How have I gone this far in my life and not seen these? Maybe a couple I KNEW about, but not sure if I've seen any of them. I haven't watched them all yet, either, because there are, like, 40 of them! Yay!
If you love sci-fi, enjoy!!! (Courtesy of IO9 and http://theparkbencher.blogspot.com/)
http://io9.com/5412722/40-unseen-moments-from-your-favorite-movies
Showing posts with label Star Trek. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Star Trek. Show all posts
Monday, December 7, 2009
Thursday, November 19, 2009
The Word Reclaimed: An Interview with Author Steve Rzasa
Today we're featuring an interview with Steve Rzasa, author of "The Word Reclaimed," which was released by Marcher Lord Press in October 2009. The book is available from www.marcherlordpress.com, Amazon, and Barnes&Noble.com. And now, let's hear from Steve:
Welcome, Steve. Tell us about yourself.
I was born and raised in South Jersey, and fell in love with books—especially science fiction novels and historical volumes—at an early age. I earned my bachelor’s degree in journalism from Boston University’s College of Communications in 2000, and then spent seven years as a reporter and assistant editor at weekly newspapers in Maine.

My wife Carrie and I moved to her home state of Wyoming in 2007 with our two boys so I could take a job as editor of a weekly newspaper there. Now I work at the Johnson County Library in Buffalo, Wyoming.
My wife Carrie and I moved to her home state of Wyoming in 2007 with our two boys so I could take a job as editor of a weekly newspaper there. Now I work at the Johnson County Library in Buffalo, Wyoming.
I read in your Marcher Lord Press interview that you're proud that "not only does my oldest son read the Bible, but he also knows the difference between an X-wing and a TIE fighter." Let me just say that I do, too! What fun for me to interview a fellow Star Wars fan! Reading the synopsis of your book, I seem to catch a bit of the Star Wars influence. I'm picturing a boy finding the remnants of Christianity (when he stumbles upon a Bible) rather than the remnants of the old Jedi religion. Am I on track at all?
Pretty much, though I did not intentionally pattern the book after “Star Wars.” That said, I am a child of the 1980s – “Star Wars” informs much of what I like to read and create. The idea came when I asked myself, “What would a guy do if he found a Bible floating in space?” The idea expanded into a universe where all print materials are illegal, and a secret police force oppresses any and all religions that claim to have the sole route to salvation or paradise or what have you. This puts Christianity at the top of their hit list. But “The Word Reclaimed” is also an adventure tale that touches on politics, combat and family.
In your interview at Marcher Lord Press, you mention how hard it is to find science fiction with redeeming spiritual themes. Why do you think that is?
I think some of that comes with the territory. Science-fiction generally appeals to an audience that has given up on God, and looks to the stars for answers. I should know – I was one of those people. Science-fiction allows you to dive into a world where science and technology can solve mankind’s ills, both literal and spiritual. But it is a genre that also makes a wonderful setting for great adventures. It is ripe for spiritual redemption.
Are there other current SF books or movies or even TV shows that you're excited about?
Well, the one show I’m most excited about is long-cancelled – “Firefly” by Joss Whedon. Cowboys and pirates in space – need I say more? I am also very much looking forward to James Cameron’s “Avatar” this winter and am still reeling from the eye-popping “Star Trek” from this summer.
Wow, you're definitely at home on this blog! My co-blogger and niece, Kristi, has a Facebook group called something like "Joss Whedon Should Hire Kristi Israel." (Kristi, correct me if I got that wrong.) And I did a post last summer about the new Star Trek movie.
Do you think a writer may accomplish some things better through speculative fiction than other types of fiction?
Speculative fiction offers a better setting for adventures than other genres, in part because the authors can feel free to create a new world. I also think speculative fiction is more entertaining because it is far removed from everyday life, and that makes it easier to tackle themes on a grander scale.
What do you hope to accomplish through The Word Reclaimed? Sheer entertainment? Warn us of a possible, grim future? Or something entirely different?
I hope to do a little of both – entertain with a tale of adventure, danger and space battles, but also warn of a future in which all information is controlled through electronic monopolies. There is no substitute for the printed word.I also want the reader to see the power the Word of God has in people’s lives. It draws people to its pages but also leads them to raging extremes to destroy it. Or perhaps I should say, try to destroy it.
