Hugo ballot go BOOM

by Doctor Science

Last year’s attempt by the “Sad Puppies” to take over the Hugo Awards turns out to have been the warm-up act. This year, they succeeded (at least partway). Oy.

Let me sum up:

1. Last year Larry Correia put together the “Sad Puppies 2” slate, ostensibly to broaden the field of works nominated for the Hugo to counteract leftist “groupthink” by the usual nominators. A subset of the SP2 slate made it onto the final Hugo ballot.

2. I had a Supporting Membership for the Hugos last year, and read (or tried to read) everything nominated. My conclusion:

None of the Sad Puppies’ horses is fit to race. The only ones I can call reasonably competent works of fiction are Correia’s novel and Dan Wells’ “The Butcher of Khardov”. They also read way too much like re-tellings of unfamiliar video games, and lack the most important quality Hugo voters are looking for, world-building. They are, at best, B level works, not the kind of thing I think *anyone* would want associated with “Hugo Award Winning”.

Both of Brad Torgerson’s stories are shockingly badly-edited with regard to basic grammar, punctuation, and sentence-structure. “The Chaplain’s Legacy” might have become a decent story in another couple of drafts, under the whip of a stern yet understanding editor. Vox Day’s story is also technically very poor, and then there’s the fact that a lot of Hugo voters really, honestly dislike him.

3. This year there were two, largely overlapping “conservative” slates: Sad Puppies 3, put together by Brad Torgerson, and Rabid Puppies 2015, by Vox Day. The result: the Best Novella, Novelette, Short Story, Related Work, Editor (Long Form), and Editor (Short Form) categories contain *only* Puppies nominees, all others have been shut out. Only two non-Puppies are in the Best Novel category and in the two Dramatic Presentations, and there’s only one each for Pro Artist, Fanzine, Fan Writer, and the Campbell Award.

4. BOOM. More links: FWOOOMP. I’ve been participating at Making Light, Crooked Timber, and Whatever.

5. My Opinions, Which Are Mine:

A. Elizabeth Bear, abi sutherland, many commenters at Making Light, and especially Cat (in a comment she cross-posted widely) have persuaded me that slates wreck the process of voting for awards. Slates are useful and often necessary when you’re voting for people who need to work with each other (= politics), but they’re destructive to the process of choosing excellence. Slates narrow the field radically, and let (or force) voters to make their choices other than from their own personal perspective, which is naturally idiosyncratic.

B. The people linked in A are among the many arguing that the only way to save the Hugo Awards system is to put *any* work, however worthy, that was on a slate below “No Award”. Being on a slate (of your own free will) must be an unconditional disqualification, or else we’ll end up with competing slates — which will be the very opposite of choosing works on the basis of quality. Generally speaking, I’m persuaded by this argument, and that’s what I’ll be doing. I’m really sorry, Guardians of the Galaxy.

C. What’s kind of stunning to me is how resolutely the Puppies have ignored issues of *quality* in assembling and arguing for their slate. Last year’s slate was unbelievably, insultingly weak — and I say that as someone whose fiction reading is mostly fanfic. I know a *lot* about bad writing, but I also know the difference between “bad, but I like it” and “objectively well-crafted”. Since Torgerson put together the SP3 slate, I feel safe dismissing it out of hand — he’s demonstrated that he doesn’t have the minimum level of competence at English-wrangling necessary to pick lists of “the best stories”.

I often enjoy things that aren’t even trying for excellence, but that’s not what awards are *for*. Part of what bemuses me about the Puppies is that having high standards, believing in excellence, thinking that there are objective standards of value that don’t have anything to do with popularity — these are all things I associate with traditional conservatism. And yet the Puppies seem to be doubling down on a pugnacious rejection of high literary standards — and, in their work, even such bourgeois affectations as grammar.

D. Another reason I won’t vote for anything touched by the Puppies is that two of the most prominent people involved — indeed, the two most likely to benefit from the slate — are IMHO actually evil.

As a rule, I don’t believe in calling a person “evil”. Every human is capable of evil actions as well as good ones, you can’t split people into neat “good” and “bad” piles.

