In some cases, eternal life sounds like a bad deal. To All Your Scattered Bodies Go is one such place. There, death is a momentary affliction, followed by adulthood reincarnation.
To All Your Scattered Bodies Go - Philip Jose Farmer
In some cases, eternal life sounds like a bad deal. To All Your Scattered Bodies Go is one such place. There, death is a momentary affliction, followed by adulthood reincarnation.
White Noise - Don DeLillo
Don DeLillo's White Noise isn't commonly thought of as sci-fi, but I maintain that not only does it fit in the genre, it's one of the more important science fictions. Two elements of the book merit closer attention: the Airborne Toxic Event and the influence of pop culture on identity.
Cold Storage - David Koepp
David Koepp is a proven screenwriting talent--he worked on the screenplay for Jurassic Park, for example. His 2019 novel, Cold Storage, returns to the Crichton canon, this time mining from Andromeda Strain. Foremost, the book operates as cli-fi, dealing with anxieties of changes to our ecosystem as a result of carbon emissions and other human activity, but it also deals with anxieties of nuclear proliferation and the diversifying of America.
How to Create Characters
Are you ready to learn how to create characters? Let's hope so, because otherwise you're way off track.
Creating characters is integral to writing great fiction. Did you ever read a book that you loved that didn't have dynamic characters, likable or unlikable? Good characters stir our passions. We love them. We fear them. We hope they will make good decision.
Readers identify with characters and make
stories memorable. This article provides seven tips for writing characters that
readers will enjoy reading, even if they are scumbags.
1984 - George Orwell: Disinformation Campaigns
George Orwell made the title 1984 an anagram of the year in which he wrote, signifying that his fiction was critical of his present day. Indeed, he had a lot to reflect on in post-war England as he wrote his now classic dystopian novel.
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