- Ow. “Too many pickles prompted woman to punch sandwich maker” http://t.co/H3Pf97W3YG #emotional #issues 16:49:40
- (chortle) RT @evanier: The Powerball jackpot has climbed over $600 million. Okay, now we’re talking serious money… 20:02:46
Diane Duane
- Did #StarTrek Give Rise to #NASA's 'Space Shuttle'? http://t.co/br6SvorNHM #space 16:38:45
- Booked into the Dublin Savoy for #StarTrekIntoDarkness tomorrow. SO buzzed. 🙂 #stid #startrek 16:53:31
- "'Smart guns' could be next step in gun control": http://t.co/nCqUQjN1vg #skyfall 17:03:33
- Egad. RT @BoxOfficeFacts: IRON MAN 3 is on track to gross $1 billion dollars worldwide by Friday. 17:33:13
- A certain amusing resonance in the way they removed him, too. RT @ryanfarrr: I hope someone filmed this http://t.co/P2luQ6x0nA 17:49:10
- 🙂 RT @ChrisDunne29: Reckon we should do a compromise with the eurosceptics whereby we stay in Europe but leave #Eurovision… 19:15:35
- Oh, crap. "#NASA’s #Kepler #space telescope malfunction may end hunt for planets": http://t.co/ppMIzaqWGS 20:00:27
- It's out now! The revised New Millennium Edition of A #WIZARD ALONE: http://t.co/YJBlshjvig #YA #fantasy #youngadult #sf #wizards 22:35:03
- "Broomstick-flying #witches to be brought down in Swaziland" http://t.co/yu4bHrNMow 00:17:06
- Available now: the revised New Millennium Edition of A #WIZARD ALONE. http://t.co/dFBY5jRcuD #fantasy #sf #YA #wizards 01:30:18
- "Man run down in dispute over #duck" http://t.co/Cdpa1P3HXV 02:40:14
- "Woman accused of slapping police officer so she could be jailed and forced to stop #smoking" http://t.co/ltrNQ4Jgws 03:25:31
- "Man blew up family home after wife and children went on picnic without him" http://t.co/5tQFIlRiwi 04:35:07
- Hey, thanks. 🙂 http://t.co/Qr6SrJSIJW 08:38:50
- #Ebooks Direct mailing list folk — sorry for store downtime this morning! All discounts have been extended one day. http://t.co/yXP816ckZa 08:46:20
- What's the next frontier for Chris Hadfield? http://t.co/CpPHvCvPyz .@CmdrHadfield #space #Canada 10:12:48
- The Argents' Bestiary: Phallic Unicorns, Ball-less Beavers and Dirty, Dirty, Intersex Hyenas: http://t.co/58MophYcrA 11:52:36
- CRIPES I am so furious right now – I need to go for a walk. http://t.co/edNsQxjI1H 15:44:51
- Hey, it's out! The New Millennium Ed'n of A WIZARD ALONE: http://t.co/TIYQ9RhhMS #YA #fantasy #autism 20:56:05
- Hard-launching today! A #WIZARD ALONE, the #New Millennium Edition: http://t.co/29sVg9xBDP #youngadult #ya #fantasy http://t.co/hAlBZ5o3Ca 14:53:32
- & he should know. 🙂 RT @p_morwood: Fake movie blood recipe from Mark Gatiss, with an extra suggestion from me. http://t.co/HxmYB4UP4f 15:02:00
- (bemusement) Why the hell have I been watching the #Eurovision?? 20:49:56
- Oh god, we made the #Eurovision finals. We’re doomed. We’re going to win and have to run it AGAIN. 20:51:27
- YAY URSULA!! RT @mythsoc: 2013 Mythopoeic Award finalists announced: http://t.co/twAtLZkJOH 20:54:54
- It’s out now: the New Millennium Edition of A #WIZARD ALONE. http://t.co/TIYQ9RhhMS #youngwizards #YA #youngadult 21:34:05
- Bloody #Torchwood again, no doubt. “Council refuse to investigate reported vortex to another dimension” http://t.co/R1qFD4HnsJ 23:34:15
Revised and edited for its 21st-century readership, this edition features new material which does not appear in the original 2002 version.
