25 February 2026

Neglected Favorites


 

I was going into the hospital in November, and I thought I’d better pack a good, big book – think Shogun or Lord of the Rings – and Jack Vance’s Lyonesse trilogy popped into my field of view.  As it turned out, I didn’t read it in the hospital, after all, but it was nice to make his acquaintance again just the same, and I’m now about to sink my teeth into an earlier series, The Dying Earth.


Jack Vance is one of those guys I read quite a lot of, in the late 1970’s, and then stopped reading, I don’t remember why.  This probably isn’t unusual, our enthusiasms aren’t consistent.  I went through almost all of Steinbeck, for instance, in my late teens (the only one I left out was A Cup of Gold), but I haven’t picked up any of the books since.  I can go back and read Irwin Shaw’s short stories, or O’Hara’s, and enjoy them – as well as learn something from them – so it isn’t the period or the fashion, just a lack of curiosity.  I admire Steinbeck’s muscularity, and I think he’s an influence on me, so I can’t explain it, not at least to my own satisfaction.  Jack Vance, though, falls into a different category.  It’s not that he isn’t a stylist, he’s a very graceful writer, if not quite as limpid as Ursula Le Guin, say, or Sylvia Townsend Warner, but no mean shakes.  The thing about Vance is that he’s an extraordinarily convincing world-builder; geography, and cosmology, yes, and politics, but language, and food, and music - ritual, in other words.  This is nothing to be sneezed at.  He’s right up there with Philip José Farmer and Philip K. Dick.  My favorite book of Vance’s has always been The Last Castle, an odd, dystopian novella I gave or lent to many other people, some of whom got it, and some of whom didn’t.


(Speaking of Sylvia Townsend Warner, I think Kingdoms of Elfin is one of the most startling and original books I’ve ever read, but I’ve never been able to get more than half a dozen pages into anything else of hers.  It’s a mystery.)

 


Rediscovering, or revisiting, Jack Vance got me thinking about this question of enthusiasms, and maybe it’s exactly that, that we can blow so hot for a writer, that we can’t help but blow cold, at some point.  J.D. Salinger comes to mind.  There’s that famous quote from Isaac Asimov, which I’ve used before.  He was asked, When was the Golden Age of science fiction?  And he said, Fourteen.


It’s true that we can go back to somebody we adored, in our early reading, and be disappointed; it’s also true that we can go back, and be astonished, not only that they can still cast the spell, but that we see things now that we of course missed, then.  Robert Louis Stevenson is one of these.  The opening chapter of Treasure Island is a masterful piece of compression and suspense; but Treasure Island actually begins before the opening lines, it begins with the frontispiece map.  Another example is Dorothy Sayers.  Most of us would have come to her later on, she’s not for kids, but at the same time, most of us would have raced through the books.  If you go back and read The Nine Tailors, or Murder Must Advertise, which has the reputation of a slighter book, but giving them breathing room, taking your time, they present as novels of manners, as much a highly-colored portrait of the years between the wars as Trollope is of the mid-Victorians.  And Sayers casts an unsettling eye forward; her world may seem serene and comfortably hierarchal, but Wimsey is in some ways strikingly modern.  He clearly suffers from shell-shock, PTSD, and Bunter, who was with him in the trenches, is more than a gentleman’s gentleman, he’s a refuge.


I think we sometimes outgrow writers we once liked.  I don’t think it’s disrespectful.  We still harbor a residual affection for them, which is in some ways a melancholy reflection on who we used to be.  I don’t think any the less of Robert Heinlein, for example, I just don’t think he’s readable, any more – at least for me.  (I could give The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress another shot, I guess, but I’m not that tempted to test my own bandwidth.)


It’s refreshing, on the other hand, to find out you can be hooked again by a writer, just as thoroughly as you were the first time.  Here’s an embarrassing story.  I read Jefferson Parker’s Laguna Heat when it first came out, and then the next book, Little Saigon, and I liked both of them a lot.  And then I had the misfortune of watching the TV movie of Laguna Heat.  I’m sorry, but Harry Hamlin, for all that he seems to be a nice guy, is not a very expressive actor, and even with Jason Robards and Rip Torn and Jimmy Gammon – no.  Least said, soonest mended.  But here’s where I mortify myself.  I stopped reading Jeff Parker.  We all know the writer has zero control of what happens when they sell a book to the movies.  Sure, you got Dutch Leonard, or Dennis Lehane, but the rest of us are up shit creek.  You can open the oven door, and the soufflé will fall, but Jeff wasn’t even in the kitchen when it happened.  It took me fifteen years, before I picked up Silent Joe, and realized what I’d been missing.  I can say now, with all humility, I never would have forgiven myself, if I’d missed A Thousand Steps, or worse, The Rescue.  And what about the Charlie Hood books?  There’s always the satisfaction of knowing you can give yourself a second chance. 


