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Conference noted::sf

Title:Arcana Caelestia
Notice:Directory listings are in topic 2
Moderator:NETRIX::thomas
Created:Thu Dec 08 1983
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1300
Total number of notes:18728

976.0. "Haldeman's The Hemingway Hoax" by ICS::SHERMAN () Wed May 01 1991 15:41

This is (apparently) the latest book from Joe Haldeman (copyright 1990).


This book is a howling disappointment, which may account for the 
fact that it is only 150 pages long. It also ends incoherently,
with all the signs of something Haldeman started and didn't know
how to finish but finished anyway because of contractual obligations.






























            ***** SPOILERS *****



















"The Hemmingway Hoax" deals with a literature professor at Boston 
University named John Baird who specializes in analyzing the life 
and work of Ernest Hemmingway. One day he is approached in a Key West 
bar by a con man named Castemaine who suggests that Baird forge a copy
of one of Hemmingway's lost manuscripts. Castlemaine is in it for the
money but Baird is interested in the scheme as an intellectual
exercise. For reasons that are never satisfactorily explained, this
plan attracks the attention of some sort of inhuman "timespace"
patrol whose business it is to ensure that the timelines of the
billions of parallel universes don't go off the track. The Baird/
Castlemaine scheme, for some reason, will lead to the end of all life
on Earth in several hundred parallel universes in the year 2006 because
of nuclear war.

The book then spends 120 pages detailing how Baird is stalked by a
"spacetime" agent who appears as Hemmingway at various times in
Hemmingway's life, each time to deter Baird from writing the
forgery. Baird is killed by this agent a number of times, only
to find himself in the next parallel universe, sharing the body of
his other-universe self with the mind of that body in that universe.
Each universe is a little different from the last. This goes on for
the rest of the book, interspersed with some gratuitous violence and 
the sort of boring, repetitive sex that so cluttered-up Heinlein's
later books when he revealed himself to be a sex-starved middle-age
writer running out of ideas. The Hemmingway Hoax then ends in a totally
incoherent fashion I can't even describe, leaving the reader with the
feeling you get when you want a hot fudge sundae and get a container
or tofu instead.

It is tragic to see Haldeman come to this. Starting with his brilliant
"Forever War," it seems to have been all downhill for him. "The
Hemmingway Hoax" is just plain embarrassing.


kbs
  
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976.1Nebula Award-winning novellaTALLIS::SIGELWed May 01 1991 19:2611
Re .0

I haven't read the book and so can't comment on it.  However, it should
be noted that "The Hemingway Hoax" won the Nebula Award for Best Novella 
(17500-40000 words) this past weekend from the Science Fiction Writers 
of America (SFWA).

Then again, TEHANU by LeGuin won Best Novel, and I wasn't impressed with
that book....

				Andrew
976.2re: .1ICS::SHERMANThu May 02 1991 20:138
    Now that IS scary. I have to believe that this book winning an award is
    a comment on the very sad state of science fiction writing today.
    
    Anyone disagree?
    
    
    kbs
    
976.3re: .1, .2ICS::SHERMANThu May 02 1991 20:142
    Where are Ellison, Sheckley, and Brown when you REALLY need them???
    
976.4Yuck is rightSNDPIT::SMITHHusband of N1IUSFri May 03 1991 10:596
    I read it when it got serialized in Asimov's (or was it Analog, I still
    can't keep those 2 straight), and was pretty disappointed.  Now that
    yopu mention it, it does read kinda like some of the later Heinlein,
    particularly JOB....
    
    Willie
976.5Yuck is rightKURMA::DREILLYSat May 04 1991 13:467
    Willie
    
      This reminds me of a rescent article i read in this months Dandy
      when Corky the cat,got run over with a tram on 2 straights.
       I was disappointed as well.
    
    	DR.
976.6Crud on a crackerFSDB00::BRANAMSteve Branam, DECcallserver ProjectWed Aug 21 1991 18:5323
I am a big fan of Haldeman. He is one of those author's I buy right off the
shelf, confident in the belief that whatever it is about, it will be good.
Oh, well. This book is interesting up to a point, especially if you are a 
Hemingway afficianado, which I am, but the ending just drops into your lap like 
so much cow flop. It is extremely disappointing. Regarding Heinleinian-ness, the
end is very reminiscent of a classic of time-travel paradox stories, "By His
Bootstraps," which RAH published under the pseudonym Anson MacDonald, back in
the days when he could write well. In this story, the main character keeps 
running into this old man who appears out of nowhere; in the course of his
investigations, where the old man leads him along, it turns out that *he* is
the old man, following this looping existence in time where the main character
himself lives through all the temporal incarnations of the old man, seeing his
past character through each different perspective. I can't possibly do it
justice, you will have to read it yourself; if you dig recursive programming, 
you will love it. Also, if you liked the paradoxes inherent in Terminator and
Terminator 2, you will appreciate this story (how did Skynet get built in the
first place if the parts for it had to come from the future? If Cyberdyne's 
lab was blown up, why did the two terminators still exist? How can events 
initiated in the future have effects in the past that directly affects that 
future? These and other questions may you ponder late at night when you can't 
get to sleep.)

So anyway, when does the next WORLDS book come out???