Of flights to Mars and Irish folklore

This week, we’re at the last of the Seanchai Library SL gatherings for 2013 – and the first for 2014! So why not warm-up for New Year’s celebrations by dropping-in to the library on Monday December 30th, or have your day-after-the-night-before headaches soothed away with a tale or two on Thursday January 2nd?

As always, the programmes at Seanchai Library this week commence at 19:00 SLT, and will be held on the Seanchai Library’s home on Imagination Island.

Monday, December 30th, 19:00: A Martian Odyssey

Challenged to provide a story about each of the planets in the solar system, Gyro has come-up with a classic tale from the 1930s centred on my favourite world beyond ours – Mars.

Written by Stanley G. Weinbaum and first appearing in wonder Stories in 1934, A Martian Odyssey takes place in the early years of the 21st century, just (according to the story) a decade after the first lunar landing, and some 20 years after the invention of nuclear power.

In it, a four-man crew arrive on Mars in the first human mission to that planet. Not long after their arrival, one of the crew – Jarvis – sets off on a solo mission aboard an auxiliary rocket craft, only to experience a malfunction which forces him to crash-land many hundreds of miles from base. Rather than await rescue, Jarvis decides to walk back to the mothership.

Not long after he sets out on his journey, Jarvis comes to the aid of a birdlike creature, which decides to travel with him. While he can understand nothing of the creature’s language, Tweel – as the creature calls itself – manages to learn some English, allowing them to communicate. Thus is the start of a unique friendship as the two companions travel together, encountering other strange and exotic Martian lifeforms as they slowly make their way back Jarvis’ mothership, Ares.

A Martian Odyssey is in fact the first part of a 2-part story involving Jarvis, his crewmates and Tweel. With the follow-up Valley of Dreams picking-up the story a short while after Jarvis has rejoined his fellow humans aboard Ares.Both tales are interesting for some of the concepts they introduce, which resonate somewhat with later thinking and controversies concerning Mars as the emerging space programme meant humans could explore the Red Planet for real.

Pyramids feature in the stories, for example, and pyramids became the subject of much debate and conspiracy theories in the 1970s following the Mariner 9 and Viking missions. Also in A Martian Odyssey, Jarvis and Tweel encounter a creature which is possibly silicone-based – and even in the late 1960s, NASA hadn’t ruled out the possibility that Mars, despite its tenuous, carbon dioxide-rich atmosphere, might still harbour hardly lifeforms predominantly based on – silicone.

In the follow-up Valley of Dreams – Weinbaum even managed to wrap some Earth-based mythology into the tale, beating the likes of von Däniken to the idea of gods being ancient astronauts by a good few decades – and providing the idea in a much more enjoyable way!

A Martian Odyssey is perhaps the first modern science-fiction story to present a sympathetic but non-human alien as a protagonist, and is regarded by many as one of only three stories ever written that changed the way all subsequent ones in the science fiction genre were written.

While Weinbaum’s life was cut tragically short, preventing him from truly reaching the heights of recognition enjoyed by his peers such as Lester del Ray, Isaac Asimov, Ray Bradbury or Arthur C. Clarke, his work is nevertheless as important, and in many respects as epic, as many of the works by those peers. His Planetary series, for example, weaves a series of consistent tales about the solar system as it was understood by in the 1930s, presenting a series of individual stories which are interlinked and consistent with one another to offer a cohesive whole.

Thursday January 2nd, 19:00: The Early Adventures of Finn McCool

Finn McCool  – Fionn mac Cumhaill – is a mythical hunter / warrior who appears in folklore spanning Ireland, the Isle of Man and parts of Scotland, as well as sharing some links with Welsh mythology.

finn McCoolAlso known as the “Green Hero”, Finn McCool draws his name “Finn” or “Fionn”, meaning “blond”, “fair”, “white”, or “bright”, from the fact that his hair turned prematurely white. According to legend, he was born of Cumhall – leader of the Fianna (small, semi-independent warrior bands found in both Irish and Scottish mythology) and Muirne, daughter of the druid Tadg mac Nuadat.

Raised in secret, Fionn, who was originally called Deimne, became a skilled hunter and warrior, serving several local kings, albeit incognito, due to the events surrounding his mother and father – and the latter’s death.

