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Jan Lee's avatar

So glad to see another optimistic climate novel coming! For a while, Steve and I were feeling very lonely. Our book, Fairhaven - A Novel of Climate Optimism, is usually paired with Ministry for the Future by KSR, which is great of course, but the latter is a very grim read. Looking forward to seeing more from you! https://habitatpress.com/fairhaven/

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Philip Teale's avatar

So on point, Solitaire 👏 can’t wait to read Godstorm as well.

As someone who’s been converted to this school of thought, I’ve been grappling with another question: which sci-fi should we be reading and prioritising today?

I’ve been jamming with the idea of a 2x2 matrix that maps sci-fi along a 'dystopian vs. utopian' axis, and a 'normalising vs. critical' axis. I thought this framework would be a useful way to distinguish between dystopias that collapse into doom-porn vs. those that imagine resistance and reform, and ‘lazy’ utopias that feel like complacent fantasies, vs. those that offer practical imagination (e.g. the ambiguous utopia).

It also acknowledges the merits of different sub-genres of sci-fi, like cli-fi but also those speculative works focused on justice, power and identity, like Le Guin's work.

Would love to know what you think of this framework.

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