Difference between revisions of "Cheap Truth"

From Fancyclopedia 3
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(samizdat actually mostly was just retyped, some content details per (sadly faulted) intro to Complete, which link, and clicking through scans)
Line 1: Line 1:
In the early 80s [[SF]] author [[Bruce Sterling]], under the pseudonym "[[Vincent Omniaveritas]]", edited a series of mostly single-sheet newsletters titled ''Cheap Truth''. (It's usually referred to as a samizdat, after the [[mimeographed]] newsletters dissidents circulated among themselves in Communist Eastern Europe, but that's just a highfalutin name for a [[fanzine]].) In them, [[Bruce Sterling]], [[Lewis Shiner]] (as "Sue Denim"), [[Rudy Rucker]], and other members of a loose-knit group of [[SF writers]] (called by themselves "the Movement") attacked what they considered the stagnant state of the time's popular [[science fiction]] and hyped their own works. As such, they document the development of the literary consciousness of many of the writers of works later dubbed "cyberpunk".  
+
In the early-to-mid 1980s author [[Bruce Sterling]], under the pseudonym "[[Vincent Omniaveritas]]", edited a series of mostly single-sheet [[reviewzine]]s titled '''''Cheap Truth'''''. (It was usually referred to as a [[wikipedia:samizdat|samizdat]], after the typescripts dissidents circulated in Communist Eastern Europe, but that's just a highfalutin name for a [[fanzine]].) In them, Sterling, [[Lewis Shiner]] (as "Sue Denim"), [[Rudy Rucker]], and other members of a loose-knit group of [[SF writers]] (calling themselves "the Movement" but soon dubbed [[cyberpunk]]) attacked what they considered the stagnant state of the time's popular [[science fiction]], its awards (especially the [[Nebula]]), and hyped their own works. As such, they document the development of the literary consciousness of the sub-genre's writers.
  
[[David Langford]]'s [[Ansible Editions]] published ''The Complete Cheap Truth'' -- containing all the issues below -- as a 2019 ebook for free download from the [[TAFF]] website.
+
[[David Langford]] published ''The Complete Cheap Truth'' containing all the issues below as a 2019 ebook for free download from the [[TAFF]] website: "Subversive and fun, ''Cheap Truth'' was explicitly not copyrighted and so has been assembled into an [[Ansible Editions]] ebook without any tiresome formality about asking permission."
  
 
<tab head=top>
 
<tab head=top>
Line 10: Line 10:
 
4 ||1983 ||2 ||  
 
4 ||1983 ||2 ||  
 
5 ||1984 ||2 ||  
 
5 ||1984 ||2 ||  
6 ||1984 ||2 ||  
+
6 || 1984 || 2 || anonymous poem "SF: A Rhapsody. After Swift" (also in ''[[Paperback Inferno]]'' 50, Oct '84), by [[Brian Aldiss]]?
 
7 ||1984 ||2 ||  
 
7 ||1984 ||2 ||  
 
8 ||1985 ||2 ||  
 
8 ||1985 ||2 ||  
9 ||1985 ||4 ||  
+
9 || 1985 || 4 || datestamp JAN 7 1985 at end of p2; 2 extra pages are "Electronic [[Letter Column]]", these dated 26 Jan ("RE CT 9", responding to an article in the issue! possibly due to earlier [[BBS]] distribution?) to 17 Feb
 
10 ||1985 ||2 ||  
 
10 ||1985 ||2 ||  
 
11 ||1985 ||2 ||  
 
11 ||1985 ||2 ||  
Line 19: Line 19:
 