Gaining wisdom as a result of burning his thumb while cooking a very special meal in a story with strong resonances of Welsh mythology, Fionn sets out on a life of adventure, love and legend, which ends perhaps not with his death, but in the fact that he lies sleeping with the rest of the Fianna under the hills of Ireland.

In this story, read by Seanchai Shandon Loring and written by Bernard Evslin, are woven the deeds and adventures of a young Fionn in the times before he became a great Irish folk hero.

Special Note

There are no planned readings at the Seanchai Library SL on either Tuesday December 31st or Wednesday January 1st, 2014. However, there might be a short-notice event taking place on the latter – so keep an eye on the Seanchai Library blog for updates!

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Please check with the Seanchai Library SL’s blog for updates and for additions or changes to the week’s schedule. The featured charity for November and December is Reading is Fundamental.

Related Links

Tales for Christmas and a Dickens of a time

It’s time to kick-off another week of fabulous story-telling in Voice, brought to Second Life by the staff and volunteers at the Seanchai Library SL. Also this week, Storyfest SL’s The Dickens Project is in full swing.

Seanchai Library Readings

All programmes at Seanchai Library this week commence at 19:00 SLT, and will be held on the Seanchai Library’s home on Imagination Island.

  • Monday, December 16th: Views of Christmas in 100 Words with Crap Mariner
  • Tuesday, December 17th: A Faerie Christmas  with Faerie Maven-Pralou
  • Wednesday, December 18th: Christmas in the Classics with Caledonia Skytower
  • Thursday, December 19th: Duel in the Snow (“You’ll put your eye out!”)  –  with Shandon Loring.

Please check with the Seanchai Library SL’s blog for updates and for additions or changes to the week’s schedule. The featured charity for November and December is Reading is Fundamental.

The Dickens Project 2013

TDPThe Dickens Project offers you the chance to enjoy Charles Dickens’ classic A Christmas Carol, as well as extracts from some of his other works in an immersive, interactive environment where you can learn more about the man, his writings and the times in which he lived. Having opened its gates to the public on Friday December 13th, this week sees the presentation of A Christmas Carol over fives and featuring some of SL’s best voice talents. Each reading occurs twice daily, allowing people to attend at a time that suits them.

Events take place within The Dickens Project set, and all times are SLT.

  • 12: 00 noon Sunday, December 15th: Other Works of Dickens: Chapter Ten from Little Dorrit “Containing the Whole Science of Government” with Klannex Northmead
  • Monday, December 16th:  A Christmas Carol: Stave One, “Marley’s Ghost”: 13:00 – Dubhna Rhiadra; 17:00 – Kayden Oconnell
  • Tuesday, December 17th: A Christmas Carol: Stave Two, “The First of Three Spirits”: 13:00 – Corwyn Allen; 18:00 – Caledonia Skytower
  • Wednesday, December 18th: A Christmas Carol: Stave Three, “The Second of Three Spirits”: 14:00 – Ixmal Supermarine; 18:00 – Kayden Oconnell
  • Thursday, December 19th:  A Christmas Carol: Stave Four, “The Last of the Spirits”:
    • 13:00 – Dubhna Rhiadra
    • 17:00 – Corwyn Allen
    • 21:00 – Dickens Late Night with Caledonia Skytower, Shandon Loring and Finn Zeddmore.
  • Friday, December 20th: A Christmas Carol, Stave Five “The End of It”:
    • 13:00 – Ixmal Supermarine
    • 17:00 –  Kayden Oconnell
    • 21:00 – Dickens Late Night with Caledonia Skytower and Kayden Oconnell.

All performances at The Dicken Project are free, but donations will be accepted on behalf of War Child North America.

Related Links

“Come in, come in! and know me better, man!” – The Dickens Project 2013

TDPFriday 13th December sees the The Dickens Project re-open its gates for a two-week long celebration of Charles Dickens and his work, which is centred on A Christmas Carol, but features so much more as well.

The Dickens Project is presented by Storyfests SL and will take place on land provided for the project through the generosity of Thinkerer Melville at the Greek Archon Theatre in Cookie. It will comprise daily presentations (in Voice) of Dickens’ seasonal classic, A Christmas Carol,  together with a special presentation of the story by the Avatar Repertory Theatre, as well as encompassing elements of his other works in an inateractive, immersive setting.

