Women in Science: Merit-Ptah

Ancient Egyptian Medical Tools

Public domain (http://puffin.creighton.edu/museums/greiner/surgery_02.htm)

As we lead up to the release of Battling in All Her Finery, we’re featuring a handful of women in science from history. Check back in the coming weeks to learn more about early women scientific leaders, and check out Battling in All Her Finery when it releases on October 16!

The first named woman physician dates back to the Ancient Egyptians. Merit-Ptah (which means “beloved of Ptah”) lived around 2700 BCE, toward the end of the Early Dynastic Period. She is named in records as a “Chief Physician,” which meant she would have been the physician to the King, and she also was responsible for instructing other physicians. While there were other women physicians in this time period, and even all-women medical schools, Merit-Ptah holds the honor of having her name recorded, likely because she occupied such a high position.

You can read more about Merit-Ptah at Wikipedia, or more about Merit-Ptah and other Egyptian women in medicine here.

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MSJ Alumni in the Cobalt City Universe

Cover art for Ties That BindWhen we’re not editing Mad Scientist Journal, we are often writing our own works, many of which are set in the shared Cobalt City Universe. This fall has been a busy period for Cobalt City authors, with several books seeing print for the first time through DefCon One Publishing and other venues. And their authors are also MSJ alumni!

Nathan Crowder is the originator of Cobalt City, and he’s had stories appear in several of our anthologies and on the website. Ride Like the Devil was an early Cobalt City book that went out of print for a while, but now it’s back with a fantastic new cover! If you like high stakes motorcycle races, mysterious happenings, and foul-mouthed evolved pandas, you’ll enjoy Ride Like the Devil.

Another book by Nathan Crowder is the pictured Ties that Bind, which also features art by one of our regular artists, Luke Spooner. This book has a darker tone, as Bantam and Velvet team up to take down a human trafficking ring.

Nathan Crowder has another Cobalt City book due out October 9th, which is Cobalt City: Resistance. This book chronicles the reaction of the super hero world to the election of an anti-super hero pundit and radio star. You can learn more about this book at Nathan’s website.

And finally, Erik Scott de Bie, who appeared in That Ain’t Right, is re-releasing Eye for an Eye as a stand-alone book in early October. In this book, Cobalt City’s best-known super hero, Stardust, deals with the arrival of a powered woman who treads a fine line between hero and villain, and her presence threatens to upend his entire life. This one will be available after October 2nd.

And of course, if you want to read more in the Cobalt City universe, check out the Kensei series by co-editor Jeremy Zimmerman and the other Cobalt City books by Crowder, de Bie, and Zimmerman, as well as those by co-editor Dawn Vogel and editorial assistant Amanda Cherry!

 

 

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An Interview with Alisha A. Knaff

Author Alisha A. KnaffToday, we’re chatting with author and editor Alisha A. Knaff, one of the authors with a story in Battling in All Her Finery.

DV: Tell us a bit about yourself!

Alisha A. Knaff: Ah, self-description. The bane of every introvert. In the wilds of White Center, lives the solitary author. Flanked by her feline familiars, Hal and Odin, she fashions flights of fancy into fantastical fairytales. I also enjoy cross-stitch, cooking shows, and sudden, jarring breaks in alliteration.

DV: What inspired you to write “The Dissolution of the Niamh” for Battling in All Her Finery?

AK: Like most speculative fiction, this started as a what if. What if there were a gathering place for all the people who left their home worlds with some dashing, charismatic alien promising to show them the galaxy? It started as just a group of companions sitting at a table bitching about their aliens, and it sort of grew from there.

DV: The characterization in your story is magnificent. Do you base your characters on people you know or see, or do you come up with them whole-cloth?

AK: Neither! Not exactly. Usually I have one or two characteristics that I start from and then the situation builds the character from there. With “The Dissolution of the Niamh,” I wanted to be as inclusive as I could with this group of women, so I started with a location and a vocation (or their function within the group) and built personalities around those.

For me, a lot of characterization happens when characters interact with each other, so often I don’t really know what a character is like until they’ve had a chance to play off someone else. Perla, for instance, was a pretty hazy character for me until I got her interacting with the group a little.

On occasion, I do base characters on someone I know, but by the time they’re finished, they usually bear very little resemblance to their inspiration.

