Foss on Food In The Skies

2001-a-space-odysseyWhile I don’t know what they served for dinner on the fictional Pan Am passenger rocket in 2001, the year the movie was released Pan Am was serving lobster thermidor aboard 747’s in the upstairs dining room. When it comes to meals real people have eaten anywhere from zeppelins to the International Space Station, Richard Foss’ Food in the Air and Space: The Surprising History of Food and Drink in the Skies can tell me anything I want to know.

This book is the first to chart that history worldwide, exploring the intricacies of inflight dining from 1783 to the present day, aboard balloons, zeppelins, land-based aircraft and flying boats, jets, and spacecraft. It charts the ways in which commercial travelers were lured to try flying with the promise of familiar foods, explains the problems of each aerial environment and how chefs, engineers, and flight crew adapted to them, and tells the stories of pioneers in the field. Hygiene and sanitation were often difficult, and cultural norms and religious practices had to be taken into account.

Author Richard Foss at high altitude.

Author Richard Foss at high altitude.

Foss’ command of details and gifts as a raconteur are also on exhibit in a related blog filled with the interesting information that didn’t fit in his book.

That’s where fans of steampunk will go to mine authentic details about dining on zeppelins or aboard WWI biplane bombers converted to passenger service after the war. What may surprise them most, though, is Foss’ revelation that in the Sixties an airline created a whole proto-steampunk marketing strategy

In my book I mentioned a promotion that was a triumph of making lemonade when life gives you lemons – the period from 1960 to 1962 when New York-based Mohawk Airlines was flying from Albany to Buffalo with DC-3s that really should have been in museums. After passengers complained about the outdated aircraft, some marketing genius decided that if they were struck with old airplanes, they might as well decorate them to look even older. Someone looked at pictures of old railroad cars, measured the aircraft for lace headrest covers, gold-filigreed wallpaper, and Victorian curtains, and “Gaslight Service” was born.

The theme was applied brilliantly – Stewardesses dressed like dance hall ladies passed out cigars, pretzels, and beer, and the airline schedules carried the warning that passengers should close the windows when going through tunnels. It was a wonderfully silly promotion that worked brilliantly; suddenly passengers wanted to fly the previously scorned airplanes instead of their faster rivals.

The Sixties were the pinnacle of passenger airline dining and naturally more fun to read about than the practices of today’s cattle car airlines, although Foss covers that trend, too. Here are some facts he mentioned when interviewed by Easy Reader News.

Robert Crandall, the president of American Airlines, in a decision that became known as “Crandall’s olive,” ordered a reduction in the number of olives in the airline’s salads, for an annual savings of $40,000.

United followed by removing beverage garnishes ($50,000 in annual savings), Delta removed strawberries from its first class salads ($210,000 in annual savings) and Continental stopped serving pretzels ($2.5 million in annual savings).

Foss on Easy ReaderGone is the TWA Banana Brunch Cake. And gone, too, is the early Space Age which gave us Astronaut Fruitcake and Tang and Cool Whip Pie. However, you can make them yourself by following the recipes in the back of Food in the Air and Space.

Foss will be signing his book January 29 (tomorrow) at Pages Bookstore in Manhattan Beach at 6:30 p.m. He’ll follow with a talk about airline food. Pages is located at 904 Manhattan Beach Boulevard.

Snow Makes NYC Even More Dystopian Than Usual

Jason Concepcion of Grantland has authored a pretty hilarious satire about the New York snow emergency — “Apocalypse Snow: A Dystopian Vision of New York City’s Blizzard” – shuffling stfnal references together with other absurdities.

The commissioner also announced that the area below St. Mark’s, from Avenue A to the Bowery, had been deemed a “purge” zone. No criminal statutes would be enforced in the zone after nightfall, except for opposite-side-of-the-street parking. “Parking enforcement officers will continue to be active in all areas of the city,” he said.

