by Mark Yon
Scenes from England
Hello again.
After the grumpiness of my last review, I’m pleased to say that 1969 has arrived and put me in a better frame of mind. I am determined that this new year will see me being more positive. Mind you, New Worlds seems determined at times to try and derail my positive outlook. This new issue is back to the usual mixture of things that inspire, as well as things that confuse and even annoy.
A noticeable change is that the magazine is under new publishers. Last month it was “Stoneheart Publications”. This month it is “New Worlds Publications”, edited by Moorcock, Charles Platt and James Sallis.
Impressively startling cover by Gabi Nasemann.
Although the publishers may be new, the cover – another one of those strangely-hued pictures of people – is, I must admit, quite startling. It rather made me think of the ending of 2001: A Space Odyssey (which I have finally seen at the cinema, by the way.) If the idea is to grab customer’s attention at the few newsagents willing to put the magazine on its shelves, I would say well done.
But does it say anything about the magazine, or the contents within? (Actually, it does, but obliquely, in that there’s a brief reference to a newborn child in Sallis’s Cornelius story.)
I guess that some may like this enigmatic approach – who knows what you’ll read about in this issue? – but I’m less convinced. The experiment of putting story prose on the front seems to have gone, though, as too the Lead In telling us of the writers and artists in this month’s issue.
Article: Orthographies by James Sallis
Instead of the Lead In, we have the return of the much-delayed and now Co-Editor James Sallis. (See last month’s issue for details.) In the article Sallis muses on the point and purpose of the modernist novel, which may be quite interesting, but unfortunately Sallis fills the article with such highfaluting gobbledygook that reads as if it is straight out of a university thesis paper.
Whilst Orthographies clearly shows Sallis’s wider reading (perhaps that’s what he’s been doing whilst away?) I did wonder whether the regular readership would appreciate it. Analog it is not! (More of which later, by the way.) Part two follows next month – personally I can wait. Not a great start. 2 out of 5.
Jeremiad by James Sallis
As expected, the usual nudity, not entirely related to the prose. Artwork by Gabi Nasemann.
Two months ago, the magazine declared that Mike Moorcock’s character Jerry Cornelius would continue in future issues by stories written by others, starting with James Sallis’s Jeremiad. It was delayed but now we have it.
And… actually, it’s not bad, though being a Sallis piece, it can’t refrain from getting some poetry in. Result – sex, drugs, disassociation with reality. It seems to be about changes through fractured elements of time, which seem to relate to Jerry’s mental breakdown. Although there are parts and characters regular readers of the Moorcock stories will recognise, this is not a typical Jerry Cornelius story. Its purpose may be unclear – much of it seems dream-like, suffused through a drug-induced haze – but dare I say it, it is a good Jerry Cornelius story. 4 out of 5.
Period Piece by J. M. Rose
A brief allegorical stream-of-consciousness story, set in some sort of dystopia or post-apocalyptic event. Sallis and Moorcock seem to love these sorts of stories, which read as if they’re some sort of weird dream. (This one has chickens hatching in the writer’s mouth and a pubic hair frozen in an ice cube, for example.) The prose is deliberately provocative, but this is nothing really new. 2 out of 5.
Kite by Barry Bowes
Artwork by Gabi Nasemann.
This is almost a kitchen-sink drama, a description of Noreen Polltoaster, a young primary school teacher who longs to escape her mundane, safe lifestyle and do something more daring with her life. Her response is to go out in the rain wearing nothing but a coat and lie down naked in a park, where she is spotted by two young boys. The inner monologue is well done, and the sense of dullness created is impressive, but the story all seems, like Noreen’s life, rather pointless. A safe and rather boring 3 out of 5.
Construction by Giles Gordon
A story as odd as the previous one, about the construction of a building and observations from it. It is all angles and girders and views of crowds, as the author mumbles precariously about who-knows-what. This is typical Giles Gordon stuff. I’m not a fan, personally but some may like it, in that now-typical “read the poetic prose, never mind the meaning” kind of way. 2 out of 5.
Article: Salvador Dali: The innocent as Paranoid by J. G. Ballard
J. G. “Chuckles” Ballard this month first tries to distil the meaning of the work of surrealist artist Salvador Dali. Lots of cutup sections and pictures, including the intriguing table below.
Table made up by J. G. comparing different writers. Notice the positioning of Pohl and Asimov and that of Burroughs (presumably William S., not Edgar Rice!), a sign of where this magazine seems to be going.
I would say that this is perhaps the article Ballard was born to write. Interesting, entertaining, and very odd, yet suited to Ballard. 4 out of 5.
The Spectrum by D. M. Thomas
Artwork by Haberfield.
More D.M. Thomas. I was slightly more interested when it said that the poem was “after the Xi Effect by Philip Latham”, a story I’m sure I’ve read at some point, but I was sadly disappointed. A poem of the end of the world, and suspender belts. Moving on… 2 out of 5.
The Master Plan by John T. Sladek
Artwork by John T. Sladek.
Another anti-war, or at least anti-military story by Sladek. Similar in style and tone to Disch's Camp Concentration, this gains points by being briefer, yet nearly loses points by being perhaps too similar in style and tone.
Pictures, poetry, extracts of text all combine to create this collage. 4 out of 5.
The Adventures of Foot-fruit by Mervyn Peake
Work by Mervyn Peake.
Part of an unfinished work by the recently deceased Mr. Peake.
The Angstrom Palace by C. J. Lockesley
Artwork by Prigann.
