Quick Search of DRB:
Lijit Search
drb rss about
suggest
advertise
subscribe
rss rss
rss
airplanes | animals | architecture | art | auto | boats | famous | cool ads | funny pics | food | futurism | gadgets | history | japan
military | music | nature | photo | russia | sci-fi | signs | space | sports | steampunk | technology | trains | travel | vintage | weird

Friday, October 12, 2007

Exclusive: Interview with Jeff VanderMeer


"QUANTUM SHOT" #294
link



A Triumph of the Bizarre
(and the Rise of Squidpunk)


Jeff VanderMeer's fiction, for my money, is the best value in modern fantasy; his every book is packed with delectable and wicked delights, loads of lush and ominous scenery, taut (bordering on poetic) writing and deep, dark currents of thought - an intense recipe that is sure to invigorate the whole genre of modern fantastic fiction. He has won two World Fantasy Awards, has been a finalist for the Hugo Award, Bram Stoker Award, Philip K. Dick Award, and as you will see below, currently displays no signs of slowing down.


(art by Scott Eagle, design Oivas)

A good introduction to his fiction would be "City of Saints and Madmen", a soaring and slightly mad compilation of stories, a work of epic surrealism (think J. G. Ballard and China Mieville), some old-school weirdness (think Clark Ashton Smith & H. P. Lovecraft), and oodles of the new hip variations (cyberpunk, steampunk, squidpunk, etc.).

It's pretty impossible to pin him down to one literary sub-genre, or to predict what he's going to do next, so we asked him some questions and he kindly agreed to shed some light on his creative process.

Jeff VanderMeer
(interviewed by Avi Abrams, Dark Roasted Blend)


photo by Keyan Bowes

Avi:
First some genre definitions for our readers: what is it you write - is this fantasy? is this fantasy on drugs? is this Dostoevsky on drugs? Is this poetry in prose form?


Jeff:
Fantasy on drugs is surrealism or "visionary fiction". I go back and forth between terminology, because one person's fantasy is another person's dreck. One person's magic realism is another person's blech. Depending on who you're talking to and the context, you find that words mean very different things. But, really, what it is and should be is idiosyncratic, original, unique imaginative fiction.

When I write, I never sit down to write a "fantasy" story or a "mainstream literary" story--whatever comes out comes out, in the way that works best for the tale being told and the characters in the story. But, yes, it's definitely more on the surreal end of the spectrum most of the time. And somewhat difficult to define, which is okay by me.


(image credit: Jacek Yerka)


(image credit: Vladimir Kush/)

Avi:
What is your favorite Jeff Vandermeer's story?


Jeff:
That's tough. Different stories mean different things to me. Probably "Bone Carver's Tale", which I wrote back in 1992 while broke and jobless, and it got a lot of attention, and it meant a lot to me personally. More recent stories, like "The Third Bear" mean a lot because I'm trying different things with them. "The Situation", coming out from PS Publishing, is another step in that direction, of pushing myself. It's kind of like Dilbert-meets-Gormenghast, and I like the idea that something can combine such disparate ideas.

"The Situation"'s front cover, by Scott Eagle:
Download the text here.



the back cover:


(art by Scott Eagle)

"The idea here is that the front of the book is like the exterior of the story–calm with hints of strangeness, and then as the story progresses, you pull away that exterior and see the true madness beneath. Kind of like corporate America…"

Avi:
"The Situation"? Please elaborate... I seem to remember J.G.Ballard wrote once about the infinite progression of office cubicles. Corporate culture meets weird fantasy? Sounds great!


Jeff:
Honestly? I had a horrible working environment the last year of my employment at my office job (I'd worked there 8 years). One night I woke up with a vision of a much stranger office building, took my day job, and completely fictionalized it. The thing is, reality is a lot stranger than any fiction sometimes. And in this case, people will read this surreal book and say "wow, Jeff has some imagination." And yet the oddest things are actually to some extent true in that book. Kevin Brockmeier gave us this quote for the book:

"In 'The Situation,' Jeff VanderMeer has created a work of surreal humor, bemused sadness, and meticulous artifice. It is as if the workplace novels of Sinclair Lewis and Joshua Ferris had been inverted, shaken, and diced until they came out looking like a Terry Gilliam creation. That a story which curves so resolutely inward toward its own logic could also be so poignant is something of an astonishment."


