Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens – Boothbay, ME
Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens – Boothbay, ME Read More »
The planet Kibou-daini is obsessed with cryonics – any member of population can expect to be frozen before or just after death (depending on how much you can pay, of course), and these not quite dead citizens still feature in the voting rights of where they’re stored. When one of the cryo-companies tries to expand
Cryoburn – Lois McMaster Bujold Read More »
I normally publish my wildflower photos on my other blog, but that’s really for local flowers. When I was in England, I definitely took plenty of wildflower photos, so I’m going to publish them here, in the style I would normally do on the other site. This is probably going to be a work
English Wildflowers Read More »
In which the Temperate House is reopened after five or so years, and we finally make it over to the Princess of Wales Conservatory. My adventures in transport getting either to or from Kew also continued. This time, there was a fault on the line after Earl’s Court, so we ended up taking a
England 2018, Day 4 – Kew Gardens Read More »
In which we were poured upon. But it was the only day of rain, so I’ll take it.
England 2018, Day 2 – Hampton Court Palace and Gardens Read More »
This book chronicles the natural history movements in the era leading up to Darwin’s voyage on the Beagle, and how the advances in technology of that time created a craze for finding new species, and what that meant for science. Darwin certainly wasn’t the only game in town. You meet a number of other naturalists
The Species Seekers – Richard Conniff Read More »
This is a book of short stories, rather annoyingly including the novella length “Something Rich and Strange” – which I already own in a stand alone illustrated edition. I like that story, but I wish I’d had more new material to read. My favorite story was “The Gorgon in the Cupboard” – the tale of
Dreams of Distant Shores – Patricia A. McKillip Read More »
Nahri is an orphan, living on the streets of Cairo at the turn of the 19th century. She’s managed to make a decent life for herself as a thief – pretending just enough mystic powers to swindle rich people worried about their health out of money. She knows she’s different than her neighbors – she
The City of Brass – S. A. Chakraborty Read More »