Whoniversaries 8 September: Louis Mahoney, Destiny of the Daleks #2, Dinosaurs on a Spaceship

i) births and deaths

8 September 1922: birth of Royston Tickner, who played Steinberger P. Green in "The Feast of Steven", the lost seventh episode of what we now call The Daleks' Master Plan (First Doctor, 1965) and Robbins in The Sea Devils (Third Doctor, 1972).

8 September 1938: birth of Louis Mahoney who played a newscaster in Frontier in Space (Third Doctor, 1973), Ponti in Planet of Evil (Fourth Doctor, 1975), and the older Billy Shipton in Blink (Ninth Doctor, 2007).


8 September 2014: death of Jane Baker, who with her husband Pip Baker wrote two and a half Sixth Doctor stories and a Seventh Doctor story.

ii) broadcast anniversaries

8 September 1979: broadcast of second episode of Destiny of the Daleks. The Doctor resurrects Romana; the Daleks resurrect Davros! And the Doctor taunts the Daleks for not being able to climb.

8 September 2012: broadcast of Dinosaurs on a Spaceship. The Eleventh Doctor, Amy, Rory, Rory's dad Brian and Queen Nefertiti of Ancient Egypt team up with a big game hunter to save the Indian Space Agency's mission from a giant reptile infestation.

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More genealogical connections: The Star-Spangled Banner

By consideration and consolidation of the various bits and pieces that have come my way, I have discovered that I am related to the writer of "The Star-Spangled Banner".

Phillip Keye (1696-1764) and Susannah Barton Gardner (1705-1742) moved to Maryland in 1740, which was obviously not so great for her; they were my 7xgreat grandparents.

Two of their sons were my 6x great-grandfather, Richard Ward Key (1727-1765) and his younger brother Francis Key (1731-1770).

Richard's daughter Mary Key (1752-1796) was my 5x great-grandmother. Her first cousin was John Ross Key (1754-1821).

Mary married Daniel Charles Heath (1744-1797) and their daughter Susanna Gardner Heath (1780–1827) was my 4x great grandmother. Her second cousin Francis Scott Key (1779-1843) was the writer of "The Star-Spangled Banner". They all lived in Maryland and the various generations were close in age, so they probably knew each other.

Susanna married the somewhat older Matthias Bordley (1757-1828); they moved to Pennsylvania, and their multiply named daughter Sally Rebecca Heath Sims Bordley (1805–1884) was my 3x great-grandmother.

She also married a somewhat older man, a homeopathic doctor (!!!), Richard Grafton Belt (1784-1855), and the love letters of their daughter Fanny, my great-great-grandmother, survive.

So, it's a small world sometimes. Francis Scott Key was my second cousin, six times removed. Am chasing another interesting Maryland connection, but one of the crucial early links is weak…

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Whoniversaries 7 September: Ewen Solon, Rona Munro, The Dominators #5, Time and the Rani #1

i) births and deaths

7 September 1917: death of Ewen Solon, who played Chal in The Savages (First Doctor, 1966) and Vishinsky in Planet of Evil (Fourth Doctor, 1975).

7 September 1959: birth of Rona Munro, so far the only person to have written TV stories for both Old Who and New Who. She wrote Survival, the very last story of the 1963-89 series (Seventh Doctor, 1989), and The Eaters of Light (Twelfth Doctor, 2017).

7 September 1960: birth of Christopher Villiers, who played Hugh Fitzwilliam in The King's Demons (Fifth Doctor, 1983) and Professor Moorhouse in Mummy on the Orient Express (Twelfth Doctor, 2014)

ii) broadcast anniversaries

7 September 1968: broadcast of episode 5 of The Dominators. The Doctor disposes of the invaders by planting their bomb on their own ship; but the Tardis is engulfed by lava…

7 September 1987: broadcast of first episode of Time and the Rani, starting Season 24. The Doctor unexpectedly falls off his exercise bike and regenerates; the Rani then captures him. Mel attempts to escape the bubble-traps but is caught.

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December 2007 books and 2007 reading

The Lib Dems elected Nick Clegg, Belgium got a new government, and I borrowed my brother-in-law's suit. No travel for me, but meanwhile little U got birthday cake at school, F got what he wanted for Christmas, and B settled into the snoezelruimte in her new home.

Not so many books in December 2007 – still a bit shell-shocked by B's departure.

Non-fiction 6 (YTD 78)
About Time 5: The Unauthorised Guide to Doctor Who, 1980-1984, by Lawrence Miles and Tat Wood
Who's Next: An Unofficial and Unauthorised Guide to Doctor Who, by Mark Clapham, Eddie Robson and Jim Smith
Back in Time: A Thinking Fan's Guide to Doctor Who, by Steve Couch, Tony Watkins and Peter S. Williams
Time And Relative Dissertations In Space: Critical Perspectives on Doctor Who, edited by David Butler
Latin Palaeography: Antiquity & the Middle Ages, by Bernhard Bischoff, translated by Dáibhí Ó Cróinín & David Ganz
Slide Rule: An Autobiography, by Neville Shute

non-genre 1 (YTD 33)
Sodom and Gomorrah, by Marcel Proust

sf (non-Who) 2 (YTD 75)
At Swim-Two-Birds, by Flann O'Brien
Dhalgren, by Samuel R. Delany

Doctor Who 4 (YTD 27)
Doctor Who: The Official Annual 2008
Sting of the Zygons, by Stephen Cole
Doctor Who – Remembrance of the Daleks, by Ben Aaronovitch
Doctor Who and the Loch Ness Monster, by Terrance Dicks

4,100 pages (2007 total 69,900)
none by women (2007 total 53/236)
none by PoC (2007 total 5/236)

The best and worst of these were all about Doctor Who. I loved both the About Time volume, which you can get here, and the David Butler essay collection, which you can get here. But the Back in Time volume tried constrained its analysis of the programme to a Christian perspective, which misses the mark. You can get it here.


