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Showing posts with label Robert T. Jeschonek. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Robert T. Jeschonek. Show all posts

Thursday, April 17, 2014

Free and reduced ebook lunches

Reboots 
by Mercedes Lackey and Cody Martin
Free

Sineater 
by Elizabeth Massie 
$0.99
Winner of the Bram Stoker award



Reboots + Diabolical Streak (two books)
by Mercedes Lackey and Cody Martin 
$1.99

Trucksong 
by Andrew Macrae 
The Weightless 1-Day Sale title for April 17th, 2014! 
$1.99
This is up for awards in Australia. Sounds pretty cool.  Author's PhD thesis.  Only a few hours left!

The Stress of Her Regard 
by Tim Powers 
$1.99
multiple World Fantasy and Philip K. Dick award winner (I'm sure he's written disappointing stuff, but I just haven't found it yet.)

Steven Barnes has a name your price program that's supposed to be the secret to The Secret.  I will get it eventually and report.  I've been motivated by his programs thus far, if that's what you're needing now.

Friday, April 19, 2013

Review: Fringe Science


Fringe Science
Parallel Universes, White Tulips, and Mad Scientists
Edited by Kevin Grazier
BenBella Books
This one I picked to review, forgetting I'd already bought it, attracted to the sound of tantalizingly possible or possibly dubious science.  Out of touch with pop culture, I didn't realize that Fringe was a TV show.  By watching the pilot episode, I remedied that lack and have a sense of what issues the book addressed. The program, like the book, does cut some broad territory.

The first three essays relate with the series' genre, with growing relevance.  David Dylan Thomas says that "Paranormal Is the New Normal" and that the show is focused on SF.  An interesting point but it may go on too long.  Amy H. Sturgis provides literary ancestors to the Fringe, some of which will send me flipping through classics, but it offers no profundities.  Paul Levinson concludes this trio saying the Fringe is "The Return of 1950s Science Fiction", describing examples from Alfred Bester to Philip K. Dick.  Levinson digs a little deeper, explaining how the show's aspects fit into the larger scheme.

Max Tegmark and Mike Brotherton discuss parallel universes.  Tegmark's contribution, the more technical of the two, had me on the edge of my seat, both in fascination and in confusion.  I'm not sure if it's the author or reader's fault, possibly a little of both.  What's cool, though, is that the author explains three types then argues for and against them.  Mike Brotherton, on the other hand, is more user-friendly guide to earlier, parallel-universe TV programs, stories and comic books.

The meatier articles, for my money, treat human biology (and time, below).  Garth Sundem's "The Malleability of Memory" treats the problems that come with memory.  He discusses which of the show's ideas are mistaken and which work.  Memory can be manipulated--through wording and through convincing someone that something that did not occur, actually did.  Memory, Sundem points out, isn't stored in one place, either.  While regrowing memories is unlikely, you can trigger memories, la Marcel Proust's tea-soaked cake or another food or sound.  Interestingly, rigid believers are easier to brain-wash.

In "Fringe Diseases" Jovna Grbic also tells what the show got right and wrong, explaining why.  This one is largely familiar, but that may be since my education was in biology, chemistry, and medicine.  Surprises are still here--from designer diseases to slime-mold robots.

Brendan Allison's "The Fringes of Neurotechnology" brings us the latest and future developments that interface the human mind and technology--BCIs, brain-computer interfaces.  Is mind reading possible?  Not yet, not close.  Mind control?  Not really.  But the possibilities are dealt with.

Stephen Cass treats time travel.  Is it possible?  What is time?  In order to build a time machine, we'd need a better understanding.  Cass discusses how wormholes and other methods of getting to the future.

Amy Berner discusses cows (agriculture, cloning and huma-cow chimeras).  Nick Mamatas wins the prize for the most unusual pairing:  Gordon Liddy and Timothy Leary in "Walthered States" where the two famous gentlemen of the sixties and seventies represent Walter from two different universes.  Robert T. Jeschonek talks about the ethics of experimentation.

This eclectic collection is sure to tickle a couple of your fancies.