Chuck Todd interviews me about alternate histories
Showing posts with label Second Life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Second Life. Show all posts

Saturday, October 29, 2022

The Peripheral 1.3: John Snow


So, I entitled this review of The Peripheral 1.3 "John Snow," even though it had an already very excellent title, "Haptic Drift".

First, John Snow is a great name.  In our real history -- which may be the history of The Peripheral story, too (since there's time travel in this story, its history is changeable)  -- John Snow was a British doctor who lived mostly in the first half of the 19th century, and helped put anaesthesia on the map of crucial medical treatments as well as get a handle on how to blunt cholera epidemics.  Anaesthesia, if you think about it, is deeply related to the transportation of consciousness at the core of The Peripheral.  Plus, we already saw the role that deadly illnesses and their treatment plays in this narrative, with Flynne's mother in last week's episodes.

In last night's episode, Flynne cleverly guesses that where "snow falls" could refer to where "Snow falls" as in John.  And as an added bonus, we have the acoustic reference to the hero of Game of Thrones that some people hate, the one and only Jon Snow.  (I actually first thought that Jon was the Snow being talked about in "Haptic Drift"). What a difference an "h" makes.

And in addition to all that, the action really picks up after John Snow is named.  We get Flynne and Cherise in a nice battle, and see Flynne pick up a little snowy figure -- not a snowman.  Years ago, I went up to the attic of my house where a new roof was being put in -- after a hurricane had taken part of it off -- and  I found a tiny figure of a soldier that someone in the family who originally lived in house must have put there.  And it reminded me of what Flynne picked up near the end of this episode.  So far so good, no one from the future has come after me, either physically or virtually.

By the way, "haptic drift" refers to people falling in love -- or souls melding, as Flynne is told -- when they spend too much time together in cyberspace, and that may be happening with Flynne and Wilf.  Good for them, they both could use it. (By the way, we have "haptic feedback" in our reality -- but, as far as I know, nothing called "haptic drift" has been noted when people fall in love in virtual communities like Second Life, or in any metaverse.) 

Otherwise, I'll say again that the Southern old boy stuff is not my favorite part of this excellent series -- mainly, because I've seen one version or another of it too many times before.  Also, in general, I'd say murder by bee stings is more creative than being locked into a car in the hot sun.  But I'll put up with it, because the rest of the story is so good.

See also The Peripheral 1.1-1.2: Cyberpunk, Time Travel, and Alternate Reality





It's Real Life

alternate reality about The Beatles on Amazon, and  FREE on Vocal

Sunday, January 6, 2013

Telepathic Reading from The Plot to Save Socrates - in Second Life

My avatar reads (via mental telepathy) from the beginning of The Plot to Save Socrates ... the virtual reality world of Second Life ...



Read this with your own eyes ... a free sample of The Plot to Save Socrates

Read more of The Plot to Save Socrates -  Kindle US ... Kindle UK  ... Kindle France ... Kindle Spain ... Kindle Italy ... Kindle Germany ... Kindle Japan ... Kindle India ... Kindle Brazil ... Kindle Canada ... and Nook ... and Kobo



Praise for the novel...

"...challenging fun" - Entertainment Weekly

"Da Vinci-esque thriller" - New York Daily News

"...a fun book to read" - Dallas Morning News

"resonates with the current political climate . . . . heroine Sierra Waters is sexy as hell . . . . there's a bite to Levinson's wit" - Brian Charles Clark, Curled Up With A Good Book at curledup.com 

"a journey through time that'll make you think as it thrills ... so accessible, even those generally put off by sci-fi should enjoy the trip." - Rod Lott, bookgasm.com

"Levinson spins a fascinating tale ... An intriguing premise with believable characters and attention to period detail make this an outstanding choice... Highly recommended." - Library Journal,*starred review

"Light, engaging time-travel yarn . . . neatly satisfies the circularity inherent in time travel, whose paradoxes Levinson links to Greek philosophy." - Publishers Weekly

"A thinking person's time travel story... I felt like I was there." - SF Signal

Monday, January 16, 2012

The Good Wife 3.13 meets Murder on the Orient Express

A good Good Wife 3.13 last night, in which the standalone part of the story concerns the Feds - in the person of Bob Balaban's well-played taxman - go after the creator of Bitcoin, on account of its being an allegedly illegal currency.

