John C. Wright ([info]johncwright) wrote,
@ 2008-02-21 12:13:00
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Shameless Self-Promotion NULL- A CONTINUUM
Mortgage your house and sell the cat to the lab for medical experiments! You need the money to rush right out and buy NULL-A CONTINUUM, the authorized sequel to the ground-breaking WORLD OF NULL-A by A.E. van Vogt.
It is available for pre-order right now on Amazon.com and from Tor books.

AND the jacket copy gives away one of the surprise plot twists from chapter 23. Thanks alot, blurb writer.



The book has already begun to garnish the scoffing and raised eyebrows such an ambitious project, in all fairness, merits.

From Rose Fox, book reviewer
I haven't looked inside the book itself, so I can't comment there. I'm just a bit croggled that it exists at all, though I suppose it's no surprise that if someone was going to have the chutzpah to "continue" one of the most influential books in the American SF canon, it would be Wright. The jacket copy claims that he "trained himself to write in the exciting pulp style and manner of van Vogt". What a terrifying statement. I'm not sure I can bring myself to read the book just yet.

Of course, the point isn't so much to outdo other sequels as to equal the original. It's also unfair to demand that it be as mind-blowing and groundbreaking as The World of Null-A was in 1949; it seems more honest to see whether Null-A Continuum can match the effect of the original on a present-day reader. I find Wright's novels contorted and stilted at best, ... I suppose at some point I'll just have to reread The World of Null-A and then see whether Wright's sequel does at least a good a job of standing up under modern critical examination. Hopefully framing it in those terms will sufficiently reduce my expectations. Hopefully.
She is right, of course. I was terrified to learned I had trained myself to write in an exciting pulp style. I used my Null-A trained double brain to deduce the semantically negative false-to-facts verbiage of purplish prose of Golden Age SF. Hemingway, it is not.

James Nicoll reports:

I do not myself much care for Van Vogt so you can imagine the mixed emotions I felt when I realized that Wright's NULL-A CONTINUUM is a successful attempt by a living author to emulate the style and plotting of a dead author. On the one hand, I could count the number of books where that trick worked on one hand (and I wouldn't need all my fingers) so Wright gets major points for making it work. On the other, he's successfully emulated an author whose work I find maddening.
You will think I am kidding if I say this is high praise indeed. I am not. This is what we lawyers call a "statement against interest." If someone who does not like Van Vogt (a creature unimaginable to me, but there you have it) says I successfully emulated van Vogt's signature Vanvogtianisms, it is a flattering statement indeed.



(Post a new comment)


[info]juliet_winters
2008-02-21 05:50 pm UTC (link)
I'll see to it that our public library buys some copies!


(Reply to this)


[info]sce2aux
2008-02-21 05:55 pm UTC (link)
I'll buy it.

Why don't you take your wife out to Ruth Chris on me with the percentage you'll make. :-)

(Reply to this) (Thread)


[info]arhyalon
2008-02-21 10:58 pm UTC (link)
Yeah...all $2.42 cents. Mmmmm nice 10th of a steak. ;-)

Still, I'm delighted.

(Reply to this) (Parent)

I will, if
[info]mrmandias
2008-02-21 05:56 pm UTC (link)
I will place my pre-order as soon as I hear from you that you have completed the next chapter in your 1000 trillion year romance. Notify me here or else email me.

(Reply to this) (Thread)

Re: I will, if
[info]johncwright
2008-02-21 06:07 pm UTC (link)
It's a deal.

(Reply to this) (Parent)(Thread)

Re: I will, if
[info]mrmandias
2008-02-21 06:09 pm UTC (link)
Nice try. As a lawyer, you should know that for this kind of offer, acceptance is by performance only.
:)

(Reply to this) (Parent)(Thread)

Re: I will, if
[info]johncwright
2008-02-21 06:28 pm UTC (link)
Not so. If I write the next chapter in the expectation that, upon completing it, you will preorder the NULL-A book, I have relied on the contract.

The elements of a contract are offer, acceptance, and consideration. You have made a conditional promise for performance. I accepted by promising performance in return. The contract is settled as of this point. Too late to back out now.

If I dither and delay in writing the next chapter, you can claim that the doctrine of laches prohibits me from insisting on specific performance.

But, as a gentleman, I will gladly tear up our contract, since I wish to finish my next chapter in any case, and I hope book, by itself, under its own merit, might persuade you to buy it.