Great power turns up in surprising places…
In A Wizard Alone, Kit and Nita join forces once more against the terrible Lone Power on an unusual battleground, as they fight for the heart and mind of a young wizard with the power to save their world.
Initially, Kit finds himself flying solo as Nita is struggling with depression after the events of The Wizard’s Dilemma. Luckily, Kit’s telepathic pooch, Ponch, is happy to fill Nita’s niche temporarily, as long as enough dog biscuits are involved.
Kit’s fighting to understand why autistic wizard-in-training Darryl McAllister has been stuck in his wizardly Ordeal for over three months. Exploring inside Darryl’s mind as they try to assist him, Kit and the increasingly magical Ponch discover complex landscapes of weird beauty and evidence of a tremendous hidden power for good. But they also find the Lone Power there, pursuing and attacking Darryl with a relentless brutality that makes little sense even in the dangerous context of a new wizard’s initiation. What makes Darryl so important — and why can’t he escape his Ordeal?
Nita, meanwhile, is distracted from her sorrow by a series of strange dreams in which mysterious beings alternately ask for her help and warn her of a deadly danger from which they’re trying to protect the world. What do the cryptic messages mean? She has to find out quickly — because now Kit, too, has vanished. Can she find him before the peril in which he’s immersed himself becomes a trap from which he may never escape? And even if Nita does find him in time, will the two of them be able to join forces with Darryl in time to deal with the Lone Power’s newest threat before It can destroy them all?
Reviewers say:
“A wonderful fantasy that marries magic and wizardry with the natural world.” (VOYA: 5Q — highest rating)
It’s nothing personal, not at all. But since yesterday both Out of Ambit and the new WordPress writing-stuff blog at Eating Paper (which I haven’t even put up a link to as yet, must fix that…) have been getting a blizzard of incoming trackback spam from Chinese sources. (Indian too, but way fewer of those.) As a result, for the immediate future I’m blocking everything from the .cn and .tw top-level domains. (And also Guatemala. Seriously, why? Well, I don’t care.) Doubtless this too will pass. In the meantime it’s just an annoyance.
The only good thing about this has been that some of the earnest-sounding, I-want-you-to-approve-this-comment text that comes with these things is so hilarious. Get this:
I would like to comprehend when you write this article is what kind of mood, why would you write this article, also written so good, is that I can emulate.
Wow, by all means. Or:
I am fond of your article.Your article is like a big tree, so that we can be seated in your tree, feel yourself a real.
No, I’m flattered but I wouldn’t presume to attempt the latter: certainly only Benedict Cumberbatch may properly inhabit that lofty eminence.
And then… this:
This article made me effulge.
(deep breath)
BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA.
…Bye bye China… gonna miss you for a while…
(effulge…)
Last year I wrote a post called “The Starship and the Upstairs Flat” which concerns the longstanding (and until then, one-sided) relationship between the Sherlock Holmes and Star Trek canons. While working on that, I had cause to go have a look at the Sherlock DVDs, because in “The Blind Banker” we get a quick glimpse at John’s CV, and I wanted to examine it in detail.
(This was as much a harking back to old habits as mere curiosity. Nurses like to have the salient professional details about the doctors they know, and especially the ones they work with. Back in the day, when it was much harder to lay hands on pertinent details than just Googling for them, my colleagues and I were definitely not above quietly sending away for the State Board scores of doctors whose expertise we weren’t sure about.)
I hadn’t given much more thought to the subject until recently, when I had reason to look more closely at the Doctor’s CV. When I did, I began to realize that it says all kinds of interesting things about John Watson to a (former) health professional. Discussion follows…
Those of you who follow me on Twitter may have noticed an uncharacteristic outbreak of annoyed language the other morning.
FECKFECKFECKFECK FECK SHIT DAMMITALLSTRAIGHTTOHELL. …Also “tits”.
— Diane Duane (@dduane) March 29, 2013
Well, this was the cause.
