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                        Mt. Holz Science Fiction Society
                    Club Notice - 06/30/00 -- Vol. 18, No. 53

       Chair/Librarian: Mark Leeper, 732-817-5619, mleeper@lucent.com
       Factotum: Evelyn Leeper, 732-332-6218, eleeper@lucent.com
       Distinguished Heinlein Apologist: Rob Mitchell, robmitchell@lucent.com
       HO Chair Emeritus: John Jetzt, jetzt@lucent.com
       HO Librarian Emeritus: Nick Sauer, njs@lucent.com
       Back issues at http://www.geocities.com/evelynleeper
       All material copyright by author unless otherwise noted.

       The Science Fiction Association of Bergen County meets on the
       second Saturday of every month in Upper Saddle River; call
       201-447-3652 for details.  The Denver Area Science Fiction
       Association meets 7:30 PM on the third Saturday of every month at
       Southwest State Bank, 1380 S. Federal Blvd.

       ===================================================================

       1. I have a little game I play with people.  I  ask  them  to  make
       some estimates.  I have three standard questions.

       Do not do any arithmetic.  What is your gut feeling of  the  answer
       to these questions?

            1. Egypt used to be a major world power in ancient times.
            From its rise to power to today, what percent of the time
            was it  a  (or  the)  major  world  power.  Gut  feeling,
            remember.

            2. Similar to the Egypt question.  From the rise  of  the
            dinosaurs  to  the  present, what percent of the time did
            dinosaurs rule the earth.

            3. We have some idea what  an  average  human  life  span
            feels  like.  Say it is 70 years.  Let that be your unit.
            How many units back to the time of Christ?

       I find people who just trust their feelings and use the Force, even
       some  very  knowledgeable  people, discover that their gut feelings
       are very inaccurate.  This editorial will continue  later  in  this
       issue (just so the answers do not show up on this page).  [-mrl]

       ===================================================================

       2. DARWIN'S RADIO by Greg Bear  (Del  Rey/Ballantine  Books,  1999,
       hardcover, $24.00, 430pp, ISBN 0-345-42333-X) (a book review by Joe
       Karpierz):

       I found it a very interesting coincidence that I  finished  reading
       DARWIN'S  RADIO  the  same day that it was announced that the human
       genome had been mapped.  Just one of those  things  that  make  you
       want to go hmmmm. . . .

       That's only the first odd  thing  about  my  whole  DARWIN'S  RADIO
       experience  (now  *that*  sounds  like a Jimmi Hendrix album, but I
       digress).  A friend of mine recently asked  me  how  many  of  this
       year's  Hugo  nominees  were  part of a series or set in an already
       existing universe.  Well, let's see.  CRYPTONOMICON, book one of  a
       series;  A  CIVIL  CAMPAIGN,  book  357  in  the  Miles  Vorkosigan
       universe;  HARRY POTTER AND THE PRISONER OF AZKABAN, book three  in
       a  particular  universe;  A DEEPNESS IN THE SKY, a prequel of sorts
       to A Fire Upon the Deep; and DARWIN'S RADIO, a standalone.

       Sheesh.  Five nominees, four can't even be standalone.

       Yep, DARWIN'S RADIO is the only (currently) standalone novel  among
       this  year's Hugo nominees.  And of the three novels that I've read
       to this point (with A DEEPNESS IN THE SKY now  in  progress),  it's
       the best.

       The beginning of the novel follows events on two fronts.   One,  in
       Austria,  where  the  mummified  remains of ancient Neandertals are
       discovered, and the other,  near  a  mass  grave  in  Russia.   The
       Neandertals  were  a  family of three, but the child was different,
       and the mother was injured.  In Russia, the local government  wants
       nothing  to  do with the UN force that is sent to help.  They claim
       that the grave falls under local jurisdiction,  and  outsiders  are
       not wanted.  In the Alps, we meet Mitch Rafelson, an anthropologist
       of shaky and shady background, who is helping another  couple  find
       the mummies.  In Russia, we meet molecular biologist Kaye Lang, who
       specializes in retroviruses, and Christopher Dicken, who works as a
       virus  hunter  for  the  CDC.   Dicken is hunting for what Lang has
       theorized--a virus, hidden for thousands of years,  that  can  come
       back  to  life and wreak havoc with the human race.  All three will
       become intertwined in one of the better sf thrillers I've read in a
       while.

