John Moores (right) served as the Science Advisor to the President of the Canadian Space Agency from 2022-2024 and held the York Research Chair in Space Exploration at York University from 2019-2024. He is an author of nearly 100 academic papers in planetary science and has been a member of the science and operations teams of several space missions, including the Curiosity Rover Mission. Jesse Rogerson is Assistant Professor at York University. He has over 15 years working in some of Canada's premier museums and science centres, including the Ontario Science Centre and the Canada Aviation and Space Museum. Their book is Daydreaming in the Solar System . JOHN MOORES Why science? For Jesse and I, our passion is science and we love to share what we’ve discovered and learned about our universe with others. Our book is simply another way of doing this in a different medium. Why the combination of fiction and popular science? We were looking to create something which married the best of
Publishing lore has it that collections of short stories don't sell - yet shorter writing often works wonderfully in science fiction and has been a major contributor to SF history. I (like, I suspect, other SF enthusiasts) would like to see many more such books. This one is diving into the past (2006), but if you have read any books set in Alastair Reynolds' Revelation Space universe (which includes the Prefect Dreyfus novels) it does a brilliant job of filling in some gaps (past and future) of that massive world building exercise. As a collection it's unusual both in that all eight of its contents fit in that same setting, and that it mostly comprises novellas and long stories, ranging in length from 17 to 67 pages. I personally prefer more shorts and greater variety, but the way that it gives context for the novels is impressive. Three of the stories are arguably SF horror - picking up on a recurring theme of the impact of the future ability of science to modify humans th