Well, it's been a few weeks, and the response to my mystery guest quiz was a loud unimpressed thud. Honestly, these weren't that hard!
The first mystery guest was (of course) Billy Campbell, better known to Star Trek fans as the Outrageous Okona himself.
The second mystery guest was Persis Khambatta, and when I said she'd probably be more recognizable with a different haircut, I wasn't lying.
The third is my fellow Brooklynite Edward Irving Wortis, also better known by his pen name of Avi. I have yet to see a modern young reader novelist as talented as his vaguely autobiographical works like "Don't You Know There's A War On?" and "Who Was That Masked Man, Anyway?"
The third is strip and peplum queen Chelo Alonso.
The fourth is Jack Williamson, and his most famous novel is obviously "The Humanoids." The first work of his I ever read was "Brother to Demons, Brother to Gods," which was startling not just because it was an obvious rip-off of Roger Zelazny's best novel "Lord of Light," but also because it foresaw the scariest possibility of genetic engineering: not that we would create monsters, but that we would create gods.
As for the last guest, the business about Kevin Bacon should have been a dead giveaway. His name is Paul Erdos, the most prolifically published mathematician of the 20th Century, who is the subject of a Kevin Bacon-esque game among mathematicians. In case you're wondering, my Erdos number is 3, as I took a class with someone that was published with Paul Erdos.
Thursday, August 6, 2009
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment