D.T. Krippene

~ Searching for Light in the Darkness

D.T. Krippene

Tag Archives: Writing Science Fiction

The Apocalypse Beneath Our Feet

06 Thursday Nov 2014

Posted by dtkrippene in Future Trends, Sci-Fi Themes

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Anders Sandberg, Apocalypse, Caldera, EarthSky Org, Extreme Science Blog, Joel Archenbach, Ken Jorgustin, Ker Than, Lake Toba Caldera, Mount St. Helens, National Geographic, Supervolcano, volcanic eruptions, Writing Science Fiction, Yellowstone Caldera, Yellowstone National Park

National Geographic - Aug 2009

National Geographic – Aug 2009

For those of us who write dystopian/apocalyptic fiction, doesn’t seem to be any shortage of theories on what could steer humanity (and other life forms) toward the extinction exit ramp. Current scare of the year is pandemic disease, aka Ebola, and any evil progeny that mutates. Modern NASA satellite tracking hardware has made us more aware of the many PHAs (Potentially Hazardous Asteroids) with our name on it. Anders Sandberg has an “existential list” compiled of Five Biggest Threats to Human Existence, number one being the ever-popular nuclear war jitters.  I found his fifth candidate interesting, if not thought provoking; – unknown unknowns – or something deadly out there that we have no clue about.

I have my own list, which includes that which bubbles beneath our feet; – millions of tons of molten Mother Earth, looking for an exit. No finer example of it is right here in North America, a super-caldera beneath Yellowstone National Park.

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Bacon – Won the West, Men’s Hearts, and maybe the Apocalypse

18 Thursday Sep 2014

Posted by dtkrippene in Dystopian Subjects, The Humor Zone, Writing Dystopian Themes

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Apocalyptic Themes, Bacon, Bacon Days, Cured Meats, Foods of the Apocalypse, History of Food, Humor, Lehigh Valley Ironpigs, Pork, Writing Dystopia, Writing Science Fiction

From Wikipedia Commons: Bartolomeo Passarotti – The Butcher Stall

From Wikipedia Commons: Bartolomeo Passarotti – The Butcher Stall

Bacon has seen a resurgence of popularity in recent months (not that it hasn’t been a durable headliner for those of us who enshrine smoked meats). Our local AA baseball team is hosting Bacon Days Friday and Saturday, September 19-20, a celebration of America’s favorite artery-clogger, to start with a 5K run that includes a stop to eat bacon.  You can read about it in the Morning Call, but I’ll venture a guess the event won’t be mentioned in Runners World.

I’m an enthusiast of foods we might see in the aftermath of apocalyptic events (see my earlier article, Expiration – Never). The cured and smoked belly of Sus scrofa domesticus, better known as the domesticated descendent of the wild boar, has been a part of ancient societies for thousands of years.  Along with flour, beans and brown sugar, it kept people alive when pioneers wagon-ho’d to the Wild West. You could say bacon is a founding food. It’s a national treasure, like the bald eagle.

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Your Brain’s PnP Driver Has Been Hacked

28 Monday Jul 2014

Posted by dtkrippene in Future Trends, Sci-Fi Themes

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Tags

Christof Koch, Dystopian, Gabriel Vaughn, Gary Marcus, PnP, Privacy Breach, Science Fiction, Science Fiction plots, Superhuman Intelligence, Wired Brains, Writing Science Fiction, WSJ

From: vectorguru - DepositPhoto.com

From: vectorguru – DepositPhoto.com

In science fiction, we love the premise of enhanced brainpower. Wouldn’t you like to be Lucy, the main character in a recently released movie, who overdoses on a synthesized drug and ends up stimulating access to over 90% of her brain capacity to become a superhuman?  Or how about Gabriel Vaughn in the TV series, Intelligence, an operative with a super-computer microchip in his brain and the first human directly connected to a globalized information grid.

We’ve been tinkering with the brain for centuries. Ever since cave dwellers discovered certain plants instilled feelings of euphoria, mankind has been on a quest to unlock the mysteries of our human processor, find ways to upgrade its abilities, repair and improve upon original sensory input devices.  A recent article on the future of “wired” brains had me wondering if we were pushing a concept destined to backfire on us.

