They always say times changes things, but you actually have to change them yourself. – Andy Warhol



Hello,
Thank you for the likes and follows. Welcome to the new year. The weather has ben murky and raining over the holidays in NYC.
I am trying to think good thoughts. My patience is being tested new year’s day, my laptop has stopped functioning. I am seriously annoyed at this. I spend a lot of time on that device, the next couple of months will be difficult. With this written it this is the first time I’ve typed a post on the tablet. It may not look like the other posts.
This might be the shortest post for the quarter. I’ve decided to break the year into quarters. I have done this before but can’t remember what exactly went wrong. Let’s say it was 2020. I’ve seen systems similar to what I am doing. I believe Sarra Cannon offers a course called HB90. There are the power sheets by Cultivate What Matters and the bullet journal method. I think there is also a system called Makselife. I’ve only seen it on planner set up videos on YouTube. I borrow what might work from everyone available. I’ll let you know what works for me and give credit where it is due.
I think there was something I needed to do in December to help improve the website but that didn’t happen. I will look it up and talk about it on another post.
There are no resolutions this year. I have issues that need to be addressed and I will. The details will also be in another post. In writing news, still working on romance planning Star Crossed. Next week, a short story will premiere, This is something I have been planning for years. Over the years I have posted my fiction on the internet but I have never been consistent. Not sure if the genre is science fiction or speculative fiction, it is entertaining though.
This is all I have for this post. I am hoping we can be kind and respectful to each other. Don’t miss an opportunity to help ourselves and other people. Please like and leave a comment.
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Summary

In the 1950s, Elma York and her husband Nathaniel York were on a short vacation, when a meteorite fell from the sky and crashed into the Chesapeake Bay. Destroying a large part of the East Coast, but that was not the only devastation. The whole world is at peril, making the choice for the whole human race.
My Thoughts
I listened to The Calculating Stars when I was in the hospital with Covid-19. I was on my stomach, struggling to breathe. Traveling to the past and then the stars seemed plausible. Mary Robinette Kowal did a wonderful job writing this series and narrating the novel. The story didn’t start with this book. The story started with a short story called The Lady Astronaut of Mars. The Calculating Stars is a prequel to that short story. Full disclosure I haven’t read the Lady Astronaut of Mars; I haven’t listened to the Relentless Moon yet. The Calculating Stars is a decent prequel, the best I’ve come across so far. I admire the skill Mary Robinette Kowal has to make the past, futuristic.
Mary Robinette Kowal is a co-host of a writing podcast called Writing Excuses. It has been running for almost 16 seasons. She is not a co-founder but when they brought her in as a host, she introduced the method of writing called the MICE quotient. She has explained it in the early episodes and just recently did a kind of in-depth class about the MICE quotient in season 16. It is something I saw throughout the story in The Calculating Stars, and I enjoyed it.
If you listen to Writing Excuses and she says that the Calculating Stars is about women being the computers in NASA. For the most part she is right, both Dr. Elma York and her husband Dr. Nathaniel York work for the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) before the disaster. Once the International Aerospace Coalition (IAC) is established they resume their roles. However, there is so much more going on. Despite Elma being a brilliant mathematician and licensed pilot, who was part of the WASP program during World War II, all the requirements to be part of the astronaut program. She faces anxiety, misogyny and deals with them in a clever ways. Elma and other women, some also working as computers in NASA and some are qualifying pilots decide to strive to become the much needed female astronauts during this time of desperate trouble for the world. They are still underestimated, belittled, and outright disregarded. In this book, there is grief, racism, and microaggressions. Undaunted Elma speaks about it all, and to be clear she is not always on the right side of the equation. The interesting part of this is that Elma realizes this, apologizes, and does better. One of the things I realized with this book is that being wrong does not make you evil. Sometimes a person needs help, understanding, I think that is one of the many themes in the series.
The Calculating Stars deserved all the awards it won in 2019. I wouldn’t be surprised if Hollywood is knocking down Ms. Kowal ‘s door for movie rights. I have given this book five stars.
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