T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1002.1 | Not Niven? | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | len, EMA, LKG2-2/W10, DTN 226-7556 | Mon Jul 22 1991 10:16 | 9 |
| I remember a story about "slow glass", but I'm pretty sure it wasn't
by Larry Niven, and I'm not sure it involved a murder. I think it was
titled "The Light of Other Days" or something like that. Someone
active in this conference knows the details because I asked a question
about it some time ago, and got the correct citation. Of course, I
don't remember who or where...
len.
|
1002.2 | Bob Shaw was the author | SALEM::MCWILLIAMS | | Mon Jul 22 1991 10:37 | 4 |
| The book in question was written by Bob Shaw, and I believe was titled
"Other Days, Other Eyes". The glass itself was called Retardite..
/jim
|
1002.3 | Not The One I Remember | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | len, EMA, LKG2-2/W10, DTN 226-7556 | Mon Jul 22 1991 17:28 | 6 |
| The story I remember was a short story, from a multiauthor anthology.
It had a bittersweet ambience - someone was using the slow glass to
remember someone dear to them who had died.
len.
|
1002.4 | Nebula Winners? | VMSMKT::KENAH | The man with a child in his eyes... | Mon Jul 22 1991 19:09 | 4 |
| I believe there's a Slow Glass story in one of the Nebula Award
collections. (I, too, remember the bittersweet story as well.)
andrew
|
1002.5 | | SEGSST::REDFORD | Entropy isn't what it used to be | Mon Jul 22 1991 23:46 | 7 |
| Shaw first introduced `slow glass' in the short story `Light of
Other Days' in 1966. He expanded on the idea in the novel `Other
Day, Other Eyes' in 1972. He's an excellent author in general,
but hasn't been heard much from recently. He's about 60 years
old now. His most famous work is probably `Orbitsville', which is
about a Dyson sphere that acts as a peculiar trap.
/jlr
|
1002.6 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | This mind intentionally left blank | Tue Jul 23 1991 05:08 | 14 |
| I've modified the topic title to reflect the true author of the
Slow Glass idea.
As previous replies have mentioned, the concept was created in the
short story "Light of Other Days". It didn't win either the Hugo
or Nebula, though it was nominated for the latter. It's been
anthologized all over the place. It was (as previously mentioned)
expanded into the fix-up novel OTHER DAYS, OTHER EYES, which has
unfortunately been out of print for quite some time.
I think less of Shaw in general than does JLR, but "Light of Other
Days" is undeniably a classic.
--- jerry
|
1002.7 | Titles? | SHIPS::GORE_I | Bar sinister with pedant rampant | Tue Jul 23 1991 11:39 | 10 |
|
I thought Other Days, Other Eyes was a collection of shorts, all
written around the slow glass theme. I remember the "bitter sweet"
story involving a Retardite picture window which would eventualy show
the main character's living room, complete with loved one. Another
story involved a murder committed beneath a Retardite street lamp
(gathers light during the day, emmits it at night). The police merely
had to wait a few hours and then they could watch the whole thing.
Ian G.
|
1002.8 | I missed that. I'll put on my slow spectacles :-) | CHEST::HAZEL | Million-to-one chances crop up nine times out of ten | Tue Jul 23 1991 12:06 | 5 |
| This slow glass sounds like a good thing. A piece of it would make a
good substitute for a video recorder.
Dave Hazel
|
1002.9 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | This mind intentionally left blank | Wed Jul 24 1991 03:37 | 11 |
| re:.7
� I thought Other Days, Other Eyes was a collection of
shorts, all written around the slow glass theme. �
I referred to it as a "fix-up" novel. That's the term used when a
novel is "built" up from a series of related short stories. It's not
a "true" novel, but it's more than just a collection of short stories
as well.
--- jerry
|
1002.10 | see you later... | WHELIN::TASCHEREAU | Job hunting is a contact sport. | Wed Jul 24 1991 11:00 | 6 |
|
You can find a slow glass short in the anthology "Robert Silverberg's
Worlds of Wonder". Its the one about a glass "farmer" who uses a piece
to view his dead family.
-St
|
1002.11 | | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Wed Jul 24 1991 12:08 | 11 |
|
re: Note 1002.8 by CHEST::HAZEL
> This slow glass sounds like a good thing. A piece of it would make a
> good substitute for a video recorder.
Also a good battery if you could manage to control the rate of release.
That was one of the quibbles about slow glass -- the amount of energy it
had to store and what would happen if it is released all at once.
JP
|
1002.12 | Slow workers? | CRATE::HAZEL | Million-to-one chances crop up nine times out of ten | Wed Jul 24 1991 12:48 | 7 |
| It would, of course, be completely reprehensible of me to suggest that
bureaucrats wear spectacles made out of slow glass...:-)
...but I'll suggest it anyway.
Dave Hazel
|
1002.13 | Who's Shaw he's not written much lately? | CHEFS::BARK | | Mon Jul 29 1991 08:45 | 11 |
| Bob Shaw hasn't been heard much from recently? So who's the author of
"The Wooden Spacehips", "The Ragged Astronauts" and (I think) "The
Wandering Worlds" plus at least one sequel to "Orbitsville" and the
recent short story collection "Dark Night in Toyland."? Maybe it's
really his friend the eccentric scientist Eric Von Donnigon who's
writing these books and getting nominated for the Arthur C Clark award
under the pseudonym "Bob Shaw"? (Check out one of his "Serious and
Scientific Talks" at a worldcon or British Eastercon, and you might
find out.) :-)
john
|
1002.14 | Was this one of Shaw's too ? | 45287::FLETCH | He's completely hatstand ... | Tue Aug 13 1991 18:46 | 9 |
| Didn't one of the Shaw stories end with the chilling hint that some
'Governmental' agency had/would seed the entire globe with minute
fragments of slow glass ? (they were of short thickness - coupla months
I think - and the general idea seemed to be that a simple 'dusting' of
the area would give you fragments of glass that would show what had
occured there over the past few months .......). I don't have the Shaw
stuff here with me so I can't be sure. Anyone else ?
/f
|
1002.15 | Slow glass is watching you (reply to 1002.14) | CHEFS::BARK | | Wed Aug 21 1991 08:40 | 5 |
| Yes, this idea was contained in one of Shaw's stories, although I seem
to remember that the ending was a little more upbeat. The dusting of
slow glass meant that no-one could ever carry out a crime undetected.
I can't tell you the title, though.
|
1002.16 | It was a little bit more 1984'ish in the novel | SALEM::MCWILLIAMS | | Wed Aug 21 1991 12:18 | 14 |
| In the novelization, the protangonist is called in to try to solve a
poltical assasination and he is told that security knows who did it and
and how they did it, although security won't tell how they know. The
protagonist's job is to prove how it was done and gather information so
that a trial can be held. The protagonist solves the crime rather
ingeniously and then begins to wonder how security knew. He finally
realizes that the government is dusting the countryside with retardite
dust (and retardite being capable of near infinite resolution and
apparrently suspension of the laws of physics) and they picked up
samples of the dust around the scene of the accident and used the
images stored therein to know how the crime was committed. He and his
girl friend then go public to stop the dusting.
/jim
|