As someone who went to Clarion West thirty five years ago I'm participating in this years Clarion West Write-a-Thon ... see my page at: http://www.clarionwest.org/events/writeathon/SteveMiller
alas, my stated goal is to write a new near-future science fiction story and now it turns out that the phrase "near future" creates different expectations for different people. So, I need help figuring out what's near future. I also hear that all near future sf "should be mundane" but ... I dunno.
What's your take:
[Poll #1209566]
alas, my stated goal is to write a new near-future science fiction story and now it turns out that the phrase "near future" creates different expectations for different people. So, I need help figuring out what's near future. I also hear that all near future sf "should be mundane" but ... I dunno.
What's your take:
[Poll #1209566]
no subject
2008-06-23 16:56 (UTC)no subject
2008-06-23 17:26 (UTC)no subject
2008-06-23 17:29 (UTC)Mundane SF mostly frustrates me. I don't mind reading realistic near future stuff, but I certainly don't want to give up a future where at some point we can do things we never imagined would be possible today. I think there's a certain point where you have to admit that we cannot know what kind of break-throughs of theory or technology might occur.
no subject
2008-06-23 17:30 (UTC)There is no correct topic for SF. Either the book has an interesting subject, theme and characters, or it doesn't. And if the author isn't interested, odds are the reader isn't either. I do tend to prefer space opera or other optimistic topics, but that's *my* taste. You can't have my taste, it's ALL MINE! Some people prefer other styles and topics, and that is fine. They can buy them.
I still have not forgiven Kim Stanley Robinson for the hyperacids tho. That was incorrect, and I'll probably never read another book of his as a result. (if you're going to make up technobabble, make it believable...)
no subject
2008-06-23 17:51 (UTC)no subject
2008-06-23 17:57 (UTC)As for appropriate topics, I think they're the same ones that have always been appropriate: commenting on human motivations and the human condition, preferably with style and wit and a willingness to laugh at yourself.
At least, that's my take on things.
no subject
2008-06-23 18:04 (UTC)(no subject)
byProper subject matter
2008-06-23 18:06 (UTC)-- Brian out --
no subject
2008-06-23 18:22 (UTC)no subject
2008-06-23 18:24 (UTC)no subject
2008-06-23 18:25 (UTC)I think the basic idea is that "near future" SF should restrict *Earth-based* technology, cultures, mores, politics, etc. to what can be reasonably expected to evolve within the next 50 years or so, based on science and the world we know today, and which would be easily recognizable as such by most people.
Also, I marked down elves, etc., because you specified *science fiction* and I consider those to be fantasy elements unless there's a *really* good explanation for them. If considering the broader range of "speculative fiction" that kind of stuff fits. And I marked down global warming because current science doesn't support it having enough of an impact in the next 50 years to make a particularly interesting story. That doesn't mean a story about what humans might do *in spite* of that would be out of bounds. Could be quite interesting, actually.
What aliens might be able/want to do is another question. What we could reasonably do if presented with adequate motivation might be expected to surprise people, so there's considerably flexibility there.
no subject
2008-06-23 19:17 (UTC)Within the present social/technological framework, i,e. science and society that one could plausibly extrapolate from where we are today.
No FTL or time travel, i.e. no interstellar travel; space colonies with weird societies okay.
No telepathy, but quantum communication via brain implants okay.
Things are pretty much as they are today except for whatever the story(conflict) is about.
****Proper subject matter for near future science fiction is:
Some current situation or problem, exaggerated enough to make an interesting story.
****Mundane SF
I can enjoy mundane SF; depends on how good the story is.
no subject
2008-06-23 19:22 (UTC)1.) Rapid prototyping / template construction
2.) Higher than normal tech scanning capability (imaging for fish)
3.) An amazingly robust and potent wireless information network
4.) Quick knit medical tech for bones
5.) Anti-grav pallets and "flitters"
But most of the stuff in the story is just about plain folks doing fishing and getting into trouble, plus a natural Shamanistic side to the protagonist and his father. This is not "woo woo" magic but more like "skeptical" magic: it could be explained either way.