(art by Hawk Alfredson)

My latest novel, "Shriek", is also out in trade paper from Tor and will be out in a limited edition with art by Ben Templesmith next year.

Avi:
I have not had a chance to bite into "Shriek" yet... maybe a little blurb for our readers.


Jeff:
It's more or less a family chronicle, with a war thrown in. Maybe this'll help:

"There came a force so beguiling that even a cold-minded scholar must surrender to it. There came a war so strange that bullets became delicacies. There came a night so terrible no one could name it. And one man's obsession may hold the key to the survival of a city... An epic yet personal look at several decades of life, love, war, and death in the famed city of Ambergris, the Afterword relates the scandalous, heartbreaking, and horrifying secret history of two squabbling siblings and their confidantes, protectors, and enemies."


(artwork by Eric Schaller)

Also, am co-editing, with my wife, both a Steampunk and New Weird anthologies for Tachyon. The genres are somewhat related — Steampunk is like New Weird’s escapist cousin.

Avi:
Please define "New Weird" for our readers, how's it different from old weird and just plain weird, or simply urban fantasy - is there some kind of "new wave" of weird happening right now?


Jeff:
Actually, I think New Weird has kind of gone back into the margins and is mostly practiced in the short story form again, for now at least. Except for myself and China Mieville, I don't see anyone doing that kind of thing at the moment. I'm sure that'll change again at some point. Our working definition is this one, which emphasizes that New Weird, unlike old weird, was influenced by the New Wave, and that New Weird also has a healthy horror component that you don't really find as much in straight-on urban fantasy:

New Weird is a type of urban, secondary-world fiction that subverts the romanticized ideas about place found in traditional fantasy, largely by choosing realistic, complex real-world models. It creates settings that may combine elements of both science fiction and fantasy. New Weird has a visceral, in-the-moment quality that often uses elements of surreal or transgressive horror for its tone, style, and effects - in combination with the stimulus of influence from New Wave writers or their proxies (including also such forebears as Mervyn Peake and the French/English Decadents).

New Weird fictions are acutely aware of the modern world, even if in disguise, but not always overtly political. As part of this awareness of the modern world, New Weird relies for its visionary power on a "surrender to the weird" that isn't, for example, hermetically sealed in a haunted house on the moors or in a cave in Antarctica. The "surrender" (or "belief") of the writer can take many forms, some of them even involving the use of postmodern techniques that do not undermine the surface reality of the text.


(artwork by Eric Schaller)

Avi:
Your writing seems to be inspired by European Old World, rather than New World? What is your preferred culture/country to live in?


Jeff:
I do love a lot of English and Russian writers in particular... If my wife Ann and I had our druthers, it'd be Tallahassee, where we live now, British Columbia, or Cairns, Australia. We feel quite at home in all three places. What I do not like about living in the United States now is that we've gone from being essentially a culture of hope and opportunity to a culture of fear and an over-reliance on material objects. I think we're just drowning in self-absorption and cowardice and a lack of individual responsibility, and I hate that. I hate that the potential of the US right now is just potential, and that too many people who live here are sleep-walking or have their heads in the sand or just plain are so in love with themselves and their iPods and their whatevers that they fail to think enough or feel enough about what it means to be alive, and the responsibility that entails.


(artwork copyright: (c) Francois Baranger)

Avi:
Your fiction seems to "bite back", do you intentionally strive to shock the reader?


Jeff:
Not really, but I am of the school of thought that fiction should engage and challenge the reader's base assumptions. I think a really good writer doesn't show you your reflection in the mirror--a really good writer puts you in an alien place with strange people and either makes them familiar, makes you realize they're no different than you, or blows the back of your skull away by not allowing you to escape someone else's reality.


(artwork by Eric Schaller)

Avi:
Are you building a "fantasy history" of sorts, and will you ever open it up to be a "shared universe"?