2007 books roundup

I did a roundup at the time, but am now reformatting to my current system (and reclassifying a few books as well).

Non-fiction: 78 (33%, almost as high as 2006 which is the highest for any year I have on record)

Best of 2007: A Time of Gifts / Between the Woods and the Water, by Patrick Leigh Fermor (here and here) and James Tiptree, Jr.: The Double Life of Alice B. Sheldon, by Julie Phillips (here)
The one you haven't heard of: Presidents I've Known and Two Near Presidents, by Charles W. Thompson (here)
Worst of 2007: After Dinner Speaking, by Fawcett Boom (here).

SF (other than Doctor Who): 75 (32%)

Best of 2007: The splendid Sailing to Sarantium / Lord of Emperors duology by Guy Gavriel Kay (here and here), and the first two of the Sharing Knife books, Beguilement and Legacy, by Lois McMaster Bujold (here and here).
The one you haven't heard of: The Way to Babylon, by Paul Kearney (here)
The one to avoid: First Lensman, by E.E. "Doc" Smith (here)

Non-genre: 33 (14% – a bit less than usual)

Best of 2007: Gilead, by Marilynne Robinson (here), and The Steep Approach to Garbadale, by Iain Banks (here).
The one you haven't heard of: The Successor, by Ismail Kadarë (here)
The one to avoid: Wilt in Nowhere, by Tom Sharp (here)

Doctor Who: 27 (11% – a bit less than 2006)

Best of 2007: counting non-fiction, the About Time series (here, here, here and here) and the Butler collection of essays (here).
Best fiction: Salvation, by Steve Lyons (here)
The one you haven't heard of: The Masters of Luxor (here)
The one to avoid: John Lucarotti's novelisation of The Aztecs (here)

Comics: 20 (8% – average before 2013)

Best of 2007: Alison Bechdel's Fun Home, followed by Craig Thompson's Blankets (here)
The one you haven't heard of: The Age of Chaos, a Sixth Doctor comic by Colin Baker (here)
The one to avoid: Pussey! by, for the third year in a row, Dan Clowes (here)

Book of the year 2007: Fun Home: A Family Tragicomedy, by Alison Bechdel, a brilliant exploration of growing up with family secrets, and your own secrets too. You can (and should) get it here.

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Whoniversaries 6 September: Zygons #2, Hive #2, ToaTL #1, Real Time ends

only broadcast anniversaries today, but gosh there are plenty of them.

6 September 1975: broadcast of second episode of Terror of the Zygons. The Zygons brag to captive Harry about their control of the Loch Ness Monster / Skarasen, and unleash it on the Doctor… There's also a particularly chilling scene with the Zygon which is imitating Harry Sullivan.

6th September 1980: broadcast of second episode of The Leisure Hive. The Doctor is forced to age by the Argolins.

6 September 1986: broadcast of first episode of The Forbidden Planet (Trial of a Time Lord #1), starting the belated Season 23. The Doctor is captured and put on trial; flashback to the somewhat incomprehensible beginning of the adventure on Ravalox.

6 September 1989: broadcast of first episode of Battlefield, starting the last season of Old Who. Yay Brigadier! Lots of nice scene-setting, and then a knight materialises and addresses the Doctor as 'Merlin'.

6 September 2002: webcast of final episode of Real Time. Evelyn is saved from cyber-conversion, but the ending is kinda confusing.

6 September 2014: broadcast of Twelfth Doctor story Robot of Sherwood. Who was Robin? And what is a legend anyway?

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Star Wars (now episode IV, but that wasn’t what we called it back then)

Star Wars won the Hugo for Best Dramatic Presentation in 1978, and a special Nebula for Best Dramatic Presentation as well – the category had been discontinued, and was not revived until 2000. The other Hugo finalists were Close Encounters of the Third Kind, the Ralph Bakshi animated film Wizards, the TV animated adaptation of The Hobbit, and a two-record album of Robert Bloch and Harlan Ellison reading their own stories with the title Blood! The Life And Future Times Of Jack The Ripper. The Hugo voters got it right, and Star Wars is rated the top film of 1977 on both IMDB rankings. Where there are both Hugo and Oscar winning films to write up for a particular year, I’ll take the highest scoring film first, so Annie Hall comes next.

Being the sort of film it is, there are a lot of actors who have appeared either in Hugo-winning filmns I have already written up, or in Oscar-winning films, or in Doctor Who. To take it from the top, I already wrote up Raiders of the Lost Ark out of sequence; Harrison Ford is obviously Indiana Jones there and Han Solo here.


Peter Cushing is the evil Grand Moff Tarkin here and was Dr Who, the genial eccentric English scientist, in the two cinema films of the 1960s (actually looking a bit older in films made over a decade before) as well as being a rather camp Osric in Olivier’s Oscar-winning Hamlet.



Alec Guinness, here the warrior sage Obi Wan Kenobi, was of course in both Lawrence of Arabia and Bridge on the River Kwai.



Mad Magazine suspected that he was not entirely happy about the role:

Confirmed by his own correspondence at the time.

David Prowse’s face does not appear here, but he is under Darth Vader’s cloak; unmasked, he was in Hugo-winning A Clockwork Orange, and masked as the Minotaur in the Doctor Who story The Time Monster


.

Meanwhile the voice of Darth Vader is provided by James Earl Jones, previously in Dr Strangelove.

