Blog Archives

Thoughts of Leith – Nautical Stuff, a Neat Old Book, and Mmm-Food

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In this episode of Thoughts of Leith I unbox some kitschy kitchen utensils, a neat old book on the French and Indian War, and some keto-oriented foods.

Category: Thoughts of Leith

Thoughts of Leith – Road Talk : The Philosophy of Driving

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I’ve renamed my YouTube Writing playlist Thoughts of Leith to take in a broader range of topics. The latest installment is a freestyle discussion of driving ethics and how easy it is not to be an asshole.

My Non-Fiction To-Read Pile

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Even if you’re a fiction fan, it can be fun to throw some non-fiction into your reading pile. And, it can enhance your enjoyment of fiction!

Category: About Me

Here is a simple and reasonable way to classify common objects in space

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People are talking about reworking the definition of “planet” again. To be honest about it, did they ever stop after the Pluto debacle? I’ve been in it, too, slamming the truly idiotic definition of a planet asserted by the International Astronomical Union (IAU).

Recently, however, it’s not the bottom end of the definition of planets (where Pluto got the boot) that’s the issue, it’s the top end where gas giants fade into stars.

I’ve thought about that boundary as well. In fact, I had already worked out a completely new (and, I believe, more rational) system of classifying heavenly bodies for an unpublished preface to the science fiction novel Xenes. In fact, I may include it as an appendix. But, I’ll share it here, outside the narrative context.

The basic idea was to conduct differential diagnosis in reverse. First divide everything we find in space into two distinguishable halves, and then repeat that process until there was a workable typology. Specifically, a workable typology that had nothing to do with where the object was in relation to other objects, i.e., what the object was orbiting or whether it had “cleared its orbit” of other objects. A typology of what objects are, not where they are.

IS IT ROUND?

The first division is between orbs, objects large enough for hydrostatic equilibrium to make their surfaces essentially round, and scalenes, from the Greek for uneven, rough, rugged. The standard for hydrostatic equilibrium is present in the IAU’s typology, but they staple on expectations about the object’s path in space, relational standards to other objects that really should have no place in determining what an object is.

Orbs would include everything from what we now call dwarf planets through planets, gas giant planets, and stars to black holes.

Scalenes would include basically everything else, from asteroids and comets all the way down to dust. Anything that isn’t massive enough to become round through hydrostatic equilibrium.

Now, this scalene-orb divide puts Pluto and other “dwarf planets” on the same side as Earth, Jupiter, stars, and black holes. Which is a fairly diverse bunch of things. So, we need to apply the same diagnostic technique to orbs.

DOES IT HAVE A SOLID SURFACE? (OR…)

Having a “solid surface” is a problematic definition. It certainly puts Pluto and Earth in the same category, right? But what about ice giants like Neptune and gas giants like Jupiter which, under all that atmosphere, are believed to have a solid core? Also, the solid surfaces of some objects conceal a huge mass of liquid, like the Earth’s rocky mantle or the water oceans believed to exist inside Ceres and Enceladus.

So, let’s do this. An orb is a planet if its volume is dominated by solids and liquids. Regardless of where it is in relation to other objects. Thus, regardless of what it orbits or whether it has “cleared its orbit,” whatever the hell that means.

This puts off our term for orbs like Jupiter and Uranus for later, of course. But, this also means not only that Pluto and other trans-Neptunian orbs would be planets, but including orbs like Ceres, Titan, Ganymede, and even Earth’s moon Luna. We can still use the word “satellite” as a modifier to describe planets that orbit things that aren’t stars. But they would be satellite planets. And, we could colloquially use “moon” to describe planets and scalenes (like Deimos, a satellite scalene of Mars) that orbit things that aren’t stars, but this would no longer strictly be a scientific term.

This approach might seem ambitious, but it’s also rational and scientific. A thing is what it is based on its own characteristics, not based on where it is in a spatial relationship. A can of beans doesn’t become something other than a can of beans because you put it on top of a box of macaroni or in a shelf beside other cans. This definition of planet is the rational and scientific approach, even if it upends our traditional ways of thinking.

A planet would be any orb with its volume dominated by solids and liquids. Which brings us to the next boundary.

IS IT DOMINATED BY GASES?

This seems like a straightforward boundary. But, are we talking dominated by mass or volume? Considering the relative mass of solids and fluids, I would select volume.

First, terminology. I reject “giant planet” for the same reason I reject the IAU’s “dwarf planet.” Both “giant” and “dwarf” are modifiers. Being a “dwarf planet” means Pluto is still a kind of planet, a grammatical reality that the IAU doesn’t seem to understand. It’s one of the things that makes their attempted demotion of Pluto logically absurd. Calling orbs like Saturn and Neptune “giant planets” would be, frankly, dumb.

