Status Updates From Science Fiction: A Literary...
Science Fiction: A Literary History by
Status Updates Showing 1-30 of 50
Aerin
is on page 213 of 256
Much SF of the Anthropocene is a Neo-Romantic fascination with how a place - this place, our place - becomes a ruin.
— Dec 26, 2022 10:39PM
Add a comment
Aerin
is on page 82 of 256
EM Forster wrote "The Machine Stops" in 1909.
The pallid protagonist, Vashti, need not move from her hexagonal pod to communicate with friends, deliver lectures to a worldwide audience, listen to music, receive books, be administered medical treatment, or call for food - by pressing a series of electric buttons and switches, all of which contribute to the perpetual humming of the Machine.
— Dec 22, 2022 03:43AM
Add a comment
The pallid protagonist, Vashti, need not move from her hexagonal pod to communicate with friends, deliver lectures to a worldwide audience, listen to music, receive books, be administered medical treatment, or call for food - by pressing a series of electric buttons and switches, all of which contribute to the perpetual humming of the Machine.
Kyra Boisseree
is on page 36 of 256
I started this because it features some professors whose research I'm interested in, but it's kind of gotten lost amidst the other books I'm currently reading.
— Dec 22, 2021 12:18PM
Add a comment
Thomas Norford
is on page 17 of 256
WARNING: this book could cost you money. I'm only on page 17 and have already spent a tenner ordering SF books I'd never heard of.
— Mar 01, 2020 06:28AM
Add a comment