Have you always wanted to be a writer? And is The Word Reclaimed the first book you've written?
I have always wanted to be a writer. It wasn’t until high school and college that I really settled on that as the thing that I wanted to do, however. “The Word Reclaimed” is the first published novel I’ve written, and is actually the first half of the manuscript reviewed by Marcher Lord Press. The second half is the sequel, tentatively titled “The Word Unleashed,” is due out this spring from MLP.
I did also self-publish a short Christian sci-fi novel called “This Stirring Strife” shortly after college. It was kind of an experiment – I had a story I wanted told, and wanted to see it in print. So now there are a few used copies out floating around on Amazon.com and Barnes & Noble somewhere.
How did you go about creating the world of your novel? Do you have a science or technology background that helped out?
I have next to zero background in those subjects – beyond public school education – but I usually read any space/future tech-related article in news magazines I come across. I spent a lot of time over the years putting together the future tech for “The Word Reclaimed,” figuring how it would impact their society, and knowing how it works. I also wanted to give the universe a feel of realism, so I made the effort to research foreign languages and put them into the book.
Tell us a little about your journey to publication.
I had little time to write fiction when I was a reporter. When you spend all day writing for a living, the last thing you want to do when you get home is park yourself in front of a keyboard. So my book proceeded slowly. In 2008 however, I changed jobs and my writing took off. Within a year, I’d completed the book and send out submissions. Jeff Gerke from MLP picked it up in the summer of 2009, and the rest, as they say, is history. It was quite a whirlwind ride.
Do you have any words of advice for other writers--especially those struggling to find that first publishing contract?
Yes – keep trying. I know that’s terribly cliché advice, but it’s true. I had several rejections along the way, but thankfully MLP was right there as the perfect fit for “The Word Reclaimed.” Do not give up on your writing, if it is a story for which you have an undeniable passion. And don’t be afraid to take the advice of others and change your work. It’s very hard for the writer’s ego, but the end result will be worth it.
Anything else you'd like to tell us?
By far, the coolest sci-fi characters in existence are Han Solo (Star Wars), Captain Jean-Luc Picard (Star Trek: The Next Generation), and Sandor Kreja (Merchanter’s Luck by C.J. Cherryh). Coolest ship ever? The USS Defiant from Star Trek: Deep Space Nine!
Thanks again for being our guest today. And best wishes with the book!
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Monday, May 11, 2009
To Boldly Go Where I've Gone Many Times Before
I'm obviously slipping. I didn't even realize there was a new Star Trek movie coming out until a few weeks ago. Back in the geeky days of my youth, I would have been one of the first to hear of such an earth-shaking development. I would have been planning to go to the premiere with my geeky friends, in t-shirts with clever sayings like, "Reality is just a crutch for people who don't get science fiction."
Even after finding out about this movie, I wasn't excited until sometime last week. Then something changed and I started getting all worked up about it. Maybe it was partly the change in the weather--the first really sticky, summery days we've had. Maybe it was a whiff of honeysuckle, or the end of the spring term at the college where I work. What does any of that have to do with wanting to see Star Trek, you ask?
Suddenly I was young again, with final exams completed and the lazy summer days stretching out before me. Hot afternoons spent in dark, cool movie theaters, transported to galaxies far, far away. Going home and writing letters to my friends (actual letters on paper, using ink pens and stamps and the mailbox. Talk about another world!) speculating on the next chapter in some ongoing space drama or other.
So suddenly, I wanted to be there on opening weekend of the new Star Trek, not just to see the movie, but to drink in the excitement. To be transported back in time. (Which turned out to be a very fitting metaphor, as you'll know if you've seen the movie!)
And isn't that what good books and movies are about? They speak to our lives at a particular time. They bring us into relationships with other fans. They spark our imaginations and take us out of ourselves. And they're bound so inextricably with the "real" parts of our lives that the connection is almost impossible to break. Hence the whiff of honeysuckle, the sticky-hot weather--and the sudden desire for an epic space movie.
And maybe the book or the movie doesn't even have to be particularly good. I thought the new Star Trek was well-written, funny and exciting, fresh and new yet faithful to the old--just extremely well done. But that's not always the most important thing. The familiar characters, the connection to our lives, some silly little thing that resonates with a part of our personality--sometimes that's more important than high artistic accomplishment.