The mundane part is that it's everyday life. Not princes, kings, potentates, galaxies exploding, time stopping and reversing, no sentient black holes. It's just these folks dealing with fish. I like it.
http://durandus.org/golden/
no subject
2008-06-23 19:28 (UTC)The non-mundane can happen any time.
Space habitats, populated by personality types like who settled America and Australia, would produce some very interesting societies; you don't need aliens.
Gated communities right here on Earth could produce strange societies. So could virtual reality communities(extensions of Second Life, etc.).
(no subject)
byno subject
2008-06-23 20:16 (UTC)no subject
2008-06-23 20:30 (UTC)There's no sense of wonder, eclat, surprise, mystery, etc., in it for me. (And I stopped reading e.g. Asimov's long ago, because I was finding very little of the content anything I felt like reading/enjoyed reading.
There is way too much I see of the "ordinary world" and find inutterably tedious for me to tend to accept/be interested in most near-term SF thesis/extrapolation.
(no subject)
by(no subject)
byno subject
2008-06-23 21:41 (UTC)Could you describe J.D. Robb's "In Death" stories as such? They're set in the near future (about half-way through this current century) and there are some SFnal elements, but the central focus is on the law-enforcement career and personal life of Dallas the protagonist.
Near Future? Aren't we living in the 1990's near future?
2008-06-24 00:33 (UTC)Near SF is something with recognizable roots in the present. Normally at least some of the characters will have been born at or around the present. After that all bets are off.
At the last near future SF should age gracefully.
no subject
2008-06-24 01:35 (UTC)Subject material -- I'm still one of those who wants some science in my science fiction? That's where the fantastic critters (unless explained as aliens or some such) kind of leave me wondering how the borders of the genre have eroded?
Mundane SF? What's that? If you take the wonder out, what are you left with?
A good story, set in a recognizable future?
no subject
2008-06-24 02:40 (UTC)Mundane SF
2008-06-24 07:45 (UTC)no subject
2008-06-24 19:07 (UTC)Near-future: I voted for "Within 25 years", but after reading some of the comments, I have to agree there's a good argument in favor of "Within the lifespan of someone alive today". On the other hand, my initial choice of the shorter time was influenced by discussions about the Singularity over at Charlie Stross's blog.
Proper topics: Anything except elves, fairies, gnomes, & trolls. Unless, of course, they're SFnal elves. A little genetic engineering, anyone?
Mundane SF: I think it's meant as "not space opera", but splitting SF along that axis doesn't map very well onto my own view of the genre, so I may have failed to grasp certain nuances.
My thoughts
2008-06-24 22:26 (UTC)The time span for near future science fiction is:
Is there such a thing? If you write about next year and next year rolls around, well then you just wrote an alt universe story.
I like far future -- I want the stars, without having my character die of old age getting there.
Proper subject matter for near future science fiction is:
A rip in the fabric of space allowing travel to a universe other than our own. I dodge that bullet!
The ones you listed seem kind of boring to me. But I have read good stories on those subjects.
Mundane SF
Well, it is ok. Since space technology is moving pretty slow I image you could go out 50 plus years and be writing about mining on asteroids.
I never really understood that, seems to me if we can mine metal in deep space we ought to be able to dig into the mantle and mine that. Well, I would prefer we mess up some rocks in space than the rock we live on. LOL, which is a rock in space.
You could parallel some current crises and apply it to the future. Instead of running out of natural resources on earth we could be running out of said resource in the solar system.
Although I seems like we have been getting an awful lot of stories about our shortsightedness – if you are going to preach to me: at least make it interesting. What am I say, I know it will be interesting.
Write on!
Re: My thoughts
byno subject
2008-06-26 04:43 (UTC)i.e., attempting to colonize mars or the moon might be reasonable, but not most likely something out of the solar system unless it was a set up a ship to last as long as possible and hope we hit something kind of thing.