ETA: Secondary to all the below, and after no steps taken at home proved useful, the machine is going to be heading back to its lovely builders for service… so we’re having a sale at the Ebooks Direct store to “celebrate”. Details are here.
…I have two computers. One is a Samsung NC10 netbook on which a surprising amount of writing gets done (because it has a lovely keyboard; while I do dictate a lot of my work in Dragon Naturally Speaking, sometimes you just want to type, and the Samsung is the best machine in the house for Just Typing on). The other computer is a desktop named Calanda, as all my desktops are these days. (For the curious: Calanda is both a [theoretically] haunted mountain near the Swiss city of Chur*, and a Graubuendner beer brewery that produces a very superior dunkel and a lovely weissbier. All my other devices except for the iPad (Spot: of course it would be Spot) are named after characters from Tenchi Muyo. The netbook is Ayeka, the phone is Tsunami, etc etc.)
…Anyway. The present Calanda (II, or probably III at this point) is the first custom build I’ve ever owned, made by Scan in the UK: a lovely machine. It has never given me a lick of trouble. (Well, the video card has, but that comes under the “Occasional Wobblies / God Knows Why It Did That / Maybe It’s Sunspots / Never Mind, It Got Better” class of problems. It did get better.) Despite many years of home-building our machines, I’ve never had the urge to do anything with it except crack the case occasionally to do a little dusting.
And everything has pretty much been hunkydory until a week ago today, when in the middle of some website work the display froze, then went black. And then the machine rebooted itself.
Fine, I thought. This happens very, very occasionally. No problem.
Except that it then rebooted itself again. And again. And again. No display to the screen: just the fans coming on. And then more attempted rebooting. Much moar.
So I forced the machine off, pulled the power cord, waited, did deep breathing for a bit, then plugged the cord back in again and hit the Go button.
Same deal.
…Now, over twenty years or so of building PCs from the bits up, I’ve seen most kinds of errors they can throw… drive stuff, motherboard stuff, memory stuff, slot stuff. But this was a new one on me. And when I realized this, and that it was really problematic due to several projects I have working right now that really need the big machine rather than the netbook, several things happened in sequence.
(a) A great disturbance in the local Force: as if a single voice had cried out in anguish, and then shut right up because the crying-out-in-anguish stuff upsets the cat.
(b) The above distressed tweet. (Followed by much helpful advice from various people who saw it and the ones that followed, which were a shade more coherent.)
(c) Crack the case, look inside, and start diagnostics.
(d) Breathe some more and decide to wait until today to start doing anything whatsoever about it: because trying to get anything tech-meaningful done in Ireland (or to a lesser extent in the UK) on Good Friday is a challenge not worth taking.
…So I started working my way down the least invasive of the suggestions this morning. On cracking the case I found the original tight beautiful build, undisturbed (I’ve never added anything because the original build had everything I wanted). I had a careful look around to make sure that there was nothing obviously burnt, oozing or otherwise deranged. And nothing was.
Then I hit the button and let the machine run through the cycle a few times. The results you can see in the embedded video.
The thing most of note for me: the processor’s heatsink fan will not run. It tries, but fails. There are a number of things this implies, but I need to talk to the guys at Scan who built the machine before I go doing what my mother used to refer to as “jumping to concussions”.
Meanwhile, for those of you who were trying to work out what was wrong: that’s what we’ve got to work with so far.
…Also, for those of you who wanted system specs to assist you in diagnosis: here they are. It’s essentially a system built for fast graphics work (it spends a lot of its spare time rendering in Terragen, in particular) but also obviously handles WP work at damn-near-blazing speed.
- Housing: Antec Three Hundred Black Midi Tower Case w/o PSU
- Mobo: Gigabyte H55M-UD2H, Intel H55, 1156, DDR3 1600/1800/2133, RAID, VGA, ATX
- Processor: Intel Core i3 530 2.93GHz S1156
- To keep the processor chilled: Arctic Cooling Freezer 7 Pro v2
- Memory: 4GB (2x2GB) Corsair XMS3 DDR3, PC3-12800 (1600), CAS 9
- Video: ATI Graphics 1GB XFX HD 5870 XT, 865Mhz GPU, 1600 SPs, 5200Mhz GDDR5
- Display: It’s a Samsung 28-inch (I think?) flat screen. I can’t find the model info at the moment: it was bought separately from the main system, an open-box bargain.