Three more Doctor Who crossovers. In the very same year that he played Chief Bast, one of the Death Star officers, Leslie Schofield also played Calib in The Face of Evil, and eight years previously had been a French soldier Leroy, in The War Games.


Garrick Hagon, who is Luke’s boyhood friend Biggs, was revolutionary/evolutionary leader Ky in The Mutants. and then the undertaker Abraham in A Town Called Mercy.


And a bit more obscurely, Graham Ashley who is rebel pilot Gold Five was the Overseer in the justly forgotten Second Doctor story The Underwater Menace.

Well, after all that throat-clearing, I loved the film when it first came out in 1977, and I love it now. It has its flaws: despite the melting pot of Mos Eisley, and the happy collaboration of humans and non-humans, there is no visible non-white human character, and James Earl Jones scandalously is not even credited as the voice of Vader. Also, I don’t think it passes the second leg of the Bechdel Test, never mind the third. (Not to mention what Carrie Fisher has told us about her relationship with Harrison Ford at the time.) As fans we accept that the things we love have flaws.

Brian Aldiss described Star Wars as giving him the "thrill of recognition", and I think I know exactly what he meant. Having now watched all of the Hugo and Retro Hugo winning films up to 1977, very few actually feel like movies rooted in the written science fiction genre. The War of the Worlds and 2001 come closest, but the former was more than two decades previously and the latter starts and ends in very different territory. (Maybe Soylent Green too, though its future New York is clearly mean to be a reflected present New York). Yes, as Alec Guinness pointed out at the time, a lot of it makes no sense and there are plot holes you could drive a Death Star through. But it's so much fun.

The effects are dazzling and brilliant, and the music thoroughly memorable.

The script may not make much sense, but it iis witty, the cast are giving it their all (even Alec Guinness) and it's just a joy to watch again.

I'm now up to twenty films which won the Hugo, Retro-Hugo and/or Nebula, so here is my ranking so far. (In red are those I've seen since I watched 2001 in February.)

20) The Canterville Ghost (Retro Short, 1945)
19) Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man (Retro Short, 1944)
18) Curse of the Cat People (Retro Short, 1945)
17) Heaven Can Wait (Retro Long, 1944)
16) The Incredible Shrinking Man (Outstanding Movie, 1958)
15) A Boy and His Dog (1976)
14) Pinocchio (Retro Short Form, 1941)
13) Destination Moon (Retro, 1951)
12) Slaughterhouse-Five (1973)
11) The War of the Worlds (Retro, 1954)
10) Sleeper (Hugo/Nebula 1974)
9) Fantasia (Retro Long Form, 1941)
8) Bambi (Retro, 1943)
7) Young Frankenstein (Hugo/Nebula 1975)
6) Soylent Green (Nebula 1973)
5) The Picture of Dorian Gray (Retro, 1946)
4) Dr Strangelove (1965)
3) A Clockwork Orange (1972)
2) 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)
1) Star Wars (Hugo/Nebula 1978/77)

Obviously the film was an original script, but in the days before home video, let alone DVDs, we were able to relive the cinema experience only by getting the comic book, by two Marvel luminaries, Roy Thomas and Howard Chaykin. The second frame of the third chapter is:

Of course it's not a match for the big screen (or even small screen, these days), but it's a faithful and enjoyable adaptation with a couple of wrinkles – notably an early scene with Luke and his friend Biggs, which was cut from the film, survives here.

And while we are on comics, I still have an affection for Mad Magazine's musical parody, already excerpted above. You can find it in issue 203, from October 1978, online here. I learned the song that goes to "Do-Re-Me" off by heart when I was twelve.


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Whoniversaries 5 September: Stephen Greenhorn, Reign of Terror #5 (both 1964)

i) births and deaths

5 September 1964: birth of Stephen Greenhorn, writer of The Lazarus Experiment (2007) and The Doctor's Daughter (2008).

5 September 1987: death of Bill Fraser, who played General Grugger in Meglos (Fourth Doctor, 1980) and Bill Pollock in K9 and Company.

ii) broadcast anniversary

5 September 1964: broadcast of "A Bargain of Necessity", fifth episode of the story we now call The Reign of Terror. Ian is rescued; the Doctor attempts to rescue Susan; but is forced to  cooperate with Lemaitre instead. A lost episode, sadly, but it has been animated.

iii) date specified in-universe:

5 September 2954: birth of Chris Cwej, one of the Seventh Doctor’s companions in the New Adventures.

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Etymology thread: दिल मेरा बंजारा, Dil mera banjaara, my heart is a wanderer

Today's etymological thread was inspired by the utterly bonkers song "बंजारा / Wanderer" in the Bollywood film Ek Tha Tiger. India looks at Dublin. Our hero, in love with the mysterious woman who is actually on the other side, falls into a reverie:

So, my eye was caught by the second line, दिल मेरा बंजारा, Dil mera banjaara, my heart is a wanderer, which is repeated throughout the song (sometimes doubled, दिल मेरा दिल मेरा बंजारा, Dil mera dil mera banjaara). दिल dil means "heart" in Hindi. Where did that come from?

English heart is obviously related to Dutch hart, German Herz, Yiddish האַרץ‎/harts, Danish/Norwegian hjerte, Swedish hjärta, Icelandic/Faroese hjarta, Gothic /hairtō, from ancient Germanic root *hertô from Proto-Indo-European root *ḱḗr with stem *ḱr̥d-.

That *ḱḗr / *ḱr̥d- root is pretty widespread with very little change of meaning in Indo-European languages. Irish croidhe / croí (also sweetheart), Welsh craidd (middle), Greek κῆρ / καρδία, Latin cor / cordis, French cœur, extended a bit for Spanish corazón, Portuguese coração.

