Sep 102021
 

At last, volume 2 of Baranger’s illustrated “At The Mountains Of Madness” is up for pre-order on Amazon. If you are even *remotely* interested in Lovecraft, get it (and Volume 1, and “Call of Cthulhu”). The artwork for the earlier books is extraordinary and IMO really captures the story and the feel.

So if you have any money left over after buying a supply of “SR-71” (because you never know, the first print run of that may end up being the most sought after book in human history), get you some copies of Baranger’s works.

 Posted by at 5:59 pm
Sep 092021
 

Well, here’s terrible news:

I have no further info.

In case this is mystifying, Winchell Chung is the creator of the Atomic Rockets website that anyone even vaguely interested in hard sci-fi should be fully familiar with.

UPDATE: Bad news continues:

 Posted by at 11:27 am
Sep 072021
 

Sonofa…

L. Neil Smith (1946-2021)

Author L. Neil Smith, 75, died on August 27, 2021 in Fort Collins, CO.

Lester Neil Smith III was born May 12, 1946 in Denver, CO. He was a former state candidate for the US Libertarian Party, ex-police reserve officer, and a gunsmith. Smith created the Prometheus Awards in 1979 to honor libertarian science fiction.

Smith began publishing science fiction with “Grimm’s Law” for Stellar 5 (1980). He wrote 31 books, including 29 novels, and a number of essays and short stories. Titles include The Probability Broach (1980), which won him his first Prometheus Award in 1984. He won twice more, in 1994 for Pallas (1993) and in 2001 for Forge of the Elders (2000). He has been nominated 17 times for the Prometheus Award for Best Novel. Nominations include Their Majesties’ Bucketeers (1981), The Venus Belt (1981), The Nagasaki Vector (1983), The Gallatin Divergence (1985), The Crystal Empire (1986), Brightsuit MacBear (1988), Bretta Martyn (1997), The American Zone (2001), Roswell, Texas (2008), Ceres (2010), and Blade of P’Na (2016). He also wrote a trilogy of Lando Calrissian novels, all published in 1983. In 2016, Smith received the Special Prometheus Award for Lifetime Achievement for his contributions to libertarian science fiction.

Smith is survived by daughter Rylla Smith and wife Cathy Smith. Full obituary and appreciations will run in the October issue of Locus.

Smith was something that would not be allowed today: a science fiction author who skewed distinctly Libertarian, and included libertarian messages in his novels. The Message was usually about as subtle as a sledgehammer, but he was also usually just about correct, at least when describing the nastiness of leftists and other collectivist monsters. His characters tended towards the Competent Man, and did not waste a second listening to anyone who would deny them the right to keep and bear arms.

“The Probability Broach” was certainly entertaining. The US public educational system could do well to include it in high school English courses.

 Posted by at 11:54 pm
Sep 022021
 

Well, this looks bonkers:

This is from the feller what who done brung us “Independence Day,” “The Day After Tomorrow,” “2012,” “Stargate,” etc., so the apparent determination to learn the laws of physics just to do the other thing is in full effect here.

And yes, I’ll be there day one.

This apparently has nothing to do with McDevitt’s “Moonfall,” which is a shame because I seem to remember it being pretty good.

 Posted by at 6:42 pm
Aug 292021
 

George R.R. Martin has completed principal photography on a short film of the short story “Night of the Cooters” by Howard Waldrop. It’s been a few decades since I last read it (though it’s available online HERE), I recall it being quite entertaining: H.G. Wells’ Martians land in Texas, and it turns out Texans have guns and are ill-disposed to being invaded by illegal aliens; hijinks and kerplosions ensue.

The film has been shot on all-green-screen. So… hmmm.

The Cooters Are Coming!

I first read “Night of the Cooters” in the “Global Dispatches” collection. That is a collection of short stories written by a bunch of different sci-fi authors, all writing as historical figures from the time of the Martin Invasion, seeing the invasion from all around the world. Teddy Roosevelt comes across them in Cuba; Winston Churchill and H. Rider Haggard in Africa; H.P. Lovecraft in (where else) Providence, Rhode Island; and others.

 Posted by at 7:20 pm
Aug 282021
 

I have need of a Monogram 1/48 scale “F-19 Stealth Fighter” model kit. It need not be pristine and unopened; it can be partially or even completely assembled, so long as it is intact-ish and complete (and preferably with instructions). They pop up form time to time on ebay, but they’re too expensive for my budget. If you have one you’re willing to part with for a reasonable sum, let me know:

 

 Posted by at 1:36 pm
Aug 242021
 

I would have committed unspeakable acts – perhaps going so far as getting a job – to have gotten this when I was a kid and “Airwolf” was on the tube.

A bit pricey, but it’s 3D printed. I don’t see much point to the “completed and painted” version unless they take care of the rather obvious printing lines. Those will have to be sanded smooth; the tail boom also looks like it’ll need substantial modification (it’s oddly fat at the tail). The sides of the fuselage will also need substantial modification; the nose looks like it might be too pointy. Someone will have to vacu-form some windows for it.

1/18 “GI Joe” Scale Airwolf Helicopter (Unassembled Kit)

$225.00

1/18 “GI Joe” Scale Airwolf Helicopter (Completed and Painted)

$325.00

 

 Posted by at 5:50 pm
Aug 222021
 

Color me skeptical. Such a bot will *eventually* almost certainly come about, but this is Musk at his Muskiest, promising a lot in very short order. Unlike rockets, AI androids are something that humans have not yet actually made work.

A rather dubious article on the topic:

Don’t overthink it: Elon Musk’s Tesla Bot is a joke

And so far, nobody is asking the really important question:

 

 Posted by at 5:41 pm