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sohkamyung@bookwyrm.social

Prisijungė prieš 3 years,6 months

Exploring one universe at a time. Interested in #Nature, #Photography, #NaturePhotography, #Science, #ScienceFiction, #Physics, #Engineering.

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Ši nuoroda atsidaro kitame langelyje

Fiction: - "Eddies are the Worst" by Bo Balder - "Bird-Girl Builds a Machine" by …

A better than average issue of Clarkesworld

A better than average issue, with interesting stories by Bo Balder, Hannah Yang and Tia Tashiro. I reserve judgement on Thoraiya Dyer's story until I've re\ ad the second half.

  • "Eddies are the Worst" by Bo Balder: in a future with fewer people having babies, the only way to get a workforce is to hire cheap clones of people who've sold their genetic maps. But what happens when the clones working for you is from the last person you expect to have been cloned?

  • "Bird-Girl Builds a Machine" by Hannah Yang: a child grows up watching, and later helping, her mother put together an unknown machine. But it is only after the machine is put to use at the end does the child realize the various clues her mother said about her future in the story.

  • "The Long Mural" by James Van Pelt: On a generational spaceship heading to a …

Gregory J. Gbur: Invisibility (Hardcover, 2023, Yale University Press)

A lively exploration of how invisibility has gone from science fiction to fact   Is it …

A fantastic and readable book on the history of light and invisibility

A fantastic and readable book on the history of invisibility. But before getting there, the author covers the history of the nature of light from the past through to the present. The excepts of fictional stories featuring invisibility found at the start of each chapter are also very interesting.

Once the nature of light is given, the author then shows how current research is looking into ways to take advantage of how light behaves to make things invisible, either by making light 'avoid' the object of interest, or by destructively interfering with the light emitted by the objects, so it cannot be detected.

The book closes with a look at how the technology and science used to make objects invisible to light can also be used to make objects invisible to other forms of energy, like sound, water waves and even earthquakes.

One property of charged particles mentioned in the …

apžvelgė autoriaus Lavie Tidhar knygą The Locked Coffin (Judge Dee, #6)

While visiting the mysterious castle of Maidstone for an investigation, Judge Dee and Jonathan discover …

A death in a locked coffin is no mystery to the Vampire Judge.

Another story in the author's Vampire Judge Dee's (and helper, Jonathan) series of stories, this one has the Judge travelling to an English castle, where its vampire master is certain somebody is trying to kill him. Despite the precautions, death does happen in a locked coffin and, given the clues given in the story, the reader might have a chance to deduce what happened before the Judge, or Jonathan, do.

Michael Ende: The Neverending Story (Hardcover, 1997, Dutton Children's Books)

This epic work of the imagination has captured the hearts of millions of readers worldwide …

A fantastic book about a neverending story.

A fantastic book about a fantastic book and the journey that Bastian Balthazar Bux undertakes with (and in) it.

Probably more people are familiar with the movies, especially the first one, but that only covers the initial journey Bastian unknowingly undertakes as he follows the adventures of Atreyu (and Falkor, the Luckdragon) in Fantastica, while being lead to the Childlike Empress who needs a new name to live; a name that only a human can give.

Conscious of his looks, Bastian is hesitant to do what the Childlike Empress needs. She resorts to her last option: a visit to the Old Man of Wandering Mountain and a retelling of the Neverending Story (in computer terms, an infinite, recursive loop) that can only be broken by an outside force: her new name which Bastian declares to be Moon Child.

Now in Fantastica, Bastian is given Moon Child's amulet, AURYN, with the …

An above average issue of F&SF.

An above average issue, with interesting stories by Rachel Pollack, Nina Kiriki Hoffman, Rich Larson and Wole Talabi.

