pull down to refresh

OK, cool, now finish The Winds of Winter. I couldn't help but wonder if a simple underlying model might tidy up the canon.
Although fans of A Song of Ice and Fire might still be hankering for the long-delayed next book in the series, bestselling sci-fi/fantasy author George R.R. Martin has instead added a different item to his long list of publications: a peer-reviewed physics paper just published in the American Journal of Physics that he coauthored. The paper derives a formula to describe the dynamics of a fictional virus that is the centerpiece of the Wild Cards series of books, a shared universe edited by Martin and Melinda M. Snodgrass, with some 44 authors contributing.
Wild Cards grew out of the Superworld RPG, specifically a long-running campaign game-mastered by Martin in the 1980s, with several of the original sci-fi writers who contributed to the series participating. (A then-unknown Neil Gaiman once pitched Martin a Wild Cards story involving a main character who lived in a world of dreams. Martin rejected the pitch, and Gaiman’s idea became The Sandman.) Initially, Martin planned to write a novel centered on his character Turtle, but he then decided it would be better as a shared universe anthology. Martin thought that superhero comics had far too many sources of the many different superpowers and wanted his universe to have one single source. Snodgrass suggested a virus.
He is never going to finish his book. He doesnt have to, because he was paid enough money for the tv show.
reply
I feel like @south_korea_ln would want to see this
Is the American Journal of Physics a good journal?
reply
Never heard of it.
From Wikipedia:
The focus of this journal is undergraduate and graduate level physics. The intended audience is college and university physics teachers and students. Coverage includes current research in physics, instructional laboratory equipment, laboratory demonstrations, teaching methodologies, lists of resources, and book reviews. In addition, historical, philosophical and cultural aspects of physics are also covered.[3] According to the 2021 Journal Citation Reports from Clarivate, this journal has a 2020 impact factor of 1.022.[6]
So, it's not really a typical journal in the sense of publishing original research. I checked my email records, they never asked me to referee for them. 1.022 is not really a high impact factor in physics.
But from a quick glance, it seems to be a legit journal. It's just not the typical journal.
Seems to be the perfect journal for this paper by Mr Martin... I do like this kind of paper off the beaten track.
reply
Wonderful! I don’t think he did much more than add his name to the list of authors, while others did the hard labor. Why in the world does he need this kind of encomium? Isn’t his list of accomplishments grand enough?
reply