Nova Mob May 7th:

Murray MacLachlan writes

James Cambias – 7 May – The Miranda Conspiracy – Baen Books

Jim Cambias writes “I’m making my first visit to Australia in April and May, and I’ll be in Melbourne between May 6 and May 9. I’d love to meet some of Australia’s SF fan community. My seventh novel, The Miranda Conspiracy, just came out.”
Jim will be our guest speaker on 7 May!


Baen Books are pure quill SF and it’s a real pleasure to welcome Jim and his wife to Melbourne! They will be joining our pre-Mob pub meetup dining too.
Here’s the Baen page for his new book:
https://www.baen.com/the-miranda-conspiracy.html
Jim’s personal blog is here: https://www.jamescambias.com

“Political intrigue on Uranus’s moon Miranda, intertwined mysteries among the super-rich ruling class, and a lost treasure from deep space add up to trouble for Adya, Daslakh, and Zee. Unravel The Miranda Conspiracy, a new Billion Worlds novel now available from Baen Books!”

Face to face 

You are invited to an in-person Nova Mob meeting at: 
Wednesday May 7th 2025 8.00pm – 9.00 (formal close) Melbourne, first floor Creative Hub.
Lift access. Stairs access. Both available.

Zoom meeting closes about 9.20pm or so.

Kensington Town Hall 30 – 34 Bellair St
Kensington Melbourne VIC 3031

By Zoom – simulcast
You are invited to a scheduled Zoom meeting.

Join Zoom Meeting
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/4177583193?pwd=VjdPL1BhSTBNclN2YnRsejN3Y1hlUT09
Passcode: nova
Meeting ID: 417 758 3193
8pm Melbourne, 7:30pm Adelaide

Please don’t attend if you have symptoms that could be COVID 19 or similar.
Our COVID-safe Plan continues to apply and we remain mask-friendly for those who wear them.
Murray MacLachlan|
Convenor

Tim Winton has the Juice

Juice … is a work of dystopian fiction, which is a sub-genre of science fiction. You heard that right: Tim Winton has written a science fiction novel. Moreover, he has embraced many of the genre’s conventions. It is exciting to see a writer of Winton’s longevity doing something new. His attempt to break new ground will be reason enough for many readers to pick up this book.

Climate change and the future

The novel is set hundreds of years in the future. Climate change has rendered large parts of the globe uninhabitable. The narrator lives with his mother in a remote outpost halfway up Australia’s west coast, where it is too hot to go outside during the day, so most activities are conducted during the night or early morning. In the summer, they must live underground for months at a time.

Much of what we would regard as modern technology has been erased by the collapse of civilisation, for reasons now mostly forgotten. However, the narrator learns that some of the powerful families from the 21st century have retained this technology and used it to retreat into hidden fortresses. He joins a resistance movement with the mission to wipe these families from the earth.”

— from Per Henningsgaard Tim Winton goes cli-fi – his dystopian novel Juice breaks new ground to face the climate emergency