Sci-Fi Wire has a brief article/interview thingy about Tim's work on adapting TMiaHM. [link]
'Destiny'
The Minearverse 3: The Network Is a Harsh Mistress
[NAFDA] "There will be an occasional happy, so that it might be crushed under the boot of the writer." From Zorro to Angel (including Wonderfalls and The Inside), this is where Buffistas come to anoint themselves in the bloodbath.
Popbitch pimps for Tim:
New TV we're excited about: Inside starts on Fox in March. It's by Tim Minear (Angel), who calls it "Silence of the Lambs by way of L.A. Confidential".
The light marriages are still there.
I believe he said "line marriages".
The light marriages are still there.
I think this is supposed to be "line marriages."
The catapult is still there...The idea is this sort of Ferris wheel thing that takes it up over the gravity well and drops to Earth.
Oh, God, no! The lunar catapult is a linear motor. [link] Like a railgun [link] for cargo containers. See also: [link]
Maybe he was thinking of Artsutanov's rotating skyhook. See [link] and [link] But that is a very different launch device than what is used in TMiaHM, and one impossible to protect from attack.
I've given the citizens of Luna ocular 'ident stamps,' which are the equivalent of prisoner tattoos, and Mike finds a way into the personalized signature of people, so he can show himself to you, but no one else can see him. So that's maybe the thing I added.
I don't understand this part. Is he saying Mike will appear to Manny (and the audience), but will be invisible to passers-by?
Geek high five! t slaps DCP
I don't understand this part. Is he saying Mike will appear to Manny (and the audience), but will be invisible to passers-by?
I think that's the case.
::high-fives Betsy back::
I was twelve the first time I read TMiaHM, so making sense of how the catapult worked was much more important to me than figuring out why different forms of marriage were considered scandalous.
I'm a lot older now, and I have more confidence that a linear motor would work as a lunar catapult than a line marriage would work anywhere, but at least Heinlein explained them both well enough that I remember them.
I still can't get my head around the idea of Mike manifesting in some way other than as a voice over the telephone or an image in a video screen.
I can't get around Wyoh prancing around in a too tight dress and giggling like an empty headed hole, and yet, that's how Heinlen wrote it.
Yet, sad to say, not an unrealistic character. I've met people just like that.