Mar 152016
 

One fictional choice an author can make is to include a thinly-veiled – or entirely open – version of him/herself in the tale. One of the better known examples of this Dante Alighieri including himself as the main character in his “Divine Comedy.” In lesser hands, the concept is often lazy wish fulfillment and says nothing good about the author and his/her skills. In my own limited store of crappy fiction I have at least tried to avoid this as much as possible.

Still, I have one story idea – almost certain to never go much further than this lameass blog post – that would include a “self insertion” so blatant I might as well use my own name for the character.

The story came to me in a flash a few weeks ago. The basic idea is not that clever, since it has been done in various forms numerous times: some geographic region finds itself displaced from time, dropped somewhen else. Hijinks ensue. (see: “1632,” “Island in the Sea of Time”).

The specific idea that occurred to me was this: a few square miles of my local area (Thatcher, Utah) suddenly – apparently due to bad management or some cosmic paperwork foulup – finds itself in the same physical location, but in mid 1942. Hijinks then ensue.

Thatcher is a small place, but if such an unlikely event were to occur, somewhere in the region of 500-800 people would find themselves in a different time period. This makes for an interesting situation; a single person could disappear into the background and not affect history, but a region like this with hundreds of people *won’t* be able to hide. Sooner or later, the FBI is going to find the place *terribly* interesting. A small, *kinda* isolated place like this would provide the possibility for the event to remain hidden; were it instead a block of Chicago, there’d be no hiding it.

Obviously, there will be some immediate problems, first up being the lack of utilities. Until new power and gas lines can be hooked up, most of the homes here will be dark. Cell phones won’t work. The internet will be non-existent. But 2016-era cars will still function and can be gassed up… but that will draw stares and paying for the gas might be problematic.

Since it’s wartime, something you *don’t* want to have happen is to bring the wrath of FDR’s government down on you. You will want to maintain some measure of control. So my thinking is that some small number of 2016-folks will need to find the nearest Army base or FBI office (both available about 40 miles from here) and nonchalantly stroll in, find someone with power, and show them a functioning Iphone and say something akin to “if you’d like to know more, meet me up in Thatcher tomorrow, noon.”

Assuming you can get hold of some 1942-officials who can accept the situation without freaking out, a whole lot of things will happen. Here you’ll have hundreds of people who know how the war will turn out. Some fraction of them will be reasonably well versed on certain historical details… their father served in Iwo Jima, their grandfather was in D-Day, etc. And there will be books.

Here’s where it’d be *real* difficult for me to not self-insert into this yarn. Because in my basement I have a couple shelves specifically on the Manhattan Project and nuclear weapons in general. Just *imagine* how the War Department would go absolutely ape with this treasure trove. Everything from “ok, let’s stop wasting time on Thin Man” to “let’s have a chat with Mr. Fuchs,” to “will someone *please* keep Mr. Slotin away from the screwdrivers.” I could have endless fun showing “Trinity and Beyond” to Robert Oppenheimer and the like.

Then there are the books on rocketry, jet engines, aircraft design, etc. My house is incredibly boring today, but in 1942, nations would have gone to war over what I’ve got. And with all due modesty, I could probably keep a whole bunch of folks entertained for years just rattling stuff off.

The firearms in probably every house, including a range of modern sporting rifles and “assault weapons” including AR-15’s, AK-47/Saiga’s would be of great interest to the Army and Marines. No doubt there are some really interesting things out here; wouldn’t surprise me if there’s a Barrett or two.

The trick would be for the 2016-locals to maintain control. It would be easy for the 1942-Army to simply sweep in, confiscate everything and lock all the 2016-folks into deep dark holes; this is the FDR era, after all. But if the 2016-folk are able to convince the 1942-authorities that the best approach is to be civilized, this sleepy little wide spot in the road could become one hell of a research facility. The 2016-folk would become fabulously wealthy on royalties.

Care would have to be taken in how 2016 technologies were utilized. Let’s face it, 1942 scientists would not have been able to meaningfully analyze a smart phone. The tech wasn’t there to build the tools needed to study the tech. A microchip would be difficult to explain… and without good scanning electron microscopes, they wouldn’t even be able to *see* the details of the chips, assuming they could disassemble the things to get at ’em without destroying them. A lot of 2016-tech would be simply inaccessible. Still… crappy junk people have long ago tossed into their attics would be monumentally useful. A cheap transistor radio that was last on when Kool and the Gang were relevant would provide all kinds of entertainment value to Bell Labs. Imagine if practical transistors were “invented” in, say, 1943.