Bitcoin, in our real world (i.e., off the television drama), is a real online currency - much like the Linden dollar in Second Life, except that people can use Bitcoin money to buy real things anywhere online (not just in-world with the Linden dollar in Second Life), if the seller is willing to accept that kind of payment.  Still in our real reality, we think we know who created Bitcoin, but there may be some pseudonymity involved.

Back on The Good Wife, Alicia and the firm are defending Bitcoin's lawyer, who may or may not be the creator about whom he the lawyer is prevented from discussing, owing to attorney-client privilege.  There are two other suspects for creator, and some typically brilliant investigation by Kalinda uncovers the truth:  all three have in fact created/marketed Bitcoin.  Reminded me of Agatha Christie's Murder on the Orient Express, where the murderer turns out to be everyone of the train with a motive.

Moving over to the continuing story, it turns out that Will may be a little vulnerable - though not really guilty of any wrongdoing - after all.   He lets Kalinda take charge of the touchy paperwork, to do what - destroy it?   All we know if she hands something that looks like those files over to Assistant DA Dana Lodge (played by Lie to Me's Monica Raymund), who's in possession of the document unknowingly signed by Alicia last week, when she was set up by David Lee in the alienation of affection case.  It could be enough to get Alicia disbarred.  Dana's happy to use this to blackmail Kalinda.

It's certainly enough for me to look more forward than ever to the next episode.

See also The Good Wife 3.1: Recusal and Rosh Hashanah ... The Good Wife: 3.2: Periwigs and Skype ... The Good Wife 3.7: Peter v. Will ...  Dexter's Sister on The Good Wife 3.10  ... The Good Wife 3.12: Two Suits

And see also  The Good Wife Starts Second Season on CBS ... The Good Wife 2.2: Lou Dobbs, Joe Trippi, and Obama Girl ... The Good Wife 2.4: Surprise Candidate, Intimate Interpsonal Distance ... The Good Wife 2.9 Takes on Capital Punishment ... The Good Wife 2.16: Information Wars



                 Special Discount Coupons for Angie's List, Avis, Budget Car, Garden.com, eMusic





The Plot to Save Socrates


"challenging fun" - Entertainment Weekly

"a Da Vinci-esque thriller" - New York Daily News

"Sierra Waters is sexy as hell" - curled up with a good book


Saturday, April 16, 2011

Fringe 3.19 meets Inception, The Walking Dead, and Tron

Weelllll ... what a Fringe 3.19 tonight ... certainly original and surprising in plot, but highly derivative in its structure, or on the other hand paying homage to a fine recent movie, a top-notch current television series, and a classic movie which has come back with more stories recently.

The surprise is Bell, last seen and still in residence in Olivia's body, now a cartoon figure in Olivia's mind - or rather, the way that Fringe represents the contents of Olivia's mind is, mostly, through animated figures.   Walter and Peter discover this when they enter Olivia's mind in search of Olivia, which is necessary to get Bell to leave so Olivia can take charge of her body once again.  And when Walter and Peter find Bell, a cartoon, in Olivia's mind, they turn into virtual cartoon figures, too.

So, at this point, we have Inception (entering someone's mind) and Tron (the move from physical to virtual worlds - a Second Life right before our eyes.   How does The Walking Dead come in?  In this world of Olivia's mind, first some flesh-and-blood zombies (or maybe they're alive) and then some cartoon zombies who are 100% zombies chase our heroes.   Totally unnecessary plotwise, but, hey, I'm a fan of The Walking Dead, and the TV series is after all an adaptation of the comic book series.

On the subject of homages, Bell aka Leonard Nimoy also says "aye, aye, Captain" to Walter, in a sly reprise of Spock to Kirk.

Also worthy of note are the WTC Twin Towers.  Why would they be in Olivia's mind?  I thought at first that maybe the mind was Fauxlivia's, but an equally good explanation is Olivia recently saw the WTC when she was "over there".

