I am continuing to work through the novels of Charles Bukowski, and am now on Women. Great stuff, really dark, seedy and also hilarious. I have just bought a collection of his short stories too, The Most Beautiful Woman in Town, and I intend to read that next.
Yeah, that much was clear. Still, despite the differences, it everything still lined up fairly well and they read like sequels rather than variations, which to me sounds more like unrelated stories set in the same universe, which this wasn't. It never felt like they weren't connected as they all referred to each other. So, his comments about that just left me confused. The finale, I agree, left a lot to be desired. I actually feel that with a series as epic and iconic as it was, that it would have been better served to have it end in an open-ended manner that would have made people wonder, instead of what he did. I did like bringing Poole back too, though Clarke didn't really do much with him to further the story and make it interesting. He kind of was just there without much purpose. Like you said, his ideas weren't as good as he was older, and it's plain to see when he starts to borrow whole chapters from 2001 and 2010 instead of writing entertaining synopses to those referred events. That bugged me quite a bit. With Poole, to make it even more circular in nature, I would have liked Clarke to have found a way to get him down on the surface and be a part of the discovery of TMA-0, much like Floyd was critical to the investigations of TMA-1, which would have given him more of a purpose and a neat parallel to him having been revived. It was a wasted potential, and I was actually frustrated that so much of it took place in space, if that makes any sense.
^^ Yeah, I agree with all of that, especially Poole. He was just an observer and a plot device to communicate with Halman; he should have had something to do to make his character the equal of Bowman and Floyd. Also, defeating the aliens using a Trojan Horse computer virus was far too mundane a climax for story that started out as the essence of "the sense of wonder." It's really too bad. Now that's interesting and topical. Can you give us an idea of what he has to say?
Yeah, tell me about it. It zapped the sense of wonder out of it. Too simple a solution for one of the greatest mysteries ever created. I think a better ending would have been for their plan to backfire as an underestimation of TMA, and as a result sending humanity back to where it all began with the opening scenes of 2001. That would have had more of an impact and would have followed the themes in a better way.
Or have an epilogue showing advanced Europans discovering TMA-0 on an idyllic but uninhabited Earth. The publisher should hire Jack McDevitt to write 4001: Ultimate Odyssey or something.
wouldn't it be 5001? wasn't the message something like 1,000 years to get there, 1,000 years for a response?
Dead Men DO Tell Tales...it's the MOST interesting non-fiction book I've ever read; by ...oh...a Forensic Scientist, the one who examined the remains of Tzar Alexander and his family. I didn't know non-fiction could be so spellbinding.
^ Sounds good. I just added it to my reading list. Your description of it as spellbinding non-fiction reminds me of The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, which I just finished. Currently reading I am Spock. So far, interesting but not spellbinding.
Maybe so. I seem to remember thinking that it would be 950 years if the aliens responded immediately, but I'd have to check to be sure. Maybe I was thinking in terms of ignoring the Stargate retcon.
On the other hand, maybe it's been so long that they'd never respond at all. Maybe they'd be like the Preservers who perished long after spreading their obelisks around the universe, their technology having outlasted them.
I'm currently reading Marc Cerasini's "Godzilla 2000", as well as the Complete Sherlock Holmes by Arthur Conan Doyle (the Wordsworth hardcover edition, so I'm not taking it on the bus with me, way too heavy to carry around). With the latter, I'm still at the beginning, I guess, having finished A Study In Scarlet just this evening.
The Dome by Stephen King. I've been watching the show so I figured I look ahead, didn't work out but both things are interesting.