Where is Dr. Timoleon When I Need Him?

Being sick is no fun. I’m on Day 10 with a pretty nasty chest illness that’s knocked me on my butt. I have gotten nothing accomplished during this time unless you count the muscle I pulled last night coughing or the tooth I chipped last Thursday on a throat lozenge.

Friday, my dentist suggested that I write about my experience getting the tooth prepped for a crown. Apparently, porcelain is very hard to get through, even with a diamond encrusted drill bit. I love my dentist (and he is fantastically skilled) but if I do a torture scene with Lombardi and Brewer… well, it all starts with a throat lozenge.

The good news is that I think I am on the mend. I still have a low grade fever and a slight cough but the sore throat is mostly gone and I feel much better than I have the past many days. I’m actually going to resume writing, only six short months before I would like to have Book 4 released!

The reception to Book 3 has been wonderful. Many thanks to you guys for purchasing The Wrong Side of Space and especially to those of you who have taken the time to post reviews. Ask any independent author and they will tell you the reviews are always appreciated.

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Naming the Star Systems

I’m not sure if readers have noticed but there is some moderate rhyme and reason to the names of the Terran governments’ star systems.

Originally, when I was writing the first book, I wanted a list of cool-sounding star systems that I could refer to. I ended up going with the list of moons around Saturn. Skathi, Skoll, obviously Titan, are all satellites of Saturn. As the Brevic Republic became more known during the second book, I branched out to other planetary bodies to take their moons’ names.

However, I was stuck when I started writing about the Hollaran Commonwealth and Solarian Federation. I was probably going to run out of moons. So, I decided pretty early to use ancient Roman gods for the Commonwealth and legendary creatures for the Federation. There are some exceptions but, for the most part, this holds true.

Eventually, as I was outlining Book Four, I knew I had to come up with a sub-classification system for the Brevic Republic. So, I decided to use Jupiter’s moons for the “Western” border, Saturn for the “North,” Uranus for the “South” and Neptune for the “East.” As this was a relatively new way to divide the star system names up inside the Republic, there are some notable exceptions (mainly systems discussed in the first book).

I also decided that since I had bothered to come up with a naming system, that I would actually attach every star system name mentioned in any book onto the Galaxy Map on the Stellar Maps page. (You can help me by sending me an e-mail if you notice one I have missed.) This is why, if you look at the huge map, some systems have names that don’t seem relevant to the main story line.

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The Universe Wonders

Midway through The Wrong Side of Space, Lombardi laments one of her ship captains breaking his ship’s position in the formation with the words: “Where is Vaettir heading? The universe wonders.”

This is an homage to WW II’s 24 Oct 1944 Battle of Leyte Gulf. Lombardi experiences the same frustration that Admiral Chester Nimitz felt when his Task Force commander, Admiral Halsey, moved from position in pursuit of a Japanese carrier group.

The carrier group, actually a mere diversion meant to lure Halsey away, was critically low on aircraft and in reality not much of a threat. However, with Halsey’s move of his own fleet carriers further north, his carriers were unable to support the defense of Leyte Gulf from Japanese battleships and heavy cruisers attacking the key region.

As a result, tiny escort destroyers and escort carriers were pressed into service against Japanese ships ten times their size. Miraculously (for the Americans), this severely outmatched force was able to defend Leyte Gulf and protect the vulnerable marines in the area.

When Nimitz heard that escort destroyers were facing off against ships like the Yamato, and that his own fleet carriers that should have been doing the job were out of position far to the north, he sent a coded message to Halsey: TURKEY TROTS TO WATER GG FROM CINCPAC ACTION COM THIRD FLEET INFO COMINCH CTF SEVENTY-SEVEN X WHERE IS RPT WHERE IS TASK FORCE THIRTY FOUR RR THE WORLD WONDERS

Reading that message, it’s easy to understand how Halsey took it as a stinging rebuke. “Where are you? The world wonders.” Halsey actually sulked for an hour before turning his carriers back to the south. The Battle of Leyte Gulf would be over before Halsey’s carriers were back into a position where they could support the defense effort.

And that’s the story… or so I thought for most of my adult life.

It ends up, the message was never meant as a scathing indictment on Halsey. Encoded messages are sent with what is called security padding meant to make enemy efforts to decipher them more difficult. Since the openings and endings of messages usually follow a similar pattern (and therefore are easier to decrypt), security padding is added to the beginnings and endings of encoded messages to avoid this. That’s the “Turkey Trots To Water” part. “The World Wonders” was actually just routine security padding tacked on to the ending. However, the decoder on Halsey’s carrier included it in the message handed to Halsey and the confusion over this simple mistake resulted in a wasted hour during a critical battle. It’s the small stuff that gets you.

A final note: “The World Wonders” is most likely taken from a poem about the infamous 24 Oct 1854 Battle of Balaclava… it was the 90th anniversary of that battle on the day of the Battle of Leyte Gulf. The poem, The Charge of the Light Brigade by Tennyson, reads in part:

Flash’d all their sabres bare,
Flash’d as they turned in air
Sabring the gunners there,
Charging an army while
All the world wonder’d.

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