- PSU: 650W Corsair CMPSU-650HXUK PSU (High End Graphics Card)
- HD 1: 500 GB Samsung Spinpoint F3, 7200 rpm, 16MB Cache
- HD 2: 1TB Samsung Spinpoint F3, 7200rpm, 32MB Cache
- CD/DVD drives: Sony AD-7240S-0B – 24x DVDRW (x2)
- Sound: Creative X-Fi Titanium – PCI-E (x1)
- Still more cooling: 120mm Akasa Amber Case Fan
- System: Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium 64bit
…So there you have it. To those of you who’ve tried to help so far, many thanks! 🙂
And now I’m off to let Moffat make me scared of WiFi.
ETA: Secondary to all the above, and after no steps taken at home proved useful, the machine is going to be heading back to its lovely builders for service… so we’re having a sale at the Ebooks Direct store to “celebrate”. Details are here.
*Disambiguation: for the worldgating complex, see the Chur entry at ErrantryWiki.
Foreword:
Something that happens to most working writers over time is that they get asked to contribute writing to charitable ventures (as opposed to being asked to write things for free, a pernicious and annoying habit which the sane jobbing writer gives short shrift).
This happened to me thirteen or fourteen years ago, when the people gathering together material for the charity anthology that would become Perfect Timing 2 contacted me and asked if I would consider donating a little something Whovian to the cause.
As it happened, I already had something. Years and years before — when dinosaurs walked the Earth and CompuServe was about all there was in the way of online life — I had been in the grip of a longstanding love affair that predates the one with my husband and was, in its own way, nearly as strong. Come to think of it, I’m still in the grip. I love the Doctor dearly.
Back then my fave was Five. It wasn’t that I didn’t like Tom Baker, the first Doctor I became acquainted with in the 70’s via the good offices of PBS (and our local affiliate, the splendid WNET). But for me there was something peculiarly attractive about Peter Davison’s portrayal of the Time Lord: something about the way he handled his personal ethos. These days it’s hard to be clear about the reasons in any more detail. In any case, eventually I did what I had done for a long time when I liked a character: I sat down and committed fanfic. The first short story, “The Effect of Dimensional Transcendence on Mozzarella Cheese” — which I wrote mostly as a joke — and later its sequel, wound up in the files area at HOM-29, the venerable SF and Fantasy Forums at CompuServe; and there they sat for ever so long, fading gently into obscurity.
So when the Perfect Timing people came to me, I thought, “Hmm: no need to write anything new: how about giving this an airing?” I submitted the story, they liked it, and it got published. So much for that.
A bit later, another anthology came along, and I fished out the second story, “A Dinner in Belgravia,” which scratched not only the Whovian itch, but another one of even longer standing — my deep love for the original Sherlock Holmes. (Not that I don’t have the writer-hots for the new incarnation, you understand. It’s impossible not to admire such a masterly reboot. But old loyalties die very very hard.)
And finally, to my great joy, the chance came to work in the Who universe under official auspices, and I jumped at it… but not without my own very muted back-reference. Readers of “Goths and Robbers” in Short Trips: the Quality of Leadership will note a certain concern with food: and indeed with pasta, which was a core issue in “Belgravia”. I think we have to assume that at that point, Five had run through the not inconsiderable amount of fettucine-or-whatever that five pounds Sterling would have bought in Holmes’s London, and needed to restock. Though personally I have to assume that the characteristic selfwilled swerve into the outfield of Time (if not Space) that the TARDIS takes during “Goths and Robbers” is about more than just concern over a Time Lord’s carb intake.
