Post by account_disabled on Dec 5, 2023 0:43:53 GMT -5
Science fiction story ideas keep buzzing around in my head. I had even created a sort of outline for a novel about robots, but for now I have no interest in writing it. If seeing science fiction films attracts me a lot, if I like reading novels of the genre, even if I'm not crazy about them, writing science fiction stories remains a huge problem for me to face. Science fiction books and films: a false documentation? To write stories of a specific literary genre you need to know it, therefore having read books on that genre. Seeing films also helps, I wrote this some time ago, even if a book is different from a film, but ultimately seeing a film represents a sort of alternative life that we live, so it has a value from the point of view of the visual experience .
Is it really enough to have read detective stories to write a mystery? No, in my opinion, because we need to know how investigations are carried out and only good documentation can give us the right information. Science fiction Phone Number Data books and films are for me just false documentation, or at least incomplete documentation. A cultural background for writing science fiction Do you know why Asimov was a great science fiction writer? Because he was a scientist. He was a biochemist who had dedicated himself for years to scientific dissemination, with texts on chemistry, physics and astronomy. I certainly don't mean to say that to write science fiction we must first graduate in aerospace engineering or quantum physics or astronomy. But I wonder: why did F.
Paul Wilson, a doctor, write sensational medical thrillers? Why did John Grisham, lawyer, write numerous bestselling legal mysteries? You can answer too, I was just asking some questions. I don't have the answers. Because I can't decide to write science fiction Because I don't have the right culture to do it. My readings in the field, as far as novels are concerned, are limited to some works by Asimov, Herbert, Bulgakov, Hubbard, Burroughs, Harrison, Bradbury, Wells, Matheson, Dick. But there are few works and I have only read one novel from almost all the authors mentioned. And I read only one essay, How to Build a Time Machine by Paul Davis. What I mean is that I don't understand anything about reactors or other issues that arise when a spaceship leaves Earth orbit, sails into space, lands elsewhere. And what might happen if a character took off his helmet on the Moon?
Is it really enough to have read detective stories to write a mystery? No, in my opinion, because we need to know how investigations are carried out and only good documentation can give us the right information. Science fiction Phone Number Data books and films are for me just false documentation, or at least incomplete documentation. A cultural background for writing science fiction Do you know why Asimov was a great science fiction writer? Because he was a scientist. He was a biochemist who had dedicated himself for years to scientific dissemination, with texts on chemistry, physics and astronomy. I certainly don't mean to say that to write science fiction we must first graduate in aerospace engineering or quantum physics or astronomy. But I wonder: why did F.
Paul Wilson, a doctor, write sensational medical thrillers? Why did John Grisham, lawyer, write numerous bestselling legal mysteries? You can answer too, I was just asking some questions. I don't have the answers. Because I can't decide to write science fiction Because I don't have the right culture to do it. My readings in the field, as far as novels are concerned, are limited to some works by Asimov, Herbert, Bulgakov, Hubbard, Burroughs, Harrison, Bradbury, Wells, Matheson, Dick. But there are few works and I have only read one novel from almost all the authors mentioned. And I read only one essay, How to Build a Time Machine by Paul Davis. What I mean is that I don't understand anything about reactors or other issues that arise when a spaceship leaves Earth orbit, sails into space, lands elsewhere. And what might happen if a character took off his helmet on the Moon?