Stephen R. Wilk's Blog: Stephen R. Wilk's GoodReads Blog

March 8, 2016

One new story out in 2016, one to come!

My most recent story, "Alloprene", has been published in the April 2016 issue of Analog.


I also have a fantasy, "George Washington and the Dragon", coming out in SEptember 2016 in the anthology "Live Free or Dragons", a collection of New Hampshire-based fantasy stories. It's being published in September 2016 by Plaidswede Press of Concord, N.H.
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 08, 2016 19:20 Tags: alloprene, george-washington-and-the-dragon

October 22, 2015

Two new stories coming!

My fantasy story "George Washington and the Dragon" has been accepted for publication in Plaidswede Press' forthcoming "Live Free or Dragons", a collection of New Hampshire-based fantasies. It is due out in September of 2016.

Also, Analog has acquired my science fiction short story "Alloprene", a very different robot story. I don't know yet when it will appear.
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on October 22, 2015 18:32

March 12, 2015

New Mystery -- Murder with Trimalchio

My ne mystery is online, and it's free.

It's a historical mystery, set in the Rome of Nero, entitled "Murder with Trimalchio". You can read it in full at

http://www.mystericale.com/index.php?...

I've also had four more pieces in Optics and Photonics News -- "The Mystery of Criolite", "The Globular Hypothesis", "Edible Optics", and just added this month is "SAcred Sun".
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 12, 2015 18:43

April 16, 2014

Two new Fiction Works out and One Non-Fiction Article coming out!

My novelette "The Flight of the Hans Pfall" was published by Aurora Publications as an e--book in February ( http://pulpcorner.com/oscommerce/cata... )
It describes a trip to the moon, by balloon! --- real SF, not fantasy.

My story "Belbet" was just publisghed today, April 16, 2014, by Fiction Vortex, also as an e-book: http://www.fictionvortex.com/2014/04/...

It's a Fairy Tal;e for Robots


The follow-up to my first book, "Medusa: Solving the Mystery of the Gorgon", is, at long last, being published. It's a journal article, and will be in the late May edition of "Classical World" Volume 107, #3, pp. 383-397. It's entitled "The Scarecrow of Os: The Function of Antefixes, Oscilla, and Suspended Masks in the Roman Garden."
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on April 16, 2014 09:31

October 6, 2013

How the Ray Gun Got its Zap! is out

My new book, How the Ray Gun Got its Zap! is now out in bookstores, and is available over the internet as well. It's a collection of popular articles on odd optics, and the title essay is a History of the Ray Gun. I've written a new piece on The First Ray Gun, about the appearance of the first Ray Gun used by invading aliens in fiction -- in 1809. The piece, which contains material not in the book, is in the Oxford University Press blog at this address:
http://blog.oup.com/2013/10/first-ray...

Besides the Ray Gun, there are pieces on Edible Lasers (about lasers in which the lasing substance is edible. There's a surprising number of these), Pyrotechnic Lasers (driven by Fireworks, not flashlamps or diodes), The Magic Lantern of Omar Khayyam (in which I investigate how the poet and scientist could have written about a device that hadn't been invented yet), The Telephote (why do we call it a Television instead of a Telephote, the original name for this vision-by-wire device?), Tractor Beams (tracing the device from its first appearance in chapters of a book by Jules Verne -- which Verne didn't write -- to a present-day reality), and This Is Your Cat On Lasers (about how two guys patented the idea of using a laser to play with your cat), and a lot of others. Why are there REALLY seven colors in the rainbow (it has nothing to do with the mysticism of the number seven)? Who invented the Diffraction Grating? How did a spider give us crosshairs in a telescope? Why is the sun always depicted as yellow, if sunlight is the very definition of white? These questions and others are answered in the book.
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on October 06, 2013 13:43 Tags: zap-ray-guns-wilk

September 3, 2013

Stephen R. Wilk photo

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on September 03, 2013 19:57

September 1, 2013

Why I wrote "Medusa"

I've always been interested in mythology. I own several copies of Edith Hamilton's and of Thomas Bulfinch's mythology. Both of my copies have the head of Medusa on the cover. Through the years I have bought and read many other books on mythology, going deeper in Greek and Roman mythology, and covering mythologies of other cultures. But, perhaps because of those book covers, I've always been interested in the myth of Perseus and Medusa in particular.

The interest crystallized when MIT professor Jerome Lettvin published an article called "The Gorgon's Eye" in the December 1977 issue of Technology Review (it was later reprinted in Astronomy of the Ancients in 1979). Lettvin drew connections between the Evil Eye of Medusa and the variable star Algol, and also with the Perseid meteor shower. He also drew connections between elements of the myth and the behavior of octopus and squid, arguing in particular that the severed head of Medusa, with its writhing snakes, strongly resembled a cephalopod.

I was very impressed with the article, and, through my years of graduate school and then during my working career, I would visit libraries and ferret out articles on Medusa and Gorgons from classical journals, art journals, and books.
In the 1990s, I had published an article on the artistic representations of thnderbolts in the ancient world in Parabola magazine, and wanted to cover another topic. I thought that Medusa would be a good topic, especially with all the information I had gathered. I discovered that I had material that went far beyond what Professor Lettvin had written years before. There were visible variable stars, for instance, in several constellations associated with the myth of Perseus and Medusa, which seemed unlikely to be due to coincidence, and there were details of both the variable stars and the Perseid shower that fit very neatly with the myth but had not, as far as I knew, been pointed out previously.

