Open thread

Tangled Bank #78 is available with the best science from around the intertubes.  Check it out if you’re a science geek like me… and even if you’re not.

For the time being, I’ve removed all references and links to Fark.  That includes the bookmark link shown at the bottom of posts.  Why?  Because Fark has a legal policy written by a Nazi.  That is, their policy states they own anything posted to their site and that they immediately own all control of anything posted to their site once it’s been posted.  As if!  Until that illegal blunder is fixed (the policy is invalid under copyright law, but still…), I won’t link to or enable use of Fark from this site.  So there.

How much science fiction reading have you done?  And how long ago did you start?  I read Greg Bear’s Eon back in 1991 shortly after it was published.  Here it is 2007 and I can still say it’s one of the best science fiction books I’ve ever read.  What a marvelous concept, what an intriguing story, and what a phenomenal world of tomorrow.  And although there are currently no plans to turn it into a movie, you can see a movie trailer for it here.  It’s definitely worth a look.  The trailer was put together as part of a computer graphics competition; that’s why you can see it yet not look forward to an actual film.  But there’s always hope…  How I still remember with abrupt clarity The Stone, The Death, The Way (especially The Way!), Thistledown, Axis City, and a great many other major pieces of the story.  I think I need to read that book again.

Samhain

Samhain, also called Samhuinn, means “end of the warm season.”  It also represents the inspiration for my second book—or second and third books, as I’m growing increasingly convinced it will take me two novels to tell the full story of Ayimat Caddi, the timeless and omnipotent Still Watcher who is a true god amongst ignorant heathen, and Sergejs Girhipovs, the immortal human who represents the closest nature has ever come to creating a real vampire, something quite unlike Dracula or any other manifestation of the word yet equally identifiable with the premise inherent in all of them.

Samhain began on November 1.  It marked the combined celebration of the Celtic New Year’s Day and Feast of the Dead.  As holidays went, Samhain was equally respected and feared, for it was the only time of the year when the veil between corporeal reality and the Otherworld could most easily be penetrated.  Like cotton gauze stretched too thin, the barrier separating these two very different realities became permeable at the end of the warm season.

The Celts used the festival of fire to celebrate the event.  That pagan party eventually was stolen by the Christians and relabeled All Soul’s Eve.  As luck would have it, the Christians weren’t able to maintain control of yet another holiday wrongfully taken from others, so it became Hallowe’en, a secular holiday.

But I digress.

The end of the warm season, or Samhain, is what my second published work will be about.  It also will encompass a battle between two powerful and ageless beings, one a god and the other a devil, neither of whom can be blamed for what they’ve become.  But don’t for an instant think you can guess how that will work or what shape these two creatures will take.  And I’ll reiterate what I’ve said before: End of the Warm Season is about a tree.

Looking up the trunk of a large and beautiful tree (186_8669)

Get away from me

I was snapping photos of The Kids the other day when I tried to get some respectable close-ups of Vazra as he lay on the bed.  I kept getting closer and closer to him while changing positions, and all in hopes of capturing one or two nice images with up-close depth and character in them.

I’ll be doggoned if all of them turned out looking like crap on a stale cracker.

Well, except for this one.  There’s something about the look he’s giving, something that has the pungent aroma of an aristocrat looking down his nose at a proletarian who’s gotten a wee bit too close.  You can almost hear him saying “Get away from me!”

A close-up of Vazra with a very aloof--or disgusted--look on his face (189_8979)

New money and old money

The Boys, Grendel and Loki, are old money.  They never knew hardship when they were growing up; instead, they were graced with pleasant childhoods stemming from a litter of kittens borne “into the system” as it were.  Raised in a foster home until they could be adopted out, neither of them has ever known desperate need or hunger.

The Twins, Kako and Kazon, are new money.  Apparently the unwanted offspring of someone’s cat, they and their siblings were placed in a box and left on the porch of the local Humane Society, where they were discovered the next morning.  It was cold and rainy, and it’s unknown how long the box was sitting there before it was discovered.  All of the kittens were sick, weak, underfed, and in poor condition overall (ear mites, upper respiratory infections, fleas and ticks, etc.).  Until I adopted them, they knew only the shelter, minimum care, and affection spread across hundreds of animals.  Treatment for their ailments and parasitic infections had only just started when I stumbled upon them and decided to adopt.

It amazes me constantly how apparent the differences are between the old money and new money upbringings.  Part of this, I’m sure, comes from Grendel and Loki being in perfect health when they came to live with me, yet Kako and Kazon required veterinary care, antibiotics, and all manner of treatment for their ills.  That alone changed the dynamics of the bonding that took place between them and me.

To expand on the disparities, here are a few examples.

Kako and Kazon will eat from my hands.  In fact, they both will lick my hands to ensure they get every last bit of whatever it is they’re after.  Also, since everyone in the house likes yogurt, they too will lick yogurt smoothie from my fingers.  Grendel and Loki, quite dissimilarly, will rarely eat anything from my hands.  No matter how much they want something, neither will hardly touch it.  Once in a while one of them will take something from my fingers or lick a bit of goodness from my hand, but it’s infrequent and always a surprise when they do it.

Note that all five of The Kids will eat from a spoon or fork or other instrument (although chopsticks are the most entertaining given the inherent struggle between the predator’s desire to eat the food and the predator’s desire to hunt/play with the chopsticks).

They’re all lap kitties.  Because there’s only one lap in which to sleep, this can be entertaining insomuch as it’s a first-come-first-served system, yet neither Loki nor Kako is opposed to inserting themselves into the tiniest of available space in an attempt to crowd out whoever is already there.  But in the sense of having them be on me somewhere, my lap and my chest (when we’re in bed) are as far as The Boys will go.  The Twins, however, take it much further.  Both enjoy jumping onto my shoulders and hanging out, although both also have different versions of this.  Kazon will sleep on my shoulders, his head wrapped around one side and his feet the other, and there he will rest and purr and sleep as long as I don’t jostle him too much or too often.  Kako also enjoys climbing up there, but for her it is an active event rather than passive.  She wants to play, to be petted, to be talked to, and to move around as much as possible.  Overactive would best describe her style in this regard.

While Kako and Kazon love just about every food offered to them, Grendel and Loki are more finicky.  I’ve only seen Kako turn her nose up at one or two things; Kazon has yet to turn down anything I proffer.  The Boys, on the other hand, both have a large selection of things they won’t touch.  Whether it’s Loki’s dislike of shrimp or Grendel’s abhorrence of certain cat treats, I have to be selective about what I bring home for them since I know those two have picky tastes when it comes to what’s acceptable and what’s not.  Vazra, so far at least, has eaten everything I’ve offered to him.

And speaking of Vazra…  If I knew more about him, I could make some relative observations about him as well, yet I only know of his existence outside until I rescued him, and that only spanning the last few years.  I can safely assume he was raised in a home with people.  He’s talkative and responsive, he loves being with me, and he follows me around half the time.  But was it a good life before being kicked to the curb?  And what happened when he was a kitten?  I just don’t have those answers, so all I know is that he had a home before finding himself evicted to the street.

Random Thought

I once had a sparrow alight upon my shoulder for a moment while I was hoeing in a village garden, and I felt that I was more distinguished by that circumstance than I should have been by any epaulet I could have worn.

— Henry David Thoreau