@booklet {11715, title = {"Yellow"}, howpublished = {Slate Future Tense}, year = {2022}, month = {September 24, 2022}, abstract = {
The story is set in a future United States that is no longer united but replaced by corporations. Lakes United is the Great Lakes area with competing consortia selling water to the West. Within that setting the story concerns an app SafeT that constantly evaluates an individuals health, the safety of their location, their route home, and so forth, rating each with a single number. A responding essay, \“Can Your Health Be Boiled Down to a Single Number?\” by Loren Helmchen, can be found at https://slate.com/technology/2022/09/health-care-risk-scores-insurance.html
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author, US author}, url = {https://slate.com/technology/2022/09/yellow-b-pladek.html }, author = {B[rittany] Pladek} } @booklet {11388, title = {{\textquotedblleft}All Us Ghosts{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Strange Horizons}, year = {2021}, month = {September 6, 2021}, abstract = {The story is set in a future affected by a continuing pandemic in which many people live their lives entirely online, including in virtual reality. The protagonist is hired by parents to create friends, a community, a life for their children through their university years.
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author, US author}, url = {http://strangehorizons.com/fiction/all-us-ghosts/ Podcast at http://strangehorizons.com/podcasts/podcast-all-us-ghosts/}, author = {B[rittany] Pladek} } @booklet {11393, title = {"Curing"}, howpublished = {Omenana Speculative Fiction Magazine}, volume = {no. 20}, year = {2021}, month = {December 21, 2021}, abstract = {The story is set in a future South Africa experiencing long term drought where cacti are grown for their water, which is sold to the cities. Some hopeful signs of change.
}, keywords = {English author, Female author, South African author}, url = {https://omenana.com/2021/12/21/curing-kristien-potgieter/}, author = {Kristien Potgieter} } @booklet {11292, title = {"The Enders"}, howpublished = {Little Blue Marble }, year = {2021}, month = {August 27, 2021}, abstract = {The story depicts the deliberate undermining of an Asian culture and society by the U.S. military.
}, keywords = {Female author, Korean American author}, url = {https://littlebluemarble.ca/2021/08/27/the-enders/}, author = {Maria S. Picone} } @booklet {11512, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Meeting at the Giant Mushroom{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {XR WORDSMITHS Solarpunk Storytelling Contest}, year = {2021}, month = {2021}, abstract = {In the future humans have learned to communicate with fungi, plants and animals, are, with the help of fungi, cleaning up the planet. Buildings are covered in vegetation.
}, keywords = {Male author}, url = {http://solarpunkstorytelling.com/stories/meeting-mushrooms/}, author = {Jeremy Palmer} } @booklet {11544, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Political and Policy Programme{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Postliberal Politics: The Coming Era of Renewal}, year = {2021}, month = {Postliberal Politics: The Coming Era of Renewal}, pages = {117-184, 206-12}, publisher = {Polity}, address = {Cambridge, Eng}, abstract = {Non-Fiction utopia based on a relational economy, democratic corporatism, a renewed social fabric, environmentalism, and civic nationalism.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, isbn = {9781509546817}, author = {Adrian Pabst} } @booklet {11507, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Return to Kiribati{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {XR WORDSMITHS Solarpunk Storytelling Contest}, year = {2021}, month = {2021}, abstract = {The story is set in a climate damaged future and is about those struggling to survive by helping others.
}, keywords = {Female author}, url = {http://www.solarpunkstorytelling.com/stories/return-kiribati/}, author = {Alexandra Porter} } @booklet {11282, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Wild Inside{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Reckoning 5: Creative Writing on Environmental Justice}, year = {2021}, note = {Also published online at https://reckoning.press/the-wild-inside/ (February 6, 2021).
}, month = {2021}, pages = {29-41}, publisher = {Reckoning Press}, address = {Lake Orion, MI}, abstract = {In the story, a community is set on destroying everything natural.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-9555360-00-5}, url = {https://reckoning.press/the-wild-inside/ }, author = {Angela Penrose}, editor = {Leah Bobet and C{\'e}cile Cristifari} } @booklet {11540, title = {The 2084 Report: An Oral History of the Great Warming}, volume = {Rev. and exp. 2nd ed.}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {227 pp.}, publisher = {Atria Books/Simon \& Schuster}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Pretty much what the title says: an account of global warming from today to 2084.\
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-9821-5021-1 }, author = {James Lawrence Powell} } @booklet {10926, title = {"Abortion Diary"}, howpublished = {The Dystopian States of America: A Charity Anthology Benefiting the ACLU Foundation}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {327-30}, publisher = {Haverill House}, address = {Haverill, MA}, abstract = {A diary set in a near-future United States detailing the treatment of women as they negotiate the possibility that they are pregnant and the choices they are able to make.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-949140-19-4}, author = {KL Pereira}, editor = {Matt Bechtel} } @booklet {11007, title = {"Bloom"}, howpublished = {Biopolis: Tales of Urban Biology}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {88-107, with {\textquotedblleft}A Note on the Science{\textquotedblright} by Abdelrahman Saleh Zaky on 108 and notes on Jarrett and Zaky on 109}, publisher = {Shoreline of Infinity}, address = {Edinburgh, Scot.}, abstract = {Three scenarios depicting climate change dystopias.\
}, keywords = {Female author, Scottish author}, isbn = {978-1-8381268-0-3}, author = {Vicki Jarrett}, editor = {Larissa Pschetz and Jane McKie and Elise Cachat} } @booklet {11008, title = {"Branching Out"}, howpublished = {Biopolis: Tales of Urban Biology}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {130-41, with {\textquotedblleft}A Note on the Science{\textquotedblright} by Karen Halliday on 142 and notes on Goldschmidt and Halliday on 143}, publisher = {Shoreline of Infinity}, address = {Edinburgh, Scot.}, abstract = {The story is set on Scottish island where housing developments are being carefully planned using computer models based on plants and constant detailed surveillance of the surroundings to keep them free of any invasive species.\
}, keywords = {English author, Female author, Scottish author}, isbn = {978-1-8381268-0-3}, author = {Pippa Goldschmidt (b. 1985)}, editor = {Larissa Pschetz and Jane McKie and Elise Cachat} } @booklet {11617, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Coming of the Grey Goose{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Scorchers: A Climate Fiction Anthology}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {122-141}, address = {Auckland, New Zealand}, abstract = {The story is set in a future in which Aotearoa New Zealand is disappearing under water. The book includes a Glossary (270-276). The author also wrote an environmental political novel aimed at Monsanto\’s herbicide Roundup--Lethal Dose. Onehunga,
The story is set in a future in which people can be enhanced in many different ways, not all of them producing positive results.\
}, keywords = {Male author, Scottish author}, issn = {978-1-8381268-0-3}, author = {Gavin Inglis}, editor = {Larissa Pschetz and Jane McKie and Elise Cachat} } @booklet {11835, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Displaced{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {After Australia}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {87-105}, publisher = {Affirm Press/Diversity Arts Australia/Sweatshop Literary Movement}, address = {South Melbourne, VIC, Australia}, abstract = {The story is set in a future in which Fiji and many other islands and coasts have been flooded. The protagonist is a Fijian who immigrated to Australia and become a citizen, who is hoping that her relatives will be accepted for immigration. It also notes the racism of the immigration process, and the growing racism directed at people of color.
}, keywords = {Australian author, Female author, Fijian author}, isbn = {9781925972818}, author = {Zoya Patel}, editor = {Michael Mohammed Ahmad} } @booklet {11318, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Don{\textquoteright}t Mind Me{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Entanglements: Tomorrow{\textquoteright}s Lovers, Families and Friends}, year = {2020}, note = {Rpt. in The Year\’s Best Science Fiction Volume 2. Ed Jonathan Strahan (New York: Saga Press, 2021), 379-400, with a note about the author on 379.
}, month = {2020}, pages = {159-69}, publisher = {The MIT Press}, address = {Cambridge, MA}, abstract = {The story is set in a future where, using technology, parents can control what their children read, even in school. The \“Minder\” deletes material the parents would not approve, which makes understanding lessons rather difficult.
