HYPERION ORIGIN: Chapter 2

  Well, we met up with DuQuesne, saw his childhood sucked, and heard unidentified voices discussing these events as though it were some kind of amusing experiment...   *****   ii.      "Mister DuQuesne," the older man said, pronouncing Marc's name deliberately as "Doo-kweznee", with a marked sneer, "If you believe you know so much more about this subject than I, praytell why am I the instructor?"        "Damned if I know," Marc answered before he could stop himself.        Professor Bryson's eyes narrowed [ Continue reading... ]

HYPERION ORIGIN: Chapter 1

This is a chapter from a partially-completed story which basically tells us how Marc DuQuesne (from Grand Central Arena) came to be the way he is -- how Hyperion MADE him that way.  I think I previously posted these on my Livejournal a couple years ago, but they should really be up on my main site, here. I'll probably post what I have of this story; whether I'll FINISH it I don't know; it gets AWFULLY grim for my taste, even if the main character is going to survive.   HYPERION ORIGIN By Ryk E. Spoor i.        He pushed his way [ Continue reading... ]

On My Shelves: Naruto/Naruto Shippuden

    It's almost unbearable, isn't it?… the pain of being all alone. I know that feeling, I've been there, in that dark and lonely place, but now there are others, other people who mean a lot to me. I care more about them than I do myself, and I won't let anyone hurt them. That's why I'll never give up, I will stop you, even if I have to kill you! They saved me from myself, they rescued me from my loneliness, they were the first to accept me as who I am. They're my friends. -- Uzumaki Naruto to Gaara of the Sand        I [ Continue reading... ]

STORY: To Duel the Gorgon

  This is a very short story (about 2400 words, or roughly the length of one of my average chapters in a book) which was originally written just as a spinoff of a Usenet discussion. The context was that we were trying to decide if there were any magical effects which could not be duplicated by technology -- i.e., whose presence immediately signaled we were dealing with magic, not science (even Sufficiently Advanced Science). One of the participants put forward the Gorgon/Basilisk/Medusa effect of "turn to stone when you look at [ Continue reading... ]

On My Shelves: The Addams Family/Addams Family Values

  Girl Scout: "Would you like to buy some Girl Scout cookies?" Wednesday: "Are they made with real Girl Scouts?"        I never watched the original TV series,and had only seen a few of the Charles Addams comics, but I saw The Addams Family on the recommendation of a few friends, and found it to be a tremendously entertaining film – and one with some rather unusual elements. The same was true of its sequel, Addams Family Values; I've watched both films several times. (NOTE: The link above goes to a combo deal for both movies on DVD, [ Continue reading... ]

On My Shelves: Van Helsing (2004)

  "To you, these are just monsters, waiting to be vanquished. I'm the one standing there when they die… and become the men they once were." --Gabriel Van Helsing        As many readers have undoubtedly noted, I have sometimes unconventional tastes in my entertainment, and it will therefore perhaps be something less of a surprise to hear that I (and my wife) find 2004's Van Helsing, starring Hugh Jackman, to be one of our favorite films of the last ten years.   This oft-mocked semi-steampunk horror movie from begins with a [ Continue reading... ]

Under the Influence: The Stars My Destination

  Gully Foyle is my name And Terra is my nation Deep space is my dwelling place And Death's my destination        Alfred Bester produced many excellent short stories in his career, but he is best known for two novels; one is The Demolished Man, a tale of police procedure and investigation in a world of telepaths.        The other is The Stars My Destination, AKA Tiger! Tiger! in some places.        The Stars My Destination is often called The Count of Monte-Cristo… IN SPAAACE!, and certainly it was inspired by that [ Continue reading... ]

[Not] On my Shelves: Mighty Max

       Mighty Max was a short-lived cartoon (one year in the early 1990s) which deserved far more recognition than it got. It shares with ROM:Spaceknight the distinction of being inspired by a toy line, but the toy line in this case was rather more successful than the show.        The basic plot of Mighty Max was relatively simple, if peculiar: the eponymous Max is a young boy – specific age not given but he appears to be maybe 13-14 – whose mother is an archaeologist. The latter is important as this is why he's able to read the [ Continue reading... ]

Under the Influence: Doctor Who

    I cross the void beyond the mind The empty space that circles time; I see where others stumble blind To seek a truth they'll never find. Eternal wisdom is my guide; I am – The Doctor. --Jon Pertwee, 3rd Doctor        The longest running and one of the most influential science-fiction television shows ever created, Doctor Who is a titan amidst pygmies, larger than life in every direction and three times as confusing. Beginning in the early 1960s as a children's adventure show, it quickly drew a much more diverse and [ Continue reading... ]

On My Shelves: ROM, Spaceknight

       Once upon a time, Parker Brothers – best known for producing some of the most classic board and table games in history (Monopoly, Risk, Trivial Pursuit, etc.), decided it was time to branch out into the heady world of action figures; taking a cue from the recent surge of popularity in SF and fantasy (this was in 1979-1980), they decided to blend both and create a space-travelling knight in modern armor – a cyborg-robot kind of thing which they called COBOL, after the programming language; after some debate, the name was revised to [ Continue reading... ]