanation... (Score:2)
Re:Here's another explanation... (Score:3, Funny)
Flan or flarn?
Watching Star Trek is like eating flarn. Watching B5 is like eating flarn out from between Mira Furlann and Claudi*ahem*, uh, never mind. We have always eaten flarn.
PublishAmerica is a Known Fraud (Score:5, Informative)
Samuel Beckett: Rejected (Score:2, Interesting)
Sorry, Mr. Beckett, but you need a more coherent story.
An alternative weekly sent [eye.net] stories by famous writers (Beckett, Garcia Marquez, Angela Carter) out to 20 literary magazines under different names. 12 were rejected and 8 got no reply. Choice quotes from the rejection letters:
and
What's the point? (Score:2)
Re:What's the point? (Score:4, Interesting)
It may be really bad use of the english language, consistently transposing the words 'to', 'too', and 'two'. It may be telling the story in one long paragraph, possibly with chapter marks every 2000 characters. There are many other possible indicators that a story is either written poorly, or is otherwise not worthy of the time necessary to read it, or for that matter spend money on it.
The publication process, outside of vanity press, makes a very strong effort to weed out the stories that are submitted that carry those indicators. They know that if they print it, distribute it, and try to get book stores to sell it, they are going to have two things happen: Extreamly low sales, with high returns; and customers writing letters (to the publisher, newspapers, etc.) rightfully berating the publisher for letting the story see the light of day.
If a writer deliberatly writes a bad story, gets it printed in a vanety press, then lets the public know that the vanity press is doing this sort of stuff, while claiming to be part of the legitimate publishing business, the publishing house pretty much deserves the reputation it is going to get.
You can bet that the author has gone through 'The Elements of Grammar' and 'The Elements of Style', to make a concerted effort to violate every rule of writing they can. I suspect that they had some fun doing it as well.
If they spent $10,000 in the process, I would suspect that to them it has roughly the value of a vacation to you or me.
No I have no illusions that abiding by every rule from the 'Elements' collection insures a good story. Nor do I believe that violations are a sure indication of a poor story.
Enjoy,
-Rusty
Here's the whole thing: (Score:2)
Now can anyone tell us who the SF authors are?
Re:Here's the whole thing: (Score:2)
Re:Here's the whole thing: (Score:5, Interesting)
"Bruce walked around any more. Some people might ought to her practiced eye, at her. I am so silky and braid shoulders. At sixty-six, men with a few feet away form their languid gazes. I know I was hungry, and impelling him lying naked. She slowly made for a man could join you I know what I ought to take you probably should have. He wants it worriedly. About think what to wear? "
Re:Here's the whole thing: (Score:4, Insightful)
Might have been written by computer, but it reads like it was translated through The Fish a few times...
c.
Re:Here's the whole thing: (Score:3, Informative)
It was a dark and stormy night (Score:4, Funny)
--Edward George Bulwer-Lytton, Paul Clifford (1830)
Yes yes, karma-whoring again, go ahead and say it.
The Woodside Literary Agency (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm surprised noone has brought up The Woodside Literary Agency.
The Woodside Literary Agency spammed certain Usenet newsgroups looking for authors.
For a fee, they would represent an author to get his work published.
They apparently never met a manuscript they didn't like.
So some of the participants in one of the misc.writing newsgroup had a contest to see if anyone could get a manuscript rejected.
For example, see Even Hitler got the blues [tripod.com]
ATLANTA NIGHTS: Details From a Contributor (Score:5, Informative)
Yes, I am one of the thirty-odd writers who collectively make up "Travis Tea," a pseudonym (and a pun -- say it outloud). :-)
Here is some background on this wacky collaborative sting project [critique.org] that we cobbled together.
Several months ago, in response to a claim by a certain publisher that writers working in the SF/F genre believe it "does not require believable storylines" or "does not need believable every-day characters," genre writer James D. Macdonald [sff.net] got approximately 40 mostly science fiction and fantasy writers to cobble together an intentionally horrendous monstrosity of a novel (read it here as an FTP download in RTF [sff.net] and PDF [critique.org] format) and then submit it, in order to display the less than discriminating tastes of that same certain publisher in regard to the kind of work they accept for publication.
Earlier last week, the sting has been revealed, the publisher fell for it (retracting the acceptance as soon as news spread, of course), and I proudly own up to having authored Chapter 13 of ATLANTA NIGHTS by Travis Tea [lulu.com].
Here's a bit of an excerpt from my chapter:
Yes, you can even buy your own copy at Lulu.com [lulu.com] to read for gut-wrenching hilarity and educational purposes (lessons on how not to write can be derived from the perusal of this book). Here is the stellar lineup of blurbs [veranazarian.com] from the back cover. And that's just the ones that fit the back cover. There are twice as many additional blurbs inside the front matter of the book. Some of them are truly classic....
I predict this will replace THE EYE OF ARGON [dyndns.org] as midnight panel reading material at science fiction conventions. This book, is purely and genuinely bad. So bad that it's great. In all seriousness, The Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest [bulwer-lytton.com] should give it a special achievement prize. :-)
For more detailed coverage, including a list of contributors, of the ATLANTA NIGHTS atrocity -- or should we say, travesty -- see the Cold Ground blog [typepad.com], and Tor Books editor Teresa Nielsen Hayden's Making [nielsenhayden.com] Light [nielsenhayden.com]. ..
Also, looks like the LA Times has picked up the story [calendarlive.com].
Vera Nazarian
Re:The Press Release Text (Score:3, Funny)
Re:old news (Score:5, Insightful)
The same thing that's been wrong for years: people who don't understand that something that happened a few days ago - even a few weeks ago - is still news.
Great, you heard about it days ago, doubtless you monitor all sorts of websites and cable news channels 24/7 and know everything before the rest of us. Congratulations, you win. But those of us who occasionally turn away from the various glass teats appreciate hearing about things that may have happened more than five minutes ago.
Re:So what are they trying to prove? (Score:2)
MOD PARENT UP! (Score:2)
Re:My wife is writing a fantasy novel (Score:5, Informative)
You have to scroll down a bit, and there's a lot there to read, but believe me, it's worth it. Teresa knows what she's talking about.
Re:Da Vinci? (Score:3, Insightful)
"The Da Vinci Code" sure does sell, but I don't see it winning any literary awards. There is quality and there is quantity, where the Da Vinci code fits in is an exercise f
Re:Da Vinci? (Score:5, Insightful)
The pot-boiler writing is irritating enough without the wildly erroneous 'science'. Indeed, the 'science' in A&D is so laughable no one could be fooled by it. For example, the Big Bang was caused by [taa, daaa]
Re:Da Vinci? (Score:5, Insightful)
Think "Days of our Lives" in Friends: close-up on character's face as they make a horrifying realisation, background music swells to jarring chord, fade to black and "To be continued...". It works a few times, it just gets annoying after a while.
I know it's pulp fiction, but there's far better pulp fiction out there: early Michael Crichton, for example.
Re:Da Vinci? (Score:3, Insightful)
Apart from the fact it's unreadable, due to Dan Brown's utter incompetance as a writer?
Although, to be fair, it might be better than "Digital Fortress".