Noted author, bigot Dan Simmons reported dead of stroke.
The Terror. Was: Dan Simmons (April 4, 1948 -- February 21, 2026)
This was brilliant, fascinating from start to finish, with repeated
plausible real life cliff hangers with great detail of the expedition, >(spoiler follows),
The Terror. Was: Dan Simmons (April 4, 1948 -- February 21, 2026)
This was brilliant, fascinating from start to finish, with repeated
plausible real life cliff hangers with great detail of the expedition, (spoiler follows),
On Sun, 1 Mar 2026 13:20:48 +1300, Titus G <noone@nowhere.com> wrote:
The Terror. Was: Dan Simmons (April 4, 1948 -- February 21, 2026)
This was brilliant, fascinating from start to finish, with repeated
plausible real life cliff hangers with great detail of the expedition,
(spoiler follows),
Did you watch the TV series? The first season was based on Simmons'
book and was good enough to get me to read the novel. I thought the
book was a little bloated - it seemed like the author did a ton of
research for it, and then decided he had to cram every bit of that
research into the novel whether it fit or not.
Second season of the TV show was a completely different story in no
way related to Simmons' book.
-- Bob
Titus G wrote:
The Terror. Was: Dan Simmons (April 4, 1948 -- February 21, 2026)
This was brilliant, fascinating from start to finish, with repeated
plausible real life cliff hangers with great detail of the expedition,
(spoiler follows),
I'm enjoying it.
It wouldn't have hurt to ask someone about sea ice though.-a Minor nit, I confess.
William Hyde
On 03/03/2026 12:44, William Hyde wrote:
Titus G wrote:
The Terror. Was: Dan Simmons (April 4, 1948 -- February 21, 2026)
This was brilliant, fascinating from start to finish, with repeated
plausible real life cliff hangers with great detail of the expedition,
(spoiler follows),
I'm enjoying it.
It wouldn't have hurt to ask someone about sea ice though.-a Minor nit, I
confess.
William Hyde
Everything was new for me and I know nothing about sea ice so I was mesmerised by both the adventure and the education with little
background. What was the issue with sea ice?
Titus G wrote:
On 03/03/2026 12:44, William Hyde wrote:
Titus G wrote:
The Terror. Was: Dan Simmons (April 4, 1948 -- February 21, 2026)
This was brilliant, fascinating from start to finish, with repeated
plausible real life cliff hangers with great detail of the expedition, >>>> (spoiler follows),
I'm enjoying it.
It wouldn't have hurt to ask someone about sea ice though.-a Minor nit, I >>> confess.
William Hyde
Everything was new for me and I know nothing about sea ice so I was
mesmerised by both the adventure and the education with little
background. What was the issue with sea ice?
It's a minor point, but the deeper you go in sea ice the warmer it gets.
As you might expect given that the ambient air temperature is around -40 while the-a water-a temperature under the ice is about -1. Sea ice is a fairly good insulator, but heat does diffuse upwards from he ocean.
But in the book, the deepest parts of the ships are always the coldest.
That will be true when the ships are heated, as hot air rises, but not
once the heating is off.
Minor, but he says it often.
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