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Bad Boys of the Multiverse: An Alternate Universe Reading Guide
Have we gone multiverse crazy? Iain Banks' latest novel, Transition, is just the latest of a long line of sideways-traveling books, and this theme is more prevalent than ever. Here are some of my favorites, with spoilers and foul language. More »Neal Stephenson Gets Half A Million Dollars, But Did He Have To Switch Genres To Get It?
A Web of Footnotes — How We Will Read Books in the Future
Why Science Fiction Still Hates Itself
If geek stuff is so hip, then why are two of the season's biggest scifi hits, CBS show Eleventh Hour and bestselling Neal Stephenson novel Anathem, adamantly classified as Not Scifi? Because nerd culture will never be pop culture. That's why Borders slashed its scifi section. And it's why JJ Abrams, director of the new Star Trek movie, denied that it's for fans of the scifi franchise, instead telling Entertainment Weekly that "it's for fans of movies." Successful science fiction, in other words, is still stealth. To get your spaceships and freaky science into the mainstream, you have to hate yourself just enough to shove your inner dork into a gym locker and keep her there. More »12 Coolest Deaths In Science Fiction History
It's never great to watch a beloved science fiction hero die — but sometimes a memorable heroic death can help turn a science fiction story into a real epic. And some science fiction characters are unforgettable and bad-ass precisely because they died in a memorable way. Here's our list of the dozen greatest deaths in the history of science fiction. With some spoilers, natch. More »Neal Stephenson Talks to io9 About Religion, Aliens, and Spoilers
Neal Stephenson's Tale of Two Planets
Neal Stephenson's new novel Anathem comes out next week, and there's something very timely about his tale of aliens on a parallel Earth whose inhabitants are locked into an occasionally-catastrophic conflict between scientific and religious institutions. The planet Arbre, which is very much like Earth in some ways, differs from our world one major respect. Its religious and scientific institutions are essentially reversed. Monks called the avout live ascetic lives studying science in gracious, ancient "maths," while the so called "saecular" world is populated with Deolators (god-worshipers) who are obsessed with religion and technology. Stephenson's world-building skills, honed by the exacting work he did on his recent Baroque Cycle trilogy, are at their best here. Anathem is that rarest of things: A stately novel of ideas packed with cool tech, terrific fight scenes, aliens, and even a little ESP. More »Want to Talk to Neal Stephenson?
Exclusive: Neal Stephenson Does Some Hardcore Phenomenology Geeking
Neal Stephenson Says His New Novel Has Parallels with Bush Era in U.S.
Neal Stephenson Explains the Name of His New Novel "Anathem"
The 10,000-Year-Old Clock that Inspired Neal Stephenson's Anathem
Neal Stephenson Explains Who Should Play Spock
Cool and Crap Awards of the Week
Plot of New Neal Stephenson Novel Revealed
Neal Stephenson's New Novel Remains Shrouded in Mystery
Major Spoiler: The Coolest Death From Neal Stephenson's Anathem