R. Leib's Blog: Dream State, page 7
August 16, 2013
How do I incorporate science into my fiction?
When I read articles either online or in Scientific American, I think about how the research and theories behind those articles might influence our lives in the future. This is not as simple as it sounds.
For example, flying cars have been a mainstay of Science Fiction stories for quite a while. The writers of these stories viewed the technology of their times and extrapolated that flying cars would be technically feasible in the future. Whether or not the production of a device is possible is not the only obstacle to its implementation. It must fill a need. It must be cost effective. It must be controllable. It must be marketable. Flying cars fail one of these requirements; they are not controllable. Can you imagine your next-door neighbor at the controls of an aircraft? How long would it take before you would be picking pieces of that neighbor out of the side of your house? For there to be flying cars, there would need to be some system of altitude control that would prevent the added dimension of movement from increasing the level of danger. This could be accomplished by equipping the cars with governors that only allow altitude changes at certain locations and that would separate these altitudes into distinct strata. This would establish a computer generated system of passageways through the air that allow traffic congestion to be alleviated by spreading it across different elevations. The system also would have to assure that the cars did not run out of fuel or fail while in the air. Maybe this will be practical some day, but I do not see today's average driver graduating to pilot status anytime in the foreseeable future.
So no air cars in my stories.
For example, flying cars have been a mainstay of Science Fiction stories for quite a while. The writers of these stories viewed the technology of their times and extrapolated that flying cars would be technically feasible in the future. Whether or not the production of a device is possible is not the only obstacle to its implementation. It must fill a need. It must be cost effective. It must be controllable. It must be marketable. Flying cars fail one of these requirements; they are not controllable. Can you imagine your next-door neighbor at the controls of an aircraft? How long would it take before you would be picking pieces of that neighbor out of the side of your house? For there to be flying cars, there would need to be some system of altitude control that would prevent the added dimension of movement from increasing the level of danger. This could be accomplished by equipping the cars with governors that only allow altitude changes at certain locations and that would separate these altitudes into distinct strata. This would establish a computer generated system of passageways through the air that allow traffic congestion to be alleviated by spreading it across different elevations. The system also would have to assure that the cars did not run out of fuel or fail while in the air. Maybe this will be practical some day, but I do not see today's average driver graduating to pilot status anytime in the foreseeable future.
So no air cars in my stories.
Published on August 16, 2013 23:38
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Tags:
air-cars, science, science-fiction
August 15, 2013
Why did I join Goodreads?
To be honest, I joined because I wrote a novel, and I wanted to find a good venue to generate interest in it. Is that why I am still here? No. Once I started participating in Goodreads, I had two realizations. First, I really liked the idea of being a member of a group where I am encouraged to read more and where I can exchange ideas about what we are reading with like minded people. Second, it was immediately apparent that any attempt to self-promote my book would just annoy the members of the group. Too many people have abused the patience of the Goodreads public that way. So, what am I going to do? I am going to take to heart the advice I read in the Goodreads discussion for authors. I am here. And I am here to read and discuss the books we read together. If members of Goodreads take an interest in what I have written, then I will be happy that they did. But the last thing I want to do is alienate the people it was my goal to entertain.
Published on August 15, 2013 18:18
August 14, 2013
When I First Saw Myself as a Writer
When did I first view myself as a writer? That goes back to my college days. Now that I am old, it is difficult to believe how much I overextended myself. I had been working on a story all night long. Without any sleep at all, I prepared to walk the two and a half miles to school for my first class of the day. When I opened the door, a package was there waiting for me. The note said that it was from my downstairs neighbor. In the package was a typewriter pad. Unknowingly, I had kept my neighbor up with me that night, as I pounded out the story on my Underwood portable. That was the first time I thought of myself as a writer.

Published on August 14, 2013 18:58
Dream State
This will be my thoughts on what it is like for me at each stage of being a writer. It starts with me as a complete unknown. Who knows? It may end there. In any case, hopefully it will be of interest
This will be my thoughts on what it is like for me at each stage of being a writer. It starts with me as a complete unknown. Who knows? It may end there. In any case, hopefully it will be of interest to others who want to become writers.
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