However. Sometimes there are people who are pretty consistent about doing evil and seem to be proud of it, so it’s fair to just cut to the chase and say they’re evil people. If they do something nice, then you can be surprised.

Cut for some pretty disgusting, hateful language.

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Cross-fertilization in the spring

by Doctor Science It’s actually spring! Except the forsythia aren’t even really blooming yet and I’m not seeing many crocuses, much less daffodils. This is *very* odd and even disturbing for central NJ: I can usually count on daffodils from the garden for Passover. If you’ve never been to a Seder, you may not be … Read more

How to tell Classical from Neo-Classical sculpture

by Doctor Science

This picture has been going around tumblr:

Veiled-vestal-320
sparking a discussion of “how do sculptors even *do* that?” and many pictures of Bernini works. Along the way, someone labeled this one “a Vestal Virgin, carved during the Roman Empire”. I immediately recognized that this was wrong.

The work is by Raffaelle Monti, a 19th-century Italian sculptor who created it in 1846-47.

I’m not sure what, exactly, makes me say the Monti sculpture is obviously 19th-C, while the Louvre statue of Aphrodite aka Venus Genetrix, also discussed in the thread, looks more authentically ancient.

Cut for images containing classical and artistic nudity — very likely to be NSFW.

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Limes and Planes

by Doctor Science

Mister Doctor and I were driving down a winding road the other day, and he asked me what the beautiful shade trees along it were. “Sycamores”, I said, “what in Europe are called plane trees.” He confessed that when he was young and heard of “plane trees” he was befuddled, not knowing if the grownups were talking about “just plain trees”, or trees that had something to do with airplanes, or if they were flat, or grew on the plains, or what. We also talked about how confusing it can be when British and American English have two different words for the same thing, and I said I was confused for years by British books that referred to “limes” as large European shade trees. Mister Doctor had just assumed they meant citrus trees, but I said no, they’re actually linden trees.

I promised him I’d look up why sycamores are called “plane” trees, and how linden trees got to be “limes” — and so I did, and now I shall share with you.

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Acculturation

by wj For the entire history of the United States, those who were already here have viewed with alarm that arrival of immigrants. In particular, the arrival of immigrants from new places. Currently, the focus is on Hispanics. Before that it was the Chinese and Japanese, before that the Italians and the Irish. In the … Read more

Terry Pratchett goes forth

by Doctor Science Dammit. Terry Pratchett, one of the greatest writers of my lifetime, just died. Age 66, of early-onset Alzheimer’s. By baalakavii, based on the announcement on Pratchett’s twitter account: AT LAST, SIR TERRY, WE MUST WALK TOGETHER. — Terry Pratchett (@terryandrob) March 12, 2015 Terry took Death’s arm and followed him through the … Read more

Speeding tickets in Finland and Ferguson

by Doctor Science This article about Finnish traffic tickets has been viral on tumblr in the last few days: Finland’s speeding fines are linked to income, with penalties calculated on daily earnings, meaning high earners get hit with bigger penalties for breaking the law. So, when businessman Reima Kuisla was caught doing 103km/h (64mph) in … Read more

Leonard Nimoy, Spock, and fandom

by Doctor Science

A lot of people have talked very movingly in the past few days about how inspirational Leonard Nimoy and the character of Spock were in their lives. For me, Spock is a culture-hero on the level of Moses or indeed Abraham. My chosen subculture is transformative media/SF fandom; media fandom began with Star Trek — and Star Trek fandom began with Spock.

Feredir-one-to-beam-up

One to Beam Up, by feredir. Yeah, I’ve been crying.

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The science fiction awards season

by Doctor Science

I’m eligible to nominate for the Hugo Awards (closes March 10) and to vote as a subscriber for the Locus Awards (closes April 15). I generally take the Locus Recommended Reading List as my starting point. The LRRL is notable this year for not including The Martian (it would be under “first novel”), which I expect to be on the Hugo ballot and may well win. Yeah, it’s not all that well-written, but it hits a primal Science! Fiction! button that doesn’t get punched very much these days.

Under the cut are the LRRL for the novel categories. Books that have been read (or attempted) by members of the Science household are grayed out. Of the others, are there any to which you-all would particularly like to direct our attention? We certainly can’t read them all before the Hugo Noms are due …

I’m particularly interested in recommendations for works published as e-books, because Locus frankly admits that they have no idea how to even find the good stuff in the e-book torrent.