Instead, given the hazy boundary between what we now call giant planets and small stars, I would call objects dominated by gases stelloids. They certainly aren’t in the same category as planets like Titan and Mars but, although their make-up differs significantly from plasma-dominated stars, they resemble stars more than planets in their form and internal dynamics.

This obviously also defines the next category, stars, which would be orbs dominated by plasma. Both the stelloid and star categories have obvious internal boundaries that need addressed, but the basic boundary between stars and stelloids is relatively easy to navigate.

The fuzziest boundary is between planets and stelloids, given that we should expect a significant gray area between smaller stelloids like Uranus or Neptune and planets with thick atmospheres like that of Venus, which is 90 times more dense than Earth’s. We can work that out as more planets are discovered outside our Solar System. The standard of volume, I believe, is the best standard.

And this, beyond stelloids and stars, bring us to our final category.

DOES IT HAVE AN EVENT HORIZON?

At a certain point, the mass of a plasma-dominated orb bends physics to create the infamous event horizon. This is the only place where physics makes having the standard be mass-based rather than volume-based bring sense to the typology. At this boundary, it’s mass that changes the nature of the orb.

The current system refers to these objects as “black holes,” which is a strange designation considering the radiation that exudes from them. Given the one-way nature of the event horizon (setting Hawking radiation for the moment) I suggest we call these object “sumps” because matter and energy drains into them. This is also a much less sensational term that doesn’t subject itself to pseudoscientific, “I LOVE SCIENCE” style of goofy speculation.

So, below is a graphic outlining the typology described above. I hope you see hope for astronomy in this and share it far and wide.

That damned day, the day that “The Ends of the World” went on sale in paperback.

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Oh, the ordeals of proofing. The learning curve was quite steep. But, I slugged through it and here we are.

The Ends of the World is now on sale at Amazon. If you like pirates, puzzling supernatural worlds, intelligent animals (we’ve got a raven, a monkey, and an octopus), and lots of plot twists, you might hate this novel. But, you’ll never know until you try it!

Okay, here’s the story. Engineer John Randolph has a new job that has nothing to do with his degree, a new girlfriend who moved in but won’t have sex with him, and new shoes that are eating into his feet. Then John gets smeared in a crosswalk and finds himself in a purgatorial afterlife that’s stuck in the age of sail. He shows up naked, gets pressed into service by wily plantation owners and brutal pirate lords, and is struggling to win freedom for his newly dead friends.

Newcomer cosplayers revere recently deceased rock stars, old souls fight to maintain their archaic control over newcomers, the mysterious Company Men move behind the scenes, and John discovers one weird fact: the World Facing remakes itself to the expectations of its not-quite-dead inhabitants.

Will John escape his pursuers or get killed again and be sent to his final reward?

Category: Fiction

Fifth chapter of Goodly Creatures available at Patreon

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I am serializing a couple of novel projects at Patreon: Xenes, a science fiction adventure novel, and Goodly Creatures, a gunpowder, age of sail fantasy about colonial ambition, with a large cast of characters. Humans from several civilizations to the west of the Apsamian Ocean have settled on the coasts of the vast and unexplored continent to the east, home to non-human races: the primordial giants and Peyri, and their mongrel  creations, hybrid peoples who dwell in the wilderness of the eastern continent.

A newly elevated lord, Julius Blake, seeks to enhance his station by securing his governor’s trade routes through a wilderness plagued by mongrel monsters. He is confronted by a bear-man, Grigarius, raised from a cub among humans by the governor of Johannia colony.

The rogue Raf Arland, condemned to indenture for his crimes in the Old World, navigates colonial society to find a way to better his low station. He is joined by an unlikely ally, a seasoned  sailor named Jefford Schank who is abandoned in the colonies by a brutal captain.

Lady Snow Bernes struggles to protect the ambitions of her father, the governor of the Royal Colony of Johannia, with the help of manservant Raymond Gamba.  She is torn between her loyalty to her father, her admiration for Lord  Blake, and her inexplicable attraction to Raf Arland. And, she has a magical secret that could determine the course of her schemes.

If you’re a patron, you can continue on to chapter five, ″Angel Shore.” Chapter one, “Kings Cove,” is available for free. If you like the story, consider becoming a patron so I can continue writing full-time.

Category: About Me, Fiction

Fifth chapter of Xenes available at Patreon for patrons

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I am serializing several novel projects at Patreon, starting with a few free chapters to let readers and potential patrons know what I’m about. My latest offering, patrons only, is from Xenes, a science fiction adventure set centuries after the humans’ first attempt to colonize nearby space had failed. In the aftermath, humans and their genetically engineered “types” have broken into multiple antagonistic factions that have been kept in an uneasy peace by androgyne somatypes.