       There is a link between the mummies and the mass graves.  And there
       have  been other occurrences recently of people being thrown out of
       their towns, shunned, and maybe even killed.  It  seems  that  many
       mothers  are  miscarrying  baby  girls,  only to get pregnant again
       within a month--without having sex.  And the miscarried fetuses are
       malformed--they are mostly unrecognizable as human beings.
       Think about all the  ramifications  of  that  one,  folks.   Virgin
       births;  husbands  and  boyfriends beating up or throwing out their
       wives and girlfriends, accusing them of cheating; women blaming men
       for their plight.

       Two sides take shape.  The government, led by Mark  Augustine,  who
       believes  that  the virus is a disease that's going to wipe out the
       next generation of  children;  and  a  small  band  of  scientists,
       scoffed at by the scientific establishment, that believes that what
       is occurring is the next step in human evolution.  That instead  of
       gradual  evolution,  we're  seeing  great leaps of evolution in one
       step.  For that's what the Neandertal mummies showed.  And that  is
       what  appears  to  be  happening with those who are giving birth to
       live, "second stage" SHEVA babies (SHEVA is the name given  to  the
       virus in question).

       [WARNING:  SPOILERS IN THE NEXT PARAGRAPH]

       This is really a good story.  However, I do have some problems with
       it.  There's lots of cool, neat scientific stuff going on.  Lang is
       a strong character, who does have some weaknesses based on her  now
       dead  husband's  behavior  patterns.   But by the end of the novel,
       we're no longer concerned about her advancement of  the  scientific
       theory  behind  all  this--we've  lost  it  to  the fact that she's
       pregnant with a SHEVA baby.  And Bear only gives cursory mention of
       the  fact  that  she was doing science while she was pregnant.  The
       story had changed direction in midstream, and I was  blindsided  by
       it  when  I  finally realized what had happened.  Additionally, the
       conflict with her nemesis Mark Augustine goes  largely  unresolved.
       There's  a  curious  chapter thrown in near the end where Augustine
       hears that Lang has had her SHEVA baby.  But *nothing* is  resolved
       with that.

       While I liked the novel overall, I don't really care  for  the  way
       the  story  ended.   If  I were to vote right now, having read only
       three of the nominees, this would get my top vote, but  it's  still
       lacking.

       There should be something better out there.

       Onward.  [-jak]

       ===================================================================

       3. Continuing with this week's editorial...

       Some of you may have actually done the calculation.  Well... that's
       cheating  and your Karma will git ya.  As for the rest of you, here
       are the answers.

            1. At  least  63%.   You  would  probably  say  that  the
            Egyptian Empire rose to world prominence about 3500 BC if
            not earlier.  It fell from that position about 2000 years
            ago.  Most of us in school learned a little about Ancient
            Egypt.  You study it briefly before you get on to  Greece
            and then Rome.  When it fell as a world power it had been
            pretty much the major power in the world for 3500  years.
            Go back 3500 years from today and we would have the first
            peoples settling in the Fertile Crescent.  Britain  would
            be  making  the  transition  form  Stone Age to the first
            Celtic hill forts.  By rights  most  of  Western  History
            should be about Egypt.  We are living in the short period
            following the fall of Egypt.

            2. The answer is again about 63%.  We are also living  in
            the  short  period after the fall of the dinosaurs.  They
            went from about 200,000,000 BC to about 70,000,000 BC.

            3. Well if you divide 2000 years by 70 you get  a  little
            under 29.  Most people think that it would be a lot more.
            I have had people guess it would be about 200.  In  fact,
            compared  to  things  like  the  duration of the Egyptian
            Empire, Biblical times are really rather recent.  I  have
            been  corresponding  with  Carl  Eichenlaub  who made the
            following list of 29 famous  people,  each  of  whom  was
            alive  when  the previous one died (at least according to
            the best we can calculate).  The  first  was  alive  when
            Christ was and the last is alive today.

                 1.  Tiberius  (Tiberius  Claudius  Nero  Caesar
                 Augustus):  Roman  emperor  014-037 and general
                 (42 B.C.E.-37 C.E.)