Jeff:
No, I'll never open up my work to be a shared universe, unless there's some artistic, not financial, reason to do so. That applies to the written word--in other media, I'd be fine with it. I do have a few different threads--the Ambergris stories, which are definitely dark fantasy, set in an imaginary city with underground inhabitants who use fungal technology. Then there's the Veniss Underground cycle, which is far future SF-fantasy featuring a lot of biotech stuff and "made" species battling humankind.

Avi:
Do you intend to collaborate? write huge door-stopper trilogies?


Jeff:
I'm doing some collaborations with a very talented writer, Cat Rambo, that might extend to novels at some point. No plans for door-stoppers, but I am doing a Predator tie-in novel right now--to learn some things about writing thrillers, for the money, too, of course, but for a variety of reasons, and I'm having fun with that. It's not so much turning off parts of my brain as utilizing parts that only come into limited play in the other books.

Avi:
Are you happy with the way "science fiction & fantasy" industry is? frustrated?


Jeff:
Between 2001 and about 2006 there was a window of opportunity for stranger stuff. I think that window is closing now and the industry is getting more conservative again. For that reason, it's a very good thing that the formal experimentation I wanted to do is done, in books like City of Saints and Shriek, and that my "experimentation" over the next couple of years in my books will be that of more straight-forward storytelling. Which isn't to say I won't be pushing myself, or doing a lot of anthology and short story projects that are very bizarre.

Avi:
Do you find the modern society too cynical and harsh for a creative person?


Jeff:
I find the internet indispensable for what I do, so in that sense, no. But the rise of the corporation, the devaluing of the arts, and the continued idea within genre that it's not just okay but demanded of you that you think of your work as "product" all has a debilitating effect on the atmosphere around you. The only way you can shield yourself from it is to continue to write honestly and from the heart.



Avi:
What is your fix for inspiration (coffee? pets? nature? exercise?)


Jeff:
An average day for me is to wake up, have a big plate of eggs and fruit with coffee, maybe a slice of wheat bread, keep going with the coffee all morning, and either write at home or the coffee shop for three or four hours, commune with the cats, deal with nonfiction and "business", and then hit the gym for a couple of hours or take a long hike. Exercise, cats, and coffee are my drugs of choice.

Oh--and I have to have my music. I love the bands Spoon, The Church, Devotchka, Pinback, Black Heart Procession, and many others. The Church actually did the soundtrack to my Shriek movie.

I love surreal art of all kinds, with one of my favorites being Myrtle Von Damitz III (see here), along with Hawk Alfredson (site), and Scott Eagle (site).


(art by Hawk Alfredson)

Avi:
Who are your favorite writers: old school, new school?


Jeff:
That's tough, because I read so much. I love the compression of a mystery writer like Ken Bruen. I love the laconic off-hand brilliance of Stepan Chapman. John Irving used to be a favorite writer. Angela Carter, Edward Whittemore, and Nabokov were at one time my Trinity. Of the new school writers, off-hand I'd say Rachel Swirsky is great, Conrad Williams. One problem is that there are so many writers out there. Still love a great Jeffrey Ford story. Some Shelley Jackson, although I didn't much like her novel.

Avi:
Please give your recommendations for people unfamiliar with the genre, wishing to try fantastic literature?


Jeff:
Here's my list of personal favorites, old and new. It leaves out a lot of books, but it's the stuff that's close to my heart.

