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								|   | Cheap Truth SF 'zine #1$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0 CHEAP TRUTH ONE $0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0
 EDITORIAL:  Hi.  You want to know the truth.  We want to tell it to you.
 Let's try to keep the ECONOMICS between us to a minimum, okay?  Right, let's
 do it.
 
 **  QUEST FOR DECAY  **
 
 As American SF lies in a reptilian torpor, its small, squishy cousin,
 Fantasy, creeps gecko-like across the bookstands.  Dreaming of dragon-hood,
 Fantasy has puffed itself up with air like a Mojave chuckwalla.  SF's
 collapse had formed a vacuum that forces Fantasy into a painful and explosive
 bloat.
 
 Short stories, crippled with the bends, expand into whole hideous
 trilogies as hollow as nickel gumballs.  Even poor Stephen Donaldson, who
 struggles to atone for his literary crimes with wet hippy sincerity, has been
 forced to re-xerox his Tolkien pastiches and doubly insult the public.  As
 Robert E. Howard spins in his grave, the Chryslers of publishing attach
 rotors to his head and feet and use him to power the presses.
 
 But the editors have eaten sour grapes and the writers' teeth are on
 edge.  Fantasy, for too long the vapid playground of McCaffreyite
 unicorn-cuddlers and insect-eating SCA freaks, has some new and dangerous
 borderlands.  Suddenly, perhaps out of sheer frustration, fantasy has
 movement and color again.  It is the squirming movement of corruption and the
 bright sheen of decay.
 
 **  Some Examples **
 
 NIFFT THE LEAN by Michael Shea.  DAW, $2.95.  Jack Vance's acolyte,
 author of the apprentice work QUEST FOR SIMBILIS, Shea has suddenly and
 fearsomely come into his own.  This astonishing work shows a furious
 imaginative concentration that is impressive and even appalling.  The
 legitimate heir of Vance, Leiber, and Clark Ashton Smith, Shea rips aside the
 polite, smirking ironies of these polished writers and shows us a crawling,
 boiling vision of the demonic.  He is a Fender Stratocaster to Vance's
 Stradivarius.
 
 For those familiar with Vance's work, the effect is odd and
 disquieting, like seeing a favorite uncle stumble in, blasted on bad acid and
 mumbling cosmis obscenities.  There are supernatural horrors here that make
 Cthulhu and his boys look as tame as pinstriped bankers.  Hell itself, its
 denizens and environs, are captured with a revolting nicety of detail and
 expression that makes you wonder for the author's sanity.
 
 Shea is doing for the outworn tradition of heroic fantasy what
 Swinburne did for the tradition of romantic poetry:  namely, piling it up in
 a heap and setting it on fire.  And, like Swinburne, he does it with so much
 insight that he renders the tradition obsolete.  Heroic fantasy is already
 moribund; Shea's book is, strictly speaking, a work of decadence, even of
 necromancy.  This is an important, even crucial book, with the lurid
 brilliance and craftsmanlike discipline of a Bosch canvas.  Not to be missed.
 
 RED AS BLOOD by Tanith Lee.  DAW, $2.50.  The morbid smirk of the
 stereotyped fantasy damsel on the Michael Whelan cover of this book
 personifies fantasy's new decadence.  Lee's talent has always threatened to
 overwhelm the narrow limits of her innumerable cape-and-thick-ankles
 bodice-busters, and this time she has the bit between her teeth and takes off
 for parts unknown.
 
 She has returned to fantasy's roots -- the 4/4 beat of Grimm's fairy
 tales -- and ripped it up in a way that Ramones fans might find eerily
 familiar.  This is a very punk book -- all red and black -- and it has some
 of the end-of-the-world energy of a '77 Pistols gig.  These stories are
 TWISTED -- tales of bloodlust, sexual frustration, schoolgirl nastiness,
 world-devouring ennui, and a detailed obsession with Satanism that truly
 makes one wonder.
 
 Casual readers may find some of these stories dense and opaque.
 Lee's prose has a cryptic, involuted quality, which creates the impression
 that she is hinting at matters too blasphemous to speak of openly.  It's a
 peculiar style, alternately annoying and frightening.
 
 Some of this apparent awkwardness is the result of a refusal to
 compromise.  It is the sign of an artist struggling to explian her visions in
 what amounts to a private dialect.  Even the failures are a left-handed
 tribute to her integrity.  She is uniquely gifted.
 
 If you are the kind of fan who wants to have a dragon for a friend
 and loves small furry animals, stay away from this book, because you might
 die from it.
 
 LYONESSE by Jack Vance.  Berkley, $6.95.  This latest effort has all
 the qualities Vance devotees cherish:  vivid clarity in description, clever,
 colorful protagonists, fully realized societies complete with Vance's
 trademark footnotes, and headlong, exciting plotting that has footloose
 freedom without becoming slipshod.
 
