The Union of Concerned Scientists

Female scientist looking through a microscope

Public domain (https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Scientist_looking_thorugh_microscope.jpg)

There is a non-profit organization of scientists working to encourage evidence-based decision making on issues ranging from climate change to human survival to racial and economic equality. They’re the Union of Concerned Scientists, and they’ve been on this path for roughly fifty years. Their mission official states: “The Union of Concerned Scientists puts rigorous, independent science to work to solve our planet’s most pressing problems. Joining with people across the country, we combine technical analysis and effective advocacy to create innovative, practical solutions for a healthy, safe, and sustainable future.”

Their funding comes from donations from private individuals and foundations, never from corporate or government sources, and they use the vast majority of that funding to further their programs.

Their website provides a variety of recommendations on what individuals can to do to help encourage evidence-based decision making. You can also subscribe to their mailing list, which is organized to provide information relevant to your region, wherever you might live.

Posted in Awesome Finds | Tagged , , | Comments Off on The Union of Concerned Scientists

Review of Coyote Songs by Gabino Iglesias

Cover art for Coyote Songsby Nathan Crowder

I grew up in the great American Southwest, in a town on the fringes of the desert where street names were just as likely to be in Spanish as English. I had friends and neighbors with names like Atencio, Martínez, Lopez, and Candelaria. Despite having moved out of the area decades ago, I was eager to dive into Coyote Songs by Gabino Iglesias (Broken River Books, 2018). I mean, listen to the hook from the back cover: “…ghosts and gods guide the hands of those caught up in a violent struggle to save the soul of the American Southwest.”

How is that not entirely my wheelhouse? It’s everything I love.

By page four, I realized that Coyote Songs was not meant for me.

I shouldn’t have been surprised by the use of Spanish in the novel. But when I came across a block of text in Spanish with no translation and not enough context for my limited grasp of the language to decipher, I had a revelation: my experience growing up there was not a universal experience. I’m a gringo, and I was merely a tourist. And if I was to continue reading, I would be seeing the border through a very different viewpoint.

Obviously, I continued reading. Not just because I’d already been hooked, like the massive alligator gar Pedrito and his father Don Pedro seek to catch in the first chapter. Iglesias writes lyrical prose that’s both approachable and taut as a fishing line. Even as it drifts occasionally into Spanish, there’s an urgency that compels the reader to keep going. But another reason I kept reading, and perhaps the most compelling, is that in just four pages, I had experienced a unique paradigm shift.

As a white dude growing up in this country, the majority of media has been crafted with me in mind. And while I get frustrated with and reject the “white savior” narrative that’s typical of stories lobbed at me that feature other cultures, I’d never experienced anything quite like Coyote Songs. Gabino Iglesias seems hell-bent to use the literary tools at his disposal (which are exceptional) to tell the story he wants to tell. And while I was invited along on the ride, there were zero fucks given for my comfort.

Labeled as “barrio noir,” this poetic and bloody novel is one blistering hell of a ride, equal parts crime, horror, and dark fantasy. It is brutally, often shockingly violent and, at turns, heart-wrenchingly familiar and tragic. The multiple characters travel their arcs, ignorant of each other, goaded toward their often dark fates by a vengeful spirit that has taken root in the desert. Dark magic and violence seethe under the surface of the sand. They bake in the unforgiving sun. They nest in the consciousness of the holy coyote, vengeful child, revolutionary artist, and woman pregnant with something not of this world. And as their stories barrel toward their conclusions, overlapping and intertwining, we get a brutal and honest look at region and its people that, if spoken about at all, are demonized, mythologized, but rarely seen.

Gabino Iglesias is the best kind of tour guide—the kind that offers an unvarnished glimpse, full of humanity and urgency, fear and hope intertwined, and leaves you to make up your own mind. Coyote Songs is a sparking cannon fuse, speeding toward an ending both compelling and inevitable. While the novel might not have been meant for me, I consider it essential reading, as electrifying and vital as any novel I’ve read in the past decade. It’s no wonder it’s been nominated for both a Bram Stoker Award and a Locus Award. Highly recommended.

 

Posted in Reviews | Tagged , | Comments Off on Review of Coyote Songs by Gabino Iglesias

That Man Behind the Curtain: April 2019

Photo of a black cat sitting on a pizza box.

This was not a pizza topping we ordered.

April was continued aftermath from the Kickstarter. We finally finished reading slush from the submissions and shipped out add-on rewards for backers. We also shipped out contributor copies for Spring 2019.

