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#1 |
Wizard
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Whither SF?
I've run into a couple of blogs lately on the future of SF/F:
http://clarkesworldmagazine.com/another_word_05_12/ by Elizabeth Bear, which spawned this by Abi Sutherland on Making Light: http://nielsenhayden.com/makinglight...79.html#013879 Which spawned these thoughts on how ebooks are changing the future of SF as a genre by Charlie Stross http://www.antipope.org/charlie/ which led to this link on why so many people are reading YA these days rather than litfic. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...804387216.html I'd love to read any comments people here would have. Me, other than select authors, I've pretty much stopped reading most SFF because it's all so grim. And it seems like there are two kinds of mysteries these days: cute cozies that relate to cats, bookstores, and/or cooking, or antiheroes and grimness. |
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#2 |
Grand Sorcerer
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We have a whole thread on whether/why SF is pessimistic floating round these parts. I'm commented-out on that side of it.
The Grossman article I like and I have no big beef with (Except the supermarket quip. Supermarkets don't carry *my* kind of fiction). ![]() Now, SF is my go-to reading; 90% or more. I'll sample anything good that hits me on the head but SF I'll ferret out no matter where it may try to hide. Picking on Harlan Ellison and the New Wave? A bit dated, I think; that's, what?, three paradigms back? Literally the 60's. Two full generations, for sure. Not what I would consider cutting edge SF. (shrug) More importantly, SF is too broad a field too be encapsulated by any "movement" or literary fad. Go back to the height of the New Wave lyrical SF fad and you'll still find Harry Harrison's STAINLESS STEEL RAT and BILL, THE GALACTIC HERO. Or Keith Laumer's RETIEF. The 70's gave us a zillion Tolkien wannabe's but they also gave us Brian Daley's CORAMONDE duo. And the first of the many MYTH-ADVENTURES. At any point in time you can find hard SF, soft SF, (a bit of) Space Opera, (lots of) Adventure SF. Fantasy, Horror, hybrids. And new variants; cyberpunk, steampunk, alternate histories, superheroes... with more to come. The good stuff is not hard to find; not least because SF has *always* been about the backlist as much as the new releases. So, on that front I'll have to beg to differ with the estimable Ms Bear. From a reader's point of view, the field is doing fine. And ebooks are just the icing on the cake, opening up the backlist and making it easier to track down neglected jewels from the likes of Chad Oliver, Ward Moore, Zenna Henderson, and all the less-than-highly prolific practitioners of decades past. We're entering a golden age of availability for the serious student of SF&F. ![]() |
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#3 |
FantasyisBetter
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I'm a lover of speculative fiction- and I am not running out of old and new books to read. There are plenty of choices and varieties. I think Elizabeth Bear (who will always be dear to my heart for Carnival and New Amsterdam) was just giving a little lecture to SF authors to "cheer up dammit!". And Charles Stross' blog that SF might be getting lost in the e-libraries of the world make me think- why is that so bad? I find new books and authors by following discussions on sites like this, and by doing searches in many, many review sites. I have read and loved a wide variety of spec fic- Connie Willis, Mary Doria Russell, Kage Baker, Daniel Suarez (Daemon), Jasper Fforde, F Paul Wilson, Kristine Katherine Rusch, Richard K Morgan, Sean McMullen, George RR Martin, Ian Tregillis, Amanda Downum, Neil Gaiman, Mira Grant, Harry Connolly, blah blah blah. Not running out of possibilities any time soon.
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#4 |
Omnivorous
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Somebody's favorite genre has been invaded by the new kids and they're not happy.
As a dedicated SF&F reader, this has got to be the greatest time in 50 years of reading for me. So much availability to backlists, so many new authors, so many choices in whatever sub-genre you like. Some dark, some light, all of it fun to read. Sorry Ms. Bear. I disagree. |
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#5 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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I just spent over a half-hour looking for a chart I'd seen once, showing a list of popular/award-winning SF books, with Year Written on one axis and Year Setting on another, and noting that they keep getting closer and closer to now... and may be moving backwards. (I'd thought the chart was an XKCD, but apparently I was wrong.) Asimov's Foundation series are set a couple-thousand years in the future. The Forever War spans thousands of years. 2001 was set a few decades in the future, in a time that's already past. Cyberpunk novels are set as close to tomorrow as they can get. And now we're getting steampunk: science fiction based on times already gone. We don't feel comfortable speculating about the future anymore. We know that any book set 20-50 years from now will quickly become anachronistic, made obsolete by whatever tech or social changes the author missed; books set a thousand years in the future but somehow holding to 20th century white-middle-class-American social mores and family structures no longer seem remotely plausible. And that's all a depressing set of thoughts, so have a happy picture. |
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#6 | |
Omnivorous
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Robert J. Sawyer has a take on this from 2008.
