Okay, CoSo. πŸ–– It's time!

Today for , we talk about Strange New Worlds' time travel episode, which takes place more or less now in Canuckistan 🍁, and raises the classic Would You Kill Baby Hitler question around La'an's past.

Does it work? Does *any* time travel episode in ? What does this trope actually do - and does the romance help or hinder?

Come for the morality play! Stay for the poutine & Carol Kane!


onlysky.media/mclark/tomorrow-

@MLClark I'm glad someone else picked up on the "Would you kill baby Hitler" trope.

I'm glad the time travel went somewhere else other then Los Angeles for a change. Of course, they're filming in Toronto ... The early intent was to pass off Toronto as New York City, but then they decided to just call it Toronto.

Time travel episodes by definition make no sense, unless it's to "close the loop" and fulfill what was intended to happen.

@WordsmithFL

Exactly that, Stephen. I talk about the contrived nature of the trope in the article. Even shows like DEVS, which *expressly* acknowledge infinite time streams, still ultimately have to contrive reasons we should care about certain timelines in particular.

It's a problem that attests to human limits to fully understanding what life in a multiverse would entail--let alone to building a coherent ethics from that view of reality. We are small, fleeting critters in a big, big cosmos.

@MLClark My writing mentor, Sheila Finch, won an award for her first novel, "Infinity's Web." It explored these timeline stories. It's rather devious at one point.

amazon.com/Infinitys-Web-Sheil

@codeWhisperer @MLClark

Greg Benford published "Timescape" in 1980, back when tachyons were a fad. He won a Nebula Award for it.

Greg was an astrophysicist at my hometown university, so yay for the home team. 😊

amazon.com/Timescape-Novel-Gre

@WordsmithFL @MLClark
I've read that one, as well as most everything by "the Gregs" (Benford/Bear). In honor of your comment, here is a joke:
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The bartender says "We don't serve your kind here"
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Two tachyons walk into a bar.

@codeWhisperer @MLClark Sheila FInch was my mentor. The Gregs were in her inner circle, so I met them often.

M.L., I saw you're active in SFWA. Sheila is longtime SFWA, so you may have run across her at one time or another.

@WordsmithFL @MLClark
ISO Advice: An earnest question for both of you: How does one go about seeking a writing mentor or a good developmental writing group? I've been trying various exercises with others to hone my writing, but with little success. The other party gives up or loses interest after only a few weeks. I've tried nanowrimo meetings but they seem to be more about socializing than doing the work.
Is there a good website out there to pair up with someone and help each other grow?

@codeWhisperer @WordsmithFL

I didn't follow a writing mentor path, and I'm not big on writing groups. I've tried them, and even ran one for a bit, but my local community wasn't well suited for the task. I find folks tend to want more from me than they can offer in turn. So, I mostly work alone. (And I was a SFWA mentor twice; that's a nice annual program.)

Some folks today use Codex to help get started as they professionalize. Wasn't for me, but it might be for you!

codexwriters.com

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