James L. Cambias's Blog, page 5
February 15, 2023
Radio Active
My media presence continues to spread. In addition to podcasts, blogs, and social media, now I'm on AM radio! I was a guest on WHMP in Northampton, talking about (what else?) The Scarab Mission. You can listen to that episode here (my segment starts at the 31 minute mark).
Megan Zinn, the interviewer, had a great list of questions, and we didn't get to most of them. That's the biggest problem with broadcast media: the very strict time limits. Anyway, this is what I sound like.
February 13, 2023
Boskone 60
This coming Friday I'll be at Boskone, the longest-running SF convention in New England, at the dear old Westin Seaport hotel in Boston. If you want to stop in and see me in person, my convention schedule is here:
FRIDAY, February 17
4:00 p.m.: Serving Up a Tasty World ��� There's more to fictional dining than Stew. I'll be moderating a panel of writers talking about food in fantastic fiction, how to make it appealing, and how to use food as a way to reveal things about settings and characters.
5:30 p.m.: Becoming a Space-Ready Society ��� I get to be on a panel with a bunch of genuine experts, all discussing what it's going to take to create a permanent and self-sustaining human population off Earth.
SATURDAY, February 18
11:30 a.m.: The Declining Readership Rate Among Children ��� I pitched this topic so they're making me moderate the panel. We've got several professional educators and experts to talk about the problem of declining readership among young people, how serious it is, what's causing it, and what we can do.
1:00 p.m.: Group Reading ��� I'll be reading a short selection from The Scarab Mission, if you want to hear what you're missing.
7:00 p.m.: Why Science Fiction Loves Getting Science Wrong ��� SF loves to break the rules, but what's the difference between speculation and just getting it wrong? This won't be just a litany of goofs, but an exploration of when you have to break from reality, and the role of accuracy in storytelling.
SUNDAY, February 19
11:30 a.m.: Autographing ��� I'll be signing books, anthologies, magazines, casts, bookplates, and anything you care to bring along.
February 5, 2023
Unexpectedly Serious Musings
The economist Robin Hanson has a wonderful wide-ranging curiosity. He developed the "Great Filter" concept for SETI, and wrote a paper about expanding alien civilizations and what it means if we haven't detected them.
Now he's tackling the ideological divide in our society, the so-called "culture war" by examining how it derives from what people consider sacred. Here's his draft paper on the subject, and two posts on his blog Overcoming Bias on the topic. This one is especially useful.
Mr. Hanson's analysis clarified some of my own recent thoughts on the subject. It really does seem as if modern Western society is going through a kind of religious awakening ��� though in this case the new faith is resolutely anti-theist and goes under a variety of names. "Progressivism," "Social Justice," or maybe "Wokeness." At times I feel like a Roman of the era just before Constantine: a new faith is spreading like wildfire, and like a fire it seems to be consuming many of the things I consider essential to our civilization.
Sometimes a new faith is like Christianity (or the Protestant Reformation) ��� but too often it winds up more like Robespierre's cult of the Goddess of Reason, or Hong Xiuquan's Heavenly Kingdom. Destroying the old order is easy, but building a new one is hard, especially if you've convinced yourself that anyone who disagrees with you is stupid and evil, and any failures of the new faith must be due to wreckers and saboteurs. That's always a reliable way to wind up with a pyramid of skulls.
February 2, 2023
Howard Hughes Vindicated!
DARPA, the Defense Department's official mad-scientist branch, has signed contracts with two companies to develop a super-heavy-lift flying boat for military transport. Here's the article from the US Naval Institute Web site.
Why resurrect a technology which has been sidelined for seventy years? Since the end of World War II flying boats have hung on in a couple of very specialized niches but otherwise they've joined long-range passenger airships in the category of "stuff we don't use any more." The modern world has paved runways everywhere, so airplanes don't need to land on the ocean.
