Sunday, September 30, 2018

The Open Notebook – Good Transitions: A Guide to Cementing Stories Together

The Open Notebook – Good Transitions: A Guide to Cementing Stories Together

Good Transitions: A Guide to Cementing Stories Together

Most writers learned in elementary school that a good story requires a compelling beginning, middle, and end. But how does one make the pieces fit neatly together? From my tattered memory of grade school, my teachers skipped that part. Or maybe I was home with the chicken pox the day we learned about transitions—the words and phrases, often subtly deployed, that give stories shape and tug readers from idea to idea.

Transitions serve such a critical purpose that some editors say good writing comes down to good transitions. Breanna Draxler, a freelance editor who has edited for Discover, Popular Science, and bioGraphic, likens transitions to the cement that glues the building blocks of a bridge together. And like any critical piece of engineering, transitions shouldn't be an afterthought. If they're done haphazardly, Draxler says, "you can definitely cement individual rocks together…. But you're not going to have a bridge that gets you up and over the river. You're going to have a pile of rocks that is cemented together."

Pulling off seamless transitions can elude even the most seasoned writers and editors. Transitions can easily come across as formulaic, forced, obvious, or patronizing. And if they're not done with finesse, they can give away the punchline and make stories feel repetitive. When transitions are ineffective—or are lacking altogether—readers may lose the thread of the story, or they may feel jarred from one paragraph or section to the next, or they may just get bored and go away.

Transitions serve such a critical purpose that some editors say good writing comes down to good transitions.

Journalist Philip Yam credits science fiction luminary Isaac Asimov with sparking his appreciation for good transitions, and says he still draws on tricks he picked up reading Asimov as a child. "After finishing a chapter," Yam remembers, "I wanted to read the next chapter. It was getting late and I really needed to go to sleep, but he got me hooked. He put some seed at the end of each chapter that got me thinking, 'Well, this [next] chapter doesn't seem that long…. I'll keep going.' "

Yam, editor-in-chief at the Simons Foundation and formerly a longtime editor at Scientific American, says when he wrote The Pathological Protein, his book on mad cow disease, he tried to emulate and incorporate the same tools Asimov used, planting a seed at the end of each chapter to lead the reader to the next.

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Transitions—whether between book chapters or between sentences, paragraphs, or sections of a story—can come in many flavors. Some are functional words or phrases—but, next, in fact—that stitch sentences together and provide simple cues to frame what's coming next. Other transitions are more linguistically or conceptually complex. They might reinforce a train of thought, set up a shift in chronology or setting, present a cliffhanger or some surprise twist, deepen a comparison, or call attention to a contrast. Still others simply create a brief pause, slowing the pacing of a story at a critical moment. Whatever their purpose, when transitions are done well, they create an invisible but essential lure that entices readers to keep going.

Creating a Logical Flow

Transitions are central to the mission of holding a reader's attention. "One good way of losing [that attention] is by creating a disconnect between something that you just wrote and the thing that follows," says author and journalist Anil Ananthaswamy. "In my mind it comes down always to thinking, 'Am I losing the reader?' "

One way to ensure a logical and pleasing progression of ideas, especially when moving from one paragraph to another, is by explicitly echoing words or concepts from the end of one passage at the beginning of the next. Here's an example from a 2017 Nautilus story that Ananthaswamy wrote on the aging process. In this excerpt, he connects the last line of the first paragraph and the first line of the second paragraph (italics added). As Ananthaswamy notes, the first line of the second paragraph both connects it with the concept of bodies' biological age and signals that he is now moving the story in a new direction. "If you simply delete the first [sentence] of the second paragraph, the two paragraphs are not as well connected, and you risk losing the reader," he says.

The older the cells in an organ, the more likely they are to stop dividing and die, or develop mutations that lead to cancer. This leads us to the idea that our bodies may have a true biological age.

The road to determining that age, though, has not been a straight one. One approach is to look for so-called biomarkers of aging, something that's changing in the body and can be used as a predictor of the likelihood of being struck by age-related diseases or of how much longer one has left to live.

Journalist and longtime editor Robin Lloyd calls these paragraph-to-paragraph connectors "head-to-tail transitions," a concept she picked up from Yam when they worked together at Scientific American.

Head-to-tail transitions involve placing "a word or concept in the first sentence of each paragraph that refers back to, repeats, reflects, or echoes a word or concept used in the last sentence of the preceding paragraph," Lloyd says. You don't have to use the same word—it can be a synonym or a more oblique reference that, by echoing what came before it, helps readers follow a chain of logic through a piece.

Head-to-tail transitions are often very simple. Take the word choice at the end of one paragraph and the beginning of the next in Ingrid Burrington's March 2018 Atlantic story on space exploration (italics added):

But Green is bullish on the tourism opportunities the spaceport will bring once the commercial spaceflights begin.

If they begin. For now, the spaceport is a futurist tourist attraction, not an operational harbor to the cosmos.

The word "begin" is a simple cue to readers that a concept introduced in one paragraph—the commencement of spaceflights—remains the subject of consideration in the next. The story's author might have just as easily started the second paragraph by writing something like "But that won't happen anytime soon," or simply "But for now …"

Lloyd says head-to-tail transitions are a control mechanism of sorts—a way of "grabbing the reader and saying, 'Look, we're going to keep talking about this topic or thought, but we're going to extend it a little further.' You're controlling the reader's train of thought even more intentionally, more aggressively" for the sake of clarity.

Transitions are central to the mission of holding a reader's attention.

Head-to-tail transitions can also be more subtle. For example, Lloyd points to an April 2018 story in Scientific American, in which Lydia Denworth writes about new approaches social scientists are taking to prevent suicides (italics added):

"We're in the midst of a paradigm shift in suicide prevention," [clinical psychologist Craig Bryan] says. "There's this new explosion of research that is calling into question a lot of the old assumptions that not only researchers but also health care providers and members of the public have had about suicide."

For decades, suicide has lurked in the shadows, weighed down by stigma. Once considered a crime, the act of killing oneself is still viewed as a sin in some religions. Even those who know that suicidal thoughts and behaviors stem from a brain disease or a psychological disorder have avoided or misunderstood the subject—hospitals and schools have been reluctant to screen for it, pharmaceutical trials have excluded suicidal patients and funding institutions have been unwilling to support research. The few clinicians and scientists working in the field made little headway.

At the simplest level, the repetition of the word "suicide" in the paragraph above creates a head-to-tail transition. But there are also subtler elements here. "For decades" echoes "old assumptions," and "lurked in the shadows" echoes the idea of experts and laypeople misunderstanding suicide.

Meanwhile suicide rates have gone up. Between 1999 and 2016 the overall rate rose by 28 percent in the U.S. The rise was steeper among certain groups: for middle-aged women and men, it jumped 64 and 40 percent, respectively. Among girls between 10 and 14, the suicide rate more than tripled, although it is still very low. Since 2001 the suicide risk among veterans has also climbed—they are now 20 percent more likely than civilians to take their own lives. Almost 45,000 Americans died by suicide in 2016, making it the 10th leading cause of death. For every person who dies by suicide, nearly 300 consider it.

The buildup of numbers at the end of this paragraph signals the urgency explicitly cited at the start of the next one:

Finally, suicide has become too urgent a problem to ignore, with the rising rate among military personnel an especially powerful call to action.

