dr_phil_physics: (dr-phil-confusion-2009)
Physics Consultant

Back in December, Nick Mamatas at Haikasoru -- an imprint that is bringing Japanese SF translated into English -- asked if I would be willing to look at the math and science translations of this very unusual and complicated SF novel. I said sure, sounds like fun. And it was.

Now, as Haikasoru is getting ready to release Toh EnJoe's Self-Reference ENGINE, Nick asked me to do a Q&A about SRE, which you can read here.
Q: Hard SF is supposed to be the subgenre of science fiction in which the laws of physics are held to. Of course, a lot of hard SF is really just science fiction that pretends toward rigor in its exposition—hard choices, Cold Equations, and tough guy/engineering stuff. Is Self-Reference ENGINE hard SF?

A: As a physics professor I’m all for holding to the laws of Physics, up to the practical limit of the story. Self-Reference ENGINE bends hard what we are sure can happen. It’s more thoughtful and cerebral than most hard SF, but if you consider Frank Herbert’s Destination: Void and The Jesus Incident hard SF — and I do — then SRE clearly fits in. Same with the Ghost in the Shell series. You can have drama through interesting discourse in hard SF. Part of what makes hard SF “hard” is the discussion of difficult technical concepts. This doesn’t mean every space marine or future cop has to have long debates on scientific minutia. But hard SF doesn’t have to be cliffhanger action or military space battles or impossible choices for the protagonist, as fun as those can be. Indeed, it’s hard to figure out who would be the protagonist in SRE, since there are so many entities — I’m thinking the concept is the star here.


This is an amazing meta novel, quite unlike anything I'd read before. And the science and math managed to survive the translation pretty well. Sometimes absurd and sometimes quite thought provoking and sublime, Haikasoru posts this amusing blurb on their webpage:
This is not a novel.
This is not a short story collection.
This is Self-Reference ENGINE.

Instructions for Use: Read chapters in order. Contemplate the dreams of twenty-two dead Freuds. Note your position in space-time at all times (and spaces). Keep an eye out for a talking bobby sock named Bobby Socks. Beware the star-man Alpha Centauri. Remember that the chapter entitled "Japanese" is translated from the Japanese, but should be read in Japanese. Warning: if reading this book on the back of a catfish statue, the text may vanish at any moment, and you may forget that it ever existed.

From the mind of Toh EnJoe comes Self-Reference ENGINE, a textual machine that combines the rigor of Stanislaw Lem with the imagination of Jorge Luis Borges. Do not operate heavy machinery for one hour after reading.

Dr. Phil
dr_phil_physics: (marjorie-dr-phil)
Over On Second Life

My 2004 Clarion classmate and phenomenally productive author Marjorie M. Liu has an hour-long interview from over on Second Life which is available as a QuickTime video. I've never bothered with Second Life because I didn't feel any burning need to use that much bandwidth, and if I want to watch jerky video, I can always go to YouTube. (grin) But since this is one step removed -- a "tape" of a Second Life interview show, so to speak -- it was worth a gander.

The experience was something like watching Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex episodes, particular the ones where they have conferences, but not as well done.

Marjorie commented on her blog, "I’ve just been told that I need to take a look because, apparently, I’m...really animated...whatever that means". And she is animated -- the avatars don't just sit there like zombies. So I wonder whether all the physical gestures are something that she did or were automatically done "for her".

(1) Let's make this look more like TV by superimposing captions! (2) I think her avatar looks a lot like Uhuru from Star Trek.

The set placed Marjorie and her interviewer far far away, and their avatars never really interacted with each other. The View or even Larry King Live it ain't.

More humongous spacing between people on the sets -- it's almost as if they don't expect people to interact with each other. I can do that lurking on a blogs.

(She's cuter In Real Life) (grin)

Interesting, But...

Still not all that interested in Second Life. Having seen what really good motion capture CGI video can look like, Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within, I'm too spoiled by the good stuff to have much patience with clunkier video games or this Second Life stuff. I'll let others ramp up the technology and then I'll check it out in five to ten years when they get it right. (oddly-disturbing-second-life-grin)

But do check out the interview, if for nothing else you can catch up on what Marjorie's been up to -- which is a lot!

Dr. Phil
dr_phil_physics: (marjorie-dr-phil)
Marjorie M. Liu Interviewed

When I got back from Penguicon 7.0 -- report forthcoming -- on Sunday night, the mail included the May issue of Locus. I knew they were doing a feature on Urban Fantasy and that there'd be an interview with fellow 2004 Clarion classmate Marjorie M. Liu. This would be the first Locus cover mention from our class for writing.


Okay, so it's a small pic and isn't even the major one. But so? (grin)

Nice interview with Marjorie. This woman writes too many books -- I can't keep up with them! (double-grin)

Dr. Phil

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