Archive for April, 2022

Catholic Culture on Gene Wolfe

Posted April 30, 2022 By John C Wright

Fans of Gene Wolfe (of which I am the biggest, at least in girth) may be interested to hear  Catholic Culture interviewing Fr. Brendon Laroche and Sandra Miesel (described here as a “Catholic historian & sci-fi knowledgeable “) on the foremost novelist of our generation. Please note I do not restrict my praise to call him the foremost science fiction novelist or foremost Catholic novelist. I mean to single him out above all men of letters penning fiction the Postcoldwar Era.

The link is here:

https://www.catholicculture.org/commentary/ep-77-gene-wolfe-catholic-sci-fi-legend-sandra-miesel-fr-brendon-laroche/

and here:

I had the honor once to be interviewed by Mrs. Miesel alongside Gene Wolfe and Tim Powers and Mike Flynn, a cornucopia of science fictional talent amid which mine was the humblest.

You can read for yourself whose answers contain the least insight. I can only suggest this was earlier in my career. And a dog ate my homework. The sun was in my eyes.
https://www.catholicworldreport.com/2009/08/10/a-conversation-with-catholic-sf-writers/

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The Lesson of History in the Domains of Koryphon

Posted April 29, 2022 By John C Wright

A recent discussion in this space touched on the topic of how, before there is one sovereign power to hold all tribes, tongues, and nations in awe, the conquest of land over generations is a tragic reality human law cannot ameliorate.

I mentioned in passing that the urge to deracinate the current landholders to return terrain to descendants of older claimants is an urge with no appeal to me, nor has been since my youth.

For better or worse, my first impression of the topic was informed by, of all things, a science fiction novel by the underrated and unfairly neglected grandmaster Jack Vance. I have seen no reason to revisit the issue. The attempt to effect a restitution for evils that befell before the current reign and realm of a prince or parliament was established is in vain, and, moreover, is pernicious if the attempt engenders evils equally as great.

Here is a quote from the Jack Vance science fiction book published as THE GRAY PRINCE, later, republished under the author’s preferred title THE DOMAINS OF KORYPHON.

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All Property is Theft

Posted April 28, 2022 By John C Wright

We have heard property rights be dismissed by the catchy phrase that all property is theft.

We have not heard it said from whom the thieves took it.

Those who voice this phrase may be libertarian or leftwing or anarchist or totalitarian from some non-mainstream variation of these schools of thought.

Such would deny a man the right to the fruits of his own labor; or to prevent the copying on his intellectual property; or to prevent trespass on land inherited from his forebears; or to prevent trespass on land pioneered from the wilderness, and made fruitful; and some would deny all of these by denying property rights altogether.

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Wine-thirst of Comus is now posted.

Comus awakens into the modern day, and meets the prince who rules it, and is given a great commission. Woe to man.

The strange events known to mortal men are more easily explained by this glimpse beyond the veil, for who has been given regency over the modern generation is explained, and the why and wherefore of it.

But there is a hint of a further veil beyond this veil, to reveal profounder mysteries: an epilogue in will soon conclude this strange, short tale.

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We Knew the Game was Rigged

Posted April 27, 2022 By John C Wright

Larry Correia holds forth on recent events of public note, including the recent acquisition of YouTwitFace by Hank Rearden, famous industrialist, and inventor of Rearden Metal.

He writes, in part (expletives in the original are here deleted.)

Keep in mind, I’m a relative nobody on there. I got up to like 12k followers before I bailed out. That’s zilch in the grand scheme of things, but I’ve done enough culture war bullshit that my name usually shows up on the naughty list. In the time I’ve been posting regularly again, that follower count remained remarkably static, only growing by a few hundred people over a year.

Along comes Elon Musk, everybody is celebrating, having a good time, and I posted about how my feed looked a lot different. I was seeing people I’d not seen for years. (my first thought was that these were people who had been gone but were checking back in because of Elon buying it, but nope, they had been posting there the whole time)

Then I started getting tweets from followers who are like, whoa, Larry is back on Twitter!

So I got curious and started asking about this, and then the posts started coming. Dozens of them. Oh yeah, I thought you weren’t on here! I thought you only posted like once a month! I never see you post. So on and so forth. It was remarkably consistent.

I knew I was throttled, but I had not realized just how bad it was. It was way harder than I thought.

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Elon Musk Just Bought Twitter

Posted April 26, 2022 By John C Wright

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Voice of Reason 20: The Opium of Utopia

Posted April 24, 2022 By John C Wright

Voice of Reason posts the next installment of the Last Crusade oration: Last Crusade 20: The Opium of Utopia.
The Last Crusade takes up arms against a fallen world.
The enemy says Utopia has never been tried. In reality, the tragic history of nations is nothing but seeking Utopia by trusting despots who promise heaven and deliver hell.

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Communal Conscience

Posted April 22, 2022 By John C Wright

A friend brought this noncontroversy to my attention. The game here mentioned is called Viticulture.

https://stonemaiergames.com/south-america-cultural-consulting-and-fixing-a-big-mistake/

Today’s continent is South America (17 cards, medium level). The core mechanism of the South America continent is that players can leverage people from history who made a big impact on viticulture in that region. The history of winemaking there is as fascinating as it is problematic; therein lies the core story I’ll share today.

