Darker Than You Think, 2013, 238 Pages, Jack Williamson, 0575087315, 9780575087316, Orion, 2013

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Darker Than You Think, 2013, 238 Pages, Jack Williamson, 0575087315, 9780575087316, Orion, 2013 Darker Than You Think, 2013, 238 pages, Jack Williamson, 0575087315, 9780575087316, Orion, 2013 DOWNLOAD http://bit.ly/1iwU36K http://www.alibris.co.uk/booksearch?browse=0&keyword=Darker+Than+You+Think&mtype=B&hs.x=19&hs.y=26&hs=Submit The unsettling dreams begin for small-town reporter Will Barbee not long after he first meets the mysterious and beautiful April Bell. They are vivid, powerful and deeply disturbing nightmares in which he commits atrocious acts. And one by one, his friends are meeting violent deaths. It is clear to Barbee that he is embroiled in something far beyond human understanding, something unspeakably evil. And it intimately involves the seductive, dangerously intoxicating April, and the question, 'Who is the Child of the Night?' When he discovers the answer to that, his world will change utterly. DOWNLOAD http://ow.ly/ulmXF http://avaxsearch.com/?q=Darker+Than+You+Think http://bit.ly/1jPZ2MZ The Silicon Dagger , Jack Williamson, Dec 21, 2012, Fiction, 352 pages. In McAdam City, Kentucky, people are fed up with big government interfering with their lives, telling them what they can't do, sticking its nose into their private business. Terraforming Earth , Jack Williamson, Jun 8, 2010, Fiction, 288 pages. When a giant meteor crashes into the earth and destroys all life, the small group of human survivors manage to leave the barren planet and establish a new home on the moon. Golden Blood , Jack Williamson, Jul 25, 2013, Fiction, 157 pages. Chemical symbol... atomic number... atomic weight... Scientific terms for gold... but science can't begin to explain the mystery and magic of gold. It was gold that lured the. Community design management , Jack Williamson, Design Michigan. Community Design Advisory Program, 1995, Business & Economics, 210 pages. The Reefs of Space , Frederik Pohl, Jack Williamson, Dec 21, 2012, Fiction, 188 pages. Far beyond the orbit of Pluto, half-mythical bodies circle the Solar System - the Reefs of Space, unknown, shrouded in mystery, the goal of human conquest, the obsession of the. Bright New Universe , Jack Williamson, Jun 27, 2013, Fiction, 158 pages. One man fights those who quarantine Earth from alien cultures.. Land's End , Frederik Pohl, Jack Williamson, Mar 4, 2013, Fiction, 384 pages. When Comet Sicara brushed near enough to strip the ozone layer from the Earth's atmosphere, civilization effectively ended - in fact, life on Earth was nearly extinguished. But. Farthest Star , Frederik Pohl, Jack Williamson, Jul 25, 2013, Fiction, 188 pages. There was no shortage of danger on Cuckoo. 20,000 light years away, the enormous flat surface of Cuckoo travelling at one-sixth the speed of light aimed arrow-straight at the. The Singers of Time , Frederik Pohl, Jack Williamson, Jul 25, 2013, Fiction, 358 pages. Award- winning authors Frederik Pohl and Jack Williamson, two of the most respected names in science fiction, draw on the speculations of cosmologist Stephen Hawking to take us. Three from the Legion , Jack Williamson, 1980, Science fiction, American, 534 pages. The Stonehenge Gate , Jack Williamson, Aug 1, 2005, Fiction, 316 pages. Stumbling on ancient stones in the Sahara Desert, four adventurous excavators and poker buddies realize that they have discovered a gateway to other worlds, from. The Crucible of power three science fiction novels, Norman L. Knight, Norvell W. Page, Jack Williamson, 1953, Fiction, 236 pages. Demon Moon , Jack Williamson, Feb 25, 2013, Fiction, 379 pages. According to legend, Zorn's distant ancestors had vanquished fiery devils from the Demon Moon. Now, a thousand years later, that bloody red world looms closer every day. But. Dragon's Island and Other Stories , Jack Williamson, 2002, Fiction, 340 pages. A Collection of Peace , Helen