VanderMeer's Recommended Reading List

1. - Pale Fire, Vladimir Nabokov
2. - The Gormenghast Trilogy, Mervyn Peake
3. - Lanark, Alasdair Gray
4. - Jerusalem Poker, Edward Whittemore
5. - The Chess Garden, Brooks Hansen
6. - The Infernal Desire Machines of Doctor Hoffman, Angela Carter
7. - Alice in Wonderland, Lewis Carroll
8. - Ficciones, Jorge Luis Borges
9. - Nights at the Circus, Angela Carter
10. - Observatory Mansions, Edward Carey
11. - Possession, A.S. Byatt
12. - In Viriconium, M. John Harrison
13. - Arc d'X, Steve Erickson
14. - V, Thomas Pynchon
15. - Sinai Tapestry, Edward Whittemore
16. - Quin's Shanghai Circus, Edward Whittemore
17. - If Upon a Winter's Night a Traveler, Italo Calvino
18. - Collected Stories, Franz Kafka
19. - The Master & Margarita, Mikhail Bulgakov
20. - The Collected Stories, J.G. Ballard
21. - The New York Trilogy, Paul Auster
22. - Blood Meridian, Cormac McCarthy
23. - The Birth of the People's Republic of Antarctica,
John Calvin Bachelor
24. - House of Leaves, Mark Danielewski
25. - The Riddle Master trilogy, Patricia McKillip
26. - The Baron in the Trees, Italo Calvino
27. - The Circus of Doctor Lao, Charles Finney
28. - The Circus of the Earth & the Air, Brooke Stevens
29. - Gulliver's Travels, Jonathan Swift
30. - Dictionary of the Khazars, Milorad Pavic
31. - At Swim-Two-Birds, Flann O'Brian
32. - The Troika, Stepan Chapman
33. - Solomon Gursky Was Here, Mordecai Richler
34. - Darconville's Cat, Alexander Theroux
35. - Don Quixote, Cervantes
36. - Poor Things, Alasdair Gray
37. - Geek Love, Katherine Dunn
38. - The Land of Laughs, Jonathan Carroll
39. - The Wizard of Earthsea trilogy, Ursula K. LeGuin
40. - The House on the Borderland, William Hope Hodgson
41. - Little Big, John Crowley
42. - One Hundred Years of Solitude, Gabriel Garcia Marquez
43. - The General in His Labyrinth, Gabriel Garcia Marquez
44. - The Seven Who Fled, Frederick Prokosch
45. - Already Dead, Denis Johnson
46. - The Fan-maker's Inquisition, Rikki Ducornet
47. - Entering Fire, Rikki Ducornet
48. - The Passion of New Eve, Angela Carter
49. - Views From the Oldest House, Richard Grant
50. - Life During Wartime, Lucius Shepard


(detail of "Untitled" by Tim Hawkinson, also see this, and Jane Wynn's concept)

Avi:
Also, a word to our international audiences in Europe and Japan: there must be translations of your books in other languages? Spanish? Russian?


Jeff:
I have translations of my books in French, German, Russian, Czech, Portuguese, Spanish, Romanian, Serbian, and several others, with translations of stories in countries like Brazil, for example. I used to document my progress in world domination, although it's now somewhat out-of-date: www.vanderworld.com. Note the photos of the alien baby at the South Pole.



My new site - www.jeffvandermeer.com features observations on writing and pop culture, movie reviews, music reviews, book reviews, polemics, and, of course, the rantings of Evil Monkey. I've been posting more and more so content updates daily. Not to mention, you can visit www.shriekthenovel.com for a bunch of video and audio objects related to Shriek, including the Shriek movie.


(art by Scott Eagle)

Avi:
One last question - please tell us three things about you that most people don't know?


Jeff:
1. I played varsity soccer in high school and was my school's racquetball champion my senior year.

2. I am terribly afraid of cockroaches because while growing up in Fiji, there was a type that would burrow into your ears while you slept.

3. I was tremendously shy in my early 20s and had to force myself to do public speaking, something that I don't mind at all now.

Avi:
Thank you Jeff, that was a pleasure, and we wish you all possible success writing the stuff that we all crave for. Barring advent of cockroaches, we should see more wonderful fiction, published under your name in gorgeous editions, full of eclectic art. Truly a case to celebrate - a triumph of the Bizarre.



The King Squid - design by John Coulthart, from "City of Saints and Madmen"

+StumbleUpon

Permanent Link...
Category: Books,Art
Related Posts:
Steampunk Art Update, Fantastic Art by Thomasz Maronski

Dark Roasted Blend's Photography Gear Picks:

READ LATEST POSTS:

November 4, 2009 - Quantum Shot #597
Weird Food McDonald's Sells Around the World

Spaghetti! Soaked! In Sugarrr!


The World's Most Magnificent Pipe Organs

Simply Blockbusters of Their Time!

