Dystopian Fiction

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Dystopian Fiction Science Fiction Rapture of the Nerds Oregon Public Library by Cory Doctorow SF DOCTOROW Cory Book Recommendations The Windup Girl Created by staff by Paolo Bacigalupi SF BACIGALUPI Paolo American War by Omar El Akkad Ninth City Burning* SF El AKKAD Omar by J. Patrick Black DYSTOPIAN SF BLACK J. Patrick Lost in Arcadia by Sean Gandert SF GANDERT Sean The Postman by David Brin FICTION SF BRIN David Neuromancer* by William Gibson SF GIBSON William Armageddon's Children* by Terry Brooks FAN BROOKS The Record Keeper* by Agnes Gomillion SF GOMILLION Agnes Red Rising* by Pierce Brown SF BROWN Pierce Ancillary Justice* by Ann Leckie SF LECKIE Ann Parable of the Sower* by Octavia E. Butler SF Bulter (pb) Gun, with Occasional Music Ender’s Game* by Jonathan Lethem SF LETHEM Jonathan by Orson Scott Card SF CARD Orson Bone Season A Beginning at the End by Samantha Shannon FAN SHANNON Samantha By Mike Chen SF CHEN Mike The Sword of the Lady by S.M. Stirling A WORLD Do Androids Dream SF STIRLING S.M of Electric Sheep? by Philip K. Dick SF DICK Philip GONE WRONG Find more great reads! oregonpubliclibrary.org oregonpubliclibrary.org/adult/ recommendations Updated 12/20 Fiction Never Let Me Go Cloud Atlas *denotes the first in a series by Kazuo Ishiguro by David Mitchell White Horse* F ISHIGURO Kazou F MITCHELL David by Alex Adams F ADAMS Alex The Children of Men Resurrection Express by P.D. James by Stephen Romano The Handmaid’s Tale* F JAMES P.D. F ROMANO Stephen by Margaret Atwood F ATWOOD Margaret The Resisters Blindness* by Gish Jen by Jose Saramago 2030 F JEN Gish F SARAMAGO Jose by Albert Brooks F BROOKS Albert The Tyrant's Novel Little Eyes by Thomas Keneally by Samanta Schweblin World War Z F KENEALLY Thomas F SCHWEBLIN Samanta by Max Brooks F BROOKS Max The Tiger Flu Before She Sleeps by Larissa Lai by Bina Shah Veracity F LAI Larissa F SHAH Bina by Laura Bynum F BYNUM Laura On Such a Full Sea The Trees by Chang-rae Lee by Ali Shaw The Girl with All the Gifts* F LEE Chang-rae F SHAW Ali by M.R. Carey F CAREY M.R. California The Mandibles by Edan Lepucki by Lionel Shriver Out in the Open F LEPUCKI Edan F SHRIVER Lionel by Jesus Carrasco F CARRASCO Jesus Severance Divided Kingdom by Ling Ma by Rupert Thomson The Passage* F MA Ling F THOMSON Rupert by Justin Cronin F CRONIN Justin Station Eleven The Traveler* by Emily St. John Mandel by John Twelve Hawks Future Home of F MANDEL Emily F TWELVEHAWKS John the Living God by Louise Erdrich I am Legend Player Piano F ERDRICH Louise by Richard Matheson by Kurt Vonnegut F MATHESON Richard F VONNEGUT Kurt New Charity Blues by Camille Griep Gather the Daughters Smoke* F GRIEP Camille by Jennie Melamed by Dan Vyleta F MELAMED Jennie F VYLETA Dan The Illegal by Lawrence Hill F HILL Lawrence .