}, isbn = {978-0-262539258 }, author = {Suzanne Palmer (b. 1968)}, editor = {Sheila Williams} } @booklet {10963, title = {Election 2220: Night of the Voting Dead. Novel in Two Parts}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {322 pp.}, publisher = {[Roofman The Spy Publishing]}, address = {[Colorado Springs, CO]}, abstract = {The 2220 mayoral election in Stars Hollow, Connecticut, pits the liberal African American Russell Limbaugh-Trump against the far-right Mrs. Sarah Palin-Trump. The two sections are \“Zombies Saved By Bible\” (1-148) and \“Swing Vote\” (149-317).\
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-7351873-0-3}, author = {John Pansini} } @booklet {10684, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Gamecocks{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Lightspeed}, volume = {bo. 117}, year = {2020}, month = {February 2020}, pages = {EJournal}, abstract = {The story is set in the near future where driverless trucks make sio much money for the companies that it is decided it makes no difference how many people they kill.\
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, url = {https://www.lightspeedmagazine.com/fiction/the-gamecocks/ }, author = {J. T. Petty} } @booklet {11213, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Glasslands. Wrack: Part I{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Ignorance is Strength: The Dystopia Triptych 1}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {15-28}, publisher = {Broad Reach Publishing + Adamant Press}, address = {New York/London}, abstract = {Three-part story set in a future where people from a different reality arrive on Earth intending to set everything straight and create a eutopia for all. The story is told from the point of view of three people from a band All You Need to Change the World is Faith and a Chainsaw who do not want to be Harmonized, as the invaders call it. Chronologically, the invasion is described as seen by the woman who leads the band members and who immediately wants to start a revolution in \“Spheres and Harmonies. Wrack: Part III.\” or Else the Light: The Dystopia Triptych 3. Ed. John Joseph Adams, Hugh Howey, and Christine Yant (New York/London: Broad Reach Publishing + Adamant Press, 2020), 17-33. In Glasslands. Wrack: Part I.\” Ignorance is Strength: The Dystopia Triptych 1. Ed. John Joseph Adams, Hugh Howey, and Christine Yant (New York/London: Broad Reach Publishing + Adamant Press, 2020), 15-28, a woman who is an artist whose desire to burn her creations is sent a reserve for the disaffected. And in \“Cacophany. Wrack: Part II.\” Burn the Ashes: The Dystopia Triptych 2. Ed. John Joseph Adams, Hugh Howey, and Christine Yant (New York/London: Broad Reach Publishing + Adamant Press, 2020), 17-32, a man who is an urban explorer and would be happy to be if he could explore other realms is not allowed to, so he joins the woman from Part III to invade the reserve.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {979-8677287572 979-8677291012 979-8677298424}, author = {Tim[othy Aaron] Pratt (b. 1976)}, editor = {John Joseph Adams (b. 1976) and Hugh [Crocker] Howey (b. 1975) and Christine Yant} } @booklet {10962, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Gulliver{\textquoteright}s Travels Into Several Remote Nations Of The World. Part V: A Voyage To The Island of The Wolves{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Stories of Hope and Wonder in Support of the UK{\textquoteright}S Healthcare Workers}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {460-71}, publisher = {NewCon Press}, address = {Weston, Eng.}, abstract = {Gulliver is thrown off a hip and ends up on an island that at first appears to be inhabited solely by a community of mostly young vegetarians who do not wear clothes and are promiscuous. But then, in what turns out to be a yearly ceremony, a pack of clothed wolves walking on two legs appear who feed on the humans.\
}, keywords = {English author, Male author, Welsh author}, author = {Philip Palmer (b. 1960)}, editor = {Ian [George] Whates (b. 1959)} } @booklet {10888, title = {"Health Care"}, howpublished = {Visions of Liberty}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {41-53, 359-66}, publisher = {CATO Institute/Libertarianism.org}, address = {Washington, DC}, abstract = {Presented as if a visitor from the future describes the improved market-based, profit oriented health care of 2050 compared to that in 2020.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-948647-25-0}, author = {Cannon, Michael F.}, editor = {Aaron Ross Powell and Paul Matzko} } @booklet {10685, title = {{\textquotedblleft}How We Burn{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Lightspeed}, volume = {no. 117}, year = {2020}, month = {February 2020}, pages = {EJournal}, abstract = {The story is set in a future with most plants and animals extinct, and a long one child policy has produced a surveillance society and overly protective families. The story is told from the point-of-view of a rebellious teenager.\
}, keywords = {Dominican American author, Female author}, url = {https://www.lightspeedmagazine.com/fiction/how-we-burn/}, author = {Brenda Peynado (b. 1985)} } @booklet {10892, title = {"Immigration"}, howpublished = {Visions of Liberty}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {183-227, 380-84}, publisher = {CATO Institute/Libertarianism.org}, address = {Washington, DC}, abstract = {Alternative history depicting the ways in which the United States would be better today if it had never imposed immigration controls. The text includes information on the controls that were imposed.\
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = { 978-1-948647-25-0}, author = {Alex Nowrasteh}, editor = {Aaron Ross Powell and Paul Matzko} } @booklet {11144, title = {Mirror{\textquoteright}s Edge}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {351 pp.}, publisher = {At Bay Press}, address = {Winnipeg, MB, Canada}, abstract = {The novel begins in a future polluted Earth that is under corporate control and everyone has a personal minder implanted that replaces an independent thought and then shifts the protagonist, without the implant, to a pristine alternative world that has rejected all that makes Earth a dystopia. There he meets the woman who has brought him to her world and travels with him back to his to reform it. The message seems to be \“Every utopia will always be a dystopia to someone\” (346).
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, isbn = {978-1-988168-23-4 }, author = {Passey, Alex} } @booklet {11009, title = {"Mudlarking"}, howpublished = {Biopolis: Tales of Urban Biology}, year = {2020}, note = {Rpt. in Best of British Science Fiction 2020. Ed. Donna Scott ([Weston, Eng.: NewCon Press, 2021), 107-15.
}, month = {2020}, pages = {144-53, with {\textquotedblleft}A Note on the Science{\textquotedblright} by Louise Horsfall on 154 and notes on Williamson and Horsfall on 155}, publisher = {Shoreline of Infinity}, address = {Edinburgh, Scot.}, abstract = {The story contrasts the new housing enabled by centralized systems that recycle/reclaim all the scarce metals needed for further technology with the old tenements to the detriment of the former.\
}, keywords = {Male author, Scottish author}, isbn = {978-1-8381268-0-3 9781912950997~}, author = {Neil Williamson (b. 1968)}, editor = {Larissa Pschetz and Jane McKie and Elise Cachat} } @booklet {10754, title = {"Notice"}, howpublished = {Us in Flux}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, publisher = {Center for Science and the Imagination, Arizona State University}, address = {Tempe, AZ}, abstract = {The story in set in a religious community called Reliance that imagines itself as self-sufficient and is cut off from the outside world as seen through the eyes of a young man in the community.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, url = {https://csi.asu.edu/projects/usinflux/sarah-pinsker-uif}, author = {Sarah Pinsker (b. 1977)} } @booklet {10531, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Parent-Teacher Association{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {The New York Times Sunday Review }, year = {2020}, month = {January 5, 2020}, pages = {8-9}, abstract = {Surveillance dystopia in which parents demand to have their children constantly tracked and have immediate access to the tracking.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Jessica Powell} } @booklet {10670, title = {The Seep}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, publisher = {Soho Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Aliens arrive and infiltrate everywhere, allowing people to change their bodies at will, communicate telepathically, and live forever. Wars end. Everyone is fed. One focus of the novel is whether this is a good thing or not; another is on the choices people make.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Chana Porter} } @booklet {11620, title = {"Serf"}, howpublished = {Scorchers: A Climate Fiction Anthology}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {190-205}, publisher = {Steam Press/Eunoia Publishing}, address = {Auckland, New Zealand}, abstract = {The story begins in 2106 with a woman on a crowded Auckland Skytrain from the domed area where she works to the polluted exterior where she lives, and then shifts to 2036 and her grandmother growing up on Beqa in the Fiji islands, which is about the disappear under the rising waters. The story then follows her family as refugees as conditions worsen and world-wide climate refugees outnumber those with land and her treatment as a brown woman working two minimum wage jobs as a serf (server).
}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Female author, Queer author}, isbn = {978-1-99-000062-1}, author = {Thompson, Talia}, editor = {Paul Mountfort and Rosslyn Prosser} } @booklet {11173, title = {Strange Labour}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {394 pp.}, publisher = {Radiant Press}, address = {Regina, SK, Canada}, abstract = {Post-apocalyptic (unexplained) dystopia in which a woman travels across the United States, sometimes with a companion, meeting individuals and people in small communities struggling to survive.\
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-989274354}, author = {Penner, Robert G.} } @booklet {11615, title = {{\textquotedblleft}T{\={a}}whaki{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Scorchers: A Climate Fiction Anthology}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {102-121}, publisher = {Steam Press/Eunoia Publishing}, address = {Auckland, New Zealand}, abstract = {The story is set in a future where increasing heat has killed the overwhelming majority of people, plants, and animals, and the people who remain live deep underground, with only occasional trips to the surface.
}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author, M{\={a}}ori author}, isbn = {978-1-99-000062-1}, author = {Witi [Tame] Ihimaera[-Smiler] (b. 1944)}, editor = {Paul Mountfort and Rosslyn Prosser} } @booklet {11619, title = {"Trigger"}, howpublished = {Scorchers: A Climate Fiction Anthology}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {169-189}, publisher = {Steam Press/Eunoia Publishing}, address = {Auckland, New Zealand}, abstract = {The story is set in a future Aotearoa New Zealand that is succumbing to fires from the increased heat and flooding from the collapse of the melting of Antarctic ice. Society has broken down, and no one with any real authority remains. The protagonist has fled Auckland with his family, but his refuge is about to been engulfed in fire.
}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, isbn = {978-1-99-000062-1}, author = {Paul Mountfort}, editor = {Paul Mountfort and Rosslyn Prosser} } @booklet {11128, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Truth Is All There Is{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Slate}, year = {2020}, note = {For a response, see Jill Carlson. \“Trust No One. Not Even a Blockchain.\” Illus. Lisa Larson-Walker. Slate (January 25, 2020). How much can we really trust the blockchain? (slate.com)
}, month = {January 25, 2020}, abstract = {The story is set in a future in which the blockchain controls is used for everything and is assumed to be completely reliable. One blockchain dominates the world, but China has introduced a competitor, which its citizens are required to use.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, url = {{\textquotedblleft}The Truth Is All There Is,{\textquotedblright} a short story about the blockchain. (slate.com)}, author = {Emily Parker}, editor = {Jill Carlson} } @booklet {10887, title = {"The War on Drugs"}, howpublished = {Visions of Liberty}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {55-78, 366-69}, publisher = {CATO Institute/Libertarianism.org}, address = {Washington, DC}, abstract = {A comparison of the success by mid-twenty-first century of the legalization of all drugs eliminated street crime and the other negative effects of drugs in 2020.\
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-948647-25-0}, author = {Trevor Burrus}, editor = {Aaron Ross Powell and Paul Matzko} } @booklet {11522, title = {"The Waterfall"}, howpublished = {Scorchers: A Climate Fiction Anthology}, year = {2020}, note = {Rpt. in Year\’s Best Aotearoa New Zealand Science Fiction and Fantasy Volume III. Ed. Marie Hodgkinson ([Wellington, New Zealand]: Paper Road Press, 2021), 102-13.