In the post-war period, there would be opportunities for the 2016-folk to make *buckets* of money. Assuming everything remains functional, I can see movie studio execs coming out here under armed military escorts to watch DVDs and Blu rays, and negotiating for the right to point their cameras at the screen. A lot of the movies on my shelf would make no sense in 1942; imagine trying to sell “The Matrix.” But… “Star Wars?” Yeah, I can see Fox executives backing up a dumptruck full of cash to get *that* on film.

The weird area is when authors in 1942 find out that 2016-people have books they won’t write for another few decades. It’d be interesting to have Robert Heinlein and Isaac Asimov come pay me a visit. Would they *want* to read the books? What would the courts decide as to the ownership of, say, “Starship Troopers?” 50% to the 2016-person with the book, 50% to the 1942 author? How about books written in the 21st century by authors who not only haven’t been born yet in 1942, but who now very likely won’t be born?

Anyway.

I’ve talked this idea over with a friend; there’s much more to it, but it’ll probably not go much further (because why would it?). Still, I had an idea for the very last scene: after the time travel hijinks, the US defeats Germany in mid 1944, Japan later that year; the USSR is weakened and shoved way back. The US occupies *all* of Eastern Europe; Mao Tse Tung meets with an unfortunate accident. Communism is thus contained and quickly fades into the obscurity in which it belongs. A few years after the war, the arrival of 2016-Thatcher is revealed; the role it played in the fabulous technologies that have appeared in recent years comes to light. Through the early 1960’s Thatcher is a better-guarded military reservation than any Manhattan site. But after the late 1960’s, the secrets have all been wrung out. The adults from 2016 are pretty much all dead by 2000; the children from 2016 are quite old by the time 2016 rolls around again. In the second 2016, Thatcher is no longer a closed-off camp, but an open-air museum with some high-tech labs continuing to develop new technologies. And so when The Day rolls around in the second 2016, the place is loaded to the gills with tourists who want to be here. And then… there’s a mighty flash, and at the exactly same day and hour, the second iteration of 2016-Thatcher disappears again.

 Posted by at 1:34 am
Dec 192015
 

It has been a while since I’ve put out a Pax Orionis story, but a new one has just been made available to the Pax Orionis Patreon patrons. This one tells of the maiden voyage of the Columbia and the resulting changes in geopolitics…

The bonus version (available to $2 & up patrons) includes diagrams and data on the Nova-class lofter as well as a bonus news article. If interested, check out the Pax Orionis Patreon. It’s cheap!

For those unaware: Pax Orionis is an alternate history project. In short, the Cuban Missile Crisis goes a little “funny,” resulting in the US fielding nuclear pulse propelled spacecraft (Orions). The goal is hard SF covering a number of decades of events, good, bad and really quite awful.

blast1

 Posted by at 1:17 pm
Nov 112015
 

I released a two-part tale in the Pax Orionis series back in September, but nothing since. Partially due to travel, partially due to stress not being terribly conducive to creative writing. nevertheless, I’ve been writing, and am within spitting distance of finishing the next yarn, “The Blast from Jackass Flats.” The earlier two-parter told of an incident during the Great War of 1984 from the viewpoint of civilians on the surface, with Orion spacecraft way off in the distance; this next story deals explicitly with an important incident in the history of the Orion program. It will almost certainly be a one-parter rather than two.

Most of the Pax Orionis stories will be in different styles. This one is in the style of an author trying to tell the story from some time later. The author is perhaps overly interested in technical details…

If interested, please take a look at and consider signing on to the Pax Orionis Patreon. Only a buck!

 Posted by at 1:35 pm
Sep 282015
 

I’ve been pondering the Casaba Howitzer weapon system for a decade now. When I re-issued Aerospace Projects Review V2N2 some years back I published a few images of what I thought it might look like; since then I’ve done some rethinking. As to the weapon itself, and exactly how it worked, and how well it worked… I’ve got no data, and no good idea of how to make it work, so that hasn’t changed. But the control systems for the weapon? Those have evolved in my thinking.

Here’s an overall view of my idea for a Casaba Howitzer preparing to fire:

Casaba

And here’s a layout drawing of the same:

PAX-0004 Casaba 1st gen-Model

Feel free to discuss.

