Monthly Archives: February 2012

“This is the voice of World Control…”

For the last five or six years I have been using an iBook made in 2001 as my laptop computer. This little machine is gleaming white and has primarily been used as a writing platform during my breaks at my day job, running gaming software during my D&D game (3.5 thank you very much), and allowing me and my sweetie-wife access to the internet while away at conventions. Given the machine’s coloration and gaming duties when I had to name it for my network the natural choice seemed to be Gandolf. Continue reading

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Sunday Night Movie:Island of Lost Souls

My most recent acquisition is the Criterion Edition Blu-ray of the classic horror/SF film,Island Of Lost Souls, adapted from the H.G. Wells classic novel The Island of Dr Moreau.

The novel has been adapted to the silver screen three times, most recently 1996 starring Val Kilmer and Marlon Brandon,  in 1977 with Michael York and Burt Lancaster, and this, the first time, 1932 under the title Island of Lost Souls.  After Universal’s staggering successes with Frankenstein and Dracula, and MGM’s profitable Freaks,Paramountwanted in on the horror market. They had limited success with Murders in the Rue Morgue, which played obliquely at the taboo or human/animal breeding. After acquiring the right to The Island of Dr. Moreau for $15,000Paramountplanned something wells had not imagined, a sexy, titillating horror film. Continue reading

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What really matters

This image was part of a story about how the Obama Administration’s Department of Justice was declining to defend the section of DOMA that preventing the recognition of gay spouses and denying those spouses benefits. A move I fully support, I think a generation from now this whole period will be looked upon with the same sort of distaste as we have for the Jim Crow era, and I will be proud of my support for equality.

What struck me interesting though was my reaction to the photograph, and instantaneous and un-contemplated reaction. No, it wasn’t that strange erotic thrill that so many men get from watching or conjuring up the thought of two women having sex. The first and foremost emotion I felt was one of sincere and profound happiness.

I have been a sailor in the United States Navy, having toured once the Western Pacific (WestPac) in a several month cruise. It is a hard and at times very lonely task. To come home to such warmth and such love is truly a blessing and it moved me to see this image, which captures the ideal so perfectly. I have no idea who the sailor is in the image, but I am terribly pleased that a person sacrificing for my safety and my rights has such love waiting here at home.

All this flashed through my mind and on a deeper than conscious level before it even registered with me that this were two women kissing. That element was trivial, not worthy of notice or consideration. What mattered here was the love.

In the end that is all that matters.

(Updated to include the link)

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Our science-fictional world.

Two weeks ago researchers UC Berkley reported a breakthrough in understanding human speech, a breakthrough that could someday shatter many of our social conventions. The scientists, studying the patterns with varies subjects’ brains, were able to determine what words the subjects hearing by the brain’s activity alone. It is a small step from there to deciphering the unspoken words thought by a person. The researchers are developing this technology to medically help people with severe brain injury and disease. We could even learn just what is going on in a person who is in a persistent coma state, breaking through to these terribly isolated people. Continue reading

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Book Review: Heartless

When a ghost, on the verge of the final death, warns Alexia of a threat on the Queen’s life, Alexia Woolsey, far advanced in her delicate condition, is thrust into a mystery that will lead her deep into the her husband’s pack’s darkest secrets of betrayal and treason. Continue reading

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The Desire for Indenpence

We’re now approaching the two year anniversary for when California, in a fit of insanity, granting my license to drive. I have had multiple permits while owning motorcycles – and somehow an event would take the motorcycle away before I I could be fully licensed. The last two years have been good. I haven’t hit anything, and I have managed to avoid a couple of truly frightening collisions. (Nothing on the road with myself behind the wheel has dissuaded me on iota from that dream of fully automatic cars and no human drivers.) Continue reading

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A New Project

By the end of this week I expect to complete my latest SF short story, a dark little piece titled, at least for now, Lady Jane. With that story wrapped I’m going to tackle one of my challenges for this year, a non-genre story. Continue reading

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