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Future Tense Fiction

Stories of Tomorrow

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
Future Tense Fiction is a collection of electrifying original stories from a veritable who's-who of authors working in speculative literature and science fiction today. Featuring Carmen Maria Machado, Emily St. John Mandel, Charlie Jane Anders, Nnedi Okorafor, Paolo Bacigalupi, Madeline Ashby, Mark Oshiro, Meg Elison, Maureen F. McHugh, Deji Bryce Olukotun, Hannu Rajaniemi, Annalee Newitz, Lee Konstantinou, and Mark Stasenko―Future Tense Fiction points the way forward to the fiction of tomorrow. A disease surveillance robot whose social programming gets put to the test. A future in which everyone receives universal basic income―but it's still not enough. A futuristic sport, in which all the athletes have been chemically and physically enhanced. An A.I. company that manufactures a neural bridge allowing ordinary people to share their memories. Brimming with excitement and exploring new ideas, the stories collected by the editors of Slate's Future Tense are philosophically ambitious and haunting in their creativity. At times terrifying and heart-wrenching, hilarious and optimistic, this is a collection that ushers in a new age for our world and for the short story. A partnership of Slate, New America, and Arizona State University, Future Tense explores how emerging technologies will change the way we live, in reality and fiction. Future Tense Fiction is a collection of original fiction commissioned by the partnership.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from July 1, 2019
      This dynamic, dud-free anthology of 14 short stories written by some of speculative fiction’s greats provides gripping, convincing glimpses into various near futures that explore the interrelated advancement of technology, society, and human nature. In Nnedi Okorafor’s “Mother of Invention,” an abandoned pregnant woman’s life is endangered because of super-plants causing terrible allergies. Her hopelessness is balanced with the optimism of her smart house. The story is quiet and hopeful, and explores friendship and family. Meg Elison’s heart-wrenching “Safe Surrender,” in which humans intermarry and interbreed with aliens, looks at the stories people tell themselves about difference as well as what it means to find a home. Paolo Bacigalupi’s “Mika Model” also attempts to define the nature of humanity after an android murders her owner. Each author cleverly and thoroughly explores the benefits and consequences of change, making this essential reading for anyone intrigued by what might come next for humankind.

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from August 15, 2019
      A diverse group of contemporary authors imagine our shared future in these speculative tales. These 14 stories peer into a variety of futures only just visible from where we stand. Many imagine solutions to pressing contemporary emergencies (climate change, overpopulation, economic inequality) and then, in the way of all the best literature, seek out the complications in that perfect picture. In Nnedi Okorafor's "Mother of Invention," the Niger Delta has been transformed into a nation-sized plantation of the "innovative air-scrubbing superplant known as periwinkle grass," which simultaneously solves the earth's CO2 emissions problem and strikes a blow against world hunger with its versatile seeds. The only problems are the "pollen tsunamis" and the resultant deadly allergic condition that strikes the story's protagonist in the final days of her pregnancy. In Charlie Jane Anders' "The Minnesota Diet," the "cutting-edge 'Smart-City' of New Lincoln" is a fantasy land of predicative-software enhanced, zero-carbon-footprint urban living. But when an agricultural collapse necessitates the reprioritization of food shipments, the entire city of "midlevel computer engineers, quality-control experts, content creators, architects, marketing experts, musical theater geeks and service workers" is deemed redundant, and starvation sets in. Other stories start with our current time's most pressing moral issues and imagine them worse. In Madeline Ashby's "Domestic Violence," smart homes--programmed to surveil, predict, and protect--become another tool in a domestic abuser's arsenal. Mark Stasenko's "Overvalued" imagines the endgame of skyrocketing college tuition costs as a complex industry of Wall Street-style investments, where the future of promising underprivileged youth is heavily leveraged on the competitive market. A standout story by Carmen Maria Machado sees a young girl exposed to the vast simultaneity of time in a fashion more lyric than the rest of the anthology's offerings. The charming "When Robot and Crow Saved East St. Louis," by Annalee Newitz, interjects both humor and hope. Science fiction has long been the great equalizer in the American literary landscape--capable of imagining more inclusive futures even as it struggles to represent them equitably on its pages. Because of the diversity of its authorship, this anthology does more than imagine what the world might be like if all of our perspectives were included. Instead, it moves past the picture of representation to a clear, uncompromising, imaginative look at just what it is we are all included in. Provocative, challenging stories that project the tech innovations of today onto the moral framework of tomorrow.

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