That Latin root also gives us courage, accord, concord, discord, record; and the Greek gives us cardiology etc. And related Indo-European *ḱréddʰh₁eti, believe, gives us Latin crēdō and therefore credit, incredible, etc. And Irish creid, to believe, has the same root.

But what about farther East? Well, the Sanskrit word for heart is हृदय, hṛ́daya, which is obviously related and gives the Hindi word हिया hiyā meaning heart. But the Hindi word दिल dil, also meaning heart, is a loan from Persian دل dil (also Urdu دِل and Punjabi ਦਿਲ).

It's not at all obvious, but दिल دل ਦਿਲ dil is also descended from Proto-Indo-European *ḱr̥d- via Proto-Indo-Iranian *ȷ́ʰŕ̥d-. There's apparently a well documented phonetic shift *ȷ́ŕ̥d- > *dŕ̥d > *dŕ̥l > dil., a similar shift giving us Persian گل gol for rose.

Of the other two words in that catchy line, दिल मेरा बंजारा, Dil mera banjaara, My heart is a wanderer, मेरा mera is easy – the word for "my" in most Indo-European languages begins with m (mon, mein/mijn, мой/мој/moj, mo, etc).

बंजारा banjaara, the title of the song, is also the name of a nomadic people in India, but the more I dig into it the less I realise I know about Indian history and geography.

The point is that our hero is lost in love, so let's leave it there.

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Whoniversaries 4 September

i) births and deaths

4th September 1975: birth of Kai Owen, who played Rhys Williams in Torchwood.

ii) broadcast anniversary

4th September 1976 – broadcast of first episode of The Masque of Mandragora, starting Season 14. The Doctor and Sarah find an older console room in the Tardis, and then find themselves in a part of Renaissance Italy which looks just like a set from The Prisoner. Inevitably they are captured by the bad guys and the Doctor is made ready for the executioner's axe…

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Thursday reading

Current
Jerusalem: Vernal’s Inquest, by Alan Moore
Titus Groan, by Mervyn Peake
The Mirror and the Light, by Hilary Mantel
The Sky Road, by Ken MacLeod

Last books finished
Bring Up the Bodies, by Hilary Mantel
Star Wars IV: A New Hope, by Roy Thomas and Howard Chaykin
The Conqueror’s Child, by Suzy McKee Charnas

Next books
Shadow Scale, by Rachel Hartman
East West Street, by Philippe Sands

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Whoniversaries 3 September

i) births and deaths

3 September 1940: birth of Pauline Collins, who memorably played companion-that-never-was Samantha Briggs in The Faceless Ones (Second Doctor, 1967) and Queen Victoria in Tooth and Claw (Tenth Docrtor, 2006).

ii) broadcast anniversaries

3 September 1977: broadcast of first episode of Horror of Fang Rock, starting Season 15. The Fourth Doctor and Leela land at the lighthouse of Fang rock, where the two keepers, Reuben and Vince, are behaving oddly (indeed, Reuben so oddly that he is dead). And a ship is wrecked on the Rock…

3 September 1993 – broadcast of second episode of The Paradise of Death. The Third Doctor rather bizarrely recovers from his fall because he is able to turn his whole body to jelly. The bad guys capture Sarah Jane Smith and take her to the planet Parakon, while the Doctor, Jeremy and the Brigadier set off in pursuit but land insyead on the planet Blestinu.

3 September 2011: broadcast of Eleventh Doctor story Night Terrors. What's up with George's cupboard? Or, indeed, with George?


iii) date specified in canon

3 September 2007 [?] – events of Revenge of the Slitheen (SJA 2008), where the slimy green gits attempt to infiltrate Park Vale Comprehensive School, attended by Luke (and Clyde, and Maria) but are foiled by our young heroes and Sarah Jane Smith.

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Gorgeous Goodreads graphs of award-winning sf

I am sitting back and marvelling at the work of ErsatzCulture, who has compiled beautiful Goodreads graphs for all of the major sf awards.

You should really go and explore them for yourself. I’ve been having fun identifying highs and lows for the major awards as follows:

Highest-ranked Hugo Best Novel finalist: Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, by J.K. Rowling (2000) – winner that year was A Deepness in the Sky
Highest-ranked Hugo Best Novel winner: Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, by J.K. Rowling (2001)

Highest-ranked Hugo Best Novel finalist of the twentieth century (which ended in 1999): Slaughterhouse-Five, by Kurt Vonnegut (1970), beaten by The Left Hand of Darkness
Highest-ranked Hugo Best Novel winner of the twentieth century: Ender’s Game, by Orson Scott Card (1986) – just a smidgeon behind Slaughterhouse-Five.

Lowest-ranked Hugo Best Novel winner: not surprisingly, They’d Rather be Right, by Mark Clifton and Frank Riley (1955)
Lowest-ranked Hugo Best Novel finalist: Second Ending, by James White (1962), beaten by Stranger in a Strange Land

Lowest-ranked Hugo Best Novel winner this century: A Memory Called Empire, by Arkady Martine (2020) – just behind Hominids by Robert Sawyer (2003); but I think this year’s winner will rise.
Lowest-ranked Hugo Best Novel finalist this century: The Sky Road, by Ken MacLeod (2001), which coincidentally I have just started rereading.

If you want to count the Retros, the lowest-ranked Best Novel finalist ever is this year’s winner, Shadow over Mars, by Leigh Brackett (1945), though a 1946 finalist, Red Sun of Danger/Danger Planet, by Edmond Hamilton aka Brett Sterling, didn’t even make the chart; the highest-ranked Best Novel winner is Fahrenheit 451 (1954); and the highest-ranked Best Novel finalist is The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe (1951), beaten by Farmer in the Sky.

