📚 twenty of 2020: Starman by Alan Dean Foster ⭐️⭐️⭐️

A pleasant and easy adaptation of an 80s SF film that I remember enjoying when it came out. It’s another of the “benevolent alien meets paranoid humans” contact stories, but does it simply and well.

Plague Puzzle Two

We actually completed this one a couple weeks ago; I just forgot to post the photos until now.

Friday

Saturday

Sunday

Monday

📚 nineteen of 2020: The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress by Robert Heinlein ⭐️⭐️⭐️ 1967 Hugo Best Novel

Once again, Heinlein has strong and interesting SF (the moon declaring independence) coupled with politics I don’t entirely go for and serious issues with women and sexism.

Norwescan’t Wrap-Up

Under normal circumstances, I would have spent this past weekend at Norwescon, running around a hotel and getting up to all sorts of geeky shenanigans with ~2,000 of my closest friends. Of course, these are not normal circumstances, so that didn’t happen.

Instead, the party moved online, taking place mostly in the Norwescon Facebook Group, with lots of people posting past costumes, planned costumes, memories of cons past, or silly updates on what they were doing at the con that wasn’t happening. And all in all, it ended up being a pretty good weekend, with lots of community silliness keeping all of our respective spirits up.

I made a point of posting at least once a day on both my personal pages and in the group, starting things off in group each the morning with a photo post asking people what their convention outfits were that day. Here’s my “Norwescan’t” experience this year…

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Are we there yet?

Just realized that as of today, I’ve been social distancing for a month: the last social thing I did was the final Norwescon Concom meeting on March 7th. And the only times I’ve gone any further out than our neighborhood was when Prairie and I went for our trail walks, before King County closed the parks and trails.

One month down. At least one to go.

I’m occasionally whiny, am tired of this, and really want a night out at the Merc to see people and dance off the stress and tension.

It’s not fun. But we can do this.

Plague Puzzle One

Hey, we’ve got all those puzzles…maybe this is a good time to work on one?

There’s the border! This is kinda fun!

Hmmmm.

So many pieces. Why did we want to do this?

A little more progress.

A few sections are starting to come together.

Suddenly we hit the point of no return…

…and violà! Success!

Book eighteen of 2020: Fantastic Voyage by Isaac Asimov ⭐️⭐️⭐️

Sure, the miniaturization process is basically magic, and the only woman in the story is treated abysmally, even for Asimov. But if you can cope with those, the concept and adventure is still a lot of fun.

📚 seventeen of 2020: The Andromeda Strain, by Michael Crichton ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

A fun, quick read; amusingly thematically appropriate for the moment. Only this has the advantage of being fictional with a satisfactory resolution. If only COVID-19 could be dealt with in five days.

📚 sixteen of 2020: This Immortal by Roger Zelazny ⭐️⭐️ 1966 Hugo Best Novel

Meh. Maybe it’s a combination of mid-60s SF and the current pandemic stress, and I might have been more receptive at another time, but this was a slog.