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Saturday, April 25, 2009

The Future Ain't What it Used to Bee





Top picture:  Evie and her gang working on restoring a tail at Weeki.

 Ken, Karen, Chris, and Frank, my buddies from the 'hood.  Never stop!  Just don't.

Here is a picture of two great gals (did manysisters just say "gals"?) that I went exploring with a few weeks ago, DonnaJean and Mary/Molly 

I love to go a-wandering, along the mountain path,
and as I go, I love to sing
my  knapsack on my back.
Val dereeeeeee, Val deraahhhhhh,
Val dereeeeeee, Val der ah hah hah hah ha ha ha ha ha.  Yeah.


And speaking of the future...I am in the middle of a great read--"October the First is Too Late", by Prof Fred Hoyle.  Written in the early 60's, it is a novel about the concept of time as a spiral, of paradoxes and choices.  And British perseverance.  Arthur C. Clarke and he were contemporaries, and I have to believe their paths crossed in many ways.  Clarke wrote a variation on that theme with his Time's Eye series.  If you have seen  "2001 A Space Odyssey" note that this book is at a right angle to it...anyway, very interesting stuff, and now I am a huge fan.

  I like the hard science in Sci Fi, but also the social side, the implications, the  prophesies, the possibilities.  Jack McDevitt is a favorite because he leaves the heavy science as a given a lot of the time, instead raising questions about what our expectations are of exploration and the nature of alienness.  Is there such a word? Hope so.  He has a series with a pilot, Priscilla Hutchins,  that makes the universe even bigger!  I would get on board one of Hutch's flights any day.  Kim Stanley Robinson is another great author.  Grounded in science, reads like Tom Wolfe in some ways, always putting planetary environmental  concerns in an intriguing storyline, complete with political and social scenarios and all wrapped up in a well thought out package.  I would start  with Red Mars.  

Zenna Henderson.  If you haven't read her "People" stories, you are in for a treat.  Not like ice cream, but like something that satisfies a craving that is good for you, too.  Having evacuated a dying planet, the People are bound for a new Home when some groups and individuals fall to earth in the 1800s.  Witch hunts, separations, psychological challenges.  Like "Escape from Witch Mountain" with intelligence.  Think Quakers that can levitate, with out the Quaker thing.

So I am moving forward on the mural, getting ready for the Tom Varn Show.  Right now I am going through a dictatorship phase, where I get to be the dictator/director, possibly alienating  anyone who gets in my way.  Must be that Queen Bee thing.  Ohhhhhhh I feel a buzz coming on!
Stop me now before I get bossy again!

Your Queen thanks you.  Kindly disregard that last request.


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