As to plot: Bell apparently takes his final leave, but since he doesn't like goodbyes, anything is possible in the future.  In the more immediate up ahead, Olivia thinks someone will kill her ... but how she got knowledge of her own future is anyone's guess...


5-min podcast review of Fringe

See also Fringe 3.1: The Other Olivia ... Fringe 3.2: Bad Olivia and Peter ... Fringe 3.3: Our/Their Olivia on the Other Side ... Fringe 3.5: Back from Hiatus, Back from the Amber ... Fringe 3.7: Two Universes Still Nearing Collision ... Fringe 3.8: Long Voyages Home ... Fringe 3.10: The Return of the Eternal Bald Observers ... Flowers for Fringenon in Fringe 3.11 ... Fringe 3.12: The Wrong Coffee  ... Fringe 3.13: Alternate Fringe ... Fringe 3.14: Amber Here ... Fringe 3.15: Young Peter and Olivia ... Fringe 3.16: Walter and Yoko ... Fringe 3.17: Bell, Olivia, Lee, and the Cow ... Fringe 3.18: Clever Walternate

See also reviews of Season 2: Top Notch Return of Fringe Second Season ... Fringe 2.2 and The Mole People ... Fringe 2.3 and the Human Body as Bomb ... Fringe 2.4 Unfolds and Takes Wing ... Fringe 2.5: Peter in Alternate Reality and Wi-Fi for the Mind ... A Different Stripe of Fringe in 2.6 ... The Kid Who Changed Minds in Fringe 2.7 ... Fringe 2.8: The Eternal Bald Observers ... Fringe 2.9: Walter's Journey ... Fringe 2.10: Walter's Brain, Harry Potter, and Flowers for Algernon ...  New Fringe on Monday Night: In Alternate Universe? ... Fringe 2.12: Classic Science Fiction Chiante ... Fringe 2.13: "I Can't Let Peter Die Again" ... Fringe 2.14: Walter's Health, Books, and Father ... Fringe 2.15: I'll Take 'Manhatan' ... Fringe 2.16: Peter's Story ... Fringe 2.17: Will Olivia Tell Peter? ... Fringe 2.18: Strangeness on a Train ... Fringe 2.19: Two Plus Infinity ... Fringe the Noir Musical ... Fringe 2.21: Bring on the Alternates ... Fringe 2.22:  Tin Soldiers and Nixon Coming ... Fringe Season 2 Finale: The Switch

See also reviews of Season One Fringe Begins ... Fringe 2 and 3: The Anthology Tightrope ... 4: The Eternal Bald Observer ... 7: A Bullet Can Scramble a Dead Brain's Transmission ... 8. Heroic Walter and Apple Through Steel ... 9. Razor-Tipped Butterflies of the Mind ... 10. Shattered Pieces Come Together Through Space and Times ... 11. A Traitor, a Crimimal, and a Lunatic ... 12, 13, 14: Fringe and Teleportation ... 15: Fringe is Back with Feral Child, Pheromones, and Bald Men ... 17. Fringe in New York, with Oliva as Her Suspect ... 18. Heroes and Villains across Fringe ... Stephen King, Arthur C. Clarke, and Star Trek in Penultimate Fringe ... Fringe Alternate Reality Finale: Science Fiction At Its Best


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The Plot to Save Socrates




"challenging fun" - Entertainment Weekly

"a Da Vinci-esque thriller" - New York Daily News

"Sierra Waters is sexy as hell" - curled up with a good book




Enjoy listening to audio books? Get a free audio book copy of The Plot to Save Socrates - or any one of 85,000 other titles - with a 14-day trial membership at Audible.com ...
 

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Battletar Galactica Caprica: Exquisite, Flawed Copies

Battlestat Galactica Caprica - the prequel movie to the just-completed, superb second version of the series - was released on DVD yesterday. It's on "very long wait" on Netflix, none of the Blockbusters around here in Westchester County had it, so my wife called a local video store yesterday, and they said they would have it in today. Which they did. And, apropriately enough, the store is named "Captain Video"...