  • "Homecoming" by Rachel Pollack: an interesting fantasy story about a person who can travel into fantasy realms around the world. In this case, a woman asks him to find a missing part of her soul. Doubts arise as he performs his job, but it is only on returning the soul that he discovers he may have unleashed an ancient horror on the world, and it may be up to him to save it. But there is a twist to the ending: people who have read the earlier stories about this Traveller might anticipate it.

  • "Vinegar and Cinnamon" by Nina Kiriki Hoffman: in this fun story, magic is a given, but training to control it is required. For one farming family, a dispute between a non-magical elder brother and his magical sister goes …

A good issue of Interzone

A pretty good issue. The stories range from good to excellent, apart from one story, and some will make you ponder more deeply about the stories after it ends.

  • "Everyone Gets A Happy Ending" by Julie C. Day: an urban fantasy tale about the end of the world caused by, of all things, bunnies. Yet, even now, the protagonist cannot help but fall in love with them.

  • "The Noise & The Silence" by Christien Gholson: a tale that didn't connect with me about a man living in a city with constant vocal noise who is seeking for Silence.

  • "The Transmuted Child" by Michael Reid: a fascinating tale of a monk and a child who go to the world of aliens to ask them for help. The aliens' technology embedded in the child is slowly driving the child to perform murderous acts, and the monk hopes the aliens can help. But …

Nėra viršelio

Ben Hatke: Little Robot (2015, First Second)

Teaching robots about friendship.

A little girl loves to explore the world. But one day, she finds a little lost robot and befriends it. As they explore the world together, she shows the robot the wonders of the natural world. But the robot's loss is noticed, and hunter robots are out to get back the little robot, and nothing is going to stop them.

It would need all the mechanical skills of the girl to save her robot friend from the hunters and to teach them the meaning of friendship and looking after each other.

Another interesting comic or graphic novel by Ben Hatke.

Nėra viršelio

Darren Naish: Dinosaurs (2016)

Dinosaurs are one of the most spectacular groups of animals that have ever existed. Many …

A nice, general book on dinosaurs.

An interesting general book about dinosaurs. It includes the latest research on dinosaurs to give a comprehensive and up-to-date view of them.

The book starts with a general overview of the dinosaur family, starting from their beginnings. It then covers the dinosaur family tree, showing where the various known dinosaurs sit in it.

The book then covers the anatomy of dinosaurs, showing how the various bones fit together. Depending on your current knowledge of dinosaur anatomy, you may learn some things. For me, it was that the posture of sauropods as usually depicted in various museums may not be anatomically correct. And, of course, the hands of the tyrannosaur and various theropods.

The book then goes into what the fossils, and other information taken from them, can tell us about how dinosaurs may have lived, their possible behaviours and about the surrounding environment at the time.

The book then looks …

John Scalzi: Starter Villain (2023, Doherty Associates, LLC, Tom)

Inheriting your mysterious uncle's supervillain business is more complicated than you might imagine.

Sure, there …

How to be a villian, but not be too evil.

A humorous and interesting story involving the usual clueless main character who discovers that he has been given a massive inheritance from a deceased relative. Only here, the relative is an uncle who turns out to have been a villain (complete with evil volcanic lair) who now wants him to run his evil empire.

As the story develops, it turns out the empire he inherits is not quite so evil after all. It does work for various governments and agencies. But it then quietly reuses the technology developed for other purposes. For example, a laser technology used to make rain gets repurposed (and boosted) to take down satellites (yes, it does get used in the story).

The main story involves the character interacting with other villains in the world who, while not plotting to take over the world, do want to accumulate vast wealth. And the death of his uncle …

In a cosmic rally race winding 12,000 kilometers across Io’s treacherous surface in just 60 …

When racing can erase your humanity.

During a race that requires the racers to circumnavigate Io, the satellite of Jupiter, one racer does the unthinkable and tries to help another racer. That would cause the racer to reevaluate just what is important to her as a human and the nature of what the race does to them: for the racers are all enhanced, or 'repaired', after racing accidents. At what point do the enhancements make a racer less than human?