In any case, there’s no telling if or when I might ever again have anything to do with the Who universe in a professional capacity. Obviously I’d love to write for them. Who knows what future years will bring? …But if it ever happens — they’re going to have to work pretty hard to keep me from putting my nose into the TARDIS’s galley. — DD
The Effect of Dimensional Transcendence on Mozzarella Cheese
You usually find the TARDIS’s galley by accident, if at all. That was the way Nyssa found it that morning. She had actually been on her way to the Orrery Room — she always found a good long session of staring out into the time vortex to be a pleasant way to put her thoughts in order after a trying day with Cybermen or other annoying fauna — but the sound of the crash down at the end of the long corridor distracted her. She headed for it at a run.
It was a bright, pleasant room in which she found herself: sunlit (impossible) through big French windows (equally impossible) with a small, formal herb garden visible through them, and sweet spring air coming in and moving the curtains. (Nyssa sighed and resigned herself for the thousandth time to the possibility of nearly anything happening aboard this craft.) The room was done in brick and quarry tile; it had an open hearth at one side, with chairs and a sofa drawn up to it, and several books laid open face down on the cushions. There was a large free-standing “island” with a cutting-board top of blond wood, and all around the walls stood tall handsome-looking cabinets and appliances. Hanging from the ceiling was a wrought-iron rack festooned with pots, utensils, hanging plants, and several blasters, all very dusty.
Off to one side was the source of the noise — a welter of pans, bowls, and other junk that one of the cupboards had dumped when opened; and standing in the middle of them, a slender fairhaired shape in the usual striped pants and white shirt and suspenders, but without the fawn-colored frock coat. It had been replaced by a white linen barman’s apron with a question mark tastefully embroidered on one deep pocket. The Doctor’s sleeves were rolled up, and he was holding a large disc of metal in his hands, and examining it, first one side, then the other.
“Roundel problem, Doctor?” Nyssa said, curious, for the disc looked rather like a roundel’s inner back plate.
He looked up at her in total shock.
“Wrong?” he said. “With what?”
“With that,” she said, and pointed.
“Yes,” he said, sounding mildly annoyed, “it’s been scratched. I expect Tegan’s been using it as a teatray again. I keep telling her, the nonstick coating — ”
“Doctor,” Nyssa said, “you’ve lost me. Roundels don’t need a nonstick coating, their atomic structure — ”
“My dear Nyssa, who said anything about roundels!! I’m making pizza.”
“Pizza?”
“Pizza,” the Doctor said, with an air of intense satisfaction. He stepped out from among the fallen pots and pans and headed for the chopping block. “An ancient Gallifreyan dish, invented by Rassilon himself. Making pizza is a source of uplift to the soul.”
“And your soul needs uplifting?” Nyssa said, a little mischievously.
“No,” the Doctor said, “I’m just hungry. And for the moment you can leave my soul out of this.” He put the pizza pan down on the chopping block and went to a cupboard, from which he took down a canister of flour.
“I’ve heard Tegan mention pizza,” said Nyssa. “She says it’s fattening.”
“Just like her to ignore the philosophical aspects,” the Doctor muttered, stopping by the sink and turning the water on to let it run hot.
“She also said it was a Terran invention.”
“Well,” said the Doctor, looking a touch bemused as he opened the refrigerator and scouted about inside, “they would say that, wouldn’t they? Though before he laid down the Laws of Time, who’s to say that old Rassilon didn’t pop ahead a few tens of thousands of years and have a look at the recipe, and then nip back home and invent it first? Prior claim is everything.” He shut the refrigerator, grabbed a small bowl from the dish-drainer by the sink, filled it about half full, and put it down on the chopping board along with a small foil-wrapped cube. “But even if they did invent it,” said the Doctor, looking smug, “Gallifreyan pizza has something that no Earth pizza ever will.”
“Oh? What’s that?”
The Doctor unwrapped the foil cube and crumbled its contents into the warm water. “Sentient yeast,” he said. He peered down into the bowl. “Wake up, lads! Work time! …And no anchovies,” he added. “Rassilon hated anchovies. And capers too. All those fiddly bits, sausage and prosciutto, ridiculous.”
