Date: Sat, 2 Mar 1996 16:01:58 -0500 (EST) From: Justin Schwartz <jschwart-AT-freenet.columbus.oh.us> Subject: Re: Scary novels of the future More good dystopian novels: William Gibson's Neuromancer books and Virtual Light. Margret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale. A fellow named, I think Adams wrote a good book called Fatherland about a Nazi-dominated Europe in 1960. There's a 40's novel about a far-distant Nazi future from a feminist perspective, I forget the title and author. --Justin On Sat, 2 Mar 1996, Hugh Rodwell wrote: > Zamyatin's book was too science fictiony for me - left me pretty cold. A > Swedish spine-chiller that didn't, though, is 'Kallocain' by Karin Boye, > 1940. There's probably an English translation by now, though I can't give > you the data off hand. > > I don't know if H.G.Wells's 'The Time Machine' with its Molochs and > Butterfly people really counts. > > For my money, the title fight for best scary novel of the future must be > between '1984' and Aldous Huxley's 'Brave New World' (which I'm surprised > nobody's mentioned yet). My bet's on Orwell - Huxley is too perfectly > consumerist and social-engineering to be real. Orwell has got the draughty > jerry-built flats, the constant break-downs, the nooks and crannies, the > relative autonomy and body-warmth of your own crowd, etc, of reality. Also, > he has conferences/meetings completely sussed out, and I love the low-tech > manipulation of history Winston Smith is engaged in at the Ministry of > Truth. If it'd been written it today they'd've all been working on 286s > using COBOL programs. > > Cheers, > > Hugh > > > > > --- from list marxism-AT-lists.village.virginia.edu --- --- from list marxism-AT-lists.village.virginia.edu --- ------------------
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