Pop Culture Blindsight

Sparth's cover for the French edition of BlindsightContinuing with notes and resources for this month’s book club reading, Peter Watts’ Blindsight, here are some fun links to explore.

First, readers should explore Peter Watts’ own Website and the supplemental material he posted.  Not only are the endnotes from the book expanded there (“for extra credit”), but he provides microfiction in the form of “primary” documents on the Firefall event, Theseus, Burns-Caulfield, Rorschach, vampires, etc.  He also provides alternate jacket covers that use the original art proposed for the book, not the one that was unfortunately altered for the first edition; and art from the various editions of all his books, including foreign editions of Blindsight.

Next, there are a number of exciting tools online for exploring the Solar System.

On the future of space exploration and “realistic” spaceships:

On the novel Blindsight itself (these links contain spoilers, of course!):


Illustration: Concept art by Sparth (Nicolas Bouvier) for the French edition of Blindsight (published by Univers Poche).)

Lingo: Peter Watt’s “Blindsight”

Blindsight - alternate coverThis month, we’re reading Peter Watts’ Blindsight in my SF/F book club.  As pointed out by reviewer mattastrophic, “Watts seems to adhere at least somewhat to a writing dictum of John W. Campbell (intentionally or not): treat the advanced technology just like the people in your story would, like it’s just an everyday thing.”

It helps reduce the amount of text dedicated to exposition, and it provides immersion, but it can also leave the reader exhausted, even annoyed, at having to figure out so much without help.  So here is my attempt at providing a glossary of sorts!  Most of this is current-day technospeak, but it’s handy to have all in one place.

If you have additional entries to request or improvements to suggest, please leave a comment below and I’ll see what I can do!   Continue reading “Lingo: Peter Watt’s “Blindsight””

Readings: Peter Watts’ “Blindsight”

The book of the month for August in my Goodreads book club is Peter Watts’ Blindsight.  Since I was the one to suggest it, I get to lead the discussion.

Peter WattsFirst, the obligatory bio: Dr. Peter Watts is a Canadian science fiction author and by profession a marine mammal biologist.  Watts obtained a bachelor’s of science degree in 1980 and a master’s of science degree in 1983, both from the University of Guelph, Ontario, and a Ph.D. from the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, BC from the Department of Zoology and Resource Ecology in 1991.  His doctorate thesis, should you want to read it, was entitled “Hauling out behaviour of harbour seals, Phoca vitulina richardsi, with particular attention to thermal constraints” (PDF).

In his personal life, he made a splash in recent years for a couple of unusual incidents. In December 2009, what should have been a routine border crossing turned into a big deal at the U.S border. Watts was returning to Canada via the Michigan border after helping a friend move house in Nebraska. After border guards asked to search his car, Watts got out of the vehicle and questioned what they were doing – and immediately was pepper sprayed, handcuffed, and placed under arrest. Witnesses in the car with him said he did nothing more than question the guards; he did not attempt to attack them. Nevertheless, he was charged with felony assault against a federal officer (and eventually released on foot, in his shirtsleeves, in a snow storm!)

The officer later admits in court that he has punched Watts. A jury found Watts guilty of obstructing a U.S. Customs and Border Protection officer  He faced a maximum sentence of two years in prison.  Watts blogged about his sentence saying that because of how the law was written, his asking: “What is the problem?” was enough to convict him of non-compliance.  In April 2010 he was given a suspended sentence, and a fine. However, due to immigration laws, Watts’ felony conviction prevents him from re-entering the United States.

Then in February 2011 he contracted necrotizing fasciitis (“flesh-eating bacteria syndrome”) during a routine skin biopsy on his right calf.  He has blogged in some detail about the ordeal, including photos of the medical procedures which saved his leg and the associated skin grafts.  Not for the faint of heart.

Later that year he got married to Canadian fantasy author Caitlin Sweet.  I can only hope that this marks the end of a string of awful luck.

Second, my impression: To say that Watts does not suffer fools gladly is an understatement.  He’s about as acerbic and even cantankerous as Harlan Ellison — and in my opinion, he’s often right.  He also has a dry, sardonic sense of humour that reminds me of of the better days of Dutch film director Paul Verhoeven’s (like RoboCop).

Blindsight: coverThe writing: Blindsight uses the conventions of a first-contact tale to explore the nature and significance of sentience.  Watts makes his novels and short stories available free online under Creative Commons license.  Various formats are available, check the individual pages for each work.

Watts’ books are probably the “hardest” science fiction we’ve looked at in this reading group.  In the fantasy spectrum, he sits at the end where the speculative reality is anchored as convincingly as possible in the developing edge of today’s science.  His previous novels, the Rifters series, are closer to his original love since they deal with underwater life forms; Blindsight was his first foray into space travel fiction.