For the Nebulas:

Highest-ranked Best Novel finalist is A Game of Thrones, by George R.R. Martin (1995), beaten by The Moon and the Sun
Highest-ranked Best Novel winner is Ender’s Game, by Orson Scott Card (1986)

Highest-ranked Best Novel finalist this century is A Clash of Kings, by George R.R. Martin (2000), beaten by Parable of the Talents
Highest-ranked Best Novel winner this century is American Gods, by Neil Gaiman (2002)

Lowest-ranked Best Novel finalist is Rogue Dragon, by Avram Davidson (1966 – a very long shortlist for the first Nebula award won by Dune)
Lowest-ranked Best Novel winner is No Enemy but Time, by Michael Bishop (1983)

Lowest-ranked Best Novel finalist this century is From the Files of the Time Rangers, by Richard Bowes (2007), beaten by Seeker
Lowest-ranked Best Novel winner this century is A Song for a New Day, by Sarah Pinsker (2020 again, therefore likely to rise)

For the BSFA Award:

Highest-ranked Best Novel finalist is American Gods (2001), beaten by Chasm City
Highest-ranked Best Novel winner is Rendezvous with Rama, by Arthur C. Clarke (1973)

Highest-ranked Best Novel finalist last century is Neuromancer, by William Gibson (1984), beaten by Mythago Wood
Highest-ranked Best Novel winner this century is Ancillary Justice, by Ann Leckie (2013)

Lowest-ranked Best Novel finalist on record (some years seem to be missing) is The Memory Palace, by Gill Alderman (1996), beaten by Excession
Lowest-ranked Best Novel winner is Grainne, by Keith Roberts (1987)

Lowest-ranked Best Novel finalist this century is Cyber-Circus, by Kim Lakin-Smith (2011), beaten by The Islanders
Lowest-ranked Best Novel winner this century is End of the World Blues, by Jon Courtenay Grimwood (2006)

For the Arthur C. Clarke Award:

Highest-ranked finalist is The Time-Traveller’s Wife, by Audrey Niffenegger (2005), beaten by Iron Council
Highest-ranked winner is the very first, The Handmaid’s Tale, by Margaret Attwood (1987), also the highest-ranked finalist last century
Highest-ranked winner this century is Station Eleven, by Emily St John Mandel (2015 – the year I was one of the judges)

Lowest-ranked finalist is Streaking, by Brian Stableford (2007) which is almost off the scale, beaten by Nova Swing
Lowest-ranked winner is Dreaming in Smoke, by Tricia Sullivan (1999)
Lowest-ranked finalist last century is again Grainne, by Keith Roberts (1988), which for the record I rather liked, beaten by The Sea and the Summer
Lowest-ranked winner this century is Bold As Love, by Gwyneth Jones (2002)

But really, as I said, go explore the tables for yourself – great fun. If I had time I'd do the same calculation for LibraryThing, which would produce similar results with quirky differences.

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Whoniversaries 2 September: Eileen Way, Roy Castle, Tomb of the Cybermen #1, The Ribos Operation #1

i) births and deaths

2nd September 1911: birth of Eileen Way who played the Old Mother in An Unearthly Child (1963), the old woman in the woods in Daleks – Invasion Earth 2150 AD (1966) and Karela in The Creature from the Pit (1979).

2nd September 1994: death, two days after his 60th birthday, of Roy Castle, who played Ian in Doctor Who and the Daleks (1965), the first of the Peter Cushing films.

Ian_(Dalek_movies)[1].jpg

ii) broadcast anniversaries

2nd September 1967: broadcast of the first episode of Tomb of the Cybermen, starting Season 5. The Doctor, Jamie, and new companion Victoria land on a deserted planet and encounter an archaeological expedition exploring the eponymous tombs. But they may not be as dead as all that…

2nd September 1978: broadcast of the first episode of The Ribos Operation, starting Season 16 (the Quest for the Key to Time). The White Guardiuan visits the Doctor and gives him both a quest – the Key to Time – and a new companion, Romana. Landing on Ribos, the two Time Lords are trapped with the savage shrivenzale….

(Incidentally, I love that the four episodes of these two stories, iconic in very different ways, were broadcast on exactly the same calendar dates eleven years apart.)

2nd September 1995: release of Downtime – I wouldn't normally note the release of spinoff video like this, but the reunion of Victoria, the Brigadier, Sarah Jane Smith and the Yeti is quite remarkable. Usually in a good way.

2 September 2011: first broadcast of The Gathering (Torchwood). Two months on, the world has become chaos and there's something about Shanghai and Buenos Aires being antipodes? Gwen and Jack get close.

iii) date specified in canon

2nd September 1666: The Fifth Doctor starts the Great Fire of London, as shown in The Visitation (1982); I guess we assume that most of the 17th-century scenes in the story are set on that day.

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The Fondation Folon

On a bit of a whim last weekend, we went to the museum of the Fondation Folon in La Hulpe, one of the southern suburbs of Brussels. Jean-Michel Folon was another one of those Belgian artists whose work you recognise instantly, though I don't think I had ever heard his name before. If you are of a certain age close to mine, and ever stayed up late watching television in France, you may have seen his evocative animation which closed every night's broadcasts of the Antenne 2 channel, featuring his trademark blue men in pork-pie hats:

Folon's art is instantly recognisable, and often somewhat sfnal. Here are his covers for two sf classics by H.G. Wells:

See also his illustrations for Kafka's "The Metamorphosis".

His New Yorker covers are strangely evocative:

He drew postage stamps, including two designs for the UK celebrating Europe in Space, and the United Nations:


And one for his adopted country of Monaco:

And a mural in Montgomery metro station in Brussels, which I must have gone past a hundred times:

His men tended to wear pork-pie hats, and his women to have semi-evolved into birds. We could not take pictures inside the exhibition, which is rather gorgeous, but the sculptures outside are fair game.