As to the movie ... my favorite part was the Adama family, with Bill Adama's father in a central role. He's a lawyer. One of the best sequences in BSG was when Lee did a stint as a trial attorney, and pored over his grandfather's law book. It was good to meet the grandfather, Joseph Adama (well played by Esai Morales, with just right gravelly voice and soft-spoken but tough Bill Adama demeanor). In Caprica we get to see the origin of the Adamas' hatred of artificially intelligent beings - Cylons, eventually - and the story makes sense.

It's about copies - to what extent humans can be copied, their intelligence and talent and interests and life experience codified - and then embodied in robots. Joe Adama's wife and daughter have been killed by a terrorist bomb on a fast-moving train, along with Zoe Graystone, a young computer genius, along the lines of Ada Lovelace, daughter of Byron, in our world history. Zoe has created an advanced avatar of herself, which survives her death. Her father Daniel (good to see Eric Stoltz in the role), pretty good with computer programming himself, figures out a way of getting Zoe's avatar intelligence into a shiny robot ... and we have some sort of precursor to at least part of the Cylons.

But before that happens, Daniel creates an avatar for Joe Adama's slain daughter, and talks Joe into going into virtual reality to talk to "her" (shades of Second Life). Joe finds his daughter's avatar unhappy, confused ... and this gets him to denounce any attempts to copy souls.

So we have the human (Adama) vs. Cylon (Zoe) conflict aborning. The other theme is religious. Polly Walker (who was just great in Rome) plays Sister Clarice Willow, who first talks about the gods (maybe the same line Polly used in Rome), but then reveals herself as a believer in the one, true God...

So the stage is pretty well set for the Caprica prequel series in 2010. Caprica is a thoughtful, literate, philosophically sharp movie. (About whether perfect copies of humans can be created - I guess I should mention Levinson's principle or paradox here - creating a perfect copy is, paradoxically, self-defeating, because if you created a perfect duplication, it would take away the uniqueness of the original, and therefore would be destroying that quality rather than copying it. See The Soft Edge, p. 52, for more.) It was also good to see all the futuristic, virtual gadgetry, which had been stripped from Battlestar Galactica (the ship) to protect it from Cylonic infiltration.

But I have one problem with the movie - if the humanoid Cylons existed for thousands of years prior to BSG, where were they in Caprica? It would have been nice to see them tied into the story in some way ... but I can wait for the series in 2010...


More Battlestar Galactica - see: Battlestar Galactica, Final 1: Dee, Ellen, and Starbuck ... Final 2: Baby and Mutiny Make Three ... Final 3: Galactica Alamo! ... Final 4: Shout-Outs to Lampkin, Lee, Tyrol ... Final 5: (Almost) All Explained ... Final 6. The Necessity of Hyrbrid ... Final 7. 'Since I Died in Your Arms' ... Final 8. Father of a Million ... Final 9. 'Every Man and Woman Over the Age of 15' ... Finale: Not Goodbye But See You Around











The Plot to Save Socrates



"challenging fun" - Entertainment Weekly

"a Da Vinci-esque thriller" - New York Daily News

"Sierra Waters is sexy as hell" - curled up with a good book


more about The Plot to Save Socrates...


Read the first chapter of The Plot to Save Socrates
.... FREE!

Saturday, April 12, 2008

Grand Opening of my New Bookshop in Second Life!



That's right: I've moved my Second Life bookshop - The Soft Edge - to beautiful new quarters, in the Artists' Village in Second Life.

And to celebrate this new opening, I'll be reading from the beginnings of each of my five novels - The Silk Code, Borrowed Tides, The Consciousness Plague, The Pixel Eye, The Plot to Save Socrates - at 4pm Eastern (1pm Second Life time) this afternoon!

I'll also be giving away a copy of one of my novels in a contest, which will be open to only those who attend the Grand Opening today!

If you're already my friend in Second Life, look for an announcement from me, 30 minutes before the reading, with a landmark you can use to get to the reading.

If you're already on Second Life, but are not yet my Friend, I can be contacted at PaulLevinson Freenote - send me a note in Second Life, and I'll reply with a landmark to the reading.

If you're not on Second Life, you can join for free any time at http://secondlife.com - after you've joined send me a message here on Facebook, and I'll give you more details.

