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Quantum fluctuations in space, science, exploration and other cosmic fields... served up regularly by MSNBC.com science editor Alan Boyle since 2002.

Alan Boyle covers the physical sciences, anthropology, technological innovation and space science and exploration for MSNBC.com. He is a winner of the AAAS Science Journalism Award, the NASW Science-in-Society Award and other honors; a contributor to "A Field Guide for Science Writers"; and a member of the board of the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing.

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Escape into summer sci-fi

Posted: Wednesday, July 11, 2007 8:05 PM by Alan Boyle

Summer is prime time for escapist fiction - but as long as you're escaping, why not head for some science, speculation and social commentary as well? Here are a few suggestions for sci-fi escapism in print and on TV:

  • Just last week, we talked about Britain's video surveillance system and the role such systems could play in combating terrorism. Of course, there's a flip side, in the form of a little thing called loss of privacy and freedom. John Twelve Hawks' "Fourth Realm" saga takes that issue head-on, proposing that throughout history, underground cells of mystics and martial-arts types have been doing battle with an Illuminati-style global conspiracy as it labors to build security-cams and computer databases into an all-seeing, all-knowing "Vast Machine." The first novel in Twelve Hawks' planned trilogy, "The Traveler," came out a couple of years ago, and I found it to be a thought-provoking page-turner. Kind of like "The Matrix" meets "The Da Vinci Code." So I'm passing the title along as this month's Cosmic Log Used-Book Club selection.

  • The trilogy's second novel, "The Dark River," went on sale this week, and if you blazed your way through "The Traveler," you'll want to pick this one up to keep the momentum going. The plot plays off pop-culture conceptions about altered states of consciousness as well as the biblical Ark of the Covenant. There's not a whole lot of real neuroscience or archaeology to the tale - but if you want to learn more about those subjects, you can refer to two recently published books: Douglas Hofstadter's long-awaited "I Am a Strange Loop," which delves into the roots of consciousness; and "From Eden to Exile," Eric H. Cline's concise roundup of biblical mysteries ranging from the location of the Garden of Eden to the fate of the Lost Tribes of Israel. It's the opposite of escapist literature: serious scholarship that adds weight to the flimsy foundations of Hollywood's far-out tales. (Yes, even "Raiders of the Lost Ark.")

  • Last weekend, admirers of the late sci-fi great Robert Heinlein marked what would have been his 100th birthday with reflections on his vision for space settlement and exploration - and speculations on how the next 100 years could bring that vision even closer to reality. If you're looking for great sci-fi escapes, Heinlein's works could be just the ticket. Two of his tales - "The Man Who Sold the Moon" and "Stranger in a Strange Land" - have ended up on the CLUB Club list. But let the reader beware: His works resonate with counterculture/libertarian themes that might set your brain working even though it's supposed to be on summer break.

  • Heinlein also plays a part in this summer's TV escapism. One of his short stories, "Jerry Was a Man," has been adapted for an episode in "Masters of Science Fiction," a summer series airing on ABC in August. This episode stars Malcolm McDowell and Anne Heche, and the casts for the other three teleplays are just as stellar. The series' host happens to be a star of a different sort: one of the world's most revered scientists, Cambridge cosmologist Stephen Hawking.

On that note, I think I'll escape for a few days myself and finish reading "The Dark River" as I sit in Seattle's bright summer sun. Do you have your own suggestions for summer sci-fi escapism? Leave your comments right here, and if your favorite becomes a future selection for the Cosmic Log Used-Book Club, I'll send you my copy of "The Dark River" - in the grandest tradition of the CLUB Club.

Regular postings to the Log will resume on Monday.

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Comments

Oh BTW, here is the link to examine "Cosmos and Psyche"  http://www.cosmosandpsyche.com/ExploreTheBook.php
I have read everything that Heinlein and Herbert have written (including "Grumbles from the Grave"). I find it difficult to find anyone writing sci fi in the grand tradition of Heinlein or Herbert but the closest are David Weber, David Drake, and a relative newcomer (a couple of years) John Ringo. I have also just finished the Brian Herbert (book 1) ending of Chapterhouse Dune.  
I'm a little surprised that Connie Willis hasn't shown up yet.  "To Say Nothing of the Dog" is as much fun as anything I've read in years.  Hard to describe, a mix of time travel, historical romance, bureaucratic satire, and slapstick comedy. (I told you it was hard to describe.  Trust me.  Read it.)

Her "Doomsday Book" is set in the same time travel system, but much darker, without the humor.  It's brilliant, but probably too heavy for stereotypical summer reading.

I would also strongly recommend her "Fire Watch" and "Impossible Things," short story collections that range over a great variety of styles and subject matters.

"Bellwether" is good fun too.  It's not SF, really, but let's not get picky here.  Anyone who has worked in a large bureaucracy will recognize every character and situation in the book.
For truly mind-bending SF, try any of Stephen Baxter's "Manifold" series ("Manifold: Space," "Manifold: Time" and "Manifold: Origin") It doesn't matter which one you read first; they each loop around the other two. It's wild. Many other Baxter books are very good also.
can anyone help me?
I am looking for a book, I know the plot, but nothing else.  
It's a look 50 years into the future, where New Orleans is flooded, old people use sunglass cameras to report crimes, everyone is literally plugged in with a chip on the brain, they nuked the swiss alps and now they live on deteriorating ships, animals are being kept in huge biospheres, etc etc.  If you know this book please email me at drliving@comcast.net.  thanks!!!!  Dr L  :o)


MOBILE TREK (Because In Space No One Can Hear You Dial), is a humorous, zany, off-the-wall look at Sci-Fi and call centres and is currently available in e-book form from www.ereadable.com. For anyone who ever had to phone a “call centre”, or worked in a call centre, and thought they were connected to some spacecraft in the distant future. USS Cellforce 1 is an intergalactic mobile phone call centre, in which Captain Pilchard battles the call centre's of the Krapulans, defeating them and forming a communications alliance. From there they battle the Bornagain and defeat them by crippling their international roaming rights. They go on to negotiate with the Phoebians over their ability to transport any object via a mobile phone to anywhere in the universe, which they call 8G. Through all this Captain Pilchard dreams of retiring to his ferret farm in Edinburgh.                                      
“Anything resembling anything living…..isn’t”
Kind Regards,
Douglas Rea.
douglasrea@bigpond.com                                                                            


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