I tried to share a Facebook post by my brother, Keith Ewing, where he thoughtfully included a link to my book, What is a Hero? (Damson Dragon Diary 1) but Facebook apparently thought I just wanted to share the link. No, THIS is what my brother said, and that I wanted to share:
So, it’s after bedtime for my oldest. I go into his room and his light is still on. I fake indignation as he really is a monster when he’s short of sleep. But his also a READER, which makes me happy. I don’t know any reader that didn’t spend time in childhood reading when he/she should have been sleeping. So, I go in to turn off the light and I see what he is reading. It’s the book that my sister wrote. My son is reading the book that my sister wrote. For fun. Is that cool or what?
That is so beyond cool, that cool does not even begin to touch it. That is downright frosty. I have accomplished many small goals on my way to my eventual bigger goal of becoming a professional author. (I am already a professional writer, but it's not quite the same thing.) When I sold my first story, I was a very happy woman. When my first book was published, that was an amazing time. When a bunch of other skilled writers and artists wrote stories for The Protectors, a world I invented, that really felt like author territory. But none of it made me feel like I had accomplished the goal like this.
My 11 year old nephew is sneaking time to read my novel. Today, I really am an author.
Showing posts with label Paige E. Ewing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paige E. Ewing. Show all posts
Saturday, August 8, 2015
Sunday, February 2, 2014
Planning my invasion of Mars
So, I want to write a story set on Mars. First, I had to essentially, plan how I would colonize Mars. So here are my rambling Mars colonization notes in case anyone is interested.
Let’s say that the Mars One mission was successful for the
first couple of crew missions. I’d say they chose the
Terby Crater on the northern edge of the Hellas Planitia Basin, but tech has moved forward since then. In particular genetic engineering takes a few leaps forward with the new gene mapping, data crunching and bio technology available. So, we have a new strategy, a new mission, with a different sort of goal. Long term
survival of Earth life on Mars.
Yes, that was the same goal of Mars One, but I have a different version of long term. Not just the lifetime of the colonists and their children restricted to little habitats and occasional careful trips outside in pressure suits, but actual life adapted to live on Mars as if it belonged there. Even if they lose touch with Earth forever, after a few years to get established, the people on Mars should be able to continue on their own, and thrive, and their children and grandchildren.
First, cyanobacteria are dropped into the Martian atmosphere, in huge quantities by probes, in an effort to do a partial, long term terraforming, just to convert C02 to O2, in order to improve the oxygen content of the air slowly over time. The existing probes should register as the oxygen level rises incrementally, indicating marginal success, and letting us know to go ahead with the next step.
Cyanobacteria and slightly genetically modified lichens (just to make
them grow faster) would be used for oxygen, and food. Habitats built using 3D printing style technology and little AI driven rock tunnelers and general worker bots, with a sort of hive mind.
They build like an ant colony, only occasionally needing instruction from the
“queen” on earth at mission control. They could all land in a single transport, like a large rover, but they'd be multiple and semi-autonomous, and possibly self-replicating if they can find the materials on Mars to do that, with pre-programmed missions, and the ability to give them new instructions whenever needed, either from Earth, or the colonists themselves.
Maybe a large rock eating machine, or a fair number of them could be created by a combo of 3D printing and parts from earth and worker ants. The machine would crush rock, extract essential minerals, release useful gases, to work on improving warmth and air pressure over time, and provide raw materials for building. That might be a good idea, but I'm not sure how feasible that would be.
The worker ant machines land near the Baetis Mensa in the Ophir Chasma, the northernmost canyon of the Valles Marineras Canyon System, in the lowest spot right near the equator of Mars. The air density in the bottom of the canyon is twice what it is at 0 level, and it actually gets up to a pleasant 70 degrees Farenheit in that part of Mars in the summer, and only down to the equivalent of a cold day in Point Barrow in winter. The bots capture
and concentrate solar radiation and solar power to smelt the hematite ore that's all over that valley into steel, and heat the sulfite
rocks to release water, and use the sulfur and other native materials to make batteries. The worker ants would create a honeycomb of naturally radiation resistant, airtight caves, with one goal being to seek underground water sources and the other to create living and growing spaces for people and plants. More than just the lichen and bacteria could grow inside the shelters, but only the hardiest high altitude edible plants would make sense. A steel reinforced concrete large scale habitat would be built merging into the side of the cliff, and extending out from it with 3D printing tech and local materials.
The moment a
decent supply of underground water, a major goal of the little ant bots, is located, much of the water is split into
O2 and H2 for backup fuel and oxygen.
Most tech is solar powered, with long battery backups, lithium/sulfur
batteries made from local materials can be built as needed in large quantities.
Supply the lithium from Earth to build a few hundred of those suckers, and hope
to find a lithium source by the time you run out. If not, have to have Earth
send more with the next mission. Eventually, you gotta find a local source, or modify the way you store power.
Water extracted is stored in multiple redundant areas, as is
oxygen and hydrogen separately. The worker ants plant, tend and encourage
lichen growth wherever they go. Large sealed tanks of cyanobacteria generate
most of the oxygen. Light is brought in for them through a series of reflectors
and clear panes.
Caves are completely lined and filled with lichen on any
unused surface providing natural oxygen, and food supply. All lighting systems simulate sunlight
for the plants, or reflect sunlight in through clear panels, or both. Entire large sections
of the caves are specifically for sheltered concentrated growth of the oxygen
producing life forms, to produce enough for high altitude adapted humans to
live in the habitats.
Entire Valles Marineras would eventually be seeded by the little bots with edible lichen
and cyanobacteria, which can absorb water in the early mornings when the ice condenses. A thin roof of solar sheeting stretched across small portions of the valley by the human habitat help concentrate the oxygen and atmosphere as well as
collect power. They are designed to stretch, move, flap, and give with the
wind, but not tear, and channel dust and debris to hollow iron and concrete
poles, which transfer the power down to batteries. Dust storms just make the
shelter stronger. Over time, more and more of the valley will get a bit of a blanket roof. Solar sheeting is made from local materials, with only
essential rare minerals supplied from earth (not sure how to make this, challenging, but important and doable, I think.) Little worker ant probes or the
big rock and dirt eater continually search for Martian sources for all minerals
needed.