Steiner Rice, Jan 1, 2014, Poetry, 160 pages. Acclaimed poet Helen Steiner Rice’s beautiful verse has been treasured for decades. Her work continues to speak to readers as they experience heaven’s comfort in Barbour'sUrban climates: proceedings of the Symposium on Urban Climates and., Volume 1 proceedings of the Symposium on Urban Climates and Building Climatology, World Health Organization, World Meteorological Organization, 1970, Urban climatology, 390 pages http://tiny.cc/uFgLfb America: History of Our Nation Lesson Planner, James West Davidson, Prentice-Hall, inc, 2009, United States, 692 pagesThe Fairies in Tradition and Literature , Katharine Mary Briggs, 2002, Literary Criticism, 324 pages. Fairies fascinate young and old alike. To some they offer tantalizing glimpses of other worlds, to others a subversive counterpoint to human arrogance and weakness. Like no 0575087315, 9780575087316 Heard It Through The Grapevine , Teresa Hill, Jul 1, 2012, Fiction, 164 pages. THE STICK TURNED BLUE! Preacher's daughter and wholesome ?good girl? Cathie Baldwin knew better than to find herself unwed and pregnant. But what miracle could save her and her The Boy, the Wolf, the Sheep and the Lettuce , Allan Ahlberg, Jul 7, 2005, Juvenile Fiction, 96 pages. You may think you know the riddle of the boy, the wolf, the sheep and the lettuce, but this book will prove you wrong. Read Allan Ahlberg's SHOCKING EXPOSE of the truth behindThe definition and interpretation of Levallois technology , Harold Lewis Dibble, Ofer Bar-Yosef, 1995, History, 502 pages Digest of United Kingdom energy statistics 2010 , Iain MacLeay, Jul 29, 2010, Business & Economics, 257 pages. This issue of the Digest of United Kingdom Energy Statistics (DUKES) is part of a series and updates the figures given in the DUKES 2009. The publication consists of seven download Darker Than You Think 0575087315, 9780575087316 Miryam, Moses' sister, watches over him as he grows up in Egypt and sacrifices her own happiness to help him fulfill his destiny, while his wife,Tzipporal, a follower of the. http://ykewin.files.wordpress.com/2014/05/barbie-of-swan-lake.pdf Drug use, impaired driving and traffic accidents , Elke Raes, T. van den Neste, A.G. Verstraete, European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction, Paul Griffiths, 2008, Business & Economics, 196 pages. This literature review provides a comprehensive report on the relationship between drug use, impaired driving and traffic accidents. It covers methodological issues, presentsTouchstones Volume C - Teacher's Guide , Howard Zeiderman, 2005, Critical thinking, . "Touchstones. helps students in the middle grades master critical thinking, reading, speaking, and listening skills. The activities and readings help students become active Utility theory a book of readings, Alfred N. Page, 1968, Business & Economics, 454 pages Traces the history of the famous text typically associated with its instruction for sexual techniques from its origins in third-century India--where it began as a primer on. Conquests of Engineering , Cyril Hall, 1912, Bridge construction, 288 pagesGieves to the Fore , Barry Tighe, Jan 1, 2009, Fiction, 288 pages. Comedy Fiction - suitable for all. Aim at fans of PG Wodehouse http://goo.gl/RX21U Beginning Trumpet Solos -, Volume 2 , Armando Ghitalla, Nov 1, 2006, Music, 16 pages. (Music Minus One). Performed by Armando Ghitalla, trumpet Accompaniment: Harriet Wingreen, piano Listen as master Armando Ghitalla of the Boston Symphony takes you through thisRunaway Pony , Jeanne Betancourt, 1995, Juvenile Fiction, 83 pages. When Lulu's pony, Snow White, develops strangles and is separated from the other ponies, she runs away during a snowstorm, and Lulu enlists the aid of her Pony Pal friends Darker Than You Think Jack Williamson Data Warehouses More Than Just Mining, Barbara J. Bashein, M. Lynne Markus, 2000, Business & Economics, 209 pages. Data mining gets plenty of press these days, but before the data can be mined, it must be warehoused assembled, cleaned, organized, and stored. And now that vendors are This book shows you how to grow your business in the toughest of times with the oldest, best and most effective marketing method in the world. The Essential Guide to Cake Decorating , Murdoch, 2007, Cake, 304 pages. 