New hard sci-fi web series: L5

L5 is a new hard sci-fi web production that has recently released their pilot episode on YouTube.

This is the best production in this genre that I have seen for a long, long time. The premise is good, the writing excellent, good acting (even from the minor characters), good production values, and good CGI that isn’t intrusive and melds well with the other parts. All done for about $15k in crowd-funding.

Check it out!

Imagine returning from an exhausting adventure only to find that your home is abandoned, empty. Not just your home, but your neighborhood, your city, in fact, everyone, everywhere, seems to be missing. This is what happens to the crew of the first manned mission to Barnard’s Star – they return after awakening from suspended animation to find that their ship-board AI has sent them on a relativistic tour of the stellar neighborhood while they slumbered, dilating time so severely that nearly 200 years have passed on Earth. After coming to, they discover their vessel is adrift at LaGrange point 5, within visual range of a vast O’neill cylinder-colony. The night side of the Earth shows no lights, and no one answers their calls across all frequencies. They have no choice but to dock with the colony and explore its cavernous interior in the hopes of finding help. When they find the colony to be airless and devoid of life, the remains of human civilization baking in the Sun for decades, their predicament becomes even more dire. Following in the traditions of great legendary hard science fiction, their exploration of this relic of their own civilization will take them on a trans-humanistic and spiritual sojourn.

The Lyttle Lytton Contest

The “Lyttle Lytton” contest (for shorter form version of the the-dark-and-stormy-night so-bad-it’s-good first novel sentence Bulwer-Lytton contest) has just been made known to me.

I share the site owner’s issue with the length of many B-L entries. If you can’t make it bad-funny in a few words, don’t bother.

About Lyttle Lytton

The annual Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest challenges entrants to pen the world’s most atrocious first line to a novel. Winners — and, for that matter, runners-up and honorable mentions — are generally very long. An example from the 2000 contest, singled out by the contest organizer as an especially strong contender:

Gwendolyn, a world-class mountaineer, summoned the last of her strength for one more heroic haul on the nylon strap (for she was, after so many failed attempts, dangerously close to exhaustion) and looked heavenward with resolve, aware that, in spite of her fatigue and anguish, she must breach the crevice in one well-coordinated movement, somehow cleave the smooth fissure with the flimsy synthetic strand even though she was chaffed raw by her repeated efforts, or more sensibly, just give the heave-ho to this new-fangled (and painfully small) Victoria’s Secret thong and slip into her well-worn — and infinitely more roomy — knickers.

Gary Dahl

I say, bleah. Brevity is the soul of wit, and this goes on and on and on. I prefer the likes of this:

Jennifer stood there, quietly ovulating.

Adam Cadre

The non-action of "stood," the vagueness of "there," the involuntary process of ovulation treated as an activity, the inappropriateness of measuring the volume of that non-activity, the uncomfortably gynecological detail of mentioning it at all — all combine to make a cringeworthy sentence. And since it’s only five words long, its impact is instant; you don’t have readers slogging through clause after clause after clause. So in 2001 I started a contest much like the Bulwer-Lytton, only with entrants limited to 25 words.

via The Lyttle Lytton Contest.

The History of Science Fiction Infographic – Ward Shelley

A fantastic hand-drawn infographic showing the historical flow of science fiction:

[infographic] History of Science Fictions

“History of Science Fiction” is a graphic chronology that maps the literary genre from its nascent roots in mythology and fantastic stories to the somewhat calcified post-Star Wars space opera epics of today. The movement of years is from left to right, tracing the figure of a tentacled beast, derived from H.G. Wells’ War of the Worlds Martians. Science Fiction is seen as the offspring of the collision of the Enlightenment (providing science) and Romanticism, which birthed gothic fiction, source of not only SciFi, but crime novels, horror, westerns, and fantasy (all of which can be seen exiting through wormholes to their own diagrams, elsewhere). Science fiction progressed through a number of distinct periods, which are charted, citing hundreds of the most important works and authors. Film and television are covered as well.

History of Science Fiction at Ward Shelley’s site.

The Big Idea ‹ Singularity&Co

This is such and incredibly awesome idea:

We love books. A lot. And we love sci-fi books, new and old. But mostly old.

And there are a lot of great old sci-fi books out there that are out of print, out of circulation, and, worst of all, not available in any sort of digital format.

Given the subject material, that’s just not right.

So here’s what we’re going to do. We’re going to open a bookshop, both online and and in real life, in Brooklyn, NY where we live and work. It doesn’t have to make much money. It doesn’t have to make any money at all, since our day jobs cover our rent.

But what it will do is let us choose one great out of print work of classic and/or obscure sci-fi a month, track down the people that hold the copyright (if they are still around), and publish that work online and on all the major digital book platforms for little or no cost. Every month on this website visitors will get to vote on the next great but not so well remembered work we will rescue from the obscurity of the past.

via The Big Idea ‹ Singularity&Co.

Review: Dangerous Angels: The Weetzie Bat Books

Dangerous Angels: The Weetzie Bat Books
Dangerous Angels: The Weetzie Bat Books by Francesca Lia Block
My rating: 0 of 5 stars

I wrote a review on Weetzie Bat #1 — However, this is the actual book I read, the collection of all 5 Weetzie Bat novels into one volume. My recommendation carries over from the other review — Block has a stunning way of writing about teens that captures the messiness and awesomeness in one go. Combining reality with bits of urban fantasy that the characters themselves make up as they go along, these tails are compelling, funny, scary, and all about being a young adult.

View all my reviews

Review: Weetzie Bat

Weetzie Bat
Weetzie Bat by Francesca Lia Block
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I read this book ages ago now, and was completely taken with the author’s style. While grounded in reality, this is also part urban fantasy as made up by the characters themselves. I highly recommend this book to anyone who is a fan of young adult work. Block’s writing is edgy, modern, very very real. Her characters have a life to them that goes beyond the mere printed page.

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Novel: Bloody Murder by Kate Kulig

Bloody Murder (Bloody Murder Mysteries)Bloody Murder by Kate Kulig
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Still in the midst of this novel. The story is gripping, realistic, and the dialog is superb. I highly recommend this book and this author; looking forward to future novels!

Update: Finished the book and WOW!!! Did not entirely see that ending coming.

This book is sprinkled with phrases that I’ve heard Kate utter at some point, or others in the chat spaces we both have inhabited. “For some Chinese values of interesting” is such a turn of phrase. This was such a delight to read, not only from the standpoint of knowing the author online, but in and of itself such a well-written tale.

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