An actual recent conversation at our house, regarding some new food for our kitten, Oona, who continues to have mild gastrointestinal issues (i.e., soft poops):
Continue reading “Well You Did Ask”Category: science fiction
Teaser Tuesday: Chill, Blaine.
So this week I’ve got two Teaser Tuesdays for the price of one (that price being $0, of course). First up is this little bit from the short story “The Jewel of Seven Stones”, which appears in the Seabury Quinn omnibus The Horror on The Links*:

The Horror on the Links is the first of five omnibus editions of Seabury Quinn’s short stories about Jules de Grandin, a French physician-slash-detective, and his sidekick Samuel Trowbridge, another physician, who very much follows in the “idiot friend” model of Hercule Poirot’s sidekick Col. Hastings, except he is, to be honest, even more of an idiot than most idiot friends.
A flurry of snowflakes, wind-driven by the January tempest, assaulted de Grandin and me as we alighted from the late New York train. “Cordieu,” the Frenchman laughed as he snuggled into the farther corner of the station taxicab, “to attend the play in the metropolis is good, Friend Trowbridge, but we pay a heavy price in chilled feet and frosted noses when we return in such a storm as this!”
“Yes, getting chilblains is one of the favorite winter sports among us suburbanites,” I replied, lighting a cigar and puffing mingled smoke and vaporized breath from my nostrils.
Seabury Quinn, The Horror on the Links
I’ve already got the second book in this series, The Devil’s Rosary, but I’m probably going to stop there. There’s only so much idiot friending one can take.
The second of this week’s Teaser Tuesdays comes from Doomsday Book, by Connie Willis, the first of the “Oxford Time Travel” books:
In this book, a young student, Kivrin, has been sent back in time to the Middle Ages for research purposes. Naturally things go awry, starting with a (maybe) epidemic that kicks into gear in the future Oxford** at the exact same time Kivrin departs for the past.*** In this Teaser, we are listening to a voice memo that Kivrin has made on a recording device implanted in her hands, which she activates by putting her palms together and then whispering to them as if in prayer, which is, quite honestly, just about the cleverest way I’ve ever seen to have somebody from the future keep a log of their observations without having any of the locals ask them what the hell they are doing and then burn them as a witch or try to perform an exorcism on them or whatever.
The language isn’t the only thing off. My dress is all wrong, of far too fine a weave, and the blue is too bright, dyed with woad or not. I haven’t seen any bright colors at all. I’m too tall, my teeth are too good, and my hands are wrong, in spite of my muddy labors at the dig. They should not only have been dirtier, but I should have chilblains. Everyone’s hands, even the children’s, are chapped and bleeding. It is, after all, December.
Connie Willis, Doomsday Book
Now, the astute reader may have noticed that both of those Teasers involve chilblains. Why is that, astute reader? Well, it’s because I have a chilblain story, of course! So, being a couple of New Yorkers living in Southern California, during the wintertime, we have a tendency to leave our heat off, because winter weather in the San Diego area looks an awful lot like mild spring weather back in New York. However, some years back, we had a winter that was unusually damp and unusually cold (not unlike this recent winter, actually), over the course of which I started to notice small itchy bumps on my hands. I took pictures of them, which I no longer have, but they looked kind of like this:

I had no idea what these might be, so after a few weeks I went to see my doctor. He also had no idea what they might be, so he forwarded me along to a dermatologist, who took one look at them and said:
Dermatologist: “Chilblains.”
Of course, I was like, “Whaddya mean, chilblains? Am I in a Dickens novel?” But the dermatologist explained that long-term exposure to weather that is damp and cold but not freezing can cause chilblains, through a mechanism that is, apparently, not well understood. The dermatologist hadn’t seen them in years, so this was a nice little nostalgia trip for him I guess. The prescribed treatment for them was, basically, “Turn the heat on.” (Being a work-from-home computer person, there was literally no way for me to keep my hands warm by, say, wearing gloves. Typing while wearing gloves is not going to do much for your accuracy, and typing while wearing fingerless gloves is not going to do much for your chilblains.) So now, on those damp and chilly winter days, we keep the heat at like 64 instead of letting it get down into the 50s the we we did when we were young and hot-blooded.
I know. So decadent.
* No, this book is not about everyone’s favorite or least-favorite golfer.
** This epidemic is occurring not long after an earlier, as-yet-unexplained pandemic swept the future world, killing untold numbers of people and resulting in this equally memorable bit that I almost used for the Teaser:
“Explain! Perhaps you’d like to explain it to me, too. I’m not used to having my civil liberties taken away like this. In America, nobody would dream of telling you where you can or can’t go.”
Connie Willis, Doomsday Book
And over thirty million Americans died during the Pandemic as a result of that sort of thinking, he thought.
And here I thought I was reading fiction (again).
*** You might think this was good timing on her part, but it’s probably not.
Teaser Tuesday: “Lock In”
So this week I was reading Lock In, by John Scalzi, a science fiction novel in which a global flu-like pandemic* causes millions of infected individuals to experience locked-in syndrome, where they are conscious but have no control over their bodies.
Continue reading “Teaser Tuesday: “Lock In””So It’s Not Just Me Then
Recently I was reading a profile in The New Yorker* of the science fiction writer Samuel R. Delany, a contemporary of other such SF authors as Arthur C. Clarke, Robert Heinlein, Robert Silverberg, Isaac Asimov, Ursula K. LeGuin, Roger Zelazny, and Octavia Butler (who was, briefly, a student of Delany’s). Despite the fact that back in my younger days I read many, many books by authors from that era, I somehow managed never to read any of Delany’s work, although I’m quite familiar with his name. I’m going to guess that this is because our local library didn’t stock many Delany titles, since in those pre-Internet days of dead-tree books that you had to get from a bookstore, most of my reading material was of the borrowed variety. But I digress. Here’s how that New Yorker article started off:
Continue reading “So It’s Not Just Me Then”Teaser Tuesday: “Perhaps the Stars”
So this week I was reading Perhaps the Stars, the final book of “Terra Ignota”:
Continue reading “Teaser Tuesday: “Perhaps the Stars””Teaser Tuesday: Still “The Will to Battle”
So this week I was still* reading the third book in the “Terra Ignota” series, The Will To Battle, by Ada Palmer:
Continue reading “Teaser Tuesday: Still “The Will to Battle””Teaser Tuesday: “The Will to Battle”
So this week I was reading the third book in the four-book “Terra Ignota” trilogy (just go with it), The Will To Battle, by Ada Palmer:
Continue reading “Teaser Tuesday: “The Will to Battle””Knowing Your Audience
So as I’ve mentioned before, whenever something we’re watching focuses on anything like a newspaper or magazine article, source code, a computer screen, a dating profile, etc., I am always compelled to pause the video and go have a closer look. Normally what’s displayed is word-like filler material, but finally—finally!—I found a show that really, really knows its audience. That show would be Doom Patrol on HBO Max.
Twofer Teaser Tuesday
So in the past few weeks I’ve read a couple of books where I decided to snip things for a Teaser Tuesday, even though, technically, on Teaser Tuesday, you’re supposed to take two sentences from whatever book you’re reading on that very day and use that as your teaser. But hey, you know how it is …
Teaser Tuesday: “The Quantum Thief”
So this week I was reading The Quantum Thief, by Hannu Rajaniemi:
Continue reading “Teaser Tuesday: “The Quantum Thief””