It’s not just sf that has gone mainstream. This kind of fannish parody of end-of-the-world pop culture once could only be found in fanzines. But here it is today on ESPN…

Take a Ride on a Discworld-Inspired Model Railroad

Angst

Shepton on heavy freight duty. Image © Mick Thornton

Hugh Norwood pays tribute to Terry Pratchett’s Discworld books with his Angst-Lesspork 009 railway layout, exhibited last year at LonCon 3.

Helping to set the scene are the Alchemists’ Guildhall (complete with stuffed alligator), one of the many Watch houses, a (working) Clacks tower and, of course, Mad Lord Snapcase’s Cruet set. Looming over the rear is the back of the Theatre. There are also a number of privies to be found. Most of the buildings are scratch-built from card; a number are illuminated and so have internal decoration.

Human figures in Victorian / Edwardian costume are readily available; finding wizards, dwarfs, trolls and other out of the ordinary figures is more problematic. Fortunately, the war-gaming fraternity could supply many of these figures. The Librarian – and the stuffed alligator – were commissioned pieces.

Angst-Lesspork is already famous among model train aficianados, having been featured in the January 2013 issue of Railway Modeller.

Norwood has also done something thematic for the table the layout sits upon when shown in public —

A number of times at exhibitions, people have asked me where the elephants were, that support the “world”. Well I decided that I should attempt to produce some “feet” to be visible below the skirt that hangs at the front of the layout.

Layout on display at LonCon 3 in 2014. Look carefully and you'll see an elephant foot under the table.

Layout on display at LonCon 3 in 2014. Look carefully and you’ll see an elephant foot under the table.

You can take even an imaginary train ride around town in this video, shot with a “keyfob” camera mounted on a flatcar.

[Thanks to James Bacon for the link.]

Margaret Atwood Speaks
at IU Bloomington 2/3

Margaret Atwood. Photo by George Whiteside.

Margaret Atwood. Photo by George Whiteside.

A week of activities at IU Bloomington devoted to the work of Margaret Atwood will be capped by a visit with the author on February 3.

The Lilly Library hosts an exhibition of her work and its influences “The Speculative Worlds of Margaret Atwood” from January 28-February 20. Atwood’s work is displayed in the larger context of speculative fiction, showcasing treasures from the library’s collections, including rare first editions of her books, literature that inspired or was inspired by her work and early 20th-century science fiction pulp magazines.

On January 29 there will be a one-day academic conference dedicated to her writing, “Between Activism and Apocalypse: The Work of Margaret Atwood.”

And there will be a screening at IU Cinema of the film adaptation of her award-winning novel The Handmaid’s Tale on February 1. The film will screen at 6:30 p.m. Free tickets can be obtained at the IU Auditorium Box Office.

Then, the author herself will appear on February 3 for “An Evening With Margaret Atwood.” The next morning Atwood will give a public reading and conduct a Q&A with IU students from 10 to 11 a.m. at the IMU’s Whittenberger Auditorium.

Jack McDevitt Wins 2015 Robert A. Heinlein Award

heinlein medalJack McDevitt of Georgia has won the 2015 Robert A. Heinlein Award. Sponsored by the Baltimore Science Fiction Society, the award is given to an author of outstanding published works in science fiction and technical writings that inspire the human exploration of space. McDevitt has been selected as this year’s winner in recognition of his body of work, which includes over 21 novels and 81 short stories.

The award will be presented during Balticon 49’s opening ceremonies on Friday, May 22.

The Robert A. Heinlein Award is a sterling silver medallion bearing Heinlein’s image as depicted by artist Arlin Robbins. A grant from the Heinlein Society funds a quarter of the costs associated with the award.

The award selection committee is chaired by Michael F. Flynn and is composed of science fiction writers.

The list of past winners of the Robert A. Heinlein Award can be found here. The full press release follows the jump.

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2015 Crawford Award

Zen Cho’s story collection Spirits Abroad and Stephanie Feldman’s novel The Angel of Losses have tied for the 2015 William L. Crawford Fantasy Award, presented annually by the International Association for the Fantastic in the Arts for an outstanding first fantasy book. Each of the winners will receive the full award.

