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I've made my first novel, Ventus, available as a free download, as well as excerpts from two of the Virga books. I am looking forward to putting up a number of short stories in the near future.
To celebrate the August, 2007 publication of Queen of Candesce, I decided to re-release my first novel as a free eBook. You can download it from this page. Ventus was first published by Tor Books in 2000, and and you can still buy it; to everyone who would just like to sample my work, I hope you enjoy this free version.
I've released this book under a Creative Commons license, which means you can read it and distribute it freely, but not make derivative works or sell it.
I've made large tracts of these two Virga books available. If you want to find out what the Virga universe is all about, you can check it out here:
I'll be adding new stories here periodically. First of all, you can try my Aurora-award nominated short story "Hopscotch." The year this was nominated, another of my stories was also nominated: "The Toy Mill," which I wrote with David Nickle. "The Toy Mill" won the award; but I've always been fond of "Hopscotch." Here it is, in its entirety excerpted from my collection The Engine of Recall.
Rumours are flying. But the truth may lead us to reexamine past missions
Aviation Week has created a shitstorm on the web by publishing this article. They claim that the White House has been briefed about a forthcoming announcement from the Phoenix Mars lander team--something significant, apparently, that will blow the doors off the recent confirmation of water and even the revelation that Martian soil would be capable of growing Earth plant life.
On sites like Slashdot, people are lining up to speculate about what the news is. Is it life? Ideas range from the possibility that Phoenix's microscopes have spotted fossils, to actual confirmation of life. NASA, however, was careful in its statement to state that no direct sign of life, past or present, has been found.
Many others are jumping in with sober reminders that Phoenix isn't even equipped to find life--just water and maybe organic substances. The most likely scenario is, in fact, that Phoenix has discovered organics in the Martian soil.
This would be a big discovery, true; it would make an unequivocal statement that Mars is a habitable planet, only the second one in the universe known. If our very next-door-neighbour is hospitable to life, then how much more likely is it that many other worlds also are?
...Of course, such a discovery isn't as world-shaking as it sounds. After all, for a very long time now, we've known that there's no known reason why other planets wouldn't be habitable--Mars included. This would just be confirming what we've already deduced from the available evidence: that safe havens for life are abundant in the universe.
From this point of view, the Phoenix team briefing the White House is really just a piece of grandstanding--a last-ditch attempt to squeeze money from a science-hostile administration before the expected recession/depression gets the space program killed.
But there is one other possibility.
The recent discovery that the soil at the Phoenix lander site could support some earthly plants would appear to contradict the findings of the Viking landers from the 1970s. Those craft deployed sophisticated experiments to determine whether life is present on Mars, yet the instruments returned ambiguous results. There was a strong signal indicating life from some of the instruments, yet no evidence of biological material in the soil. The official interpretation that has become orthodoxy as a result, is that the Martian soil is highly oxidizing, ie. that it contains compounds such as hydrogen peroxide that destroy biological materials.
But if Phoenix has found that you could grow earthly plants in the soil at its site, doesn't this cast serious doubt on that interpretation?
Here's the logic in its most direct form:
By this hypothesis, NASA is being coy by saying that Phoenix has not detected life. It hasn't; what it's done is confirm that the Vikings already found it!
Now, NASA's not actually going to say this. Scientists are (rightly) conservative with their pronouncements, and even vindication of the Viking experiments doesn't actually prove anything. A Mars sample-return mission would have to be undertaken to do that. But maybe that's the funding that NASA is looking to get here.
Because the fact remains that if you can grown vegetables in Martian soil, it can't be the kind of hostile chemical bleach that would be necessary to invalidate the Viking experiments. Even without any data beyond what's already been released, the evidence now points to life on Mars, and fairly cries out for a follow-up investigation. And that, I suspect, is what NASA is going to call for.
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