Have u read her books? I am right now & im absolutely amazed, so i contacted her agent: i wanna interview her for my small SF blog:

https://sfss.space/

If u love her & have good questions to ask her, please answer in the comments.

  • Zoomba7@lemmy.worldOP
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    1 day ago

    & now Ill rest and will just enjoy reading Becky Chambers.

    Unfortunately, I contacted her agent 5 days ago. I recontacted him twice since, no answer.

    That’s life, but I mean, Doctorow agreed & Watts too. Without mailing an agent. These guys, anybody can email them & get an answer.

    Since shes lefty, she’s not on X, so I have no other idea.

    I’ll wait, & if it’s a big nope Ill still write a post on her, I think.

    —> Does someone here knowns a hopepunk/solarpunk peep that writes short stories or novellas?

    —> & Take care.

    • Zoomba7@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 day ago

      Edit: undersood, there are a crapton good solarpunk authors that writes short texts. Its just that its totally new for me.

      Plz explain the downvote.

      Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do. (JC)

      Or the way i see it:

      Everyone always thinks they are doing the right thing, even when they’re wrong.

      If u don’t answer, u’re not brave like trans chicks, u ain’t got no balls.

      Work’s done, disconnecting.


      Going fallow

      You probably know someone who believes that they need to be doing something all the time. Someone on the productivity treadmill. Someone who suffers from something I call the idle hands syndrome — as in The Devil makes work for …

      On top of that, people keep repeating (ad nauseaum) the idea that the brain is a muscle that must be continually exercised. It’s an interesting idea, and one that has truth to it. To a point. Any muscle that you exercise needs to rest after it’s been exerted. That includes the brain.

      You need to go fallow once in a while. Doing that lets your brain cool down, if you will. And, more importantly, it moves much of the processing of thoughts and ideas from the active front of the brain to the back of the brain.

      One of my personal heroes is physicist Freeman Dyson1. Dyson was a unique character, who did a lot of interesting work over the decades — ranging from helping design an interplanetary spacecraft to doing some groundbreaking mathematical work to coming up with a number of interesting scientific concepts. But it was a story about a bus ride that Dyson recounted to the author of the book The Starship and the Canoe that demonstrated the power of going fallow. At the time of the story, Dyson was a graduate student working at Princeton University. He was trying to solve a particularly thorny theoretical problem, but was having no luck. During a school break, he decided to take a cross-country bus trip. During that trip, Dyson was concerned more with the his journey and the ever-changing scenery than with the problem that vexed him. At the end of the trip, guess what happened? The solution that Dyson had been so desperately seeking came to him.

      You might not have a eureka moment like Freeman Dyson’s. You might not come up with a solution that will change … whatever. But by going fallow for a short time, you’ll give your brain a break. That just might help you see pieces of a problem a bit more clearly.

      Scott Nesbitt