Nyssa put a tentative hand to her head. “What’s that buzzing?” she said.
“Just the yeast, they’re on a pretty low wavelength,” said the Doctor, opening the flour canister. “Just above celery. No fiddly bits in this pizza! Just a good crisp crust, and tomato sauce, and plenty of cheese. The elemental building blocks of life.” He paused and looked around a touch guiltily, as if Rassilon might overhear him, then added, “Maybe some garlic. He was a good chap, but he liked it so bland!”
The buzzing in Nyssa’s head was getting more intricate: it began to sound like a chorus. “They’re singing,” she said in wonder. “What are they singing about?”
The Doctor cocked his head up for a second, listening, as he measured out flour into another bowl. “Oh, the usual. How nice it is to turn sugar and flour protein into carbon dioxide and alcohol, and fulfill their purpose in life, all that sort of thing.” He looked back down at his work, smiling.
“Nice to listen to, isn’t it? I told you it was uplifting to the soul.”
“Yes, but — Doctor, when you bake the crust, won’t they die?!”
“Of course they will.” He reached over to one side for a long-necked oilcan and splashed a little olive oil into the flour. “And a lot more mercifully than they would if you just let them drown in their own alcohol. Hand me the saltcellar, will you please? Thank you. Death by fire,” he said, salting the flour. “They find it — well, you’ll hear how they find it, I suspect. Are they bubbling yet?” He peered into the yeast bowl. “So they are. Here you go, gentlemen.” He poured the yeast and water into the flour bowl, and began to knead.
Nyssa leaned on her elbows at the edge of the chopping-block, watching the kneading and listening to the soft incessant litany of the yeast. “Looks sticky,” she said.
“That it is,” the Doctor said cheerfully. “Too many Time Lords are afraid to get their hands full of dough… that’s probably why they only make pizza on state holidays. As a memorial to Rassilon, you understand.” He snorted softly. “So busy looking to see who’s dropping sauce on themselves at the state dinner that they don’t even notice what they’re eating. Shameful. Here, while you’re not doing anything, there’s some garlic already peeled in the ‘fridge. Would you get it out? Thanks. The garlic press is in that crock. Just do me three or four cloves, if you’d be so kind.
“And anyway, is it so awful,” he added, more reflectively, “to die when you’ve got the job done that you came here for? Whatever it is.”
“Not if you know what you’re here for,” Nyssa said, putting a clove through the press and into a handy cup.
“Ah, yes,” the Doctor said, and smiled to himself. “I suppose it’s wise to find out, then. Here we go.” He turned out the dough on the floured board and kneaded it a few minutes more.
“Won’t it need a while to rise?” said Nyssa, finishing with the garlic.
“Well, yes,” said the Doctor, reaching for another bowl, one lightly greased with olive oil. He turned the ball of dough into it and covered it with a teacloth. “But I’m hungry now…so I shall cheat a bit.”
He picked up the bowl and carried it over to a small appliance that Nyssa took for a microwave oven. “Surely you’re not going to…” she said, as he slipped the bowl in and turned the appliance on. The buzzing in Nyssa’s head abruptly scaled upward in pitch.
“Doctor, what is that?”
“A rising box,” he said, going to wash his hands. “Actually a selective tachyon-packet field accelerator. It speeds up time in a tightly localized area.” The Doctor shook his hands off, dried them on another teatowel, and went back to the appliance. “It’s been about two hours in there for them.” Ping! said the accelerator, and the Doctor opened its door and took out the bowl. The dough had more than doubled in size.
“Here we go, then,” said the Doctor, and turned the dough out on the board, where he began to stretch it out flat.
“Wouldn’t a rolling pin be better?” Nyssa said.
“Never roll,” said the Doctor. “Ruins the texture. Now then.” He lifted the dough into the pan, rolling its far edges slightly around the pan’s to hold it in place. “Olive oil, please, and a brush.”
Nyssa handed him the necessary equipment; he brushed the dough lightly with the oil. “In the ‘fridge there’s about a pound of sliced mozzarella; would you get it for me please?”