More details about all of my novels over here...

Time: 4pm Eastern (= 1pm Second Life Time)

Here's a snapshot of my bookshop - clicking on it will bring to a place where you can "teleport" to the bookshop... (my old friend Barry Cramer is even sitting permanently outside...)

Saturday, March 29, 2008

Reading a Tantalizing Bit More of Unburning Alexandria




You know you want to hear this ... you've regretted missing all of the readings I've done before ... So I'll be back this afternoon, on the Web, in Second Life, reading some new material from my novel in progress, Unburning Alexandria...

It's the sequel to The Plot to Save Socrates - but, if you haven't read that novel yet, not to worry, I promise I won't give anything away in my reading...

The reading will take place on the Web in Second Life.

If you're already my friend in Second Life, look for an announcement from me, an hour before the reading, with a landmark you can use to get to the reading.

If you're already on Second Life, but are not yet my Friend, I can be contacted at PaulLevinson Freenote - send me a note in Second Life, and I'll reply with a landmark to the reading.

The reading will be at the Bantam Dell Cafe in Second Life.

If you're not on Second Life, you can join for free any time at http://secondlife.com - after you've joined send me a message here on Facebook, and I'll give you more details.

More details about The Plot to Save Socrates and Unburning Alexandria at http://theplottosavesocrates.com

Time: 4pm Eastern (= 1pm Second Life Time)

Sunday, March 2, 2008

MySpace Poet Lance Strate Writes Verses for Sierra Waters

MySpace poet Lance Strate has written verses for time traveller Sierra Waters ...

I sent it to one of her listening posts in 2042, and who knows if it will get through, but you can read it any time at A River Song for Sierra Waters...

Added March 3, 2008: And poet Larry Kuechlin has written this sonnet for Sierra ... Of Water

Sierra is really taking on a life of her own, with a Facebook group, a MySpace page, a Second Life life (see picture below), an appearance in an 18th century painting (see below), and now this poem...

And, of course, there will be more Sierra adventures in Unburning Alexandria...

You can read her story, known to me as of 2007, in The Plot to Save Socrates ... enjoy the first chapter, FREE!




painting by Jean-Baptiste Régnault, 1785
Socrates dragging Alcibiades from the Embrace of S.

Thursday, February 28, 2008

Reading from Unburning Alexandria in the Artists Village in Second Life this Sunday



Reading from Unburning Alexandria in a Greek amphitheater in the Artists' Village in Second Life

another reading right on your computer! Sierra Waters rockin' the ancient world!

Sunday, March 2, 2008

12:00pm - 1:00pm SLT

Artists Village, Second Life


The hits keep on coming! I've been getting such good response to my readings in Second Life - which you can attend right on your computer - that I decided to accept a invitation to do a reading this Sunday!

It will be in a breathtaking virtual space - a Greek amphitheater in the Artists Village - in Second Life.... what better place to read a little more from my novel in progress, Unburning Alexandria - sequel to The Plot to Save Socrates...

Sierra Waters rockin' the ancient world..

If you already have a Second Life account, IM me at PaulLevinson Freenote, and I'll reply with a landmark to the reading.

If you do not have an SL account, you can get one, for free, at secondlife.com - once you have an account, just do as above. You can use the landmark to get to my reading on the day of the event...

Note: 3pm Eastern time = 12 Noon Second Life time

Monday, February 18, 2008

Back in Second Life Next Sunday - Public Reading of The Plot to Save Socrates

Back by popular demand - I'll be reading from a section of my novel, The Plot to Save Socrates, never before heard in public...

You can hear and see this on your computer, just by connecting to Second Life.

The time of the reading - 3-4pm - is EASTERN TIME, this coming Sunday, Feb 24

If you already have a Second Life account, just send me a note (or leave a comment right here), befriend me on Second Life (if we're not already friends), and I'll reply with a "landmark" which will bring you right to the reading.

If you do not have a Second Life account, you can easily get one, for free, at SecondLife.com - once you get an account, just let me know here or on Second Life.