Also on this year’s Crawford shortlist were Ghalib Islam, Fire in the Unnameable Country; Sarah Tolmie, The Stone Boatmen; Greg Bechtel, Boundary Problems; and Jessie Burton, The Miniaturist  (Ecco).

Participating in this year’s nomination and selection process were Farah Mendlesohn, Ellen Klages, Graham Sleight, Karen Burnham, Candas Jane Dorsey, Jedediah Berry, Niall Harrison, and last year’s winner Sofia Samatar.

The award will be presented on March 21 during the 36th International Conference on the Fantastic in the Arts in Orlando, Florida.

Other award winners announced by the IAFA today are:

IAFA Distinguished Scholarship Award
Colin Milburn

Jamie Bishop Memorial Award
(for a work of scholarship written in a language other than English)
Fernando Ángel Moreno
Mikel Peregrina
Steven Bermúdez Antúnez.

Awards for student scholarship will be announced later.

Amazing Miskatonic Railroad Layout

A1-NE-arkham_A3_LOne of model railroader John Ott’s prized layouts, inspired by H.P. Lovecraft’s fictional georgraphy, is the fabulous Miskatonic RR.

Many Lovecraft commentators believe that Arkham [Massachusetts] was old H.P.L.’s stand-in for the real-life burg of Salem— Salem of colonial witch-trial fame. Salem today rates about a seven on the dreary scale— not much to see, despite its touristy cant. But up until about sixty years ago, Salem boasted the most spine-tingling eerie Gothic-Norman stone train station in North America.

A1-AK-arkham_B5_L

Ott is a Southern California resident who lived four years in New England. He loves to research his period layouts as much as he enjoys doing the artwork constructing the layouts. That chemistry of talents results in exquisite tableaus of trains, cityscapes and figures that seem to come alive when viewed with the photographer’s eye. Lots of photos of the buildings, engines and rolling stock on his website.

He’s also posted a photo essay about another of theme layout commemorating the 1908 visit of the Great White Fleet to San Diego. Besides a train of open-sided “picnic cars” bringing San Diegans down to the waterfront for the celebration, the fine details include a lineup of naval officers posing for a photographer, and members of the Women’s Christian Temperance Union marching in front of the Seven Buckets of Blood saloon!

[Thanks to Andrew Porter for the link.]

2014 Diehard GameFAN Awards

The Diehard GameFAN website has announced their awards for 2014 Video Games and Tabletop Gaming. These awards are selected by the site’s staff.

