|
The
Observation Deck
A return of everyone's favourite section ... where we
stick in all the news shorts.
China Syndrome
Shards from a massive meteorite over 5,000 years old were unearthed
last week in China (the Shaanxi province county of Huangling), and
has been interpreted as lending credence to one of China's oldest
legends - kind of an Atlantis and King Arthur tale combined. China's
Yellow Emperor legend.
The Yellow Emperor, Huangdi, was the land's enigmatic first emperor
and perished during a cataclysmic shattering of China around the
years 2597 to 2697 B.C.
The Yellow Emperor tales credit this Plato-like semi-mythical figure
with having an advanced school of medicine that was able to heal
most diseaseses of the time, the discovery of how to weave silk
from silkworms, writing, using gun powder to power rotating weapons
of great destructive power, and massive engines powered by the breath
of a dragon (presumably steam).
Huangdi and the rule of learning & peace he brought to China
ended when he was aged 110 and was carried off from a mountain near
his capital city to heaven by nine dragons as the land died around
him; the epicentre of the celestial destruction visited on China
being the Huangling region.
China's state media agency said that geologists estimate the the
uncovered meteorite samples dates back over five thousand years.
Exactly the same time the heavens were meant to be destroying China's
first civilization.
In a Close Encounters-like moment, as news of the discovery spread,
50,000 modern-day Chinese flocked to Huangdi's ancient mausoleum
(erected by the Han dynasty to honor the great teacher) to pay their
respects to the Yellow Emperor.
Into Orbit again.
Our chum Tom over at Future Orbits is keen to invite all you Nest
readers to sample the current issue of his PDF-based short fiction
magazine, Future Orbits.
Said April/May issue features science fiction short stories by
Linda J. Dunn, Gene Stewart, Brian Plante, Timons Esaias, James
Van Pelt, and Michael J. Jasper, as well as a commentary about the
different kinds of futures by Greg Beatty.
Not to mention some very nice cover art by Maurizio Manzieri.
You can click on the following link to download the free PDF version
of Future Orbits Lite (the sample edition of Future Orbits).
http://www.futureorbits.com/FOv2n2Lite.pdf
Future Orbits Lite features excerpts from all six short stories
in this issue and the commentary, plus background information on
the contributors.
You can receive the full edition of the current issue in Adobe
Acrobat PDF, Microsoft Reader, Mobipocket, and/or Rocket eBook formats,
by surfing over to www.futureorbits.com
|
|
OTHER CONTENT - May 2002
|
The
Gold(in) Standard
It's not every author who can boast they co-authored a science fiction novel
with E.E. Doc Smith. Stephen Goldin slips into the author's hot seat for an
interview.
(AUTHOR INTERVIEW)
Art
for SF's Sake
John Jarrold, the SF editor behind this year's Arthur C. Clarke Award-nominated
SF novel - Pashazade by Jon Courtney Grimwood - issues a plea of tolerance for
creative art on book jacket covers.
(COMMENT)
Muster
the Goombahs
SF author Harlan Ellison has a quiet word about Isaac Asimov's death and an
egregious misreading of history.
(COMMENT)
Acquisition
(Trek)
With the Enterprise crew incapacitated and a Ferengi raiding party aboard, it
falls to Trip, Archer, and T'Pol to save the ship. More Trek reviews from the
master.
(TV REVIEWS)
Drawing
the Jedi
May's crop of book reviews hits the streets - including all those juicy DK Star
Wars art books dropping out of hyperspace just in time for the Clone Wars movie.
(BOOK REVIEWS)
Jack's
Back
Had he ever left? Writer Jack L Chalker is one of the few novelists who can
switch from fantasy to science fiction with consummate ease. Read about his
life and times here.
(AUTHOR INTERVIEWS)
The
Observation Deck
Includes the scientific community's latest evidence on the
Chinese 'Atlantis' - not to mention an interesting offer from the desk of Future
Orbits magazine.
(COMMENT)
Hugo,
Hugo, as long as you USA-go
The Hugo Award nominees get trotted out for 2002. Truly global, as long as your
definition of the world starts at the West Coast and ends at the East Coast.
(AWARDS)
Moving
with the Times
An American Physicist believes he has discovered how to visit the past, driven
on by a terrible personal tragedy.
(WEIRD SCIENCE)
Bitten
by a Scorpion
Conan the Barbarian (in virtually all but name) clobbers again in another sword
and sorcery adventure, but this time he is played by The Rock and called Mathayus,
the Scorpion King.
(FILM REVIEWS)
Vampire
Blood and Egyptian Assassins
Rod weighs in with some neck-biting action from the cult movie Blade II, and
tops it off with a trip to see the Scorpion King too.
(FILM REVIEWS)
|

CHAT
ABOUT THIS STORY
Advertise
Here (More ...)
|