On 5/30/2024 11:44 AM, Cryptoengineer wrote:
On 5/30/2024 10:21 AM, James Nicoll wrote:
In article <[email protected]>,
Chris Buckley <[email protected]> wrote:
On 2024-05-30, James Nicoll <[email protected]> wrote:
ISFDB has a "disowned by its author" tag. The books thus tagged are:
The Wind from Nowhere by J. G. Ballard
Probe by Margaret Wander Bonanno
The Star Conquerors by Ben Bova
A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess
Survivor by Octavia E. Butler
Rage by Stephen King
Astronauci by Stanislaw Lem
Aeneis by Virgil
The Butler is a legit awful book, the only true dud Butler ever wrote
(very early in her career). The Bova is also from early in his career, >>>> his first novel, written for Winston. I must have read it but I don't
remember it. In fact, I thought the book Bova disowned was the sequel, >>>> Star Watchmen. The others, I don't know the backstories.
Weird so many of them are from authors whose surnames begin with "b".
Interesting. But no Harlan Ellison? I know he disowned SF TV scripts,
and he bought up copies of his _Doomsman_ novel so he could destroy
them - I don't know if that counts as disowning.
It is almost as though that tag was added by someone who got tired of
using it early in the alphabet.
The Bonanno is there because Probe was actually mostly written by
Gene Deweese.
https://fanlore.org/wiki/This_is_the_tale_of_PROBE:_The_Novel_I_Didn%27t_Write
Rage is about a Columbine-style school well regulated militiaing.
The Ballard was apparently hackwork to get his foot in the book
of paperback publishing.
The Burgess omitted a vital chapter.
The Virgil was not finished. Still isn't, even thought the author
has had lots of time.
The Ballard is indeed his first published novel. Its a not-so-cozy catastrophe, a format he repeated for his next three novels.
pt
[quote]
Burgess dismissed A Clockwork Orange as "too didactic to be
artistic".[33] He said that the violent content of the novel "nauseated" him.[34]
In 1985, Burgess published Flame into Being: The Life and Work of D. H. Lawrence and while discussing Lady Chatterley's Lover in his biography,
Burgess compared the notoriety of D. H. Lawrence's novel with A
Clockwork Orange: "We all suffer from the popular desire to make the
known notorious. The book I am best known for, or only known for, is a
novel I am prepared to repudiate: written a quarter of a century ago, a
jeu d'esprit knocked off for money in three weeks, it became known as
the raw material for a film which seemed to glorify sex and violence.
The film made it easy for readers of the book to misunderstand what it
was about, and the misunderstanding will pursue me until I die. I should
not have written the book because of this danger of misinterpretation,
and the same may be said of Lawrence and Lady Chatterley's Lover."[35]
[/quote] -
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Clockwork_Orange_(novel)
A testimony to "the only reason to write is for the money," and its consequences?
--
Kevin R
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