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18 02, 2019

Kirkus Reviews: An intelligent, wistful rumination …

By |2021-02-28T16:24:33-05:00February 18th, 2019|Categories: Jellyfish Have Eyes!, Reviews & Testimonials|0 Comments

Cover of Kirkus Reviews Feb 2019. Jellyfish Have Eyes is featured in this edition

Piatigorsky (The Speed of Dark, 2018, etc.) offers a speculative novel about a researcher undertaking a pure-knowledge scientific study in an era of hostility to free inquiry.

Financial collapse in the near future has left the United States with a huge unemployment rate, new diseases appearing and old scourges returning, more conservatives in Congress, and a rabble-rousing Washington, D.C., reporter slamming taxpayer spending on any research that doesn’t promise immediate, practical payoff. In the 2040s, researcher Ricardo Sztein is an aged, respected fixture at the Vision Science Center who is shaken after his wife’s cancer death. He embraces his other great love—science experimentation just for the sake of knowledge, not a dictated agenda or financial return. His curiosity about how jellyfish see with multiple eyes (“rhopalia”) of unexpected complexity sends him to the swamps of Puerto Rico, supported by like-minded colleagues and a loan of NASA computer tech. Clues uncovered in his field lab hint at new revelations about animal perception and evolutionary biology. But when his rambles become publicly known, grandstanding politicians and media condemn him, cuing a public tribunal that’s reminiscent of that in the film Inherit the Wind. Piatigorsky is a scientist and essayist, so he knows of what he speaks regarding the cloistered realm of modern inquiry and exploration, which includes people jockeying for grants with ambition masked by professional etiquette. He also expresses scientists’ angst that average citizens appreciate nothing about basic research and could pull the plug on it at any moment. The future that the author evokes in this high-minded, speculative drama is thinly sketched, but what readers do glean about it is unpleasant, indeed. The jellyfish material, meanwhile, seems fanciful, but it’s firmly based in fact; the author includes photographic illustrations here that shore up the science. Still, it’s an intelligent, wistful rumination on the value of scientific pursuit, the joy of discovery, and the loneliness of a maverick thinker. A sensitive drama about an aged scientist in an anti-intellectual era.

–Kirkus Reviews

11 02, 2019

In Defense of Boredom

By |2020-03-28T21:16:50-04:00February 11th, 2019|Categories: Blog, Writing is how we explore our place in the world|0 Comments

“I’m bored!” Chilling words that most, if not all, parents have heard raising children. However, what I heard as a parent was, “Entertain me!” I felt irresponsible if I didn’t respond by occupying them. Wasn’t that my parental responsibility – to guide and educate – not abandon my children when they are bored? “…We could do [...]

25 01, 2019

Beware of Clichés

By |2020-03-28T21:15:53-04:00January 25th, 2019|Categories: Blog, Perpectives|0 Comments

Clichés – stale phrases that have lost impact due to over-usage – are frowned upon and considered unimaginative and superficial, such as “a picture is worth a thousand words,” or “all that glitters is not gold.” Dull. Boring. Lazy. Banal. Sophisticated writers cringe at clichés to the point of outright snobbism. Characters are portrayed as [...]

22 12, 2018

Objects and Possessions

By |2020-03-25T21:42:43-04:00December 22nd, 2018|Categories: Blog, Perpectives|Tags: , , , , , |1 Comment

I knew a man in his low 30s – single, of course – who said that he never wanted to own anything more than could fit in his car. He considered possessions as traps, a type of deceptive quicksand. “More possessions, less freedom,” he said. “Objects are anchors.”

Possessions sap space, need attention and if valuable, are laden with expenses, such as insurance and other protective measures. I even knew a man who refused to own a car and went everywhere by taxi (today he would use Uber). “It’s so much easier and cheaper,” he said. “No need to buy gasoline, make repairs or buy insurance. No charges for garage space or parking. No traffic violations or risk of accidents.” These were hard arguments to refute. ...

Yet, while objects may burden us, our possessions also shine a light on our humanity, taste and values, provide insight on what drives our choices and...
9 12, 2018

Recreating Ourselves

By |2020-03-28T21:18:21-04:00December 9th, 2018|Categories: Blog, Perpectives|0 Comments

When paging through an album of family snapshots, I reflect on my life as a chronological series of events, noting growth from seed to tree. My life appears as sequential notches on a measuring stick: I did this and then did that, and so forth.

Too simple, I say! Each notch is more like shrapnel from an exploding grenade. The photos are headlines, mere titles of first drafts of stories in progress that fail to capture the essence: feelings and conflicts.

23 11, 2018

Niceties

By |2020-03-28T21:28:19-04:00November 23rd, 2018|Categories: Blog, Perpectives|Tags: , , , , |1 Comment

Ever since 2016 and the political “take-over” by you-know-who, complaining and nastiness have dominated our lives. Between deranged individuals splattering blood indiscriminately in random gatherings before committing suicide as their grand finale, and police shooting innocent victims because, what the heck, those guys might be dangerous, even if running away, and children being ripped from [...]

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