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San Francisco, 7:11 PM
Fri Jan 1
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A Scanner Darkly Meets Brazil, Creating A Fascinating Mess
Geoengineers vs. The Mafia State in "The Quiet War"
Doctorow's Little Brother Shows The Genesis Of Dystopia
Terry Pratchett vs. the Global Economic Crisis
House Of Suns Is A Flawed Far-Future Thrill Ride
The Woman Who Saves Humanity From Itself in "The Margarets"
Superpowers Is A CW Show On Paper
In "Zoë's Tale," It's Hard to Be a Teenage Messiah
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 »A Sexbot on the Run in a Posthuman Solar System