But now, recluse Sandalfon Kaffel, androgyne diplomatic officer Vani Matoyan, and the mysterious girl Meyna Jeyen find themselves in an unexpected battle that destroys Sandalfon’s new home planet and corners them between the politically zealous Threaders, strictly religious Bahrí, and philosophical Smoke Hatters.

Xenes was originally serialized at Fresh Pulp scifi magazine, but now has new content as I firm it up for publication as a novel.

This offering is for patrons. If you’re a patron, you can continue to “Meyna Jeyen.” Chapter one, “Break From Juggler,” is available for free! If you like the story, consider becoming a patron so I can continue writing full-time.

Category: About Me, Fiction

Fourth chapter of Goodly Creatures available at Patreon

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I am serializing a couple of novel projects at Patreon: Xenes, a science fiction adventure novel, and Goodly Creatures, a gunpowder, age of sail fantasy about colonial ambition, with a large cast of characters. Humans from several civilizations to the west of the Apsamian Ocean have settled on the coasts of the vast and unexplored continent to the east, home to non-human races: the primordial giants and Peyri, and their mongrel  creations, hybrid peoples who dwell in the wilderness of the eastern continent.

A newly elevated lord, Julius Blake, seeks to enhance his station by securing his governor’s trade routes through a wilderness plagued by mongrel monsters. He is confronted by a bear-man, Grigarius, raised from a cub among humans by the governor of Johannia colony.

The rogue Raf Arland, condemned to indenture for his crimes in the Old World, navigates colonial society to find a way to better his low station. He is joined by an unlikely ally, a seasoned  sailor named Jefford Schank who is abandoned in the colonies by a brutal captain.

Lady Snow Bernes struggles to protect the ambitions of her father, the governor of the Royal Colony of Johannia, with the help of manservant Raymond Gamba.  She is torn between her loyalty to her father, her admiration for Lord  Blake, and her inexplicable attraction to Raf Arland. And, she has a magical secret that could determine the course of her schemes.

If you’re a patron, you can continue on to chapter four, ″Admirable Footsteps.” Chapter one, “Kings Cove,” is available for free. If you like the story, consider becoming a patron so I can continue writing full-time.

Category: Fiction

Fourth chapter of Xenes available for patrons at Patreon

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I am serializing several novel projects at Patreon, starting with a few free chapters to let readers and potential patrons know what I’m about. My latest offering, patrons only, is from Xenes, a science fiction adventure set centuries after the humans’ first attempt to colonize nearby space had failed. In the aftermath, humans and their genetically engineered “types” have broken into multiple antagonistic factions that have been kept in an uneasy peace by androgyne somatypes.

But now, recluse Sandalfon Kaffel, androgyne diplomatic officer Vani Matoyan, and the mysterious girl Meyna Jeyen find themselves in an unexpected battle that destroys Sandalfon’s new home planet and corners them between the politically zealous Threaders, strictly religious Bahrí, and philosophical Smoke Hatters.

Xenes was originally serialized at Fresh Pulp scifi magazine, but now has new content as I firm it up for publication as a novel.

This offering is for patrons. If you’re a patron, you can continue to “Gears and Gunnery.” Chapter one, “Break From Juggler,” is available for free! If you like the story, consider becoming a patron so I can continue writing full-time.

Category: Fiction

Third chapter of Goodly Creatures up for patrons at Patreon

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I am serializing a couple of novel projects at Patreon: Xenes, a science fiction adventure novel, and Goodly Creatures, a gunpowder, age of sail fantasy about colonial ambition, with a large cast of characters. Humans from several civilizations to the west of the Apsamian Ocean have settled on the coasts of the vast and unexplored continent to the east, home to non-human races: the primordial giants and Peyri, and their mongrel  creations, hybrid peoples who dwell in the wilderness of the eastern continent.

A newly elevated lord, Julius Blake, seeks to enhance his station by securing his governor’s trade routes through a wilderness plagued by mongrel monsters. He is confronted by a bear-man, Grigarius, raised from a cub among humans by the governor of Johannia colony.

The rogue Raf Arland, condemned to indenture for his crimes in the Old World, navigates colonial society to find a way to better his low station. He is joined by an unlikely ally, a seasoned  sailor named Jefford Schank who is abandoned in the colonies by a brutal captain.

Lady Snow Bernes struggles to protect the ambitions of her father, the governor of the Royal Colony of Johannia, with the help of manservant Raymond Gamba.  She is torn between her loyalty to her father, her admiration for Lord  Blake, and her inexplicable attraction to Raf Arland. And, she has a magical secret that could determine the course of her schemes.

If you’re a patron, you can continue on to chapter three, ″Humble Beginnings.” Chapter one, “Kings Cove,” is available for free. If you like the story, consider becoming a patron so I can continue writing full-time.

Category: Fiction