'The Essential Guide to Cake Decorating' will lead a newcomer through the simplest basics of this colourful pastime, and also contains great ideas and fantastic creations toHolly's Heart Collection Three, Books 11-14 , Beverly Lewis, Oct 1, 2008, Juvenile Fiction, 448 pages. Thirteen-year-old Holly is dealing with the major concerns of every preteen and teenage girl: boys, family, and school. But with the help of her friends and her faith in God http://www.2shared.com/document/RimazUjF/Darker-Than-You-Think.html Scarface The Movie Scriptbook, Oliver Stone, 2007, Comics & Graphic Novels, 239 pages. Set in Miami in 1980, follows the violent career of a small-time Mariel refugee hoodlum who guns his way to the top of Miami's cocaine empireSample Census 1966, Great Britain Summary Tables, Great Britain. General Register Office, 1967, Great Britain, 93 pages Darker Than You Think 2013 Orion, 2013 Principles of Philosophy , René Descartes, Apr 30, 1984, Philosophy, 353 pages. When we further reflect on the various ideas that are in us, it is easy to perceive that there is not much difference among them, when we consider them simply as certain modesQueen of the South , Arturo Perez- Reverte, May 31, 2005, Fiction, 464 pages. Few authors inspire the kind of passion that Arturo Pérez-Reverte does. Reviewers, readers, and booksellers alike have embraced his fiction as the perfect blend of suspense and Darker Than You Think 0575087315, 9780575087316 Sojourner Truth , Laura Spinale, Aug 1, 1999, Juvenile Nonfiction, 40 pages. This is a biography of the former slave who dedicated her life to achieving equal rights for women and blacks http://www.powells.com/s?kw=Darker+Than+You+Think Hardcore Java , Robert Jr, 2004, Computers, 324 pages. Focuses on the little-touched but critical parts of the Java programming language that the expert programmers use. Learn about extremely powerful and useful programmingPrince of Sumba, Husband to Many Wives , Don Milton, 2009, Fiction, 344 pages.
Recommended publications
  • Bantam Books, 1977 Frederik Pohl Was
    Yue Wang Team 2B Before The Universe Frederik Pohl. & C.M. Kornbluth New York: Bantam Books, 1977 Frederik Pohl was one of the early members of The Futurian Society of New York in the 1930s, Cyril Kornbluth, a bright fellow from the farthest north part of Manhattan joined later around 1938. Pohl became editor of two profession science fiction magazines called Astonishing Stories and Super Science Stories. Both of the magazines were low-budget projects that the magazines were sold for a dime and fifty cents. Pohl often needed to find cheap talents for stories to fill the blank pages. The Futurian Society was the first place where Pohl could seek help. Before The Universe is one of the Futurian collaborations by Frederik Pohl and Cyril Kornbluth. Furthermore, the two names have appeared on many other science fiction books. The book compiled with eight individual science fiction stories. One of the stores called Mars-Tube is about an expedition team on Mars from earth after a half century interplanetary war that Mars was eventually defeated and the entire Martian population was annihilated. The story began with the three members of the expedition team, Ray Stanton, Annamarie Hudgins, and Ogden Josey a roentgenologist encountered a Mars robot on an underground train, that the robot blocked them from exiting the train at a certain stop, which arose their curiosity. The three in the next day exited the train at a near by stop and walked back to the stop where they were blocked from exiting the train. At the suspicious train stop, the three expeditors encountered some spider-like robots and were attacked by those robots.