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#7 |
Wizard
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Sf and Romance readers were the early adopters of ebooks; the romance fans came a little later but are (and were) more numerous than the sf fans. (I read both)
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#8 | |
Wizard
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#9 | |
Guru
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The problem could simply be a combination of: (i) science education is better now than it was in the "golden age" of science fiction, so the most far out ideas just aren't believable to a more educated and skeptical public (e.g. psychic powers, FTL travel, etc.); and (ii) hard science is getting harder as we've begun to understand far more complex phenomenon. Or maybe it's simply that the rate of scientific advancement has begun accelerating to the point where tomorrow's breakthrough is less easily predicted, making science fiction that much harder to write. |
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#10 | |
Are you gonna eat that?
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dr. kaku theorizes that at the rate of advancement in computing the next 50-100 years may see the uploading of human consciousness and essentially the end of death. we're on the cusp of being able to regrow limbs and organs. etc. sorry, but the gee-whiz spaceships and aliens simply aren't as exciting as what i see around me every day. edit-2 days ago: Bionic eyes activate! Microchip gives sight to the blind "A tiny 3mm microchip has given vision back to the blind. Scientists and doctors in Oxford implanted a new “bionic eye” microchip in the eyes of two blind individuals last month during a grueling eight-hour operation. The chips were placed in the back of the eyes and connected with electrodes. Weeks later, both individuals — Chris James and Robin Millar — have regained ‘useful vision’ and are well on their way to recognizing faces and seeing once again, reports Sky News. “Since switching on the device I am able to detect light and distinguish the outlines of certain objects which is an encouraging sign,” said James. “I have even dreamt in very vivid colour for the first time in 25 years so a part of my brain which had gone to sleep has woken up! I feel this is incredibly promising for future research and I’m happy to be contributing to this legacy.” Both patients, previously blind, were able to immediately detect light after the chip/sensor (which isn’t entirely unlike the cameras in in your smartphone) was turned on, as well as detect white objects in a dark background. Their eyes have been improving since. Though they’ll never regain color vision, the chip (designed by a company called Retina Implant) is fitted with 1,500 pixels which pick up light and transmit it to the brain. It gives patients a ”field of vision is limited to a window the size of a CD case held at arm’s length.” Read more: http://www.digitaltrends.com/cool-te...#ixzz1u4mx10Iu Last edited by xg4bx; 05-06-2012 at 04:28 AM. |
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#11 |
Grand Sorcerer
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The last days of SF? Not a subject I'll debate.
But, points of fact: - Asimov's Foundation timeline extends *tens* of thousands of years into the future. 25,000+ - Plenty of current SF has settings well beyond "a few hundred years". At least three ongoing series from the likes of Weber, Drake, Bujold, etc are set thousands of years in the future. - The plurality of SF has *always* been set in the present or near future; just ask Dick Seaton and Susan Calvin. - SF is *not* about technical extrapolation or predicting the future; it is about exploring ideas in a rationalist fashion. - Setting is just a storytelling element. It doesn't deine the story, much less the genre or the field. - SF is all around us; just because the marketers don't trumpet it doesn't mean it isn't blooming. Last edited by fjtorres; 05-06-2012 at 07:27 AM. |
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#12 | |
Wizard
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There is much quality material using SF tropes to explore the human condition and look at alternatives to where we are now not to forget the classic "if this goes on..." theme amongst others... ![]() |
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#13 |
Readaholic
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Some Sci Fi is written to explore current humanity and society.
Take Do Android's Dream of Electric Sheep for example. Apache |
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#14 | |
Transplanted NYer
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#15 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Authors and commentators have been saying that SF&F has been dying since the 80's. The odd thing is that when I went by B&N yesterday, the SF section looked just as full. SF&F has changed quite a bit since I first started reading and it does seem to go through cycles - Tolkien knockoffs, Middle ages based fantasy, hard SF, military SF, urban fantasy, cyper-punk, vampire/werewolf fantasies, the list goes on and on.
One thing that I've noticed is that SF&F publishing especially seems to be personality based. Lin Carter, Lester Del Rey's wife Judy-Lynn Del Rey, Jim Baen and several others have all been big in nurturing the SF&F categories and bringing in new authors. I'm not sure who is the current equivalent of those editors/publishers. It seems to me that the biggest challenge for the future will be how new talent is brought into the field and taught the craft. Baen use to pair new authors with older, established authors. Most new authors at least need a good editor. |
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