(Reply to this) (Parent)(Thread)

Re: I will, if - [info]mrmandias, 2008-02-21 06:33 pm UTC
Re: I will, if - [info]mrmandias, 2008-02-21 06:55 pm UTC
Re: I will, if - [info]johncwright, 2008-02-21 07:29 pm UTC
Re: I will, if - [info]mrmandias, 2008-02-21 07:36 pm UTC
Re: I will, if - [info]sce2aux, 2008-02-21 09:21 pm UTC
Re: I will, if - [info]johncwright, 2008-02-21 09:45 pm UTC
Re: I will, if - [info]arhyalon, 2008-02-21 11:03 pm UTC
Re: I will, if - [info]arhyalon, 2008-02-21 11:01 pm UTC
Re: I will, if - [info]oscillon, 2008-02-21 10:15 pm UTC
Re: I will, if - [info]mrmandias, 2008-02-21 10:18 pm UTC
Re: I will, if - [info]bibliophile112, 2008-02-22 04:14 pm UTC
Re: I will, if - [info]mrmandias, 2008-02-22 05:42 pm UTC
Re: I will, if - [info]johncwright, 2008-02-22 05:56 pm UTC
Re: I will, if - [info]carbonelle, 2008-02-22 08:59 pm UTC
Re: I will, if - [info]mrmandias, 2008-02-28 05:46 pm UTC
Oh my Goodness!
[info]johncwright
2008-02-21 07:33 pm UTC (link)
I got a friendly blurb from Mike Flynn and Stephen Baxter. I would be smiling had it not been that my jaw dropped to the floor. These are real, high-powered authors. Wow.

"A superb homage to a genre classic by one of the field's most promising talents. Even if you haven't read van Vogt yet, don't miss John C Wright."

—Stephen Baxter on Null-A Continuum

"Anyone curious about the grand old days of gosh-wow, whiz-bang,Golden Age SF need look no further than this homage to A.E. Van Vogt. Packed with intergalactic adventures, the cliffhangers and plot twists of the pulp era - and Space Princesses! - this is a roller coaster ride."

— Michael F. Flynn on Null-A Continuum

(Note the Space Princess reference!)

(Reply to this) (Thread)

Re: Oh my Goodness!
[info]mrmandias
2008-02-21 07:38 pm UTC (link)
A fellow traveler of the all-victorious Space Princess Movement?

(Reply to this) (Parent)

Re: Oh my Goodness!
[info]saintjoi
2008-02-21 08:46 pm UTC (link)
1. Dang. Now I have to finish reading Vogt's books. My reading list is too long as it is.

2. DANG. You got a blurb from Flynn? Now I HAVE to order the book. (Just read Eifelheim, and am currently reading In the Country of the Blind.)

(Reply to this) (Parent)(Thread)

Re: Oh my Goodness!
[info]m_francis
2008-02-21 10:15 pm UTC (link)
A fellow traveler of the all-victorious Space Princess Movement?

"Space Princess" only if you count the Queen of the Universe as a Space Princess pulling rank.

VanVogt once said, IIRC, that you should never write more than 200 words without introducing an unexpected plot twist. Hence the breakneck pace of pulp writing. The reader had to have a reason not to stop reading. (Crichton is a modern master of this.) But it is possible in this way to get so twisted that the twists begin to contradict one another, and loose ends abound like frizzled hair after a bad shampoo. But they do keep you turning the pages.

Personally, I've always liked The Voyage of the Space Beagle, which is actually a fix-up of some previously independent novelettes. It's interesting to compare the first adventure in Beagle with the original version "Dark Destroyer." Couldn't've been easy inserting a new Main Character into the narrative.

I had to jettison a lot of books in the last move, but I have on hand: The World of Null-A, Slan, The Voyage of the Space Beagle, Rogue Ship, Mission to the Stars (a.k.a. The Mixed Men), The Wizard of Linn, and a collection, Destination Universe!

Just read Eifelheim, and am currently reading In the Country of the Blind.

You should also read The Wreck of The River of Stars and The January Dancer.

(Reply to this) (Parent)(Thread)

Re: Oh my Goodness! - [info]saintjoi, 2008-02-22 12:26 am UTC
Re: Oh my Goodness! - [info]arhyalon, 2008-02-22 01:07 pm UTC
Re: Oh my Goodness! - [info]saintjoi, 2008-02-22 07:09 pm UTC
Re: Oh my Goodness! - [info]johncwright, 2008-02-22 01:50 am UTC
Re: Oh my Goodness! - [info]m_francis, 2008-02-22 02:10 am UTC
Re: Oh my Goodness!
[info]ladyhobbit
2008-02-22 06:21 pm UTC (link)
Me, too! First I had to read Zelazny's Chronicles of Chaos, so I could read "Orphans of Chaos"--now I have to read "Null-A" so I can read the new book.