Diehard GameFAN Video Game Awards

System Awards

BEST SONY CONSOLE EXCLUSIVE GAME
Akiba’s Trip: Undead and Undressed

BEST SONY PORTABLE EXCLUSIVE GAME
Dangan Ronpa 1&2

BEST MICROSOFT CONSOLE EXCLUSIVE GAME
Sunset Overdrive

BEST PC EXCLUSIVE GAME
Shadowrun: Dragonfall Director’s Cut

BEST NINTENDO CONSOLE EXCLUSIVE GAME
Hyrule Warriors

BEST NINTENDO PORTABLE EXCLUSIVE GAME
Persona Q: Shadow of the Labyrinth

BEST MULTI-CONSOLE GAME
Valiant Hearts

Genre Awards

BEST SPORTS GAME
Rusty’s Real Deal Baseball

BEST FIGHTING GAME
Persona 4 Arena Ultimax

BEST DRIVING GAME
Mario Kart 8

BEST ACTION ROLE-PLAYING GAME
Dark Souls II

BEST TURN BASED ROLE-PLAYING GAME
Persona Q: Shadow of the Labyrinth

BEST STRATEGY ROLE-PLAYING GAME
Warhammer 40,000: Armageddon

BEST FIRST PERSON GAME
Five Nights at Freddy’s

BEST TRADITIONAL SHOOTER
Procyon

BEST ACTION GAME
Bayonetta 2

BEST ADVENTURE GAME
Dangan Ronpa 1&2

BEST RE-MAKE/RE-RELEASE
The Lost Crown

BEST PLATFORMER
Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze

BEST HORROR GAME
Five Nights at Freddy’s

BEST ALL-AGES GAME
Detective Grimoire

BEST RHYTHM GAME
Hatsune Miku: Project Diva F

BEST DIGITAL/DOWNLOADABLE GAME
Velocity 2X

BEST MULTIPLAYER GAME
Singstar Ultimate Party

BEST PUZZLE GAME
Wayward Manor

BEST DLC
South Park Pinball

Top Awards

WORST GAME GAMING EVENT OF THE YEAR
Everything, Everywhere, is Broken (Especially AAA Games)

CHARACTER OF THE YEAR
Monokuma

BEST STORY
South Park: The Stick of Truth

BEST GRAPHICS
Dreamfall Chapters – Book One: Reborn

BEST AUDIO
Persona Q: Shadow of the Labyrinth

BEST GAMEPLAY
Neo XYX

SYSTEM OF THE YEAR
PC

GAME OF THE YEAR
Dangan Ronpa 1&2

Diehard GameFAN’s 2014 Tabletop Gaming Awards

BEST BOARD/CARD GAME
The Doom That Came To Atlantic City

BEST GAMING MAGAZINE
White Dwarf

BEST TABLETOP BASED FICTION
The Return of Nagash (Warhammer: The End Times)

BEST ART
Shadows of Esteren: The Monastery of Tuath

BEST OLD SCHOOL RENAISSANCE TITLE
Castles and Crusades: The Book of Familiars

BEST RE-MAKE/RE-RELEASE
Call of Cthulhu: Horror of the Orient Express

BEST NEW GAME
Atomic Robo: The Roleplaying Game

BEST FREE RELEASE
Dungeons & Dragons Basic Rules

BEST MINIATURES LINE
Dwarven Forge Cavern Tiles

BEST MINIATURES RULEBOOK/SOURCEBOOK
Warhammer: The End Times: Nagash

BEST SUPPLEMENT
The Scerets of Cats (Fate Core System)

BEST SOURCEBOOK
Numenera: The Ninth World Bestiary

BEST ADVENTURE (SOLO)
Scenic Dunnsmouth (Lamentations of the Flame Princess)

BEST ADVENTURE (COLLECTION OR CAMPAIGN)
Tales of the Crescent City: Adventures in Jazz-Era New Orleans (Call o0f Cthulhu)

BEST CAMPAIGN SETTING
Warhammer 40,000: Shield of Baal

BEST CORE RULEBOOK
Dungeons & Dragons Fifth Edition Player’s Handbook

SYSTEM OF THE YEAR
Dungeons & Dragons, Fifth Edition

Elon Musk Honors Iain M. Banks

SpaceX CEO/CTO Elon Musk has named his company’s drone ship/booster rocket landing pads after two of Iain M. Banks’ Culture starships.

(And you may be entertained by the suggestions for new Culture ship names that a Banks fan has been making on Twitter.)

[Via Tor.com.]

Castles In Spain Crowdfunding Appeal

Sharing the best Spanish genre fiction side by side with English translations is the goal of Castles in Spain/Castillos en el aire, and the entire 10-story anthology can be produced if they raise US$7,200. Most of the funds will go for paying for the translations. The stories have already been selected — details about the authors are on the Indiegogo site.

Mariano Villarreal will edit the anthology. He manages the Literatura Fantástica website and is responsible for the award-winning Terra Nova series. His Ignotus-winning article, “Science Fiction from Spain,” appeared in the October 2014 issue of New York Review of Science Fiction.

Sue Burke leads the translation team. Her translation of the novel Prodigies by Angélica Gorodischer will be published in 2015 by Small Beer Press. She also has been translating the Spanish medieval novel Amadis of Gaul as a blog. (“This book drove Don Quixote mad. What will it do to you?”)

Castles in Spain is projected to appear in December 2015 and, if possible, another two volumes will be published before  the 2016 EuroCon is held in Barcelona.