Continue reading

Posted in Man Behind the Curtain | Tagged | Comments Off on That Man Behind the Curtain: April 2019

Fiction: Excerpts From the Audio Notes

An essay by Jim Dennath, P. (Eldritch) E., as provided by Jonathan Ficke
Art by Leigh Legler


Day 1

Finally, a place where my desire to dream beyond the bounds of what a rational engineer may dream, to build that which ought never be built, to be the mad engineer that breaks down barriers, and possibly ends the world–Fimbulvetr Industries. I confess that I saw their job posting and sent my résumé to them on a lark–who would have thought that the premiere apocalyptic science and engineering conglomerate would want me? But they did, so here I am walking the austere gunmetal hallways, seeing the laboratories where the cutting edge of apocalyptic science is conducted. And everything is so clean! It’s the platonic form of Nordic design. I couldn’t imagine a better place to undergo hours of trite human resources onboarding nonsense.

At least they have a slogan: Building a Better End of Days, Today.

It’s perfect.

~

Day 2

Fimbulvetr is not screwing around. I’ve been here a day and have access to the development lab of my dreams. Good devils below, there’s an entire team of assistants at my beck and call. The job is simple–as simple as engineering a possibly world-ending device is concerned that is–build a device to create a stable planar gateway to the nether realm to allow the creatures of the dark beyond access to the mortal plane of existence.

Should be fun!

Turns out the ancient Assyrians were super into the nether realm. The Fimbulvetr archives have hundreds of original clay tablets recovered (read: stolen or plundered) from archaeological sites across the Levant. As it so happens, however, I cannot read cuneiform.

Good news, though! Ivan, a twitchy Russian ex-pat with an eyepatch, has been the most useful in that regard. He tells me he studied and taught ancient languages at a university in Kiev, stumbled on something he’s only muttered about as “the impossible realities,” and they fired him for gibbering too much during lectures. Their loss is my gain.

There’s also a linguist to help interpret the texts, Bernice, an Alabaman with absolutely the sweetest accent and the keenest eye for the dark logic employed by the forces of darkness. Who would have imagined that demons employed passive aggressive language? When I expressed my disbelief, Bernice said “bless your heart,” and told me it makes her feel right at home. What a lovely person.

With Ivan and Bernice’s help, the task came into focus. We have a great deal of work ahead of us.

There’s also Jeffrey. He doesn’t talk much, and near as I can tell, he’s mainly here to pick up heavy things at my direction. He does so at a languid pace. He must be hourly.

Art for "Excerpts From the Audio Notes"

(Oh … right, Jeffrey was–literally–pulled limb from limb by a seven-armed reptilian beast with eleven mouths and three wings. As it happens, and this would be a subject better suited for a mad evolutionary biologist, demons have very strange anatomy.)


To read the rest of this story, check out the Mad Scientist Journal: Spring 2019 collection.


Jim Denath, P. (Eldritch) E., holds the distinction of being the only youth scout to be dismissed from the national organization for designing an autonomous drone that hunted down and cooked ants with a magnifying glass. He parlayed that (minor) infamy into a scholarship to attend the Polytechnic Institute of Apocalyptic Studies, and subsequently a position at Fimbulvtr Industries, where he is now the only person with a professional engineering license currently being used as the torture plaything of twenty-three demonic fellbeasts.


Jonathan Ficke lives outside of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, with his beautiful wife. He graduated from Marquette University with a degree in public relations, which (in a manner of speaking) is another form of speculative storytelling, His work appears in Mad Scientist Journal Spring 2018, Writers of the Future: Vol. 34, and Tales of Ruma. He muses online at jonficke.com and on twitter @jonficke.


Leigh’s professional title is “illustrator,” but that’s just a nice word for “monster-maker,” in this case. More information about them can be found at http://leighlegler.carbonmade.com/.


“Excerpts From the Audio Notes” is © 2019 Jonathan Ficke
Art accompanying story is © 2019 Leigh Legler

Posted in Fiction | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Fiction: Excerpts From the Audio Notes

Strange Science: Potential for Hosting Life on Another Planet

Researchers have found that a planet orbiting Barnard’s Star might be able to host life.

Barnard’s Star is roughly 6 light years away from Earth, and the planet orbiting it is roughly 3.2 times larger than Earth. And the average temperature there is negative 274 degrees Fahrenheit. But there are geothermal processes occurring beneath the planet’s icy surface that could suggest that life could evolve there.

At this point, scientists are waiting to see what the James Webb Space Telescope will record regarding this planet. It could be a rocky terrain beneath the ice, which would mean the potential for hosting life. However, the telescope might also see evidence that points to this planet being a gas giant, like Neptune, that would not allow for habitation.

There’s no indication yet as to when scientists will receive their answers, as the James Webb Space Telescope’s launch had not yet occurred (it will launch in 2021). But you can read more about the possibilities of this planet here.