The museum is not easy to get to unless you have a car – it’s the former farmhouse for the Solvay family mansion. But it was well worth the journey. I’m glad to say that a friend who saw me post about it on other channels on Sunday lunchtime brought her family there the same afternoon, and also loved it.

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Whoniversaries 1 September: Burn Gorman, Destiny of the Daleks #1, Thorington, Roz’s funeral

i) births and deaths

1st September 1974: birth of Burn Gorman, who played randy (and later undead) medic Owen Harper in the first two series of Torchwood (2007-2009).

ii) broadcast anniversary

1st September 1979: broadcast of episode 1 of Destiny of the Daleks, opening episode of Season 17. Romana regenerates; the Tardis lands on Skaro a radioactive planet; the Doctor is captured by the Movellans, and Romana threatened with extermination by the Daleks.

1 September 2012: one of the most successfully unspoilered twists ever as Jenna-Louise Coleman prequels her future companionship in Asylum of the Daleks, the first story of Ne Who series 7 with the Eleventh Doctor.

iii) dates specified in spinoff literature

1st September 1991: happens over and over again in the Suffolk town of Thorington. Incidentally, what happened to the sea? (as told in the 2008 Eighth Doctor audio play, Brave New Town)

1st September 2982: funeral of Eighth Doctor Adventure companion Roz Forrester (in Ben Aaronovitch and Kate Orman's 1997 novel, So Vile a Sin).

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August Books

Not so much this month – several very long books, and my demi-commute is hitting my reading.

Non-fiction: 1 (YTD 38)
From Barrows to Bypass: Excavations at West Cotton, Raunds, Northamptonshire, 1985-1989, by Dave Windell, Andy Chapman and Jo Woodwiss

Fiction (non-sf): 5 (YTD 23)
Our Mutual Friend, by Charles Dickens
Jerusalem: The Boroughs, by Alan Moore
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, by Ken Kesey
Wolf Hall, by Hilary Mantel
Bring Up the Bodies, by Hilary Mantel

sf (non-Who): 3 (YTD 79)
A Boy and His Dog, by Harlan Ellison
Jerusalem: Mansoul, by Alan Moore
The Conqueror’s Child, by Suzy McKee Charnas

Comics: 1 (YTD 28)
Star Wars IV: A New Hope, by Roy Thomas and Howard Chaykin

Doctor Who: 2 (YTD 10)
The Secret in Vault 13, by David Solomons
The Maze of Doom, by David Solomons

3,700 pages (YTD 47,900)
4/12 (YTD 58/177) by women (Woodwiss, Mantel x2, McKee Charnas)
None AFAIK (YTD 18/177) by PoC
4/12 reread (YTD 25/177) – One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, Wolf Hall, Bring Up the Bodies, A Boy and His Dog

Current
Jerusalem: Vernal’s Inquest, by Alan Moore
Titus Groan, by Mervyn Peake
The Mirror and the Light, by Hilary Mantel

Coming soon (perhaps)
The Sky Road, by Ken MacLeod
Shadow Scale, by Rachel Hartman
East West Street, by Philippe Sands
Chronin Volume 1: The Knife at Your Back, by Alison Wilgus
Beren and Luthien, by J.R.R. Tolkien
Darwin's Island: The Galapagos in the Garden of England, by Steve Jones
Barcelona, Catalonia: A View from the Inside, by Matthew Tree
"Stardance" by Spider Robinson and Jeanne Robinson
Palestine 100: Stories from a century after the Nakba, ed. Mazen Maarouf
Complexity: The Emerging Science at the Edge of Order and Chaos, by M. Mitchell Waldrop
Helen Waddell, by Felicitas Corrigan
Survivants, Tome 3, by Leo
Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance: An Inquiry into Values, by Robert M. Pirsig
SS-GB, by Len Deighton
Tono-Bungay, by H. G. Wells
The Inside of the Cup, by Winston S. Churchill

This Must be the Place, by Maggie O'Farrell
Utopia For Realists, by Rutger Bregman
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Whoniversaries 31 August: Roy Castle, Gerry Davis, Michael Sheard, The Dominators #4

i) births and deaths

31 August 1932: birth of Roy Castle, who played Ian in the Doctor Who and the Daleks movie with Peter Cushing (1965).

31 August 1991: death of Gerry Davis, script editor of Doctor Who from The Celestial Toymaker (First Doctor, 1966) to part 3 of The Evil of the Daleks (Second Doctor, 1967), co-writer of The Tenth Planet (First Doctor, 1966), The Highlanders (Second Doctor, 1967), and Tomb of the Cybermen (Second Doctor, 1966-67), and sole credited writer of Revenge of the Cybermen (Fourth Doctor, 1975).

31 August 2005: death of Michael Sheard, who played Rhos in The Ark (First Doctor, 1966), Dr. Summers in The Mind of Evil (Third Doctor, 1971), Laurence Scarman in Pyramids of Mars (Fourth Doctor, 1975), Lowe in The Invisible Enemy (Fourth Doctor, 1977), the Mergrave in Castrovalva (Fifth Doctor, 1982), and the Headmaster in Remembrance of the Daleks (Seventh Doctor, 1988). I'm not sure if any other actor has played six different Doctor Who parts of that weight.

ii) broadcast and production anniversaries

31 August 1968: broadcast of fourth episode of The Dominators. Jamie and Cully manage to destroy a Quark; the Dominators threaten to take revenge by killing the Doctor.

