@booklet {11314, title = {In Autotelia{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Arc Magazine 1.1. The future always wins }, volume = {1.1}, year = {2012}, month = {February 2012}, abstract = {

An odd, rather indeterminate story told from the point of view of an aging woman doctor traveling from a rundown apparently contemporary London to another city, which appears to be in an alternative universe, to give medical tests to those applying to immigrate.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, issn = {2049-5870}, author = {M[ichael] John Harrison (b. 1945)} } @booklet {2816, title = {"Settling the World"}, howpublished = {The New Improved Sun: An Anthology of Utopian S-F}, year = {1975}, note = {

Rpt. in Best SF: 75. The Ninth Annual. Ed. Harry Harrison and Brian W. Aldiss (Indianapolis, IN: Bobbs-Merrill, 1976), 126-53; and in his\ The Ice Monkey and other stories\ (London: Victor Gollancz, 1983), 59-79.

}, month = {1975}, pages = {117-43}, publisher = {Harper \& Row}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

An odd utopia in which god has been found behind the moon and brought back to Earth, where what appears to be a eutopia of peace, plenty, and security develops. But god is an immense beetle, which no one notices, and beetles are replacing humans in positions of authority.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {M[ichael] John Harrison (b. 1945)}, editor = {Thomas M[ichael] Disch (1940-2008)} } @booklet {2721, title = {The Centauri Device}, year = {1974}, month = {1974}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Dystopia. The world is divided between the Israeli World Government and the Union of Arab Socialist Republics, with the Earth destroyed at the end. A contrasting anarchist planet is presented in eutopian terms.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {M[ichael] John Harrison (b. 1945)} }