Unless . . . you're the US Navy and Marine Corps, and you're thinking very hard about how you'd fight against a certain large country on the western side of the Pacific. You'd want to use the island chain running from Kamchatka to Australia as a line of unsinkable air bases and combat platforms. You'd want to be able to move forces rapidly around that region, which means you need something faster (and cheaper to replace) than amphibious landing ships.
Speculation: I expect older ballistic missile submarines will not be scrapped as newer boats replace them. Instead they're going to be repurposed as undersea transports, suitable for rapid, secret deployment of small combat units to islands near Asia.
January 31, 2023
I've Got A Little List . . .
The nice people at Shepherd.com asked me to submit a list of five book recommendations. I chose "The Best Novels About Exploring Big Things In Space." It's kind of a funny coincidence that I chose that topic, right when I have a book out about people exploring a ruined space habitat. Their site has loads of other recommended-reading lists on a whole range of topics.
I'd love to hear if anyone has any suggestions for books on that same topic. Maybe you can come up with a better list than I did!
January 30, 2023
DiFilippo on Scarabs
Paul DiFilippo put up a very kind review of The Scarab Mission in his Locus column. You can read it here, at Locus Online.
The summary: he liked it. The review calls Scarab a "rousing, unstoppable, non-stop adventure," which is good to hear. That's what I wanted to write, but you never know if you hit the mark. I think that is the single most frustrating thing about writing: the lag time. I wrote Scarab in 2020-2021. The last revisions were done last summer. I've mentally moved on to the next book, and only now can I find out if anyone understands or likes what I was trying
to do three years ago. And of course some people won't find this book for months or years yet.
Copies should now be hitting the mark in bookstores, so pick up yours today. Buy them all up so I can stop promoting and get back to the Worldbuilding series.
January 27, 2023
FOUND!
Good news for everyone waiting to get a trade paperback copy of The Scarab Mission: the lost copies have been found! According to my publisher, "they should be going where they were supposed to this week."
I'll send a signed bookplate to whoever comments first that they got their copy. (And to anyone else who requests one, but the first commenter gets bragging rights.)
January 18, 2023
The Big Idea: Writing For Games vs. Writing Fiction
I wrote a guest post for John Scalzi's Whatever blog, discussing my work writing roleplaying games and how that affected my fiction. You can find it here. For visual interest, check out the cover of Weird War I!
January 13, 2023
Scarab Mission World Exclusive!
If you want a copy of The Scarab Mission, make your way to the Westin Seaport Hotel in Boston and seek out the booth for Larry Smith Booksellers in the dealer area. They've got six signed, hand-delivered copies of The Scarab Mission, making them the only book dealer in the world right now capable of selling you one. Get them while the supply lasts!
January 11, 2023
Arisia 2023
This weekend Boston's biggest annual science fiction convention returns to the Westin Seaport hotel, January 13-16. I'll be there, promoting my rare and eagerly-sought new book The Scarab Mission. I'm also doing several panels and events.
Saturday, January 14
10:00 A.M.: Connecting With Your Kids Through Media ��� How liking the same nerdy stuff as your kids can draw you closer together.
4:00 P.M.: Overt and Covert Antagonists: Who's More Evil? ��� Which is worse, a bad guy you don't know about, or one who isn't afraid to make their villainy obvious?
8:30 P.M.: All Words Are Made Up ��� How to do alien or fantasy languages, what to avoid, and why it's important.
Sunday, January 15
11:30 A.M.: Reading ��� I'll be reading some selections from The Scarab Mission.
2:30 P.M.: Gods Walk Among Us ��� Gods, both real and made-up, as characters in fantasy fiction.
When I'm not in these program events I'll be hanging around. If I can arrange it, there may be some copies of The Scarab Mission available (no guarantees). If that doesn't work out I can provide signed bookplates to paste into your copy when it finally arrives. And of course, I'll sign any of my older work, including games.
See you all at Arisia!