Another fractured dreamscape. Nice prose but really nothing of consequence. 3 out of 5.
The Conspiracy by Norman Spinrad
Artwork by Prigann.
The return of Norman. Prose made up of slogans, interspersed with unanswered questions. Manages to combine contemporary cultural references with paranoid ideas – life’s all a conspiracy, really. Though we’ve seen work like this before – see John Dos Passos, John Brunner and yes, good ol’ J. G.. I liked this one for its distrustful manner. 4 out of 5.
How Doctor Christopher Evans Landed on the Moon by J. G. Ballard
And writing of J. G., here’s a short prose piece. This one took a bit of working out, but it seems to show an unsuccessful Moon landing in the form of a computer print out, even when the computer program says it is successful. (Notice the velocity at zero feet.) One where you have to join the dots yourself, so to speak, and all the better for it. Mind you, I was a little disappointed to discover that this was not the welcome return of science article writer Christopher Evans! 3 out of 5.
Entropy by Thomas Pynchon
Artwork by Gabi Nasemann and Charles Platt.
Since the publication of his novel The Crying of Lot 49 in 1966, I’ve not read much from this writer, although he seems to be gaining a reputation for writing dense, complex literary novels – something that seems to fit in with New Worlds’s current agenda.
So, as expected, this is a complicated, fractured story dealing with physical and metaphysical change. There’s lots of talk about heat exchange and metaphysical allegory across different time periods.
Reading this, I think that this is what the ‘new’ New Worlds aspires to be. It is deliberately obtuse and stubbornly literary in style. I don’t think I got it all, but it seems meaningful, unlike other similar stories New Worlds often publishes. I have to admire Entropy for being partly confusing, partly irritating, and yet undeniably damnably clever. 4 out of 5.
Article: Mervyn Peake – An Obituary by Michael Moorcock
As mentioned earlier, and as the title explains. Moorcock praises Peake’s work whilst pointing out the irony that his work was only now becoming better known as his health was failing. Untapped potential, sadly.
An advertisement from this issue of Peake's better-known work.
Book Reviews
A varied list this month. M. John Harrison covers a range of books that look at social class and modern myths, R. Glyn Johns reviews some psychological material and Marshal McLuhan, and Peter White discusses some surrealist literature. None is really genre-related.
Onto the science stuff, and Charles Platt positively reviews Arthur C. Clarke’s The Promise of Space amongst others.
More science-fictional in nature, James Cawthorn reviews Philip K. Dick’s ‘uneven’ The World Jones Made, the ‘refreshingly simplistic’ Analog 3 edited by John W. Campbell, and the limited adventure novels Assignment in Nowhere and A Trace of Memory by Keith Laumer. The Best of Fantasy & Science Fiction 13 edited by Avram Davidson is generally received favourably, even when Zenna Henderson’s People story is described as ‘soggy’. The Rest of the Robots by Isaac Asimov succeeds only too well, and SF: Author’s Choice edited by Harry Harrison is as fascinating and as diverse as you would expect. Cawthorn finishes with brief reviews of Orbit 3, edited by Damon Knight and A Far Sunset by Edmund Cooper.
Briefly mentioned and reviewed by D.R.B. are a number of books also received.
Summing Up
Perhaps inspired by the new publishers, this issue of New Worlds feels like a sort of reset. More than ever before, I think this issue shows New Worlds' desire to be a literary magazine. Yes, there is a mixture of new and old authors, but it feels like more than ever before the emphasis is on literary material you wouldn’t read elsewhere. For better or worse, you'll not get an issue of Analog or The Magazine of Fantasy & SF like this.
Why am I not surprised to see this advert for a controversial new album here?
Until next time!
Very Ballardian rating of authors in that chart where Herman Kahn — famous for penning that laughfest ON THERMONUCLEAR WAR, wherein he writes 'The living will envy the dead,' and for being a real-life model for Kubrick's Doctor Strangelove — comes in at number three, just below Dali and Burroughs.
"Chuckles" Ballard, indeed.
As for this issue as a whole, NEW WORLDS seems to be in a process of a continuing struggle to survive and seems to thrown together only after whatever exigencies its editors/publishers have hurdled this month are behind them.
This issue particularly has the feel of a holding action. The Pynchon is the only real story of substance, but it's a reprint from the stateside KENYON REVIEW in 1960, though this is its first appearance on the UK's side of the puddle.
The Ballard offerings are, as always, of interest, though nowhere near the level of classic Ballard. Well, we can hope for better from the next issue's 'The Killing Ground,' with the UK in 'the Vietnam situation, with a brave band of Britons battling the braggardly might of the Yankee imperialists.'
Though alongside a Moorcock 'aptly entitled 'A Cure for Cancer' together with George Macbeth's long poem describing the Horrors of Hiroshima, the next issue of NEW WORLDS does promise to have a certain 'you must eat your porridge' feeling to it.
Thanks, Mark. Each month I find that I end up mentioning JG, even when he's not in the issue. His presence is everywhere, it seems. Must admit I did think about giving the story 4 out of 5 but in the end, like you, felt that it was relatively minor Ballard in comparison.
Thank you for the details on the Pynchon. It was new to me, but more importantly it seems to be here because it fits that idea of what NEW WORLDS seems to want to be.
I don't think this issue is quite as scrabbled together as the last, but it does seem a little like "everything we got from James Sallis", with mixed results. (See: I am trying to be positive!)