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Future
Orbits, short Science Fiction for the digital world
This month's Wizard Site award goes to Future Orbits, who are
using the Adobe PDF format (among others) to produce a new SF magazine
you actually have to pay to download.
Roderick S. MacDonald brings you the inside scoop on this brave
new venture.
‘Future Orbits’ is about the same value, word for word per issue,
as the on-line version of ‘Magazine Of Fantasy & Science Fiction’.
If you have to pay for a magazine then you'd expect to get paid for
published work: this they do at the rate of 6 to 10 cents per word.
Each issue has six short stories, one third of
which are written by women. There's also a science commentary and
an editorial. All authors have a history of publications elsewhere
and the quality is more or less comparable with other established
magazines.
However, no articles about Science Fiction appear.
Tom Vander Neut's aim is for a publication which is Science Fiction
rather than one which is about Science Fiction. Fair enough, he's
set out his stall in the market place on this basis and it should
be judged accordingly.
I reviewed the first two issues. Happily, none
of the stories could be classed as rubbish or downright bad. There
were some I couldn't get my head around - either they've lost the
plot or I have. Fortunately, most of the fiction was absorbing,
rewarding to read and also well-written. I've selected a few for
comment:
'Blues for Amy' by K.D. Wentworth. Intriguing story
of a hit-and-run drunk driver who pushed a family off the road into
a ravine, killing them all except for Amy, a pregnant woman, now
a broken, childless paraplegic. His gnawing guilt is accompanied,
in more ways than one, by aliens called shaemsa.
These strange creatures, the first extraterrestrial
visitors to Earth, have defied expectations by being useless, pesky
blobs, intent on playing the blues to morbid, maudlin characters.
Our drunk has first one alien following him but this turns into
an entourage by the end of the story. Are the aliens real or are
they a figment of a tortured mind? I liked this one. Wentworth's
description of a person losing his mind, going out of control, was
convincing enough to make me wonder if she had run someone off the
road at some time herself.
Her invention of the aliens, in such an unlikely
and ludicrous form, adds a touch of originality to a story which
could have also been told without them, albeit without the same
mystery.
'The Minch Maneuver' by Fiona Curnow. The women
pilots flying around Jupiter's satellites are all lesbians because
the men have had their testicles tandooried by the deadly Jovian
radiation. Moreover, the chief lesbian, the owner and controller
of the spaceships, has them over a barrel.
In order to get spare organs to replace those
frequently damaged by the rigours of space flight, the pilots seem
to be constantly in debt to her and have to perform more and more
missions just to keep body and soul together. An old girl has an
affair with a new girl and then the pair go for a difficult feat
of flying - the above mentioned manoeuvre. This seems to be the
gist of a rather pointless story. I seem to remember tales of organs
being transplanted willy-nilly some years ago. It seems they're
still at it.
Each issue has a piece of commentary. In the first
issue, Geoffrey A. Landis takes a rather pedestrian tour around
the Solar system. Much of this stuff is old hat. We've seen it all
before on TV programmes. However, in the second issue, Gregory E.
Pence discusses the clone in Science Fiction.
This well-researched article points to the many
misconceptions and inaccuracies that have appeared over the years
in this genre. My only small criticism is that he spends a great
deal of time discussing what cloning isn't and little on what it
is.
In issue 2 there was 'Babushka for Sale' by Andrew
Burt. An interesting story about capitalism in modem Russia. There
was also 'Keeping Lalande Station' from Richard Parks, a curious
but compelling tale of a man alone on a planet for fifty years.
Mary Soon Lee's 'The Strangers' told of a soldier of the future
with things on his mind, a story that made you want turn the pages.
We don't really find out who the strangers are
until later in the story. The main character, Jesper, seems to be
a half-man/half-machine soldier directed to receive reports from
colonists. Guilt wells up within him - the previous mission saw
him involved in the genocide of a rebellious colony.
This lot, though, are clean living folk who have
left technology behind. When reading this story, you wonder about
this soldier. Who is he? What's he feeling about another possible
genocide on the agenda? The author gradually let's out a little
bit at a time, keeping you hooked until the revelation comes.
I would say that there was definitely an improvement
from issue 1 to issue 2. There's many Science Fiction magazines
to be found on the Net. Some, of course, are junk but others like
this one, isn't bad at all. Why choose ‘Future Orbits’? The quality
is certainly there. Maybe the format is somewhat conventional.
Being new, it doesn't have an identity as yet and
we need to read more issues to become familiar with the style. It
needs to have something unique, something to separate itself from
other magazines. What this is, I don't know. If I did, I'd be out
there doing it myself, making dollars and euros in the process.
Overall, I found ‘Future Orbits’ a magazine which would make me
want to read more and buy a subscription. I did just that!
Will ‘Future Orbits’ survive? I would like to think
so but realistically, as with all new magazines, it's odds against
survival beyond a year or two. It has good artwork, quality stories
and a dedicated editor and publisher. I think the latter, in conjunction
with other facts, may help it to survive and become successful.
These facts? Well, at $7.95 a year, you're not
breaking the bank to subscribe. This isn't a facet of cheapness,
it's a facet of electronic publication technology. For the price
of one paper magazine you can have several electronic magazines
and the publisher can still make money. The recipient of this literature
won't have a room full of dusty paperbacks - they'll be neatly stored
away on a disk.
Since I began to read electronic books, I've experienced
a reawakening to literature. For someone like myself who has problems
with hands that can't turn pages very well, this innovation is tremendous,
but more and more people are familiar with screens, the quality
of which has improved greatly over the years. Those unable to read
from an old computer screen have no difficulty with modem versions.
There are also portable electronic readers. You
can now take a pile of books anywhere with you, all in a small rectangular
device that can be read with ease. Something like ‘Star Trek’, isn't
it? There is a misconception amongst the general public that somehow,
electronic readers and electronic publications are cheap and of
low quality.
The major difference between a conventional book
and an electronic book is that with the latter, the purchaser isn't
paying for a load of useless paper which, given the quality and
endurance of its modem manufacture, will be a brown disintegrating
mass within a decade anyway.
People equate books with paper. This isn't the
case. Books are words. Once the general public cotton on to this,
electronic literature will expand exponentially.
Roderick S. MacDonald
January 2002
[Editor note: Rod not only bought a subscription
for the above publication but sold them an article that is appearing
in # 3. Both of us want to indicate that the review was written
first.]
Visit the 'Future Orbits' site over
here
Future Orbits, short Science Fiction for the digital
world: Editor/Publisher Tom Vander Neut. (bimonthly. ISSN 1536 -
3651. Subscription $7.95 for 6 issues at www.futureorbits.com)
'Future Orbits' supports the following electronic
book readers: Adobe Acrobat PDF Reader, Adobe Acrobat eBook Reader,
Microsoft Reader, Mobipocket Reader, Rocket eBook and Gemstar's
REB 1100].

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