Denworth's use of head-to-tail transitions in this passage is particularly helpful, Lloyd says, because it leads the reader through some dense figures and other set-up material on an emotionally challenging topic.

Lloyd cautions that head-to-tail transitions should be used sparingly—as Denworth has done—lest the prose become too formulaic or the reading too tedious.

Not all stories need head-to-tail transitions, Lloyd notes. They're especially useful, she says, in sections that readers might find confusing, such as in presenting background that is less cinematic in nature. "It's really useful when I as an editor and representative of the reader am getting lost in the text and just need to thread my way through it," Lloyd says. "Sometimes you really need that hand-holding."

When done well, transitions can make sentences and paragraphs unspool as smoothly and (seemingly) effortlessly as a series of Vinyasa yoga poses.

Flow Yoga for the Brain

Successful transitions are seamless, says Roxanne Khamsi, chief news editor at Nature Medicine. She compares the pleasing flow that good transitions create to the flow of the body during yoga, in which each position requires a move that's natural for the muscles. "The brain is a muscle too, in a way," Khamsi says. "The reason that flow is important in writing is so that it doesn't tax the brain—it doesn't put the brain in the wrong kind of twist." When done well, transitions can make sentences and paragraphs unspool as smoothly and (seemingly) effortlessly as a series of Vinyasa yoga poses.

She points to Maryn McKenna's 2018 Mother Jones story on phage therapy (the use of viruses to treat deadly bacterial infections) as an example of how this can work well. "Each closing sentence of a paragraph naturally leads to the topic sentence of the next paragraph, so that the reader effortlessly reaches another layer of context in this fascinating story." In fact, Khamsi says, the transitions are so smooth that they're nearly imperceptible. Yet each paragraph builds on the previous one in a graceful and logical way (italics added):

To understand how phage therapy works, it helps to know a little biology, starting with the distinction between bacteria and viruses. Most of the drug-resistant superbugs that cause medical havoc are bacteria, microscopic single-celled organisms that do most of the things that other living things do: seek nutrition, metabolize it into energy, produce offspring. Viruses, which are much smaller than bacteria, exist only to reproduce: They attach to a cell, hijack its reproductive machinery to make fresh viruses, and then, in most cases, explode the cell to let viral copies float free.

The short, declarative sentence that begins the next paragraph acts like a signpost for readers, signaling in uncomplicated language that, now that we've explained the basic difference between viruses and bacteria, we're going to bring phages into the mix:

Phages are viruses. In the wild, they are the cleanup crew that keeps bacteria from taking over the world. Bacteria reproduce relentlessly, a new generation every 20 minutes or so, and phages kill them just as rapidly, preventing the burgeoning bacterial biomass from swamping the planet like a B-movie slime monster. But phages do not kill indiscriminately: Though there are trillions in the world, each is tuned evolutionarily to destroy only particular bacteria. In 1917, a self-taught microbiologist named Félix d'Herelle recognized phages' talent for targeted killing. He imagined that if he could find the correct phages, he could use them to cure deadly bacterial infections.

That was a gleaming hope, because at the time, nothing else could. (Sir Alexander Fleming wouldn't find the mold that makes penicillin, the first antibiotic, until 1928.) Treatments were primitive: aspirin and ice baths to knock down fever, injections of crude immunotherapy extracted from the blood of horses and sheep, and amputation when a scratch or cut let infection burgeon in a limb and threaten the rest of the body with sepsis.

The first sentence of this paragraph ("That was a gleaming hope …") provides a trail of bread crumbs for the reader, bridging the biology and historical background on phages with important context on the discovery of antibiotics. It also interjects a touch of suspense and tension.

Sometimes a story requires a marked shift in direction, perspective, or chronology from one paragraph to the next. Making these turns without throwing readers off balance can be challenging, especially in shorter stories like news pieces, in which brevity and word economy are essential.

One common way to make such pivots is by using what Draxler calls the "contrast approach," in which the writer summarizes what is already known or has just been established, then throws in a twist. This passage from Jack Dykinga's January 2018 bioGraphic story about quiver trees illustrates the use of contrast for switching gears (italics added):

Quiver trees support a wide variety of creatures in the desert. Birds, insects, and mammals, including baboons, rely on the nectar in their flowers for moisture and sustenance. As some of the few elements on the landscape with any height, the trees act as nesting sites for social weaver birds (Philetarius socius) and perches for raptors. The trees provide resources for humans, too; indigenous San hunters hollowed out the branches to construct quivers to carry their poisonous arrows, which is what gives the tree its common name.

While the trees have carved out an impressive niche in this extreme environment, they don't have a lot of wiggle room within it. Quiver trees are surprisingly sensitive to changing conditions—especially high temperatures and drought, which is exactly the trend predicted for this part of the world as the global climate changes.

A similar type of widely used transition is what Draxler calls the "But wait" approach. Since so much of science writing is discovery-based, she notes, many stories follow the same basic form, first laying out foundational knowledge and then imparting what's new: "But wait—this new discovery is what's changing how we think about this issue." She offers another example from bioGraphic, this one from an extended caption that accompanied a photograph by Alex Hyde (italics added):

Living beings—from ferns and ferrets to E. coli and crickets—age over time, a process of deterioration called senescence. While the rate of aging varies dramatically among species, the general rule is that the chance of mortality rises as an individual's reproductive capacity wanes. It's a universal and unchangeable fact of life: We all age. Or so scientists thought.

"You and I are going to age; there's no way around it," MartÍnez says. "But the Hydra doesn't have to."

Pivoting at Section Breaks

Smooth transitions are especially vital in longer stories, because these stories typically involve more layers and bigger conceptual leaps than news stories or other short pieces. Perhaps the most critical tool for creating transitions in longer stories—and especially in stories that rely heavily on narrative storytelling techniques—is the judicious use of section breaks, which are typically denoted by either a subheading or a skipped line set off by a drop cap, asterisks, or some other typographical treatment.

Perhaps the most critical tool for creating transitions in longer stories—and especially in stories that rely heavily on narrative storytelling techniques—is the judicious use of section breaks.

Narrative features often require jumping forward or backward in a story's chronology, introducing new characters, and shifting to a different scene or backdrop. When done properly, section breaks serve as a stylistic device that allows a writer to make these major shifts without leaving the reader feeling disoriented. What makes section-break transitions effective, though, is not just the subhed or the skipped line itself—it's the sentences that bracket the break.

In an award-winning 2017 High Country News feature about researchers who study forest fires, freelance journalist Douglas Fox demonstrates how transitions following section breaks can drop the reader into unexpected territory before then bringing them back to the central through line of the story. At the end of the first section of his story, Fox describes researchers flying through an epic smoke plume, noting that, as one scientist had earlier said, the plume was reminiscent of a nuclear mushroom cloud:

"The plume is orders of magnitude harder to study than the stuff on the ground," says Brian Potter, a meteorologist with the Pacific Wildland Fire Sciences Laboratory in Seattle who sometimes works with Clements. Indeed, it took a global conflagration much darker than any forest fire to even begin laying the foundations of this work. Kingsmill's observation about the bomb, it turns out, isn't far off.