Nyssa fetched it. The Doctor took out about ten thin slices and began to lay them over the crust. “I thought the sauce was supposed to go on first,” she said.
“And that,” the Doctor said, looking sharply at her, “is why almost every pizza crust you ever taste is soggy. Cheese first, always….it seals it. Then sauce. Then more cheese on top.” He finished the first layer.
“Garlic, please. Just scatter it around. Thank you.”
He reached over to the stove, where a large pot sat simmering quietly. When he took the lid off, such a sublime aroma filled the galley that Nyssa broke out in a smile. “It’s marvelous!”
The Doctor flashed her a delighted grin. “The tomatoes in the greenhouse have been quite good lately,” he said. “It’s giving them the kitchen scraps that does it, I suspect.” He poured sauce over the cheese-covered crust, then began the second layer of cheese until the whole pound of mozzarella was used up. “Hand me that oregano, will you? Our own,” he said, looking affectionately at the spice jar. “K9 used to sit in the garden and talk to it all the time. He did that with the basil, too… improved it tremendously. Remind me to make some pesto some time. Is the oven ready?”
“It says so.”
“Good. In we go, then. — I shouldn’t mind,” he said, “just the slightest nip before it’s ready.”
The Doctor went over to another cabinet, opened it, and stared in thoughtfully. “There’s hardly a thing in here worth drinking,” he muttered. “I really must run down to the wine cellar. Always assuming we still have one after that last reconfiguration. Oh well.” He came out with a bottle. “California,” he said, holding out the bottle for Nyssa to read the label. “Infinitely superior to the continental varietals. And besides, I have friends at Krug…they keep sending it to me free…”
He reached down wine glasses from the rack, uncorked the bottle with the sonic screwdriver, and poured for both of them. Nyssa sat down on the couch by the brick hearth; she was feeling a little strange.
The Doctor sat down across from her, his eyes all of a sudden gone oddly expectant and intense. “Don’t be afraid,” he said, cupping his wineglass in his hands.
That was when the singing began in good earnest; and Nyssa was glad not to be holding her own glass, for she would have dropped it. Her head began to fill with crashing choruses, gaining moment by moment in intensity and number: multitudinous song, delighted at doing, at being, at having been: piercing joy, growing by the second, as passage from here-and-now to otherness came closer and closer: acceptance of having been: acceptance of some indescribable about-to-be-ing: and then, then, the passage, the shift, out of life, out of time, into something else, something ineluctably more —
— and then gone, all gone: silence.
She looked up at the Doctor, the tears of the yeast’s unbearable joy blurring her vision. He looked back at her, gentle-eyed.
“For what we are about to receive,” he said with a somber smile, “may we be truly thankful.” And he drained his wineglass, and smashed it in the fireplace, and got up to take the pizza out of the oven.
It was the best pizza Nyssa ever had. She took several slices to Tegan, who was in the console room, browsing through the TARDIS databanks. Tegan ate two and a half of them while she worked. (The slices, not the databanks.)
In the galley, the Doctor did the washing-up, smiling still. But it was a quieter sort of smile, one his companions rarely ever saw; a musing look, as he stood wondering to whom his lives might be meat and drink. It was in the middle of these reflections that several of the TARDIS’s remote alarms went off. The Doctor dried his hands hurriedly, flung down the tea-towel, and raced out to see what the matter was.
Tegan had put her last slice down on the console while reading a particularly juicy bit of gossip about Catherine the Great.
The Doctor discovered that it can be extraordinarily difficult to get melted mozzarella out of the time rotor.
GALLIFREYAN PIZZA
(aka Pizza alla Dottore)
CRUST: 4 cups sifted flour
1 cake Fleishmann’s or other fresh yeast (unless you can get the Gallifreyan sort)
1&1/3 C water at about 85 degrees (for the yeast)
2 tbs. salad or olive oil 1 tsp. salt
Crumble the yeast: add the water to it and stir, and let it be for about ten minutes, or until it starts to bubble a bit. (To hurry it, or just in a good-natured attempt to help it along, you might add about half a teaspoon of sugar. This is also wise if the yeast is old.) Add the yeast/water mixture to the flour, salt and oil, and knead. Put in a greased bowl, covered with a towel, and let rise in a warm place for two hours.
