William Shatspeare, The First Professor of Time Travel
Author Bio
William Shatspeare is a pen name that Timothy McGettigan invented as the nom de guerre for his first science fiction novel, Captain Quark and the Time Cheaters.
Tim McGettigan, PhD, is a professor of sociology at CSU-Pueblo who has been writing nonfiction for thirty years. Prof Tim views writing as a way of constructing new architectures of thinking that can transform fantasies into reality.
Consider, for example, Jules Verne, the greatest imagineer of the 19th century. Verne introduced his readers to steampunk wonders that literally blew their minds. Although Verne did not include assembly instructions for the ships, aircraft and rockets that he imagined, Verne did equip his readers with the expanded headspace that they needed to transform his fantasies into bold new realities.
In the 19th century, Verne fantasized about the Nautilus, a wondrously-advanced nuclear submarine that conquered the north pole by brashly cruising beneath it. In the 20th century, the US Navy built the very first nuclear-powered submarine, named it the Nautilus and replicated Captain Nemo’s audacious feat by cruising beneath the northern ice cap--only this time they did it for real. Clearly, the engineers who built the USS Nautilus were inspired by Jules Verne. Through their writing, imagineers like Verne demolish the limitations of conventional thinking and inspire freshly-enlightened minds to create the wonders of tomorrow.
William Shatspeare has embraced sci-fi’s tradition of imagineering by cramming Captain Quark’s adventures with a parade of "Ooo! I’ve gotta have that!!" next-gen technologies throughout. Shatspeare believes that imagineers have a special responsibility to stimulate future generations of bright young minds so that, by dreaming about new ways to live and work together, puny humans will find the hope and strength that they need to make the future a better place.
William Shatspeare, The First Professor of Time Travel
Author Bio
William Shatspeare is a pen name that Timothy McGettigan invented as the nom de guerre for his first science fiction novel, Captain Quark and the Time Cheaters.
Tim McGettigan, PhD, is a professor of sociology at CSU-Pueblo who has been writing nonfiction for thirty years. Prof Tim views writing as a way of constructing new architectures of thinking that can transform fantasies into reality.
Consider, for example, Jules Verne, the greatest imagineer of the 19th century. Verne introduced his readers to steampunk wonders that literally blew their minds. Although Verne did not include assembly instructions for the ships, aircraft and rockets that he imagined, Verne did equip his readers with the expanded headspace that they needed to transform his fantasies into bold new realities.
In the 19th century, Verne fantasized about the Nautilus, a wondrously-advanced nuclear submarine that conquered the north pole by brashly cruising beneath it. In the 20th century, the US Navy built the very first nuclear-powered submarine, named it the Nautilus and replicated Captain Nemo’s audacious feat by cruising beneath the northern ice cap--only this time they did it for real. Clearly, the engineers who built the USS Nautilus were inspired by Jules Verne. Through their writing, imagineers like Verne demolish the limitations of conventional thinking and inspire freshly-enlightened minds to create the wonders of tomorrow.
William Shatspeare has embraced sci-fi’s tradition of imagineering by cramming Captain Quark’s adventures with a parade of "Ooo! I’ve gotta have that!!" next-gen technologies throughout. Shatspeare believes that imagineers have a special responsibility to stimulate future generations of bright young minds so that, by dreaming about new ways to live and work together, puny humans will find the hope and strength that they need to make the future a better place.
LL&P!
- Starbard