Wednesday, November 12, 2014

Sci-Fi Round-Up: November 12, 2014

MECHA by GRONEZ ILLUSTRATEUR

"Mecha" by Angouleme, France-based Grosnez Illustrateur

Interview: Brian Howe interviews William Gibson, author of The Peripheral.

Interview: Eco-Fiction interviews Austin Aslan of Islands at the End of the World.

Interview: Flavorwire interviews William Gibson, author of The Peripheral.

Interview: Joss Whedon talks feminism and Avengers leaks with Vulture: “It’s an ugly time because change is happening. It would be lovely to be living after the change has happened.”

Interview: Reddit recently hosted an AMA for Bill Nye, author of Undeniable

Interview: Tor.com interviews Marcus Wynne, author of The Sword of Michael.

12 Greatest Psychological Dramas That Just Happen to be Set in Space

Alien’s Neil Marshall praises Ridley Scott’s sci-fi classic.

Doctor Who needs to let go of the Past: “This past weekend saw Doctor Who kick off its Series FinalĂ© with the shocking reveal of antagonist Missy’s true identity – except I wasn’t really left shocked by it, just kind of disappointed. Oh, Doctor, why can’t you try something new?”

In Traveling to the Stars, Risk and Cost: Accidents at Virgin Galactic.

io9 pretends to have found 20 Doctor Who Stories That Are Based On Real Science. I think someone doesn’t really understand what qualifies as “real science.”

Jeff VanderMeer on The Uncanny Power of Weird Fiction

Let’s adjust those Intimacy Settings, Doctor Who

Mental Floss shares some deep thoughts on The Twilight Zone.

One Year Later: The Dissolve looks back at Gravity

Post-apocalyptic Seinfeld story ideas and Seinfeld: The Purge are both actual things. 

Rajan Khanna, author of Falling Sky, writes about Creating a Post-Apocalyptic World.

This list of 27 “Essential Films for the Student of Philosophy,” includes a lot of sci-fi.

Skulduggery, a Dirigible, and a Stolen Train: Gail Carriger’s Waistcoats and Weaponry

Star Wars 7 is done filming, but the feels aren’t over

“We’re All Dreaming,” Arctor Said: Drugs in Sci-Fi, from the 1960s to the Present.

Why Ronald D. Moore was ‘eager’ to kill off Star Trek’s Captain Kirk


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