The full-rez version of the layout drawing is available in the second Pax Orionis installment. If interested, check out the Pax Orionis Patreon.

becomeapatron

 Posted by at 7:50 am
Sep 182015
 

Just a few minor things (conversion to PDF & EPUB, uploading, stuff like that) and the second Pax Orionis installment will be posted. This will be “The Deadliest Catch, Part Two,” the conclusion to that particular tale. The bonus will include diagrams and data on the first generation Casaba Howitzer weapon (which has evolved substantially from when i first illustrated it for the pages of APR issue V2N2, years ago), derived from the Orion pulse unit, and a short media piece that fits in with the one included last time. I plan on posting this tomorrow (Saturday).

Patrons who are signed up *before* the story is released will automatically get the story as soon as it’s published. If you sign up *after* the story is published, you won’t automatically get it… but you won’t be charged for it, either. However, patrons may purchase “back issues” for the same price, so you can catch up without any trouble. Each tale is only a buck; with the bonus diagrams and technical discussion, only one additional buck.

If interested, check out the Pax Orionis Patron.

becomeapatron

Feel free to tell anyone you think might be interested.

 Posted by at 8:51 am
Sep 162015
 

One of the more interesting, but less known, aspect of the Orion program was code named “Casaba Howitzer.” Little is known of this, except that pulse unit technology was somehow adapted to turn the device into a single-shot nuclear directed energy weapon. The propellant was somehow collimated into a tight “beam” that would be able to destroy enemy warheads out in space at some considerable distance. Just what that distance would be, though, remains clouded by Classification.

I created a simple provisional concept for Casaba Howitzer for issue V2N2 of Aerospace Projects Review. Since then… I’ve found out no new info on CH. But I’ve put considerable thought into the thing, and have redesigned my concept. Since the design is all mine, it’s usefulness in a factual history of Orion is minimal, but it’s great for fiction. And so I’m working on a set of diagrams for CH for Pax Orionis, and will include layouts of the “deployed” Casaba Howitzer configuration with the next release. Other diagrams will show the launch configuration as well as internal layouts.

If interested, check out the Pax Orionis Patron.

becomeapatron

 Posted by at 9:51 am
Sep 142015
 

The first Pax Orionis yarn was posted for patrons at the PS Patreon just a few days ago. Several people signed up afterwards, which meant that they got left out of the first issue. It’s perhaps something of a flaw or shortfall in the system. But I’ve worked out a simple solution: back issues. If you sign up for the Pax Orionis Patreon campaign, you can now purchase each “back issue.” Two dollars per issue is the current goign rate on the Patreon that nets you the story, the Technical Diagram and another bonus feature; that same price will get you those things in the back issue.

Currently there is only the one back issue available. But if you sign up for the Patreon campaign, you can read everything, right from the start. The stories are available as both PDF and EPUB (you get both versions).

becomeapatron

The first story released was “The Deadliest Catch, Part One,” and the first technical diagram is of the USS Orion, the first nuclear pulse flight test article in the Pax Orionis world.

PAX-0002-Model

—————-

On other Pax Orionis matters, here is the current listing of foreseen technical diagrams:

PAX_diagrams

And here is the current list of chapter titles, in rough chronological (story timeline order:

“The Box”

“Magicians”

“Orion Rises”

“The Blast from Jackass Flats”

“Weapons Test”

“Weapons Test 2”

“Mission to Mars”

“Knock knock”

“Uranium Exploration for Fun and Profit”

“The Burning Desert”

“Down in the Weeds”

“Deadliest Catch”

“Windows over the War”

“Hyperbolic Excess”

“The Hole”

“The Blue Dot”

“Things Blow Up”

“Leviathan”

“Every Man a King, Every Cabin Steerage”

“Sailing the Rocks”

“Over the Ice”

“Into the Deep”

 

 Posted by at 2:26 pm
Sep 112015
 

The first story is now available for Pax Orionis patrons. This is available for the low, low price of only a buck. But if you pledge $2 or more, you get not only the story – “The Deadliest Catch, Part One” – but also a Technical Diagram and description of the USS Orion test flight article, and a bonus news article, the first of a number that will tell a tale.

becomeapatron

 Posted by at 11:26 pm
Sep 082015
 

 

The Pax Orionis Patreon is now online. It’s a little bare, but it at least seems to be up and running.  The first piece of fiction and a tech diagram will be ready in a few days, so the first patrons will be kinda guinea pigs. With this system, patrons get charged when new stuff is made available, rather than on a strict monthly schedule.

So if’n you’ve got a hankering for stories about an alternate history with extra nuclear wars and spacelanes filled with atom bomb powered spacecraft, I got ya covered.

POPat

 Posted by at 6:48 pm