Hieroglyph

Stories and Visions for a Better Future

audio cd, 1 pages

Published Sept. 9, 2014 by HarperCollins Publishers and Blackstone Audio, Harpercollins.

ISBN:
978-1-4830-2811-8
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3 stars (10 reviews)

2 editions

Review of 'Hieroglyph' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

This book came out of Arizona State University’s Center for Science and the Imagination, and is the product of a collaboration effort between science fiction writers and actual scientists. Each short story takes a real piece of current day science or technology and extrapolates it into the future; at the end of each story are links to the relevant real science and discussions from scientists about the story.

The stories themselves are a mixed bunch, I definitely liked some better than others and there's a few that didn't impress me, but there were also a few "wow" stories and the overall premise of the book is really the best side of science fiction writing.

From future houses that are entire self-contained living ecosystems to new social media "Dorians" who personify companies and change appearance and personality (like the fictional Portrait of Dorian Gray) based on a summary of the customers' …

Review of 'Hieroglyph' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

The stories in this book do a fair-to-excellent job of their stated goal: to envision futures in which science and technology have improved the world, instead of destroying it. It's Project Hieroglyph's view that dystopian fiction has become distressingly common and unthinking, and that science fiction is abdicating one of its goals: to inspire beneficial innovation.

As a voracious SF reader in my youth, I have a lot of sympathy for that goal, and for that reading of the problems of modern SF. There are thoughtful, uplifting stories about how we could stand up and grapple with issues that seem unassailable now: global warming, mass extinctions, the tightening of global surveillance, etc. Lee Konstantinou's raggedy band of drone-hacking techno-pagans in "Johnny Appledrone vs. the FAA" is a good example, although the story is too short to offer more than a quick sketch of the characters and their solutions. I'd love …