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Science Fiction [Archive]

Yukikaze or, The New Hawtness

It’s been cold here in the Bay Area, cold enough that we’ve actually seen a few flakes of snow in the wind coming over the wharf.

Wait, did someone say snowy wind? Why that reminds me of something else that showed up today!

Behold, the advance copies of Yukikaze, the classic of military SF from Japan. Chohei Kambayashi’s classic spawned a sequel and a very popular anime series. We’re thrilled to bring you this first English-edition and just in time for…well, not the holidays, but in time to use any gift certificates you may receive for the holidays. Yukikaze can be pre-ordered now, but will be in stores in mid-January.

Check out with military SF legend David Drake and Hammer’s Slammers author had to say about Yukikaze:

Yukikaze may be the perfect bridge between anime and the sort of military SF which I write. The novel is a clean, detached look at war and warriors: fast-moving, poetic, and precise even when describing passion. A remarkable book, unique in my experience.

Well, what are you waiting for? I mean, other than when the book is released next month! Add it to wishlists and add a postscript to your letter to Santa today.

SpaceShipTwo!

Spaceheads all over were excited over the unveiling of SpaceShipTwo this week. Virgin Galactic zillionaire Richard Branson is looking to turn space tourism into a leisure activity for the wealthy, whereas now it is simply a leisure activity for fellow zillionaires.

Perhaps because I am neck-deep in edits for The Next Continent, about a private mission to the moon funded by an leisure firm, but I’m getting excited. I don’t even like having to take the BART to work each day, and nothing is more infuriating to me than an airport layover (well, except for a canceled flight), but I want to go. I wanted to get into space as a kid, but like many such kids I just ended up working in the science fiction field instead. Three hundred people have signed up for the $200,000 space jaunt already, but I guess I’ll have to wait till SpaceShipFive or something and a price that’s the space-equivalent to those $99 super-saver flights to Florida. Space by 2020, that’s for me!

I just hope there’s no layover in the stratosphere.

Devourer of Worlds or Usurpers of Suns?

What’s worse, having the planet eaten, or the sun surrounded by a nanotech cage and sucked dry of all its energy? I’m sure such a vital question is on your mind, as it is on mine. So today I’d like to talk about the sun-stealing aliens of our new hard science fiction novel Usurper of the Sun, and compare the spooky Builders to another famous alien with a low-carb high-planet diet, Galactus!

We must admit that there is a certain hipness to planet-eating, especially given Marvel Comics’ philosophical devourer of worlds, Galactus. Not only is he huge, with a purple helmet (uh, I mean…), but he rocks T-shirts. VIZ editor Jann Jones has been known to wear this little number around the office:


“I [Galactus Head] Planets”!

The Big Man even contributed the epigraph to the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao:

“Of what import are brief, nameless lives… to Galactus?”

Good question! Though ultimately we must strike a point from Galactus for talking about himself in the third person. Who does he think he is, The Rock or something?

( ObViz: Junot Diaz, author of Oscar Wao blurbed our manga 20th Century Boys, saying “Urasawa is a national treasure in Japan, and if you ain’t afraid of picture books, you’ll see why.” He’s right, yaknow.)

Finally, in his early appearances, Galactus had a big “G” on his chestplate:


Truxfax: Galactus was actually named Geoffrey by his mother, but he just calls himself Galactus when on Earth because he wants us to think that he’s hot. (But he’s so not!) (And by “tru” I mean false.)

That puts Galactus down two points!

Then we have the enigmatic Builders, the eponymous star-stealers of Usurper of the Sun. Well, Usurper won the Seiun Award in 2002, which is just like the Pulitzers, except…uh, Japanese and nerdy. No purple helmets for the Builders, but they are plenty weird. Computer geek Raul, on penetrating the Builders’ ship, asks himself, “I don’t know what’s worse—being human and knowing we’re crawling around inside an alien’s brain, or being an alien and knowing that three humans are stomping inside your head.” We’ve all been on both sides of that situation, I’m sure. Also, “one” of the Builders is named Alice, but he/she/it/they doesn’t have to wear a big scarlet A or anything like that.

I suppose our tie-breaker boils down to theme. Consuming a planet is something we all do every day, in tiny ways both depressing and exhilarating. In a way, Galactus is like a guy with two Hummers who keeps his TV running all day and doesn’t recycle. He’s us. Over the years, Galactus plots have evolved to the point where he could simply be persuaded not to eat Earth as opposed to being driven off. Sort of like convincing your neighbor to separate out his plastics. Finally.

Usurping the sun, however, is even more serious business. That’s lights out. We Earthlings depend on the sun as much as we do the earth, but we have no way of really dealing with or managing the sun. In the Bible, the universe began with the declaration, “Let there be light!” The sun is more fundamental than even our home planet—with luck some humans will leave Earth eventually for long-term deep space missions. We’ll need a sun though, even if we end up settling on other planets many millennia from now. The end of the sun isn’t just the end of everything here, it’s the end of the possibility of anything else for us. It’s the Prime Mover of the solar system.

The Builders are also substantially less human than Galactus. Big Blue speaks English, albeit the sort of English that suggests all he knows of Earth is the Book of Mormon. By way of contrast, the near-impossibility of communication with a truly alien species is one of the driving themes of Usurper. It’s hard SF we’re talking after all. Real physics (well, mostly), real exopsychology (to the extent that any such thing can be real), and real human drama.

On the downside, nobody seems interested in a Usurper of the Sun T-shirt. Plus, no helmets. But seriously, Usurper rules, and just as hard as the Big G! What are you waiting for? Pick up a copy today, or I shall consume the very planet on which you stand, mortal insect!

Hmm, I guess a threat to eat the planet does sound less cool in the first person…

A Glorious Dawn

The PBS series Cosmos, aired on PBS in 1980, launched billions and billions (well, millions) of science fiction dreams, and did so with hardly an appeal to fictional conceits. Fueled by Carl Sagan’s enthusiasm for the infinite, a soundtrack by Vangelis, and an extremely large budget to pay for tons of late-seventies era special effects, Cosmos was the most widely watched PBS show of that era, and its record was only broken a decade later with The Civil War.

Time is the great enemy though; we’ve learned much more about the solar system, the universe, subatomic particles, evolution, and everything else covered in the show over the last thirty years. Somehow, despite all the evidence of environmental degradation, Sagan’s construction of a fork in the road—we as a species can make it into space, if only we do not destroy ourselves—seems a little less current now that the Cold War is history. The youngest military volunteers weren’t even alive during that era. The effects haven’t always aged well, and Sagan’s haircut sure hasn’t.

But this morning, I found a music video on YouTube, half tribute and half détournement, that pretty much captures the experience of watching the show through the magic of montage and backbeats. Also, it has a verse by Stephen Hawking, or at least someone using a vocoder with a dial set to “Stephen Hawking” a la a hip-hop song with a guest rapper who breaks off a little something. Check it out!


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