From: KH.Ranitzsch@t... (K.H.Ranitzsch)
Date: Sun, 16 Jul 2000 20:41:46 +0200
Subject: Greetings, Carbon-Based Bipeds
Hello everybody "Greetings, Carbon-Based Bipeds" is the title of a voluminous collection of Arthur C.Clarke's non-fiction essays. The book is now available in paperback (Voyager books, ISBN 0-00-648369-0). The content ranges from discussing his time in school in the 1930's to up-to-date pieces. The range of subjects is incredible. They reach from Alexander the Great to giant squid, from Meccano "the most wonderful toy ever invented up to that time [the 1940's]" to PCs: "a cure for the complete Meccano syndrome", and of course all the subjects you would expect: fellow science fiction writers, technical prophecy, including his 1940's paper advocating geostationary radio/TV satelllites (electricity to be provided by a steam engine powered by solar heat!) plus such items as his 1940's membership in the British Interplanetary Society (which was founded in 1933 and still exists, see: http://www.bis-spaceflight.com/ ) and its relationships with sister organisations such as the American Rocketry Society and the Verein für Raumschiffahrt (which was eliminated by the Nazis). Clarke can turn a fine phrase and there are little gems on just about every page: "One may laugh at the little vials of dews that Cyrano de Bergerac attached to his body so that he may be drawn towards the sun; but perhaps the familiar warp of contemporary science fiction will bear no closer examination" Clarke worked in WWII as a radar technician with physicist Luis Alvarez (he of the dinosaur asteroid) on developing aircraft blind-landing equipment: "One [test site] was surrounded by a tasteful tableau of crashed Liberators. We were always very careful to to explain to visitors that they had managed to get that way without any help from us."(1949) "The problem of making contact between two bodies [spaceships] in space seems to us considerably less difficult than refueling a plane in midair ... we consider that a few nylon cables should be able to neutralize any reasonable relative velocity, after which it would be merely a matter of manning the capstans."(1948) "In a few year, we will be seeing the first photographs of of the Earth as a single small globe among the stars. Is it too much to hope that this may make the more extreme forms of nationalism look as ridiculous as they are?" (1947) The book continues in chronological order and ends with Clarke's version of the history of the 21st century (which differs considerably from what we know to be the real one ;-) In one word: FASCINATING Greetings Karl Heinz available from amazon.com or amazon.co.uk