Biscotti Bits
Mixed Links & Images

incl. "The Unsinkable Pygmy Gecko"

SFSite
"Steampunk Anthology" Reviewed, in All Its Brass Glory

Making all sci-fi punks in the world "feel lucky", since 2008
(for other weekly "Biscotti" issues - see our main page and monthly archives)

COMMENTS:

4 Comments:

Blogger Robert Seddon said...

Put me out of my misery: what do you mean by 'squidpunk'? Is it just an inside joke, or am I witnessing the coinage of a new literary genre term? It doesn't produce many search engine hits...

___  
Blogger Avi Abrams said...

hm.... Robert, this is a joke for now. But you got me thinking...

___  
Blogger Robert Seddon said...

In the comments on http://faceofthemoon.blogspot.com/2007/10/squidly-dots.html I've been given the suggestion: 'I'm pretty sure it has to do with underwater cities, magic, and squids with top hats and perhaps monocles of some sort.'

___  
Blogger D. said...

this image:

http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2087/1557540210_1e73b3f1c4.jpg

is a detail from the work of Tim Hawkinson. 'Untitled' from 2003.

Another similar piece is here:

http://www.acegallery.net/artwork.php?pageNum_ACE=22&Artist=1

___  

Post a Comment

<< Home


SF ART & BOOK REVIEWS:
Don't miss: The Ultimate Guide to SF&F Writers!
Fiction Reviews: Alastair Reynolds "Chasm City"
Short Fiction Reviews: Lovecraft's "At the Mountains of Madness" (with pics)
New Fiction Reviews: The Surreal Office

MORE RECENT POSTS:


The World's Most Magnificent Pipe Organs

Simply Blockbusters of Their Time!


Lovely Cowgirls in Vintage Westerns

Beauties with guns scorched the screen... and it was good


Weirdest Cell Phones Ever!

Totally non-conventional looks and futuristic specs.


British Pubs: Signs of the Times, Part 2

Pub signs are almost like time machines...


Fabulous Las Vegas: Vintage Treasures

Part 1: Glamour vs. Kitsch


Incredible Astronomical Clocks

Antique and medieval technology blended with art


Battersea, and Other Abandoned Power Stations

Part 2 of popular urban exploration series


Hilarious & Crazy Signage

Part 13 of this side-splitting series


Living, Growing Architecture

Grow your house one root at a time


Alone in the Wild: Yukon Survival Saga

How to eat porcupine livers, and more!


Unusual and Marvelous Maps

Alternate histories, sea monsters, weird politics


Airships & Tentacles

Exclusive Interview with artist Myke Amend


Jet Engines on Trucks (For Fun and Profit)

Snow-blowers from hell, and more...


Star Wars for Your Mind, Heart and Soul

Part 3 of the popular series


Britain's Colorful Pub Signs, Part 1

A map to your last night adventures


Flying Colors! Creative Paint on Airliners

Groovy additions to the fleet...


Walled Cities: Keeping Out the Joneses

Highlights of the defensive architecture


Postage Stamps From the Future

...and some alternative realities


The Glamour of Flight: Sexy Stewardesses

Part 4 of highly popular series


Flags of Forgotten Countries

Don't just wave a black flag... consider your options


Spectacular Steampunk Art Update

Part 2 of this eye-popping, mind-boggling series

MORE OF THE RECENT POSTS:








Anything for the Perfect Shot! Part 3
Charmed by the Unknown Brazil
Ekranoplans Showcase, Part 2
Riot Vehicle with Water Cannon
Thrilling Vintage Movie Posters
Cheers to Beers!
Most Interesting Bridges, Part 3
Mesmerizing Kinetic Sculptures
Real Life Spy Gadgets
Tangled & Crazy Wiring
Underground Cities and Bunkers
Extraordinary Clocks & Watches
Pasta Monster & Other Strange Food
How Morgan Cars Are Made
Abandoned Boeing-747 Restaurant
Surprised Astronauts (Funny Pics)
One-Track Wonders: Early Monorails
Komodo Dragons: They Eat Meat
Spring Cleaning of the Mind: Surreal Art
Crazy & Funny Faces, Part 5
Wonder Weapons of World War Two
Narrow Buildings in Japan & Around the World
The Cutting Edge of Retro Tech
Bladerunner Tokyo Large-Format Photography
Nightmare Playgrounds, Part 3
Victorian Flea Circuses: A Lost Art Form
Strangest Music Scores, Part 2
Monstrous Aviation: Huge Helicopters!
- many more in the Archives and in the Contents Index (left bar)


