Operation Mayhem

I'm moving in about two weeks to the apartment building next door and I'm calling it Operation Mayhem. Today I've started doing some preliminary packing, sorting, etc. I have this big box full of old Anolog and Isaac Asimov science fiction magazines from 1978-1982. Paging through them, I finally understand the nerdy sci-fi fan stereotype. The art work is hilarious, and the science fiction poetry just plain weird. The funniest story I noticed was called FemWorld, about a future society where feminism has run amuck!

Maybe the nerds were all nervous in 1980. I don't know. I was barely five months old back then.

10 comments:

Voix said...

Where in heaven's name did you get all those back issues? Have you been stalking my father again?

David Oppegaard said...

My dad picked 'em up at a garage sale and gave them to me. I'm going to sell about half of them (I've sorted out the coolest looking ones with writers I recognized) to the Half priced bookstore. No one needs an entire box of this stuff.

lp said...

Hey, weren't you trying to tell me you're about 37 years old on Friday night?

Michelle said...

5 months old??

David Oppegaard said...

Yes ma'am. I was born on August 19th, 1979. I share my birthday with Bill Clinton, Gary Gaetti, and David Sedaris.

Voix said...

Lovely. I love Half-Price books. It's a wonderful store.

Jeff Smieding said...

Quark Soup

A mechanical hand stretches
across eons, these fingers,
temporal nodes
pass unhindered through
neutron stars, magnetars,
absolute singularities.
I dip my spoon of probability
into quark soup
and am reborn.

Thanks for the inspiration, bloppo! I should submit this ASAP to Asimov!

Voix said...

Appy, the science fiction poet, rides again!

Rand said...

The term "quark" as a term for subatomic particles was inspired by James Joyce's use of the term in Finnegan's Wake. In a poem in Finnegan's Wake, no less. And now on Bloggy-gaaaard we have a poem using the word quark.

Bloggy and James Joyce - both writers - both inspiring.

David Oppegaard said...

Ha ha, what a funny poem, App. Science fiction poetry. It just sounds so dorky. Yet it is so...dorky.

Thanks, Rand. Your comment was both informative AND inspiring.

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