Recommended publications
  • ENGL 279 Course Title: Science Fiction and Dystopic Literature Units
    Course name: ENGL 279 Course title: Science Fiction and Dystopic Literature Units: 3 Course Description: This course is designed to increase students’ knowledge of the literary genre known as Science Fiction. Emphasis will be on the study of literature--novels and short fiction--that depicts our future world, visionary scientific endeavor, and conflicts between humans, aliens, and sentient technology. Students will study the history, exciting contemporary trends, and the relevant contemporary issues in Science Fiction, including dystopia vs. utopia, artificial intelligence, current theory concerning technology, cloning and physical science, human psychology in a futuristic environment, and the rise of Cyberpunk and new Alternate Reality literature within the genre. Prerequisites: Completion of ENGL 101 Course Objectives: l. Analyze the role of literature as a means of reflecting and shaping thought and behavior. 2. Recognize and employ literary terminology and the language of literary criticism. 3. Identify, interpret, and compare and contrast specific leitmotifs and character types of the Science Fiction genre. 4. Practice critical reading and writing skills. 5. Conduct research and synthesize material from outside the given text in developing a written or oral project. 6. Recognize the attributes that make literary works universal and timeless, as well as unique to certain genres. 7. Demonstrate the ability to discuss literature using relevant support from the text. 8. Evaluate a literary work objectively, being able to understand and analyze critical responses to the works read. Course Content: I. In discussing the roots of many essential elements of Science Fiction, the instructor will guide students in: A. Distinguishing the important archetypes of Science Fiction.
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  • Paolo Bacigalupi
    Paolo Bacigalupi Author, The Water Knife Council Member Lorelei Cloud is a member of the Southern Paolo Bacigalupi’s writing has appeared in WIRED Magazine, High Country News, Salon.com, OnEarth Magazine, The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, and Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine. His short fiction been anthologized in various “Year’s Best” collections of short science fiction and fantasy, nominated for three Nebula Awards, four Hugo Awards, and won the Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award for best science fiction short story of the year. His short story collection Pump Six and Other Stories was a 2008 Locus Award winner for Best Collection and also named a Best Book of the Year by Publishers Weekly. His debut novel, The Windup Girl, was named by TIME Magazine as one of the ten best novels of 2009, and also won the Hugo, Nebula, Locus, Compton Crook, and John W. Campbell Memorial Awards. Internationally, it has won the Seiun Award (Japan), The Ignotus Award (Spain), The Kurd‐ Laßwitz‐Preis (Germany), and the Grand Prix de l’Imaginaire (France). His debut young adult novel, Ship Breaker, was a Micheal L. Printz Award Winner, and a National Book Award Finalist, and its sequel, THE DROWNED CITIES, was a 2012 Kirkus Reviews Best of YA Book, A 2012 VOYA Perfect Ten Book, and 2012 Los Angeles Times Book Prize Finalist. He has also written Zombie Baseball Beatdown for middle‐ grade children, about zombies, baseball, and, of all things, meatpacking plants. Another novel for teens, The Doubt Factory, a contemporary thriller about public relations and the product defense industry was a both an Edgar Award and Locus Award Finalist.
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  • Jonathan Lethem, Amnesia Moon the US Election This Week Has Sent Me
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Birkbeck Institutional Research Online Jonathan Lethem, Amnesia Moon The US election this week has sent me back to Jonathan Lethem’s second novel, the science fiction picaresque Amnesia Moon (1995). The novel depicts a dystopian near future in which a catastrophe has fragmented America into a series of communities that are worlds unto themselves. A character refers to the ‘FSRs’ – Finite Subjective Realities – in which people are locked into locally distorted perceptions. The one I was looking for was Vacaville, California, into which the protagonist Chaos stumbles. The town has a number of strange features. For one, the populace has to move house once a week, taking their few possessions with them. For another, they are governed by a system of ‘Luck’. The local government tests each citizen’s Luck and some are deemed unlucky, which becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. Citizens also compete to make each other unluckier by writing out violations for each other’s behaviour. Third, government and media are peculiarly collusive. Joining the household of local resident Edie and her young sons, Chaos watches television with them: ‘“Test Your Luck!” was on, the afternoon game show hosted by President Kentman’. A game show – hosted by the President? Another programme is Moving Day: ‘Like today’, a boy explains, ‘when everybody has to move, except it’s about how all the government stars change houses’. ‘Government stars?’, wonders Chaos, like the reader. ‘Like movie stars’, Edie explains: ‘It’s not real.
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  • Why Read Science Fiction and How to Help Those Who Do Chat Transcript
    Why Read Science Fiction and How to Help Those Who Do Chat Transcript 1:29 PM Welcome everyone! Thanks for joining early. We will get started at the top of the hour. 1:39 PM Hello everyone! 1:46 PM "Hello from Salt Lake City! We're reading Station Eleven for our United We Read book, and I'm loving it so far." 1:47 PM "I've heard it has Sci-Fi elements, but I haven't gotten that far yet." 1:47 PM That's great Tanya. Thanks for sharing. 1:48 PM "Hi, I'm Kirsten from Boston. A science fiction book that I've read and enjoyed recently was Space Opera by Catherynne Valente. I'm currently reading Becky Chambers' Record of a Spaceborn Few and am enjoying it!" 1:49 PM "Hello from Fresno County Public Library!. I don't read much scifi. In fact, I have a hard time differentiating it from fantasy. I'm looking forward to learning how to approach our scifi-reading patrons." 1:50 PM "Hello from FCDL in Lancaster, Ohio" 1:50 PM "Hi, I'm Denice from Louisiana. " 1:50 PM "Hi! I'm Heather from Eckhart Public Library. My reading is always varied, but my most recent sci-fi reads have been the Murderbot Diaries series by Martha Wells." 1:50 PM I am Jo at Dallas Public Library. I like some Science Fiction especially Fantasy other worlds. 1:51 PM I do fondly recall my 6th grade teacher reading THE WHITE MOUNTAINS to our class. Anyone read the Tripods series? 1:51 PM The Man in the High Castle 1:51 PM Is there aurdio right now? I'm testing my sound and don't hearg anythin 1:51 PM I love Ender's Game; I wish we had one of those Freeze weapons to zap at kids running in the library.
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  • Mccann Lit Review
    Olentangy Local School District Literature Selection Review Teacher: Shachter / Boone / Overbeck /Boden School: Liberty High School Book Title: Let the Great World Spin Genre: Literary Fiction Author: Colum McCann Pages: 400 Publisher: Random House Copyright: December 2009 In a brief rationale, please provide the following information relative to the book you would like added to the school’s book collection for classroom use. You may attach additional pages as needed. Book Summary and summary citation: (suggested resources include book flap summaries, review summaries from publisher, book vendors, etc.) In the dawning light of a late-summer morning, the people of lower Manhattan stand hushed, staring up in disbelief at the Twin Towers. It is August 1974, and a mysterious tightrope walker is running, dancing, leaping between the towers, suspended a quarter mile above the ground. In the streets below, a slew of ordinary lives become extraordinary in bestselling novelist Colum McCann’s stunningly intricate portrait of a city and its people. Let the Great World Spin is the critically acclaimed author’s most ambitious novel yet: a dazzlingly rich vision of the pain, loveliness, mystery, and promise of New York City in the 1970s. Corrigan, a radical young Irish monk, struggles with his own demons as he lives among the prostitutes in the middle of the burning Bronx. A group of mothers gather in a Park Avenue apartment to mourn their sons who died in Vietnam, only to discover just how much divides them even in grief. A young artist finds herself at the scene of a hit-and-run that sends her own life careening sideways.
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  • Catalogue 147: Science Fiction
    And God said: DELETE lines One to Aleph. LOAD. RUN. And the Universe ceased to exist. Then he pondered for a few aeons, sighed, and added: ERASE. It never had existed. For David Catalogue 147: Science Fiction Bromer Booksellers 607 Boylston Street, at Copley Square Boston, MA 02116 P: 617-247-2818 F: 617-247-2975 E: [email protected] Visit our website at www.bromer.com n the Introduction to Catalogue 123, which contained the bulk of a In his fifty years as a bookman, David naturally recognized the signifi- science fiction collection he had assembled, David Bromer noted cance of the early rarities, the books that laid the groundwork for the that “science fiction is a robust genre of literature, not allowing authors of the modern era. He was pleased to discover, when cata- one to ever complete a collection.” The progressive nature of sci- loguing Cyrano de Bergerac’s The Comical History of the States and enceI and the social fabric that it impacts means that the genre itself Empires of the Worlds of the Moon and the Sun, that its author de- has to be fluid, never quite getting pinned down like a specimen under scribed a personal music player–anticipating in the year 1687 the cre- glass. ation of the Walkman and iPod three centuries later. In this regard, it is entirely fitting that David has been drawn to science Ultimately, science fiction primed the human imagination to accom- fiction as a reader, and as a collector. He is a scientist by training, hav- plish what is perhaps its greatest achievement: the exploration of ing earned a PhD in Metallurgy from MIT and worked in research fields space and the mission to the moon in 1969.
