Active Users:1204 Time:22/11/2024 03:33:06 PM
I haven't read it, but that sounds like what I've heard of West of January. Gher Send a noteboard - 15/02/2013 08:20:57 PM
It rotated something like once a century and so had a dead zone that was high noon and a moving band of a fertile zone at the twilight edges. Not sure how good the science was but I do recall that I liked the books.


I have no idea on the science in it or if it's even a series, it's just a book that I've got hovering somewhere in my list of "eventually find and read" books.
"And it breaks my heart to look around, and see the unimpressed; who can't believe the emperor is dressed"~Fastball
2-7-1
Reply to message
I have some strange questions. - 14/02/2013 04:45:04 PM 888 Views
Some strange answers - 14/02/2013 05:14:36 PM 625 Views
Re: Some strange answers - 14/02/2013 06:16:59 PM 560 Views
...goddammit Nate quit stealing my writing ideas. - 14/02/2013 07:11:53 PM 444 Views
Nuh uh. Can't make me. - 14/02/2013 08:11:16 PM 410 Views
More strange answers - 14/02/2013 08:28:39 PM 520 Views
Re: More strange answers - 14/02/2013 09:19:31 PM 492 Views
Re: More strange answers - 14/02/2013 10:24:10 PM 518 Views
A tidally locked world would be horrifying. I'm pretty sure you'd get more than a breeze. *NM* - 14/02/2013 07:07:41 PM 194 Views
I never run the numbers but I wouldn't expect it to gust - 14/02/2013 08:51:21 PM 425 Views
I remember a series of books about a planet that was almost tidal locked - 14/02/2013 11:45:43 PM 418 Views
I haven't read it, but that sounds like what I've heard of West of January. - 15/02/2013 08:20:57 PM 479 Views
that is it - 16/02/2013 01:11:30 PM 380 Views
the magnetic field won't collapse but it might go whacky - 14/02/2013 11:41:33 PM 519 Views
So THAT'S your book's twist in the final act! *NM* - 15/02/2013 08:20:32 AM 183 Views
- 15/02/2013 03:29:35 PM 413 Views
Re: - 15/02/2013 03:38:34 PM 393 Views

Reply to Message