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Tomorrow Happens
  

Tomorrow Happens (Hardcover)

by David Brin (Author), Deb Geisler (Editor), James Burns (Illustrator)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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This gathering of mostly previously published essays and short fiction also includes "The Open-Ended Science Fiction Story: A Challenge to New Colleagues," which is based on a writing-group exercise, and the previously unpublished beginning of a novel. The stories range from an unnerving meditation on the nature and the reliability of reality in "Stones of Significance" to a clever collaboration with Gregory Benford, "Paris Conquers All," that envisions the City of Light's triumph over the Martians of H. G. Wells' War of the Worlds. Brin's essays raise a number of interesting questions about such matters as the social responsibility to increase human maturity of attitude in tandem with rapidly advancing technology; the works of J. R. R. Tolkien; and the effects of proficient amateurs on various creative endeavors. An admirable showcase of Brin's multifaceted writing personality, one that, in fiction and nonfiction, enjoys raising difficult questions without claiming to have all the answers to them. Regina Schroeder
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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4.0étoiles sur 5 Brin's own version of Tomorrow is a hard SF "Tree & Leaf", Fév 23 2004
Par Jack E. Holt, III (Orlando, FL USA) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Tomorrow Happens (Hardcover)
Many years ago, I first read J.R.R. Tolkein's Tree & Leaf, a book composed of Tolkein's essay on fairy stories and a demonstration of that theory in a short story called "Leaf by Niggle".

It came as a surprise to me, because I had thought Tolkein's predominant interests were philological rather than philosophical. After reading the book, I thought of Tolkein in a new, more conservative light. In some ways his attempts to halt progress seemed misplaced to me. Also, it was the first time I became aware of Tolkein's religious world view. But, regardless of how I responded to the themes of the book, I finally understood the gravity of the themes that lurked under his longer works.

It changed how I looked at his work forever.

This volume is much the same. It takes some excellent short stories and highlights Brin's own themes against a series of speculative essays and comments. We also get to see a teaching tool Brin has used in writers' workshops.

The short stories are fine. One is about Uplift, another about humans becoming divine (in a different way from that described in Kiln People). Another recounts what has to be the first environmental lawsuit I have ever seen in a space opera story.
Brin & Benford take a turn pretending to be Jules Verne in one.

In one essay, Brin questions the wisdom of creating a fantasy view of feudalism (one of the most execrable form of economic oppression ever created) as he takes on Tolkein's fantasy. Brin makes a case for looking at the positive results of the Enlightenment and the modern Information Age. He asks a pertinent question in a world where Presidents talk about inclusive governments: "Would Aragorn's coalition cabinet include orcs and trolls?" It may be good to be a king, but the world runs better when everyone has a voice of some kind.

Tomorrow Happens some of Brin's best thoughts on how information is carried on from person-to-person and from generation-to-generation. He explains things he thinks make a good science fiction story. And he shows us why we should never be afraid to try a new spin on an old idea.

In a strange way, I think this is almost Brin's "answer" to Tolkein's Tree & Leaf. If Tolkein's book extolled the virtues of religion, faerie (the mythical land subbing for irrationality and romanticism) & lore, Brin's book preaches a different approach to literature and life. Brin's worlds are about optimism, innovation, and information.

Worth a serious look.

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