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Criticism and Reading

About a month ago I asked for advice on learning more about literary criticism, especially as pertains to science fiction. I promised I’d summarize the results.

Jess left a very good comment, discussing different forms of criticism and a few resources. She also pointed out the essay collection Bringing the Devil to His Knees: The Craft of Fiction and the Writing Life, edited by Charles Baxter and Peter Turchi. I haven’t tracked it down yet, but it does look interesting.

I also asked an expert. Elizabeth Bear suggested John Clute and Joanna Russ as exemplars of the kind of SF criticism I was asking about. Another commenter on her blog reminded me of Jo Walton’s contributions to Tor.com. I read those regularly, but didn’t think to mention them. As a bonus, Jo and I seem to share similar taste in reading material, so I’ve already read many of the works discussed.

In the intervening time, I read The Dreams Our Stuff Is Made Of: How Science Fiction Conquered the World by Thomas Disch. Part history, part criticism, part anecdote; I enjoyed it, and learned some things about trends within the field that I’d dimly perceived but hadn’t understood. I didn’t realize until just now, getting the GoodReads link, that it had won a Hugo in 1999 — but I’m not surprised.

If you run across other interesting sources, please let me know.

2 Comments on “Criticism and Reading”

  1. #1 Jess
    on Mar 10th, 2010 at 1:35 pm

    :)

    I just read that Elizabeth Bear essay you linked in the sidebar– great stuff. I know she *says* she’s only talking about her job, but I think she’s also talking about my job. More to the point, she’s saying things about my job I’ve either forgotten or ignored. Thanks for pointing me to that.

  2. #2 Sarah
    on Mar 10th, 2010 at 1:38 pm

    Elizabeth Bear rocks. I’ve learned a lot from her just through her online presence.

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