This is all relatively standard Mars settling kind of strategy. The twist in this is genetically engineered people. There are massive ethical and practical questions that would undoubtedly be part of accomplishing that, but I'm totally going to bypass those (coward, I know,) and assume they got slugged out over the next two decades. First mission in 2033, second in 2035, third in 2037. Six pregnant women and two men on every mission.The people are all
chosen for genetic diversity and high altitude adaptability, as well as the usual expertise and physical health criteria. The children are genetically
modified embyos. By the time the third mission lands, the six first mission
children would be school age.
The genetic fathers of the children were sperm donors from
Peru, Tibet, Nepal, and other high, cold places of earth, the Andes Mountains,
the Kunlun, the Himalayas, the Hindu Kush, the Tian Shan, the Karakoram, the
Pamir, the Saint Elias, and the Caucasus. The men who travel with them are of
the same high altitude, cold and thin air tolerant genetic stock. The transport ships and Mars habitats themselves have atmospheric pressure roughly equivalent to 3 miles high on
earth, like a Peruvian or Tibetan village. The men are there to help when all
the women are very pregnant or nursing tiny infants, and on the assumption that
more children will follow after they land, through natural means and slight
modifications of the embryos conceived so that they match the new Martian
children. At least one gifted genetic engineer would travel with each mission.
The children would be modified as little as possible, but the minor
modifications produce huge differences in physiology. Their lung capacity, already the best
humanity has to offer, would be expanded to four times any earth human’s, and
production of hemoglobin proportionately accelerated to allow maximum absorption
of available oxygen from thin atmospheres, along with extensive capillary
systems, and rapid respiration rates, a high tolerance for carbon dioxide, and
blood pressure that is far below dangerous levels for a human, low enough to balance against a far lower air pressure externally.
Their skin would be the
only obvious external difference; hair follicles modified to produce scales
which provide double the protection from exposure to radiation, help with the low air pressure, plus they would seal in
water to minimize dehydration. A layer of fat just under the skin
insulates them from the cold (about double the thickness of the average Eskimo)
and also makes them less susceptible to radiation. One last important modification would be a nictitating membrane to protect their eyes from the thin, cold
atmosphere, dehydration and dust.
Special community nursery rooms for the babies would have been built on
the outer edges of the colony habitat. The lichen grow in them and oxygen is
supplemented, but the rooms are not pressurized. Mothers must put on
pressurized suits and pass through airlocks to tend to their littles. The
babies have to be born in specially prepared rooms. One or two moms stay with
the kids awake at all times in case the kids need anything, since it would take too long to get to them through the airlock in an emergency. All the moms take turns.
Similarly genetically modified pregnant Peruvian chinchillas travel
with them. Their babies thrive on a diet of lichen and require very little air.
Their flesh provides much needed protein and their skins and fur provide warmly
insulated clothing for the growing children.
The chinchillas and the children alike need only a bit of
extra oxygen to survive comfortably in Martian air at the bottom of a chasma. Large outdoor structures are built that
hold in some of the extra oxygen the lichen and algae provide, concentrating it
on the valley floor, so, after a few years, the children and critters can roam around outside a
bit. They should bring oxygen with them, just in case.
As the bacteria seeded in the atmosphere continues to build
the oxygen levels globally, the children will need less and less supplemental
oxygen and be able to roam further from the habitats safely. They won't be able to climb the walls of the chasm, though, because the air at the top is half the air pressure of what's on the bottom. Fortunately, that chasma is hundreds of miles long, giving them lots of room to expand over time. The earth humans will always be confined to the habitats or
pressurized suits, but their descendants will be adapted to large sections of their new world. With a pressurized transport vehicle, they could travel to the other large depressions on the Mars surface several generations down the road when they feel the need for more space.
Now, a lot of folks, who are into this sort of thing, are probably wondering why I didn't think of heating the polar ice caps, particularly the southern one. Currently, we could heat the southern polar ice caps of Mars
with reflective mirrors and produce a thicker atmosphere that would warm the
planet and increase the water content of the air. However, we cannot currently
simulate the magnetic field of a planet that holds that air in. Heating the
solar ice caps to terraform Mars would only accelerate the loss of the last
remaining free C02 and water on that planet, leaving our new race of people stuck on a dying planet.
When we gain the knowledge needed to give Mars a magnetic
field, or learn some other way to hold the air in all over the planet, the
children of Mars, who were otherwise restricted to just the deep valleys where
the air pressure is twice that of the neutral surface, will be delighted to
have the highlands opened up to them, vastly expanding the area of the planet
that they can comfortably live in, and the earth humans can move into the
valleys and lowlands where the air will be dense and oxygen rich enough for the most high
altitude adaptable of them.
Instead of forcing Mars to adapt to become completely Earth-like, we would adapt the planet a little, and adapt ourselves a little, and meet in the middle.
That's how I would do it anyway,
Paige
Wednesday, January 22, 2014
SFSignal and PaigeEwing.com on a Deserted Island with Drugs
Three wonderful things happened to me today that I am selfishly delighted about:
1. SfSignal and Rick Klaw published my list of graphic novels I'd have to take to a deserted island: http://www.sfsignal.com/archives/2014/01/mind-meld-our-desert-island-graphic-novel-picks-part-1/ (Paul Benjamin and Alan J. Porter also put in their lists. Interestingly enough, my list included one of Paul's books, and Alan's list included my number one pick "Strangers in Paradise" plus "Kingdom Come" which I would have added, but wasn't sure if it was kosher under the rules.)
2. Having my personal author website link on said article provided the kick in the pants needed for me to complete at least a first shot at my personal author website www.paigeewing.com Finally! Next, I will tackle that hideous monstrosity I foisted onto caughtdreamsbooks.com. Soon, it too, will look like a normal web page. I promise.
3. I had my 6 week post-op checkup for my herniated disk surgery, and the doc took me off most of the mind and body affecting chemicals. I am very much delighted to have most of my brain chemistry be provided by mother nature again, not a collection of pill bottles.
It's a good day for team Paige.
