Progress
I'm writing: yesterday producing three conversations that need to be worked into existing scenes.
And, as always, I'm reading:
Right now I'm reading 'The Key Trilogy' by Nora Roberts: three books with a
related storyline in which three women must find three magical keys to free
the souls of three Celtic demi-goddesses, thereby winning a million dollars
each, and incidentally finding love along the way. Or not so incidentally,
since love is part of the magic that reveals the keys.
Before that I read 'Transcendent' by Stephen Baxter, a very high-concept,
high-tech science fiction book. The story went back and forth between a
near future (40 years from now) when the earth's climate has changed
drastically, and society is changing to cope - and a far future (half a
million years from now) in which humanity has changed in many ways,
diverging and evolving along various paths, and is then undertaking the
task of creating a transcendent consciousness which will encompass all that
we've ever been and will be. Interesting stuff, but I was disappointed in
the way the author handled the conclusion.
And, as always, I'm reading:
Right now I'm reading 'The Key Trilogy' by Nora Roberts: three books with a
related storyline in which three women must find three magical keys to free
the souls of three Celtic demi-goddesses, thereby winning a million dollars
each, and incidentally finding love along the way. Or not so incidentally,
since love is part of the magic that reveals the keys.
Before that I read 'Transcendent' by Stephen Baxter, a very high-concept,
high-tech science fiction book. The story went back and forth between a
near future (40 years from now) when the earth's climate has changed
drastically, and society is changing to cope - and a far future (half a
million years from now) in which humanity has changed in many ways,
diverging and evolving along various paths, and is then undertaking the
task of creating a transcendent consciousness which will encompass all that
we've ever been and will be. Interesting stuff, but I was disappointed in
the way the author handled the conclusion.
no subject
related storyline in which three women must find three magical keys to free
the souls of three Celtic demi-goddesses, thereby winning a million dollars
each, and incidentally finding love along the way."
Wow. A combination of "The Legend of Zelda" and a reality show. And they said it couldn't be done.
no subject