An Exterminator-Free Galaxy

This post builds on my previous series about the Fermi Paradox. Quoting Nick Land, expat Brit philosopher in Shanghai, “The cosmic reality visible to us is characterized by an intense, efficient aversion to the existence of advanced civilizations.” He calls whatever it is that prevents the existence of advanced civilizations “The Great Filter.” Longtime science fiction

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“New” Fantasy Novel

Pen names are one of the many aspects of the publishing industry in flux these days. Formerly, traditional publishers would typically demand writers change pen names when switching genres. Marketplace confusion was the stated rationale: if “Max Steele” mostly wrote hard-boiled detective stories, then switched to a cozy mystery, where Grandma sets down her knitting

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Transforming landscapes and battling twins in Roger Zelazny

I decided to start 2015 by rereading the Roger Zelazny books I own. (Here’s why). Wikipedia can tell you about some of Zelazny’s characteristic themes: immortals, riffs on real-world mythologies, and the ‘absent father.’  Thanks to immersing myself in rereading, I noticed a couple of recurring themes I haven’t seen reported anywhere else. (Not even

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Mardi Gras dark fantasy

CARNIVAL IN SORGENBACH, by Raymund Eich Imagine Mardi Gras, a.k.a. Carnival… Imagine Mardi Gras on an empty stomach, under the eye of foreign occupiers, with most of your friends maimed or dead…. Imagine Mardi Gras, haunted not only by the horrors of the war just ended, but premonitions of an even more terrible war to

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