The
End of an Era
There's some good news and some
frelling bad news coming from Titan Magazines!
First, the dren news: It's official - the Farscape Magazine is
coming to an end. The magazine s two-year run will end with Issue 12 on
sale 27 March (in the UK) and 15 April (in the US).
And now the good news: the final issue is AMAZING! The issue contains:
Exclusive new fiction by series creator Rockne S. O'Bannon - set in the
future at the funeral of censored!;
Exclusive interviews with Gigi (Chiana) Edgley and Rockne S. O'Bannon;
An episode guide to the entire series, including synopses, trivia and
commentary by some of the behind-the-scenes Farscape brains;
Massive cast poster featuring every Farscape character (almost)!!!;
Farscape readers poll results - including acceptance speeches from
the winning actors;
Executive producer David Kemper's final column, in which he answers
readers' questions about the series;
"Goodbye" speeches to the Farscape Magazine readers from some
of the main cast;
Gorgeously illustrated features on the show's Creature Shop and the art
of Farscape!
Before we go - and as you try to gather
yourself from the floor after all that excitement, we thought we would
tantalise you all with an extract from Rockne's exclusive story!
Enjoy!
"HORIZONS"
A Farscape short story by Rockne S. O'Bannon
(This story takes place long after the
end of season four!)
Crichton awoke moments after the first
sun crested the horizon. He had purposely never put a covering over the
north facing portal because he liked awakening naturally and the gentle
light of the first sun did the job perfectly. One of the countless reasons
he had chosen this planet on which to build his home.
The structure was no more than five cycles old, built by Crichton himself
- with occasional help from some Jash-nak labourers he hired to
help with the bigger tasks like transporting wall slabs and shaping the
foundation. It was simple in design and function, in the natural colours
and style of the American southwest. Crichton wasn t sure why he decided
to build it this way - but it seemed to best fit the rusty clay soil and
stark green vegetation of the expansive valley where it resided.
The furnishings were as spartan as the six-room dwelling itself. Having
been a man on the run for so many cycles, he'd long ago become used to
maintaining very few personal possessions. If there was one thing he d
learned living the vast majority of his life at this end of the universe
it was that simple, basic, functional things were always most effective.
His first glimpse of that was his early days out here in what used to be
known as the Uncharted Territories. Those first cycles spent aboard Moya
he dedicated every spare moment to studying the remarkably elegant
functionality of the living ship.
The thought of Moya gently nudged him back to today's events.
You re losing it, John. Mind wandering like that. You're acting
like an 80-year-old man...! Which John Crichton certainly wasn't.
He was 311 years old.
As Crichton rose from the bed, he felt the usual stiffness in his joints -
elbows, knees especially - and his back always ached for the first arn
or so after getting up. But considering he lived nearly four times as long
as he would have if he d never taken that fateful ride into orbit around
Earth back in - what Earth year was it? 1999 - he wasn t going to
complain.
The extension of one s natural life was one of the unknown benefits of
Translator Microbes. Well, unknown to Crichton, at least, in those early
days at this end of the universe. It seems Translator Microbes have long
life spans of their own, and when their host s body begins to age, the
microbes go to work, repairing failing systems, fighting off any pesky
debilitating diseases. Crichton's little guys and gals had been
performing this function on his behalf for nearly three hundred cycles.
Crichton moved across the Nebari Tecca rug - a gift from a very
dear, old friend - and gazed out the portal. The valley was brightening -
the second sun, the larger of the two, was just below the crest of the
distant mesas, its rich copper light already splashing across the
magnificent unspoiled vista that sprawled before Crichton's view.
Growing up in North Carolina, Crichton truly loved his family home. As
with all adults - well, human adults, he couldn t speak for the
myriad other species he d met over the centuries - but like human
adults, Crichton thought such a warm, comforting cocoon of family and home
was something only a young child could experience. But here he was at the
other end of his life - and he had that once again. He loved this house he
built. For the longest time he thought he might never have a place to call
home again. Yet here he stood. There was only one thing missing to make it
perfect. One person.
As Crichton stared out, the second sun began to appear in earnest, the
light very bright, but Crichton didn t look away. He was lost in a
reverie and it was only someone s face he saw before him. Finally the
sun cleared the mesa completely and Crichton blinked, his reverie broken.
And the importance of this particular day returned to him. He had a
funeral to attend.
Farscape issue #12 on sale 27 March (in the UK)
and 15 April (in the US).
For
information on existing Farscape subscriptions, please contact andy.new@titanemail.com.
For press information, please contact emma.duncan@titanemail.com
or phone 0207 803 1843 |