 

Posted in Strange Science | Tagged , | Comments Off on Strange Science: Potential for Hosting Life on Another Planet

Space Travel Throughout the History of MSJ

A glimpse of the Deep Space Atomic Clock in the middle bay of the General Atomics Orbital Test Bed spacecraft. Image Credit: NASA

Public domain (https://www.nasa.gov/directorates/heo/scan/engineering/technology/dsac)

We’ve published a lot of science fiction stories involving space travel over the years at Mad Scientist Journal. Here’s just a few of them!

Every Little Star” by Fiona Moore (an alternate history look at 1960s space travel and technology)

“Introduction to the Journal of Interplanetary Lycan Studies, Volume 1” by S. Qiouyi Lu (an different alternate history take on space exploration) (available in Summer 2017 quarterly)

“On Conveying Private Materials and Persons in the Solar System” by Leenna Naidoo (business opportunities in space) (available in Winter 2016 quarterly)

“Hamlet and Ashley” by Leland Neville (intercepted communications and their interpretations) (available in Spring 2015 quarterly)

“The Ghosts of Ganymede” by Suzanne van Rooyen (unusual creatures encountered during space explorations) (available in Spring 2012 quarterly)

Posted in MSJ Time Machine | Tagged , | Comments Off on Space Travel Throughout the History of MSJ

New Short Fiction and Novels from MSJ Alum

Portion of cover art for Five Minutes at Hotel StormcoveSeveral MSJ alum have published new short fiction and novels recently!

Patrick Hurley’s story, “The Memory Bank & Trust,” recently appeared at Cosmic Roots and Eldritch Shores, with some fantastic art accompanying it!

Atthis Arts’ Five Minutes at Hotel Stormcove anthology contains stories from a number of MSJ alum, including Stewart C. Baker, Robert Dawson, M. Lopes da Silva, George Nikolopoulos, Jennifer Lee Rossman, Holly Schofield, Dawn Vogel, and future alum (and publisher) E.D.E. Bell. All of the stories take place in the same locale, but they cover different portions of this unusual hotel’s history.

George Nikolopoulos and Dantzel Cherry have stories included in the 2018 Best Vegan Science Fiction and Fantasy.

Diana Parparita published the second book in her Toadmilla Wartly series in March, which you can find here.

MSJ alum Q. Parker has a sci-fi novel, Nova EXE, coming out in June!

Posted in Mad Scientist News | Tagged | Comments Off on New Short Fiction and Novels from MSJ Alum

MSJ Final Submission Period in June

If you’ve always wanted to be published in Mad Scientist Journal, you’ll want to get your stories ready! Our final submission period will be June 2019, and we’ll be looking for first-person stories from the world of mad science, other stories of interest to mad scientists that will be published only in our upcoming quarterlies, and classified ads. We are looking to fill the final issues of Mad Scientist Journal before we close in April 2020.

More details are available on our Submissions page! Please be sure to read the requirements carefully to increase your chances of being published!

Posted in Administrative | Tagged | Comments Off on MSJ Final Submission Period in June

Fiction: Retirement Options

An excerpt from the journals of former Intergalactic Police (IGP) Agent Irene Magnus, as provided by Sam Crane
Art by Luke Spooner


“Cheers!”

I clinked my round tumbler against the whiskey bottle with a little plink! and knocked back a third of what was in my glass. “Leave the bottle” had been the smartest thing I’d said all day–much better than all the pointless speeches and the hollow “thank you, it’s been an honor” or “yes, I’m looking forward to some peace and quiet.”

All lies.

Today was the worst day of my life.

Give me something to fight, give me a case to solve. Even if I lost, at least I would’ve fought. And maybe–just maybe–I could have even fought the medical reports. Even the bad injuries sometimes improved with rest and physical therapy, and Lord knows I would’ve tried. But I would’ve needed time for that, and the Intergalactic Police wasn’t giving me any.

I had barely been out of the medical center’s ICU for a day when one of my handlers had come to have a “discussion.” The IGP’s oversight committee had deemed me unfit for further active duty. Of course, I appealed immediately, anything to buy some time. Instead the committee promptly came back with “no,” told me my last day was in an Earth month, and that was that. Almost forty years of service, and I didn’t even get to leave on my own terms.

I flopped boneless against the backrest of the chair, my eyes wandering up and up. The bar, Prisms, billed itself as a “traditional human old English tavern,” clearly trying to target homesick humans or possibly other species seeking a little taste of Earth. However, it looked less like a tavern and more like the bastard child of Westminster Abbey and some East End dive bar.

The walls were stone and the ceiling was a huge vaulted Gothic mess. Everything was in black and shades of grey except for strands upon strands of colored glass, like pieces of shattered stained-glass windows, that had been hung in crisscrossing lines all throughout the wide room. The colors danced and swam in the dim recessed lighting, and I couldn’t stop myself from wincing as the brighter shards caught the light and glared down at me.