}, month = {2020}, pages = {156-168}, publisher = {Steam Press/Eunoia Publishing}, address = {Auckland, New Zealand}, abstract = {Climate change story told from the perspective of a trainee doctor who discovers that the authorities, including the medical establishment are falsifying current conditions to look better than they are.
}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Female author}, isbn = {9781990000621 978-1-99-115031-8}, author = {Renee [Wen-Wei] Liang (b. 1973)}, editor = {Paul Mountfort and Rosslyn Prosser} } @booklet {11003, title = {{\textquotedblleft}We Can No Longer Hold the Sun{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Biopolis: Tales of Urban Biology}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {52-61, with {\textquotedblleft}A Note on the Science{\textquotedblright} by Amanda Jarvis on 62 and notes on Tarbuck and Jarvis on 63. }, publisher = {Shoreline of Infinity}, address = {Edinburgh, Scot.}, abstract = {The problems that develop as rare earths, used in most contemporary technology, are used up.\
}, keywords = {Female author, Scottish author}, isbn = {978-1-8381268-0-3}, author = {Tarbuck, Alice}, editor = {Larissa Pschetz and Jane McKie and Elise Cachat} } @booklet {11616, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Whenua to Whenua{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Scorchers: A Climate Fiction Anthology}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {51-73}, publisher = {Steam Press/Eunoia Publishing}, address = {Auckland, New Zealand}, abstract = {The story is set in a future Aotearoa New Zealand and focuses on the impact on both individuals and communities of the disappearance under the rising sea of the homeland of a M{\={a}}ori community.
}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, isbn = {978-1-99-000062-1}, author = {James George (b. 1962)}, editor = {Paul Mountfort and Rosslyn Prosser} } @booklet {11916, title = {Where the World Turns Wild}, year = {2020}, note = {Excerpts were published in the SCBWI (Society of Children\’s Book Writers and Illustrators) Undiscovered Voices anthology for 2018.
}, month = {2020}, pages = {344 pp.}, publisher = {Stripes Publisjing}, address = {London}, abstract = {Post-apocalypse (disease) young adult dystopia in which two children who are immune escape from the locked down city and search for their mother in the wild lands.
}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, isbn = {9781788951524}, author = {Nicola Penfold} } @booklet {10971, title = {The Burning River}, year = {2019}, note = {Parts were originally published as \“The Road to Tokomairiro.\” Sport: New Zealand Literary Magazine, no. 39 (2011); and \“Intruder.\” Illus.\ Overland, no. 219 (Winter 2015): 42-45 https://overland.org.au/previous-issues/issue-219/fiction-lawrence-patchett/
}, month = {2019}, pages = {335 pp. }, publisher = {Victoria University Press}, address = {Wellington, New Zealand}, abstract = {The novel is set in a future Aotearoa/New Zealand that has experienced a devastating environmental collapse and follows the experiences of one P{\={a}}keh{\={a}} man who travels across the country with a few M{\={a}}ori in search of connections among people and the possibility of rebuilding the country.\ In the future, and in the text,\ people are bilingual in English and M{\={a}}ori and use the languages as if they were one.
}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, issn = {9781776562237}, author = {Lawrence Patchett} } @booklet {11015, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Chosen. Novella Extract{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {New Welsh Reader}, volume = {no. 122}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {41-46}, abstract = {Extract depicting a future in which Earth has been abandoned and people have settled in hollowed out asteroids. In the story an asteroid of Amish of various persuasions regarding technology are dealing with the problem of shortages of essential rare earths.
Rpt. as Love After the End: An Anthology of Two-Spirit \& Indigiqueer Speculative Fiction. Ed. Joshua Whitehead (Vancouver, BC, Canada: Arsenal Pulp Press, 2020), 77-94.
}, month = {2019}, publisher = {Bedside Press}, address = {Narol, MB, Canada}, abstract = {The story takes place after the collapse of civilization and concerns struggles within First Nations communities over who should be accepted into the community sand who doesn\’t belong.
}, keywords = {Native American author, Two-Spirits author}, isbn = {9781988715247 9781551528113}, author = {Kai Minosh Pyle}, editor = {Joshua Whitehead} } @booklet {10693, title = {MALL}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, publisher = {Del Sol Press}, address = {Washington, DC}, abstract = {A woman shopping in a twenty-first century mall accidentally enters a mall in an alternative reality, where the Mall Code rules everything. She is initially sent to a Mental Health Practitioner, and the novel presents how both understand and deal with the situation.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Pattie Palmer-Baker} } @booklet {10542, title = {Nobody People}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {479 pp.}, publisher = {Del Rey}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Dystopia with fantasy elements in which the government and, with the encouragement of the government, bigoted people attack people with special talents, Muslims, and others.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Bob Proehl} } @booklet {10340, title = {{\textquotedblleft}One Thousand Beetles in a Jumpsuit{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Lightspeed Science Fiction \& Fantasy}, volume = {no. 111}, year = {2019}, note = {Rpt. in The Best Science Fiction of the Year. Volume 5. Ed. Neil Clarke (New York: Night Shade Books, 2020), 189-210.\
}, month = {August 2019}, abstract = {The first story in a sequence given the general title Robot Country. The story is set in a climate-change dystopia controlled by corporations in which \“Corporate treason was punishable by death.\” The protagonist is supposedly testing procedures for surviving on Mars and ends up cooperating with the AIs rather than her corporate minders. In \“Her Appetite, His Heart.\” Lightspeed, no. 114 (November 2019). https://www.lightspeedmagazine.com/fiction/her-appetite-his-heart/, the second story, the AIs have revolted and excluded their makers from their country. In The Dystopia Triptych sequence, the first story is followed by two different stories, which begin after the successful revolt of the AIs and the establishment of Robot Country. In \“Paradise Requires a Wall. Robot Country: Part II.\” Burn the Ashes: The Dystopia Triptych 2. Ed. John Joseph Adams, Hugh Howey, and Christine Yant (New York/London: Broad Reach Publishing + Adamant Press, 2020), 169-90, Robot Country has been established and is under constant attack from what remains of the United States, with the focus on the personal relations between a woman working with the AIs and a U.S. Forest Ranger trying to protect the little that remains of the forest. Followed by \“Human Country. Robot Country: Part III.\” or Else the Light: The Dystopia Triptych 3. Ed. John Joseph Adams, Hugh Howey, and Christine Yant (New York/London: Broad Reach Publishing + Adamant Press, 2020), 289-207, which develops those relations as he and other humans move into Robot Country.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-949103-22-2 US 979-8677287572 979-8677291012 979-8677298424 }, url = {http://www.lightspeedmagazine.com/fiction/one-thousand-beetles-in-a-jumpsuit/ https://www.lightspeedmagazine.com/fiction/her-appetite-his-heart/}, author = {Dominica Phetteplace} } @booklet {10271, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Painter of Trees{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Clarkesworld}, volume = {No. 157}, year = {2019}, note = {Rpt. in The Year\’s Best Science Fiction Volume 1. Ed. Jonathan Strahan (New York: Saga Press, 2020), 77-89, with an editor\’s note on 77; and in The Best Science Fiction of the Year. Volume 5. Ed. Neil Clarke (New York: Night Shade Books, 2020), 1-10.\
}, month = {June 2019}, abstract = {Dystopia in which humans, set on terraforming a planet, destroy all the food the indigenous inhabitants eat. Few of the humans are at all bothered.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-5344-4959-6 978-1-949103-22-2}, url = {http://clarkesworldmagazine.com/palmer_06_19/}, author = {Suzanne Palmer (b. 1968)} } @booklet {11256, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Registering Eve{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {How to Run a City Like Amazon, and Other Fables}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {351-503 [112-118]}, abstract = {A future city in which all interactions are through the blockchain, based on a company like Ethereum, which has many flaws, some of which are deliberately designed to overcharge.
}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, isbn = {978-0-9955776-7-1 }, author = {Alison Powell}, editor = {Mark Graham and Rob Kitchin and Shannon Mattern and Joe Shaw} } @booklet {10354, title = {A Song for a New Day}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, publisher = {Berkley}, address = {New York}, abstract = {After a series of bombings, the government prohibits all public meetings. The two main protagonists are a musician who performed in large venues and a woman, who had been working entirely online, with both involved in locating illegal performances and streaming them. Three of her stories are set in the same future beginning with 2015 Pinsker, \“Our Lady of the Open Road;\” followed by \“A Song Transmuted.\” Illus. Aaron Lovett and Joshua Viola. Cyber World: Tales of Humanity\’s Tomorrow. Ed. Jason Heller and Joshua Viola (Erie, CO: Hex Publishers 2016), 151-60; and \“Everything Is Closed Today.\” Do Not Go Quietly: An Anthology of Defiance in Victory. Ed. Lesley Conner and Jason Sizemore (Lexington, KY: Apex Publications, 2019), 149-74; rpt. in her Lost Places. Stories (Easthampton, MA: Small Beer Press, 2023), 79-102.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Sarah Pinsker (b. 1977)} } @booklet {10503, title = {{\textquotedblleft}That Our Flag Was Still There{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {If This Goes On}, year = {2019}, note = {Rpt. in her Lost Places. Stories (Easthampton, MA: Small Beer Press, 2023), 36-50.
}, month = {2019}, pages = {209-22, with an editor{\textquoteright}s note on 222}, publisher = {Parvus Press}, address = {Yardley, PA}, abstract = {A dystopia of extreme patriotism, where, for example, a permit is needed to criticize the president.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-62873-199-9 }, author = {Sarah Pinsker (b. 1977)}, editor = {Cat[herine Tigerlily] Rambo (b. 1963)} } @booklet {10610, title = {"The Touches"}, howpublished = {tor.com}, year = {2019}, note = {Rpt. without the illus. in her The Rock Eaters: Stories (New York: Penguin Books, 2021), 167-90.
}, month = {November 13, 2019}, pages = {EJournal}, abstract = {The story is set in a future where disease means that the world is divided between the clean and the dirty, and humans live in the clean never touching another human. The protagonist details the four times in her life that she has been touched.