13 ||1985 ||2 ||  
 
13 ||1985 ||2 ||  
 
14 ||1986 ||2 ||  
 
14 ||1986 ||2 ||  
15 ||1986 ||4 ||  
+
15 || 1986 || 6 || 4pp "Cheap Truth Letter Column" mostly from writers inc. "[[Orson Scott Card|Orson Card]]"; from 3 Dec 85 to 22 May 86 (first response to CT15 on 16 May), ending with a xerox from 13 July UK newspaper
16 ||1986 ||4 ||  
+
16 || 1986 || 4 || "special issue" "Cheap Truth [[London]]" on UK fiction with 2 extra pages of "Pilgrimage to Node Zero by Seth L. Lapcart" ([[Charles Platt]])
no number ||November 1986 ||2 ||"The Last Cheap Truth"; the only dated issue  
+
"The Last" || November 1986 || 2 || "The Last Cheap Truth"; the only dated issue  
no number ||?1986 ||2 ||[[Theodore Sturgeon]] tribute by [[Brian Aldiss]]  
+
no number || 1986 (post-May) || 2 || "Special Unnumbered Edition", big title "[[Theodore Sturgeon|Sturgeon]]: Mercury plus X" – tribute by [[Brian Aldiss]]  
 
</tab>
 
</tab>
  
{{fanzineindex|name={{PAGENAME}}|dir=Cheap_Truth}}
+
* {{fanzineindex|name={{PAGENAME}}|dir=Cheap_Truth}} (image scans, one PDF)
 +
* [https://taff.org.uk/ebooks.php?x=CheapTruth ''The Complete Cheap Truth''] at TAFF website – all standard eboook formats, 33,500 words
  
 
{{publication | start=1983|end=1986}}
 
{{publication | start=1983|end=1986}}
 
[[Category:fanzine]]
 
[[Category:fanzine]]
 
[[Category:US]]
 
[[Category:US]]

Revision as of 13:43, 3 March 2022

In the early-to-mid 1980s author Bruce Sterling, under the pseudonym "Vincent Omniaveritas", edited a series of mostly single-sheet reviewzines titled Cheap Truth. (It was usually referred to as a samizdat, after the typescripts dissidents circulated in Communist Eastern Europe, but that's just a highfalutin name for a fanzine.) In them, Sterling, Lewis Shiner (as "Sue Denim"), Rudy Rucker, and other members of a loose-knit group of SF writers (calling themselves "the Movement" but soon dubbed cyberpunk) attacked what they considered the stagnant state of the time's popular science fiction, its awards (especially the Nebula), and hyped their own works. As such, they document the development of the literary consciousness of the sub-genre's writers.

David Langford published The Complete Cheap Truth containing all the issues below as a 2019 ebook for free download from the TAFF website: "Subversive and fun, Cheap Truth was explicitly not copyrighted and so has been assembled into an Ansible Editions ebook without any tiresome formality about asking permission."

Issue Date Pages Notes
1 1983 2
2 1983 2
3 1983 2
4 1983 2
5 1984 2
6 1984 2 anonymous poem "SF: A Rhapsody. After Swift" (also in Paperback Inferno 50, Oct '84), by Brian Aldiss?
7 1984 2
8 1985 2
9 1985 4 datestamp JAN 7 1985 at end of p2; 2 extra pages are "Electronic Letter Column", these dated 26 Jan ("RE CT 9", responding to an article in the issue! possibly due to earlier BBS distribution?) to 17 Feb
10 1985 2
11 1985 2
12 1985 2
13 1985 2
14 1986 2
15 1986 6 4pp "Cheap Truth Letter Column" mostly from writers inc. "Orson Card"; from 3 Dec 85 to 22 May 86 (first response to CT15 on 16 May), ending with a xerox from 13 July UK newspaper
16 1986 4 "special issue" "Cheap Truth London" on UK fiction with 2 extra pages of "Pilgrimage to Node Zero by Seth L. Lapcart" (Charles Platt)
"The Last" November 1986 2 "The Last Cheap Truth"; the only dated issue
no number 1986 (post-May) 2 "Special Unnumbered Edition", big title "Sturgeon: Mercury plus X" – tribute by Brian Aldiss


Publication 19831986
This is a publication page. Please extend it by adding information about when and by whom it was published, how many issues it has had, (including adding a partial or complete checklist), its contents (including perhaps a ToC listing), its size and repro method, regular columnists, its impact on fandom, or by adding scans or links to scans. See Standards for Publications.