By Steve Herte
Lately
I’ve been ranting (oh, so politely) that Hollywood seems unable to
come up with fresh, new plots for movies and that so much of what we
view is rehashed or revived. Well, I visited a fascinating website
entitled “Planetary Stories” (www.planetarystories.com),
which just might be a wellspring of ideas for the drought in
Tinseltown. Shelby Vick publishes his own original science fiction
tales as well as those of other talented writers on the website and,
being a fan of science fiction, I wanted to test the waters.
The
three short stories I read were as entertaining and as diverse in
plot as the genre can get. Shelby not only spins his yarns from the
Earthman’s point of view but the alien’s as well. He can also
switch convincingly to a woman’s persona and sensitivity in his
stories. According to the website, it was back in 2005 that he
created “Space
Marshall vs King Jorx,”
“Moult Revolt,”
and “Tolerance Station or True Confessions from
Space”
and each story is more engaging than the previous one.
In
“Space Marshall vs King Jorx,” we meet Slade
Marsten, an interplanetary patrol officer whose beat is the many
worlds inhabited by emigrants from Earth. In Shelby’s introduction
to the story we learn that interplanetary travel and medical
nanotechnology may have enabled people to be healthy enough to
colonize other planets, but crime lives on. The story reads much like
a Flash Gordon episode with its almost tongue-in-cheek bravado and
playful interplay of characters. Jill is Slade’s “love interest”
(when he’s not super-focused on the task at hand) and Probot ably
fills the role of Doctor Zarkoff except that he’s the biological
brain of a brilliant professor in a robotic body.
The
one remaining member of his crew is an entity named BRITO, half of a
traveler from another dimension whose acronymic moniker translates
Belt-like Remote Instantaneous Transmission Organism (Marsten chose
this name) who appropriately is worn by Slade as a belt. The
character reminds me of an intelligent version of the character
“Belt” in the movie The Croods, a clinging simian
creation. In this episode, King Jorx, a tail-less raptor-like
creature reminiscent of the Gorn in the original Star
Trek series is mounting an attack on Earth and is planning
to use his “planetbuster,” a weapon recently improved and having
no counter-weapon. Slade takes advantage of Jorx’s inflated ego to
bluff his way onto the battle cruiser and, with BRITO’s assistance,
foils the apocalyptic plot.
If
there’s anything negative to be said about this story is that it’s
too short and over way too quickly. The concept of a Space Marshall
has been suggested by the movie The Day the Earth Stood Still but
Shelby tempers the extremity of having a heartless robot destroying
all violence with a feeling being who enforces the law.
We
are taken to the remote world of the “cruike” race in “Moult
Revolt” where crickets have evolved to become the sentient
and dominant species. They are insectoid in appearance but have
nine-fingered “hands” and consequently a system of mathematics
based on nine. In fact, the number nine appears often in the story.
Symme, the main character is one of nine siblings (or hatch-mates if
you will, they hatch from eggs) and he’s a kind of rebel. Almost
religiously his species conducts their “moults” together but not
Symme. He believes that a moult (shedding one’s exoskeleton) is a
personal experience and he goes off to the edge of a canyon to
perform his in private. After emerging, he discovers a “new music”
when tossing pebbles into the canyon. Crickets are, after all,
musical (they “sing” on Earth) and it stands to reason that music
would be holy to them. And listening to the “holy music” of the
wind increases his excitement when this “beat” is added to it. He
decides to bring this new sound to his hatch-mates.
Meanwhile,
his birth-mother Eomme has been working closely with “the Director”
in trying to solve the problem of where to stack all the surplus
unhatched eggs – a form of over-population dilemma – and upon
returning home she’s horrified that Symme would commit the double
sacrilege of moulting alone and creating new music (reminding me of
the first time rock and roll made its appearance).
But
Symme is undaunted and the young cruikes love the new music. He
creates a new mathematics to accommodate the base four of the music
and reconcile it with the base nine of tradition and becomes the
unlikely hero of the day. His new math solves the over-population
problem as well.
It’s
a charming tale written from a completely insectoid point of view,
complete with appropriate body language references. The characters
are curiously believable and the allegorical issues resonate with
current reality. I would really like to see this one on film,
possibly an animated one?
The
third short story is the longest, but its length does not make it
tedious in any way. “Tolerance Station or True Confessions
from Space” is the remembrances of a young girl who, though
a straight “A” student in school, is completely naïve about the
ways of the world (or worlds, in this case). Her dream of running off
with a dashing “spacer” ends when she winds up in an abusive
relationship with one and he dumps her as soon as she becomes
pregnant. In this age, the word intolerance has replaced the word
discrimination as a derogatory term for judging someone unfit to
associate with and strangely enough, the planet she is stranded on is
called “Tolerance Station.”
She’s
taken in by a kind (she thinks) older man who takes advantage of her
naiveté to essentially sell her body to visiting spacers and then
sell the babies she produces (and she gives birth to several) to the
local farmers. When she finally figures out what he’s doing, he
leaves her and takes all the money he made.
But
all is not lost. She becomes a hero to the local farm families when
they tell her that something in the planet’s atmosphere has made
their women infertile. Out of gratitude they take care of her for
life. It is yet another wonderful story worthy of the big screen.
Hollywood, are you listening?
It’s
not just the novel plot ideas. Shelby’s dialogues between
characters are down to Earth, understandable and unhampered by
haughty elements that would diminish their credibility. They speak as
you would expect them to speak. He keeps description simple and only
elaborates when the plot requires it, allowing the reader to build
his or her own stage sets. Now you may say, if the first story
resembles a Flash Gordon episode that much, then how is it so
original? It’s the way the tale is told, the “color” you could
call it, of Shelby’s style. It’s how he draws you into the story
that makes you want to hear what will happen in the next episode.