The project first opened its doors over Christmas 2012, as a part of global celebrations marking the 200th anniversary of Charles Dickens’ birth. Over the course of two weeks, thousands of visitors passed through the project’s gates, explored the life and times of Charles Dickens and attended presentations of A Christmas Carol and other works by the author. This year marks the next steps in the dream of creating a totally immersive environment for the enjoyment of live readings from the vast Dickens canon of works.

Caledonia Skytower, Shandon Loring (centre) and Kayden Oconnell in an evocative shot of the virtual / live performance by Bear Silvershade
Caledonia Skytower, Shandon Loring (centre) and Kayden Oconnell in an evocative shot of the virtual / live performance by Bear Silvershade

At the start of December, I was fortunate enough to be invited to a very special presentation of A Christmas Carol which featured the talents of Caledonia Skytower, (who has conceived, directed and produced The Dickens Project), Kayden Oconnell and Shandon Loring. “Special”, because the event featured audiences in both the real and virtual worlds, as Caledonia Skytower (Judith Cullen in real life) sat before an audience in Tacoma, Washington. As such, I can very thoroughly, and at first hand, recommend at least one visit to the Project this year for anyone with a love of Dickens’ work or for the telling of wonderful tales through the medium of voice.

Dickens

The Schedule

The following presents the performance schedule as it stood on Thursday December 12th; however, as both the real and virtual worlds can be unpredictable, please be sure to check with the Storyfests SL blog for any revisions or additions to events or timings.

The main readings of A Christmas Carol will take place twice daily to offer audiences a choice of times to attend. Additional events are as currently indicated. As ever, all times are SLT.

All performances are free, but donations will be accepted on behalf of War Child North America.

Friday December 13th, 2013

  • 12:00 noon – Dickens’ Christmas Short Stories – Caledonia Skytower in Dickens Square
  • 17:00 – A Christmas Carol (an adaptation by Ada Radius) – Avatar Repertory Theatre.

Sunday, December 15th

  • Noon – Other Works of Dickens: Chapter Ten from Little Dorrit “Containing the Whole Science of Government” with Klannex Northmead.

Monday, December 16th:  A Christmas Carol: Stave One, “Marley’s Ghost”

  • 13:00Dubhna Rhiadra
  • 17:00 – Kayden Oconnell.

Tuesday, December 17th: A Christmas Carol: Stave Two, “The First of Three Spirits”

  • Opening of “Christmas Past” to guests
  • 13:00 – Corwyn Allen
  • 18:00 – Caledonia Skytower.

Wednesday, December 18th: A Christmas Carol: Stave Three, “The Second of Three Spirits”

  • Opening of “Christmas Present” to guests
  • 14:00 – Ixmal Supermarine
  • 18:00 – Kayden Oconnell.

Thursday, December 19th:  A Christmas Carol: Stave Four, “The Last of the Spirits”

  •  Opening of “Christmas Yet to Come” to guests
  • 13:00 – Dubhna Rhiadra
  • 17:00 – Corwyn Allen
  • 21:00 – Dickens Late Night with Caledonia Skytower, Shandon Loring and Finn Zeddmore.

Friday, December 20th: A Christmas Carol, Stave Five “The End of It”

  • 13:00 Ixmal Supermarine
  • 17:00 – Kayden Oconnell
  • 21:00 – Dickens Late Night with Caledonia Skytower and Kayden Oconnell.

 Sunday, December 22nd: Other Works of Dickens

Monday, December 23rd: A Christmas Carol (Part 1)

  • 16:00 – Caledonia Skytower with a possible repeat at 21:00.

Tuesday, December 24th: A Christmas Carol (Part 2)

  • 16:00 – Caledonia Skytower.

Thursday, December 26th: Other Works of Dickens

  • Times & Titles to be announced.

Friday, December 27th

  • The Dickens Project closes

Related Links

A virtuoso performance and a Dickens of a tale

Dickens-2013Sunday December 1st, 2013, Saw two special premieres take place in Second Life and in the same time-frame. The first was for the opening season two of The Blackened Mirror. The second was a very special presentation of A Christmas Carol, forming the return of The Dickens Project to Second Life – and its first presentation in real life.