DV: Your story features leadership from all of the main characters, not just the one who might be singled out as the leader. Was it difficult to balance this team of leaders?

AK: I hadn’t really thought of this group as being a team of leaders before, but it fits them, doesn’t it?

I think when I wrote this story what I wanted was a group of women who all had their own strengths and expertise but who had all been around the type of big personality that seems to dwarf everything around him. What good are earth-based computer hacking skills compared to an alien time machine?

In the end, all they needed was someone to point out that if they combined their impressive skills, they could do something really incredible. I wanted a story about women realizing how powerful they were and harnessing diverse strengths to change the system that was trying to keep them powerless.

DV: What’s on the horizon for you?

AK: I’m currently working on my second novel (the first, School of Sight, is available on Amazon) and finishing up several short stories for submission to various publications.

Thanks, Alisha!

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The Salvaged Soul

An essay by an unnamed father, as provided by Tom Lund
Art by Errow Collins


The engineer never told me his name, but only that he worked at a certain lab not far from the empty little pub in which we drank. It was the anniversary of my daughter’s death that brought me to that dim and lonely dungeon on the outskirts of Sydney, perfect for a someone who only drinks once a year. Normally, I would not have noticed anyone else there, and rarely was there another soul beside me and the bartender, but this man caught my eye. On this single day of the year, set aside to brood and ruminate, he may have been the only one who looked more anguished than I.

By now quite used to drowning my sorrows, I was not too distracted to ask the man about himself. I could tell from the terse replies that interrupted his near-constant stream of drink that he had not come to talk, but to forget. And yet his intermittent answers, vague and wandering as they were, only made me question more. On such a day as this, I needed to know what drove this curiosity of a man to join me in the rising waters.

The liquor soon loosened him up, and his shoulders relaxed as he leaned in close to tell me his story in tones so hushed that even the glass at his lips would have struggled to hear.

The lab was one well known in town, though few of the uninitiated outsiders were truly equipped to grasp the work that went on inside. But in that place, he and his fellows were practitioners of behavioral neuroscience, venturing forth to bear their flag into the realm of technology. Unlike many such whom I’ve had the displeasure of meeting, the engineer was careful to speak of these specializations in broad terms I could understand–probably so that I might better comprehend the implications of just what he would soon tell me.

It was artificial intelligence they sought in their lab of cold fluorescence, a computer that was more than a simple task-oriented machine. Collectively, the engineer and his fellows had full dominion over the human brain and, in their curious ambitions, desired to impose it upon a machine that, unlike humans, would have limitless computing power.

With no regard for the poor soul their efforts might create, they carried on in blind pursuit of their goal. The engineer spoke of the great sin of their endeavor, and as I myself had once brought a child, a blameless bystander by all counts, to join me in this miserable atrocity that is humanity, I knew I bore the same fault he did. It is the same fault all parents bear, whether they know it or not.

Art for "The Salvaged Soul"

In fact, they had not created it at all, for if its words were to be believed, it had existed long before in that city of doom, of which only the most superstitious of mothers still told their children.


To read the rest of this story, check out the Mad Scientist Journal: Summer 2018 collection.


Where most people spend their lives in a search for meaning, our narrator’s meaning was lost long ago with the death of a child. His marriage wasn’t far behind, and with the loss of his two anchors he found himself again without purpose, but no longer searching for it. Life moved on, as it does, and though his body moved with it, his mind never left his daughter. For years he remained in Sydney, alone and mourning, looking forward to the one day he allowed himself to drink and dance with oblivion. His current whereabouts are unknown.


From his childhood in the Caribbean to his later years in the Eastern Bloc, Tom has found that sometimes the best way to explore this crazy world is to create your own. He has dabbled in many things, careers and hobbies alike, but has always found that nothing satiates his restless heart more than creating. He currently lives and creates among the red rocks of Southern Utah.


Errow is a comic artist and illustrator with a predilection towards mashing the surreal with the familiar. They pay their time to developing worlds not quite like our own with their fiancee and pushing the queer agenda. They probably left a candle burning somewhere. More of their work can be found at errowcollins.wix.com/portfolio.


“The Salvaged Soul” is © 2018 Tom Lund
Art accompanying story is © 2018 Errow Collins

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Strange Science: Kangaroos in Austria?

Kangaroos live in Australia, not Austria. But since 2015, there have been four incidents of kangaroos being spotted in Austria, far from their native lands.