After a section break, Fox then offers the reader crucial backstory, looking back in time nearly 75 years. He plunges us into the thick of World War II, where British planes are sending flares down in a bombing raid over Hamburg, Germany, turning buildings into infernos. The resulting catastrophic fires and loss of life gave researchers their earliest glimpses into the behavior of firestorms:

The evening of July 27, 1943, was stiflingly hot in Hamburg, Germany. The leaves of oak and poplar trees hung still in the air as women and teenagers finished factory shifts and boarded streetcars. They returned home to six-story flats that lined the narrow streets of the city's working-class neighborhoods. They opened windows to let in cooler air, and folded themselves into bed. It was nearly 1 a.m. when British planes arrived.

One of the tricks to introducing a new setting or point in time is to create what Fox thinks of as a "launch pad" for the reader. To build that launch pad in this story, he says, he and his editor, Sarah Gilman, worked and reworked the transition—particularly the sentence before the section break, referring to wildfires' smoke plumes being like nuclear bombs. They wanted to create tension and give readers a hint of what was coming, while also offering sufficient information before the section break to firmly anchor the reader in the new scene that begins after the section break. Including specific details (such as, in Fox's story, the exact date, time of day, and city in Germany where the scene is occurring) in the opening line of a new section can serve to "lessen the confusion and hopefully help [the reader] to figure out, just a tiny bit more quickly, how this seeming digression fits into the overall story," says Fox.

Punctuating the scene with such details also signals to the reader that something important is going to happen there, he notes. "It's the right temporal and spatial scale for talking about the bombing raid, since the firestorm was a product of the specific layout and architecture of that city, and of the weather on that particular evening," he says. What's more, "Cuing the reader in to a particular date and evening also tells them, on a more gut level, that something very acute and sudden is going to happen—something that is sudden on a very personal, human scale."

The transition in the example above serves another important purpose, which is to slow down the pacing of the story, amplifying its impact. Fox says that he likes to be intentional about using section breaks to "create a little bit of a speed bump—to jar the reader just a tiny, tiny bit."

"By the time you finish a section, things often feel fast—or at least you've (hopefully) built to some kind of crescendo, or some new insight, gotten the reader to think, 'Oh wow, I didn't know that,' " Fox says. "The intention of the break is to slow things back down again."

The very thing that makes transitions elusive is the subtlety we often don't notice as we're reading.

Here's another example of a section-break pivot. In this case, the break is used to introduce a new character—a baby gorilla—in a recent Atlantic feature by journalist Krista Langlois (italics added):

The invention of processed, calorically dense "biscuits" packed with vitamins and nutrients and supplemented with a few fruits and vegetables eventually helped standardize gorilla diets. Animals on the biscuit diet began living longer, seemingly healthier lives, sometimes surviving into their 50s. Infant mortality rates dropped. One female gorilla, Jo Ray K, gave birth to five fuzz-headed infants, including a rambunctious baby boy born on July 10, 1987. Zookeepers named him Mokolo.

***

When Mokolo arrived at the Cleveland Metroparks Zoo in 1994, he helped establish a bachelor group with three other young males. Wild gorillas often live in bachelor groups when they're young, and Mokolo settled easily into his new social role. From the start, says the zoo's executive director and animal behaviorist Chris Kuhar, Mokolo stood out for his big personality. "He was the punky kid who caused trouble," Kuhar recalls. "But he was also the peacemaker. He was the one who wanted to play, or who wanted to fight, or cuddle."

The example above illustrates a case where the sentence following a section break picks up on the same concept (the gorilla Mokolo) that the previous section ended on. (It is also an example of a head-to-tail transition.) But section breaks might just as easily be used to start a new thread in the story, or to circle back to a previous one, and have nothing to do with the paragraph preceding the section break. For instance, Langlois uses a section break elsewhere in the same story to bring a broad topic to a close and to zoom in on a new scene at the zoo (italics added):

But in time, the work of Less, Krynak, Kristen Lukas, Pam Dennis, and others may take captive gorillas one step closer to living like their wild cousins—one step in a century-long series of steps and missteps. It's fitting, Dennis thinks, that our understanding of human medicine and physiology is finally contributing to the health and well-being of primates, instead of the other way around.

"My feeling," she says, "is that we learned so much about human health by doing research on primates that now it's sort of like giving back."

***

At 6:30 in the morning, when the streetlights are still on and the Cleveland Metroparks Zoo is closed to the public, Brian Price, the gorilla keeper, shows up for work in faded Carhartts and a hooded sweatshirt. A ring of keys, a handheld radio, and a canister of heavy-duty pepper spray hang from his belt.

Pinpointing what makes a transition work takes practice and a well-trained eye. A clumsy break—for example, one that leans too heavily on a subheading, or that comes without bringing appropriate closure to a discussion—can leave readers scratching their heads about why a story has taken a sudden turn or left an important discussion unresolved. "Sometimes it's like, 'Hold onto your hats, the roller coaster just took a 90-degree turn,' " Khamsi says.

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That's especially likely to happen if the writer isn't confident about where the story is heading. "Building successful transitions comes down to knowing with a certain level of granularity what the logical progression of ideas is within the story," Ananthaswamy says.

Draxler agrees, drawing again on the construction analogy. She says writers often make the mistake of using transitions to "bridge two very small parts of the story, to get from one paragraph to the next, without zooming out and really thinking about where this is taking the whole story."

Developing that understanding of a story's internal logic and narrative flow, and constructing the transitions that help hold the pieces together, often involves building and disassembling and rebuilding through the course of several drafts. And it usually requires substantial teamwork between editor and writer.

But we all know a successful piece when we read it: The structure hangs together into a pleasing story that we don't want to put down. The very thing that makes transitions elusive is the subtlety we often don't notice as we're reading: the well-constructed bridges have connected the roads along the way so seamlessly that we don't even realize we've crossed them until we reach the end of the journey.

Courtesy of Amanda Mascarelli

Amanda Mascarelli

Amanda Mascarelli is the managing editor of Sapiens, an online magazine devoted to covering anthropology. Prior to taking on this role in May 2015, Mascarelli spent a decade as a freelance journalist. Her stories have appeared in AudubonNature, New Scientist, Science, Science News for Students, The New York Times, The Washington Post, Yoga Journal, and other publications. Follow her on Twitter @A_Mascarelli.



— Steve Smith

Uncensored John Simon

http://uncensoredsimon.blogspot.com/

Now take an even more common and equally egregious tautology of which television is especially culpable, though you get it all over the place, spoken and written by perhaps even you (Et tu Brute): "cannot help but." Thus "I cannot help but think otherwise" etc. or "we cannot help but commit the sins of our fathers." Correct would be "I cannot but think" or "I cannot help thinking," but not both. Yet even in the most prestigious publications you will find this solecism pullulating.

Now you may say, "What does it matter? People will understand you either way." But it does matter. People will understand it if after a meal of beans you should fart in public—perhaps even overlook it—but that does not make it all right. Correct speech, like correct dress, may be a dying nicety, but people of taste will cling to it and reward you with their esteem if you practice it. Correct speech is an integral part of correct behavior.