 It's true that Vance has only one voice:  a carefully crafted,
 mock-archaic one.  Vance characters, from wizards to galactic effectuators,
 always speak with the same sense of antiquated, polite calculation.  In
 LYONESSE, a pair of housecats are given the power of speech, and when they
 immediately pipe up with a uniquely Vancian courteous peevishness the
 effective is irresistably (and deliberately) hilarious.  It's a voice that
 has served Vance well, and has even been borrowed wholesale by Michael Shea
 without becoming tiresome.
 
 Vance's works have always had a veiled darker side; they are replete
 with wine-sipping perverts whose sidelong glances and polite insinuations
 hint at unspeakable vices.  Vance is a writer of rare perception; although he
 created many of the parameters of modern fantasy, he is clearly aware of
 their exhaustion.  His answer, like Shea's, is to turn up the amps.
 
 Thus we have a female character whose suffering innocence almost
 reminds one of deSade's Justine.  There is a definite, quiet cruelty in this
 book that is presented with an alarming sense of relish.  Characters are
 blinded, tortured, branded, buggered, thrown into wells and left to die.
 Women and children especially are singled  out for torment; one long section
 is a Tanith Lee-esque black fairy tale, and its peculiar viciousness is
 cynically funny.  At last Vance even turns on the reader, for the book's
 ending is a cruel joke.  It hints at books to follow, but since Vance's
 languorous attitude toward sequels is legendary, his audience is probably
 doomed to a long session on the tenterhooks.
 
 THE FLOATING GODS by M. John Harrison.  Timescape, $2.50.  This book
 is called IN VIRICONIUM in Britain, but was stupidly retitled for American
 release, presumably because Timescape believes we are boneheads.  It's the
 third book in a sword-and-sorcery trilogy that includes THE PASTEL CITY and A
 STORM OF WINGS.
 
 It's clear that a different but allied form of decadence has struck
 Across the Water.  Its trademark is not perversion, but exhaustion.  PASTEL
 CITY rejoiced in such sprightly characters as Tomb, "the nastiest dwarf that
 ever hacked the hands off a priest," whose rotten malevolence was a welcome
 relief from Harrison's sometimes stifling meditations on spiritual decline.
 
 FLOATING GODS has no such characters.  It is set in a city smothered
 under a nebulous Plague Zone.  Possibly Harrison has spent too  much time in
 Brixton.  Despair seems to have been printed across his eyeballs in letters
 of fire.  THE FLOATING GODS is a relentless exercise in total, stifling
 futility; it is one long, gray, debilitating dream.
 
 Harrison's extraordinary talent merely crams the reader's head more
 firmly into the bucket.  It is impossible to read this book without
 considering suicide.  It is painful to read; painful even to think about.
 Let's hope to God something happens soon to cheer him up.
 
 $0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0 CHEAP TRUTH TOP TEN $0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0$0
 
 These new editions are readily available at your local
 smokestack-industry chainstore bookstand.  You could do a lot
 worse.
 
 1. SOFTWARE Rudy Rucker.  Ace, 2.25.  Pyrotechnic work by deranged math
 professor.  The hottest thing going in contemporary SF.
 2. UNIVERSE 10 Terry Carr, ed.  Zebra, 2.50.  Fine anthology reduced to utter
 penury.  Should be bought for the good of the genre.
 3. PAST MASTER R. A. Lafferty. Ace, 2.50.  Classic Lafferty.  His most
 decipherable SF novel.
 4.  THE LEFT HAND OF DARKNESS Ursula K. LeGuin.  Brilliant LeGuin from her
 pre-didactic era.  Has modern intro with words like "semiotic" and
 "positivist."
 5.  THE IRON DREAM Norman Spinrad.  Timescape, 2.95.  Biting parody of
 fascistic SF power fantasies.  Genuinely bizarre.
 6.  THE MONSTER OF THE PROPHECY Clark Ashton Smith.  Timescape, 2.50.  Curious
 archaeological relic from the Golden Age.  Outrageous, clotted prose.
 7.  THE KING IN YELLOW Robert W. Chambers.  Ace, 2.50.  What fantasy was like
 before its prostitution.
 8.  A WORLD OUT OF TIME Larry Niven.  Del Rey, 2.50.  Heartening indication
 that Niven may escape total artistic collapse.
 9.  CREATURES OF LIGHT AND DARKNESS Roger Zelazny.  Avon, 2.25.
 Self-indulgent pastiche of his best work.  Flashes of brilliance.  Beats
 being smothered in amber.
 10.  ESCAPE FROM NEW YORK Mike McQuay.  Bantam, 2.50.  Surprisingly decent
 novelization.  Makes more sense than the movie.
 
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 CHEAP TRUTH On-Line, 809-C West 12th Street, Austin, Texas 78701.  Editing:
 Vincent Omniaveritas.  NOT COPYRIGHTED.  Data pirates, start your engines!
 "SERVING SF THROUGH SAMIZDATA"
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