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  • Homesteading on the Extraterrestrial Frontier
    Portland State University PDXScholar Urban Studies and Planning Faculty Nohad A. Toulan School of Urban Studies and Publications and Presentations Planning 7-1-2005 Homesteading on the Extraterrestrial Frontier Carl Abbott Portland State University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/usp_fac Part of the Urban Studies and Planning Commons Let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Citation Details Abbott, C. Homesteading on the Extraterrestrial Frontier. Science Fiction Studies , Vol. 32, No. 2 (Jul., 2005), pp. 240-264. This Article is brought to you for free and open access. It has been accepted for inclusion in Urban Studies and Planning Faculty Publications and Presentations by an authorized administrator of PDXScholar. Please contact us if we can make this document more accessible: [email protected]. 240 SCIENCE FICTION STUDIES, VOLUME 32 (2005) Carl Abbott Homesteading on the Extraterrestrial Frontier The colony was made up of homesteaders and townies. The townies worked for the government and lived in government-owned buildings.... But most of the colonials were homesteaders and that’s what George had meant us to be. Like most everybody, we had come out there on the promise of free land and a chance to raise our own food.—Heinlein 105 Johnny Appleseeds. Ray Bradbury and Robert Heinlein define opposite poles in postwar American science fiction. Bradbury made and sustained his reputation as a stylist who crafted small stories with big emotional wallops. He has published only one sf novel—Fahrenheit 451 (1953)—but many collections of loosely connected stories that wander back and forth among sf, fantasy, and nostalgic realism.
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  • Mirrorshade Women: Feminism and Cyberpunk
    Mirrorshade Women: Feminism and Cyberpunk at the Turn of the Twenty-first Century Carlen Lavigne McGill University, Montréal Department of Art History and Communication Studies February 2008 A thesis submitted to McGill University in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Communication Studies © Carlen Lavigne 2008 2 Abstract This study analyzes works of cyberpunk literature written between 1981 and 2005, and positions women’s cyberpunk as part of a larger cultural discussion of feminist issues. It traces the origins of the genre, reviews critical reactions, and subsequently outlines the ways in which women’s cyberpunk altered genre conventions in order to advance specifically feminist points of view. Novels are examined within their historical contexts; their content is compared to broader trends and controversies within contemporary feminism, and their themes are revealed to be visible reflections of feminist discourse at the end of the twentieth century. The study will ultimately make a case for the treatment of feminist cyberpunk as a unique vehicle for the examination of contemporary women’s issues, and for the analysis of feminist science fiction as a complex source of political ideas. Cette étude fait l’analyse d’ouvrages de littérature cyberpunk écrits entre 1981 et 2005, et situe la littérature féminine cyberpunk dans le contexte d’une discussion culturelle plus vaste des questions féministes. Elle établit les origines du genre, analyse les réactions culturelles et, par la suite, donne un aperçu des différentes manières dont la littérature féminine cyberpunk a transformé les usages du genre afin de promouvoir en particulier le point de vue féministe.
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  • Catalogue XV 116 Rare Works of Speculative Fiction
    Catalogue XV 116 Rare Works Of Speculative Fiction About Catalogue XV Welcome to our 15th catalogue. It seems to be turning into an annual thing, given it was a year since our last catalogue. Well, we have 116 works of speculative fiction. Some real rarities in here, and some books that we’ve had before. There’s no real theme, beyond speculative fiction, so expect a wide range from early taproot texts to modern science fiction. Enjoy. About Us We are sellers of rare books specialising in speculative fiction. Our company was established in 2010 and we are based in Yorkshire in the UK. We are members of ILAB, the A.B.A. and the P.B.F.A. To Order You can order via telephone at +44(0) 7557 652 609, online at www.hyraxia.com, email us or click the links. All orders are shipped for free worldwide. Tracking will be provided for the more expensive items. You can return the books within 30 days of receipt for whatever reason as long as they’re in the same condition as upon receipt. Payment is required in advance except where a previous relationship has been established. Colleagues – the usual arrangement applies. Please bear in mind that by the time you’ve read this some of the books may have sold. All images belong to Hyraxia Books. You can use them, just ask us and we’ll give you a hi-res copy. Please mention this catalogue when ordering. • Toft Cottage, 1 Beverley Road, Hutton Cranswick, UK • +44 (0) 7557 652 609 • • [email protected] • www.hyraxia.com • Aldiss, Brian - The Helliconia Trilogy [comprising] Spring, Summer and Winter [7966] London, Jonathan Cape, 1982-1985.