I loved "The Weapon Shops of Isher," though, so I'm looking forward to it.

And by the way--in the shameless flattery department, although I enjoyed "Nine Princes in Amber" and the half-dozen other Zelazny novels I read, I like the Orphans books better.

(Reply to this) (Parent)

Cat? Lab? eep!
[info]necoras
2008-02-21 10:50 pm UTC (link)
How dare you suggest I sell my cat! I love my kitties. Some coworkers maybe.....

(Reply to this)


[info]isaac_wilcott
2008-02-21 10:56 pm UTC (link)
I'll get at least three copies, two for me and one for me mum. And I'd very much like to send two of them to you to get autographed... real autographs, mind you! I know you're a busy man, but please, no rubber-stamp signatures! :-P

(Reply to this) (Thread)


[info]arhyalon
2008-02-21 11:05 pm UTC (link)
John will autograph books that are sent! (Sometimes, he even draws pictures, though I don't know if there are any characters in the Null-A book that he would draw.)

(Reply to this) (Parent)(Thread)


[info]isaac_wilcott
2008-02-21 11:26 pm UTC (link)
Hmmm. A drawing would certainly be interesting, but is there any chance he could write a non-Aristotelian limerick instead?

(Reply to this) (Parent)(Thread)

(no subject) - [info]johncwright, 2008-02-21 11:29 pm UTC
Non-Aristotelian Limerick - [info]m_francis, 2008-02-22 05:39 pm UTC
Shameless Self-Promotion
[info]niallmor
2008-02-22 12:41 am UTC (link)
Wow! Even Professional writers who actually get PAID for what they write engage in shameless self-promotion? Who'da thunk it? Me, I'm just a little nebbish trying to promote his latest fanfic, which the internet seems to be greeting with a collective yawn.

(Reply to this) (Thread)

Re: Shameless Self-Promotion
[info]johncwright
2008-02-22 01:51 am UTC (link)
We also from time to time engage in shameful self-promotion. Since my NULL-A novel is set in another man's background, and uses his characters and themes, whether or not it is fanfic or something more elevated, I leave to the judgment of the candid readership to decide.

(Reply to this) (Parent)


[info]kokorognosis
2008-02-22 03:19 am UTC (link)
I cannot wait. I read Null-A one and two very recently, and loved them-- noticing influences; if the Games Machine is not a proto-Sophotech, I don't know what is :p

So. Yeah. Pre-ordering tomorrow morning. ^^

(Reply to this)


[info]lordbrand
2008-02-22 03:30 am UTC (link)
So your publisher's marketing team is working closely with Amazon to create a slightly discounted bundle for this book + the original book, yes?

Because it's a highly unusual situation and who wouldn't want both books now?

Because some Wright fans who haven't purchased or read the original would like to experience this book in context?

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[info]arhyalon
2008-02-22 01:05 pm UTC (link)
I don't knnow that we ever have control of these things. Marketing is a mystery unto which mere authors are not initated. We can send them suggestions from time to time, but it is a lot like sending a message written on a paper airplane into a black hole.

(Reply to this) (Parent)(Thread)


[info]lordbrand
2008-02-22 01:53 pm UTC (link)
Grin. I am on the other end (well, for business non-fiction books)- it is often unfortunately a mystery to the publisher as well!

(Reply to this) (Parent)(Thread)

(no subject) - [info]lordbrand, 2008-02-22 01:54 pm UTC

[info]oscillon
2008-02-22 11:30 pm UTC (link)
Speaking of the business side of books...
Does anyone know why certain authors are only available in those giant sized, overpriced softcovers ($14 instead of $8)?
It's driving me crazy lately. 1/2 the well reviewed books are $14 for the paperback. So far, I refuse.

(Reply to this) (Parent)(Thread)

(no subject) - [info]arhyalon, 2008-02-25 09:24 pm UTC

[info]mrmandias
2008-02-22 08:26 pm UTC (link)
Great idea. Exactly my problem, since my local library only has the third Van Vogt, which is apparently Not Canon, by decree of His Serene Johnness, Mr. Wright.

(Reply to this) (Parent)(Thread)


[info]isaac_wilcott
2008-02-22 09:22 pm UTC (link)
...Not Canon by the decree of anyone who's read it!

(Reply to this) (Parent)(Thread)

(no subject) - [info]arhyalon, 2008-02-26 03:36 pm UTC

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