}, keywords = {Dominican American author, Female author}, isbn = {978-0-143135623}, url = {https://www.tor.com/2019/11/13/the-touches-brenda-peynado/}, author = {Brenda Peynado (b. 1985)} } @booklet {10091, title = {What Went Wrong, or Was It Right?}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {106 pp.}, publisher = {AuthorHouse}, address = {Bloomington, IN}, abstract = {Mostly a critique of the current situation in the United States comparing it to the situation in 2095, which appears, on the surface, to be eutopian, but it turned out to be a flawed utopia.\
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Jackson Phillips, III [pseud.]} } @booklet {9765, title = {Adjustment Day}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, publisher = {W. W. Norton}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Dystopia in which the population is going to be adjusted by killing large numbers of people.
A positive future story in comic form in which a future eutopia has been created but could be destroyed by actions in the past.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Jennie Wood}, editor = {Matt Miner and Eric Palicki and Tyler Chin-Tanner} } @booklet {9997, title = {{\textquotedblleft}And the Rest Is Music{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {All We Ever Wanted: Stories of a Better World}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {59-66}, publisher = {A Wave Blue World}, address = {Np}, abstract = {A future story in comic form in which each person lives in a pod that creates their ideal world for them, with the intent to keep humans from destroying the planet. The story is about an old woman who leaves her pod and experiences what is left of the world.
First volume of a climate change dystopia series followed by Borderless: An Analog Novel. Seattle, WA: 47North, 2018; and Breach: An Analog Novel. Seattle, WA: 47North, 2019.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Eliot Peper} } @booklet {10001, title = {"Blackst*r"}, howpublished = {All We Ever Wanted: Stories of a Better World}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {79-87}, publisher = {A Blue Wave World}, address = {Np}, abstract = {A positive future story in comic form that gives a tour of the future music scene.\
}, keywords = {African American author, Male author}, author = {Chris Visions}, editor = {Matt Miner and Eric Palicki and Tyler Chin-Tanner} } @booklet {10000, title = {"Bombs Away"}, howpublished = {All We Ever Wanted: Stories of a Better World}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {51-58}, publisher = {A Wave Blue World}, address = {Np}, abstract = {A positive future story in comic form in which when war breaks out none of the missiles explode and the weapons don\’t work because aliens had decided to give humans a second chance.
A positive future story in comic form in which a death cult is poisoning the atmosphere, and two women fight back.
The story is set in a future recovering from environmental collapse with two cities, one high-tech and one low-tech, trying to find a way to cooperate.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Julia K. Patt}, editor = {Sarena Ulibarri} } @booklet {10867, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Charlie and the Aliens{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Who Will Speak for America? }, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {204-11}, publisher = {Temple University Press}, address = {Philadelphia, PA}, abstract = {The story is about immigration and refugees on a far future Earth, and the strict rules they must follow to be accepted, even if they are human or were born on Earth and are returning after life on another planet.\
}, keywords = {Egyptian author, Male author, US author}, isbn = {978-1- 4399-1623-0}, author = {Ganzeer [pseud.] (b. 1982)}, editor = {Stephanie Feldman and Nathaniel Popkin} } @booklet {10003, title = {"Chat Room"}, howpublished = {All We Ever Wanted: Stories of a Better World}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {96-106}, publisher = {A Wave Blue world}, address = {Bp}, abstract = {A future story in comic form about the problem of wanting to fit in and finding friends when you are different.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Nadia Shammas}, editor = {Matt Miner and Eric Palicki and Tyler Chin-Tanner} } @booklet {10010, title = {"Choice"}, howpublished = {All We Ever Wanted: Stories of a Better World}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {153-58}, publisher = {A Wave New World}, abstract = {A future story in comic form in which a man tries to fashion a female AI in the way he wants her and cannot understand why she leaves him.
}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Kay Honda}, editor = {Matt Miner and Eric Palicki and Tyler Chin-Tanner} } @booklet {10995, title = {"City Bones"}, howpublished = {Futurescapes Volume Two: Blue Sky Cities}, volume = {2}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {77-87 with a note on the author on 76}, publisher = {Utah Valley Office of New Urban Mechanics \& Utah Valley University}, address = {[Orem, UT]}, abstract = {The story is set in a future Chicago where automated cars are helping reduce the pollution and ease traffic congestion, but drivers insist on still controlling their cars whatever the consequences.
The story is set in Australia in a future after multiple catastrophes destroy the world\’s technological civilization. The small community that the survivors have created is presented in eutopian terms, and at the end of the story contact is made by people from New Zealand travelling in an airship.\
}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Australian author, Female author, Male author}, author = {Simon Petrie and Edwina Harvey}, editor = {Grace Bridges and Lee Murray and Aaron Compton} } @booklet {10013, title = {"Day At the Park"}, howpublished = {All We Ever Wanted: Stories of a Better World}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {149-52}, publisher = {A Wave Blue World}, address = {Np}, abstract = {A brief positive future story in comic form in which a girl and a young girl who is a robot play in the park.
The story is set in a polluted city in which the rich have clean air, and the poor are left to suffer and die, and the poor, predominantly Hispanic community decide to improve their lot.
The story is set in a future climate-change dystopia in which Phoenix, Arizona, is completely under a covering that collects solar power and outside the city is a settlement where the people have modified themselves and the countryside to live without water.\
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, url = {https://www.dropbox.com/s/961pb8yve314a8r/Weight_of_Light.epub?dl=0.}, author = {Pressman, Corey S. and Clark A. Miller and Joey Eschrich} } @booklet {10629, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The End of the Incarnation{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Who Will Speak for America?}, year = {2018}, note = {Rpt. as \“The End of the Incarnation I\” through \“The End of the Incarnation VII.\” In her . . . and Other Disasters (Baltimore, MD: Mason Jar Press, 2019), 15, 39, 55, 95, 105, 139, 165.\
}, month = {2018}, pages = {192-94}, publisher = {Temple University Press}, address = {Philadelphia, PA}, abstract = {A depiction of the gradual dissolution of the United States ending with rights becoming universal rather than tied to citizenship.\
}, keywords = {Female author, Latinx author, US author}, isbn = {978-1- 4399-1623-0 978-0996103787}, author = {Malka [Ann] Older (b. 1977)}, editor = {Stephanie Feldman and Nathaniel Popkin} } @booklet {10035, title = {"Eruptions"}, howpublished = {Reckoning 3: Creative Writing on Environmental Justice}, volume = {3}, year = {2018}, note = {Rpt. https://reckoning.press/eruptions/ (February 12, 2019).\
}, month = {2018}, pages = {61-64}, publisher = {Reckoning Press}, address = {West Orion, MI}, abstract = {Poem describing an environmental dystopia.
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author}, author = {[Samantha] Lynne Sargent}, editor = {Michael DeLuca and Danika Dinsmore and Mohammad Shafiqul Islam and Giselle Leeb and Johannes Punkt and Sakara Remmu and A{\"\i}cha Martine Thiam} } @booklet {9843, title = {"Escape from Caring Seasons{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Twelve Tomorrows}, year = {2018}, note = {Rpt. in her Lost Places. Stories (Easthampton, MA: Small Beer Press, 2023), 110-138.
}, month = {2018}, pages = {157-178}, publisher = {The MIT Press}, address = {Cambridge, MA}, abstract = {A dystopia brought about by an artificial intelligence that controls all the residents in Caring Seasons, a senior citizens home, and whose decisions, which are aimed at benefiting the home not than the residents and cannot be overridden by anyone. The story concerns a man trying to get his wife released when the algorithm says she should stay.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-0-262-53542-7 978-1-62873-199-9 }, author = {Sarah Pinsker (b. 1977)}, editor = {Wade Roush and Pontin, Mark} } @booklet {9999, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Everything I Own{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {All We Ever Wanted: Stories of a Better World}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {67-72}, publisher = {A Wave Blue World}, address = {Np}, abstract = {A post-catastrophe but positive future story in comic form in which a girl discovers seeds and plants them, later other people, including children, come, who the girl\’s mother wants to chase away, but the girl wants to stay. The children ask the mother if she can read to them, and everything changes for the better.\
}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Lela Gwenn}, editor = {Matt Miner and Eric Palicki and Tyler Chin-Tanner} } @booklet {10062, title = {"Exit Here"}, howpublished = {Reckoning 3: Creative Writing on Environmental Justice}, volume = {3}, year = {2018}, note = {Rpt. https://reckoning.press/exit-here/ (June 11, 2019).\
}, month = {2018}, pages = {189-96}, publisher = {Reckoning Press}, address = {Lake Orion, MI}, abstract = {Environmental dystopia.
Presented as a report on the United Regions of England, which has kicked London out and is establishing a eutopia based on communities and communication.\
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Dan Gavshon Brady and James Pockson}, editor = {William Davies} } @booklet {10004, title = {{\textquotedblleft}First Steps Outside{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {All We Ever Wanted: Stories of a Better World}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {107-12}, publisher = {A Wave Blue World}, address = {Np}, abstract = {A positive future story in comic form in which two people who meet online as avatars and are afraid of ever going outside choose to meet.
In the future, pollution is devastating, the official position is that the air is clean, and it is illegal to report the facts.
. Rpt. https://reckoning.press/fuck-you-pay-me/ (April 2, 2019).
}, month = {2018}, pages = {1768-2072}, publisher = {Reckoning Press}, address = {Lake Orion, MI}, abstract = {The story is set in an environmentally damaged future where most people are deeply in debt, the entire safety net has disappeared, and the possibility of higher education is eroding.\
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Francis Bass}, editor = {Michael DeLuca and Danika Dinsmore and Mohammad Shafiqul Islam and Giselle Leeb and Johannes Punkt and Sakara Remmu and A{\"\i}cha Martine Thiam} } @booklet {9996, title = {"Gaea"}, howpublished = {All We Ever Wanted: Stories of a Better World}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {43-50}, publisher = {A Wave Blue World}, address = {Np}, abstract = {A positive future story in comic form in which Earth has been nursed back to health only for others to arrive set to despoil it again.
