Sunday, February 26, 2006

Spin: A Review

I have just completed reading Spin , a science fiction novel by Robert Charles Wilson. From time to time SF authors come out with Really Big Concepts. When an author combines that with good fiction, then we have a winner, and Spin is just such a novel.

In this case, the Really Big Concept is that Earth is enclosed by unknown forces in a membrane (the Spin) that not only cuts off all sunlight (which is replaced by an apparently artifical sun) and starlight, but also radically alters how time passes on Earth. A specific example mentioned in the novel is that while five years have passed on the planet, 500 million years have passed in the rest of the universe, on the other side of the membrane. Now, if that's not a Big Concept, I don't know what is!

Into this Wilson gives us the stories of three persons: twins Jason and Diane Lawton, and Tyler Dupree, their friend. The novel starts with the night the the Spin is put in place. The Lawton twins and Tyler are respectively thirteen and twelve. The three of them are outside looking at stars while the twins parents are throwing a party when they suddenly realize they can no longer see any stars.

A crew of Russian cosmonauts who were in orbit when the Spin appeared spend a week unable to regain communications with anyone on the ground before they decide to risk a manual atmospheric reentry, but once they are safely on the ground they are told it is the same night the membrane appeared. Nobody believes their story of having spent as much time in orbit as they say.

But it is later discovered packages of instruments can be boosted through the membrane by rockets to record what is happening on the other side and then allowed to come back to Earth the same day. When their recorded data is examined, the realization of the changes in how time is passing occurs.

Through out this novel the author provides a exciting mix of ideas and good old fashioned science fiction. For instance, the successful terraforming and colonization of Mars occurs during the lifetimes of the three main characters thanks to the time passage differential.

All in all Spin is a very highly recommended work!
Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Tuesday, February 07, 2006

V for Vendetta: A Review

I took this photo, originally posted by me on ...Image of Alan Moore via Wikipedia


I have become interested recently in graphic novels. The most powerful one of those that I have read so far is V for Vendetta by writer Alan Moore and artist David Lloyd.

The tale is set in England after a World War III that involved a limited exchange of nuclear weapons. This created a political power vacuum in England that was filled by a fascistic group.

The story starts with a 16-year old girl, Evey Hammond, who is desperate for money to survive on in the very bleak world the fascists have made of England and decides her only option is to prostitute herself. The first man she approaches turns out to be a policeman working a vice detail. Under the rules of the fascist state, police who catch someone in the act of soliciting for prositution can do whatever they want with her before summarily executing her on the spot. As the group of three police working the vice detail move in to start raping Evey, a masked figure comes out of nowhere and kills them. The masked figure takes Evey away to his hideout, where he tells her she will be safe.

The man tells Evey that he has no name, and to call him V. We quickly discover he always wears masks, and the mask he uses almost full time is of the face of Guy Fawkes, who is famous in England for his plan (never carried out) in the year 1605 to assassinate King James I and all the members of Parliament by blowing up the Houses of Parliament buildings while all of them were present there.

Soon after taking in Evey, V carries out part of Fawkes' plan and does blow up the Parliament buildings (which were abandoned when the fascists took control of the country).

As the story progresses we learn V is simultaneously carrying out a plan to bring down the fascists by driving England into anarchy (destroying the Parliament buildings being just one part of that plan) and murdering individuals from his past.

I won't get into more details of the story here. But I will note that during the story we are shown many details that reflect on the significance of "V" as both a letter and the Roman numeral for five - all of which enhances how fascinating the story is.

All together the combination of Moore's writing, Lloyd's art, and the themes they explore create an utterly amazing and haunting book.
Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Sunday, February 05, 2006

License Plate Watch 7

Passed on the freeway what I think was a Mazda Miata that had the following plate:

"4HR FUN"

At first I was trying to make sense of "Four Hour Fun", then I realized what the real reading of the plate must be: "For Our Fun"