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Bride of Frankenchicken

07 Wednesday May 2014

Posted by dtkrippene in Dystopian Subjects, Future Trends, Sci-Fi Themes, The Humor Zone, Writing Dystopian Themes

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Allentown Morning Call, Animal Husbandry, Climate Change, Dystopia, Evan Halper, Featherless Chickens, Future Trends, Futuristic Food, Global Warming, GMO, Modified Foods, Movie Matrix, Science Fiction plots, Writing Science Fiction

From: amusingplanet.com

From: amusingplanet.com

Anybody out there think last year’s weather was normal?  Bounty hunters are still looking for Punxsutawney Phil.  Or is it Phyllis now?  Who can keep up with the changes anymore?  Harder still, I’m unsure what’s considered normal. What I do know, based on the regularity of Chicken Little teeth gnashing, much of the world is warming, and farmers have been encouraged to rethink industrial agriculture.

A recent article in a local paper by Evan Halper, described how food scientists are Hot on the Trail of New Food Sources better suited to endure the hazards of climate change.  You had me at “new food sources”.  I love it when geneticists and agrobiologists talk shop, especially over cocktails, and think of ways to further jigger the natural world.  It gives us writers of dystopian fiction new fodder in a currently overcrowded, literary genre.  I had a little fun on the subject last year with the idea of synthetic meat, How Do You Like Your Schmeat.  Never mind that we’ve have thrown in the towel on global warming, for a new arena of carnival freaks about to make their debut, I can’t wait for the ticket booth to open.

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Guest Blogging This Week with Ariel Swan

17 Monday Feb 2014

Posted by dtkrippene in Dystopian Subjects, Guest Blog, Writing Dystopian Themes

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Ariel Swan, Dystopian, Science Fiction plots, Writing Science Fiction

Photopin-Flickr Charlie Reynolds

Photopin-Flickr Charlie Reynolds

This week, I’m guest blogging with author, Ariel Swan.  

Ariel and I share a similar taste for old Victorian homes, rural New England settings, art by Lori Nix, and a make-believe world in our heads that would make Walter Mitty proud. In a departure from my usual postings, I’ve decided to share a sneak peak of my current story: Lasty, a dystopian tale of mankind’s date with extinction, and a young couple’s reluctant journey to prevent it.

Ariel Swan

“As a novelist, by definition I live in a world of make-believe.”

.

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Guest Blogging This Week with Tanisha Jones

01 Saturday Feb 2014

Posted by dtkrippene in Writing Dystopian Themes

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Tags

Apocalypse, Dark Romance, Dystopia, Guest Blogging, Post Apocalyptic Stories, Science Fiction plots, Tanisha D. Jones, Writing Science Fiction

Konradbak - Depositphotos.com

Konradbak – Depositphotos.com

This week, I’m guest blogging at author Tanisha Jones site, with an article on, A Fascination with Post Apocalyptic Stories.   Click the linked title and get beamed directly to the article on her site.  

“There is no safety this side of the grave.”

Robert A. Heinlein – Stranger in a Strange Land

Whether you write divinely dark romance like Tanisha, or dark dystopian tales like me, Heinlein’s quote relates to us both.  If you haven’t read Serenity, Tanisha’s short story posted on her site, be prepared for the forebodingly exotic.

Stop on by at Tanisha D. Jones, Author of Divinely Dark Romance. Tell me what fascinates you in a post-apocalyptic tale.  Then check out Serenity …… if you dare.

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Dystopia and the Malthusian Check

08 Tuesday Oct 2013

Posted by dtkrippene in Dystopian Subjects, Writing Dystopian Themes

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

Blade Runner, Dan Brown, Dystopia, Dystopian Fiction, Elysium, Joachim Boaz, Malthusian Catastrophe, Overpopulation, population growth, Robert Heinlein, Soylent Green, Thomas Malthus, World Population, Writing Dystopia, Writing Science Fiction

ARTi19 DepositPhotos.com

ARTi19 DepositPhotos.com

Those who read or write dystopian and apocalyptic stories, are likely to know what a Malthusian Check is.  For those who don’t, a quick Wikipedia definition.

In 1798, Thomas Malthus published An Essay on the Principle of Population, in which he wrote:

“The power of population is so superior to the power of the earth to produce subsistence for man, that premature death must in some shape or other visit the human race. The vices of mankind are active and able ministers of depopulation. They are the precursors in the great army of destruction, and often finish the dreadful work themselves. But should they fail in this war of extermination, sickly seasons, epidemics, pestilence, and plague advance in terrific array, and sweep off their thousands and tens of thousands. Should success be still incomplete, gigantic inevitable famine stalks in the rear, and with one mighty blow levels the population with the food of the world.”

Also known as a Malthusian catastrophe, it refers to humanity’s forced return to subsistence-level conditions if population growth outpaces the world’s agricultural production.

