Tomorrowing

Terry Bisson

Book - 2024

"For twenty years, Terry Bisson published a regular "This Month in History" column in the science fiction magazine Locus. Tomorrowing collects these two decades of memorable events, four a month, each set in a totally different, imaginary yet possible, inevitable yet avoidable future. From the first AI President to the first dog on Mars, to the funeral of Earth's last glacier, it's speculative SF at its most (and least) serious. Collected as a series for the first time, Tomorrowing will amuse, alarm, intrigue, and entertain, and like science fiction itself, make readers think. Bisson's short stories have won every major award in science fiction, including the Hugo and Nebula; but never, ever, anything for this ...series"--

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Subjects
Genres
Fiction
Science fiction
Published
Durham : Duke University Press 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Terry Bisson (author)
Physical Description
xviii, 150 pages ; 18 cm
ISBN
9781478030683
9781478026457
  • Preface
  • This month in history.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This keepsake compilation brings together 20-years' worth of Hugo and Nebula award winner Bisson's "This Month in History" column, which, beginning in 2004, ran weekly in the sci-fi magazine Locus. Instead of recalling the past, Bisson's take on the format offers fragmentary glimpses of the future. April 24, 2102, sees the destruction of "all the works of art in the Louvre, the Met and the Prado." On May 26, 2117, a "disgruntled science fiction author" erases the entire Library of Congress. Cultural destruction is a prominent theme, along with environmental disasters and pandemics. July 5, 2044, marks the death of the planet's last elephant, the lone survivor of the year 2036's "Dumbo virus," and May 9--11, 2107, witnesses a "Ceticide," or mass extinction, of blue whales on Long Island's South Shore. Bisson's handling of doom is mostly tongue-in-cheek, while his entries on gender and racism are noncommittal, in keeping with the dry newspaper format he is parodying. Here and there, he drops a present-day clunker (for example, in the entry dated Sept. 4, 2011: "Reparations Day celebrated nationwide as Harvard, Yale... turn over their endowments to the trustees of the United Negro College Fund"). The snippets are comical but rarely poignant or presaging and there's little gained from reading the compendium cover-to-cover, rather than dipping in and out. Still, this will be a gift for Bisson's fans. (May)

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