    [Show full text]
  • Jerey Allen Tucker the Necessity of Models, of Alternatives: Samuel R
    Je!rey Allen Tucker The Necessity of Models, of Alternatives: Samuel R. Delany’s Stars in My Pocket like Grains of Sand “Boy loses world, boy meets boy, boy loses boy, boy saves world” In Reading by Starlight: Postmodern Science Fiction, Damien Broderick provides the %rst thorough analysis of Samuel R. Delany’s last sci- ence %ction novel, Stars in My Pocket like Grains of Sand (1984). He notes that despite—or perhaps, as a result of—its conceptual accomplishments, the novel’s plot is “scant indeed.”& The prologue, “A World Apart,” is set on the planet Rhyonon and tells the story of Rat Korga, an illiterate nineteen-year-old male who undergoes a loboto- mizing procedure known as Radical Anxiety Termination (RAT), after which he is sold to do the menial work and su'er the degradations of a porter at a polar research station. Suddenly, all life on the surface of Rhyonon is eradicated by %re. The mechanics, purpose, and attribution of this planetwide holocaust are never fully explained to the reader; one possibility is that Rhyonon experi- enced a phenomenon called Cultural Fugue that was triggered either locally or by a mysterious and threatening alien race known as the Xlv. Most of the rest of the novel is organized under the title “Monologues” and is narrated by Marq South Atlantic Quarterly 109!2, Spring 2010 "#$ 10.1215/00382876-2009-034 © 2010 Duke University Press 250 Je!rey Allen Tucker Dyeth, an aristocratic “industrial diplomat” whose job frequently requires him to leave his homeworld o( Velm to travel across the galaxy, interact- ing with its myriad peoples and their cultures.
    [Show full text]
  • A Course Whose Time Has Come
    A course whose time has come Paul R. Joseph Law is a central component of the democratic State. It defines the relation between the government and its people and sets the rules (and limits) of the restrained warfare of politics. Law becomes the battle­ ground for moral debates about issues such as abortion, discrimination, euthanasia, pornography and religion. Today we also debate the role Using science fiction and functioning of the legal system itself. Are lawyers ethical? Do judges usurp the legislative role? Are there too many ‘frivolous’ law materials to teach law. suits? Law and popular culture Where do the masses of people learn about the law? What shapes their views? Some peruse learned treatises, others read daily newspapers or tune in to the nightly news. Some watch key events, such as Supreme Court confirmation hearings, live, as they happen. Some have even been to law school. Many people also rely (whether consciously or not) on popular culture for their understanding of law and the legal system. Movies, television programs and other popular culture elements play a dual role, both shaping and reflecting our beliefs about the law. If popular culture helps to shape the public’s view about legal issues, it also reflects those views. By its nature as a mass commercial product, popular culture is unlikely to depart radically from images which the public will accept. By examining popular culture, we, the legally trained, can get an idea about how we and the things we do are understood and viewed by the rest of the body politic.
    [Show full text]
  • PRESS RELEASE Breaking News from SFWRITER.COM Robert J
    PRESS RELEASE Breaking News from SFWRITER.COM Robert J. Sawyer Wins World’s Top Juried Prize for Science Fiction Robert J. Sawyer, 46, of Toronto, has just won the world’s top juried award for science fiction: the John W. Campbell Memorial Award for Best Novel of the Year. The award, which Sawyer won for his latest novel, Mindscan, was presented Friday night, July 7, 2006, at a banquet at the J. Wayne and Elsie M. Gunn Center for the Study of Science Fiction at the University of Kansas. With this award win—his 38th for his fiction—Robert J. Sawyer now joins the most- select club in all of science fiction: the seven writers who have won all three of the field’s top awards for best novel of the year: • the World Science Fiction Society’s Hugo Award, which he won in 2003 for his novel Hominids; • the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America’s Nebula Award, which he won in 1996 for his novel The Terminal Experiment; • and the John W. Campbell Memorial Award, which he has now won for Mindscan. (The full list of winners of all three awards: David Brin, Arthur C. Clarke, Joe Haldeman, Frederik Pohl, Kim Stanley Robinson, Robert J. Sawyer, and Connie Willis; Sawyer is the only Canadian to win all three.) The John W. Campbell Memorial Award was created to honor the late editor of Astounding Science Fiction magazine (renamed Analog Science Fiction and Fact in 1960). Campbell, who edited the magazine from 1937 until his death in 1971, is often called the father of modern science fiction.