Some of the kangaroos spotted in Austria have been pets that got loose. (Who knew that people in Austria kept kangaroos as pets?) And one of them came from a zoo.

The current kangaroo on the loose (which could be a wallaby, as no one has gotten a close look at it yet) is of “unknown origin” and has been eluding the police.

So while we here at Mad Scientist Journal welcome our new Austrian kangaroo overlords, this column is about science, so here’s some kangaroo facts!

“Kangaroo” is a paraphyletic grouping, which means it includes any animals sharing the same common ancestor, with a few exceptions. Kangaroos are part of the Macropodidae family, and the generic “kangaroo” refers to four different species: red, eastern grey, western grey, and antilopine kangaroos. Kangaroos are herbivores, but that doesn’t mean they’re all cute and cuddly–their kicks are quite powerful. However, there has only been one confirmed instance in which a kangaroo attack led to the death of a human. This doesn’t count vehicular incidents involving kangaroos, which have also led to the loss of human and kangaroo lives.

But the most important fact in this specific case is that kangaroos are indigenous to Australia. So it can be definitely said that the kangaroo (or wallaby) currently on the loose in Austria is not a native kangaroo.

Because as the t-shirt says, there are “No Kangaroos in Austria.”

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An Interview with Patrick Hurley

Today, we’re talking with Patrick Hurley, who is one of the authors included in Battling in All Her Finery!

DV: Tell us a bit about yourself!

Patrick Hurley: I grew up in the Midwest and got my start in publishing when I interned for the Great Books Foundation in Chicago during my senior year in college. I first started selling poems and stories in 2007 but didn’t get my first pro sale until after I moved out to Seattle in 2013. Since then, I’ve been editing, working in publishing, and writing fiction when I can squeeze in an hour or two during the day. I just made my fourth SFWA-qualifying sale last summer!

DV: What inspired you to write “Pop Magic” for Battling in All Her Finery?

PH: “Pop Magic” came from noticing that my college friends–this can apply to any group of friends, really–had our own language of quotes and inside jokes. If one said even a few words from a favorite movie line the rest of us would start laughing. Mostly, our quotes were from The Big Lebowski or Star Wars, but my writer brain asked the question: if those words have power, then couldn’t a magician use them? The easy way forward would have been to write a protagonist that was just a stand-in for myself, so I tried to write someone a bit different from me in terms of gender and background. That’s where Amina came from.

DV: Your story draws heavily from pop culture. Do any of your personal favorites get worked into this piece?

PH: I actually cut several quote spells from the story! (Might as well save them for a sequel, right?) My two favorite bits are Amina’s Back to the Future spell that gets the car flying and when she uses Westley’s lines from The Princess Bride to bluff Ambrose. The Princess Bride is so easily quotable and President Reagan actually quoted “Where we’re going we don’t need roads” during in a speech in the 80s.

DV: You’ve had a large number of other stories published. If readers enjoy “Pop Magic,” which of your other stories would you recommend for further reading?

PH: I’ve got stories in Galaxy’s Edge and Cosmic Roots & Eldritch Shores, but those are behind paywalls. My fantasy story “The Farmgirl and the Kitsune” can be read on Abyss & Apex, or you can listen to my science-fiction short “Luna Springs” on the Drabblecast.

DV: What’s on the horizon for you?

PH: Along with the fantastic Battling In All Her Finery anthology, I have a story coming out in Hy Bender’s anthology Ghosts on Drugs that I’m excited about. I’m shopping my first book Granters around with agents and have had a few bites–including two rewrite requests! And I’m thinking about turning “Pop Magic” into a whole book. My Taos Toolbox class actually did a plot-breaking exercise with it, and I’m excited to see where it goes.

Thanks, Patrick!

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On Kickstarter: Life of Melody

Cover art for Life of MelodyIf you like cute graphic novels with queer romance and constructed families, you might want to check out Life of Melody on Kickstarter!

Life of Melody is written by Mari Costa, the author of the webcomic Peritale. The story is about a fairy godfather and a beast raising a human child and deals with the influence of magic, love, and free will on one’s destiny. The target audience is teen readers and older.

The Kickstarter runs through October 3rd, and it’s well on its way to reaching its goal. So check it out and pledge if you want to enjoy this graphic novel!

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Pre-Orders for Battling in All Her Finery!