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Encanto Sleepy Joe

Posted April 22, 2022 By John C Wright

For your musical and political entertainment:


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Encanto Fan Theory

Posted April 20, 2022 By John C Wright

A note on Encanto: This is not part of my review of the film, but is related.

The film inexcusably leaves unanswered several crucial questions, including what, if anything Alma’s gift might be, and whether Mirabel was granted a gift at the end, and, if so, what it was.

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Wine-thirst of Comus: Of Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone

Posted April 20, 2022 By John C Wright

Wine-thirst of Comus is now posted.

All is not well for the gay-hearted scion of the wine-god, as the Three Sisters, drenched in blood, arrive with cries of vengeance upon their doom-decreeing lips.

Comus is slain and sepulchred, but, as is often the case in tales of this kind, this does not bring matters to a conclusion.

A new god from the East arises, a humble god hanged on a cursed tree like a slave. The old gods fail like autumn leaves, as the winter of the world approaches.

But the old gods are not done with Comus yet.

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Review: Encanto Fails to Enchant

Posted April 19, 2022 By John C Wright

Encanto (2021) is from Disney studio, not Pixar, and comes very close to being one of their animated masterpieces, but fails due to simple errors any competent editor would have seen and fixed in the first draft of the script.

The error here is that the show tells rather than shows every significant point of character development. Resolutions are presented with insufficient set up, or none,  are followed by insufficient follow-through, or none. This happens not with one character, but all.

It is mildly astonishing that projects of this size, expense, and prestige can be carried to conclusion without anyone involved seeing and correcting so basic a flaw in story-telling.

But, to be fair, even a near miss for a studio with a history of producing legendary and immortal works of animation puts this film way above average, and it still earns my recommendation.

It is a good film. It could have been great, but missed the mark.

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Pale Realms of Shade

Posted April 17, 2022 By John C Wright
In honor of Easter Sunday, here follows a tale from the Book of Feasts and Seasons:

 

Pale Realms of Shade

 

1

It was not the being dead that I minded, it was the hours.

No one ever calls me up during the day, and most people decide to wait until after midnight, for some reason.  I am a morning person, or was, so meetings in the still, dark hours lost between midnight and the dawn make me crabby.

This time, it was not some comfortable séance room or picturesque graveyard with moss-covered stone angels. I came to the surface of mortal time on a street corner of some American city, mid-Twentieth to early Twenty-First Century. You can tell from the height of the buildings that it is American, and from the fact that the road names are written on signs rather than walls. And Twenty-Second Century streets are not lit up at night, of course.

The main road was called Saint Street. The small alley was called Peter Way. Great. I was crossed by Saint and Peter.

I smelled her perfume before I saw her. I turned. There she was, outlined against the streetlamp beyond. I could not mistake her silhouette: slender, alluring, like a she-panther as she walked.

“Matthias,” she breathed in her low whisper. Her voice was throbbing music to me, despite everything that had happened. “You look well — ah — considering.”

“Lorelei,” I grunted. She was just wearing a blouse and skirt and a knee-length gray coat, but on her the outfit could have made the cover of a fashion magazine. Or a girly magazine. Her wild mass of gold-red hair was like a waterfall of bright fire tumbling past her shoulders to the small of her back. Atop, like a cherry on strawberry ice-cream, was perched brimless cap. My arms ached with the desire to take her and hold her. But I could never touch her, or, for that matter, anyone ever again.

She sighed and rolled her enormous emerald-green eyes. “Sweetheart, this time, you have to tell me if you were murdered. You have to!”

I took a puff of an imaginary cigarette, and watched the smoke, equally imaginary, drift off in a plume more solid than I was. “I ain’t saying.”

“But you must! I cannot rest until I know!”

Now I knew when and where I was. Because I died the day the Korean War ended. July 27. Mark the day on the calendar. That was the day I gave up smoking.

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Voice of Reason 19: Lies, More Lies, Leftism

Posted April 16, 2022 By John C Wright

Voice of Reason posts the next installment of the Last Crusade oration:
Last Crusade 19: Lies, More Lies, Leftism.
The Last Crusade takes up arms against a fallen world. Falsehood is the core principle and the sole principle of Enemy philosophy.

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Queen of the Tyrant Lizards By John C Wright

Posted April 15, 2022 By John C Wright
This work first appeared in THE BOOK OF FEASTS AND SEASONS published by Castalia House. Reprinted here for the purposes of commentary.

Queen of the Tyrant Lizards

By John C Wright

There was no time. That is the first thing to remember. I did not know what was about to happen. That is the second thing to remember.

Imagine a time line. Select a zero point. To one side is an infinity of tomorrow, starting with positive one. To the other is an infinity of yesterday, starting with negative one. But between the positive and the negative infinities, what is there? Less than nothing, less than half of nothing, a pinprick, a dot, a point, less time than it takes to decide to murder them all.

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