As an experiment with Open AI Art, I tried to create a cover design for my next novel, whose working title is The Foark River Hair and Tanning Salon and Bait Shop . The final one may be truncated from that. It is based on a play I wrote, which was a comedy, but the whole vibe is quite different. I used the AI app the first time to create a rather bland convenience store look. I would not use it, of course, and as I hope to have this published by someone else, that will be their task. Here are the two versions. Then my husband suggested I ask it to do the same in the style of Howard Finster's art. He is a popular figure here in Northwest Georgia. The second is eye -catching, but has some big problems. I can't have Howard Finster's name on it, and good grief, the writing is almost all gibberish. I posted this to Facebook to see what folks thought, and they love the Finster look. I find the background interesting. That is a really sketch looking shack there. ...
I think I would be picking at the Plur1bus post every day if I let myself, so I'll leave it alone at this point. I want to move on to Severance as my second example of Speculative Fiction that I have been immersing myself in, with several provisos or caveats mentioned up front. I call it speculative fiction but it's a how, not prose on a page. Same with Plur1bus. I do read other speculative fiction, just not as often. I read Til We Have Faces and The Memory Police in the last year or so and plan to read them again. In the last five years I have read Ursula LeGuin and Dune and Hyperion and Wool (Silo). Overall, I tend to read literary fiction that is set "in the real world." Both of these shows touch or "Venn Diagram" into typical space and technology science fiction but are definitely more about the psychological matters involved. Most people know the premise of Severance. A huge multinational corporation, apparently providing hea...