                 2. Agricola, Gnaeus Julius: Roman general  (40-
                 93)

                 3. Antoninus Pius: Roman ruler; emperor of Rome
                 138-161 (86-161)

                 4. Severus,  Lucius  Septimius:  Roman  emperor
                 193-211 (146-211)

                 5.  Plotinus:  Roman  philosopher;  founder  of
                 Neoplatonism; wrote "Enneads" (205?-270)

                 6. Anthony: Egyptian anchorite, ascetic,  monk,
                 and  saint;  founder  of  Christian monasticism
                 (250?-355)

                 7.   Augustine   of   Hippo   (also    Aurelius
                 Augustinus):  Carthaginian  author,  saint, and
                 church  father;  bishop   of   Hippo   396-430;
                 opponent of Pelagian heresy; wrote "The City of
                 God"; principal feast day August 28 (354-430)

                 8. Zeno (also Zenon) Isaurian: Roman emperor of
                 the East 474-491 (426-491)

                 9. Justinian I (Justinian  the  Great;  Flavius
                 Petrus   Sabbatius  Justinianus;  orig.  Petrus
                 Sabbatius):  Byzantine  lawgiver   and   ruler;
                 Byzantine emperor 527-565; issuer and eponym of
                 Justinian code, compiled from Roman  law  (483-
                 565)

                 10.  Ethelbert   (also   Aethelbert):   English
                 Kentish ruler; king of Kent 560-616 (552?-616)

                 11. Ayesha (also Aishah, Aisha, A'isha;  Mother
                 of   the   Faithful):  Arab  favorite  wife  of
                 Muhammad; daughter of Abu Bakr (611?-678)

                 12.  Bede   (the   Venerable   Bede):   English
                 historian,   saint,   and  scholar;  originated
                 dating of  events  anno  domini  (A.D.);  wrote
                 history   "An  Ecclesiastical  History  of  the
                 English People" 731; father of English history;
                 canonized 1899 (673?-735)

                 13. Alcuin of  York  (also  Albinus,  Ealhwine;
                 later  Albinus  Flaccus):  English  Anglo-Saxon
                 clergyman, mathematician, and scholar;  teacher
                 of Charlemagne (732?-804)

                 14. Adrian II (also Hadrian II):  Italian  pope
                 867-872 (792-872)

                 15. Battani, abu-'Abdullah  Muhammad  ibn-Jabir
                 al-  (also Albategni, Albategnius, Albatenius):
                 Arab  astronomer;   made   precise   astronomic
                 measurements (858?-929)

                 16. Otto I (Otto the Great): German ruler; king
                 of  Germany 936-973; Holy Roman emperor 962-973
                 (912-973)

                 17. Robert II  (Robert  the  Wise,  Robert  the
                 Pious):  French ruler; king of France 996-1031;
                 son of Hugh Capet (971?-1031)

                 18.  Clement  III  (orig.   Guibert):   Italian
                 antipope 1080, 1084-1100 (1025?-1100)
                 19. Hildegard of  Bingen  (also  Hildegard  von
                 Bingen; the Sibyl of the Rhine): German abbess,
                 mystic,  and  saint;   wrote   visionary   work
                 "Scivias"  1141-1152;  feast  day  September 17
                 (1098-1179)

                 20.  Sylvester  Gozzolini:   Italian   Catholic
                 abbot,  religious  leader,  and  saint; founded
                 Sylvestrian Order 1231 (recognized  by  Vatican
                 1247) (1177-1267)

                 21.  Osman  I  (Osman   al-Ghazi,   Osman   the
                 Conqueror;  also  Othman  I): Turkish conqueror
                 and ruler; sultan of Turkey 1288-1326;  founder
                 of Ottoman empire (1259-1326)

                 22.  Wickham,  William  of  (also  William   of
                 Wykeham):  English  clergyman  and  politician;
                 English lord chancellor 1368-1371 (1324-1404)

                 23.  Della  Robbia,  Luca:  Italian  Florentine
                 sculptor (1399?-1482)

                 24.  Grolier  [de  Servieres],  Jean   (Vicomte
                 d'Aguisy):   French   bibliophile  and  scholar
                 (1479-1565)

                 25. Galileo Galilei (1564-1642)

                 26.  Mather,  Increase:  American  author   and
                 clergyman;   president  of  Harvard  University
                 1685-1701 (1639-1723)

                 27. Parker, Peter, Sir: British admiral  (1721-
                 1811)

                 28. Pope Leo XIII  (orig.  Gioacchino  Vincenzo
                 Raffaele Luigi Pecci): (1810-1903)

                 29. Adler, Mortimer (1902-present)
       [-mrl]

                                          Mark Leeper
                                          HO 1K-644 732-817-5619
                                          mleeper@lucent.com

            The world is divided into people who do things and 	    people who get the credit.
                                          -- Dwight Morrow