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Readers
Letters and @-xclamations

Today
I accessed this site for the first time, and I was thrilled to find
such a place dedicated to sf and fantasy. I eagerly accessed the
TV, film, and book reviews, expecting to find more useful and interesting
information. What I found distressed me greatly.
I do not know who wrote
your review of the FOX television series, "Roar," but
whoever it was certainly was not familiar with the show; indeed,
the review's author must have only given the show a perfunctory
glance. Your reviewer totally misunderstood the aim of the show,
and this person subsequently misrepresented the show's theme on
your review page.
I would first like to
establish the fact that the name of the show is "Roar,"
not "The Roar;" furthermore, the show is filmed in New
Zealand, not in "obviously tropical Californian forest-land."
Your reviewer claims
that the show contains historical inaccuracies, but as a student
of history I can tell you that this period in time is a seriously
gray area. Evidence of Roman influence has been found and unearthed
in the British Isles; complaining that Romans never landed on Ireland
is a moot point since that can be neither proved nor disproved.
Your reviewer also failed
to delve beneath his/her superficial judgments of the show's characters.
This is a show about loyalty: to one's convictions, to one's beliefs
(religious and moral), to one's family, to one's friends. This is
not a corny, swashbuckling carbon-copy of Hercules and Xena -- this
show's writers and producers have attempted to bring to life a brutal
and harsh era in an untamed land, with characters that must make
hard decisions and often make serious mistakes. I know of no other
fantasy show that actually portrays its characters like real people
who sometimes really screw up.
Your reviewer must have
only seen one episode, or else he/she would have been more familiar
with the history of the characters:
Conor, the so-called
"poor Irish Prince," was the younger son of one of the
land's kings whose family was brutally murdered during his brother's
wedding. Also in that first episode, Conor's love was killed by
her own father, who was under the influence of Diana, the Roman
bent on winning favor with Rome by taming Ireland.
Longinus is Diana's advisor,
but he is not a "vampire-like dark sorceror." He is the
Roman soldier who, 400 years previous, impaled Jesus Christ on the
cross -- and he has caused Diana to come to Ireland to search for
the spear that did this deed, the spear that is his only hope for
death or redemption.
While "Roar"
might have unrealistic moments, the aim of the show is noteworthy.
The show explores themes of loyalty, prejudice, peace and war; the
characters experience conflict of all kinds, and do their best to
muddle through and come out with some kind of understanding. It
doesn't always work out happily and simply, and the "good guys"
don't always win. But the commentary that "Roar"'s writers
attempt to make on human society is commendable, especially in a
television world populated with dark police dramas and immoral soap
operas.
The show's filming makes
beautiful use of the New Zealand landscape, and "Roar"'s
crop of unknown actors get better with each episode. Interesting
cinematography and incredible use of natural light (there is not
a soundstage conveniently down the block if the scene doesn't turn
out right) make the show a delight to watch.
I understand the fact
that opinion is often a part of any review, and I respect the opinions
of your reviewer. The fact that I disagree is not the reason that
I am responding. The reason for my response is that I feel that
it is necessary for a reviewer to make an attempt to get the facts
or at least to understand the subject before writing the review.
His/her scathing comments were based on a perfunctory, superficial
viewing of the show, and I am saddened by the fact that this review
might have prevented other, more objective viewers from giving a
worthwhile show a try.
Carol Ann Sartin
carolann@arn.net

There's
a set of fan sites for the Sime~Gen universe which don't categorise
neatly in your SF-finder page.
The sites might- be considered
a web-zine.. most contain fiction, updates on what's happening,
extensions of the universe, explanations of awkward concepts...
Just wondering if it'd
be appropriate to have a category for single-universe fandom?
Jenn V.
Alas, Jenn, the universe
is a complex place for which we must make many a simplification
on the road to enlightenment. Which sentence makes as much sense
as a Slime-General universe full of fiction and happenings.
If anyone can guess
what Jenn means, please send your explanations to:
Obscure Letters Competition
Hologram Tales
Sack'o'Shite Road
Your Passage

I noticed your "magazine" while searching
the web, and thought your members might have an interest in hearing
about my publishing initiative!
I've written a 247 page
Science Fiction work, which I'm working on releasing in the near
future.
I am 26 years of age,
and I live in Tórshavn. Tórshavn the Capital of the
Faroe Islands, is with it's approx. 15.000 thousand inhabitants,
probably one of the smallest Capitals in the world.
This is the first Science
Fiction Novel written by a Faroese author to be published in the
United States, or anywhere in the world for that sake.
By writing this book
in English, I've taken a very different approach to the creative
process, compared to the established Faroese writing community.
Hopefully my efforts
will enable other Faroese "would be writers" of the SCI-FI
genre to take steps toward publishing their own work.
About the book!
---
In "Help Wanted!",
by Einar Petersen © 1996, you're taken on a trip to a world
forced into a new way by a powerful organisation, known as the Freelancers.
This has been achieved
by dissolving the corrupt UN, while encouraging the forming of a
new World Union!
Several of the worlds
most pressing problems have been solved. Not creating the perfect
society, but hunger and disease, are basically a thing of the past.
But corruption lurks everywhere, there is a strong resistance from
within the new World Union where hard core officials, are doing
their best to dismantle the work in progress, in order to change
things back to what they were in the good old days!
All of a sudden new players
arrive on the scene, there is an interstellar conflict in our back
yard, and we have been chosen, to give a helping hand.
Furthermore there is
a copy of the informational material I've written about the publishing
initiative on the following homepage. http://users.cybercity.dk/
blk4017/book.htm
Simply click on the flag
you prefer and you're on the way. I hope that you find the concept
interesting, and would appreciate if you informed your members about
it. Anyway Let me know what you think!
Einar
Petersen
Good god. It's the new wave of Faroe-punk, and you heard about
it here first! If anyone wants to read Einar's work and comment
back to him, be our guest.

Just
finished The reality dysfunction by Hamilton, and I think it is
a really good and complex story, well written.
Then at page 1221 I realise
the book just ended!!!!!! CRAP! Is the book the first part in a
trilogy, or does Hamilton enjoy playing games with my mind???
I hope that you know
the answer to this most important Q of mine!!!!
MVH
Sren OMINOUS
C YA
Best that we know,
it's a trilogy. The second one is out now in hardback.
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