A positive future story in comic form in which technology both punishes and rehabilitates in a very short time.\
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Vasilis Pozios}, editor = {Matt Miner and Eric Palicki and Tyler Chin-Tanner} } @booklet {10025, title = {"The Green Man"}, howpublished = {Reckoning 3: Creative Writing on Environmental Justice}, volume = {3}, year = {2018}, note = {Rpt. https://reckoning.press/the-green-man/ (January 15, 2019).\
}, month = {2018}, pages = {15-28}, publisher = {Reckoning Press}, address = {Lake Orion, MI}, abstract = {Environmental dystopia in which, with all the bees and other pollinating insects gone, the young poor are hired as pollinators.\
}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Teika Marija Smits}, editor = {Michael DeLuca and Danika Dinsmore and Mohammad Shafiqul Islam and Giselle Leeb and Johannes Punkt and Sakara Remmu and A{\"\i}cha Martine Thiam} } @booklet {11131, title = {"Guardian"}, howpublished = {Pulp Literature}, volume = {no. 19}, year = {2018}, month = {Summer 2018}, pages = {97-104}, abstract = {The story is set in a world in which everyone must wear a Guardian that limits their ability to feel emotion.\
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author}, issn = {2292-2164}, author = {Susan Pieters} } @booklet {9842, title = {{\textquotedblleft}A House by the Sea{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Uncanny Magazine: Disabled People Destroy Science Fiction! }, volume = {no. 24}, year = {2018}, month = {September 2018}, abstract = {The story is about the lives of the children from Le Guin\’s \“The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas (Variations on a Theme by William James)\” (1973) after they are released from the basement and replaced by another child.\
}, keywords = {Transgender author}, url = {https://uncannymagazine.com/article/a-house-by-the-sea/}, author = {P. H. Lee}, editor = {Elsa Sjunnesson-Henry and Dominik Parisien} } @booklet {9998, title = {"The Inventor{\textquoteright}s Daughter"}, howpublished = {All We Ever Wanted: Stories of a Better World}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {73-78}, publisher = {A Wave Blue World}, address = {Np}, abstract = {A future story in comic form in which a woman who invented carbon capture is imprisoned by those in power. In the story, years later\ when the Earth is flooded, her daughter frees her.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Lucia Fasano (b. 1993)}, editor = {Matt Miner and Eric Palicki and Tyler Chin-Tanner} } @booklet {9992, title = {{\textquotedblleft}It Looked Like Our Dreams{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {All We Ever Wanted: Stories of a Better World}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {39-42. The pages in the table of contents are wrong}, publisher = {A Wave New World}, address = {Np}, abstract = {A positive future story in comic form in which a future is imagined where a small enclave embedded in nature and with advanced technology is surrounded by devastation.\
}, keywords = {Female author, Norwegian author}, author = {Maria Fr{\"o}lich}, editor = {Matt Miner and Eric Palicki and Tyler Chin-Tanner} } @booklet {10006, title = {"Just Like Heaven"}, howpublished = {All We Ever Wanted: Stories of a Better World}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {119-26}, publisher = {A Wave Blue World}, address = {Np}, abstract = {A positive future story in comic form in which the Earth has recovered, but there is still a need to struggle against those who would go back to the old ways.
A positive future story in comic form about the dan8er of experimenting with DNA.\
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Justin Zimmerman (b. 1977)}, editor = {Matt Miner and Eric Palicki and Tyler Chin-Tanner} } @booklet {10033, title = {{\textquotedblleft}More Sea Than Tar{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Reckoning 3: Creative Writing on Environmental Justice}, volume = {3}, year = {2018}, note = {Rpt. https://reckoning.press/more-sea-than-tar/ (February 26, 2019).
}, month = {2018}, pages = {67-86}, publisher = {Reckoning Press}, address = {Lake Orion, MI}, abstract = {The dystopia of the struggle for survival in a flooded, polluted world.\
}, keywords = {Male author, Nigerian author}, author = {Osahon Ize-Iyamu}, editor = {Michael DeLuca and Danika Dinsmore and Mohammad Shafiqul Islam and Giselle Leeb and Johannes Punkt and Sakara Remmu and A{\"\i}cha Martine Thiam} } @booklet {10990, title = {"Negative Space"}, howpublished = {Futurescapes Volume Two: Blue Sky Cities}, volume = {2}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {33-52 with a note on the author on 32}, publisher = {Utah Valley Office of New Urban Mechanics \& Utah Valley University}, address = {[Orem, UT]}, abstract = {The story is set in a future China with extreme pollution but that has areas that under domes that are accessible to those with sufficient money or status and is building a city that is pollution free and in the open air. The protagonist is a fairly high-status functionary who is trying to quit smoking during a crackdown on smokers.\
}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author, Vietnam author}, isbn = {9781790982868}, author = {Max Knight}, editor = {Luke Peterson and Kenna Blacklock} } @booklet {10008, title = {"Owning Up To the Past"}, howpublished = {All We Ever Wanted: Stories of a Better World}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {135-42}, publisher = {A Wave Blue World}, address = {Np}, abstract = {A positive future story in comic form in which in a father takes a child living in the eutopia to see the horrors of the past.
A positive future story in comic form in which good relations between Earth and aliens are undermined by a rogue human but restored.
Rpt. in Transcendent 4: The Year\’s Best Transgender Speculative Fiction. Ed. Bogi Tak{\'a}cs (Amherst, MA: Lethe Press, 2019), 193-213, with a \“Content Note\” on 271.
}, month = {January 2018}, pages = {67-105 with {\textquotedblleft}An Author Interview{\textquotedblright} on 107-13}, abstract = {The journal issue is \“The Diverse Pronouns Issue,\” and the story is set in a country with forty-five pronouns and the struggle of an immigrant from a country with only nine to understand and be understood.\
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Non-binary author}, isbn = {9781590216767 }, author = {A. E. Prevost} } @booklet {10009, title = {"Seeds"}, howpublished = {All We Ever Wanted: Stories of a Better World}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {159-64}, publisher = {A Wave Blue World}, address = {Np}, abstract = {A positive future story in comic form in which a retired superhero has to be convinced his life was worthwhile.
A positive future story in comic form in which world peace has been achieved and famine and disease conquered. A project is developed to rescue from the past and bring them to the better future.
Rpt. https://reckoning.press/tiger/ (February 5, 2019).
}, month = {2018}, pages = {47-60}, publisher = {Reckoning Press}, address = {West Orion, MI}, abstract = {Environmental dystopia which most animals have disappeared.
The story is about corruption in a city that is transforming itself into a green city, corruption that hurts the farmers in the surrounding countryside.
A positive future story in comic form in which the military has created cassettes that allows a person to have a particular skill.
A positive future story in comic form in which an alien visiting Earth behaves as people know they should, and so they come to do so.
The story is set in a future where everyone uses bots and plastic surgery to change the way they look, including the protagonist who is a middle-aged male at work and a young woman at home.\
}, keywords = {Female author, Romanian author}, author = {Diana P{\u a}rp{\u a}ri{\c t}{\u a}}, editor = {David F. Shultz} } @booklet {9993, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Weight of Time{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {All We Ever Wanted: Stories of a Better World}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {1924}, publisher = {A Wave Blue World}, address = {Np}, abstract = {A positive future story in comic form in which a gay scientist proposes to go back in time to erase all the anti-gay religious texts but is convinced that he would also erase all the positive experiences that gays would have had.
The protagonist is a blind woman who uses Virtual Reality to see the world through the eyes of birds and uses the system of electronic referenda to try to protect them, which will end up protecting people also.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-0692879313 }, author = {Anjali Sachdeva}, editor = {Luke Peterson} } @booklet {10945, title = {"Blue Stratus"}, howpublished = {Futurescapes Volume One: Cities of Empowerment}, volume = {1}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {82-91}, publisher = {Utah Valley Office of New Urban Mechanics \& Utah Valley University}, address = {[Orem, UT]}, abstract = {The story is set in a future eutopian community with high rise urban farms, gardens, permaculture, and all of the desirable environmental design features that are currently possible.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-0692879313 }, author = {Amy Mrotek}, editor = {Luke Peterson} } @booklet {10572, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Books of the Risen Sea{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Asimov{\textquoteright}s Science Fiction}, volume = {41.9 \& 10 (500 \& 501) }, year = {2017}, month = {September/October 2017}, pages = {172-98}, abstract = {Climate change dystopia and the importance of saving books and of libraries.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {1065-6298 }, author = {Suzanne Palmer (b. 1968)} } @booklet {10751, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Brother{\textquoteright}s Keeper{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {The Obama Inheritance: Fifteen Stories of Conspiracy Noir}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {97-126}, publisher = {Three Rooms Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {The dystopia that has resulted by the time of the third Trump administration with little health care, all public services paid for individually as needed, with only the wealthy, for example, able to afford any emergency call at night. Many people escape into virtual reality.
