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Science Fiction Trivia

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Malacandra
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Re: Science Fiction Trivia

Post by Malacandra »

Okay, your Allowed Burglar is called Drake Maijstral and the reason such a thing is allowed is that the Emperor was a thief and so burglary had to be declared legal. :lol:
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Re: Science Fiction Trivia

Post by ffutures »

Malacandra wrote: Tue Apr 04, 2017 6:48 pm
Okay, your Allowed Burglar is called Drake Maijstral and the reason such a thing is allowed is that the Emperor was a thief and so burglary had to be declared legal. :lol:
Absolutely right, and the author is Walter John Williams - well done!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drake_Maijstral

I hurl my nipper in your general direction

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Re: Science Fiction Trivia

Post by Malacandra »

Okay, try this. There is an unlikely cosmic event that is common to both A World Out Of Time (Larry Niven) and "The Star", an H. G. Wells short. What's the event?
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Re: Science Fiction Trivia

Post by Cody »

From my bookcase...
The Martian astronomers – for there are astronomers on Mars, although they are very different beings from men – were naturally profoundly interested by these things.
I'll not answer Malacandra's question though, as my question-fu has gone walkabout.
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And any survivors, their debts I will certainly pay. There's always a way!
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Re: Science Fiction Trivia

Post by Malacandra »

Cody wrote: Thu Apr 06, 2017 10:00 am
From my bookcase...
The Martian astronomers – for there are astronomers on Mars, although they are very different beings from men – were naturally profoundly interested by these things.
I'll not answer Malacandra's question though, as my question-fu has gone walkabout.
Well, half the answer will be in the place you sourced that quote from, and the other half can be found with a little digging. Incidentally "The Star" proves that Wells's grasp of orbital mechanics was lamentable.
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Re: Science Fiction Trivia

Post by ffutures »

Since I've apparently succeeded in blotting A World Out Of Time from my memory I'll guess that both books have a star pass through or near the Solar System and cause huge climate changes to the Earth.
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Re: Science Fiction Trivia

Post by Malacandra »

Close enough to give it. The celestial body in "The Star" is actually the product of a collision between Neptune and a foreign body that causes the resulting object to fall into the Sun, grazing Earth as it passes, while in "A World out of Time" the planet Uranus is deliberately caused to pass close to Earth in order to modify Earth's orbit. So "A giant planet passes close to Earth" was the answer I was after -- but both events certainly do cause drastic climate change, the one by accident and the other by design.

Over to you!
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Re: Science Fiction Trivia

Post by Cody »

Malacandra wrote:
"The Star" proves that Wells's grasp of orbital mechanics was lamentable.
<grins> He could write a damn good tale though!
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Re: Science Fiction Trivia

Post by ffutures »

Okaaaay...

One of the stories in Doyle's The Return of Sherlock Holmes mentions "Here also I find an account of the Addleton tragedy, and the singular contents of the ancient British barrow."

In which SF story sequence do the "singular contents" turn out to be a box of radioactive ingots lost by a time traveller?
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Re: Science Fiction Trivia

Post by Malacandra »

Cody wrote: Sat Apr 08, 2017 10:25 pm
Malacandra wrote:
"The Star" proves that Wells's grasp of orbital mechanics was lamentable.
<grins> He could write a damn good tale though!
Yes, I enjoyed a number of his shorts when I was a schoolboy and we studied a collection of them in English class. It's just that in story after story he displayed a remarkable ability to bang on and on about science without, by all the available evidence, understanding very much about it... thus anticipating internet atheists by about a hundred years. :lol:
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Re: Science Fiction Trivia

Post by ffutures »

Hint; it's an American author and the series was published over a forty year span, with the story mentioning the barrow the first of the sequence.
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Re: Science Fiction Trivia

Post by Disembodied »

I resorted to google, I confess - but it's Poul Anderson's Time Patrol.

Oddly, though, Google also threw up a modern Holmes story built on the throwaway reference to the Addleton barrow called "The Mystery of the Addleton Curse", which also uses radioactivity as the cause of the "tragedy" …
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Re: Science Fiction Trivia

Post by ffutures »

Disembodied wrote: Tue Apr 11, 2017 10:59 am
I resorted to google, I confess - but it's Poul Anderson's Time Patrol.

Oddly, though, Google also threw up a modern Holmes story built on the throwaway reference to the Addleton barrow called "The Mystery of the Addleton Curse", which also uses radioactivity as the cause of the "tragedy" …
Time Patrol it is - the first story begins with the death of an archaeologist excavating the barrow - Holmes investigates, Watson mentions it in his casebooks, and the Time Patrol sends someone back to investigate. Causing a series of events that ends with the box left in the barrow to avoid a time paradox. Great fun!

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Re: Science Fiction Trivia

Post by Disembodied »

Thank you … I suspect some google-fu will be required for this! Name the authors that go with these spaceships (1 author per ship):
  1. Alexei Leonov
  2. Pure Big Mad Boat Man
  3. Yggdrasil
  4. Atalanta in Calydon
  5. Hot Needle of Inquiry
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Re: Science Fiction Trivia

Post by Malacandra »

Disembodied wrote: Wed Apr 12, 2017 8:32 am
Thank you … I suspect some google-fu will be required for this! Name the authors that go with these spaceships (1 author per ship):
  1. Alexei Leonov
  2. Pure Big Mad Boat Man
  3. Yggdrasil
  4. Atalanta in Calydon
  5. Hot Needle of Inquiry
I could manage one of these without Google, and I had the nagging suspicion that I knew one of the others but had to look it up:
  1. Arthur C Clarke
  2. Ian M Banks
  3. Dan Simmons
  4. M John Harrison ?Suggested by what I've been able to find but not 100% certain
  5. Larry Niven
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