For more about why this author writes sci-fi eco-adventures, visit her website: KHBrower.com

Wednesday, October 12, 2016

Digging Deeper:
Why Fungi Matters to Space Travelers



Fly Agaric, Amanita muscaria variety formosa.
past its prime and shrouded in a lacy, miscellaneous mold
My literary research includes thinking out loud with experts about what types of fungi space travelers would need and why.

For Mission to Blue Grannus, my work-in-progress, I sketched out the major beats of the story for both the plot line and what I call the heart line of the story. However, as I'm drafting I still must answer many detailed questions.  So even when I'd like to whip through scenes, simply adding words and paragraphs and pages to my manuscript, often I need to pause and dig deeper into the character's inner life and the demands of the natural world Gordy and Virginia encounter.

This past week I've been toggling back and forth between the emotional arc, the lessons that come out of Gordy's experience, and the scientific motivations of his mission.

Spoiler Alert! Here's a passage from my current draft of chapter 14. The Council Circle, in which the community's need for fungi is outlined:
     Jimmy continued, “The Blue Moon Trading Post is a regular stop for us and typically we would pick up mushrooms and fungi supplies for terraforming trade. Unfortunately, our normal contacts are missing, so we need to trade directly with the mushroom man, the primary source of product, supplies, and propagation knowledge.” 
     The crowd murmured, and I had an aha moment about the renegades around me. They werent just piratesthough thats how Id first known themthey were active in the terra-forming trade. As fungi were the absolute foundation of a healthy soil of a thriving ecosystem, and it made sense they would be involved. 
     I leaned over to Virginia and shared a memory. "Remember our fungi forays on Green Tara?" I explained to Lora and Lee, "On our planetary trek we hunted mushrooms for dinner." 
     "Better than cicadas!" Virginia screwed up her face in mock horror.
     I chuckled, remembering some of our more gruesome dinners. I asked Lora and Lee, Is terraforming the main business of the tribe?”   
     “Fungi, Lora said. 
     “… is our biz, Lee said. 
     “Mycelium networks, Lora said. 
     “ connect all of life, Lee said.
     “Fungi are valuable for,” Lora said. 
     “Terraformation,” Lee said.
     “Myco-remediation,” Lora said.
     “Medicinal extracts,” Lee said.
     “Medicine for things like radiation poisoning? Virginia asked. I knew that officially mushroom extracts were not considered effective beyond a general immune system boost, but renegades and colonial cruisers alike believed in them. So they'd be a valuable product to trade. The twins nodded. 
     “And you said myco-remediation. You mean using mushrooms to restore a compromised environment?" I'd seen signs of radiation poisoning in the Blue Moon Trading Post. "Near here? On the Grannus Moon?"
     "They poisoned ...," Lora nodded.
     "... the water," Lee nodded. 
     "All of it downstream ..., Lora said. 
     "... of the old dam," Lee said.
The decaying mushroom has one last
ecstatic reach to the sky.
Within hours of this snapshot
the delicate mold and most of
the mushroom body had disappeared.  
You may be wondering how my visuals of moldy mushrooms relate to this part of the story. They don't. But the magical, lacy fringe will most definitely make an appearance later in the story, once Gordy and Virginia make it farther upstream into the heart of the ice caves.

To learn more about why I write sci-fi eco-adventures, and to find out more about my work-in-progress and how writing Mission to Blue Grannus requires my research into fungi and myco-remediation, tap on KHBrower.com.