This week on the podcast, Watson didn’t do the assigned reading. If he did that in my class, we’d move on without him and he’d fail another of life’s little tests.
Man, that was really, really mean.
Let’s talk about aliens.
This week on the podcast, Watson didn’t do the assigned reading. If he did that in my class, we’d move on without him and he’d fail another of life’s little tests.
Man, that was really, really mean.
Let’s talk about aliens.
One of the four basic building blocks of science fiction is time travel. Alongside artificial life, space travel, and aliens, time travel has been explored in numerous ways in fiction going back at least as far as H.G. Wells’ The Time Machine.
But what if a person was forced to relive his or her life in repetition? That’s the central premise behind Ken Grimwood’s 1998 novel Replay. Review and some spoilers after the cut.
At some point every geek franchise goes for time travel. Superman circles the globe at high speeds to make sure he can be in two places at once. Captain Kirk needs to find some humpback whales. I dream of dumping Barney back in the paleolithic age where he belongs. Time travel is what every geek has considered at some point.
But, how exactly does it work?