Steven Hoefer's PlanetShine
It has a been a long minute since that last episode, but there's a good reason! The name is changing, though the content will stay the same. I talk briefly about what's going on and offer some good reading until the full episodes of next season arrive.
info_outline Reader's Room: Hidden StructuresSteven Hoefer's PlanetShine
Reader's Room pulls the most fascinating writing from speculative fiction, science, and technology. In this edition we look at how two stories can simultaneously be strikingly similar and completely different. We also have a roundup of interesting science and technology, N.K. Jemisin's Broken Earth books, and Rosemary Kirstein The Steerswoman series.
info_outline Reader's Room: Between The TradewindsSteven Hoefer's PlanetShine
Reader's Room pulls the most fascinating writing from speculative fiction, science, and technology. In this edition we talk about what happens when the wind goes out of your sails, speculative fiction from Fireside, the optimistic present from Future Crunch, and long-term thinking from The Long Now foundation. And we talk about my difficulty with naming things.
info_outline Reader's Room: Fortune’s Furious Fickle WheelSteven Hoefer's PlanetShine
Reader's Room pulls the most fascinating writing from speculative fiction, science, and technology. In this edition we talk about coming to terms with things, including glitter, Shakespere, and loss.
info_outline Reader's Room: The Benefit Of ExperienceSteven Hoefer's PlanetShine
Reader's Room pulls the most fascinating writing from speculative fiction, science, and technology. In this edition we talk about experience on a Japanese leisure island, the unhelpfulness of book blurbs, and Nick Harkaway’s The Gone Away World. Plus the usual science and technology links and updates from the writer's world.
info_outline Reader's Room: Fatal WordsSteven Hoefer's PlanetShine
Reader's Room covers the month's speculative fiction, science and technology. In this edition we talk about how to grow literature in the desert, the very real ways words can threaten life, Kawamata Chiaki’s novel Death Sentences, and the Surrealist movement.
info_outline Reader's Room: Turning The CornerSteven Hoefer's PlanetShine
Reader's Room covers the month's speculative fiction, science and technology. In this edition we talk about autonomous vehicles, and how they're still a nuisance on the road if they can't effectively communicate with the humans around them. We also talk about what causes car crashes in professional races, using AI to keep people and sharks safe from each other, and Karin Tidbeck’s powerful short story collection, Jagannath.
info_outline Reader's Room: Extending YourselfSteven Hoefer's PlanetShine
The Reader's Room talks about speculative fiction, science, and technology. This month, we ask what kinds of changes you might make to your body to improve your work, or better reflect your beliefs.
info_outline Reader's Room: When One Thing ChangesSteven Hoefer's PlanetShine
This month we talk about the possibilities of making a single change in reality, and I get caught up on Charles Stross's Laundry Files novels.
info_outline Reader's Room: Building WorldsSteven Hoefer's PlanetShine
Reader's Room ponders the best speculative fiction and and science for the month. This edition we look at how and why authors create specilatve worlds, and their impact on storytelling. Show links: We talk about Andy Weir's latest book, . If you have an hour, Weir did an interview about the process of creating Artemis on . (Both audio and transcript.) If you only have five minutes, he also did an interview on . (Audio and text excerpts.) Charlie Jane Anders wrote the excellent, , on her site, io9. It’s a few years old, but it all remains true. A good read for writers, but it'll...
info_outlineReader's Room ponders the best speculative fiction and and science for the week. This week I visit some of the same craters that the Apollo astronauts walked on fifty years ago, and we talk about making up some history just so we can mess it up later.
Show links:
- Cinder Lakes Training Field (PDF) where the Apollo astronauts trained.
- S. (aka Ship of Theseus) by Doug Dorst and J. J. Abrams
- Linkdump:
- Steal The Stars Tor Labs weekly dramatic podcast
- The Economist explains algorithms
- Robot Priests leading funerals in Japan at the Guardian.
- Ten best SF stories you can read for free at The Chicago Review of Books
- Support:
- Nevada Museum of Art, launching a satellite for the sake of art. (Kickstarter)
- Escape Pod, weekly genre podcasts. (Patreon)
- Story Hospital weekly, quality writing advice from a talented editor.
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