This reading will not be recorded. If you can't attend, the only way you will be able hear this section is in The Plot to Save Socrates audiobook

And, of course, you can read it in the paperback novel

But here are some Plot to Save Socrates goodies that are FREE:

- read the first chapter online!

- listen to me reading the first chapter!

- Red Moon author David S. Michaels reacts to a reading from the first chapter of The Plot to Save Socrates that I gave last week on Aaron Busch's new Primetime and Online webcast

- Sierra Waters - heroine of the novel - is twice introduced

- more review blurbs than you can shake a stick at (whatever that means) ... my favorites are "challenging fun" (Entertainment Weekly) and "Sierra Waters in sexy as hell" (Curled Up with a Good Book)

And here's a videoclip from a reading I did in December in Second Life...

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

NBC's Journeyman in Second Life: Media Within Media Within Media...



And here I am, plugging NBC's Journeyman, in Adele Ward's Meet the Author interview with me...

Or, more precisely, it's my avatar plugging Journeyman, on Adele Ward's Meet the Author show in Second Life, as broadcast on the web via SLCN.tv ...

You gotta love this: a shout-out for a network television series, via webcast of an interview in a virtual world...

A good example of an observation I first made in Digital McLuhan. The distinction we often make between medium (say, television) and content (Journeyman) is too simple. What we really have are media within media within media, almost ad infinitum ...

Also a good example of how Second Life is increasingly spilling over and into real life - as I pointed out in my Second Life Meets Real Life piece on Internet Evolution a few weeks ago.

So, when you look at the above ad, you're seeing the medium of this blog, which contains the medium of a YouTube video, which contains my plug for Journeyman, which is itself a clip from SLCN.tv's webcast of my (avatar's) interview by Adele Ward('s avatar) in Second Life ...

Little boxes ... no, that's Weeds ... though weeds, viral marketing, and media within media all partake of a kind of dandelion spore dissemination...

Friday, December 21, 2007

Video: The First Pages of The Plot to Save Socrates...



my avatar reads from the very beginning of The Plot to Save Socrates ... in Second Life ... it starts "Athens, 2042... Sierra Waters had always done everything for the thrill..."

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Meet the Author: Talking and Reading My Science Fiction in Second Life



I'm interviewed, in my Second Life avatar identity, by Adele Ward on her Second Life Meet the Author show on December 9, 2007. Videotaped by SLCN.tv - Second Life Cable Network.

I talk about how I came to write The Plot to Save Socrates, my love of time travel and Journeyman, my nonfiction books (ranging from The Soft Edge to Cellphone to In Pursuit of Truth), and other goodies. I give advice to new writers and discuss how to work with your editor. And ... I read the first two sections of The Plot to Save Socrates...

Sixty minutes in all ... enjoy.






The Plot to Save Socrates


"challenging fun" - Entertainment Weekly

"a Da Vinci-esque thriller" - New York Daily News

"Sierra Waters is sexy as hell" - curled up with a good book


more about The Plot to Save Socrates...

Get your own at Profile Pitstop.com



Read the first chapter of The Plot to Save Socrates
.... FREE!

For the Very First Time: Reading from the Plot To Save Socrates Sequel, in Second Life!



You don't want to miss this.

For the very first time, anywhere, I'll be reading from Unburning Alexandria - the sequel to The Plot to Save Socrates - Second Life, this Sunday, at 3pm Eastern (12 Noon Second Life and Pacific Time).

Here are the details:

You do need a Second Life account to attend. You can get one, free of charge, at SecondLife.com

You can "teleport" to the site of the event - even before the event -  via this link

My Second Life name, again, is PaulLevinson Freenote. Make sure you wave at me, or say hello.

***

Thanks to everyone who came to my reading this past Sunday. All told, we had more than 50 people (avatars) in attendance. If you missed it, or would like to see yourself on television, there's a good link at http://slcn.tv/meet-author-paul-levinson

Another place you might want to visit in Second Life is my Soft Edge book shop - just down the street from Sunday's reading - and pictured below. Click on the picture to "teleport" to my bookshop...




 

Read the first chapter of The Plot to Save Socrates
.... FREE!

Monday, December 3, 2007

Live Reading of The Plot to Save Socrates - at a screen near you!

