Thursday, 14 July 2011
Free Fiction Sampler at Underwordsblog.com
It has come to my attention that there is a little taste of Evolve Two over at Underwordsblog.com's Summer Free Fiction Sampler. Scroll down until you see Evolve Two, then click on the book title to see who of the 22 authors was chosen to represent the anthology.
Monday, 11 July 2011
In the Shadow of Atlantis
There’s this thing called the Fermi paradox. Very basically it says if there’s a high probability of the existence of extraterrestrial civilizations (Fermi, I think, had some sort of equation, but it was more vigorously explored in the Drake Equation) - then where the hell are all the aliens?
There are theories about why we haven’t encountered evidence of other civilizations. They range from humanity is alone in the cosmos to an inherent self-destructiveness in intelligent species to suppression of evidence by our governments to the intentional isolation of humanity from others in the cosmos by those very same aliens we’re looking for. There’s another theory about the narrow window of opportunity regarding radio signals and the belief that we just might not be looking at the right place or that we’re unable to detect a message in the first place.
In the shadow of the final shuttle launch, I put forward another hypothesis:
Disinterest.
If there are other intelligences in the universe and if they are anything like us, perhaps their evolution brought them to the fork in the road that stands before humanity. If other intelligent societies are anything like us perhaps they, like us, decided that tax breaks were more important than reaching out into the cosmos.
Perhaps they, like us, reached for the nearest little satellite – say a moon or neighbouring planet – and thought “Wow – that was really, really hard. And it was risky, too. Do you know how dangerous it is to send folks into space? There’s real risk involved and you know how risk adverse we are…And expensive? Wow. I keep seeing my taxes go up and up and I think about all those resources spent on that risky stuff that I really don’t understand too well? Let’s face it, for a while it was all fun and good but really, there comes a time to say enough is enough.”
Perhaps they, like us, thought that unmanned (or whatever their equivalent might be) spacecraft would fill the void. Maybe they, like us, committed to maintain their multi billion dollar space-station for another ten years or so. Maybe they, like us, fooled themselves into believing that a return to capsules and rockets was not a giant step backwards into galactic insignificance.
Maybe that’s why they, like us, never got to see that perhaps they weren’t alone in the cosmos after all.
Friday, 8 July 2011
Publishers Weekly Review of Evolve Two
Well, just take a look over there at Publishers Weekly.
Here's what they had to say about the anthology:
Kinda nice to be singled out for a mention by the good folks at Publishers Weekly.
They've reviewed Evolve Two - Vampire Stories of the Future Undead, the anthology edited by Nancy Kilpatrick in which my story, Symbiosis appears.
Here's what they had to say about the anthology:
Kilpatrick opens the sequel to 2010's Evolve with a lengthy essay on vampiric history, setting the stage for 22 stories exploring the future of vampires. Some are comedic, like Kelley Armstrong's "The List"; more tragic are a predator's pleas for justice in Michael Lorenson's "Six Underground" and a simple attempt at companionship between a lonely human and an unexpectedly endangered vampire in David Beynon's "Symbiosis." Kilpatrick and her authors have avoided the common pitfalls of themed anthologies by creating an assortment of tales set in unique worlds, from the mundane to the postapocalyptic and interstellar; the futures don't quite reach Stapledonian depths of time, but Sandra Kasturi's "The Slowing of the World" hints at them. Never repetitious or dull, this anthology stands as a model for other editors to contemplate. (Aug.)
Reviewed on: 06/27/2011
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