A collection of stories set in a dystopian future in which part of California, called Cali, secedes from the country in order to establish a socialist state committed to diversity. Northern California and southern Oregon forms a new territory called Jefferson that may become a new state. The stories are \“A Matter of Honor\” by J. L. Curtis in which the U. S. Navy leaves San Diego and blows up its base as it does with the story continued in his ebook novella The Morning the Earth Shook. 69 pp. (2017). \“Last Plane Out\” by Bob Poole centers on the last plane to leave Los Angeles airport. \“Carpetbaggers\” by Cedar Sanderson focuses on carpetbaggers in Jefferson. \“Night Passage\” by Tom Rogneby begins in Cali, where all people are chipped, and continues with the escape of a couple. \“Roll, Colorado, Roll!\” by Alma [T. C.] Boykin in which The Colorado River is released into its original channel, cutting off water to Cali. \“Final Flight\” by B. Opperman is a story of escape from Cali. \“Freedom\’s Ride\” by L. B. Johnson is a story of escape from Cali. \“The Farm\” by Eaton Rapids Joe describes the authoritarian liberalism of Cali and the damage it does. \“By Hook and Crook\” by Lawdog [pseud.] is an escape story. In \“Fifth Column\” by Kimball O\’Hara the U. S. Navy returns. A graphic novel covering some of the same themes is Matteo Pizzolo, CALEXIT. Illus. Amancay Nahuelpan. Colorist Tyler Boss. Flatter Dee Cunniffe. Letterer Jim Campbell. Map designer Richard Nisa. Flag Designer Robert Anthony, Jr. Los Angeles, CA: Black Mask Studios, 2018. Originally published as CALEXit 1-3.\ There is an actual Calexit movement with different versions of what a separate California would look like and various positions of the opponents.\
}, keywords = {Female author, Male author, Maltese author, US author}, author = {J. L. Curtis and Bob Poole and Cedar Sanderson and Tom Rogneby and Alma [T. C.] Boykin and B. Opperman and L. B. Johnson and Eaton Rapids Joe and Lawdog [pseud.] and Kimball O{\textquoteright}Hara}, editor = {J. L. Curtis} } @booklet {9776, title = {"Control"}, howpublished = {Meanwhile, Elsewhere: Science Fiction and Fantasy from Transgender Writers}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {1-8}, publisher = {Topside Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {The story is set in a deeply divided dystopia, in one part of which the streets are clean and safe, heavily policed by both cameras supported by a police force. The cameras use face-recognition to identify everyone and evaluate them, giving them at actual score. The other part is collapsing and dangerous with no cameras and no police.\
}, keywords = {Transgender author, US author}, author = {Rachel K[atie] Zall}, editor = {Cat Fitzpatrick and Casey Plett} } @booklet {9784, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Control Shift Down{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Meanwhile, Elsewhere: Science Fiction and Fantasy from Transgender Writers}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {126-39}, publisher = {Topside Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {The story is set in a class-based, high-tech, authoritarian dystopia.\
}, keywords = {Transgender author}, author = {Paige Bryony}, editor = {Cat Fitzpatrick and Casey Plett} } @booklet {9488, title = {Crazy House}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, publisher = {Little Brown/Jimmy Patterson}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Young adult dystopia in which young girls are imprisoned, supposedly to test them to help overthrow an authoritarian system that divides people and controls information.\ . A sequel is The Fall of Crazy House. New York: Little Brown/Jimmy Patterson, 2019 in which the protagonists of the first novel fight the government and win.\
}, keywords = {Female author, Male author, US author}, author = {James [Brendan] Patterson (b. 1947) and Gabrielle Charbonnet (b. 1961)} } @booklet {9788, title = {"Cybervania"}, howpublished = {Meanwhile, Elsewhere: Science Fiction and Fantasy from Transgender Writers}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {200-24}, publisher = {Topside Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Violent dystopia set among people living in the junked material of the electronic age.\
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Transgender author}, author = {Sybil Lamb}, editor = {Cat Fitzpatrick and Casey Plett} } @booklet {9763, title = {"Desperate Resolve"}, howpublished = {More Alternative Truths: Stories From the Resistance}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {332-40}, publisher = {B Cubed Press}, address = {Benton City, WA}, abstract = {The story is set in West Virginia, which has been destroyed by current policies on the environment.
The flawed utopia of the completely connected world and, very briefly, choosing to disconnect.\
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Ramez Naam}, editor = {[Glen] David Brin (b. 1950) and Stephen W. Potts} } @booklet {10072, title = {"Elderjoy"}, howpublished = {Chasing Shadows: Visions of Our Coming Transparent World}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {191-95}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Humorous dystopia in which governmental implants register unhealthy activities and tax them. In the story, the \“unhealthy\” activity is sex over a certain age.
Rpt. in The Best Science Fiction \& Fantasy of the Year: Volume Twelve. Ed. Jonathan Strahan (Oxford, Eng.: Solaris, 2018), 113-30.
}, month = {2017}, pages = {271-85}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {The story is set in a future Vancouver that has been returned to First Nation peoples, who are technologically advanced but tension remaining with Canadian authorities and can be seen as an emerging eutopia with problems. Much of the focus is on a new currency that, by being given away, gains \“eminence\” for the giver, which, in the society, is more important than the money.\
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, isbn = {978-0765382580 978-1-78108-573-8}, author = {Karl Schroeder (b. 1962)}, editor = {[Glen] David Brin (b. 1950) and Stephen W. Potts} } @booklet {10060, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Eyejacked{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Chasing Shadows: Visions of Our Coming Transparent World}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {102-12}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {The story is set in a future in which an implant in the eye can be used to connect tom others and create followers, which produces income. Within the story a husband and wife disagree over the effect on their family is positive or negative.
Interactions through a computer game that connects people throughout the U. S. both brings about the spread and helps end a deadly disease.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Kaftan, Vylar}, editor = {Stephen W. Potts and [Glen] David Brin (b. 1950)} } @booklet {10947, title = {"Fire Wire"}, howpublished = {Futurescapes Volume One: Cities of Empowerment }, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {92-103}, publisher = {Utah Valley Office of New Urban Mechanics \& Utah Valley University}, address = {[Orem, UT]}, abstract = {The story is set in a future where, after worldwide fires, electric power must be generated by individuals and focuses on whether or not to build new power plants.\
}, keywords = {Female author, Latinx author, US author}, isbn = {978-0692879313 }, author = {Malka [Ann] Older (b. 1977)}, editor = {Luke Peterson} } @booklet {9407, title = {"Games Theory"}, howpublished = {Boundaries, Border Crossings, and Reinventing the Future }, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {61-75}, publisher = {Aqueduct Press}, address = {Seattle, WA}, abstract = {The story is about a multi-generation starship and the relations between the male, white scientists and engineers and the predominantly female, mixed race and ethnicity who are more arts and humanities oriented.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Beth [Ann] Plutchak (b. 1952)} } @booklet {9800, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Ghost in the Machine{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Compostela: Tesseracts Twenty}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {145-58}, publisher = {Compostela: Tesseracts Twenty}, address = {Calgary, AB, Canada}, abstract = {The story is set in a future that can be read as either eutopian or\ dystopian. It is presented as much better than the past in that war has disappeared, but the future is controlled through an AI. The DNA of boys is analyzed at birth and aggressive and religious features removed.\
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author}, author = {Susan Pieters}, editor = {Spider Robinson (b. 1948) and James Alan} } @booklet {10938, title = {"Happenstance"}, howpublished = {Futurescapes Volume One: Cities of Empowerment}, volume = {1}, year = {2017}, note = {Rpt. in Reckoning 4: Creative Writing on Environmental Justice (Lake Orion, MI: Reckoning Press, 2020), 73-100. Also published online at https://reckoning.press/happenstance/ (March 11, 2020).\
}, month = {2017}, pages = {73-100}, publisher = {Utah Valley Office of New Urban Mechanics \& Utah Valley University}, address = {[Orem, UT]}, abstract = {The story is set in a high-tech future in which a city can be constantly reconfigured to improve peoples\’ lives.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-0692879313 978-09989252-6-4}, author = {Fran Wilde (b. 1972)}, editor = {Luke Peterson} } @booklet {9339, title = {Humans, Bow Down}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, publisher = {Little, Brown}, address = {New York}, abstract = {A dystopia set in a future in which a war between humans and robots has been won by the robots and focuses on those who do not accept defeat.\
}, keywords = {Female author, Male author, US author}, author = {James [Brendan] Patterson (b. 1947) and Emily Raymond (b. 1972) and Jill Dombowski} } @booklet {10948, title = {"It Takes a Village"}, howpublished = {Futurescapes Volume One: Cities of Empowerment }, volume = {1}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {104-19}, publisher = {Utah Valley Office of New Urban Mechanics \& Utah Valley University}, address = {[Orem, UT]}, abstract = {The story is about the beginnings of a eutopia based on unarmed community policing told from the point of view of a policeman used to the old ways. An Unconditional Basic Income with additional amounts is linked to voting on the referenda that are part of what is called nanodemocracy or nanodem and appear regularly on individual eyepieces.\ One paragraph suggests that the military is also using some of the same tactics.
Rpt. in The Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy\™ 2018. Ed. N[ora] K. Jemisin (Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt/Mariner, 2018), 49-56.\
}, month = {January 2017}, pages = {EJournal}, abstract = {A man waiting to go before a judge in a criminal trial (he is guilty) dreams about a series of alternative justice systems, most of which seem preferable to the one is about to face.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-328-83456-0}, url = {http://clarkesworldmagazine.com/prell_01_17/ }, author = {Lettie Prell} } @booklet {10059, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Mine, Yours, Ours{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Chasing Shadows: Visions of Our Coming Transparent World}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {25-35}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Whether the story describes a eutopia or a dystopia is left up to the reader. The I.O.E. (International Organ Exchange) is symbolic of a society that sees everyone connected to everyone else. When you sign up for the I.O.E., you agree to give an organ when requested, and the protagonist is struggling over whether she should have a lung removed. If she doesn\’t, she will be expelled from the I.O.E. and ineligible for a future transplant.
The situation of the child in Ursula K. Le Guin\’s \“The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas (Variations on a Theme by William James)\” (1973) from the point-of-view of the child when, apparently, everyone has left.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {1065-6298 }, author = {Sarah Pinsker (b. 1977)} } @booklet {10459, title = {"The Oracle"}, howpublished = {Infinity Wars}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {155-66}, publisher = {Solaris}, address = {Oxford, Eng}, abstract = {Satire on U.S. politics in which a \“war of the month\” is instituted to gain support for the President.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Dominica Phetteplace}, editor = {Jonathan Strahan (b. 1964)} } @booklet {9701, title = {"Pinwheel Party"}, howpublished = {Alternative Truths}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {150-55}, publisher = {B Cubed Press}, address = {Benton City, WA}, abstract = {The beginning and the end of the story are brief depictions of the dystopia inflicted on the poor and immigrants by current policies. The middle is a drug-induced dream of a eutopia in which everyone works together to improve the U.S.
