review: Futureshocks



http://www.publishersweekly.com/article/CA335711.html?display=current
Futureshocks
Edited by Lou Anders. Roc, $14.95 paper (336p) ISBN 0-451-46065-0

A few of the 16 contributions to Anders's all-original anthology about the dark side of tomorrow simply present a Big Scary Idea with little storytelling; others offer the kind of thoughtful, full-bodied admonitions that SF can do so well. Sean McMullen's Engines of Arcadia," for example, reconsiders the devolutionary theory of H.G. Wells's The Time Machine: what if humans weren't doomed to degenerate but instead could choose to survive happily for all time? Another side of humanity comes into play in Adam Roberts's "Man You Gotta Go," the story of a chirpy, helpful AI that gives us all the chance to explore the universe—if we're willing to give up our physical bodies. The nature of a "human" soul is tested in Robert Charles Wilson's "The Cartesian Theater," in which artificial constructions die in agony for the audience's amusement. These writers stress human potential for bad choices. Evidently, we are the scariest aspect of the future. Read in short stretches, this volume offers a worthwhile assortment of jolting warnings. Anders (Live Without a Net) is the editorial director of Pyr, Prometheus Books' SF imprint. (Jan.)
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Relevant Pages

  • Re: Time Machine - anyone know any details?
    ... features of Time Machine? ... "...which means he created the heaven and the earth... ... in the DARK! ...
    (uk.comp.sys.mac)
  • Re: Doh... Filled my HDD
    ... But these days that could be either Time Machine or Spotlight re-indexing as ... "...which means he created the heaven and the earth... ... in the DARK! ...
    (uk.comp.sys.mac)
  • Re: 10.5 - new Finder?
    ... Unless any of these specifically say anything I don't know - the Finder was ... used in the 'time machine' demo, ... "...which means he created the heaven and the earth... ... in the DARK! ...
    (uk.comp.sys.mac)