_- Steve

The Great Mortality — Real Life

http://reallifemag.com/the-great-mortality/


_- Steve

Thursday, September 27, 2018

The great cryptocurrency heist | Aeon

The great cryptocurrency heist | Aeon

The great cryptocurrency heist

Blockchain enthusiasts crave a world without bankers, lawyers or fat-cat executives. There's just one problem: trust

On 20 July 2016, something happened that was arguably the most philosophically interesting event to take place in your lifetime or mine. On that day, after much deliberation and hand-wringing, in the aftermath of a multimillion-dollar swindle from his automated, algorithm-driven, supposedly foolproof corporation, Vitalik Buterin, then 22 years old, announced the 'hard fork' of the cryptocurrency Ethereum. By making that announcement, Buterin shattered certain tightly held assumptions about the future of trust and the nature of many vital institutions that make modern life possible. He also really pissed off a lot of people.

How? Well, to understand all that, first we need to talk about trust and its place in the fabric of our lives. Trust seems to be in short supply these days, although we have no choice but to rely on it. We trust schools and babysitters to look after our children. We trust banks to hold our money and to transfer it safely for us. We trust insurance companies to pay us should we meet with some disaster. When we make a large purchase – such as a house – we trust our solicitors or an escrow company to hold the funds until the transaction is complete. We trust regulators and governments to make sure these institutions are doing what they are supposed to be doing.

Sometimes, however, our system of trust fails us. There are runs on banks. People lose faith in currencies issued by nation-states. People stop trusting their political institutions because of the chicanery, short-sightedness and general incompetence of the self-interested clowns running the show. The response to this widespread erosion of trust has been varied, ranging from Donald Trump's (hypocritical) pledge to 'drain the swamp', to the promise of so-called 'blockchain technology' and its associated cryptocurrencies.

The blockchain is the key to understanding Buterin's project. A good way to wrap our minds around the concept is to think of its most famous application: Bitcoin. And the best way to think about Bitcoin is not in terms of coins at all but rather as a giant ledger.

Imagine a world in which we didn't exchange currency, but kept track of who had what on a huge public spreadsheet, distributed across the internet. Every 10 minutes, all the transactions that took place in that slice of time are fused together into a single block. Each block includes a chain linking it to previous blocks, hence the term 'blockchain'. The end result is a universal record book that reliably logs everything that's ever happened via a (theoretically) tamper-proof algorithm. We don't need to trust human bankers to tell us who owns what, because we can all see what's written in the mathematically verified blockchain.

But Bitcoin is just one version of the blockchain. The fundamental technology has the potential to replace a much wider range of human institutions in which we use trust to reach a consensus about a state of affairs. It could provide a definitive record for property transfers, from diamonds to Porsches to original Picassos. It could be used to record contracts, to certify the authenticity of valuable goods, or to securely store your health records (and keep track of anyone who's ever accessed them).

But there's a catch: what about the faithful 'execution' of a contract? Doesn't that require trust as well? What good is an agreement, after all, if the text is there but people don't respect it, and don't follow through on their obligations? Which brings us back to the crucial matter of how Buterin managed to piss off so many people.

In the beginning, Buterin was a hero to the crusaders against trust. In late 2013, at the age of 19, he wrote a document, known as the 'Ethereum White Paper'. In it, he observed that you could hypothetically use the blockchain to store and execute computer programs – hypothetically, any computer program. This gave rise to Ethereum: a blockchain-based platform that supported self-executing contracts. The commands to execute the contract were built into the contract itself, and the contract was sealed into the (supposedly) immutable and universally visible blockchain. No trust necessary. Or so the story went.

This had extraordinary implications – one of which was that entire corporations could be encoded in the blockchain in the form of 'decentralised autonomous organisations' (DAOs). None of the usual trusted business partners would be required: employees, managers, human resources officers, CFOs and CEOs would be rendered otiose. No longer would shareholders need to pay massive bonuses to hedge-fund executives 'trusted' to make decisions about our money. In theory, at least, those executives could be replaced by a bundle of transparent, pre-set instructions stored in the blockchain.

About 11,000 people ponied up a total of $150 million to take part. What had they purchased, exactly?

On the back of a wave of excitement, Ethereum's currency, known as 'ethers', went up for pre-sale in the summer of 2014. Ethers would serve a dual function as both the 'fuel' that powered the computations on the network, and as a medium of exchange, like bitcoins. In short order, the value of ethers started to climb, and the platform reached a 'market capitalisation' of around $1 billion after the pre-sale. (Full disclosure: I participated as an investor at this initial stage but have since liquidated my holdings.)

Two years later, a DAO was created. It was called, simply, The DAO, and about 11,000 people ponied up a total of $150 million to take part. What had they purchased, exactly? What they believed they had bought was a virtual hedge fund that would invest in other companies and ventures. Anyone wanting to get money from the DAO had to submit a proposal online, in the form of a self-executing contract that DAO shareholders would then vote upon. If approved, the DAO was programmed to automatically transfer the agreed allotment of ethers.

Shareholders did not have to worry about the good intentions of the DAO's employees, for there were no employees; nor about the competence of its supervisors or executives, because there were none; nor about its lawyers to go over the fine print, for there was no fine print to go over. They'd have no need to trust courts and police and attorneys to enforce the contracts, because the contracts did it themselves. All they had to do was look at the software code and see what the program (that is, the corporation) would do, and choose whether or not to buy in. Remember the Texas oil man T Boone Pickens, who campaigned for shareholder rights in the 1980s? To the optimistic investors in The DAO, this was a T Boone Pickens dream come true.

Of course, it was all totally awesome until it all went to shit. On 17 June 2016, someone – we still don't know who – successfully hacked The DAO. The hacker siphoned off the equivalent of $50 million into a different DAO, which subsequently became known as the Dark DAO. When this flaw in the code was detected, other stakeholders used the same move to bump the remaining ethers into a third DAO, known as the White Hat DAO. Then all the existing accounts in the three DAOs were frozen.

What to do with the money in Dark DAO and the White Hat DAO? Some argued that, as the hacker was only doing what the software allowed, the ethers in the Dark DAO rightfully belonged to the hacker. And why was one DAO called 'Dark' and the other 'White Hat' – weren't both hacks undertaken with the same code? And wasn't the code the law?

This brings us, finally, to what pissed people off. It was the 'fork' – actually, the 'forks', for there were two forking options. A 'soft' fork would merely change the code for Ethereum so that only future transactions would be affected. But a 'hard' fork, well, that was another matter entirely. A hard fork would undo previous transactions. In this case, what the hard fork could do would be to take the money back from the Dark DAO and the White Hat DAO, and put it back in the hands of the original investors.

But in a trustless universe, who decides if the fork happens? Now we have no choice but to talk about miners. They do the gruntwork of sealing information into the blockchain, using a cryptographic method called 'hashing'. As it turns out, the process of computing a hash to seal each block involves an astounding level of computational power. So who is going to bother to do it, and why?

The code was supposed to be the law. If you didn't see the weakness in the software, that was your problem

With Bitcoin, for example, miners are rewarded with payments in bitcoins (around 12.5 bitcoins are currently rewarded for the successful hash of each block). What this really means is that hashing wins you some extra units on the ledger. They're called miners, but it would be more accurate to describe these people as clerks. Whatever we call them, the point is that if the miners stop mining, the whole enterprise grinds to a halt. So, while Buterin and the Ethereum Foundation could propose a fork, ultimately it was up to the Ethereum miners to decide. They were the ones that had to mine the revamped Ethereum code, and keep the whole system ticking over. (Another disclosure: I have been a Bitcoin miner before.)

