VoidTrecker Express Mods ([personal profile] voidtreckermods) wrote2020-08-30 03:04 pm

Library


LIBRARY
This a double carriage. On the bottom floor there is a corridor running along one side, with a door to enter the carriage itself in the middle of the corridor. Up the stairs on either end of the carriage, the space is open, relatively.

Downstairs appears similar to a public library. The walls are painted brightly and lined with shelves, most of which are empty. Labels indicate that fiction books should be stored here. The wall facing the door is alternating windows looking out into the Void, and posters that seem to be large, blown-up book covers for the more popular fiction books in the train.

Four tables with linked chairs are spaced throughout the car, each one painted one of the team colours, and beanbag chairs similar to those found in the Games carriage can also be seen scattered in a pile in one corner.

A little wooden train with shelves built into it winds its way through the tables, its shelves filled with all of the previously-purchased Merry Little Void Train literature and the first book of several of the encountered but unpurchased MLVT series, including several colouring books. There's room on its shelves for far more than it currently contains. Kheli the rabbit is painted leaning out of the engine window, waving.

Along the far wall to the right are two scanning machines, which can do the following: register new books - as a helpful tutorial on the screen will inform you; provide summaries of books if given a specific title; or check books out if presented with a valid ticket. Passengers can have up to eight books checked out at a time; if someone walks out of the carriage carrying a book not checked out by them, the ICP speakers in that carriage will beep obnoxiously for ten seconds.

Upstairs resembles an academic library. The wall next to the stairs is a similar bank of windows as downstairs, although lacking the colourful posters, instead dotted with landscape paintings of previously visited worlds and unknown worlds both. Rows of shelves divide the space into six smaller workspaces, each with a single-person desk with lamp and bookstand and another window above, bracketed by shelves on either side. The bookshelves muffle sound, creating semi-private spaces around each desk.

The shelves are empty, with labels on each shelf indicating that non-fiction books belong up here.
We will not OOCly be tracking books being checked in and out. If a book is not being returned, please reply to that book's comment to let people know that it isn't available.

Please comment below with any books your character is registering with the library computers, using the following form, to either the fiction or non-fiction top level and under the correct genre or subsection with the book's title as the subject header:




BOOK SEARCHES ~ FICTION ~ NON-FICTION
FICTION: Merry Little Voidtrain ~ Action/Adventure ~ Crime ~ War/Epic ~ Drama/Slice Of Life ~ Horror
NON-FICTION: Void ~ Historical/Travel ~ Educational ~ Entertainment ~ Arts/Sports ~ Philosophy/Religion ~ Health
OTHER: Recipes ~ Passenger Documents

adregem: (who knew you could look this good thinki)

Time Travel and the Void?

[personal profile] adregem 2021-06-04 03:56 pm (UTC)(link)
Donor: Roland Crane

Description:
The void exists between space and out of time. But can Voidcraft go back in time? Can they enter a world earlier than the present?

This book claims that no one really knows. It is theoretically possible to enter a world at any time though most Voidcraft only have the capacity to enter a world at its current point. There are craft that are perhaps able to enter a world a few hours before it's 'current' time. But a lot isn't known and what is known is probably kept secret by the scientists working on such things.

The book is a bit rambly, everything is theory and there's quite a lot of different time travel theories in there, a couple of chapters on the dangers of paradoxes. There is the question of whether changing time would merely result in an alternate and a lot of ethical questions that come up with the question of going into worlds' pasts and potentially fundamentally changing their future. There's also a chapter on how void time travel would work within worlds that already had time travel as a science that had been discovered within them (the answer seems to be: messily).

In fact the whole thing is a bit messy but the books conclusion is, it may be possible one day, it might already be possible but it may not be recommended.