    [Show full text]
  • Newsletter Spring 2007 Final
    Institute to Host Poet Laureate he Humanities Institute is currently Rosenkranz four poets will read and dis- T will host the Pulitzer writer-in-residence at Yale cuss their poetry, giving the Prize-winning poet and University. Her other honors audience an opportunity to ask United States Poet Laureate include the Bollingen Prize in questions about their poetry for 2003-2004 Louise Glück Poetry, the Lannan Literary and creative processes. on Tuesday, April 10, 2007 at Award for Poetry, Sara Teas- 7:00pm in Traditions Hall, dale Memorial Prize, and fel- Streckfus is on the faculty of Alumni Center. She is the lowships from the Guggen- Western Connecticut State author of numerous books of heim and Rockefeller founda- University’s Low Residence poetry, including The Seven tions and from the National MFA in Professional Writing Ages (2001); Vita Nova Endowment for the Arts. In program and also teaches at (1999), winner of The New 2003, she was City Col- Yorker Magazine’s Book named as the “Averno ...demonstrates lege of San Award in Poetry; Meadow- new judge for that she is writing at the Francisco. lands (1996); The Wild Iris the Yale Series He is a (1992), which received the of Younger peak of her powers” graduate of Pulitzer Prize and the Poetry Poets, serving George Society of American’s Wil- through 2007. The Yale Se- Mason University’s MFA pro- liam Carlos Williams Award, ries of Younger Poets is the gram in creative writing and a and her latest Averno (2006), oldest annual literary award in recipient of fellowships from which the New York Times the United States.
    [Show full text]
  • The New Heinlein Opus List
    Nhol.fm Page 253 Wednesday, March 22, 2000 7:21 PM Excerpted from the book Robert A. Heinlein: A Reader’s Companion. This excerpt is from the final press version of the book, and the numbering scheme herein can be considered final. Any updates or changes to this list will use the addendum numbering described on the second page. ©1996–2000 James Gifford. All Rights Reserved. May be duplicated and quoted from according to the terms described in “Reproduction & Use of the Hew Heinlein Opus List” within. The author may be contacted at: [email protected] www.nitrosyncretic.com Nitrosyncretic Press PO Box 4313, Citrus Heights, CA 95611 916-723-4765 voice & fax The New Heinlein Opus List This section presents a complete listing of every known work by Robert A. Heinlein, in the order of creation. Each work is prefaced by a unique identify- ing number, the New Heinlein Opus Number. These numbers, in the format ‘G.nnn,’ have been used throughout this book to identify the work in ques- tion. These numbers have not been used previously for Heinlein’s works. Those readers who are familiar with Heinlein’s opus list may wonder why I did not use Heinlein’s own numbers for these works. The answer is simple: Heinlein’s list was developed and maintained as the core of a filing system for the business management of his works. It was not created until about 1948, with the number of existing works approaching three digits. It is neither complete nor completely accurate in its numbering: there are minor works that do not appear on it, as well as some works that appear out of sequence.
    [Show full text]
  • DOUBLE:BILL Symposium
