* Thomas Steinbeck - with whom we worked many years ago at a production company that had optioned four of his father's works - is profiled.
* We thought the Hugo Award was the world's top honor for science fiction writing, but we're hardly experts. According to UPI it's The John W. Campbell Memorial Award.
* Indian author Raja Rao has died.
* The Sunday Times - Ireland looks at the impact John Banville's The Book of Evidence had on the true-life events upon which it was based.
That honour goes to The Book of Evidence, his 1989 novel based very closely on the Malcolm Macarthur case. Freddie Montgomery, the suave dandyish antihero, was vividly identifiable as the man at the centre of the most celebrated and controversial murder case in Ireland in generations. Banville’s prose put fictitious, but wholly credible, flesh on the bones of the charismatic killer with the bow tie and the neat finger-waved hair.
It’s hard to know how Banville feels about the real-life inspiration for his fictional creation. His only comment, about the prospect of liberty for Macarthur, was a throwaway quip about expecting the killer to pursue him for a portion of his royalties.
There is little doubt that The Book of Evidence helped elevate Macarthur to near-mythological status. It may even have contributed in some way to the outcry that is heard every time the possibility of Macarthur’s release from prison is raised. If that is so, then Banville has had some unwitting part to play in the killer’s continued incarceration, but only a very small one.
* The game's afoot - The Victorian Society is trying to save Arthur Conan Doyle's house.
* And finally, as you check out Dave Shields' Tour de France update today, pop over and check out the standings of the Indoor Tour where, at press time, your host holds the green (sprinter's) jersey. (And yes, that's GOTEV leading the G.C. in the yellow jersey ... )
Friendly, neighborhood SF expert here: you are dead right, no one pays much attention to this Campbell Memorial Award thing.
(Detail aside here: Campbell's estate authorized two awards to use his name. The other is the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer, which is voted alongside the Hugos and presented at the Hugo Ceremony but is sponsored by Dell Magazines rather than the World Science Fiction Society. That one is worth paying attention to.)
Posted by: Cheryl Morgan | July 10, 2006 at 01:35 AM