It involves a subject we hear about in a regular stream of media events, population growth.  Today, the human population is estimated around 7 billion.   In the last two-thousand years, we’ve gone from just another mammalian species struggling for a niche, to the most dominant, animal life form on the planet.  We can thank our developed frontal lobe for allowing us to think our way out of natural selection limiters designed to keep numbers in check.  Today, humanity’s only real predator is …

Ourselves.

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Mosquitoes Have a Hall Pass from Extinction

08 Sunday Sep 2013

Posted by dtkrippene in Musing, Writing Dystopian Themes

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

Dystopian, Extinction, Humor, Mosquitoes, Mozzies, nature, Writing Science Fiction

František Czanner-Depositphotos.com

František Czanner-Depositphotos.com

I’m sure you’re first thought upon reading the title, there goes ole DT, off on another weird subject.  Can’t help it, I like unusual subject matter, especially if it can relate to the dystopian, apocalyptic stories I write.  Summer is nearly over, but the Culicidae parasite is still in high season.  Plenty of biting insects fill the roster of least favorite critters in this world, but none are as universally despised by the global community than mosquitoes, or mozzies as the Aussies like to say.  In my latest tale, a future where humans teeter on the edge of extinction, our hero ponders why mosquitoes continue to have free reign of the environment when 95% of the human race has perished from a plague virus.

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What’s On Your Plate In Two Hundred Years?

24 Wednesday Jul 2013

Posted by dtkrippene in Future Trends

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Eating, F&W Magazine, Food, Food of the Future, Future Agriculture, Future Cooking, Future Trends, Malthusian, Manufactured Food, Science of Food, Writing Science Fiction

Lightsource – DepositPhotos.com

Lightsource – DepositPhotos.com

I’m a bit of a foodie, and own a sizable collection of eclectic cookbooks.  My favorite cocktail hour pastime is to peruse one of many food magazine subscriptions, reading the latest recipes. The cocktail stimulates my virtual tasting acumen. I’m at a point where I can imagine how something tastes by reading the ingredients, but it’s a limited window, disproportional to the quantity of alcohol consumed.

While sifting through past issues, I stumbled across an article in the March 2013 issue of Food &Wine, The Plate Project: What We’ll Be Eating in 35 Years.  What made this article unique was not gastronomical guessing by famous chefs.  The project was more of a lighthearted prediction that had to be drawn, or displayed, on a paper plate.  The results were as unique and original as the personalities of world famous cooks, artists, and designers. As a writer of sci-fi, it had me pondering what influences would decide what’s on our plate two-hundred years from now.

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A Bleak Place

19 Friday Jul 2013

Posted by dtkrippene in Writing Dystopian Themes

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Apocalyptic Settings, Bleak Landscape, Death Valley, Desert, Writing Science Fiction

Photos:  DT Krippene

Photos: DT Krippene

Dystopian and apocalyptic stories are often set in bleak places.  James Dashner’s Maze Runner series, or Frank Herbert’s legendary Dune series, are great examples.  We don’t have to go far to find models. Our planet’s diverse topography has no shortage of places that qualify as bleak.  South Pole comes to mind, or the mountainous wasteland bordering Afghanistan.  My pick for the perfect post apocalyptic setting … Death Valley … 3000 square miles of extreme nothingness.  It holds the record for highest reliably recorded temperature, 134 degrees F.  Hard to imagine it used be part of an inland sea during the Pleistocene age.

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About DT

dtkrippene

dtkrippene

A native of Wisconsin and Connecticut, DT deserted aspirations of being a biologist to live the corporate dream and raise a family. After seven homes, a ten-year stint working in Asia, and an imagination that never slept, his muse refused to be hobbled as a mere dream. DT writes science fiction, paranormal, and mystery. DT has published several short stories. “Hell of a Deal” in the paranormal collection - Untethered; “Man’s Best Friend” in the 2021 Best Indie Book for Fiction - Fur, Feathers, and Scales; and "The Lost Gold of Rhyolite" in the award-winning - An Element of Mystery. He now has two short stories in the newly released holiday anthology – Seasons Greetings; “The Heart Needs a Home” and “Millie’s Christmas Wine.” An active member of the Bethlehem Writers Group, he’s been a featured author in the BWG Writers Roundtable Magazine. His latest project is an apocalyptic tale of humans on the edge of extinction and a young man born years after surviving humans had been rendered sterile. You can find D.T. on his website, dtkrippene.com - Searching for Light in the Darkness; and his social media links on Facebook and Pinterest.

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