31 August 1990: John Nathan-Turner resigns as producer after a decade, and the Doctor Who production office is closed by the BBC.

31 August 2012: release of episode 5 of Pond Life.

And that's it for August. I hope you've been enjoying these. It's a bit of a chore sometimes, to be honest, but usually not!

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November 2007 books

I started the month in London, and then went to Cyprus for a work trip via Istanbul on the way out and (very briefly) Malta on the way back. Later in the month there was a science fiction convention in Leuven, where I renewed acquaintance with Ken MacLeod and Al Reynolds, and got to know Christopher Priest. I finished the month with trip to Skopje, including a day excursion to Pristina.

F got his first taste of Doctor Who live when we let him stay up to watch Time Crash. He and I also visited Technopolis in Mechelen, where he had a hair-raising experience:

U delighted us with a little dance.

I read only 11 books in November 2007, still I think decompressing from October. (Also did quite a lot of driving – in Cyprus and between Skopje and Pristina.)

Non-fiction 3 (YTD 72)
William the Silent: William of Nassau, Prince of Orange 1533-1584, by C.V. Wedgwood
Democratisation in Southeast Europe, ed. Dusan Pavlovic, Goran Petrov, Despina Syrri, David A. Stone
The Awful End of William the Silent: The First Assassination of a Head of State with a Handgun, by Lisa Jardine

Non-genre 2 (YTD 32)
The Steep Approach to Garbadale, by Iain Banks
Oscar and Lucinda, by Peter Carey

SF 6 (YTD 73)
A Storm of Swords: Steel and Snow, by George RR Martin
A Storm of Swords: Blood and Gold, by George RR Martin

The Prestige, by Christopher Priest
Eurotemps, edited by Alec Stewart, devised by Alec Stewart and Neil Gaiman
Mutiny In Space, by Avram Davidson
The Happy Prince and Other Stories, by Oscar Wilde

3,800 pages (YTD 65,800)
3/11 by women (YTD 53/223)
none by PoC (YTD 5/223)

Several of these were very good, and I'm going to single out The Prestige, by Christopher Priest, which you can get here, and The Steep Approach to Garbadale, by Iain Banks, which you can get here. Mutiny in Space, by Avram Davidson, was pretty awful but you can get it here anyway (without the famous cover).


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Whoniversaries 30 August: Terror of the Zygons #1, The Leisure Hive #1, Real Time #5

i) births and deaths

30 August 1988: birth of Ellis George, who played Coal Hill pupil Courtney Woods in four 2014 Twelfth Doctor episodes.

ii) broadcast anniversaries

30th August 1975: broadcast of the first episode of Terror of the Zygons, launching Season 13. The Doctor, Harry and Sarah, responding to the Brigadier's appeal via space-time telegraph, land in the neighbourhood of Loch Ness which looks strangely like Sussex. Oil rigs are being wrecked in the North Sea; while tending to a survivor, Harry is shot and injured by a servant of the enigmatic Duke of Forgill. As Sarah visits him in hospital, she is grabbed by… a Zygon!!!!!

30th August 1980: broadcast of the first episode of The Leisure Hive, launching Season 18. Poor K9 gets short-circuited on the beach at Brighton; the Doctor and Romana head for the famous pleasure planet, Argolis, but the Doctor, investigating a mysterious chamber, apparently gets torn apart. (Perhaps symbolic of new producer John Nathan-Turner's plans for the show.)

30th August 2002: release of fifth episode of webcast Real Time. Cybermen, viruses and the Time Portal; by this stage I'd lost interest in it but I will give it another go some time.

30 August 2012: release of fourth episode of Pond Life.

30 August 2014: first broadcast of Into the Dalek. The Doctor and Clara are shrunk to explore a Dalek's mind and brain.

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Rocky

Rocky won the Oscar for Best Picture of 1976, and won just two others, Best Director and Best Film Editing. All the President’s Men and Network both won four. I don’t think (though will check later) that any other Best Picture winner was beaten by two other films in the total number of statuettes it brought home.

All the President’s Men, Network, Bound for Glory and Taxi Driver were also nominated for Best Picture. I have only seen the first of these. I have seen eleven other films released in 1976, which is (so far) a record for me: Carrie, The Outlaw Josey Wales, The Pink Panther Strikes Again, The Man Who Fell to Earth, The Eagle Has Landed, Bugsy Malone, Silver Streak, At the Earth’s Core, The Shaggy D.A., Treasure of Matecumbe and Don’s Party.

Don’s Party is way down the IMDB ratings, which I think is a real shame; it’s a wee jewel of a film, adapted from a play about a group of friends watching the Australian election results coming in on election night in 1969. One of the leads is played by Ray Barrett, who voiced John Tracy in Thunderbirds and was also Bennett/Koquillion in the Doctor Who story we now call The Rescue (he is credited under a false name in the first episode to avoid revealing that the two characters are in fact the same; sorry if that is a spoiler for a Doctor Who story from 55 years ago).

Hugo voters, given the choice of CarrieLogan’s RunThe Man Who Fell to Earth and Futureworld, incomprehensibly voted for No Award, and there was no Nebula for that year. Anyway

Anyway back to Rocky; it is second behind Taxi Driver on both IMDB ratings (here and here) but ahead of the rest; and, with some reluctance, I think I’d rate Rocky as the best of those that I have seen. Here’s a trailer.

Incidentally, the stall owner who throws Rocky an orange at the beginning of the trailer apparently had no idea that a movie was being filmed and that he would be in it.

