From the March 2008 issue
Todd Seavey
first encountered nanotechnology—engineering at the molecular
level—in the science fiction novels of Neal Stephenson and Vernor
Vinge. When he got an opportunity to see what real researchers in
the field were doing (see “Neither Gods Nor Goo,” page 18), he
discovered that nanotech was “neither as dire nor as utopian as
expected.” Seavey, 38, is director of publications at the American
Council on Science and Health, but he has held a variety of writing
gigs, including a brief spell at DC Comics. “I was chastised once
for using nanotech to explain how alien invaders transformed the
earth,” he recalls. “The editor said, ‘I’m so sick of nanotech.
Can’t you come up with something else?’ ”
Contributing Editor Cathy Young, 44, had two reasons to read
Philip Pullman’s acclaimed trilogy His Dark Materials,
which she explores in “A Secular Fantasy” (page 36). She enjoys
fantasy fiction—“I’m not a hard-core fan but definitely have an
interest in the genre”—and she has been following the debate about
the “new atheism,” a movement that counts Pullman as a supporter.
“Pullman’s greatest strength is that he raises big and challenging
questions,” Young reports. “His greatest weakness is that he wants
to provide definitive answers.”
Senior
Editor Kerry Howley knew she wanted to review Dana Thomas’
Deluxe (page 42) when she noticed the book had been
blurbed by both Fareed Zakaria, the international relations expert,
and Miss J. Alexander, the flamboyant runway coach from
America’s Next Top Model. Howley doesn’t share Thomas’
worries about the increasing accessibility of fashion. “She has
kind of a ‘there goes the neighborhood’ mentality,” Howley says.
“You see a lowly libertarian journalist lugging around a Prada
handbag, and the brand comes to mean something other than it did
when only the very rich could afford it.” Howley, 26, is currently
waiting for this scourge of democratization—and the price slashing
that comes with it—to affect a much-desired Diane von Furstenberg
sleeveless minidress.
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