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- Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf.written
- Path: sparky!uunet!munnari.oz.au!mtiame!iconix!iconix.oz.au!mwp
- From: mwp@iconix.oz.au (Michael Paddon)
- Subject: Re: One-time Gor fan bitches
- Message-ID: <mwp.721897993@iconix.oz.au>
- Sender: news@iconix.oz.au (USENET)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: titanic
- Organization: Iconix Pty Ltd (World Headquarters)
- References: <1992Nov14.193904.8739@iscsvax.uni.edu>
- Date: Mon, 16 Nov 1992 07:13:13 GMT
- Lines: 56
-
- In <1992Nov14.193904.8739@iscsvax.uni.edu> darnell8690@iscsvax.uni.edu writes:
- > I read Tarnsman when I was in eigth-grade, and right away was an
- >instant fan. I grew up without a father, and admired Tarl Cabot, and in
- >stressful situation would try to act as he would have. I guess what I liked
- >about Cabot the most was that he was a single man who always stood against
- >entire cities and armies to do what he thought was best, which usually intail
- >freeing people from slavery and opression. He did what he thought was right,
- >even though the whole world of Gor was against him.
- > Then in Captive of Gor, Norman killed my most admired hero. And what
- >he did was so stupid. He had Tarl captured, and was told that he had the
- >choice of death or becoming a slave. He chose becoming a slave and giving up
- >his codes, changing him for ever. What bugs me is that in all the other books
- >he had faced either death or conforming to somebody's wish, and every other
- >time he took death, and survived. But this time was different, but why? I
- >think something was have happen in Norman's life, he must have gotten dumped on
- >by some woman, so he took out his hatred in his writing. Needless to say I
- >stopped reading his books, it was just too painful to see what Tarl of Bristol
- >had turned into.
-
- Actually, I thought that this was a successful attempt to "mature" the
- central character. Everyone faces the loss of youthful ideals, everyone
- is forced to face the compromises of life sooner or later. One day you
- wake up and realise that facing every situation with a "die on my feet"
- attitude is *stupid*.
-
- Tarl had the clear choice of feeding the fishes or living to fight another
- day. In the real world, which choice would you make? There are some things
- worth dying for; a friend, a homestone, one's Ubar perhaps. Getting speared
- on one's knees in a swamp because one can't accept capture is not a
- worthwhile exit.
-
- I thought one of the most poignant moments of the series was when Tarl
- explained this fact to the pallisade full of armed men he was about to
- attack (_Hunters of Gor_).
-
- As for the psychosexual content, Norman was clearly obsessive. By any
- sane yardstick, the philosophy he forwarded was repugnant and shallow.
- Enough said.
-
- Michael
-
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