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Your Immortality of the Crab Open Thread

by Doctor Science Today while link-hopping around Wikipedia, as you do, I learned that “thinking about the immortality of the crab” is a Spanish idiom meaning “daydreaming”. Actually, I would say that the best English translation is “woolgathering” — a much less intellectual and sophisticated idiom, though an old one, dating from 1550. But in … Read more

The conservative grifter problem

by Doctor Science

Kevin Drum at Mother Jones discusses something I’ve been wondering about for a while: the number of conservative American political grifters. Drum asks,

why is this problem so much bigger on the right than on the left? I won’t be happy with answers that simply assume liberals are innately better people. Even if they are, they aren’t that much better. It’s got to be something institutional, or something inherent in the nature of American conservatism. But what?

I think there are two factors at play:

  • “Demand side”: Conservatives are more elderly, more fearful, and more loyal than liberals, which makes them naturally more vulnerable to scams, especially affinity scams.
  • “Supply side”: Conservatives believe very strongly in capitalism and in making money, so conservative political operatives are much more likely than liberals to feel they deserve to make a lot of money for their political work. They expect to do well by doing (conservative political) good.

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The Saudi succession system isn’t really strange, but that doesn’t mean it’s functional

by Doctor Science Josh Marshall at Talking Points Memo thinks Saudi succession is a strange, strange system (via slacktivist). As a reader of Marshall Hodgson’s The Venture of Islam, I don’t find it strange at all: the Saudi system is based on the usual Islamic succession principles, which are intended to focus on fairness and … Read more

Does Hollywood export American racism?

by Doctor Science The e-magazine Atlanta Black Star recently ran an article on 8 of the Worst Countries For Black People to Travel: Germany (the formerly East parts, specifically), Russia, Greece, Spain, Italy, Thailand, China, and South Korea. About anti-black racism in the Asian countries, one (anonymous) person said: My own experience is that the … Read more

“The Legend of Korra” and what boys are taught about toxic relationships

by Doctor Science

When The Legend of Korra ended last month in a burst of sparkly rainbows, I decided I’d try watching it again. I watched the first season as it aired, but it didn’t really grab me so I lost interest. So, being a completist by nature, I went back and picked up with Season 2. I just finished episode 2.04 “Civil Wars: Part 2”, and I’m giving up. I am not happy that I just saw Korra, Our Heroine, torture someone for information (and it works!), but the last straw has been the relationship between Bolin and Eska.

TRIGGER WARNING: some discussion of abusive relationships, more may arise in comments.

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It’s not about the danger or difficulty of police work, it’s about Respecting My Authority

by Doctor Science In almost every speech or article about police behavior, there’s a reference to the “difficult and dangerous job” police do, and how they deserve our respect for it. How dangerous is policing, really? Does society usually have more respect for people who do dangerous jobs in general, and dangerous but necessary jobs … Read more

Your 2015 Spoilers Open Thread

by Doctor Science To paraphrase comic writer/artist Ian D. Sharman: Dear Australians People Living in Japan, Please remember to be considerate and not post 2015 spoilers. If there are jet packs and flying cars then the rest of us would like to enjoy the surprise for ourselves. However, if we’re facing thermonuclear annihilation then a … Read more

The charity spreadsheet

by Doctor Science Speaking of 501(c)3 organizations, I’m putting together our yearly charity donations spreadsheet — what we’ve given so far this year, who we’ll give to between now and midnight Dec 31, what our plans are for next year. We were already donating to Doctors Without Borders, but we’re definitely upping the amount this … Read more

Your New Car Smell Open Thread

by Doctor Science We now have enough money that when my old car (2001 Honda Accord, 147K miles)’s transmission decided to bid farewell to this mortal coil, we could just go out and buy a new car: A 2015 Subaru Legacy. In “Twilight Blue Metallic” so it’s not the same color (black, white, or beige/gray) … Read more

My favorite books of 2014: Fiction

by Doctor Science For my own reference, and in case any of you are looking for gift-giving suggestions. This list is all fiction I read for the first time in 2014, whether it was published this year or not. In order by author’s last name. The Goblin Emperor by Katherine Addison (2014). Maybe the best … Read more