I'll be reading, live (always better than dead) from the first chapter of The Plot to Save Socrates - and then answering questions from the audience. Part of Adele Ward's acclaimed Meet the Author series in Second Life.

I've always regretted not being able to do a national or even international reading of my science fiction - and have, up until now, been confined to bookstores. Next Sunday will be my first truly global reading... You'll be hearing my real voice in real time (and seeing my Second Life avatar).

You do need a Second Life account to attend. You can get one, free of charge, at SecondLife.com

If you can't get to Second Life, you can also watch and hear the reading live at http://www.slcn.tv - but I'm not sure if you'll be ask to any questions.

You can "teleport" to site of the event - even before the event - any time, via http://tinyurl.com/2p4qcg - or by clicking the image below.

My Second Life name, by the way, is PaulLevinson Freenote. Make sure you wave at me, or say hello.

The event will start at 2pm Second Life time - which is the same as Pacific time - or 5pm Eastern time on Sunday. Be there - or be, one-dimensional...








The Plot to Save Socrates


"challenging fun" - Entertainment Weekly

"a Da Vinci-esque thriller" - New York Daily News

"Sierra Waters is sexy as hell" - curled up with a good book


more about The Plot to Save Socrates...

Get your own at Profile Pitstop.com



Read the first chapter of The Plot to Save Socrates
.... FREE!

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Further Genesis of "The Light That Time Forgot"

I now know what I think of as the "furniture" of this story. The metaphor comes from my editor at Tor for The Silk Code through The Plot to Save Socrates - David G. Hartwell - who likes to talk about "rearranging furniture" when plot elements and/or characters in a draft novel need a major overall. I'm using it here more in the sense of what you put in an empty house or room, after you've constructed it.

The house is "The Light That Time Forget" - otherwise known as the title. I know the story, anthology, novel, whatever will be about time travel. That's where I was a few days ago.

But yesterday afternoon, driving to Fordham University, I realized what the furniture would be - what the texture, characters, vehicle of the story were all about.

Watercolor. Impressionist painters. Better living through captured light. Better living through watercolor. Something like that...

Now, at this point, I'm going to go into sub rosa mode, and not talk about the story. First, I don't like talking about my writing on a blow-by-blow basis. Second, I have no idea how long it will take me to write this - could be tomorrow, could be next year, or much longer...

But I'll definitely keep you posted. And will of course acknowledge the good denizens of Second Life, if and when (ok, I'm pretty confident it's just a question of when) "The Light That Time Forgot" is published.

See also Genesis of a Title: "The Light That Time Forgot"






The Plot to Save Socrates


"challenging fun" - Entertainment Weekly

"a Da Vinci-esque thriller" - New York Daily News

"Sierra Waters is sexy as hell" - curled up with a good book


more about The Plot to Save Socrates...

Get your own at Profile Pitstop.com



Read the first chapter of The Plot to Save Socrates
.... FREE!

Saturday, November 24, 2007

Genesis of a Title: "The Light that Time Forgot"

People often ask me where I get my ideas for stories. Part of my answer is that sometimes a title comes into my head, and I write a story around that.

Which of course leads to the question - well, then, how do you come up with titles, if you haven't already written at least part of the story?

Now that's a good question, especially for me, because, truthfully, I really can't remember how I came up with most of my titles...

But I came up with what I think is good title late last night, or early this morning, and since that's not all that long ago, it turns out I can indeed remember exactly - more or less - how I came up with it. Which I thought I'd share you... And then, years from now, if you come across something I published with that title, you'll recall reading someplace just how I came up with it...

To begin ... I've been spending a lot of enjoyable time the past few days in Second Life - the virtual world that Ken Hudson (Kenny Hubble in SL) brought me into earlier this month to do an interview.

In large part because of Ken's encouragement, I've even decided to open a virtual book shop in Second Life - I'm calling it the Soft Edge bookshop, and it will sell all of my books via Amazon links, and I'll be doing live readings there, holding contests, other fun stuff. The store's still under construction... I'll be making an announcement about the grand opening soon.