Dizzy from looking at them too intently, I let my head thunk against the tabletop, which was nice and cool. Its smooth top was smartly polished and shone like mahogany, but it was probably just Cattameeran eeli wood instead. Cheaper and local. The planet of Cattameer was the center of government for the Milky Way Galaxy, and here in Capitol City, there was virtually anything you could ask for–including knock-off human bars with crap whiskey and washed up Intergalactic Police agents to drink it.

Distractedly, I trailed a gloved finger along the table’s surface, the fine protective mesh of my synthetic-steel gloves tracing the wood’s grain. The gloves weren’t IGP standard issue. I’d bought them with my own money, so they were mine, and I got to keep them. Unlike my blaster and my badge.

No. No more bad thoughts. Good thoughts only now. I was blowing a lot of money on this middling whiskey, so at the very least, I was going to be happy about drinking it. A lot of the non-human races loved human alcohol. Champagnes and ciders were particularly lucrative exports for Earth and Mars both; anything fizzy and carbonated was generally a hit. Human hard liquors never really caught on though. You could find the basics sometimes, especially if you went to a bar that catered to a more human clientele, but no one exported the top shelf stuff–it just wasn’t worth it. God, I would kill for good bourbon.

Ugh, it was too hot in here, and I still had my grey dress suit on from the retirement party. The tabletop was cool but not enough. Fumbling awkwardly, I loosened my tie and popped a few buttons. Better. Time for more whiskey though.

I tugged myself back upright by sheer force of will, and it took me an embarrassingly long second to realize that the chair opposite me was no longer empty. Instead, a small alien sat there, looking like an eerie cross between a human and a crow. The bar’s lighting was very flattering to her though–glossy black feathers almost seemed to glow, while streaks of iridescent feathers shimmered in a myriad of colors. Like an oil slick but prettier. She wore a brown utility belt with a number of pouches on it and a nasty looking ray gun holstered at each hip.

“Who–?” I started to say before I caught myself. I already knew her. It was Ambassador Scholar Trishell, a scientist and diplomat from Pluto. Belatedly, I realized I should probably be concerned about her abrupt, well-armed appearance. She was surprisingly dangerous for being a three-foot-tall bird creature.

Art for "Retirement Options"

Belatedly, I realized I should probably be concerned about her abrupt, well-armed appearance. She was surprisingly dangerous for being a three-foot-tall bird creature.


To read the rest of this story, check out the Mad Scientist Journal: Spring 2019 collection.


Irene Magnus served as an IGP agent for almost four decades, earning a Silver Comet of Bravery and several merit awards for crucial intelligence gathering. She is also an exemplary blaster shot and has won numerous shooting competitions. When her promising IGP career appeared to be cut short, Irene unexpectedly went on to become the first former-IGP agent to be hired by the University of Pluto. Her contract with Ambassador Scholar Trishell is currently in its fourth renewal.


Sam Crane enjoys writing science fiction and dark fantasy stories. A History major and an IT professional, she draws considerable influence from both history and technology, as well as from New England, where she lives with two very mischievous black cats. You can find her online at sam-crane-writes.blogspot.com


Luke Spooner, a.k.a. ‘Carrion House,’ currently lives and works in the South of England. Having recently graduated from the University of Portsmouth with a first class degree, he is now a full time illustrator for just about any project that piques his interest. Despite regular forays into children’s books and fairy tales, his true love lies in anything macabre, melancholy, or dark in nature and essence. He believes that the job of putting someone else’s words into a visual form, to accompany and support their text, is a massive responsibility, as well as being something he truly treasures. You can visit his web site at www.carrionhouse.com.


“Retirement Options” is © 2019 Sam Crane
Art accompanying story is © 2019 Luke Spooner

Posted in Fiction | Tagged , , , , | Comments Off on Fiction: Retirement Options

Strange Science: Super-Chilled Helium and Universe Formation

Tube containing ultrapure helium, which glows a purple-pink color

Hi-Res Images of Chemical Elements (http://images-of-elements.com/helium.php) CC-by-3.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/)

Researchers at Aalto University’s Low Temperature Laboratory have documented “walls bound by strings” in superfluid helium-3. Because helium remains a liquid even at absolute zero, and because it becomes a superfluid at other low temperatures, it has the potential to flow forever with zero viscosity. This allows the researchers to form “half-quantum vortices—whirlpools in the superfluid where the amount of helium flowing is strictly controlled by the rules of quantum physics.”

By studying super-chilled helium, these researchers have found evidence for what cosmology theorists suggest happened in the wake of the Big Bang–symmetry-breaking phase transitions that effectively “froze” some fluctuations in place while the universe expanded. These “frozen” fluctuations then became galaxies. So their studies allow more insight into how the universe formed and why.

You can read more about this here! (Special thanks to MSJ alum K. Kitts for bringing this article to our attention!)

Posted in Strange Science | Tagged , , | Comments Off on Strange Science: Super-Chilled Helium and Universe Formation