Hieroglyph Stories and visions for a better future

Book - 2014

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SCIENCE FICTION/Hierogly
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  • Foreward / Lawrence M. Krauss
  • Preface, Innovation starvation / Neal Stephenson
  • Introduction, a blueprint for better dreams / Ed Finn and Kathryn Cramer
  • Atmosphæra incognita / Neal Stephenson
  • Girl in wave, wave in girl / Kathleen Ann Goonan
  • By the time we get to Arizona / Madeline Ashby
  • Man who sold the moon / Cory Doctorow
  • Johnny Appledrone vs. the FAA / Lee Konstantinou
  • Degrees of freedom / Karl Schroeder
  • Two scenarios for the future of solar energy / Annalee Newitz
  • Hotel in Antarctica / Geoffrey A. Landis
  • Periapis / James L. Cambias
  • Man who sold the stars / Gregory Benford
  • Entanglement / Vandana Singh
  • Elephant angels / Brenda Cooper
  • Covenant / Elizabeth Bear
  • Quantum telepathy / Rudy Rucker
  • Transition generation / David Brin
  • Day it all ended / Charlie Jane Anders
  • Tall tower / Bruce Sterling.
  • Science and science fiction, an interview with Paul Davies.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The editors of this gripping anthology "believe that if we want to create a better future, we need to start with better dreams" and counter the trend of dystopian and apocalyptic visions of tomorrow. Neal Stephenson, who founded Project Hieroglyph to "rekindle grand technological ambitions through the power of storytelling," fittingly lives up to that goal with "Atmosphæra Incognita": it plausibly describes an entrepreneur's plan to construct a tower that would be 20,000 meters tall, and whose top would be "for all practical purposes in outer space." The science and the narrative are perfectly blended. Other stories explore the implications of using neuroscience to "cure" individuals whose brains are deemed abnormal, and of replacing the trucking industry with robot trucks and the Amazon/UPS "droneport." Karl Schroeder's "Degrees of Freedom" is particularly clever, featuring a future where a soi-disant democratic government suppresses data about voter turnout, and "Big Data" is used by the public to increase participation in decision-making. The editors' ambition is successfully realized in this fine anthology that any optimistic futurist will appreciate. (Sept.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.