Now, in addition to Ken, I've met a whole bunch of interesting people in Second Life, including Mike Stackpole (a fellow science writer whom I've known and whose work I've enjoyed for years) and Jeremy Owen Turner, who did a great interview with me years ago about Digital McLuhan (that was in 1999 - small worlds...)

So, last night, I was having a fascinating talk about writing in general, style in Second Life, etc with Jeremy (whose SL name is Wirxli Flimflam) and aurel Miles (her SL name - her real name is Stephanie Farrington) and her friend. Now, aurel and her friend do visual design, among other things, and at some point they showed Wirxli and me a mural by an artist whose name I can't recall (see, I'm forgetting already). Started with a J, and was something like Juria. Anyway, there were words on this mural, and scenes, and one of them was something about lighting and forgetting (no kidding)....

And something about that hit me, and I began playing around with titles...

The first one I came up with was, "The Time That Light Forgot". Which I like, but a few hours later - I was long gone from Second Life by then - I realized that that would make a good title for maybe a story about the Dark Ages.

So I switched two of the words, and come up with "The Light That Time Forgot"....

Now there, I think, is a proper title for anything having to do with time travel - which as you know, I love - or, more specifically, observing the past, as it's actually happening, live and directly from the present (looking at the light time has forgotten).

I can't say, at this point, what exactly I'll do with the title. At very least, I'll likely use it as a title for a collection of my time travel stories that I'll someday publish. But it could lead to more ... a short story, or even a novel...

If you still know me then, you'll let me know what you think of it...

And I'll be back here later tonight with my review of the Battlestar Galactica special.

See also Further Genesis of The Light That Time Forgot...

Here's a screen shot of the Soft Edge book shop, under construction...

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

The Silk Code and The Plot to Save Socrates in Second Life


The Silk Code on a wall in Second Life


The Plot to Save Socrates on a wall in Second Life

Hey, tell me what you think of these ads. They cost, literally, just a couple of bucks, and will be up on the wall in Second Life for two weeks.

You can click on the image and see what the ads actually look like in Second Life (you'll need to join SL, if you're not already a member, but it's free).

Sunday, November 18, 2007

A Conversation with Kenny Hubble aka Ken Hudson about Second Life

Latest episode of my Light On Light Through podcast: I converse with digital artist Ken Hudson aka Kenny Hubble of and about Second Life. At 10,000 accounts and growing, the vibrant virtual community of Second Life is becoming a way of life for many. Ken interviewed me in his Media Ecology Second Life series a few weeks ago - see the 60-minute video here - and I'm still enjoying it. Ken and I talk about life in Second Life - how to do it, how to live it, and its relationship to real or "first" life in everything ranging from art and music to (of course) sex. Whether you're an old hand at Second Life, a newbie, or just want to learn more about this fascinating place, you won't want to miss this special 40-minute interview (and, actually, there is no way that you can, because it will always be available here - and likely somewhere in Second Life, too).







my 40-minute interview of Ken Hudson



For more of my work about the differences between realspace and cyberspace...

Sunday, November 11, 2007

Paul Levinson Lectures on Freedom and Media



Apologies for the third person in the title, but I thought it would make a more informative title than "I"... Either way, you'll find here my lectures, and interviews, about freedom and media. At present, you can see

my 60-minute November 5, 2007 avatar interview in Second Life, conducted by Kenny Hubble (Ken Hudson)



my 50-minute September 28, 2007 lecture to my Fordham University class on the mainstream media mistreatment of Ron Paul

my 60-minute June 28, 2005 Keynote Address at Fordham University on "The Flouting of the First Amendment" (here's the transcript)

and videos of my science fiction


I expect to be adding new and old lectures to this series, every now and then. (You can click on the icon to the left of the > at the bottom of the screen, and then "Guide," for a complete list of available episodes.)

The videos in this series will usually be at least 30 minutes in length, and often an hour or more, in contrast to my YouTube videos, which are usually interview clips of me of just a few minutes. (Some of these "Lectures on Freedom" videos, however, may also be on YouTube, as series of 10-minute clips.)

You can also subscribe to these lectures on freedom and media on iTunes.
InfiniteRegress.tv