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1

I HAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAATE John Saul...Back in the day, (meaning the 80's, when it was oool to read Stephen King and other horror writers) I read a couple of Saul's books...they were all variations of some kind of kiddie torture porn.

A slimy, untalented and very rich hack.

Posted by michael strangeways | August 12, 2008 12:08 PM
2

I hear we have the car seat, but still working out the camel thing. Our insurance is balking on the coverage. What a bunch of humps!

Posted by Brian | August 12, 2008 1:04 PM
3

Greg Bear is a great author, and has a way with words in person as well - highly recommended.

Plus, he's fun at parties. Not as out there as Bill Gibson, but very interesting participant and unassuming as well.

Posted by Will in Seattle | August 12, 2008 1:19 PM
4

John Saul is openly gay. Not that that makes his books any better -- and probably his type of reader doesn't know (or care) the first thing about him, biographically -- but I couldn't think of another "brand name" mass market genre writer of whom that's true.

From a 2001 interview with The Advocate:
"Saul, a struggling writer, was in Seattle working for Stonewall, one of the first rehab centers tailored to gay and lesbian clients....Having delved into the gay scene in Los Angeles and San Francisco in the 1960s and '70s, he even wrote a semiautobiographical gay novel, later published as A Fairy Tale under the pseudonym S. Steinberg." "Faggots" as written by a Dean Koontz knockoff? I'd almost be curious to read that!

Posted by David | August 12, 2008 1:32 PM
5

David @4

Clive Barker - but that's the only one I come up with.

Posted by ADW | August 12, 2008 2:00 PM
6

There are more.

Posted by Will in Seattle | August 12, 2008 2:09 PM
7

I find Rita Mae Brown's cat mysteries to be truly terrifying...

Posted by michael strangeways | August 12, 2008 2:21 PM
8

ADW,
That's true but even Clive Barker is on the "artsier" end of genre writers compared to what I was thinking of. I meant the kind of writers that professionally churn out their familiar kind of product, whose books you find in supermarkets, airports, Walgreens -- Danielle Steel, Tom Clancy, Dean Koontz, Terry Brooks, Harlequin romances, etc.

Posted by David | August 12, 2008 2:59 PM
9

"Bear writes solid sci-fi"

Guess it depends on your definition of "solid" and "sci-fi".

I have this sudden alarming feeling that Greg Bear may be a lot of people's first and last exposure to "sci-fi". [shudder]

Posted by JohnC | August 12, 2008 10:57 PM

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