    BRIAN W. ALDISS ALLEN KIM LANG POUL ANDERSON KEITH LAUMER PIERS ANTHONY FRITZ LEIBER ISAAC ASIMOV ROBERT A. W. LOWNDES CHARLES BEAUMONT RICHARD LUPOFF GREG BENFORD KATHERINE MacLEAN ALFRED BESTER anne McCaffrey JAMES BLISH J. FRANCIS McCOMAS ROBERT BLOCH DEAN MCLAUGHLIN ANTHONY BOUCHER P. SCHUYLER MILLER LEIGH BRACKETT MICHAEL MOORCOCK RAY BRADBURY LARRY NIVEN MARION ZIMMER BRADLEY ANDRE NORTON REGINALD BRETNOR ALAN E. NOURSE JOHN BRUNNER ANDREW J. OFFUTT KENNETH BULMER ALEXEI PANSHIN ---------------------------------------------- JOHN W. CAMPBELL EMIL PETAJA s JOHN CARNELL H. BEAM PIPER ’ TERRY CARR FREDERIK POHL SYMPOSIUM JOHN CHRISTOPHER ARTHUR PORGES 3r ARTHUR C. CLARKE DANNIE PLACHTA tr HAL CLEMENT MACK REYNOLDS I MARK CLIFTON JOANNA RUSS GROFF CONKLIN ERIC FRANK RUSSELL BASIL DAVENPORT FRED SABERHAGEN AVRAM DAVIDSON JAMES H. SCHMITZ B io HANK DAVIS T. L. SHERRED CHARLES DE VET ROBERT SILVERBERG LESTER DEL REY CLIFFORD D. SIMAK AUGUST DERLETH E. E. 'DOC SMITH PHILIP K. DICK GEORGE 0. SMITH GORDON R. DICKSON JERRY SOHL jllopii HARLAN ELLISON NORMAN SPINRAD PHILIP JOSE FARMER THEODORE STURGEON DANIEL F. GALOUYE JEFF SUTTON DAVID GERROLD WILLIAM F. TEMPLE H. L. GOLD THEODORE L. THOMAS MARTIN GREENBERG WILSON TUCKER JAMES E. GUNN PIERRE VERSINS EDMOND HAMILTON KURT VONNEGUT, JR. double-.bill HARRY HARRISON TED WHITE ZENNA HENDERSON KATE WILHELM JOE HENSLEY ROBERT MOORE WILLIAMS JOHN JAKES JACK WILLIAMSON LEO P. KELLEY RICHARD WILSON DAMON KNIGHT ROBERT F. YOUNG DEAN R. KOONTZ ROGER ZELAZNY $3. the DOUBLE BILL Symposium ...being 94 replies to 'A Questionnaire for Professional Science Fiction Writers and Editors' as Created by: LLOYD BIGGLE, JR. Edited, and Published by: BILL MALLARDI & BILL BOWERS Bill BowersaBill Mallardi press 1969 Portions of this volume appeared in the amateur magazine Double:Bill.
    [Show full text]
  • Frederik Pohl
    The Gateway Trip : Tales And Vignettes Of The Heechee Copyright (c) 1990 by Frederik Pohl There was a time, half a million years ago or so, when some new neighbors came into the vicinity of the Earth's solar system. They were eager to be friendly-that is, that was what they wanted to be, if they could find anyone around to be friends with. So one day they dropped in on the third planet of the system, the one we now know as Earth itself, to see who might be at home. It wasn't a good time to pay a call. Oh, there was plenty of life on Earth, no doubt of that. The planet crawled with the stuff. There were cave bears and saber-tooth cats and things like elephants and things like deer. There were snakes and fish and birds and crocodiles; and there were disease germs and scavengers; and there were forests and savannahs and vegetation of all kinds. But one element was conspicuously missing in the catalogue of terrestrial living creatures. That was a great pity, because that was the one quality the visitors were most anxious to find. What those visitors from space couldn't find anywhere on the planet was intelligence. It just hadn't been invented yet. The visitors sought it very diligently. The closest they could find to a being with what they were after was a furry little creature without language, fire, or social institutions-but which did, at least, have a few promising skills. (For instance, it could manage to crunch tools out of random bits of rock.) When modern humans came along and began tracing their evolutionary roots they would namd this particular brand of prehuman "Australopithecus." The visitors didn't call it anything in particular .