Rocky is the story of a part-time boxer and occasional hoodlum who gets the unexpected break of fighting the world heavyweight champion in his home town of Philadelphia, written by and starring Sylvester Stallone. (I think this is the first Oscar-winning film we’ve had in Philadelphia, which is incidentally where my grandmother was born. Compare 14 Oscar winners out of 49, so far, set in and around New York, only 160 km away.) There are a vast number of legends about the film, including the story of the orange mentioned above. Other glorious legends include that the poster showing Rocky wearing the wrong shorts, and his robe being too big, were actual mistakes made by the props department that the film then lampshaded; and that the reason he and Adrian have a solo date at the ice rink is that the 300 extras who had been booked failed to show up, so they had to improvise on the spot. I found it a charming character-driven film, but I still don’t like boxing much, so I’m putting it just about halfway down my table, ahead of Marty (which is quite similar in a lot of ways) but behind Laurence of Arabia.

There are a few returnees from previous Oscar-winning films, most notably Talia Shire, who was in both The Godfather and The Godfather II, films made by her real-life brother, playing the on-screen sister of Al Pacino and the daughter of Marlon Brando and Robert de Niro (surely a marriage made in heaven). Here she is Rocky’s girlfriend Adrian, who becomes sexy when she takes her glasses off. (Try it, girls. Or not, as you please.)

The two others I spotted don’t really merit pictures. Bill Baldwin is the fight announcer on the left during the big fight, and is the unseen TV movie announcer in The Apartment. Al Silvani (credited here as Al Salvani) is the cut man who tends (if that is the word) to Rocky during the big fight, and was an extra in From Here to Eternity.

So, to go through my usual list. Rocky is a film about a white man, and there are three named women characters, two of whom are in only one scene each, and the other is played by Talia Shire. (In her first scene she and her boss, both women, talk to Rocky, which I don’t think passes Bechdel Two.) Talia Shire is a versatile actor and does a lot with not much here.

On race, it’s a different matter: the whole setup of the film is for the culminating fight between Rocky and the champion Apollo Creed, played by Carl Weathers (currently to be seen in The Mandalorian). Creed is supported by a vibrant black community in and outside Philadelphia, with Joe Frazier turning up as himself at the start of the fight. Creed literally wraps himself in the American flag as he makes his entrance.

The music is good, but not obtrusive, and the theme song ridiculously catchy. And I think the cinematography is really very effective, telling a simple story simply and effectively.

Plus I have to salute Stallone’s acting. This project mattered a great deal to him, but he manages to free Rocky of the burdens of producing and writing the film and portray a not very bright guy who is put in a situation where he has to rise to new challenges, and succeeds in meeting his own expectations, while undergoing heavy physical abuse. I thought the ending of the film was well delivered.

IMDB says that the two pet turtles Cuff and Link actually belonged to Stallone (as did the dog) and were still alive and well as recently as last year. That made me smile.

Well, next year is the year of Annie Hall.

Winners of the Oscar for Best Picture

1920s: Wings (1927-28) | The Broadway Melody (1928-29)
1930s: All Quiet on the Western Front (1929-30) | Cimarron (1930-31) | Grand Hotel (1931-32) | Cavalcade (1932-33) | It Happened One Night (1934) | Mutiny on the Bounty (1935, and books) | The Great Ziegfeld (1936) | The Life of Emile Zola (1937) | You Can’t Take It with You (1938) | Gone with the Wind (1939, and book)
1940s: Rebecca (1940) | How Green Was My Valley (1941) | Mrs. Miniver (1942) | Casablanca (1943) | Going My Way (1944) | The Lost Weekend (1945) | The Best Years of Our Lives (1946) | Gentleman’s Agreement (1947) | Hamlet (1948) | All the King’s Men (1949)
1950s: All About Eve (1950) | An American in Paris (1951) | The Greatest Show on Earth (1952) | From Here to Eternity (1953) | On The Waterfront (1954, and book) | Marty (1955) | Around the World in 80 Days (1956) | The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957) | Gigi (1958) | Ben-Hur (1959)
1960s: The Apartment (1960) | West Side Story (1961) | Lawrence of Arabia (1962) | Tom Jones (1963) | My Fair Lady (1964) | The Sound of Music (1965) | A Man for All Seasons (1966) | In the Heat of the Night (1967) | Oliver! (1968) | Midnight Cowboy (1969)
1970s: Patton (1970) | The French Connection (1971) | The Godfather (1972) | The Sting (1973) | The Godfather, Part II (1974) | One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (1975) | Rocky (1976) | Annie Hall (1977) | The Deer Hunter (1978) | Kramer vs. Kramer (1979)
1980s: Ordinary People (1980) | Chariots of Fire (1981) | Gandhi (1982) | Terms of Endearment (1983) | Amadeus (1984) | Out of Africa (1985) | Platoon (1986) | The Last Emperor (1987) | Rain Man (1988) | Driving Miss Daisy (1989)
1990s: Dances With Wolves (1990) | The Silence of the Lambs (1991) | Unforgiven (1992) | Schindler’s List (1993) | Forrest Gump (1994) | Braveheart (1995) | The English Patient (1996) | Titanic (1997) | Shakespeare in Love (1998) | American Beauty (1999)
21st century: Gladiator (2000) | A Beautiful Mind (2001) | Chicago (2002) | The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003) | Million Dollar Baby (2004, and book) | Crash (2005) | The Departed (2006) | No Country for Old Men (2007) | Slumdog Millionaire (2008) | The Hurt Locker (2009)
2010s: The King’s Speech (2010) | The Artist (2011) | Argo (2012) | 12 Years a Slave (2013) | Birdman (2014) | Spotlight (2015) | Moonlight (2016) | The Shape of Water (2017) | Green Book (2018) | Parasite (2019)
2020s: Nomadland (2020) | CODA (2021) | Everything Everywhere All at Once (2022) | Oppenheimer (2023)

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