1. SfSignal and Rick Klaw published my list of graphic novels I'd have to take to a deserted island: http://www.sfsignal.com/archives/2014/01/mind-meld-our-desert-island-graphic-novel-picks-part-1/ (Paul Benjamin and Alan J. Porter also put in their lists. Interestingly enough, my list included one of Paul's books, and Alan's list included my number one pick "Strangers in Paradise" plus "Kingdom Come" which I would have added, but wasn't sure if it was kosher under the rules.)
2. Having my personal author website link on said article provided the kick in the pants needed for me to complete at least a first shot at my personal author website www.paigeewing.com Finally! Next, I will tackle that hideous monstrosity I foisted onto caughtdreamsbooks.com. Soon, it too, will look like a normal web page. I promise.
3. I had my 6 week post-op checkup for my herniated disk surgery, and the doc took me off most of the mind and body affecting chemicals. I am very much delighted to have most of my brain chemistry be provided by mother nature again, not a collection of pill bottles.
It's a good day for team Paige.
Thursday, September 5, 2013
The Magnificent Madness that was Worldcon 2013
So, I went to this little event called World Science Fiction
Convention, aka Lone Star Con, since it was in San Antonio, Texas this year.
Next year, it’ll be in London and they’ll call it LonCon. I got to not only go, I got invited to speak
on several panels! I shared panel space
with folks like David Brin, had breakfast with Harry Turtledove and Ed Lerner
(during which I tried and failed to remember Larry Niven’s name. D’oh!), tea
with Lois McMaster Bujold, sat at an autograph table next to Campbell Award
nominee Max Gladstone. This was my first
Worldcon. It was a heck of a way to start, I gotta say.
You’ll have to forgive that this is going to be a really
long, rambling, seemingly pointless post. My main goal is to remember as much
of the event as possible, and to get all this madness out of my brain so I can
sleep again. I developed such a tremendous case of emotional and brain overload
over the course of the 5 day con that I had a curious block about remembering
anyone’s name, even my own once or twice. I called old friends by the wrong
name, forgot famous authors that I’ve had engraved in my brain since childhood,
and couldn’t remember the name of the chimp who learned sign language. (Washoe,
btw.)
On the plus side, I brought a whole bunch of copies of “TheProtectors” with me to the con, and none home. I gave a couple to
contributors who I had missed, and a couple to folks who expressed interest in
writing for the next anthology, and the rest sold. Woo hoo! I only sold a
couple copies of Damson Dragon, though. I blame Denis Loubet for making such an awesome
cover for “The Protectors” that no one could resist them.
I saw Denis at the con, for about 2 seconds. Lots of folks I
knew there I saw just long enough for zoom-by huggings, and never saw again.
Some folks I know were there, and I never even laid eyes on them. The place was
massively spread out. According to a pedometer app, I walked well over 20 miles
in the 5 days of the con. I did manage to spend a little time with other
Protectors contributors: Marshall Maresca,
Beth Loubet, Alan J. Porter, Paul Benjamin,
K.G. Jewell, and Rick Klaw, who
got a quick hug, but I barely saw after that. His new anthology, “RayGuns Over Texas” got a very warm reception, I hear, but I was always on the
wrong end of the con when the readings and such were happening.
The river walk between the hotel and the convention center
was lovely, although blocked for a mariachi band filming. There was actually 2
conventions happening this weekend in the same building. The other was the
People in Hispaniola festival, where my friend Jericho did some crowd yoga
presentations while we were geeking out over sci fi.
First thing I saw when I walked in the convention hall front
door on Thurs afternoon was GeorgeR.R. Martin chit-chatting with some fans in the lobby. Seemed like a pretty
good launching point. I found a comfy spot and went through the program to
circle stuff I wanted to go to, most of which I didn’t make it to, ironically
enough.
My first panel was an amusing one. I made the mistake of
mentioning in my panel survey that I had more costumes than clothes in my
closet and ended up on three different costume panels, this one being the most
wildly inappropriate. “Organizing Your
Costume Space” Those who know me realize that this is like putting Pig Pen on a
panel about daily hygiene. I managed to convince Pierreand Sandy Pettinger to join this panel, along with the other two. Susan Di Guardiola and David Weingart
did admirably, with Susan as the shining example of what to do, and me as the
horrible warning of what NOT to do.
A chat in the bar with Marshall Maresca and his brilliant
son Nicholas was a highlight of the evening.
On Friday, I got a late start, and did a lot of wandering,
trying to find the right building, much less the right room, but eventually,
found my way to the kaffeeklatsch with ChuckWendig. Brilliant writer, Campbell nominee, and very pleasant fellow. He
was kind enough to let me join, even though my misguided wandering had me
sliding in way late. His Terrible Minds blog is well worth following, and I’ve
been following it for years. There was a challenge to come up with profane new
words, but with entries of the likes of “Cuntsnickers” I felt a bit shy about
even putting a hat in the ring.
I did a quick turn around the dealer’s room, and Book Universe and LarrySmith Bookseller both put “The Protectors” and the first DamsonDragon novel out on the table. I picked up David Brin’s “Existence” while I
was there.
Over the course of 5 days, with me trying VERY HARD not to buy
books, I came home with:
“Existence” by David Brin
“Fleet of Worlds” by Larry Niven and Edward M. Lerner
“Goblinopolis” by Robert G. Ferrell ( Who has been a friend for more than a decade and I didn’t even know he’d written a book, until I stumbled on his booth in the back of the dealer’s room.)
“A Soldier’s Duty” by Jean Johnson
“GreatShadow” by James Maxey
“The Dirty Streets of Heaven” by Tad Williams
“Fleet of Worlds” by Larry Niven and Edward M. Lerner
“Goblinopolis” by Robert G. Ferrell ( Who has been a friend for more than a decade and I didn’t even know he’d written a book, until I stumbled on his booth in the back of the dealer’s room.)
“A Soldier’s Duty” by Jean Johnson
“GreatShadow” by James Maxey
“The Dirty Streets of Heaven” by Tad Williams
My Joe griped profusely, even with this small list of
purchases, as he had volunteered to carry them for me across much of the vast
distances of the con.
