Albanian
Basque
Bulgarian
Catalan
Croatian
Czech
Danish
Dutch
English
Esperanto
Estonian
Finnish
French
German
Greek
Hindi
Hungarian
Icelandic
Indonesian
Irish
Italian
Latin
Latvian
Lithuanian
Norwegian
Piratical
Polish
Portuguese (Brazil)
Portuguese (Portugal)
Romanian
Slovak
Spanish
Swedish
Tagalog
Turkish
Welsh
Sign in / Join
|
English
|
Help
Home
Zeitgeist
Talk
Groups
Local
Hide this
Results from Google Books
Click on a thumbnail to go to Google Books.
Main page
Work details
Book details
Reviews
(1)
Recommendations
Members
Descriptions
(2)
Conversations
(1)
Common Knowledge
Popularity
Cover images
Editions
Loading...
Meet Me at Infinity
(edition 2000)
by
James Tiptree Jr
Members
Reviews
Popularity
Average rating
Mentions
111
1
98,834
(4.22)
1
Add to your library
Add to wishlist
Title
Meet Me at Infinity
Author
James Tiptree Jr
Tags
Collections
Your library
,
Mooched in &/or out
Rating
Review
This is a posthumous gathering of previously uncollected stories and essays, so might have turned out to be a grab bag of offcuts of interest only to completologists. I'm glad to report that it's not so.
In the fiction section, roughly the first half of the book, most of the pieces do turn out to be of mainly completological interest. But two of the stories, specifically 'Trey of Hearts' and 'The Color of Neanderthal Eyes', are vivid reminders of Tiptree's ability to portray intimate sensuality (including, as in the first of these stories, graphically described sexual encounters) between beings from different planets.
The non-fiction pieces were mostly written for fanzines – some of which were produced by the book's editor, Jeffrey D Smith, who helpfully explains fandom and fanzines in his notes. The early pieces are informal, 'Uncle Tip' telling traveller's tales, dispensing advice to his younger co-fans and generally shooting the breeze in playfully overwrought language. You get the impression the writer was having so much fun creating this male character that she allowed herself to say all sorts of things about creativity, science fiction, ageing, the environment and anything else that crossed her mind, things she might not have said in her own person. Some of it is embarrassing, as when 'Tip' writes with self-deprecating comedy of his lustful admiration for a young Mayan woman. But there's a lot that's eminently quotable.
The book gets really intersting with his/her unmasking, in a number of ways. First, the real Alice Sheldon steps out onto the stage, and although she talks in a number of pieces of how disappointed her readers must be to have the writer they'd suspected of having lived a daring life (a spy, or something worse?) turn out to be a nice elderly lady ('At least I hope I'm nice'), she turns out to have had a very interesting life – starting with accompanying her parents on major journeys of exploration as a very young child. Second, her writing changes, becomes more straightforward, less florid, though perhaps also slightly less adventurous. And third, she reports on what she has learned about gender in sciencce fiction, about sexism in general, from her masquerade and unmasking: all too often what can be heard with respect if said by a man, if said by a woman is understood to be whining. As 'Tip' she could suggest to an anthologist (pen-)friend that he ought to include some women in his collection; the same suggestion from Alice would probably be heard as motivated by pure self-interest. And so on. Without the male persona, she writes passionately about the situation of women, and about the importance of male allies in the struggle against sexism. But always with style, oddness, modesty, spark and a weird kind of grace.
Other authors
1
Publication date
2000
Publication
Tor Books (2000), Edition: 1st, Hardcover, 396 pages
ISBN
0312858744 / 9780312858742
Number of volumes
1
Number of copies
1
Pages
396
Dimensions
8.27
x
5.75
x
1.5 inches
Weight
1.28 pounds
LC Classification
1
PS3570.I66A6
Dewey
813.54
Primary language
(blank)
Secondary language
(blank)
Original language
Comments
Date acquired
2009-06-18
Date started
2009-09-22
Date finished
Summary
1
Meet Me at Infinity by James Tiptree Jr (2000)
BCID
XXX-
From where?
Data source
amazon.com
Private
No
Citation
MLA
,
APA
,
Chicago/Turabian
,
Wikipedia citation
Help
Quick Links
Amazon.com
(
direct
)
Abebooks.com
Amazon Kindle
(0 editions)
Audible
(0 editions)
CD Audiobook
(0 editions)
Project Gutenberg
(0 editions)
Google Books
—
Loading...
WorldCat
Get this book
Local Book Search
All sources
Swap
Ebooks
Audio
33 wanted
—
—
Popular covers
Rating
Average:
(4.22)
0.5
1
1.5
2
2.5
3
1
3.5
4
5
4.5
5
3
Is this you?
Become a
LibraryThing Author
.
Help/FAQs
|
About
|
Privacy/Terms
|
Blog
|
Contact
|
LibraryThing.com
|
APIs
|
WikiThing
|
Common Knowledge
|
Legacy Libraries
|
81,895,219 books!
Copyright LibraryThing and/or members of LibraryThing, authors, publishers, libraries, cover designers, Amazon, Bol, Bruna, etc. | static: /
31286938