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  • The Hugo Awards for Best Novel Jon D
    The Hugo Awards for Best Novel Jon D. Swartz Game Design 2013 Officers George Phillies PRESIDENT David Speakman Kaymar Award Ruth Davidson DIRECTORATE Denny Davis Sarah E Harder Ruth Davidson N3F Bookworms Holly Wilson Heath Row Jon D. Swartz N’APA George Phillies Jean Lamb TREASURER William Center HISTORIAN Jon D Swartz SECRETARY Ruth Davidson (acting) Neffy Awards David Speakman ACTIVITY BUREAUS Artists Bureau Round Robins Sarah Harder Patricia King Birthday Cards Short Story Contest R-Laurraine Tutihasi Jefferson Swycaffer Con Coordinator Welcommittee Heath Row Heath Row David Speakman Initial distribution free to members of BayCon 31 and the National Fantasy Fan Federation. Text © 2012 by Jon D. Swartz; cover art © 2012 by Sarah Lynn Griffith; publication designed and edited by David Speakman. A somewhat different version of this appeared in the fanzine, Ultraverse, also by Jon D. Swartz. This non-commercial Fandbook is published through volunteer effort of the National Fantasy Fan Federation’s Editoral Cabal’s Special Publication committee. The National Fantasy Fan Federation First Edition: July 2013 Page 2 Fandbook No. 6: The Hugo Awards for Best Novel by Jon D. Swartz The Hugo Awards originally were called the Science Fiction Achievement Awards and first were given out at Philcon II, the World Science Fiction Con- vention of 1953, held in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The second oldest--and most prestigious--awards in the field, they quickly were nicknamed the Hugos (officially since 1958), in honor of Hugo Gernsback (1884 -1967), founder of Amazing Stories, the first professional magazine devoted entirely to science fiction. No awards were given in 1954 at the World Science Fiction Con in San Francisco, but they were restored in 1955 at the Clevention (in Cleveland) and included six categories: novel, novelette, short story, magazine, artist, and fan magazine.
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  • Motherless Brooklyn to Open 55Th Chicago International Film Festival
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  • How Science Fiction Grapples with the Growing Power of Artificial Intelligence
    DePaul University Via Sapientiae College of Liberal Arts & Social Sciences Theses and Dissertations College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences 3-2016 Artificial perspectives: how science fiction grapples with the growing power of artificial intelligence Marcus Emanuel DePaul University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://via.library.depaul.edu/etd Recommended Citation Emanuel, Marcus, "Artificial perspectives: how science fiction grapples with the growing power of artificial intelligence" (2016). College of Liberal Arts & Social Sciences Theses and Dissertations. 207. https://via.library.depaul.edu/etd/207 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences at Via Sapientiae. It has been accepted for inclusion in College of Liberal Arts & Social Sciences Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of Via Sapientiae. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Artificial Perspectives: How Science Fiction Grapples with the Growing Power of Artificial Intelligence A Thesis Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts March, 2016 By Marcus Emanuel Department of English College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences DePaul University Chicago, Illinois 1 Introduction In Stanley Kubrick’s 1968 film 2001: A Space Odyssey, based on the stories of Arthur C. Clarke, astronaut David Bowman, aboard the spacecraft Discovery One, struggles to shut down HAL, an artificial intelligence responsible for operating the ship. The HAL computer system has been killing astronauts one by one in an attempt to preserve its functioning and programmed mission. Bowman, in an orange spacesuit, floats into what we assume is HAL’s mainframe, armed with a variation on a ratchet key, in an attempt to power down the computer and its deadly intelligence.
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