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Site of the Week—August 16, 2004

Ursula K. Le Guin Official Homepage
http://www.ursulakleguin.com

L ike her writing, the official homepage of Ursula K. Le Guin exhibits a richness derived from a thoughtful, expansive simplicity. The first sight to greet the visitor is a pastel map of her world of Earthsea. Entering through this magical veil, the visitor next sees a warm and smiling portrait of the writer herself.

All the subsequent features are accessed simply by scrolling continuously downward for a long distance, clicking once on various buttons that appeal. No applets, no animation, no jumping all around: just good solid information and delights for her fans.

Readers will discover links to the upcoming Earthsea miniseries on the SCI FI Channel. They can catch up on recent reviews of Le Guin's work, as well as longer critical essays about her. Entire speeches and lectures given by the author at various functions are reproduced, including a digitized audio-visual record of one such occasion. Several of Le Guin's recent short stories are accessible, thanks to a link with the webzines Infinite Matrix and SciFiction, among others. Readers interested in Le Guin's poetic accomplishments will find satisfaction as well. Her translations of the poems of the Nobelist Gabriela Mistral are sampled here.

Le Guin even shares a rejection letter concerning her classic novel The Left Hand of Darkness. All these features radiate an empathetic bond with her readers, a humility and willingness to share that's impressive. As Le Guin says in "A Few Words to a Young Writer," the carefully chosen words of storytellers "make the souls of their readers stronger, brighter, deeper."

— Paul Di Filippo


Site of the Week—August 9, 2004

TheDarkTower.net
http://www.thedarktower.net/

I f the Dark Tower series is Stephen King's Jupiter—the single, massive literary planet that rules over the rest of his work—then DarkTower.net is his Io. Like that fiery moon, the Web site orbits King's creation, watching its turbulent surface and basking in its radiation.

The Web site dedicates itself to tracking every aspect of Stephen King's immense Dark Tower universe, and it begins that Herculean task with "Connections," a section that attempts to explain how the seven core books relate to the rest of King's work. It starts with what the author calls the "Central Canons," the three books Insomnia, Hearts in Atlantis and Black House, which actively expand the Dark Tower mythos. From there, the site ventures into other works—like The Stand and Bag of Bones—which have more tenuous associations with the Tower.

Elsewhere, the "Dark Tower Road Map" provides a visual guide to how the books interrelate, and gives newbies an idea of where to start reading. The "Timeline" attempts to put the events of the Dark Tower into chronological order, while "Booksearch" allows readers to search the text of the core and related books. It will not serve up the entire book, just the portion that contains the text readers searched for.

There is a fan art section that contains some very good work, a trivia contest that readers can use to test their understanding of the series, and even a downloadable, Windows-based application for keeping up with the site. Rounding out the site is a heavily trafficked forums section and "Other Rolands," which discusses books and movies beyond King's that nonetheless are important to the series.

— Ken Newquist


Site of the Week—August 2, 2004

AngryAlien.com
http://www.angryalien.com/

I n space, no one can hear you hop. So says AngryAlien.com, a science-fiction site that parodies famous films with ... bunnies.

Each parody is a 30-second Flash film featuring cartoon rabbits acting out the highlights of that film. The final results are weird, but also pretty funny.

The Shining parody has all the movie's signature elements—Danny screaming "redrum," his dad flipping out and axing through doors and cooks, cadaverous undead twins and the signature "Jack's in the picture" ending, though this time everyone in the 1920s-era photo is a rabbit. Other genre films mocked are Alien and The Exorcist, with the disaster flick Titanic rounding out the lot.

Elsewhere on the site, visitors will find some non-genre features, including an illustrated grade school diary, a strange "pigeon cam" and an animated lesson on where the site's cartoonist gets his ideas.

— Ken Newquist


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