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storytitle:
firstname: Joe
lastname: Haldeman
booktitle: Camouflage
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  <p>Haldeman is a Hemingway scholar, and it shows in the elegance of his minimalist 
    prose in this thought-provoking book. In the best tradition of &quot;hard&quot; 
    sf, Haldeman mixes scientific speculation with purely human &quot;what if?&quot; 
    in wondering what would happen if a shape-shifting alien predator became, 
    essentially, human? This book explores the human condition as thoroughly as 
    any literary work, with understanding of gender at the crux of that understanding. 
    For me it was one of the best science fiction books I have read in years.--ct</p>
  <p>An ageless, sexless entity who can take any form is at first indifferent 
    to gender; as it grows more human, the choice becomes more important to it; 
    it ends up a woman by preference. If gender isn't the central concern of this 
    novel, it's near the center, and the handling of it is skillful, subtle, and 
    finely unpredictable.--ukl</p>
  <p>I like the problem-solving: how do we figure problems out and how do people 
    relate to others, how do they understand themselves and others and even figure 
    out that some of their instinctive (or learned) sexual responses are not healthy 
    ones.--mm<br>
  </p>
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storytitle:
firstname: Johanna
lastname: Sinisalo
booktitle: Not Before Sundown
alttitle: Troll: A Love Story (US)
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  <p>A deft novel of how human society is ruled by complex territorial relationships. 
    In particular, Sinisalo reveals the life of the human male as closely as zoologists/biologists 
    do chimpanzee social groups, only she does it through a quick-paced story 
    of gay bars, advertising agencies and veterinarians. Does it matter who the 
    king of the urban jungle is, when a real live troll cub turns up on the doorstep 
    of a lovelorn 30-year-old photographer? Well written and affecting.--ct <br>
    The subject is the dehumanisation of the Other - a great subject. It may be 
    the fault of the translation, but the apparent gendering of the trolls as 
    all male sentimentalises what might have been a more powerful story. Still, 
    very much worth looking at.--ukl</p>
    <p>This one has grown on me, perhaps, the most out of any of the books read.</p>
    <p>The excellent world-building and intriguing use of pheromones really impressed 
    me. The troll's own gender issues were interesting, as a kind of unspeakable 
    Other.--ad</p>
    <p>I always wondered what happened to changelings when they grew up, both the 
    humans in Fairyland and the trolls coping with humans. This book retells troll 
    stories, with some major twists, in the context of the current commercialization 
    of sexuality in jean ads and picture book brides/sex slavery.--mm <br>
    The two books stand completely opposed in so many ways--you could almost say 
    they define the opposite edges of what is conceivable for the Tiptree. Haldeman, 
    the well-known, Hemingwayesque, male, very American, hard sf writer at one 
    end, and Sinisalo, the European, not-well-known (in the US and within our 
    genre, I mean), female contemporary fantasy writer at the other. Hmm, and 
    we have the male writer creating a female protagonist (well, eventually female) 
    and the female writer creating a male protagonist. That clicks in my head 
    as a balance I would enjoy.-ct</p>