On 20 July 2016, Buterin announced that the miners had accepted the hard fork and were happily mining away with the new code. The reality was that most of them had. A number of holdout miners and Ethereum users were outraged. In their view, the hard fork undermined the core principle of Ethereum, which was, after all, to bypass all the meddling humans – the corrupt bureaucrats and politicians and board directors and CEOs and lawyers. The code was supposed to be the law. If you didn't see the weakness in the software, that was your problem, since the software was publicly available.

Some Ethereum miners thus refused to go with the fork and instead stayed with the original Ethereum protocol, which they re-dubbed 'Ethereum Classic'. You'd think that would be the end of it, but no. Shortly after the hard fork of Ethereum and the persistence of the rebranded Ethereum Classic, a further round of technical problems were identified with the Classic protocol. Soon, there was a counter-proposal to hard-fork Ethereum Classic, which led to the inevitable threat by the true believers that they would respond with an Ethereum Classic Classic.

Such are the perils of supposedly trust-free technology. It might make for good marketing copy, but the fact of the matter is that blockchain technology is larded through with trust. First, you need to trust the protocol of the cryptocurrency and/or DAO. This isn't as simple as saying 'I trust the maths', for some actual human (or humans) wrote the code and hopefully debugged it, and we are at least trusting them to get it right, no? Well, in the case of The DAO, no, maybe they didn't get it right.

Second, you have to trust the 'stakeholders' (including miners) not to pull the rug out from under you with a hard fork. One of the objections to the hard fork was that it would create a precedent that the code would be changeable. But this objection exposes an unmentioned universal truth: the immutability of the blockchain is entirely a matter of trusting other humans not to fork it. Ethereum Classic Classic would be no more immutable than Etherum Classic, which was no more immutable than Ethereum. At best, the stakeholders – humans all – were showing that they were more trustworthy qua humans about not forking around with the blockchain. But at the same time, they obviously could change their minds about forking at any time. In other words, if Ethereum Classic is more trustworthy, it's only because the humans behind it are.  

Third, if you are buying into Ethereum or The DAO or any other DAO, you are being asked to trust the people who review the algorithm and tell you what it does and whether it's secure. But those people – computer scientists, say – are hardly incorruptible. Just as you can bribe an accountant to say that the books are clean, so too can you bribe a computer scientist. Moreover, you're putting your trust in whatever filters you applied to select that computer scientist. (University or professional qualifications? A network of friends? The testimonials of satisfied customers – which is to say, the same method by which people selected Bernie Madoff as their financial advisor.)

Blockchains don't offer us a trustless system, but rather a reassignment of trust

Finally, even if you had it on divine authority that the code of a DAO was bug-free and immutable, there are necessary gateways of trust at the boundaries of the system. For example, suppose you wrote a smart contract to place bets on sporting events. You still have to trust the news feed that tells you who won the match to determine the winner of the bet. Or suppose you wrote a smart contract under which you were to be delivered a truck full of orange juice concentrate. The smart contract can't control whether or not the product is polluted by lemons or some other substance. You have to trust the humans in the logistics chain, and the humans at the manufacturing end, to ensure your juice arrives unadulterated.

Can't these gateways to the system be trustless as well? Can't smart contracts some day have code to call for robotic orange-pickers and robotic juice concentrate-makers who would summon their robotically driven trucks to deliver the orange juice concentrate straight to our door? Yes – in theory. But imagine the task of reviewing the code to ensure that every step in the process hadn't been corrupted by a bug that uses security failures to highjack trucks, or that gives false approvals to adulterated orange juice. Perhaps we could write second-order programs to automate the testing of the first-order programs – but why do we trust those? Do we ultimately need automated automated-program-tester testers? Where does it end?

By now, the answer should be obvious: it ends with other humans. Blockchains don't offer us a trustless system, but rather a reassignment of trust. Instead of trusting our laws and institutions, we are being asked to trust stakeholders and miners, and programmers, and those who know enough coding to be able to verify the code. We aren't actually trusting the blockchain technology; we are trusting the people that support the blockchain. The blockchain community is certainly new and different, and it talks a good game of algorithms and hashing power, which at least sounds better than tired slogans such as Prudential is rock solid and You are in good hands with Allstate. But miners aren't necessarily any more reliable than the corporations they replace.

The sorry case of The DAO raises another question: Why are people so eager to put their faith in blockchain technology and its human supporters, instead of in other social and economic organisations? The upheavals of 2016, from Brexit to Trump, suggest that there is widespread fatigue with traditional institutions. Governments can be bought. Banks are designed to service the wealthy, and to hell with the little guy. 'The system is rigged' is a common refrain.

But instead of targeting the moral failures of the system and trying to reform it, the very concept of 'trust' has become suspect. Blockchain enthusiasts tend to cast trust as little more than a bug in our network of human interactions. To be sure, one of the weird features of trusting relationships is that, in order to trust someone, there has to be some chance that they will fail you. Trust involves risk – but that's not necessarily a bad thing.

Which brings us back to Buterin and the hard fork of The DAO. What made this event significant was not just what it demonstrated about the foibles of technology or the hubris of 20-something computer scientists. What it really exposed was the extent to which trust defines what it is to be human. Trust is about more than making sure I get my orange juice on time. Trust is what makes all relationships meaningful. Yes, we get burned by people we rely on, and this makes us disinclined to trust others. But when our faith is rewarded, it helps us forge closer relationships with others, be they our business partners or BFFs. Risk is a critical component to this bonding process. In a risk-free world, we wouldn't find anything resembling intimacy, friendship, solidarity or alliance, because nothing would be at stake.

Perhaps we ought to reconsider the desire to expunge trust, and instead focus on what should be done to strengthen it. One way to support trust is to hold institutions accountable when they betray it. When the US Department of Justice, for example, elected not to prosecute any of the bankers responsible for the 2008 financial collapse, the net effect was to undermine confidence in the system. They debased the principle of trust by showing that violating the public's faith could be cost-free.

Much of our system of trust is invisible to us – but it would be helpful if we could be more aware and appreciative all the same

Second, trusting relationships should be celebrated, not scorned. When we believe in someone and they betray us, our friends might call us a sucker, an easy mark, a loser. But shouldn't we celebrate these efforts to trust others – just as entrepreneurs talk up the value of failure on the road to innovation? Isn't the correct response along the lines of: 'I see why you trusted them, but isn't it is terrible that they let you down?'

Third, we should appreciate the trusting relations we engage in, and are rewarded by, every day. We're constantly relying on others to help us with something or look after our financial affairs, and much of the time we simply take it for granted. In part, that's because much of our system of trust is invisible to us – but it would be helpful if we could be more aware and appreciative all the same.

Finally, we shouldn't deceive ourselves with the idea that a technological fix can replace the human dimension of trust. Automation of trust is illusory. Rather than disparaging and cloaking human trust, we should face the brutal truth: we can't escape the need to rely on other people, as fallible and imperfect as they might be. We need to nurture and nourish trust – not throw it away, like so much debased and worthless currency.



_- Steve

The 10 Best Completed SF and Fantasy Series (According to Me) | Tor.com

The 10 Best Completed SF and Fantasy Series (According to Me) | Tor.com

The 10 Best Completed SF and Fantasy Series (According to Me)

Before diving into the list itself, I'd like to establish a few things: first, these are completely subjective rankings based on my own favorite series. The list takes into consideration things like prose, dialogue, characters, worldbuilding, and plot. In some cases, weight will be given more to phenomenal prose; in others, the focus will be on setting or characters or whatever the books' major strengths happen to be.