Awards: The novel was no. 3 for the John W. Campbell Memorial Award for Best Science Fiction Novel in 2007, as well as being a finalist for the Locus Science Fiction Award, the Hugo Award for Best Novel, and the Geffen Award for Best Translated Science Fiction Book.  In Poland, the book has been very successful, winning the Sphinx award for 2008 Foreign Novel of the Year and the 2008 Katedra award for Best Foreign Fantastic Book (both awarded by popular vote).  In March 2011, TOR Books readers voted Blindsight to #4 on the list of best SF/F novels of the decade opening this millennium.

The Internet footprint: Although Blindsight originally received critical approval, Watts’ name remained relatively poorly known and sales were originally modest.  Interestingly, he credits his decision to release the book free online under CC license for rapidly tripling his print sales.  This decision, and his visible presence online, has resulted in gradually becoming known and acquiring dedicated fans.

Immersion and Verisimilitude in Bram Stoker’s Dracula

Gothic castleThe Week 3 reading assignment for my online class on Fantasy and Science Fiction: The Human Mind, Our Modern World was Bram Stoker’s Dracula.

I read this book about 20 years ago, right after the Francis Ford Coppola movie of the same name came out because friends told me the movie did in fact make lots of changes to the story.  I confess, I’m not a devoted fan of the vampire sub-genre and I had not much enjoyed the book.  Re-reading for this class, I made an effort to look at it with news eyes; I still didn’t enjoy it much for its own sake, but I was interested in seeing in which ways and by which means it had so marked the genre.

Here is my 300-word essay on a small aspect. Continue reading “Immersion and Verisimilitude in Bram Stoker’s Dracula”

More Pop Culture Vampires

To go with my online class Fantasy and Science Fiction: The Human Mind, Our Modern World, I started a series of posts listing companion materials in pop culture; I’ve already given some to go with the Week 3 reading, Bram Stoker’s Dracula, but I wanted to add the two vampire stories I’ve liked best, and they are not Stoker’s.

Those Who Hunt the Night coverAlthough I’m not a big fan of the genre, I do still like Barbara Hambly’s Those Who Hunt the Night.  It has a plucky, non-submissive heroine with a science background, a Spanish don vampire, and a scientifc approach to vampirism. Best of all, it tackles the idea of otherness more honestly than many books in the genre.  Plus I just think that Hambly is very good at characterization, at writing protagonists who are flawed and human, and at depicting romances that are made more poignant for their seemingly prosaic nature.  I love all her books, be they fantasy, science fiction or mysteries.

Blindsight coverSecond, one of the more unusual examples of vampire in literature, guaranteed to really, really be Science Fiction (TM): Canadian author and scientist Peter Watts’ Blindsight. Watts’ short stories and novels can all be downloaded free under Creative Common license if you poke around his site. Blindsight features vampires as the by-product of gene therapy (this is not a spoiler, it’s mentioned in the first chapter). Here is a darkly funny prequel presented by Peter Watts himself in the form of a conference talk on Vampire Domestication — if you appreciate very tongue-in-cheek humour.

Pop Culture Dracula

NosferatuTo go with my online class Fantasy and Science Fiction: The Human Mind, Our Modern World, I started a series of posts listing companion materials in pop culture, preferably ones that are a little forgotten, have not received the attention I think they deserve, or take an unusual angle.  All the better if they are available online, double-plus for free.

These are the ones I propose to accompany Bram Stoker’s Dracula.  (Note that I’m trying to concentrate on characters from Stoker’s book, not vampires in general, otherwise we would drown in references.)

  • Mina Murray’s portrayal in Alan Moore and Kevin O’Neill’s graphic novel series The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (not the disappointing movie based on the series). I enjoyed volumes 1 and 2 of the collected issues, though not the subsequent books.
  • The 1922 movie Nosferatu, a cult classic available free online; it was an unauthorized version of Dracula so the characters were renamed.
  • The 1931 authorized movie version, Dracula, starring Bela Lugosi, also available free online.
  • The 1938 radio play Dracula, which was the inaugural episode of Orson Welles’ Mercury Theatre on the Air, also available free online.
  • The 1958 Hammer Films version with the suave Peter Cushing, titled Horror of Dracula to distinguish it from Bela Lugosi’s landmark performance; free, on DailyMotion.
  • Kate Beaton’s take in her webcomic Hark, a Vagrant: Dracula.
  • There’s an app for that: PadWorx’ Dracula for iPad, an interactive version of the story.
  • Bram Stoker’s works online on Unz.org.