I'll keep this simple. This is Cast-Away on a distant planet. Explorers in our future come across the long-lost wreck of one of our first deep-space missions. As the main historian pieces together what happened to the stranded astronaut, the readers get to see through the eyes of the stranded person as the explorer left behind "letters" written to some future rescuer. The two stories intertwine as the physical isolation of the ship-wrecked person reflects the historian's own social isolation.
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I've been reading the "Forever Evil" crossover from DC comics. Now, I have an entire other rant about some of the trends in comics later, but that's not today's focus. On the first day of the Crime Syndicate's appearance in the DC universe, Ultraman (the Earth 3 opposite of Superman) pulls the moon to create an eclipse of the sun because the sun is poisonous to him. The eclipse darkens the entire Earth.
The entire Earth. . . In a solar eclipse due to the moon. . . You know, the moon that's one sixth the size of the Earth. . . It's somehow blocking all of the sun's rays from hitting any point on the Earth. . . Never mind the aliens, super powers, alternate universes, the fact that Ultraman could move the moon, or that somehow the moon stays perfectly in place after a single alignment, THIS complete misunderstanding of how eclipses work has my blood boiling. There are going to be people who believe this sort of thing is a possibility, who will think that just because they are seeing a solar eclipse, everyone in the world is seeing a solar eclipse. How did the editors even let that pass? I know . . . I know . . . a person reading stories about beings with super powers probably shouldn't get upset over nit-picky science-y things like this, but . . . SERIOUSLY?! There are scientists who would like to set up radio telescopes on the far side of the moon, often mistakenly referred to as the "dark side" of the moon. Because the far side of the moon always faces away from the Earth, it effectively uses the rest of the moon's mass to block the numerous radio signals that otherwise bombard space from our surface communications. These signals confound and distort information to an enormous degree. Being free of that chaos would, like taking a visual telescope beyond the distortions of our atmosphere, allow these radio telescopes a much clearer view of our universe.
In my story, humanity has done exactly that. In fact, Dark-Side Station is one of a couple of human colonies that have been established on the moon. While most people prefer to be on the Earth side of the moon with its magnificent sights of our home planet, there are some who prefer the purity of space. One character (whom I have not yet fleshed-out) has specifically started using the radio-telescopes to search for broadcasts from alien civilizations. Despite high hopes for the project, he (or she) is still quiet surprised to pick something up. The signals are garbled and confused, but she (or he) is eventually able to figure out a way to clean up and translate the information, discovering that they are (basically) radio and television signals. The aliens are similar to us in many ways, but clearly alien. Linguistic experts pore over the data and eventually figure out the languages used. People on Earth start listening to and watching the translated broadcasts not just on a scholarly level, but for pure entertainment. Here is where I can branch in several directions: 1. We manage to establish communication with the aliens and start a long distance dialogue despite the massive time-lag (we're talking decades) between communications. 2. Wars erupt on Earth over the alien contact with many people claiming that the signals are governmental forgeries designed to disrupt world religions (I've already seen sites that claim this idea, by the way). 3. We watch, helplessly, as the alien civilization destroys itself. 4. We realize that the transmission is from centuries, if not eons ago. 5. We watch as the alien civilization comes into contact with our media and decides that we are a hostile species. They then create a space fleet in order to gain a first-strike advantage. The first one was my original thought, but there's no reason that aspects of all five might not be mixed together. Whatever direction I decide to go, I certainly hope that our government (or someone) decides to build Dark-Side Station in reality. Someone else out there is bound to have started shooting messages into the stars. |
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