Have ready two 12-inch pans, or one large one (oiled, if not already nonstick). Flatten and stretch the dough to fit. Brush with olive oil.
CHEESE: For maximum effect, no pizza should ever contain less than half a pound of a good skim or part-skim mozzarella. (Fontina is also good for a change.) The Doctor, having growing companions to feed, uses rather more. Remember to lay down a layer first to seal the crust. The crumbly kind is all right, but mozzarella (because of its long chain molecules) works best sliced.
SAUCE: Everyone has their favorite (the Doctor’s recipe will follow at a later date). Pour on enough to suit your taste. Bake the whole thing in a preheated 400-degree oven for about 25 minutes, or until the crust is light brown.
And whether it sings or not, appreciate the yeast. It gave you the best hours of its life.
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Teenage wizards Nita Callahan and Kit Rodriguez have been working the New York suburbs for nearly thirty years now, through nine novels’ worth of adventures. As the dawn of their fourth decade in print draws near, the long-planned updating of the Young Wizards series continues with the Ebooks Direct release of the fifth novel in the series: The Wizard’s Dilemma.
You can find out more about the update project as a whole here. All nine books will be updated by the end of 1Q of 2013, and all brought into alignment with the new (2008-2011-based) timeline.
ETA: Dilemma is also now available at Ebooks Direct as part of the Young Wizards New Millennium Editions 9-volume box set.
A little about the story:
Sometimes even wizardry isn’t enough…
For the first time ever, friends and wizardly partners Nita and Kit seem to be having trouble communicating. They argue over a spell to clean up the pollution in part of New York’s Great South Bay, and from that point on, they can’t seem to connect on anything. Is it adolescence that’s tearing them apart or something more profound?
Nita breaks away from Kit to work on her own for a while — and then is jolted by a terrible and unexpected blow as her mother falls ill and is rushed into the hospital.
What’s even more horrifying for Nita than the mere fact of her mother’s illness is the possibility that nothing — not surgery, not even wizardry — will be able to keep her mom alive.
But Nita refuses to let her mother go down without a fight. Soon she’s on a mission to seek her mom’s cure: a journey that takes her across universes, and out of them, to the only place where she can learn the skills that may help her save her mother’s life.
What she doesn’t foresee is the terrible way in which this journey will once again bring her face-to-face with the Lone Power, the source of all death in the universe. That Power has been Nita’s worst enemy since she first started her practice of wizardry. Now, though, the Lone One and the bargain It offers her may be her mother’s only hope….
Reviewers say:
“A harrowing but triumphant affirmation of the power of the human spirit. Powerful and satisfying on many levels.” (Kirkus Reviews: starred review)
“A gripping and dynamic fantasy.” (VOYA)
On this day twenty-six years ago, I got married (for the first time*) to the coolest man on Earth.
There he is in a pic I took of him some months previously, by the boathouse on Central Park Lake. That afternoon seems like about ten minutes ago, some ways. And even after two and a half decades spent being with this man and learning his complexities, the experience never gets old. My life and my work would be utterly empty without him: his presence and his gifts inform everything I do.
He contains multitudes. Hotshot novelist, gourmet cook, indefatigable researcher (“Are you still on TV Tropes??”), crazed modeller, retrotech geek, artist, sound effects specialist, raconteur, friend of all cats (especially big ones) and softie about all cute things, eagle-eyed pilot, militaria expert, swordsman and screenwriter, connoisseur of fountain pens and typewriters, sex god, ever-understanding confidant, protector and defender, best friend, kindly and incisive critic, Calvin to my Susie: he is all of these and more… way more.
Peter, I love you.
Bring on the next twenty-six years.
*There were two weddings: one in LA to get the paperwork handled, and the second on in Boston so that the maximum number of friends could be there.