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"It's hard to tell stories about critters that are not human. John W. Campbell tried it, in "Twilight," and everybody says it's a wonderful story, and nobody ever reads it twice."
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One of the reasons that I'm fascinated by this particular idea is that, during the Cold War, film canisters were dropped from spy satellites in orbit. There was no other way to return physical film from cameras.
The canisters were dropped, and deployed parachutes once in the atmosphere. They were snagged by USAF planes with specially trained pilots; it was called the Corona program.
Compare to Argento-Platinoid Dispatch Box from Schachner and Zagat's 1931 story Venus Mines, Incorporated, the personal capsule from Foundation (1951) by Isaac Asimov, the single sheet molecule from Dorsal! (1960) by Gordon R. Dickson, truffle skins from The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch (1965) by Philip K. Dick and the message cylinder and the distrans from Dune (1965) by Frank Herbert. Comment/Join this discussion ( 0 ) | RSS/XML | Blog This | Additional
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