I enjoy when successful authors publish the writing exercises and cutting-room scraps that were left behind when publishing a series of books. I remember trying to write in the early 1980s and going through an exercise to figure out how one of my characters should react to some event in my story; I wrote a short vignette about her from 10 years in her past to flesh out her personality and sensibilities so that I could understand her well enough to write the section of the story I was working on. The expanse authors have published some of their writing that was cut from the expanse series and this short novella appears to be another writing exercise or snippet that was cut from their new series. It's a great stand-alone story. 5/5 Stars.
Friday, November 1, 2024
Saturday, October 26, 2024
Deception - The Great Covid Cover-Up by Rand Paul (2023)
The Wuhan Lab's "gain of function," including cover-ups, deception, and the people behind the odd lockdown policies are brightly illuminated in this interesting book. The silly politics are distracting and boring, but the information about the corruption, censorship, and the conflicts of interest within government funding agencies and EcoHealth Alliance are very good. 4/5 Stars.
Sunday, October 20, 2024
Saturday, October 19, 2024
Thursday, October 17, 2024
Screens are *still* worse than Paper for reading retention
My first published academic paper in 1987 explained an elegant experiment I ran using SAT test questions that measure retention to discover if humans retain and understand information better by reading on paper or reading from screens. Of course the overwhelming measurements and evidence indicate that reading from paper is much better than screens. Recently, Amy Tyson published an in-depth study about the use of books and paper versus devices (phones, tablets, computers) in classrooms and looking at test scores. She validated my measurements in school settings. If you have a kid in school, get them to use books and printed materials.
Tuesday, October 15, 2024
Icehenge by Kim Stanley Robinson (1984)
I have no idea how or why this book appeared on my stack to read. The book holds up surprisingly well after 30 years. I did not like the authors "Mars" books that follow this original one, but I enjoyed this story. The story explores the insane conspiracy theories, alternative facts, fake news, and other modern topics over a centuries long time line. It's interesting how human societies treat history. The objective truth never matters. 4/5 Stars.
Labels:
scifi
Sunday, October 13, 2024
Starship flight 5
I am very grateful to live in a time when we have exceeded the wildest imaginative concepts of science fiction to catch the biggest rocket ship ever built with chopsticks. I have not been this excited about watching space flights since watching (live) as Neil Armstrong descended the lunar lander. Go watch the 4K videos.
Labels:
popsci
Saturday, October 12, 2024
Thursday, October 10, 2024
new goal in life
My new goal in life is to get paid 2.7 gigadollars ($2.7 billion) to get re-hired at one of my previous employers. I am very grateful to live in such an interesting time.
Labels:
management
Sunday, October 6, 2024
Barsk: The Elephants' Graveyard by Lawrence M. Schoen (2015)
I think David Brin pointed me to this book as an illustration of other authors who picked up David's idea of uplift. Uplift is when an advanced species (patron) genetically modifies a pre-sapient species (client) to elevate the new species to full sapience. In this book, the author has an area of our galaxy filled with uplifted earth species. The magic system and themes in the book are a little inconsistent and the physics is terrible. But the story is interesting and the writing is good. 3/5 Stars. I enjoyed it but won't read any others.
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