Reading the Encyclopedia – the SF Encyclopedia
Reading through the Encyclopedia of Science Fiction from A to Z. Today’s entry – “A-“
Reading through the Encyclopedia of Science Fiction from A to Z. Today’s entry – “A-“
In June, astronomers reported a disappointing discovery: The James Webb Space Telescope failed to find a thick atmosphere around the rocky planet TRAPPIST-1 C, an exoplanet in one of the most tantalizing planetary systems in […]
Alone, Art felt a deep sense of peace as he looked out at the stars. Often, on his way to an ore rich basin, he’d stop his truck and gaze out at the firmament. Ten […]
OBIR: Occasional Biased and Ignorant Reviews reflecting this reader’s opinion. FUSION FRAGMENT MAGAZINE #18 – September 2023. Publisher: Fusion Fragment, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. Editor: Cavan Terrill Cover Art: by KiTT St. Joans A Short Accounting […]
AMAZING NEWS: 10/29/23 The Seven Most Amazing Discoveries Found by Exploring Mars Planet collision explains star’s brightening, then dimming Son of the Return of the GREATEST SF MAGAZINE COVERS OF ALL TIME! A Tale of […]
2023 Pegasus Awards The 2023 Pegasus Awards for excellence in filking were announced on October 28 at the Ohio Valley Filk Fest (OVFF). BEST FILK SONG BEST CLASSIC FILK SONG BEST PERFORMER BEST WRITER/COMPOSER BEST ADAPTED SONG [Tie] […]
Chengdu con reports and pictures from various sources; Eggleton shares Freas proofs; Sirois features Phyllis Wheatley; Swanwick to be WFC Toastmaster; Gahan Wilson’s Tales of Horror; Taral Wayne fan art; Mike Glyer celebrates LASFS Clubhouse anniversary; Edelman eats with Michael Marano; Sussmann reviews Zelazny and more
Mars, our neighboring planet, has revealed several significant discoveries through space missions and scientific research. Initially thought to be a lush, life-teeming world, Mariner 4’s 1965 mission dispelled this misconception, showing that Mars is a […]
Planet formation is thought to be a messy process, as lots of growing planets end up in unstable orbits, resulting in large collisions like the one that resulted in the Moon’s formation. The messiness […]
Planet Stories, Satellite Science Fiction, Unknown, Science Fantasy, Vanguard Science Fiction – these are some of the greatest magazine covers of all time.
Title: On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft Published by: Simon & Schuster Audio, 2000 ISBN 10: 0743506650 ISBN 13: 9780743506656 Author: Stephen King Read by: Stephen King On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft […]
Many more Great magazine covers from the world of science fiction
Up to this season, Steve’s personal opinion has been that it’s okay as a tribute (to Stephen King and the eponymous movie), but rather meh as a show. Steve thinks Greg Nicotero’s show is finally hitting its stride.
Ron Miller is an illustrator and author living in South Boston, Virginia. He has created 71 books on astronomical, astronautical and science fiction subjects for adults and young adults. His books have received more than twenty commendations and awards, including the American Institute of Physics […]
When opportunity comes knocking, author Alex Shvartsman is quick to answer the call. Follow along in his Big Idea for the second novel in his Conradverse Chronicles, Kakistocracy, to see just how he started crafting […]
Well, at least according to me!
Here’s the weekly post from my author blog on the new releases I found to be of interest in my three favorite romance genres (which are also the ones I write in!), and related areas […]
We just watched Oppenheimer. And sure, I am grateful that Christopher Nolan is making the kind of sprawling, deeply-moving and meaningful delights for mind and senses that David Lean used to do. Like Lean, Nolan […]
Mark Waid, a New York Times bestselling author, has written and edited more than 2000 graphic novels over the course of his 40-year career. He is best known for Kingdom Come, produced with painter Alex […]
A new novel from Jack Mackenzie, coming soon from Rage Machine Books
Source: MARTHA WELLS TALKS HIT MURDERBOT BOOK SERIES-EPISODE PROMO
“But all too often novice writers seeking to emulate these men are ignoring or castigating “old-fashioned” sf as irrelevant or worse. These novice writers have fastened upon the superficialities of style in the so-called “New Wave,” and ignored its foundations.”
This week in Television/Streaming. And, in Film as well. As a weekly feature of our emails now, this week we’re spotlighting ‘Spider-man: Across the Spider-Verse’ and ‘Barbie,’ holding strong positions at #6 and #1 in […]
If you spend your whole life thinking about death, are you even really living? Author Daniel Hope brings us some excellent existential questions like this in the Big Idea for his newest novel, The Inevitable. […]
The TV behind the bar showed a shaky phone video, framing a flying saucer hanging in the sky. It looked like a refugee from a bad 50’s science fiction movie. “Fifteen minutes ago, authorities evacuated […]
An unofficial and unauthorized overview of The X-Files (Parts 1 2 3 4) Part Four: The Journey A hero ventures forth from the world of common day into a region of supernatural wonder: fabulous forces […]
OBIR: Occasional Biased and Ignorant Reviews reflecting this reader’s opinion. The Sapien Empire – by Nathan Ogloff Publisher: Nathan Ogloff, British Columbia, Canada, Feb 6, 2024. Premise: Modern Civilization has collapsed. Warlords are feeding on […]
Part 3 of John Pierce’s Xamination of the X-Files
Pierce is the son of John Robinson Pierce, the engineer, scientist (and science fiction writer) who coined the word “transistor”. He is married to Marcia (née Feinbaum), widow of Arata Suzuki, and lives in Ramsey, New Jersey. He works as an editor for two trade magazines, Private Label and Quick Frozen Foods International.
Pierce published the science fiction fanzine Renaissance from 1968 through 1974, and was an outspoken critic of the New Wave. In the 1970s he edited The Best of Murray Leinster, The Best of Cordwainer Smith and The Best of Raymond Z. Gallun for Del Rey Books. In 1977–78, he was named editor of Galaxy at a time when the magazine was in financial trouble, an experience he later recounted in Thirteen Months of Torment.
After leaving Galaxy, Pierce focused on a four-volume (1987–1994) critical history of science fiction under the general title, “A Study in Imagination and Evolution”, adopting a conceptual framework, as opposed to a strictly chronological approach, and using parallels with biological evolution and dialectics to characterize the evolution of the genre as a whole. As of 2012, he was working on a revised and updated version.
He has written critical essays and book introductions on Cordwainer Smith, and essays on Twin Peaks and The X-Files for the fanzines Wrapped in Plastic and Spectrum and has had other articles published in The New York Review of Science Fiction and Science Fiction Studies. Besides works related to science fiction and popular culture, he is the author of a family history, The Children of Levi Peacock (2002).

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