My late start Friday was largely due to a distinct lack of
sleep Thursday night, and knowing I’d be up until all hours for the next 2
days, I wussed out on the afternoon and grabbed a nap, emerging in time to make
it to my next panel: DC’s New 52: Brilliance or Disastrous? I was the token
woman on the panel. I love comics and superheroes, but being on a panel with Jess Nevins, Tom Galloway, and Weldon Adams
put me at a bit of a disadvantage. I’m not sure it mattered. I know a lot about
marketing, and we mainly discussed what a marketing disaster the New 52 had
been. The only genuinely positive comment came from me, “I love Batwoman.” And
that was pretty much responded to with, “Yeah, but it was awesome before the
New 52.” I have to add that today, (less
than a week later) I have felt immense amounts of sadness and frustration with
DC, as they put a big splotch of mud on that one bright spot. This post could
have been written by me, it expresses my feelings so exactly: http://virginiagentlenerd.tumblr.com/post/60363186701/batwoman-dc-me
To hear one of the panelists basically say that right now,
all the creators at DC would love to work somewhere else, really put things in
perspective. Who doesn’t dream about working at DC or Marvel when they’re a
kid? How bad does it have to be to chase people with those dreams, and
impressively high paychecks away?
And let’s not talk about what they’ve done to Wonder Woman, and not done. I want my damn Wonder Woman movie, and/or a decent TV series.
The next panel was the Writing Erotica panel, which was
remarkably civilized, sensible, and even useful, I think, to folks who want to
get published in that field. I’ve been on a lot of Erotica panels before, and
they tend to degenerate rapidly into silliness, so this was a refreshing
change. The other panelists were MaryAnne Mohanraj, Jean Johnson, and
one other lady whose name I have forgotten who took Catharine Asaro’s place at the last
minute.
I made the rounds of the parties after that, starting at the
Space Squid party, so I could say hi and
distribute hugs to Matthew Bey and David Chang. I ran into Elle Van Hensbergen
at some other point in the Worldcon madness, but I couldn’t tell you when. Might
have been at the Space Squid party. NickyDraden was there, too, but pretty much I just said hi. I didn’t get a
chance to actually talk to her. I’ve met all of these folks, and half the
Protectors contributors, from my critique group, the Slug Tribe, which has
churned out amazing authors like Jay Lake for over 20 years.
One interesting person I chatted with for a while was
Anthony Tollin, a DC legend. Fascinating source of genre history. Very much
enjoyed the chat, and swung by his booth at the dealer’s room a day or two
later, to peek at his Shadow and Doc Savage books and memorabilia. He was
wearing an outstandingly cool Capt America shirt which I complimented him on,
and he said I could get one at Dragon’s Lair. I will have to see if they still
have any in stock.
Saturday morning started with me sitting at an autograph
table. Beside me sat Max Gladstone, very nice person. He didn’t have a copy of his book with him, or
I would have come home with one more book. I’ll have to find it on Amazon. I
sold a copy or two of my books, and actually gave out an autograph or two, but
mostly Max and I chatted. Also, Connie Willis
swung by and spent some time talking to us both. She gave a wonderfully sweet
pep talk on being where we were, but with already famous authors sitting beside
her with long lines of people waiting for a signature. She even mentioned that
a few years back, she’d seen George R.R. Martin being the one with no one
waiting while David Brin had a line out the door. I have to say that is one
very big-hearted lady to take the time to do that for a couple of brand new
writers.
The folks from Larry Smith Bookseller swung by looking for Patrice Sarath to sign a few of her
books, and I sent her their way when she came by to chat.
The next panel I was on was made for photo ops. Steven Gould, Wesley Chu and Paul Benjamin
all volunteered to try to reproduce some of the insane poses that they put
women in on the covers of comics and fantasy novels. We reproduced some of the
ones that Jim C. Hines
put in his blog. I got volunteered to help pose folks, but I mostly hauled
chairs around and kept Wesley Chu from falling while attempting some of the
crazier poses. He had a lot of guts, and even attempted one flying, balanced on
the knuckle insane one after everybody left that I was afraid he might break
his neck trying. I mistook him for the dude who played the sexy stunt man in
The Guild, probably because he said he’d done some stunt work, but he said it
wasn’t him. Mary Robinette Kowal
turned the tables a bit and imitated a nutty pose that some artist put a man in
on the cover of a spy novel.
Here’s a few of the gems from that panel. The right one is from
Mr. Eric Ray at http://imgur.com/tLLMOv9:
There was an actual back doctor in attendance, just in case
we injured ourselves, I think.
And then, Sunday morning, I had to elucidate the nature
of BigData, Big Brother and such. I’ve already given a pretty good summary of the
kind of things we discussed on my previous post. It was a really good,
thoughtful panel. Ran into friends, Jim Gould (aka Dammit Jim) and Jeff
Johanigman from http://www.scareforacure.org/.
Oh, for anyone reading this who saw the panel, I gave the website http://www.kaggle.com/ as a good source of
big data related stuff and things. I was really trying to think of http://www.kdnuggets.com/ but my lack of
memory for names messed with me just then. They’re both good, but KDNuggets really
is a gold mine.
I didn’t have much time to chat with folks after the panel. I
ran straight to “Body Shaping and Support” the one costume panel that I had
real stuff to contribute to. Me and the Pettingers talked corsets, hoops,
wings, extra limbs, missing limbs, stilts, arm extensions, heads from helmets,
and the lightweight structural joy that is chicken wire. We covered bent leg
stilts for werewolves and demons, panniers for French ladies, giant heads and
hats with lighted Christmas trees made on bicycle helmets, giant mutant snakes
and spiders, and harps that come to life. I saw a couple tweets later from the
handle @BorgFest related to our panel, so it seemed to go over well:
@BorgFest: @PaigeEwing & Pettingers answer best question
asked @LoneStarCon: how do you attach limbs you weren't born with?
@BorgFest: @PaigeEwing @LoneStarCon And the best follow-up
question: how to make one of your limbs disappear? #cyborg #costuming
If you love this sort of thing and live in the Austin, TX
area, please, show up at Scare for aCure. They will scratch your freaky costume itch between cons. Oh, and
tickets for this year are on sale. Get them before they sell out. They always
do.
Sunday was a crazy busy day for me. I had four panels, and
then the Hugos.
