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Visions of Tomorrow

Science Fiction Predictions that Came True

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A fascinating collection of fiction-turned-reality tales. Long before movies like Minority Report and The Matrix, the world's writers have been recording the future as it might exist—and as it turns out, they were right. This bizarre anthology collects the most stunning predictions and imagined inventions here for the first time. Visions of Tomorrow includes “The Land Iron Clads" by H. G. Wells, who described a military tank in 1903—long before it was ever a possibility; “The Yesterday House" by Fritz Leiber, who writes about cloned humans; “Reason" by Isaac Asimov, who predicted solar power could be harnessed by satellites; and many more.
In this stunning anthology of never-before-collected stories, our world's greatest science fiction writers demonstrate that the truth can be just as strange as fiction.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 24, 2010
      Identity theft, computer viruses, performance-enhancing drugs, and space elevators are just some of the innovations found in this intriguing anthology. H.G. Wells's grim pre-WWI tale "The Land Ironclads" anticipates the use of tanks in warfare. Jeff Hecht's "Directed Energy" and Thomas Easton's "Matchmaker" offer whimsical uses for high-powered lasers and genetic engineering. Robert Scheckley's black comedy "The Prize of Peril" envisions a deadly precursor to reality TV. Vonda N. McIntyre's "Misprint" foresees a printer capable of creating new organs for transplant. The atomic weapon in Cleve Cartmill's 1944 story "Deadline" proved timely enough to worry the U.S. military. Teen and adult fans of hard SF will appreciate this look back at some of the genre's most insightful work.

    • Booklist

      June 1, 2010
      One naive view of sf is that its trying to predict tomorrows technology. Sf Grand Master Robert Silverbergs introduction suggests, however, that such prognostications are rarely particular and original. Gadgets are seldom correctly envisioned, and when they are, the writers are copping designs and details from engineers. Still, now and then, as the editors put it, science fiction gets it right. H. G. Wells The Land Ironclads envisioned tanks and their deployment more than a decade before WWI. The most notorious sf prophecy, Cleve Cartmills Deadline, had the FBI asking author and Astounding editor John W. Campbell how they came to know of the then-developing, top-secret A-bomb. Both tales appear here, along with stories forecasting reality TV, the Internet (with uncanny social prescience in Murray Leinsters A Logic Named Joe), identity theft, AIDS (though the engineered virus David Gerrold imagines causes sexual sterility, not collapsed immunity), and nine other developments, only two of them still on the drawing board. Curiously, prophetic accuracy and literary distinction dont much coexist. Fun book, anyhow.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2010, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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