sovay: (Rotwang)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2014-09-24 01:58 pm

Only we're more complicated

This post would have gone up much earlier if our house internet were not being staticky.

1. Yesterday was the first day of autumn. I appear to have celebrated by walking my niece around the neighborhood and singing to her, which says as much about the change of seasons as anything. Catching up on social media tells me that yesterday was also Bisexual Visibility Day. I approve of the liminal timing; I wouldn't have minded knowing then! What I tend to say is that I'm interested in people. That includes people who are not on the gender binary and people whose identities and/or bodies change, but bi erasure is a thing and let's not have any more of it, thanks. Queer works for me. So does bisexual. We now return to your regular schedule of being not very successfully invisible anyway.

(This is where it is probably appropriate to link a comic about a bisexual unicorn, but my favorite of the series is unsurprisingly the genderqueer mer-person. They have armpit fins and seaweed on their hat. The asexual succubus is also pretty brilliant.)

2. A comment to [livejournal.com profile] steepholm last night caused me to wonder if I had ever written at length about Eleanor Cameron. Sadly, short of posting this excerpt in 2008, the answer appears to be no. I have one note from 2006 that never seems to have made it into a post:

Currently I'm re-reading Eleanor Cameron's Mushroom Planet series. I had forgotten how much I like one particular character who appears in the third and fourth books. This is Prewytt Brumblydge, a small, jaunty, almost preternaturally neat and cheerfully conceited Welsh astrophysicist who—owning the daylights out of his preposterous surname—names all of his discoveries things like "Brumblium," "the Brumblitron," and "B-rays." In Mr. Bass's Planetoid (1958), he almost blows himself off the face of Aberystwyth while messing around with cosmic rays. In A Mystery for Mr. Bass (1960), either he's enduring a run of extremely bad luck or a curse has caught up with him for a dishonest deed done in his youth, and being a practical and obstinate man, he refuses to believe it's the latter. It's not hard for me to guess the reasons I zeroed in on him as a child. Where Mr. Bass is a benevolent magical tinkerer, Prewytt is ambiguous and eccentric; rather like the trickster figure that his mercurial confidence sometimes suggests, he has a talent for figuring himself out of corners and often the concomitant problem of having figured himself into them in the first place. It would have been easy for Cameron to cast him as either a villain or pure comedy, those being the standard forms of the mad scientist in the 1950's, but he's neither. He has overtones of both at times, but ultimately he's the kind of character who views the punishment of being sent into an alternate universe as a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to prove his theory of everything, and how can you not like someone like that? (He rings a nice change on scientific stereotypes, too: he's a dapper dresser with marvelous social skills.) I'd almost totally forgotten him. But when I was about seven, he was probably one of the people I wanted to grow up to be.

—Once recovered, this fondness has persisted to the present day. I can't imagine ever having forgotten any of those books now. For the record, I don't especially like A Mystery for Mr. Bass despite its Prewytt-centric plot; it retcons the emotional climax of Mr. Bass's Planetoid in ways I find less interesting than the original and the sudden advent of the supernatural into the series occasioned almost as much disbelief from me as from Prewytt. I do not dispute that The Wonderful Flight to the Mushroom Planet (1954) is more science fantasy than science fiction, despite its sheer sense-of-wonder joy at the possibilities and mechanics of spaceflight. Basidium was my first planetary romance, although I didn't realize it in elementary school; Tyco Bass has an otherworldly touch about him even then, blowing away like a spore on the wind (or Mary Poppins) at the end of the story. By later books he has taken up residence somewhere abstract in the spiral galaxy Messier 81 and only returns to 5 Thallo Street for significant occasions, a guardian angel in an old grey gardening coat. There are still distinct genre lines the earlier books don't cross—even astral projection is a pulp sci-fi trope—and A Mystery for Mr. Bass does, making it an uneasy bridge between the spacefaring fiction of the first three books and the full-bore Arthurian mysticism of Time and Mr. Bass (1967). Which I do like, although it very nearly belongs to another series. It's numinous. Also it is still true that I cannot eat hardboiled eggs without thinking about Basidium. This theory was tested as recently as last night's fettucine.

If you have not read the separately published short stories Jewels from the Moon and the Meteor That Couldn't Stay (1964), the internet can help with that.

3. Tonight is Erev Rosh Hashanah. We are going to my parents' house. L'shanah tovah, all.

[identity profile] sartorias.livejournal.com 2014-09-24 10:26 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, how I loved the Mr. Bass books as a little kid. I need to get the entire series.