I've had this idea before. (I will admit, for example, that the Pirates of the Caribbean movies have some of the most convoluted and hard-to-follow scripts in the world, but they resonate with me in a way that most better-written movies do not.) Then I heard someone else express the same thought, in a sort of unexpected venue: the Rush Limbaugh show. Last Friday, Rush had a guest host named Mark Davis, who is about my age. (Translation: Baby Boomer.) (Translation of the translation: old.)
Mr. Davis also talked about being excited over the movie, largely out of a sense of nostalgia. He also mentioned his fascination with the "franchise" idea of Star Trek--how many incarnations and series and movies and spinoffs there have been. He admitted that one of the series (The Next Generation, I think) was superior in every technical way to the original. Better writing, better acting, better special effects. And yet, it would always be Captain Kirk and Bones and Spock that held his heart and fired his imagination, because they're eternally connected with his youth, and with the joy of discovery.
I wonder if Mr. Davis has a picture of himself in a Star Trek uniform. I do. Have a picture of myself, I mean--not of Mr. Davis. Should I share it with you? Hmmm...it would take a LOT of comments telling me you're dying to see the picture for me to stoop that low. We'll have to see.
What about you out there? Even if you're not science fiction or Star Trek fans, are there books or movies that you realize aren't exactly great literature--and yet they stir something in you that "higher art" never could?
Even after finding out about this movie, I wasn't excited until sometime last week. Then something changed and I started getting all worked up about it. Maybe it was partly the change in the weather--the first really sticky, summery days we've had. Maybe it was a whiff of honeysuckle, or the end of the spring term at the college where I work. What does any of that have to do with wanting to see Star Trek, you ask?
Suddenly I was young again, with final exams completed and the lazy summer days stretching out before me. Hot afternoons spent in dark, cool movie theaters, transported to galaxies far, far away. Going home and writing letters to my friends (actual letters on paper, using ink pens and stamps and the mailbox. Talk about another world!) speculating on the next chapter in some ongoing space drama or other.
So suddenly, I wanted to be there on opening weekend of the new Star Trek, not just to see the movie, but to drink in the excitement. To be transported back in time. (Which turned out to be a very fitting metaphor, as you'll know if you've seen the movie!)
And isn't that what good books and movies are about? They speak to our lives at a particular time. They bring us into relationships with other fans. They spark our imaginations and take us out of ourselves. And they're bound so inextricably with the "real" parts of our lives that the connection is almost impossible to break. Hence the whiff of honeysuckle, the sticky-hot weather--and the sudden desire for an epic space movie.
And maybe the book or the movie doesn't even have to be particularly good. I thought the new Star Trek was well-written, funny and exciting, fresh and new yet faithful to the old--just extremely well done. But that's not always the most important thing. The familiar characters, the connection to our lives, some silly little thing that resonates with a part of our personality--sometimes that's more important than high artistic accomplishment.
I've had this idea before. (I will admit, for example, that the Pirates of the Caribbean movies have some of the most convoluted and hard-to-follow scripts in the world, but they resonate with me in a way that most better-written movies do not.) Then I heard someone else express the same thought, in a sort of unexpected venue: the Rush Limbaugh show. Last Friday, Rush had a guest host named Mark Davis, who is about my age. (Translation: Baby Boomer.) (Translation of the translation: old.)
Mr. Davis also talked about being excited over the movie, largely out of a sense of nostalgia. He also mentioned his fascination with the "franchise" idea of Star Trek--how many incarnations and series and movies and spinoffs there have been. He admitted that one of the series (The Next Generation, I think) was superior in every technical way to the original. Better writing, better acting, better special effects. And yet, it would always be Captain Kirk and Bones and Spock that held his heart and fired his imagination, because they're eternally connected with his youth, and with the joy of discovery.
I wonder if Mr. Davis has a picture of himself in a Star Trek uniform. I do. Have a picture of myself, I mean--not of Mr. Davis. Should I share it with you? Hmmm...it would take a LOT of comments telling me you're dying to see the picture for me to stoop that low. We'll have to see.
What about you out there? Even if you're not science fiction or Star Trek fans, are there books or movies that you realize aren't exactly great literature--and yet they stir something in you that "higher art" never could?
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