Take this as a cautionary tale.  Fashions change.  Our own tastes.  The way a writer looks at the world, or the way we do.  But don’t pass up a good book.  They sneak up on you. 

5 comments:

  1. I agree with Asimov - having read my eyes out on Heinlein, Andre Norton, Cordwainer Smith, Asimov, Bradbury, Philip Jose Farmer, Philip K. Dick, Tolkein, basically the entire freaking sci-fi / fantasy canon. And then I stopped. I think the killer for me was that I read "Dune" to the point of obsession and then I read a couple of other of Herbert's and realized... none of them were any better, and most of them were very bad. Feel free to disagree with me.
    I still do read some sci-fi - "The Left Hand of Darkness" and the LeGuin canon. And others. "Riddley Walker." "Carpe Jugulum". Which leads me to self-promotion: my blog post here next week is on some books that have stayed with me forever, especially the ones that no one (or only very few) seem to have ever heard of.

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  2. I regretfully have to say I'm with you on DUNE. I read it originally serialized in Analog, and I was fascinated by the ecological aspects (terraforming, the exploitation of resources without any regard for interdependent systems, etc.), but with all due respect, Herbert was just such a clunky, graceless writer - it pains me to say that. What happened with Le Guin, and Zelazny, and Chip Delany, among others, is that it shook the mothballs out of the closet. (There had always been people like Algis Budrys and A.E. van Vogt, who'd been shaking things up for years, but it was hard for them to make a dent in the prevailing space opera/locker room continuum.) Breaking up the boy band is the best thing that happened.

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  3. Interesting choices. I will take a look at Vance. Also Kingdoms of Elfin. I realize I'm very familiar with Sylvia Townsend Warner's name but have never read any of her work. Fascinating woman. You discuss your changing opinions of these authors as writers. For me, it's politics that changed my mind, sometimes but not always my adult feminism, which not only disillusioned me on Heinlein but made me chuck one of his paperbacks into the trash after reading. (It hurt, even though I bought it used for a dollar. I've never thrown away a book before or since.) Dune, in retrospect, seems kinda fascist, and I wish I could unread the last line, when the mother and concubine of the ubermensch tell each other proudly, "History will call us wives!" Yuck. That's stuck with me for fifty years, because I remember the mom at my son's nursery school who recommended the book to me. "Incredible world building," she said, and so it was. I still read some fantasy, SF, and urban fantasy, especially cross-genre with mystery (and write some too). It must be superbly written. Hors concours: Lois McMaster Bujold's Vorkosigan Saga. Top of the list of novels fourteen and fifteen year olds adored and didn't realize were fascist until they grew up: Ayn Rand, The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged. As for Sayers, imo she elevated the mystery from puzzle to character-driven novel in mid-series when she introduced Lord Peter Wimsey to Harriet Vane and he suggested she endow the characters in her mysteries with feelings. Murder Must Advertise was the book that converted me, new English lit grad, from what we didn't yet call literary fiction to genre fiction reader, and Gaudy Night, the murder-free one, the Sayers on my all-time top ten mysteries list.

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  4. ADVERTISE, for all its silliness (the harlequin disguise), was apparently Sayers putting paid to her years as an ad copywriter, and very entertaining; GAUDY NIGHT is one of my personal faves, and an academic satire as telling as Pamela Hansford Johnson's NIGHT AND SILENCE; THE DOCUMENTS IN THE CASE is an interesting departure (no Lord Peter). It's not just the misogyny in Heinlein; there's the proto-Fascism to choke down, too. And as we see with GamerGate, all that hostility toward the vagina hasn't slacked at all, it's just put on different shoes. Labeling them Incels gives them too much credibility, as if it were a handicap, and they could get a parking sticker. Who has the patience for this crap?

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  5. I love Sayers. I love GAUDY NIGHT, and MURDER MUST ADVERTISE. Also, I think STRONG POISON is very underrated, because we watch Wimsey change, and fight the change. And Harriet's sheer exhaustion after being finally exonerated is so real.

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