Rpt. in his Episodes: Short Stories (London: Gollancz, 2019), 292-320, with notes \“Before\” on what led him to write the story (289-91) and \“After\” on its publication and some reflections on it (321-22).
}, month = {2017}, pages = {285-317}, publisher = {Unsung Stories/Red Squirrel Publishing}, address = {London}, abstract = {Dystopia depicting a \“reality\” game that has taken over the entire society as seen through the eyes of someone working for the company producing the show. The stories are supposed to be predictions regarding the world fifty years after Orwell\’s Nineteen Eighty-Four, and Priest took his title from Orwell\’s \“Shooting the Elephant,\” a work that greatly influenced his own work.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, isbn = {9781907389580 978-1-4732000630 }, author = {Christopher [McKenzie] Priest (1943-2024)}, editor = {George Sandison} } @booklet {9496, title = {"Snow Decils"}, howpublished = {Persistent Visions}, year = {2017}, month = {January 27, 2017}, abstract = {Climate change dystopia in which it snows all year round in the North and the South has become crowded and dangerous.\
}, keywords = {Bisexual author, US author}, url = {https://persistentvisionsmag.com/fiction/snow-devils-charles-payseur}, author = {Charles Payseur} } @booklet {11385, title = {The Store}, year = {2017}, note = {U.K. ed. London: Random House Century, 2017. 259 pp. + 26 pp. excerpt from a forthcoming novel.
}, month = {2017}, pages = {259 pp. + 26 pp. excerpt from a forthcoming novel. }, publisher = {Little, Brown}, address = {New York}, abstract = {In the novel, one store takes over a country with surveillance cameras and tracking not just in the store but in the streets, buildings, and private homes, all reinforced but what is essentially a private army. The protagonist is struggling to reveal the truth about the store.In the novel, one store takes over a country with surveillance cameras and tracking not just in the store but in the streets, buildings, and private homes, all reinforced but what is essentially a private army. The protagonist is struggling to reveal the truth about the store.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {978-0-316-39545-8 9781780895345}, author = {James [Brendan] Patterson (b. 1947) and Richard DiLallo} } @booklet {10073, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Street Life in the Emerald City{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Chasing Shadows: Visions of Our Coming Transparent World}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {196-207}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Technology, including surveillance technology being used to end homelessness.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Brenda Cooper (b. 1951)}, editor = {[Glen] David Brin (b. 1950) and Stephen W. Potts} } @booklet {9532, title = {Trans Liberty Riot Brigade. Book 1}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, publisher = {Ninestar Press}, address = {Albuquerque, NM}, abstract = {Walled dystopia at war with all its neighbors and trying to control its population. Being transgender is illegal and a group transgender people struggle to survive and manage to escape at the end. First volume in a planned series.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {L[indsay] M. Pierce} } @booklet {11309, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Trash Goes in the Ground{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The Future Fire: Social Political \& Speculative Cyber-Fiction}, volume = {no. 43}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {4-7}, abstract = {Flash fiction set in a polluted future.
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author}, issn = {1746-1839}, url = {The Future Fire: 2017.43 fiction trash }, author = {Kelly Rose Pflug-Back} } @booklet {9377, title = {Want}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, publisher = {Simon Pulse}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Young adult dystopia set in a society in which the rich can afford protection against the damaged environment and the poor cannot.\
}, keywords = {Female author, Taiwanese author, US author}, author = {Cindy Pon (b. 1973)} } @booklet {10058, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Your Lying Eyes{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Chasing Shadows: Visions of Our Coming Transparent World}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {131-37}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {The story is about glasses that can detect lies. Whether a eutopia or dystopia is left up to the reader.
A dystopian future of corporate power and pervasive surveillance.
Climate-change dystopia in which half of The Netherlands has disappeared and the Dutch are building a New Amsterdam on an island they have built on the Australian coast.\
}, keywords = {Dutch author, Female author}, author = {Bo[ukje] Balder}, editor = {Trina Marie Phillips} } @booklet {9280, title = {Everything Belongs to the Future}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, pages = {116 pp.}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Dystopia of a world where the rich can get treatment that extends their lives while the poor die young.\
}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Laurie Penny (b. 1986)} } @booklet {11722, title = {Everything That Isn{\textquoteright}t Winter}, year = {2016}, note = {Rpt. in her We Won\’t Be Here Tomorrow and Other Stories (Chico, CA/Edinburgh, Scot.: AK Press, 2022), 88-105.
}, month = {2016}, publisher = {Tor.com}, address = {New York}, abstract = {The story is set in a post-apocalypse future Cascade mountains in what used to be the state of Washington. It focuses on a self-organized community growing tea that is attacked by a group trying to establish an authoritarian government to rebuild the old, bad system.
}, keywords = {Female author, Transgender author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-84935-475-2}, url = {https://www.tor.com/2016/10/19/231037/}, author = {Margaret Killjoy (b. 1982)}, editor = {Diana M. Pho} } @booklet {10745, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Girl, Blue Eyes, Boy{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {African Writer}, year = {2016}, note = {Rpt. in The Naked Convos - Original African Stories (March 6, 2017). http://thenakedconvos.com/girl-blue-eyes-boy/
}, month = {December 12, 2016}, abstract = {The story is set in Lagos, Nigeria in 3096, which is a high-tech city with Lagoonborg robots designed to help the elderly but becoming ubiquitous. Mars has been settled, and people are being Marsinalized so that they more easily adapt to conditions there. The story ends abruptly, and the author says he is considering a sequel.\
}, keywords = {Male author, Nigerian author}, url = {https://www.africanwriter.com/girl-blue-eyes-boy-fiction-marvel-chukwudi-pephel/.}, author = {Marvel Chukwudi Pephel} } @booklet {9286, title = {Learning to Speak Tiger"}, howpublished = {SciFutures presents The City of the Future}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, pages = {9-27 with a note about the author on 27-28}, publisher = {SciFutures}, address = {[Burbank, CA]}, abstract = {The story is set in a very high-tech future Hanoi with strong eutopian elements but with the technology largely integrated into daily life. The story is about a poor, young girl struggle to find her place.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Trina Marie Phillips}, editor = {Trina Marie Phillips} } @booklet {9287, title = {"Light Times"}, howpublished = {SciFutures presents The City of the Future}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, pages = {43-51 with a note about the author on 52}, publisher = {SciFutures}, address = {[Burbank, CA]}, abstract = {The story is set in Nigeria, which, after a devastating war, is recovering using high-tech and the help of the United Nations.\
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Ari Popper}, editor = {Trina Marie Phillips} } @booklet {9289, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Love in a Lonely City 2050"}, howpublished = {SciFutures presents The City of the Future}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, pages = {29-42 with a note about the author on 42}, publisher = {SciFutures}, address = {[Burbank, CA]}, abstract = {The story is set in a very high-tech future London with strong eutopian elements and is about how hard it still can be to find love.\
}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Deborah Walker}, editor = {Trina Marie Phillips} } @booklet {9515, title = {The Nethers: Frontiers of Hinterland}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, publisher = {Diversion Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Dystopia in sequel to 2014 Parker where the man from the earlier novel is sent to find scrap metal outside the Jonesbridge complex, and he and the woman finally escape after many adventures.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {M[itch] E. Parker} } @booklet {9568, title = {"The New Law"}, howpublished = {Dystopia Utopia Short Stories: An Anthology of New \& Classic Tales}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, pages = {310-14}, publisher = {Flame Tree Publishing}, address = {London}, abstract = {Dystopia of a totalitarian regime in which a new law allows a judge to misrepresent a decision to a defendant and senior party members to do whatever they want with anyone found guilty of a crime.
The story points out that things can still go wrong in a high-tech eutopia but high-tech can solve the problems. The utopia supposedly has no slums, gangs, or homeless, but the protagonist encounters a mugger who steals his watch to sell for its value in metal, but the city\’s connectedness means that he will be captured, and the watch recovered.