Can police culture be changed?

by Doctor Science The only good news I’ve seen about American police-citizen relations is this: Conservatives Join Outrage Over Grand Jury Decision In Eric Garner’s Death. When Charles Krauthammer and I agree that the situation is borked, there’s actually a possibility that something might change. The essential problem, as I see it, is: American police … Read more

Hindsight about foresight

by Doctor Science Mister Doctor Science just re-read Robert Heinlein’s The Door Into Summer for the first time in many years. One thing that really struck him this time around was how far off Heinlein’s predictions were about basic technological change. Not just about social or scientific changes (nuclear war, cold sleep, time travel), but … Read more

Your Thanksgiving Recipes Open Thread

by Doctor Science

Brett asked for “a Thanksgiving recipe thread in time for pre-Thanksgiving grocery shopping”, and it sounded good to me. Also, I’d like to have my traditional Thanksgiving (or other turkey-based holiday) recipes up somewhere that the family can find them in an emergency.

My traditional turkey dinner includes: Herb-Brined Turkey, Chestnut-Rice-Rye Stuffing, Roasted-Garlic Gravy, and Two-Cranberry Sauce with Grand Marnier. The herb brining comes from this Epicurious recipe, the herb butter from this one, the stuffing was invented by my mother (who finds traditional bread stuffing too gluey and greasy), the gravy and cranberry sauce are basically my own inventions — insofar as anything in a traditional meal counts as any one person’s invention.

My recipes are under the cut; talk about your own, trade tips, strategize your meal. And discuss the eternal Thanksgiving question: what wine?

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The peculiar institution of American violence

by Doctor Science

I hadn’t really understood, on a gut level, how unusual American violence is until after Michael Brown was killed in Ferguson, MO. As people started talking about what happens in other wealthy, “civilized” countries, I realized that Americans experience — and expect — an extreme level of violence from both police and their fellow citizens.

As I’ve thought about it, I’ve come to the conclusion that the most important ingredient in American violence is slavery. The past isn’t dead, it isn’t even past.

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Words I never heard in the Bible

One of them is “abuse”. Warning: this post and the comments will be about abuse of all kinds. Know your triggers & limits. New Yorker reporter Rachel Aviv wrote about how exposing child abuse in the Brooklyn Hasidic community has made Sam Kellner an outcast. The article covers what I have to call “the usual”: … Read more

So this is the future

Doctor Science

So when I got to the computer late this morning, I discovered that the European Space Agency spacecraft Rosetta had reached its target, the comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko (which really needs a snappier name, people), and had sent out its lander, Philae.

Which is the general kind of thing that people have been doing most of my life, so no longer really future-y. What makes me really feel like Yes, This Is the Future:

1. The Rosetta Mission has a livestream. And a twitter account.

2. Their second tweet after Philae’s successful landing:

Rosetta-Shatner

Fortunately for all, Philae does not wear a shirt.

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We Don’t Need No Punctuation

by Doctor Science

In my earlier post about I Corinthians 11, I said I was convinced by Evangelical translator William Welty’s reading, that Paul was telling the Corinthians head-coverings (for men or women) don’t really *matter* all that much theologically, but that in any case women should make their own decisions according to their own consciences.

I like Welty’s reading not just because it makes Paul non-misogynist, but because it reads smoothly, Paul’s argument hangs together and makes sense. But the trouble is that it’s untraditional: for at least 1700 years, these passages have been read to prove that women *ought* to cover their hair in church, and to adopt an attitude of general subservience to their patriarchal masters.

How good a writer can Paul be, really, if he was being consistently misread for so long? — and misread not merely by the naive, but by the most intelligent and educated minds in Christendom, for *centuries*. It makes Paul look like a poor writer, and/or makes all the smartest people in Christendom look like poor readers.

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The Angels of Her Nature

by Doctor Science A few weeks ago, Slacktivist called my attention to some current discussion about the meaning of 1 Corinthians 11:10: “For this cause ought the woman to have power on her head because of the angels.” I invite you to read this verse in context at BibleGateway, switching around translations to see if … Read more