Walter Tevis

Last week I learned that Walter Tevis wrote The Queen’s Gambit, after watching the first few episodes of the Netflix series. Then I discovered that he also wrote The Man Who Fell to Earth, which was published in 1963. I had seen the 1976 movie by Nicolas Roeg, staring David Bowie, in the early Eighties, but hadn’t read the book.

I found the audio book version of The Man Who Fell to Earth on Hoopla and have been listening to it – I am a little more than two thirds into it. I can see why casting David Bowie made sense on a lot of different levels. The alien, in book and movie, could be seen as an artist and his alcoholism seen as the artist’s way of shielding themselves from a world that can often be too much for them.

As is the case with most movie adaptations of novels, I find the book much more interesting. Short stories often adapt to the screen much better than novels do. I haven’t seen the movie in decades but might want to revisit it. There certainly are images from the movie that have stuck with me. For example Bowie, as TJ Newton, clumsily walking down a hill in Madrid, New Mexico, at the beginning of the film.

The idea of round balls that contain layers of data that would be scanned to reproduce music was an amazing vision in 1963. On the other hand the author could not imagine anything other than analog film for photography. Listening to the book I wondered how often scientists might turn to Sci-Fi as a predictor of future technologies.

Happy New Year

Until the year 1752 the UK, plus their American colonies, used the Julian calendar which meant they observed New Year’s Day on the 25th of March. In 1752 they switched to the Gregorian calendar which celebrates the new year on the first of January. Before this switch the British calendar differed from that of continental Europe by eleven days. September 2 in London was September 13 in Paris, Lisbon, and Berlin.

For any agrarian culture it makes sense to start the year at the beginning of spring. It feels like a sensible new beginning… as long as one lives in an area where Spring actually happens in March. Perhaps that’s not a good idea for a world-wide holiday. The year shouldn’t change when Europe experiences Spring.

January is the month named after the two-faced god Janus, the Roman god of beginnings, transitions, time, passages, and endings. One face of Janus looks into the past, the other looks into the future. Okay, that makes some sense.

Happy New Year. May the new year be a lot less interesting than 2020.

Wishing you health and happiness.