My third panel was an important one, “Who’s Working on Gay
Issues and Themes in SF/F?” That was the one panel I would not have missed for
anything. We all agreed that Doctor Who is getting it right. Some folks from
the audience pointed out that some authors have been doing it right for a long
time, and gave Marion Zimmer Bradley’s Darkover novels and Mercedes Lackey’s
Vanyel stories (The Last Herald-Mage Trilogy) as excellent examples. Ursula Le
Guin didn’t get mentioned, but she should have. Lots of good historical
examples, and some great current examples were sitting on the panel with me. My
Iron Angel in the “The Protectors” books is a gender queer hero and Remedy is
her bi partner. Matthew Johnson’s “Fall From Earth.” PaulJ Salamoff’s “Discord” has a hero made of 6 people, one a lesbian woman
very gently handled. Lee Martindale is
famous for off-beat heroines that don’t fit any standard mold. Scot Bobo and Julia Rios rounded things out. I believe
Julia, who does the Outer AlliancePodcast intends to broadcast the panel some time soon. I’ll keep an eye out
and see if I can update this post with a link when it goes on line.
My fourth panel was “First Contact Without a Universal
Translator.” I was really looking forward to a good discussion, but it didn’t
go very well. The panel drifted off topic a fair amount. We did get in a little
talk about chimps and gorillas who have learned sign language, and IQ tests
that are species skewed. I didn’t get a chance to mention it, but had heard a
lady was doing some experiments with dolphins where she blindfolded herself,
and sort of forced the dolphins to talk to her. It was the only one I know of where
we were trying to get the higher order intelligence animals to communicate with
us and understand them, rather than simply forcing them to learn how to
understand what we tell them to do. One of the people in the audience contacted
me later on email, and said he really enjoyed what I had to say, so I guess it
wasn’t a complete waste. My one valid point, aside from the fact that it’s not
a black box problem, we have alien intelligences here on earth we should be
practicing on, was that if aliens manage to cross interstellar space, having
conquered the limits of Einsteinian physics, and the challenges of living in
space, and probably visited other worlds, I would hope that they are up to the
challenge of communicating with us.
Right after the con, I saw this, and realized how far we are
from ever truly communicating with any alien species, when wecan’t even understand our own genius children. The state of cognitive
psychology is so primitive that we can’t tell the difference between a severely
damaged mind and an extraordinarily gifted one. If you watch the kid’s Ted
Talk, he demonstrates a form of mathematics that doesn’t use numbers. One of
the basic tenets the panel tried to establish was that math and numbers would
be a common element between us and alien species. I think the kid pretty much
blew that theory out of the water.
After that, I zipped to the hotel room and put on a dress and
makeup for the Hugos. Paul Cornell
hosted and he was brilliant, I have to say. I have never seen an award show
that I enjoyed so much, and it was largely due to his marvelous humor. I won’t
go into whowon what Hugo, you can find that elsewhere on line. My friend, KatherineEliska Kimbriel, was the only familiar face I could find in the crowd and
we sat together to watch. She was particularly delighted to see Mur Lafferty
win the Campbell and Pat Cadigan get a Hugo. Stina Leicht is a friendly
acquaintance of some years, but I had sort of bonded a bit with Max Gladstone
at the signing table, and was rooting for him a bit. He’s got another year of
eligibility, though, so maybe he’ll get it next year. I was disappointed that
Stephen Moffat of Doctor Who didn’t win, although he got three nominations,
delighted that Avengers won, and also that John Scalzi won best novel. “Red
Shirts” was arguably the best book I read all year. I devoured it in a single
day, up until 3 AM to read all the codas.
After the Hugos, I intended to go to more parties, but
instead I randomly sat down with a bored looking gentleman in a cowboy hat. He
turned out to be a truck driver, one of Larry Smith Bookseller’s friends and
occasional employees, and a really fun guy to chat with. He’s a long time sci
fi geek from a tiny little country town. Another gentleman joined us after a
while, and I’m sorry to say, I don’t remember either one of their names. We
chatted until the wee hours about everything geeky under the sun. I had a grand
time until my Joe came to pick me up so I wouldn’t have to hike a quarter mile
in heels.
Monday came with three more panels for my melted brain and
exhausted, sore body to get through. I think they put me on so many panels to
fill in spots for famous folks who didn’t want to be on too many panels. Mark Finn, I believe, had
something to do with getting an unknown writer like me on Worldcon panels to
begin with. He’s a great guy. He had a moment of panic somewhere in the midst
of the con, when he thought he’d lost his wallet, and I was about to offer to
keep him fed until con end, and give him a ride home. He’s good people.
Fortunately, it was a false alarm.
We were on the panel together on Comic Book movies along
with Jayme Lynn Blaschke, Lawrence Person, and Weldon Adams.
I was once again, woefully out-geeked, but I could hold my own when it came to
movies. I was rather sad that I had forgotten my fave superhero movie of all
time “Mystery Men” until someone else, Jayme, I think, mentioned it as one of
his faves. I think Mystery Men was a big influence on me when creating the
Protectors universe. Weldon brought up “Popeye,” and we all kind of thought
that was a bit out of left field, but valid.
My penultimate panel was on Grimm fairy tales in films and
TV. I was moderating that puppy, and it was a really lively and interesting
discussion, with a scholar of the original tales from Sweden I think, CarolinaGomez Langerloff, on my left, and JeanJohnson and Shanna Swendson on
my right. I adore Shanna Swendson’s
Enchanted Inc. books, btw. If you love your fairy tale magic mixed liberally with
gritty realism to make something supremely fun and funny, her books rock. The
panel was great! I had something happen afterward I’ve never had happen before,
someone thanked me for doing a good job of moderating. Usually, folks thank
you, or ask questions about the subject. First time I got gratitude for being a
referee.
Next, and thank all that is holy, final panel of the con was
Costuming and Social Media. We had a small audience and a small panel, so I
went around the room and asked folks what they wanted to get out of the panel,
and let that be the guide on what we talked about. It went reasonably well
considering the level of tired in the room.
I skipped the closing ceremonies. Just too darn worn out.