It also ignores incomplete series, so you won't see any love for The Kingkiller Chronicle or The Stormlight Archive, among others. Similarly, it ignores standalone books, so no Uprooted or The Windup Girl or Roadside Picnic.

Additionally, this list in many ways represents science fiction and fantasy of the past (mostly the late 20th century). It's likely that a few of these will still be on my list in a decade, but SFF of the past few years has taken a much-needed turn toward more diverse viewpoints and voices. This means that I simply haven't read some of the best new authors yet—and others, whom I have, don't have their series finished. So while the largely male and white voices of the 1980-2010 era have provided some excellent groundwork, the future of science fiction and fantasy will undoubtedly feature more diverse voices at the top of the board.

For instance, I haven't yet read the Broken Earth trilogy by N.K. Jemisin (which is by all accounts a stunning literary work). Authors like Jemisin are sure to figure into future lists of this sort…and the opportunity to find and read new stories from new voices is one of the most exciting things about reading SFF.

That said, let's dive on in!

10. The Runelords ("Earth King" series) by David Farland

David Farland's Runelords series occupies an interesting spot in the fantasy canon, especially for me. Perhaps because of the timing of my introduction to it, and perhaps because of the cover art, but I've always thought of Runelords as a more traditional series. Like The Wheel of Time, Runelords had cover art for most of the books done by the legendary Darryl K. Sweet.

Indeed, it was that cover art that led me to buy the first book, The Sum of All Men, in a little beachfront bookstore on vacation in Hawaii when I was 12. I saw something that looked like The Wheel of Time and jumped in with both feet.

I'm glad I did. Farland's a talented writer, and he truly excels at giving depth to things that normally get glossed over in fantasy.

There are two main magic systems, for lack of a better term, in Runelords. The first involves a pretty standard elemental magic: you've got magic-users who can perform magic based around earth, air, fire, and water. There are some interesting applications here, but the genius in this series lies with the other magic system.

In this world, people can grant endowments—physical or mental attributes—to other people. Those who have acquired such endowments are called Runelords, and tend to be nobles or soldiers. After all, a warrior with the strength of five men and the stamina of three is going to be tough to fight on a battlefield.

Farland could have left the magic there and made the series somewhat interesting. Instead, he dug deeper, exploring the ethical, moral, and even economic implications behind such a system.

When an endowment is given to a Runelord, it's transferred. Thus, if a Runelord wants the sight of two men, his Dedicate will be left blind, and the endowment only works for the Runelord while the Dedicate is living.

The result is tremendous expense given to keep Dedicates alive. The giving of endowments like grace (the ability to relax muscles), brawn (the ability to flex them), and stamina leaves such Dedicates in extremely fragile states. A Dedicate who gave stamina, for instance, is susceptible to disease.

On top of that, Runelords are almost unstoppable in battle, except by other similarly powered Runelords. Instead of facing them down on the field, strategy has evolved to focus on assassins, who try to break into Dedicates' Keeps and kill the helpless Dedicates, weakening Runelords out on the field. It's a fascinating look at all of the implications of the way this magic works.

I should note that while, technically speaking, the extended series as a whole will run nine books, it's really split into two: the first four books comprise the "Earth King" series, and the next four (and forthcoming fifth) comprise the "Scions of the Earth" series. The first four are where Farland's story and world work the best.

9. The Harry Potter Series by J.K. Rowling

As one of my friends noted when I mentioned this list to her, "one of these things is not like the others."

Harry Potter may be aimed at a younger audience than the rest of the series here, but it is without a doubt one of the most influential series of the last 30 years.

Sure, Rowling's writing is a bit elementary during the first few books, but it improves as the series goes on. Her worldbuilding is excellent (despite post-publishing missteps), the characters are undeniably vibrant, and the plotting is, for the most part, tight.

Most impressive, however, is the pacing of these books. There truly isn't much wasted space, even in the 800-plus-page The Order of the Phoenix. They are eminently re-readable, buzzing along at a healthy speed and filled with moments of thrills, sadness, and exuberance.

8. The Mistborn Trilogy (Era 1) by Brandon Sanderson

The only completed series in Sanderson's Cosmere deserves a place in this list. While many of the series that I have ranked higher are there because of incredible prose or vibrant characters, Sanderson's strength lies in his worldbuilding.

Scadrial is perhaps the most "traditional" of the worlds in the Cosmere, with the typical medieval tech and armies of high fantasy. But Sanderson's world around those staples is unique, with the mists and the ashmounts—and the Metallic Arts.

The three main types of magic used in Mistborn revolve around the use of metals to fuel (or steal) magic, with an intricate, thorough grounding. Mysteries are explored and revelations abound, remaining satisfying and surprising despite how logical they are.

While the second book, The Well of Ascension, suffers from pacing issues and a bit of a lackluster conflict through the first two-thirds, its final third and climax are truly outstanding work—some of Sanderson's best.

The Hero of Ages presents the kind of bombastic conclusion hoped for, with twists, surprises, and a beautiful, bittersweet ending. By all accounts, Era 2 of Mistborn is even better, but that review will have to wait for the release of The Lost Metal, expected sometime in late 2019.

7. The Lord of the Rings by J.R.R. Tolkien

This may be a somewhat controversial pick; or it may not. Either way, Tolkien's famed trilogy holds a special place in my heart. Lord of the Rings is not the best-paced story, nor the most intricate, but it does several things extraordinarily well.

The way Tolkien handles tropes is straightforward but meaningful: Samwise Gamgee, for instance, truly is the hero of the story. It's not Aragorn or Legolas or Gimli, of course, but neither is it Frodo. Samwise is the ultimate sidekick, because at the root of the story, he's not a sidekick.

Tolkien's prose gets knocked fairly often, though I don't mind it. But where he really knocks it out of the park is with his dialogue. The elevated language flows beautifully, and there are some absolutely fantastic conversations and exchanges in these books. Take Gandalf's encounter with the Witch King inside the gates of Minas Tirith:

In rode the Lord of the Nazgûl, under the archway that no enemy ever yet had passed, and all fled before his face.

All save one. There waiting, silent and still in the space before the Gate, sat Gandalf upon Shadowfax: Shadowfax who alone among the free horses of the earth endured the terror, unmoving, steadfast as a graven image in Rath Dínen.

"You cannot enter here," said Gandalf, and the huge shadow halted. "Go back to the abyss prepared for you! Go back! Fall into the nothingness that awaits you and your Master. Go!"

The Black Rider flung back his hood, and behold! he had a kingly crown; and yet upon no head visible was it set. The red fires shone between it and the mantled shoulders vast and dark. From a mouth unseen there came a deadly laughter.

"Old fool!" he said. "Old fool! This is my hour. Do you not know Death when you see it? Die now and curse in vain!"

Not many writers can craft something so smooth, foreboding, and powerful. Similar scenes between Eowyn and the Witch King, and between Aragorn and the Mouth of Sauron, stand out.

The Silmarillion technically doesn't belong here, but I must note that it is also a tremendous bit of storytelling in a different style. The tales in the Quenta Silmarillion vary from exciting to romantic to outright heartrending (looking at you, Túrin Turambar…).

