Two anthologies
Currently reading Songs of the Dying Earth
, a tribute anthology to Jack Vance and his Dying Earth series, about a third of the way through. I do not particularly fault Vance for the secondary role of women in a lot of Dying Earth stuff, as the stories are a product of their time. I do, however, wonder why more of the tribute writers did not seize upon the opportunity to fix that.*
Also read Welcome to Bordertown
, and although I loved the Bordertown series when I was younger, it doesn't speak to me as much now. I identified a lot more with the character in one of the stories who found they weren't a fit for Bordertown. I think as I get older, the idea of living in squats and doing Art-with-a-capital-A and hanging out in clubs and whatnot just doesn't appeal to me, even with magic involved. The people doing that seem less like edgy rebels and more like pretentious twits. I fear this means I am an Adult.
* Editorial choice, perhaps? Who knows?
Also read Welcome to Bordertown
* Editorial choice, perhaps? Who knows?

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My brother told me long ago that there is a very fine line between "cool" and "loser". Truer words.
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* Seductresses, too, but it didn't fit with the "h" thing I had going there. :) (Also, one that pretty much serves as a pretty backdrop, whose role could have been filled by anything animate.)
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Or Hipsters. Don't forget Hipsters.
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I wasn't that impressed with the anthology overall. There are some good stories (Neil Gaiman's, Matt Hughes', a few others). There are a fair number of perfectly fine but hardly necessary stories. There are some stories which you couldn't possibly tell were meant to be set on the Dying Earth if they weren't in this book (and in some cases namedrop someplace like Ascolais). And then there are some stories which are actively bad, like Mike Resnick's and the one by the old buddy of Vance's who isn't really a writer and boy does it show.
Averaged together it didn't end up being something I felt a need to keep, especially given that I can always read Matt Hughes' books. (Hughes could also do a better job of including women, but he does at least improve on Vance.)
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