james_davis_nicoll (
james_davis_nicoll) wrote2008-02-10 12:27 pm
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I was going to put a rant here but I think it would be prudent for me to wait a month until the book that triggered it sees print. Even if I friends-lock it, that doesn't mean the publisher might not get wind of my comments and take offense.
So, to fill the time until then:
Is writing Heinlein young adult novel pastiches primarily a male occupation? I can't off-hand think of a female writer who tried her hand at a Heinlein young adult novel, at least not in the centenary wave of Heinlein pastiches.
[This might be a stupid question but if it is mainly a guy subgenre, why would that be?]
In a unrelated comment, metric _or_ American imitation of Imperial, people. Not both or at least not both in the same sentence.
So, to fill the time until then:
Is writing Heinlein young adult novel pastiches primarily a male occupation? I can't off-hand think of a female writer who tried her hand at a Heinlein young adult novel, at least not in the centenary wave of Heinlein pastiches.
[This might be a stupid question but if it is mainly a guy subgenre, why would that be?]
In a unrelated comment, metric _or_ American imitation of Imperial, people. Not both or at least not both in the same sentence.
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And I find myself using both when writing in LJ and email lists sometimes, knowing people of both flavors will be reading; and a character in a book might possibly get away with that as well (though of course Twain's Dictum applies).
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While we have shifted internally, the southern neighbours need to be reminded as they cross.
The very large sign on the Canadian side of the Sault St Marie crossing to the upper Michigan peninsula comes to mind.
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Sudden switching is a disaster, but switching can be done, with time and care.
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Expensive, but it worked.
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That gives me an idea for an amusing post to soc.history.what-if, come to think of it.
Something That I Did Not Know When I Woke Up
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My dad had a big American car, and I remember him putting the stickers on after he was told by a traffic officer that it wasn't acceptable to have a car without them.
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It was just a convenient example where at least *today* you can very easily justify using both systems in the same sentence.
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A likely example of mixing systems would be when discussing tax rises after a budget - "2 pence on a pint of beer and a penny on a litre of unleaded..."
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I like the tax rise example better anyway.