6. The Ender Quartet/Shadow Quartet by Orson Scott Card

I struggled with whether or not to split these into two series, since they really do follow two separate (but intertwined) stories. In the end, I felt that the way Card has written in new novels since completing the main quartets shows he considers them more connected.

Ender's Game is certainly one of the most popular science fiction novels ever written, and for good reason. It resonates with younger audiences, while exploring themes and morality suitable for any adult. The subsequent Ender books carry forward that more adult-oriented focus.

Speaker for the Dead remains the single best science fiction book I've ever read, and while Xenocide and Children of the Mind do not maintain that lofty standard, they at least give a decent conclusion to the series.

Meanwhile, the Bean installments are uniformly excellent. Ender's Shadow was a brilliant idea, and the way the subsequent Shadow books handle the characters of Peter Wiggin and Petra Arkanian is wonderful.

5. The Acts of Caine by Matthew Woodring Stover

Like The Gap Cycle by Stephen R. Donaldson, Stover's quartet can get rather gruesome at points. It's the kind of no-holds-barred adventure story that fantasy often aspires to be, but misses. It's grimdark, but not for the sake of being grimdark.

Starting with Heroes Die, Stover's series blends science fiction and fantasy: in the far-future of Earth, the world finds its entertainment in the recorded Adventures of Actors, sent by inter-dimensional technology to a fantasy world called Overworld, inhabited by elves and dragons, wizards and ogrilloi.

As the series goes on, it becomes clear that the fates of Overworld and Earth are more intertwined than people believed, and Hari Michaelson, a.k.a. Caine, is at the center of it all.

The characters are truly what shine in Stover's series. His prose is excellent, riddled with fight scenes and one-liners to make any reader laugh, but the most impressive part is how he molds a wide cast of characters.

Caine is, of course, the focus. However, his estranged wife Shanna (or Pallas Ril, as she's known on Overworld) is a deeply interesting woman with psychological depths of the kind rarely explored in other series. The antagonists are at turns pure evil and startlingly sympathetic. Arturo Kollberg, Hari's boss on Earth, undergoes one of the most shocking transformations you can imagine. Ma'elKoth, the god-emperor of Ankhana on Overworld, is ruthless yet tender.

Most of all, The Acts of Caine is an ambitious series. Heroes Die is a near-perfect adventure novel, with sublime pacing and a cathartic climax. The Blade of Tyshalle follows up Heroes Die as a flawed masterpiece.

In Blade, Stover plays with mythology and legend while taking the old authors' maxim "think of the worst thing you can do to your protagonist, and then do it" to 11. It is in this book that we see the darkest depths of characters; it is also here where we see hope shine the brightest.

The third book, Caine Black Knife, is an unadulterated love letter from Stover to Caine, covering his most famous Adventure. The final book, Caine's Law, is a runaway roller coaster, full of bombastic twists and mind-boggling revelations.

The Acts of Caine is, at heart, an adventure story—but one with all the trappings of high literature already in place. It allows the reader to enjoy the thrill of the action, but also forces you to consider the entertainment you're consuming, and what it means to consume it.

4. The Gap Cycle by Stephen R. Donaldson

Donaldson's Gap Cycle is my highest-ranked pure sci-fi series. This is the peak of space opera, as far as I'm concerned.

The five-book series starts with a shorter volume: The Real Story is basically a novella, laying the groundwork for the fireworks to come. It tells a story from several different perspectives, showing how point-of-view impacts what people might think of as "the real story."

Donaldson's clever introduction explodes in the second installment, Forbidden Knowledge. From here, the series just gets more intense, more tightly woven, and develops ever-increasing stakes.

The Gap Cycle is, in fact, probably the only series I've ever read where each book is demonstrably better than the last. The final book, This Day All Gods Die, was a white-knuckle thriller from page one to the epilogue—on top of having one of the most incredible titles I've ever seen.

(Content of the stories aside, Donaldson's titles are just fantastic. A Dark and Hungry God Arises? Awesome. This Day All Gods DieHell yeah.)

This series has one major knock, and that's the subject matter. The first two books especially deal with graphic violence, of both sexual and psychological natures. It can get pretty tough to read at points. Despite that, it's an incredible story, well-written, with some of the most complex and layered characters in science fiction.

3. The Book of the New Sun by Gene Wolfe

Gene Wolfe is probably the most decorated, celebrated, and accomplished SFF writer that most people have never heard of.

(Okay, that's a little bit of an exaggeration. But not by much.)

Wolfe's four-part Book of the New Sun is a monumental literary accomplishment. His use of symbolism, metaphor, an unreliable narrator, and constant foreshadowing beggars anything that Robert Jordan or George R.R. Martin have ever done.

Wolfe's story is compelling, but unorthodox. The pacing of the series—especially in the first two books—is strange, as the narrative meanders about, touching on seemingly inconsequential events and glossing over (or leaving out entirely) big action scenes.

But the action and adventure isn't the point. Wolfe's writing is so rich and his storytelling so involved that he grips you and pulls you along in a riptide of language and mystery.

The Book of the New Sun is a challenging read, to be sure. Archaic language abounds, and layered storytelling forces the reader to pay attention, smarten up, and read more critically.

My favorite part of Wolfe's work is his writing, though. The way he uses words, conjuring everyday images in beautiful ways, is unparalleled among writers I've read (really, only Kai Ashante Wilson is even in the same conversation):

How glorious are they, the immovable idols of Urth, carved with unaccountable tools in a time inconceivably ancient, still lifting above the rim of the world grim heads crowned with mitres, tiaras, and diadems spangled with snow, heads whose eyes are as large as towns, figures whose shoulders are wrapped in forests.

Who else would describe mountains like that? Who else would turn such an everyday writing opportunity into lyrical, evocative imagery?

I think it says a lot that, after I finished Citadel of the Autarch, I couldn't make myself read any other authors for almost two months. Everything just felt bland after the richness of Book of the New Sun.

2. The Black Company by Glen Cook*

Glen Cook is a lesser-known name, but his mark on fantasy is everywhere. His knack for approaching the grittier, more down-to-earth aspects of fantasy inspired the grimdark genre. The Black Company itself eschews the deep worldbuilding of Jordan or Martin or Sanderson, instead concentrating on the day-to-day stories of soldiers in the mercenary Black Company.

Tropes are twisted on their heads, humor abounds, and settings move from standard European fare to vibrant Middle Eastern analogues and beyond.

The Black Company is a rollicking good time, interspersed with creepy demons and eldritch castles, mad wizards and the horrifying conditions of besieged cities.

This series features some of my favorite characters. Whether it's the snarky Croaker, brooding Murgen, competent Sleepy, or the irrepressible Voroshk girls, there's a wide and diverse cast. Not only that, but the emotional impact built up over the course of ten books leaves the reader stunned at the end of Soldiers Live.

It's that lasting impression from the end of the series that sticks with me—it's the most perfect series ending I've read.

As Croaker says at one point, "Memory is immortality of a sort." The Black Company left this reader with indelible memories.

*The full narrative arc of the series is completed in Soldiers Live, but Cook may not be totally finished just yet. Port of Shadows, a sort of "interquel" between books one and two, was recently released. Another book has long been rumored, called A Pitiless Rain.

1. The Wheel of Time by Robert Jordan (and Brandon Sanderson)

I almost feel bad about how little there is to say in this section. When it comes down to it, I can't do justice to this series in a list review. The meat, the immersion, the pure reality of reading Robert Jordan's magnum opus is something that must be experienced to be understood.