The presentation took place at the Greek Archon Theatre in Cookie, where Caledonia Skytower, Shandon Loring and Kayden Oconnell took to the stage before an audience of invited guests to present Dickens’ most popular Christmas tale. At the same time, Caledonia’s real-life persona, Judith Cullen, was seated in the Pythian Lodge in Tacoma, Washington, before an audience who had also gathered to hear the story, and who could  watch in-world activities via a large screen. As is the magic of Second Life, Kayden joined her via voice from Minnesota and Shandon from Nebraska.

As with the original run of The Dickens Project, performed over Christmas 2012, the reading took place in a specially created set representing a scene from Dickens’ time and which, when the project re-opens its doors to the public later in the month, will provide a special walk-through of Charles Dickens’ life, works and the times in which he lived. The outdoor stage, sans props, provided a simple and effective focal-point for the reading, with Caledonia and Kayden sharing the role of the story’s narrator and taking on the various supporting roles, while Shandon once again reprised the role of Ebenezer Scrooge.

Shandon Loring reprises his role as Ebenezer Scrooge
Shandon Loring reprises his role as Ebenezer Scrooge

Prior to the reading commencing, the audiences in both worlds were told something of the history of the Knights of Pythia and the lodge in which the real world audience were seated. To help them understand Second Life better, Judith / Caledonia gave a very short overview of the platform, and members of the digital audience were encouraged to interact – if only one-way – with the real-life audience through greetings, etc. Nor was the performance entirely static for the audience in Tacoma; to give them a greater feeling of involvement, the in-world feed was monitored by another SL user, who used the viewer’s camera to show actors, audience and setting.

The performance, using a text adapted and annotated by Dickens himself when he presented the story in person, together with some additional text from the full novella, was presented with aplomb and style by the three artists. From my own perspective, I found it to be as much an engaging and virtuoso performance as the time I saw Sir Patrick Stewart perform A Christmas Carol as a one-man show; so much so that, other than the need to flick away for some 20 minutes to take care of other commitments, the time simply flew by for me.

The Knights of Pythia Temple, Tacoma, where the performance took place in RL
The Knights of Pythia Temple, Tacoma, where the performance took place in RL

For Judith / Caledonia, who conceived, directed and produced The Dickens Project, I know that this is very much a personal triumph; she has been working towards The Dickens Project being both a real life and virtual experience for the better part of a year. If the audio feedback was anything to go by for those of us in the virtual world, the performance was very well received in Tacoma and generated a number of questions about the story, the idea and Second Life from the audience there.

While the presentation was, in terms of a combined SL / RL event, a one-off (at least for now!), The Dickens Project will be returning to Second Life for a seasonal run commencing on Friday December 13th. I’ve no details on the schedule at the moment, but will publish them here once confirmed.

Caledonia Skytower, Shandon Loring (centre) and Kayden Oconnell is an evocative shot of the perfromance by Bear Silvershade
Caledonia Skytower, Shandon Loring (centre) and Kayden Oconnell in an evocative shot of the performance by Bear Silvershade

If you’ve not seen a performance of The Dickens Project, I urge you to take the time to do so once the new season opens. Anyone with a love for literature and especially for Dickens’ famous tale of a miserly old man, ghosts, and ethical and emotional transformations, will love this performance. Kudos to Caledonia, Shandon and Kayden and to all those who helped make The Dickens Project a reality once more – and in both the real and digital realms!

Related Links

Both the real world and SL presentations of A Christmas Carol were free admission. However, audiences at both were offered the opportunity to donate to one of two charities: War Child North America in the case of the SL audience and My Sister’s Pantry for those in the real world audience.

Journey to the planets and to the heart of the tanglewood, and hear ghostly tales of old

It’s time to kick-off another week of fabulous story-telling in Voice, brought to Second Life by the staff and volunteers at the Seanchai Library SL.

As always, all times SLT, and unless otherwise stated, events will be held on the Seanchai Library’s home on Imagination Island.

Monday December 2nd, 19:00: Science Fiction: The Planets Series

With Gyro Muggins.

Tuesday December 3rd, 19:00: Treasure it the Heart of the Tanglewood

Faerie Maven-Pralou continues her reading of Meredith Ann Pierce’s 2001 novel for young adults.

TanglewoodHannah lives by the fearsome Tanglewood with a few talkative companion animals. She doesn’t age, and she has no memory of anything but this life of isolation. Once a month she plucks the flowers that grow from her head, a painful process in which “each yank made her whole scalp ache”, and brews them into a tea for the wizard who lives deep in the woods.