FULL ARCHIVES (with previews, fast loading):

September 2009 -- August 2009 --
June-July 2009 -- May 2009 -- April 2009 -- March 2009 --
February 2009 -- January 2009 -- December 2008 --
November 2008 -- October 2008 -- September 2008
August 2008 -- July 2008 -- June 2008
May 2008 -- April 2008 -- March 2008
February 2008 -- January 2008 -- Dec, 2007
November 2007 -- October 2007 -- Sept, 2007
August 2007 -- July 2007 -- June 2007
May 2007 -- April 2007 -- March 2007
February 2007 -- January 2007 -- Dec, 2006
November 2006 -- October 2006 -- Link Lattes




CATEGORIES:
airplanes | animals | architecture | art | auto | boats | books | cool ads | funny pics | famous | futurism | food
gadgets | health | history | humour | japan | internet | link latte | military | music | nature | photo | russia | steampunk
sci-fi & fantasy | signs | space | sports | technology | trains | travel | vintage | weird



Discretion Advised! These cartoons contain some extreme animated violence!






Airplanes
Animals
Architecture
Art
Auto
Boats
Computers
Cool Ads
Extreme Weather
Food
Funny Pics
Futurism
Gadgets
History
Humour
Link Latte
Military
Music
Nature
Oops Accidents
Photography
Robots
Science
Science Fiction

Space
Sports
Technology
Trains
Travel
UE Abandoned
Vintage
Weird




Avi Abrams
Rachel Abrams
M. Christian
James Golbey
Simon Rose
Paul Schilperoord
Scott Seegert
Constantine vonHoffman
Steve Levenstein

- Join Our Team -
Guidelines








  • Water bears- the pinnacle of evolution... best adapted to multiple environments. Too bad they're not intelligent- or maybe they are? :o
    Read more

  • Cool! If only we could enlarge one of these things to life size dimensions. sigh.
    Read more

  • Maybe they're merely the protrusion into our dimension of vast hyperintelligent pan-dimensional beings. ;)
    Read more

  • Ah yes but do they have any knowledge of self?
    Read more

  • There is a great song about them available on iTunes (and other places) by Mal Webb
    Read more

  • Who wants to live so long, being so ugly?..
    Read more

  • Lovely article, but it's "minuscule," not "miniscule."
    Read more

  • imagine if we grew one of those to human size... holy crap! it will destroy us all! these would be like indestructible. radiation, freezing, burning, we couldn't stop it! it would be the ultimate killing machine!
    Read more

  • "imagine if we grew one of those to human size... holy crap! it will destroy us all! these would be like indestructible. radiation, freezing, burning, we couldn't stop it! it would be the ultimate killing machine!"

    Well, I'm sure if they got that big a spear would do nicely....

    er...

    You try the spear. If it doesn't work, I'll be back here with the rocket launcher!
    :-D
    Read more

  • I think we should use their genetic material to cross-breed a new strain of humanoids. These things are awesome.

    Oh, and to Anonymous: "miniscule" is an accepted alternative spelling of "minuscule"... look it up, if you don't believe me.
    Read more

  • Why are you boiling me?! Why are you boiling me?! Owwww! This is so painful!
    Read more

  • Sorry to disappoint all those that think growing a human size one of these would be great and indestructable... If you did manage by some mystery of science to create one any larger than they are now it would probably die, restrictions in cell size, body size and organ size due to water loss, diffusion and active uptake means that surface area to volume ratios must be kept in a certain range or the poor little thing would just die :-( but if you do manage to get a big one going... dont keep it a secret! lol!
    Read more

  • How interesting!
    Read more

  • Movies! http://tardigrades.bio.unc.edu/movies/
    Read more

  • Read more

  • Amazing! Great post!
    Read more

  • makes you think.. and believe the earth will go on even after we are extinct. i think they maybe ETs aka extra terrestrials. maybe we all decend from other worldly beings. would love to get a animal psychic in on this one.
    Read more