The Wheel of Time is one of the preeminent fantasy series of the late '90s/early 2000s. Jordan was an absolute titan of fantasy, with his books selling upwards of 80 million copies, according to some sources.

Jordan took Tolkien's legacy and transformed it for the modern era. The series purposely starts in a similar, familiar fashion, but rapidly comes off the rails and grows into its own monster. The level of worldbuilding is incredible, down to histories, cultures and customs, genealogies and magic.

The Wheel of Time defined a generation of fantasy. Robert Jordan didn't turn out sparkling prose like Gene Wolfe, but he certainly had his moments. His characters aren't necessarily as compelling as those in The Acts of Caine or The Black Company, but they're nonetheless rich, dynamic, and feature the kind of warmth that makes readers consider them friends. The Wheel of Time is, in its way, the complete fantasy package.

Drew McCaffrey lives in Fort Collins, CO, where he is spoiled by all the amazing craft beer. You can find him on Twitter, talking about books and writing, but mostly just getting worked up about the New York Rangers.



_- Steve

Author Kevin Fedarko On Why a Grand Canyon Thru-Hike Matters

Author Kevin Fedarko On Why a Grand Canyon Thru-Hike Matters

Author Kevin Fedarko on Why a Grand Canyon Thru-Hike Matters…

If you think anyone who would try to hike the length of the Grand Canyon—estimated at more than 750 miles—is only in it for bragging rights, think again.

Marble Canyon seen while walking the length of the Grand Canyon, over 600 miles, to highlight secret beauty between the rim and the river.

In late 2015, Kevin Fedarko, author of The Emerald Mile, and National Geographic photographer Pete McBride, set out to do just that. The two journalists embarked on a sectional thru-hike of the Grand Canyon that will be completed before the end of this year if all goes according to plan. But they're not interested in records or fame. They're interested in showing the world what's at stake if we don't protect one of our greatest national treasures. With approximately 90 miles to go, I caught Kevin on the phone to talk about what prompted this crazy journey and why it matters.

You've spent a lot of time rafting through the Grand Canyon, but what inspired the idea to hike the length of it?

Honestly, it wasn't my idea. The idea originated with Pete McBride. Pete and I have worked all over the world together, but Pete has a particular affinity for the Colorado River. In 2014, he came to me with this harebrained scheme that would involve walking the length of the Grand Canyon. And to be honest, I thought it was an absolutely terrible idea. And, in fact, it's proven to be an absolute terrible idea. So I really lay 100 percent of the blame for all of this to Pete McBride [laughs].

Kevin Fedarko in Glen Canyon, Colorado River

It sounds like the trip has been pretty grueling so far. Has there been a moment when you thought, "This was a mistake?"

There hasn't been just one moment, but an entire river of moments like that. It is just so hard and physically punishing to move through a place where there are no trails, with up to 50 pounds of gear, equipment and food strapped to your back, where the consequences of a single misstep can be very severe and where the terrain itself seems to resist and scoff at the idea that a human being could pass through it with ease.

But all of that physical brutality is leavened by many, many moments of sublime beauty. That's one of the paradoxes of moving through the canyon on foot. You're sort of immersed in a river of pain, but you're continuously reminded that this is a landscape drenched in beauty. I think some of the most beautiful moments are at night when you can simply lie back without having to figure out where your foot is going to be placed next. You can lie back and look up, and there's no light pollution out there, so the stars seem to glow with an intensity and a ferocity unlike any other place I've ever been. The heavens are drenched in this celestial ribbon of starlight.

Grand Canyon stars | Photo: Justin Bailie

You've said in other interviews that this isn't about bragging rights, why are you really making this trek?

The really only important element for us, which was an instrumental part of Pete's ability to convince me to do this in the first place, was the idea that a journey like this, on foot, would offer the best way for two journalists to not only get a sense of the secrets and less heralded treasures that the canyon contains, but also we felt, would offer the best way to gauge and measure the impact of a number of commercial developments that are poised to do irreparable harm to the integrity of one of the most iconic and beloved landscapes in America.

Can you elaborate on some of those developments?

Well, they're all incredibly disturbing. And they literally wring the canyon from every point.

On the eastern rim of the Grand Canyon you have a group of developers from Scottsdale and Phoenix, Arizona who are working together with the Navajo Nation to put in a motorized gondola system from the rim of the canyon all the way to the bottom, where they will erect a raised set of metal walkways that include what's been described as a food emporium. This tramway system will be capable of delivering 10,000 people per day down to a place that many river runners know and hold dear to their heart—the confluence of the Little Colorado. This is an area that rarely sees a few dozen people on any given day of the summer and even fewer in the winter.

Author Kevin Fedarko on Why a Grand Canyon Thru-hike Matters

On the south rim there's an effort to radically expand the town of Tusayan, which sits directly adjacent to the park headquarters and serves as the gateway for most of the 5.5 million visitors who come to the Grand Canyon each year. An Italian real estate corporation by the name of Stilo envisions expanding Tusayan—putting more than 3 million square feet of commercial space, 2,200 new homes, shopping malls, hotels, a dude ranch, an entertainment pavilion on the arid south rim of the Grand Canyon. All of this would draw even more people to a park that simply doesn't have the infrastructure to handle it.

All the way out on the west, the Hualapai, whose reservation abuts the rim of the canyon in its western most reaches, have partnered up with a number of very large and successful air tour operators. They are bringing up to 1 million visitors per year, primarily from Las Vegas, and have flooded western Grand Canyon with hundreds of helicopter flights per day. These helicopters are flying through the river corridor, and in many cases they're flying directly over the park itself. They are shattering the tranquility and purity of the landscape and there's no end in sight for growth.

And then finally, on both the North Rim and South Rim, there are a number of uranium mines. Some of them are inactive, but at least one of them is active. These mines threaten to harm the integrity of the aquifers that drive the springs inside a certain section of the South Rim, and in the case of the North Rim, they offer the potential for radioactive contaminated water seeping through layers of rock and ultimately reaching the canyon.

Kevin Fedarko on Why a Grand Canyon Thru Hike Matters | Photo: Q Martin

Why should people care about what's going on there right now?

Well, among many reasons, this is the crown jewel of the National Park System. And because of that, what happens inside the Grand Canyon matters enormously. Everything that happens within this landscape—the good, the bad or indifferent—tends to reverberate throughout the entire National Park System, and also I would argue, throughout the entire public lands system of the United States. So it offers kind of a bellwether—a bellwether of success or failure in terms of our effort as Americans to do what we're required to do by the National Park Service mandate. The organic act that created the Park Service itself 100 years ago this year, in 1916, it creates a kind of covenant between each generation of Americans. We're all required to protect these lands and preserve them, not only for our enjoyment but for the enjoyment of future generations of Americans. And Grand Canyon, more than any other place, offers a gauge and a litmus test for how well or how poorly we are holding up that covenant. That, more than anything else, is why I think it matters.


Photos: Kevin Fedarko & Pete McBride on the rim of the Grand Canyon – Pete McBride; Kevin Fedarko rowing in the Grand Canyon – Q Martin, Grand Canyon stars – Justin Bailie, Grand Canyon hikers – James Kaiser; Kevin Fedarko in The World Beneath the Rims – Q Martin



_- Steve