    [Show full text]
  • Social Criticism in Two Science Fiction Novels from the 1950S and 1960S
    Social Criticism in Two Science Fiction Novels from the 1950s and 1960s Pauline Kimman Ghent University Student ID: 01409997 Submitted on August 7, 2015 For Completion of Masters of Arts in American Studies Acknowledgements First of all I should like to thank all the academic staff of the MAAS program and my supervisor Prof. Codde in particular. I am eternally grateful for my family’s unconditional support throughout the academic year. My friends have been equally supportive, and I acknowledge how fortunate I have been to have had them by my side. 2 Table of Contents Introduction ..................................................................................................................................... 4 Chapter 1: The Space Merchants (1953) ........................................................................ 9 1.1 Introduction ........................................................................................................................ 9 1.2 Synopsis............................................................................................................................... 10 1.3 The Fictional Reality ..................................................................................................... 10 1.4 The Protagonist ............................................................................................................... 11 1.5 Social Issue: The Class System ............................................................................. 15 1.6 Social Issue: Corporate Power ..............................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • ARTHUR C. CLARKE Father of Satellite Communication
    K. SMILES MASCARENHAS ARTHUR C. CLARKE Father of Satellite Communication Sir Arthur C. Clarke, one of the greatest science fiction Feature Article Feature writers, will continue to shine like a bright star among the scientific greats of our time for years to come. “Prediction is very difficult, especially if it’s about the future.” A geostationary satellite is a satellite that has its revolution — Niels Bohr period equal to the earth’s rotation period. When viewed from any geographical point, it will appear to be stationary above it. HEN we see Wimbledon live, or the opening ceremony To satisfy this condition, the satellite has to orbit the earth at a of the Olympics, via satellite, we seldom remember height of 36, 000 km above the equator. Technologically, it would Wthe person who first suggested that satellites could be not have appeared feasible at that time. An orbit of 36,000 km used for communication purposes. Even when that person above the equator is officially recognized by the International entered the Glorious Abode on 19 March 2008, few TV channels Astronomical Union (IAU) as a “Clarke Orbit”, in his honour. The remembered him with gratitude. Even Science Fiction buffs who concept was published in the “Wireless World” magazine in read his novels avidly must have failed to notice the demise of a October 1945. Clarke would have made billions if he had great Scientific Prophet—Sir Arthur C. Clarke who predicted not patented his idea. But like the great Marie Curie, who refused to only communication through geostationary satellites, but also patent her discovery of Radium, Clarke’s only intention was to advances in computer technology.
    [Show full text]
  • Baycon Hugo Awards Ceremony Transcription, Cleaned Version [Note: Baycon, the 1968 Worldcon, Had Its Entire Program Taped by KPFA
    Baycon Hugo Awards Ceremony Transcription, cleaned version [Note: Baycon, the 1968 Worldcon, had its entire program taped by KPFA. As far as I know, the tapes are lost. However, Alva Rogers had a transcript made for a planned Proceedings of Baycon of the Hugo Awards Ceremony. It’s a bit of a mess. This is cleaned up as much as I can do so, guessing in many cases about who was being referred to under the various spellings of names, and interpolating Alva’s handwritten corrections when they make sense. I’ve also had to guess about when various people started and stopped speaking. It’s been easier to retype the whole thing than try to get an OCR system to deal with it. Punctuation is, as always with a transcript from a recording, a guess – I’ve done my best to make it cleaner for the text as something to read. I have not, however, tried to change what people said 47 years ago. This is a document of our history. Anything said then probably wouldn’t be said the same way now. Some other documents from the proposed Proceedings exist, but not many; after we get this cleaned up, I may publish some of them in the same way. Tom Whitmore, cleaner] ROBERT SILVERBERG (Toastmaster): Forgive me for beginning the festivities on a solemn note, but I think I should explain what I’m doing up here, as I’m not the Toastmaster who was chosen for this a year ago when Alva, Ben and Bill made their convention bid.
    [Show full text]
  • Discussion About Frederik Pohl
    Science Fiction Book Club Interview with Michael Page (May 2020) Michael Page is the author of a number of books which examine the history and cultural importance of science fiction. He has published analyses on the life and works of Frederik Pohl, James E. Gunn, and edited a collection of stories by Miles J. Breuer a “forgotten” science fiction writer from the Pulp Era. He is a lecturer at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln, and regularly teaches courses on both science fiction and nineteenth century British literature. He also acts as the faculty advisor for Laurus, UNL's undergraduate literary magazine. Blaine Savini: There is a belief that most writers approach novels from one of two directions...either they write the first sentence and find out what happens as the story is written or they know how it will end and then explain how the ending occurred. Would either of these descriptions describe Mr. Pohl's writing style...why or why not? My sense is that Pohl primarily took the latter tactic. His adage was “four pages a day,” meaning that no matter what he was doing or how he was feeling, he always carved out some time to write those four pages each day. I’ll paraphrase what he says in The Way the Future Was: sometimes the four pages come fast and I’m done in half an hour; sometimes it might take 16 hours to grind them out. This is a different kind of discipline than the discipline of planning work out well in advance. That’s not to say that Pohl didn’t plan, but I think once he got started he’d let the story and the characters go in their own direction as he got going on a project.
    [Show full text]