  • You're right when you say they aren't publicized. This is the first time I've heard of them. No mention even in high school biology.
    Read more

  • The song itself is completely worthless. Apparently "experimental" means it's supposed to be deserving of respect even if it's garbage. But the video is absolutely gorgeous. A very nice find!
    Read more

  • the structures in the last photo look like observation towers, either for a prison or a factory. maybe they have been left to decay at the factory where they were made?
    Read more

  • The towers at the last photo are looking like mobile observation towers. They could be used to watch for forrest fires.
    Read more

  • More likely to be cement or lime kilns, that looks like a chalk pit face behind. They are charged from the top with chalk and coal, the cement or lime is drawn off the bottom. The slope in the foreground could be for trucks to tip chalk into crushers.
    Read more

  • The 'forest cinema' photo is of an abandoned outdoor theater, part of Moscow's All-Russia Exhibition Centre - see map: http://maps.google.com/maps?q=moscow&t=k&hl=en&ie=UTF8&om=0&ll=55.831306,37.617322&spn=0.002118,0.004699&z=18&iwloc=addr
    Read more

  • The rusty towers in the last picture are from Krakow, Poland. It's an old granite quarry: http://www.silentwall.com/QuarryI.html
    Read more

  • Thank you guys! I updated the post with new info.
    Read more

  • Did anyone else notice that in the control panel picture, there are a couple of lighted buttons still on? That building cannot have been powered? right?
    Read more

  • Not only is the instrument panel powered on, the oscilloscope on top of it is also powered on, and there is a faint line to be seen on its screen, so it's actually measuring something as well. It seems this equipment is still in use.
    Read more

  • the country isnt as wealthy as the us(but they also aren't in debt as much either)
    so they are probably using it as an antenna to this day, other wise the complex would probably have been tore down and recycled for the metal
    Read more

  • HAARP.

    I was not aware of the Russian equivalent. Thank you.

    The concept is excellent.. blast the mind of the guidance electronics in an incoming ICBM with an extremely high microwave field. HAARP is convienently situated geographically to do so with incoming missles from North Korea. I'd think the Soviets had positioned their devices with launches from the continental U.S. in mind.

    The problem is focusing the antennas to yield the necessary energy levels [flux densities'] at the target. Our physics is just not up to it, and that is why the beautiful parabolas sit rusting. Megawatts effectively transmitted but then spread out as the energy travels to the target yields little more than a nuiance to the missles, as the rad hardening technologies have improved since these projects were begun.

    The facilities though would still be a great gift, and highly functional, to a [poor] radio astronomer.

    meaux
    Read more

  • The last picture is from an ad: http://www.pantherhouse.com/newshelton/who-do-ya-think-youre-talking-to-some-lamo-that-scuba-dives/
    Read more

  • Everyone in Japan does that pen twirling thing, it's practised at school until it comes second nature.
    Read more

  • Makes me want to take up my juggling sticks again.

    I found out through a last-minute invite that you can get pretty good at a skill if you practice it intensively for a couple of weeks. (While walking is good.)
    Read more

  • Electrical engineers everywhere are having trouble breathing...
    Read more

  • That image of the Indian "electrician" is not uncommon here where I live in Venezuela. Every now and then you get to know these guys' abrupt end-of-lives via the local newspapers.
    Read more

  • And to think I can't stand the sight of an extension cord showing. I have to hide wires from the computer, printer, etc. because they're so ugly.
    Read more

  • Samuil’s Vomit Urinal: While the design might be original, the basic idea is not. These things used to be quite frequent in Germany and Austria. They can still be found in old taverns and even in some newer ones. Look it up here: http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speibecken
    Read more

  • Read more

  • http://www.cee-gee.net/Movies/Movies.htm

    Code Guardian The Movie - Nazi-Steampunk-Robots...

    :-D
    Read more

  • Was just going to post that link Dave, C.O.D.E. Guardian is the most amazing CG video I have ever seen. Unreal. I'm not one for steampunk suff, but this is still a great post!
    Read more


Send us your topic ideas, site suggestions, rants or sweet unpublished poetry. We love to hear from you.



Misc.:
Compare Prices
Samsung LED TV






Blu