Then, I ran into Lee Martindale having a smoke outside as I
was leaving, and she was very sweet to me, and made the mistake of saying, “I’d
work with you anytime.” I took her up on it, got her contact info, and she
asked me to send her something for her next anthology, and I’ll ping her for a
story for the next Protectors anthology. Mark Finn is in for the next
Protectors universe anthology, as well. Most of my current cadre of folks are
up for a second story, and Paul J. Salamoff expressed interest, along with
three or four other comic or sf/f writers. I’ve already gotten a yes from
Matthew Sturges, and Will Conrad is in for some art. Paul Benjamin is talking
to an artist about doing his Protectors story, Paragon, as a graphic novel.
I sure would love to see D Dragon or Iron Angel and Remedy
get their own comic.
It looks like it’s time. If this mad journey has done one
thing for me, it’s lit a fire under my butt. The next thing I’m going to write
is a Damson Dragon chapter, and after that, a website, and a letter to several
folks asking for stories, and a query to a publisher, and ... It’s time to get
this train moving again.
I feel inspired. I needed this.
Labels:
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science fiction,
space,
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urbanfantasy
Sunday, October 28, 2012
Wonder Woman and Shaking Hands with the Hulk
Amazing weekend. Some stuff I just have to write about while
it’s fresh in my brain. I didn’t get a chance to blog about the deeply cool
stuff that happened at Fencon because the day job ate my life for a while.
Maybe I’ll still do a retroactive post on it later. And I know, I’m behind on
Damson Dragon posts, but it’s for a very good reason, Austin Comic Con was this
weekend!
It all started last week when I went on a day job business
trip to Las Vegas. Walking from the Luxor where I was staying, to the Mandalay Bay,
where the convention was, involved walking through a shopping mall. Each day, I
passed a window dummy wearing a nice Wonder Woman costume. I have wanted a
Wonder Woman costume since I was 10. But I’ve tried to find one many times
before. I’m no petite size 5. They never carry those things big enough to cover
my .. um .. assets. So, I sighed and
kept walking. Finally, on the last day, I went in and gave it a shot. Not only
did they have the costume in my size, it was on sale. Score!
A little white electrical tape on some old red gogo boots
buried in the back of my closet and a new dark brown wig, et voila! I went to
Comic Con as Wonder Woman! I ran into dear friend Jarrett Crippen, the “Who Wants
to Be a Superhero” winner, creator of “The Protectors” universe hero TakeDown,
and director of my favorite charity, Scare for a Cure. Jarrett was wearing a
pink bow tie, since we all know that bowties are cool, and doing his thing as
Wizard World MC and costume contest organizer. He made an appearance the next
day in his Defuser spandex and armor, but I missed the chance to grab a pic
unfortunately. You’ll have to settle for his MC suit.
If you look closely at what Jarrett’s holding, you’ll see
that he, too, is a massive geek, as if that weren’t already common knowledge.
You see, there were some folks from this obscure TV show called Star Trek The
Next Generation. But you wouldn’t want to hear about that entire cast being all
in one building at the same time for the first time since the series ended. Or,
maybe you would, but while I got to see them all, I was at a booth most of the
con, so seeing them from a distance was about all I got to do. Will Wheaton
wandered the floor for a bit, and I hoped he might swing by, but alas, it was
not to be. Jarrett, on the other hand, since he does some work for Wizard World
on the weekends, when he’s not keeping Austin safe from criminals, actually
knows some of the folks from TNG. He’s got a pic and post on his facebook of
the back of Patrick Stewart and John De Lancie’s heads as they drove him in a
golf cart to his interview at a con, and talking about how surreal that felt.
I shared the booth of my friends and fellow “The Protectors”
writers, Alan J. Porter (@alanjporter) and
Rick Klaw
(@rickklaw). Alan did especially well with his Bond,
Star
Trek, and Beatles
books as well as being a big hit with the kids with his Cars
comics. Tony Stark seemed particularly fascinated by the Bond books. He
came by twice. Maybe he and Bond are friends.
Wonder Paige also got to hang a bit with my favorite Doctor.
“The Protectors”
sold quite well. It helped that, in addition to me, Alan & Rick, Jarrett,
Dave Justus, and Zach Spivey were all there to sign them. So, anyone who got a
book at the show, could collect autographs from about half the contributors all
at once.
I chatted with Matthew Sturges
(@matt_sturges), Mark Finn
(@FinnsWake), and Will Conrad
(@willconrad). They’re all in for contributing to “The Protectors” upcoming
sequel, “The All-American Alliance.” The first Protectors universe book is barely out there, and I’m
already gearing up for the next one. Loving this shared universe.
I did a quick interview with Eric Stewart, a Scare for a
Cure friend, who did a series of podcast interviews from the Con floor. I don’t
have the link for it, yet, but will post it as soon as I do.
I took a ton of pictures, like you do at Comic Con, of very
cool costumes mainly.
The Sesame Street martians were particularly awesome. Stayed in character all day. If asked for a picture, they'd say, "Yup, yup, yup." If handed something, they'd eat it.
But one of the most enjoyable moments, I didn’t get a picture of.
Lou Ferigno is a friend of Jarrett’s, and he says a lot of nice things about
him. So, when Lou’s autograph line was short, I went up and chatted with him a
bit:
“Hi, I’m a friend of Jarrett Crippen’s.”
“What?” Lots of background noise at a con.
I leaned in close enough to whisper in his ear and said very
clearly. “Jarrett Crippen is a friend of mine.”
“Oh, Jarrett, yeah. He’s a great guy.” Shakes my hand. He’s
got great hands, very warm and strong, and looks absolutely amazing for a guy
his age, or any age for that matter.
“Jarrett says a lot of nice things about you, so I just wanted to
say hello.”
“Nice to meet you,” still holding my hand. He looks at the
Wonder Woman get up. “Aren’t you cold?”
“No, not at all. This wig is really warm.”
He nods knowingly. “I know.”
I grin. “You would know, wouldn’t you?”
He chuckles and shakes my hand again as more folks line up
for his autograph. “It was great meeting you. Tell Jarrett I said, Hi.”
Short conversation with a very nice man.