It’s the questions that arise in the reader’s mind from the way
the characters “perform” such as, “Will Jill and Slade ever get
romantic?”
As
for me, I certainly will return to “Planetary Stories” to see
where Shelby’s stories take me next and read some of the other
authors’ works. In high school, I was an aspiring science fiction
writer but I never received the encouragement to develop a style.
It’s obvious to me that Shelby was encouraged.
In
keeping with my “Dinner and a Movie” theme I thought it only
fitting to “complete” this submission with an article on
something gustatory. Since the first item is about stories that I
would like to see as movies, the second is spurred by a dinner that I
had with Helene at a New York restaurant quite a while ago. It was so
surprising that they served a spirit that was banned and vilified as
“mind-altering” for so long that I had to discover the story
behind that accusation. What I found was fascinating.
Absinthe
Made My Heart Grow Fonder
Commonly
known as “the green fairy,” absinthe was the most popular drink
in Europe at the turn of the 20th century. But a
combination of economics and politics conspired not only to diminish
the popularity of the liqueur, but also to have it banned outright in
many countries across the globe. Now that the green anise-flavored
drink has been proven safe to consume, it is making a strong comeback
as the after-dinner drink of choice at many restaurants.
When
I was dining at David Burke and Donatella (now David
Burke’s Townhouse) in 2007, dessert time rolled around as it
usually does and I took a double take when I saw absinthe among the
after-dinner drinks. Wasn’t this stuff banned because it was
dangerous, a drug, or perhaps poisonous? And yet there it was on a
menu I trusted. Not being one to back away from a gustatory adventure
I ordered it. The server brought out an elegant glass of the clear
liqueur, suspended a silver perforated spoon over it with a sugar
cube on it and poured ice water over the sugar and into the glass.
The absinthe became cloudy white and when the sugar cube was gone,
the pouring stopped. Taste and smell were akin to licorice but only
with a higher alcoholic content than Anisette. I liked it and from
then on made sure to have it again whenever it appeared on a menu.
Why
was this delicious drink banned? A little research later and I
discovered that it was due to a combination of elementa – all
human-created – including misunderstanding, limited science,
economics, and scandal. Pierre Ordinaire, a French doctor living in
Couvet, Switzerland, is credited with the first distilling of the
Wormwood plant Artemisia Absinthium (hence the name)
in alcohol with anise (hence the licorice flavor), hyssop, lemon balm
and local herbs. Ordinaire created it as an all-purpose patent remedy
and it was sold as such. The Egyptians and ancient Greeks used
wormwood as a medicine for various conditions and it stands to reason
that if they saw the healing benefits of the plant, it would probably
make a potent tonic (especially at 72% alcohol). The active
ingredient, terpene thojone, was thought to be capable of
stimulating creativity and clearing one’s thinking, but the limited
science of the late 1890s and early 1900s found that lab animals died
when injected with large amounts and dubbed it a neurotoxin. A “large
amount,” by the way, would equal about 150 glasses of absinthe.
The
popularity of the drink soared in the 1840s when absinthe was given
to French troops as a malaria preventative. When the troops returned
home, they brought absinthe home with them and it caught on rapidly
in bars, bistros, cabarets and cafes to the point that the hour of 5
pm was labeled l’heure verte (“the green hour”).
The
large number of distilleries producing absinthe during its heyday
made it cheaper than wine and the fact that artists and the upper
class were fond of it increased its popularity. Also at the time, a
breed of louse was decimating the vineyards in France, seriously
affecting and limiting wine production. Unfortunately, absinthe’s
popularity also bred imitators who got the recipe wrong and created
cheaper, adulterated and yes, poisonous versions. This
misunderstanding became interwoven in the absinthe mythos.
Then
there was the “Absinthe Murder.” In 1905, Jean Lanfray, a Swiss
farmer, murdered his family and attempted to take his own life after
drinking the demon absinthe. The fact that Lanfray was an alcoholic
who had consumed a considerable quantity of brandy and wine prior to
drinking two glasses of absinthe was overlooked during his trial and
the blame for the murders – and hence his insanity – was placed
on the absinthe. In 1906, both Belgium and Brazil banned the
importation and manufacture of absinthe, and in 1910, even
Switzerland followed suit. Lastly, an anti-absinthe novel “Wormwood,
a Drama of Paris” by Marie Corelli (apparently the most respected
writer of her time) raised negative opinion in the United States and
absinthe was banned nationwide in 1912. Even though the ban was not
universal, sales of absinthe plummeted so low that production ceased
in the 1960s.
But
rising like the phoenix, absinthe created in the Czech Republic in
the 1990s was exported to the United Kingdom and interest was
revitalized. Then, in 2002, the original distillery in Pontarlier
France was reopened to make the original recipe. Though sales were
still banned then, the United Kingdom procured the product and
absinthe reappeared as an after-dinner drink.
It’s
a fascinating story, one of mystery and full of humanity. I learned
that there exist more than one “flavor” of absinthe (depending on
the herbal inclusions), but none are mind-altering, poisonous, or
will drive you to murder. The drink was called the “Green Fairy”
because the original recipe yielded a green liqueur. The first taste
I had might have been green, but it was so pale it looked clear.
Since then I’ve enjoyed absinthe several times, even once at Sunday
brunch at the Caribou Café in Philadelphia. I’ve noticed no change
in my behavior, but my understanding and appreciation of absinthe has
definitely changed for the better.
No comments:
Post a Comment