Furthermore, I was surprised to find that about a dozen articles had made the connection between Medusa and cephalopods, all of them independently. But I had myself become dissatisfied with this interpretation. In part, it was because the motif of the gorgon head seemed to have parallels all over the world, and that these were often used in exactly the same functions. Gorgon faces adorned the clay tiles (called "antefixes")lining the edges of Greek and Roman roofs. But similar antefixes with similar faces were used in China and Japan, and similar faces were carved or painted over doorways or on roofs elsewhere in the world. Green shiels often were decoated with medusa faces (in Greek vase paintings, the shield of Achilles is so identified with this feature that it can be used to identify him). Yet almost exactly the same face appears on shields used by the Classic Maya in central America thousands of years later. Similar faces are used on shields made by the Iatmul living along the Sepik river in New guinea to this day.
What could account for these similarity of motifs used for the same purpose in such diverse places, separated by gulfs of nboth distance and time? Surely they could not be the result of cultural diffusion. And how did this relate to cephalopods, and to the astronomical roots of the legend?
I thought that I had come up with a series of explanations that accounted for it all, but it was not something that could be simply stated in a brief article. It was also interdisciplinary, and that demanded a venue that was not restricted to one subject. I published brief articles in Double Star Observer and in a couple of issues of the Journal of the American Association of Variable Star Observers, and gave lectures at the AAVSO annual meeting and at the annual meeting of the Classical Association of New England, but I needed to set all of my arguments and suppositions down in one place. So I wrote a book.

I gave it to my wife, Jill, to read. Jill is my first and best critic, and she vets everything I write. In this case, her judgment was unequivocal. "Nobody is going to read this," she said. "It reads like a thesis."

So I threw it out and started over again, writing in a freer, more colloquial style, writing the sort of book I myself like to read. And I wrote from start to finish in one go, not working on chapters out to order. This would, I hoped, improve the flow.

This time she liked it (although she had plenty of comments). After it was polished, I sent it to various agents, hoping to find one who was interested. I had no luck. Finally, I decided to send it directly to the publisher myself. Oxford University Press had a reputation for published scholarly works by first-time writers, and they had published at least one similar book, David Ulansey's "Origins of the Mithraic Mysteries", which sought to explain much of the ancient Roman religion by referencing its allusions to astronomy. To my shock and delight, they accepted the book, without revisions. It was first published in hardcover in 2000, and several years later in paperback.

Over the years I have come across new information that I wanted to add. I eventually gathered this new material into an article, which I sent out to various magazines, mostly classical magazines, but without success. Recently, though, it has been approved for publication in the journal Classical World, although no publication date has been set. The article is to be called "The Scarecrow of Os" ("Os" is a latin word for "face". An "Oscilla" is a "little face" that was made of stone or ceramic, and may originally have been made of bark and hung in trees. They are mentioned by Vergil in his Georgics, for instance. The swinging mottion of these masks give us the english word "oscillation". The title is also a pun on L. Frank Baum's book "The Scarecrow of Oz")
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on September 01, 2013 14:10 Tags: medusa-gorgon-scarecrow-of-os

August 31, 2013

Introductions

Hi! My name is Stephen Wilk, and I've just set up an account and a blog here at GoodReads. I'd like to thank everyone who has commented on my work this far. My main purpose in starting this blog was to interact with readers about my forthcoming book "How the Ray Gun Got Its Zap!", which is due to come out next month (September 2013), although it probably won;t be on shelves until the beginning of October. But I can see that there's a lot of material I can fill in about my prior work.

Nobody develops in a vacuum, and I've been writing since I was seven years old. I've been publishing my work since 1979. Much of that has been technical work, but it hasn't all been in scientific journals -- my first piece, for instance, was in Scientific American, and I've published in a lot of non-technical journals since, including Weatherwise, Parabola, and New Jersey History.

I've been writing fiction (historical fiction, science fiction, fantasy, mystery, and even some non-genre contemporary fiction) for a great many years, but it's only been in this past year that I've been able to get it published beyond the high school or college literary magazine. One thing I'd like to do in this post is list the online stories you can read.

Stephen Wilk's free on-line fiction:

"The Tale of the Sweet Strength"
A historical mystery, podcast on "Tales of Old" January 2013
http://www.talesofold.org/

"The Ipswich Abhorrence"
Fantasy/Horror
"Roar and Thunder" March 2013
http://roarandthunder.com.au/2013/the...

"Bullseye"
Science Fiction
"Asbury Pulp" February 2013
http://asburypulp.com/

That's enough for now. In the next post I'll tell you about my prior book, "Medusa: Solving the Mystery of the Gorgon", which came out in 2000, and about its soon-to-be-published, long-delayed follow-up, "The Scarecrow of Os".

-- Stephen R. Wilk
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on August 31, 2013 16:05 Tags: wilk-e-zines-publications

Stephen R. Wilk's GoodReads Blog

Stephen R. Wilk
Information on my publications, random thoughts, and discussions (if anyone's interested) ...more
Follow Stephen R. Wilk's blog with rss.