Austin Comic Con isn’t the massive madhouse of Comic Con in San
Diego. I walked up and chit chatted with my childhood hero, Lindsay Wagner for about 10 minutes last year. It’s the same awesome guests, costumes, comics, creators and kitsch,
without the insane crowds. It’s a little slice of geek nirvana. I had a blast. See ya there next year!
Paige
Added this as a comment, but the images don't show up that way, so:
Jarrett came back on Sunday in his full superhero spandex. He's been working out a bunch and looked fabulous. I didn't get any pics, but other folks did. In this one, he's holding up his two superhero in training grandbabies. Yup, you heard that right. The Defuser, and creator of TakeDown, is a grandfather. I still wouldn't suggest taking him on in a fight, though:
Added this as a comment, but the images don't show up that way, so:
Jarrett came back on Sunday in his full superhero spandex. He's been working out a bunch and looked fabulous. I didn't get any pics, but other folks did. In this one, he's holding up his two superhero in training grandbabies. Yup, you heard that right. The Defuser, and creator of TakeDown, is a grandfather. I still wouldn't suggest taking him on in a fight, though:
While he was at Comic Con, The Defuser was forced to apprehend a dangerous criminal. It seems that Will Conrad was a supervillain in disguise. Who knew?
Labels:
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Mark Finn,
Matthew Sturges,
Paige E. Ewing,
Protectors,
Rick Klaw,
superhero,
The Defuser,
Will Conrad
Saturday, September 15, 2012
Fencon Dallas Sept 21-23
I'm going to Dallas next week to talk comics, King Arthur and Doctor Who on some panels and hang out with a lot of cool geeks.
If you're in the area, come check it out. Much fun will be had, and I will bring books!
My Fencon schedule:
___________________________
Friday 6:00 PM - 7:00 PM Red Oak
Talkin' About My Regeneration (M)
Description: Time Lords originally had twelve lives. Now maybe it's 401. What's changed? What can kill a Time Lord?
Panelists:
B. Hale , A. Porter , K. Sullivan , S. B. Taylor , P. Roberts *
___________________________
Friday 8:00 PM - 9:00 PM Pecan
Reading
___________________________
Saturday 10:00 AM - 11:00 AM Red Oak
Return of Son of Super-Hero Summer
Description: Just like 2011, this summer has seen a flood of great superhero movies at the box office! How do you think it went, and do you think the movies are getting better or worse?
Panelists:
J. Anealio , A. de Orive , C. Medellin , P. Roberts , R. Rogers , A. Porter *
___________________________
Saturday 7:00 PM - 8:00 PM Live Oak
There and Back Again (Again) (M)
Description: "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey" will be out within a couple months, and expectations are high. Panelists discuss casting, the breaking of the story into multiple movies, the soundtrack, the special effects, and other related topics.
Panelists:
T. Eber , M. Fletcher , F. Summers , P. Roberts *
___________________________
Saturday 8:00 PM - 9:00 PM Live Oak
50 Years of Web-Spinning & Smashing
Description: Come celebrate the birthdays of Spider-Man and The Incredible Hulk, two of the greatest radiation-affected heroes of all time.
Panelists:
Ma. Finn , P. Roberts , C. Sledge , S. Patrick *
___________________________
Sunday 10:30 AM - 11:00 AM Gallery
Autographs
Description:
Panelists:
A. Porter , P. Roberts , R. Rogers
___________________________
Sunday 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM Addison Lecture Hall
King Arthur in the 21st Century (M)
Description: Despite the fact that strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government, the story of King Arthur has been told and retold over the centuries. Each time it gets updated, it gets a new take and a whole new audience.
Panelists:
P. David , A. Porter , G. Warfield , P. Roberts *
___________________________
Sunday 3:00 PM - 4:00 PM Elm
It's... (Monty Python's Flying Panel) (M)
Description: Enjoy some Owl Stretching Time as we discuss the greatest sketch comedy show ever. Monty Python changed the face of comedy forever, and for some reason science fiction fans still love it today. We want to know why.
Panelists:
D. Rainbolt , S. B. Taylor , P. Roberts *
Saturday, August 11, 2012
Protectors Update
A quickie update on life in the Protectors universe. The first Damson Dragon Diary novel, "What is a Hero?" is out as a print book and Kindle e-book . 50 Advanced Reader Copies of "The Protectors," the anthology of superhero stories all set in the same world as Damson Dragon, have been printed, and most of them distributed to the contributors and to folks interested in writing us a review. If you have a review blog or website and would like to review "The Protectors" let me know, and I'll send you a digital copy, or mail you one of the few ARCs left.
Several folks have expressed interest in writing for a second book in the shared Protectors world. So, it looks like this thing is going to take off into a shared world series. "The Alliance" is the next book planned.
I'm sorry I've been so pokey slow with Damson Dragon updates. I promise there's a lot more to come, but getting the new books ready has been eating up most of my writing time.
On the plus side, I will be a panel participant at Fencon next month in Dallas. Guest of Honor is the amazing CJ Cherryh!! If you're in the area, don't miss it! Fingers crossed. I'm hoping to have copies of both "What is a Hero?" and "The Protectors" to sign and read and generally show off.
And on the ridiculously awesome side, I just got some preliminary roughs of cover art for "The Protectors." Denis Loubet seriously rocks the art. He's been doing covers for video and tabletop games for a lot of years. His cover of Ultima Ascension is stunning.
Here's some of the thumbnail roughs he sent me.

That's Tesla Girl on the left, one of my characters, and Avenger Girl on the right, Marshall Maresca's character. Avenger Girl is a protege of Liberty, also Marshall's creation, who will be familiar to D Dragon readers.
I think I know which one I like best. What do you guys think? Which one would you pick?
Paige
Several folks have expressed interest in writing for a second book in the shared Protectors world. So, it looks like this thing is going to take off into a shared world series. "The Alliance" is the next book planned.
I'm sorry I've been so pokey slow with Damson Dragon updates. I promise there's a lot more to come, but getting the new books ready has been eating up most of my writing time.
On the plus side, I will be a panel participant at Fencon next month in Dallas. Guest of Honor is the amazing CJ Cherryh!! If you're in the area, don't miss it! Fingers crossed. I'm hoping to have copies of both "What is a Hero?" and "The Protectors" to sign and read and generally show off.
