Saturday, November 26, 2005

Bookbooters Closes Down!

The publisher of my first book has closed down

http://www.bookbooters.com/index.html



Still, you can still buy it in ebook form from UFOData.co.uk or my website plus I have a few copies of the paperback knocking about in a box somewhere...

Sunday, October 23, 2005

UFO Monthly.com



On the main page of my website (www.mercuryrapids.co.uk), I am promoting Gary Heseltine's excellent UFO Monthly.com e-zine.

From there you can download the first FREE issue of the magazine in pdf format.

Wednesday, October 05, 2005

Mercury Rapids


The Mercury Rapids trilogy is now available as a single volume Adobe Acrobat pdf file to download from The UFOData Ebook Store. It is also available on CD-ROM from the same e-store...

Wednesday, September 28, 2005

The Great British UFO Show


On Saturday, 1st October 2005, The Leeds Rugby Supporters Club, in Headingley, Leeds, UK, hosts the inaugural Great British UFO Show.

Top researchers from the British UFO community will speak for the whole day, giving us a terrific snapshot of the current state of ufology in the United Kingdom.

I shall be attending this major event, so expect a full review soon.

Update:

My review for the show can be found in the Articles section of my website or by clicking here

Update 2:

The review can also be read at the UFOData website.

Monday, September 19, 2005

NASA back on the Moon by 2020

NASA have announced that they plan to put four men on the Moon in one go by the year 2020.



This is exciting, if only for seeing men walking on the Moon again. The scientific aspects of the mission probably won't be much different to what happened during the Apollo era:

Four men on the Moon for seven days - I can't see much to be learned more than we already know, to be honest.

How many missions will there be?

The modus operandi seems very similar to the Apollo moonshots of over 30 years ago.

Going all conspiratorial for a second, I wonder if reserves of hydrocarbons have been located on the Moon? Everybody knows that we'll soon have a major energy crisis soon, as oil stocks begin to dwindle. We've already hit peak production and extraction of our oil reserves worldwide, so less oil will be produced with demand ever increasing.

If the Moon is a vast untapped resevoir for usable hydrocarbons, it could make such missions highly profitable (albeit very difficult and expensive in and of themselves) for the USA.

With China planning unmanned missions to the Moon, and not entirely ruling out later, manned missions, could we be seeing the beginning of a new Space Race?

Thursday, September 15, 2005

Review of Mercury Rapids: The Mountains of Tomorrow


Katherine Reece, owner of The Hall of Maat Website, has kindly written a review of Mercury Rapids: The Mountains of Tomorrow. It can be found at Amazon.com and also on my Reviews page.

Thanks, Kat!

Tuesday, September 06, 2005


A great write-up at AICN by Harry Knowles of his trip to watch a Spielberg flick marathon at Devil's Tower, Wyoming:

Click here

I bet it was awesome watching one of my favourite films at the actual place where the movie climaxes!

Monday, September 05, 2005

Hurricane Katrina

A little belated, I know, but my thoughts go out to everybody caught by the disaster in the US Gulf states. It's a terible disaster that hasn't been helped by the Bush administration's complete ineptitude.

I dearly hope that the 50,000 body bags that were ordered on Tuesday 29th August won't be needed, although reports are suggesting that there may indeed be tens of thousands who perished to nature's fury.

But rather than blaming nature, the responsibility should be placed squarely on those in authority that did not get those people out who had no transport of their own.

That something like this could be allowed to happen in the world's premier democracy stinks!

Friday, August 12, 2005

Moonbase Alpha - rethink

Well, our (Edd and I) Moonbase Alpha project got rejected - AGAIN! It's not what you know, it's who you know in this business. And we don't know anybody! Sheesh!

Anyway, we've decided to have a rethink and perhaps rework the script into a tighter, more exciting, self-contained movie format. We had a lengthy brainstorming session and came up with some good ideas, so it's time for me to get busy!

I'll keep you posted...

Update (28th August 2005):

Sorry, still haven't started! I've been a bit sidetracked recently. I have been pottering about with the notion of doing an update of another sci-fi classic. I think it has great relevance to today's violent society, so I'll keep you posted on that one. Probably.

p.s.

Clue: It's a TV serial from the 50s that was made into a movie in the 60s and was written by 'the grandfather of British science fiction'. I also paid a hefty homage to it in Mercury Rapids: The Mountains of Tomorrow.

Thursday, August 11, 2005

Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter



The largest spacecraft ever sent to Mars blasts off from Cape Canaveral today. The Mars Reconnaisance Orbiter's mission is to study the history of water on the Martian surface and also to find possible landing sites for future missions.

A side-mission is to discover, if possible, the fate of the ill-fated Beagle 2 probe that slammed into the Red Planet in 2003. If the imaging systems on MRO are so good that a lost probe can be found, then I hope that it will be used to photograph areas of interest to us 'nutty' people, such as the Cydonia Face, the D&M Pyramid and other areas that suggest that there may have once been intelligent life on Mars.