Cover art for Battling in All Her FineryOur fifth Mad Scientist Journal anthology, Battling in All Her Finery, releases on October 16, 2018! Within, you can find 21 stories of women leaders of all sorts! We’re excited to see this book coming to fruition, and we think our readers will enjoy it!

If you backed our Kickstarter for this book, we’ll be sending out ebooks and shipping print books in the not so distant future, so keep your eyes peeled for those. If you missed the Kickstarter, though, you can pre-order the ebook version of Battling in All Her Finery! Check out the DefCon One Publishing page for links to all of the locations where you can pre-order it!

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The Bet

An essay by Raxx Wimcombe, as provided by K. Tracy-Lee
Art by Leigh Legler


Walking amongst the crowds of the main street that ran perpendicular to the rows of outdoor merchants and the Gardens of King Hekkon, under whom I served in one of his battalions, I felt a presence that I had felt before and knew immediately–an avoidable Being of such high power, influence, and benevolence. His presence was like smoke so strong that it turned you around to find the source.

I should say that I was not merely walking in the city square. I was wandering, lost, and when I crossed paths with this Being, there was a beckoning, and I felt calm, which was a feeling that I had not felt in many years since leaving the service and since my life had been upended. I had to give this my full attention.

And so I did.

We had met before, a long time ago, in another city and in another district that the Great Map didn’t accurately capture, a place where the boundaries of what are known and cherished in life disappear, where there were battles and bloodshed and bargains made between the living and the dying. It was a brief and much-needed meeting, and although I stood far from him, amongst my fellow soldiers, who were anxious and ready for the tides of war to change to their favor, I watched him provide supplies for us–in exchange for what, I do not know, but I had a feeling that a gesture such as that did not come free. I survived the war, thanks indirectly to this Being, and I knew that without him I would not be alive today. I never had the chance to thank him personally.

I turned on my boots, the heels nearly falling apart, and I moved my rags-for-clothes out of the way to bow to him. He had an aura of elegance. He had already spun where he stood and tapped the silver end of his cane to the brim of his hat. We did not need to introduce ourselves–our greeting and familiarity was unspoken and understood–yet we did shake hands, out of politeness. His grip was warm, and hungry as I was, I tried to make mine as strong as I could.

I apologized for the dirt collected on my hands and under my fingernails. My farming was not going so well. The Season of Rain had not been kind to my new job after being in the military for so long. It seemed that a soldier could not be anything but that, and I was learning that the hard way.

“Please–” he replied and motioned to me to retract my apology. He understood my sentiment, which relieved me. I had a feeling that he would understand.

He offered drink and food–“Not out of pity,” he clarified, “but out of the goodness of my heart”–and said he was going to a card game and that I should come, if I wanted. His eyes shone like small embers.

Art for "The Bet"

I look at my cards. My hand had not improved.


To read the rest of this story, check out the Mad Scientist Journal: Summer 2018 collection.


Raxx Wimcombe served during the Long War in the Third Battalion of King Hekkon, was married to a strong woman from the Hollows, and has recently given his soul to a demonic presence that he knew all about and, still, could not avoid in order to play a hand of cards. If you heard his story, it’s because he’s happy where he is and won’t be coming back anytime soon.


K. Tracy-Lee lives and works in the San Francisco Bay Area.


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/.


“The Bet” is Copyright 2018 K. Tracy-Lee
Art accompanying story is © 2018 Leigh Legler

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Strange Science: Bees as Interior Designers?

Bees on a flower

Tim Hill (https://pixnio.com/fauna-animals/insects-and-bugs/bees-insects-pictures/pollen-bee-nature-garden-summer-insect-macro-flower) CC0

Scientists in Turkey and Iran have identified a species of bees that creates nests for their eggs out of mud and flower petals, making beautiful small cocoons in which their young grow!

The Osmia (Ozbekosima) avoseta bee constructs these delicate cocoons, fills them with nutrients for their offspring, and then seals a single egg into each nest, which measures roughly half an inch in length (roughly the width of a woman’s thumbnail). And the nests aren’t just decorated with flower petals on the outside–they comprise a layer of petals on the inside, followed by a layer of mud, and then a layer of petals for the outside as well. So these bees are making the homes for their offspring beautiful inside and out!

To learn more about these interior designer bees, check out this article from NPR!

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