When Hannah falls in love with one of the many knights who seek the treasure of the book’s title, she starts to question the wizard’s motives, finding he has turned the knight into a fox.

Escaping the wizard’s manipulative grasp, Hannah sets out to find a cure for the knight, an adventure in which she discovers her own identity and the repercussions of some of her actions while under the control of the wizard.

Wednesday December 4th, 19:00: Beggar’s Day, the Beggar Prince

With Caledonia Skytower.

Thursday December 5th, 11:00: Christmas Ghosts: A Collection of Spooky Tales for a Winter’s Eve

Xmas GhostsHalloween may have come and gone for 2013, but the year’s end tends to be another traditional time for ghost stories to be read. This week, Shandon Loring dips into a collection of classic ghostly tales from the pens of writers past. This delightful volume of short stories comprises:

Christmas Eve on a Haunted Hulk by Frank Cowper
The haunted House by Charles Dickens
The Phantom Coach by Amelia B. Edwards
The Haunted Man by Bret Harte
Catherine’s Quest by J. Sheridan Le Fanu
Joseph: A Story by Katherine Rickford
The Abbot’s Ghost by Louisa May Alcott

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Please check with the Seanchai Library SL’s blog for updates and for additions or changes to the week’s schedule. The featured charity for November and December is Reading is Fundamental.

Related Links

Voyages to the planets, treasure, and a satirical poke at 1960s bureaucracy

It’s time to kick-off another week of fabulous story-telling in Voice, brought to Second Life by the staff and volunteers at the Seanchai Library SL.

As always, all times SLT, and unless otherwise stated, events will be held on the Seanchai Library’s home on Imagination Island.

Monday November 25th, 19:00: Science Fiction: The Planets Series

With Gyro Muggins.

Tuesday November 26th, 19:00: Food! Glorious Food!

With Derry McMahon.

Wednesday November 27th, 19:00: Treasure it the Heart of the Tanglewood

Faerie Maven-Pralou continues her reading of Meredith Ann Pierce’s 2001 novel for young adults.

TanglewoodHannah lives by the fearsome Tanglewood with a few talkative companion animals. She doesn’t age, and she has no memory of anything but this life of isolation. Once a month she plucks the flowers that grow from her head, a painful process in which “each yank made her whole scalp ache”, and brews them into a tea for the wizard who lives deep in the woods.

When Hannah falls in love with one of the many knights who seek the treasure of the book’s title, she starts to question the wizard’s motives, finding he has turned the knight into a fox.

Escaping the wizard’s manipulative grasp, Hannah sets out to find a cure for the knight, an adventure in which she discovers her own identity and the repercussions of some of her actions while under the control of the wizard.

Thursday November 28th, 11:00: Alice’s Restaurant Massacree

Image via wiki commons

You can get anything that you want
At Alice’s restaurant.
You can get anything that you want
At Alice’s restaurant.

Walk right in, it’s around the back,
Just a half-a-mile from the railroad tracks
,
And you can get anything that you want
At Alice’s restaurant
.

As Thanksgiving arrives in the United States, Shandon Loring presents singer-songwriter Arlo Guthrie’s famous 1967 musical monologue, Alice’s Restaurant Massacree (also popularly known as Alice’s Restaurant, and the inspiration of the 1969 Arthur Penn film of that name, starring Guthrie himself).

Aside from the opening and closing chorus, the song is delivered as the spoken word accompanied by a ragtime guitar. The story is based on a true incident in Guthrie’s life when, in 1965, he (then 18) and a friend were arrested for illegally dumping garbage from Alice’s restaurant after discovering that the town dump was closed for the Thanksgiving holiday.

What follows is a complicated, ironic and amusing story told in a deadpan, satirical tone, which encompasses fines, blind judges, guide dogs, 27 8×10 copiously annotated glossy photos related to the littering, frustrated police officers, the Vietnam War draft and, ultimately, the inexplicable ways in which bureaucracy moves to foil itself, just when you’ve given up hope of foiling it yourself.

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Please check with the Seanchai Library SL’s blog for updates and for additions or changes to the week’s schedule. The featured charity for November and December is Reading is Fundamental.

Related Links