"All this he saw, for one moment breathless and intense, vivid on the morning sky; and still, as he looked, he lived; and still, as he lived, he wondered."

Author: shelidon

As the leaves turn crisp and the nights grow longer, the Gothic community prepares for its favorite season: Spooktober. October isn’t just another month on the calendar — filled with chestnuts and mushrooms and pumpkin — but a countdown to Halloween. Spooktober is a tradition, a...

A Mirror on Virtuality, Scarcity, and Human Dependency Isaac Asimov’s The Naked Sun (1957) is the second novel in his Robots cycle, following The Caves of Steel and preceding The Robots of Dawn. These books occupy an important place in Asimov’s broader universe, where they form...

1. Leadership Beyond Titles 1.1 Why leadership in BIM coordination is more about behaviour than authority In the world of digital construction, the title BIM Coordinator suggests responsibility, but not necessarily authority. Unlike traditional hierarchical roles, coordination is rarely about giving orders and more often about influencing...

The Tales of Old Miura (I racconti del vecchio Miura), published in Italy by Lindau, brings together short stories by Kidō Okamoto (1872–1939), a Japanese playwright and novelist best remembered for his contribution to kabuki theater and historical fiction. Born in Tokyo during the Meiji era,...

Automation, Tradition, and the Architecture of a Crowded Future When Isaac Asimov published The Caves of Steel in 1954, he achieved something remarkable: he fused the detective novel with hard science fiction, using the tropes of noir to explore the sociological and technological anxieties of the...