The Cydonia Face


The D&M Pyramid

Update:
Launch scrubbed until 12th August due to a fuel sensor problem... Having a lot of fuel sensor problems lately, aren't they?

Update:
The probe was launched today (12th August) and will arrive at Mars in seven months.

Tuesday, August 09, 2005

Welcome Home Discovery


Thank goodness the space shuttle Discovery has returned safely to the Earth.

Unfortunately, STS-114 could be the last ever space shuttle mission. Atlantis was due to be used on the next flight, and indeed the Space Transportation System was supposed to be phased out in 2010, but with the Columbia tragedy and the problems during this mission, where astronaut Steve Robinson had to make an unprecedented EVA to remove protruding gap fillers from beneath the nose of the shuttle.

If the shuttle fleet is decommissioned, I hope that NASA have a worthy succesor in store. Surely reliance upon the Russian Soyuz system is unacceptable to the proud American public!

Sunday, August 07, 2005

'Contact'


I just watched the Robert Zemeckis movie, Contact, again(!) and never has a movie filled me with such a sense of awe concerning the nature of the universe and ourselves as human beings.

Jodie Foster's closing speech always brings tears to my eyes:

I had an experience I can’t prove, I can’t even explain it, but everything that I know as a human being, everything that I am tells me that it was real. I was part of something wonderful, something that changed me forever; a vision of the Universe that tells us undeniably how tiny, and insignificant, and how rare and precious we all are. A vision that tells us we belong to something that is greater than ourselves. That we are not, that none of us are alone. I wish I could share that. I wish that everyone, if even for one moment, could feel that awe, and humility, and the hope, but... that continues to be my wish.

A truly wonderful movie based on a great book, although I actually think the movie is better at bringing across that sense of wonder of the great unknown than Sagan's novel. But that's just me...

Saturday, August 06, 2005

GoogleEarth

A while back, I discovered the wonders of Google Maps, an amazing online resource with which you can explore the surface of our planet through satellite imagery and/or local maps.

Then I found out about Google Moon, with which you can explore the lunar landscape, albeit not with as much resolution as its earthly sibling.

Then I installed GoogleEarth, an absolutely fantastic program that allows you to glide over the world, with the landscape terrain-mapped in 3D, and visit places you could only dream about.



Now I have learned that Google has reserved domain names for the other planets of our solar system! I can't wait for Google Mars! Will it be possible to fly through the huge Mariner Valley, glide around Olympus Mons or even get a close-up of the Cydonia Face?

C'mon Google bods! get your fingers out! :)

Friday, August 05, 2005

NatGeo - Paranormal? - UFOs

I just watched the National Geographic programme, Paranormal?. This episode was about the UFO phenomenon and I was looking forward to it as the other programmes in the series (about stuff like lake monsters, ghosts etc.) had been very good and pretty much impartial, giving both sides of the relevant arguments.

Unfortunately, the episode about UFOs was just taking the p**s, in my opinion. They did nothing but debunk everything from the Mexican Eclipse UFOs (saying they were Venus) to the recent Mexican airforce IR sighting (saying it was distant oil platforms) to a UFO video near Mt Popecatepetl (saying it was a bird) [in fact Mexican sightings featured almost the entire programme!] to abductions (saying that they were nothing more than sleep paralysis and/or hypnotic suggestion).

It was a truly diabolical programme.

I'm in agony.... :(

After feeling better yesterday, my lower back has gone through something of a relapse and I'm suffering today (tunes up violin and casts about for sympathy... heh heh). Too late to cancel my son's dental appointment now, though. I'll just have to grit my teeth and get on with it.

Ah well...

Thursday, August 04, 2005

The joys of parenthood

I put my back out the other day doing the shopping. It's only just getting better and tomorrow, I've got to drag my son up to the hospital for a dental appointment first thing in the morning.

Ah the joys of being a lone parent! :)

Moonbase Alpha

I recently sent of my proposal for a rejuvenation of the beloved '70s TV series, Space: 1999 to a top London agent. I'm not building up my hopes, but I have my fingers, toes and eyes crossed!

You can read my script and other stuff at my Moonbase Alpha page.

Mercury Rapids: The Mountains of Tomorrow


At long last the final chapter of the Mercury Rapids trilogy is available to buy!
Published by iUniverse, Mercury Rapids: The Mountains of Tomorrow can be purchased from all good online retailers or through my own website ( http://www.mercuryrapids.co.uk )


The countdown has begun and Earth is in jeopardy once more!

Bill Lewis is once again flung into events beyond his control when he learns that the evil, reptilian aliens known as the Others have begun construction of a devastating weapon on the Moon.

Can the combined forces of Earth's secret UFO agencies defeat them as they did once before? What part will Bill Lewis play in this terrifying 'war of the worlds'? And why do the enigmatic Greys continue to probe his mind?

Mercury Rapids: The Mountains of Tomorrow explosively concludes the trilogy that began with Mercury Rapids and continued with Mercury Rapids: The Thoth Imperative.