Seed Media Group

Page 3.14

The Best of ScienceBlogs, and Beyond

Search this blog

Subscribe via Email

Stay abreast of your favorite bloggers' latest and greatest via e-mail, via a daily digest.

Sign me up!

Profile

old_neuron.jpg Maintained by Seed's editors, web editors, and the other people who make Seed tick, Page 3.14 points you in the direction of some of ScienceBlogs' finest offerings, plus the tastiest tidbits of science news and opinion from around the web.

Other Good Stuff

MEMBER, ORDER OF THE SCIENCE SCOUTS OF EXEMPLARY REPUTE AND ABOVE AVERAGE PHYSIQUE



Add ScienceBlogs to your Technorati favorites:



Add this blog to my Technorati Favorites!

Recent Posts

Recent Comments

Archives

Blogroll

« We've Made a Few Changes... | Main | An Interview with ScienceWoman »

Science Novelist Speaks in NYC

Category: AnnouncementScienceBlogsThings We Like
Posted on: October 17, 2007 2:01 PM, by Virginia Hughes

andrea.jpgFor the Salon feature in the June 2006 issue of Seed, we brought together the curator of the American Museum of Natural History, Niles Eldredge, with novelist Andrea Barrett to talk about the role of narrative in science.

Next Monday, October 22, Barrett will read from her new novel, The Air We Breathe, at the 92nd Street Y in New York City.

Barrett, who studied biology in college, writes historical novels whose themes betray her love for science. (Many of her characters, in fact, are 19th-century scientists.) Moreover, she sees science in the writing process itself. In the Salon discussion, for instance, she likened the evolution of characters in a novel to the evolution of species:

Any piece of fiction starts by selecting from all the possible characters existing, or potentially existing, in the universe, and isolates a few. Those few, set on an island of their own, then interact over the narrative time of the fiction, and also over the real time it takes to write the multiple drafts. Some sets of characters exhibit stability over long stretches of time, then change suddenly in the aftermath of a meteor-like crisis. Others change more gradually.

Monday's reading will feature Barrett, as well as Russian journalist and fiction writer Tatyana Tolstaya, author of The Slynx.

For tickets or more information, visit the 92nd Street Y's website.

Image Credit: Julian Dufort

TrackBacks

TrackBack URL for this entry:

Post a Comment

(Email is required for authentication purposes only. Comments are moderated for spam, your comment may not appear immediately. Thanks for waiting.)





Having problems commenting? (UPDATED)

Blogs in the Network

Advertisement

Top Five: Most Active

  1. Baylor rededicates itself to bible college status 07.25.2008 · PZ Myers
  2. One goofy site 07.25.2008 · PZ Myers
  3. Comments from the McDonald's Boycott 07.25.2008 · Ed Brayton
  4. When Political Labels Become Useless 07.25.2008 · Ed Brayton
  5. Oh no! My cell phone's going to kill me! 07.25.2008 · Orac

Search All Blogs

Top Science Stories

powered by SEED - seedmagazine.com