And on the ridiculously awesome side, I just got some preliminary roughs of cover art for "The Protectors." Denis Loubet seriously rocks the art. He's been doing covers for video and tabletop games for a lot of years. His cover of Ultima Ascension is stunning.
Here's some of the thumbnail roughs he sent me.


That's Tesla Girl on the left, one of my characters, and Avenger Girl on the right, Marshall Maresca's character. Avenger Girl is a protege of Liberty, also Marshall's creation, who will be familiar to D Dragon readers.
I think I know which one I like best. What do you guys think? Which one would you pick?
Paige
Sunday, June 17, 2012
Weekend
Watched 3 movies in a row Saturday, and snuggled a whole lot with my baby. We were overdue. I started my new job Monday, and got on a plane to California for a Hadoop conference the next day. Just got back Friday night midnight-ish. My brain was darn near exploding from all the big data technology and market information I crammed into it over that week.
I did get a few hours to enjoy the beach and a nice seaside seafood dinner, thanks to having a ridiculously awesome boss.
So, watched 3 movies in a single day, something I've never done before.
Movies:
Prometheus - Scary! A lot like the original Alien. But, I have to agree with all the murky plot comments. It made very little sense, but I was too busy squeezing Joe's arm in time honored date at a scary movie fashion to care.
Dark Shadows - Fun romp in time honored Johnny Depp, Tim Burton fashion - dark, weird, twisted and kind of cool. Enjoyed it, but wouldn't rush back to see it again.
Battleship - Wow. I had heard this was not great. Who the heck was rating this thing? This movie was brilliant! It reminded me a lot of Independence Day. It had a lot of that awesome ID4 style action, humor, and kick the bad guys in the teeth coolness. It also, surprisingly, had intriguing aliens who were not either space squids or humans in alien suits, nor were they cardboard cutout evil. They didn't do unnecessary harm or violence, only what was necessary to win military objectives, and they only fired when first fired upon. I found them reasonably okay for suspension of disbelief, although I found their ships a bit implausible.
I finished a couple of Damson Dragon posts today, that I started while driving back from North Carolina, and worked on while flying to California. I'm not sure how I'm going to keep up with D Dragon posts now that I'm not flying on a regular basis. It's my best writing time.
Watching a marathon session of Drop Dead Diva, now while doing some housework. Never saw this show when it was on the air. Really good television. Glad I got to watch it.
Tuesday, January 3, 2012
New Year, New Me
I've been having a lot of fun playing the part of my superhero character, Damson Dragon on Twitter, but I realize that hiding behind my character isn't really the best way to go about things.
I'm trying to enhance my on line presence a bit in the new year. I'll be putting up a new web page and such soon.
In the meantime, one of the things I haven't been able to share has been the stories behind the stories. I'll put those here, in Paige's Pages from now on.
You may not know this, but The Damson Dragon Diary is a fun mix of reality and fantasy. Many of the events in the diary are inspired by real events in my life in Austin. There really was a grass fire, an 18 wheeler wreck, a bank that keeps their doors locked during the day because they were robbed, a 16 mile wide wildfire in Bastrop, a cat like Cam, a dog like Peanut, and more.
Many of the people in the diary are also real people that I know, included with their permission, or characters that others have created. There really is a Lord Vile, and a Madspark, actual fun friends of mine who live in Austin.
My friend Jarrett Crippen has inspired no less than three characters, Det Long, Officer Flynn, and TakeDown, who is his own superhero invention. You may know him as The Defuser from Stan Lee's Who Wants to Be a Superhero.
Lord Vile, or Alex Gray in his non super-villain personna, wrote a story for the Protectors anthology, and has a world wide following. Madspark, my favorite real life mad scientist, although he prefers the PC term, rogue technologist, might show up in the next Protectors anthology.
Austin is the only place I know where that many fascinating personalities mix. How many towns can boast their own real life superhero, supervillain and mad scientist?
Add to that the talents of many of my fantasy and sci fi writer friends from the Slug tribe and the Austin Comic Creators group, and I had an amazing talent pool to pull from for the Protectors anthology. A few semi-famous visitors to Austin for the Armadillocon writer convention also pitched in. The anthology is nearing completion. I'll keep you guys posted on it's status as it goes along.
In the meantime, pay no attention to me. I'm just the woman behind the curtain.
Keep enjoying the Damson Dragon Diary, and I'll keep writing it.
Paige E. Ewing
I'm trying to enhance my on line presence a bit in the new year. I'll be putting up a new web page and such soon.
In the meantime, one of the things I haven't been able to share has been the stories behind the stories. I'll put those here, in Paige's Pages from now on.
You may not know this, but The Damson Dragon Diary is a fun mix of reality and fantasy. Many of the events in the diary are inspired by real events in my life in Austin. There really was a grass fire, an 18 wheeler wreck, a bank that keeps their doors locked during the day because they were robbed, a 16 mile wide wildfire in Bastrop, a cat like Cam, a dog like Peanut, and more.
Many of the people in the diary are also real people that I know, included with their permission, or characters that others have created. There really is a Lord Vile, and a Madspark, actual fun friends of mine who live in Austin.
My friend Jarrett Crippen has inspired no less than three characters, Det Long, Officer Flynn, and TakeDown, who is his own superhero invention. You may know him as The Defuser from Stan Lee's Who Wants to Be a Superhero.
Lord Vile, or Alex Gray in his non super-villain personna, wrote a story for the Protectors anthology, and has a world wide following. Madspark, my favorite real life mad scientist, although he prefers the PC term, rogue technologist, might show up in the next Protectors anthology.
Austin is the only place I know where that many fascinating personalities mix. How many towns can boast their own real life superhero, supervillain and mad scientist?
Add to that the talents of many of my fantasy and sci fi writer friends from the Slug tribe and the Austin Comic Creators group, and I had an amazing talent pool to pull from for the Protectors anthology. A few semi-famous visitors to Austin for the Armadillocon writer convention also pitched in. The anthology is nearing completion. I'll keep you guys posted on it's status as it goes along.
In the meantime, pay no attention to me. I'm just the woman behind the curtain.
Keep enjoying the Damson Dragon Diary, and I'll keep writing it.
Paige E. Ewing
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