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author}, author = {Holly Schofield}, editor = {Trina Marie Phillips} } @booklet {8971, title = {"Project Empathy"}, howpublished = {Asimov{\textquoteright}s Science Fiction}, volume = {40.3 (482) }, year = {2016}, month = {March 2016}, pages = {46-59}, abstract = {The first of five stories about a future San Francisco and various ways artificial intelligence is used to both enhance and control people. The other stories, all with the same protagonists, are, in order, \“Project Synergy.\” Asimov\’s Science Fiction 40.4 \& 5 (483 \& 484) (April/May 2016): 70-82; \“Project Symmetry.\” Asimov\’s Science Fiction 40.6 (485) (June 2016): 42-56; \“Project Entropy.\” Asimov\’s Science Fiction 40.7 (486) (July 2016): 40-57; and \“Project Extropy.\” Asimov\’s Science Fiction 40.10 \& 11 (489 \& 490) (October/November 2016): 124-39.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {1065-6298 }, author = {Dominica Phetteplace} } @booklet {10332, title = {Quarantine Zone}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, publisher = {DC Comics}, address = {Burbank, CA}, abstract = {In the future, scientists discover that evil is caused by a virus that can be easily eliminated in most people. The incurables are rounded up, forced into a Quarantine Zone, and kept there by a Quarantine Force.\
}, keywords = {Male author, Native American author}, author = {Daniel H[oward] Wilson (b. 1978)}, editor = {Bobbie Chase and Sara Miller} } @booklet {11067, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Sooner or Later Everything Falls into the Sea{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Lightspeed}, volume = {no. 69}, year = {2016}, note = {Rpt. in her Sooner or Later Everything Falls into the Sea. Stories (Easthampton, MA: Small Beer Press, 2019), 33-56.\
}, month = {February 2016}, pages = {EJournal}, abstract = {The story is set in a climate change dystopia in which there is little land left and the wealthy life on cruise ships.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {9781618731562}, url = {https://www.lightspeedmagazine.com/fiction/sooner-or-later-everything-falls-into-the-sea/ }, author = {Sarah Pinsker (b. 1977)} } @booklet {8794, title = {Too Like the Lightning. Terra Ignota, Book I}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, pages = {432 pp.}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {A complex novel set in a 25th century technological flawed utopia. Abundance. Much on gender roles. The public practice of religion has been outlawed. Most people belong to world clans that are economic entities in competition with other clans. First volume in a series. The second volume is Seven Surrenders: Terra Ignota, Book II. New York: Tor, 2017. 384 pp. in which certain groups have conspired to maintain stability on the planet through selective murders. The third volume is The Will to Battle: Terra Incognita, Book III. New York: Tor, 2017. 352 pp. in which the utopia has collapsed and turned into a dystopia. The fourth volume is Perhaps the Stars: Terra Ignota, Book IV. New York: Tor, 2021. 593 pp. where war breaks out with devastating consequences, but at the end a better world is slowly being rebuilt. The series has explicitly utopian threads throughout. See https://irradiate.space/worldbuilding/notes-on-oaths-and-laws-from-terra-ignota/utopia/ for the Utopian Oath from volume one.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-0-7653-7801-9 978-0-7653-7803-3 978-0-7653-7805-7 978-0-7653-7807-1 }, author = {Ada [Louise Grace] Palmer (b. 1981)} } @booklet {10592, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Watching the Watchers{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Thirty Years of Rain}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, pages = {60-69}, publisher = {Taverna Press}, address = {Glasgow, Scotland}, abstract = {An odd satire about a future society that has many of the appearances of a dystopia but could be considered a eutopia. The ruling party is the \“Party in Favour Of Helping People To Do What They Like, As Long As They Don\’t Hurt Anyone (And Don\’t Take Too Many Sickies)\” and the state-sponsored newspaper is The Daily Propaganda: Don\’t believe everything you read just because it looks official.\
}, keywords = {Female author, Scottish author}, author = {Anya Penfold}, editor = {Elaine Gallagher and Cameron Johnston and Neil Williamson (b. 1968)} } @booklet {8657, title = {"Wellesley Girl"}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, publisher = {Unpublished play}, abstract = {Dystopia set in 2465 in which the few Americans left have barricaded in Wellesley, Massachusetts to protect themselves from the army from Texas that is outside. See the review in The New York Times (April 12, 2016), C2.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Brendan Pelsue} } @booklet {8649, title = {Arcadia}, year = {2015}, note = {U.S. ed. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2015
}, month = {2015}, pages = {510 pp.}, publisher = {Faber and Faber}, address = {London}, abstract = {The novel follows a number of different characters during the present and a dystopian future where much of world civilization has collapsed. Connected to these is the Arcadia, which has the feel of the past but initially exists only within a machine from the dystopian future.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Iain [George] Pears (b. 1955)} } @booklet {8145, title = {Ash: A Destined Novel}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, publisher = {Polis Books}, address = {[Hoboken, NJ]}, abstract = {Young adult dystopia in which every person\’s destiny is determined by the government. First volume in a series. In this volume the contrast is set between those chosen for the top and the Ash, chosen for the bottom. The second volume, Ultraviolet: A Destined Novel. [Hoboken, NJ]: Polis Books, 2017, is what appears to be a middle volume in which the two struggle to survive.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Shani Petroff and Darci Manley} } @booklet {8851, title = {At the Beginning: This is the Way It Was}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, publisher = {CreateSpace}, address = {North Charleston, SC}, abstract = {New Age eutopia that will be brought about by the Brotherhood of the New Light, descended from Atlantis and Lemuria.
}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Adrienne Behren Pollock} } @booklet {9475, title = {The Beautiful Bureaucrat. A Novel}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, publisher = {Henry Holt}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Kafkaesque take on a dystopian bureaucracy in a damaged future.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Helen Phillips (b. 1983)} } @booklet {8962, title = {"Blood-Kin"}, howpublished = {Gifts of Darkover. Darkover{\textregistered} Anthology 15}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, pages = {62-86 with an editors{\textquoteright} note on 62}, publisher = {The Marion Zimmer Bradley Literary Trust Works,}, address = {San Francisco, CA}, abstract = {Free Amazon story.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Diana L. Paxson (b. 1943)}, editor = {Deborah J. Ross} } @booklet {8233, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Children Who Fly{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Octavia{\textquoteright}s Brood: Science Fiction Stories from Social Justice Movements}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, pages = {249-53}, publisher = {AK Press and the Institute for Anarchist Studies}, address = {Oakland, CA}, abstract = {Climate-warming dystopia with LSBT themes.
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author, US author}, author = {Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha (b. 1975)}, editor = {Walidah Imarisha and adrienne maree brown (b. 1978)} } @booklet {9262, title = {"Interchange"}, howpublished = {Pedal Zombies: Thirteen Feminist Bicycle Science Fiction Stories}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, pages = {98-110}, publisher = {Elly Blue Publishing}, address = {Portland, OR}, abstract = {Post-catastrophe (Zombies) dystopia of a largely abandoned U.S. where people can transport themselves to other parts of the world to work. The story focuses on a meeting of two women in these circumstances.
Emotional life in a feminist utopia.
}, keywords = {Asian-American author, Female author}, author = {Suey Park}, editor = {Alexandra Brodsky and Rachel Kauder Nalebuff} } @booklet {9587, title = {The Island of Lost Girls}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, publisher = {Hachette, India}, address = {Gurgaon, India}, abstract = {Sequel to 2008 Padmanabhan in which the girl and her father hve escaped India and live of the Island of Lost Girls, where they are having difficulties adapting to the modern world and the girl is having to learn what it means to be a woman.
}, keywords = {Female author, Indian author}, author = {Manjula Padmanabhan (b. 1953)} } @booklet {9127, title = {Keep Mars Weird}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, publisher = {47 North}, address = {Seattle, WA}, abstract = {The novel opens in an egalitarian eutopia on Earth in which everyone has \“Enough,\” but young men are bored and travel to an extremely inegalitarian Mars.
Rpt. in her Sooner or Later Everything Falls into the Sea. Stories (Easthampton, MA: Small Beer Press, 2019), 169-209.
}, month = {June 2015}, pages = {84-105}, abstract = {The first in a series of stories related to 2019 Pinsker, A Song for a New Day. In this story, the protagonists, a touring rock band, is trying to survive in a future in which there are no large venues and people life isolated lives. The other stories are \“A Song Transmuted.\” Illus. Aaron Lovett and Joshua Viola. Cyber World: Tales of Humanity\’s Tomorrow. Ed. Jason Heller and Joshua Viola (Erie, CO: Hex Publishers 2016), 151-60; rpt. in Sunspot Jungle: The Ever-Expanding Universe of Science Fiction and Fantasy [the cover adds Volume One]. Ed. Bill Campbell (Greenbelt, MD: Rosarium, 2018), 35-42; and \“Everything Is Closed Today.\” Do Not Go Quietly: An Anthology of Defiance in Victory. Ed. Lesley Conner and Jason Sizemore (Lexington, KY: Apex Publications, 2019), 149-74; rpt. in her Lost Places. Stories (Easthampton, MA: Small Beer Press, 2023), 79-102.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {9781618731562}, issn = {1065-6298 }, author = {Sarah Pinsker (b. 1977)} } @booklet {8827, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Stripped to Zero: Someone to watch over you{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Nature}, volume = {524.7563 }, year = {2015}, month = {August 6, 2015}, pages = {130}, abstract = {Dystopia of an over-automated future.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Stephen S. Power} } @booklet {8110, title = {ACID}, year = {2014}, month = {2014}, publisher = {Delacorte Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Authoritarian dystopia based on a violent police force known as ACID or the Agency for Crime Investigation and Defence.
}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Emma Pass} } @booklet {9446, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Beekeeper{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Isthmus (Seattle, WA)}, volume = {no. 2}, year = {2014}, note = {Rpt. in her\ Some Possible Solutions\ (New York: Henry Holt \& Co., 2016), 163-83.\
}, month = {Fall/Winter 2014}, pages = {3-13}, abstract = {A somewhat vague dystopia with a domed city cut off from the countryside, with both the city-dwellers and those living in the countryside afraid of the other.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Helen Phillips (b. 1983)} } @booklet {8172, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Evanda{\textquoteright}s Mirror{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Stars of Darkover. Darkover{\textregistered} Anthology 14}, year = {2014}, month = {2014}, pages = {195-215 with an editors{\textquoteright} note on 216}, publisher = {The Marion Zimmer Bradley Literary Trust Works}, address = {San Francisco, CA}, abstract = {Free Amazon story.
}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Diana L. Paxson (b. 1943)}, editor = {Deborah J[ean] Ross and Elisabeth Waters} } @booklet {9514, title = {Jonesbridge: Echoes of Hinterland}, year = {2014}, month = {2014}, publisher = {Diversion Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Dystopia. The Jonesbridge Industrial Complex is on an island and its workers are all prisoners. The novel focuses on the attempt by a man and a woman to escape. See also 2016 Parker.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {M[itch] E. Parker} } @booklet {8658, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Lights On Water{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The Short Anthology: Fiction From Photography. The First Issue}, year = {2014}, note = {Rpt. in his A Killing in the Sun (Yeoville, Johannesburg, South Africa: Black Letter Media, 2014), 86-106.
}, month = {[2014]}, pages = {33-52}, publisher = {Ptd. by Ditto Press}, address = {Np}, abstract = {Authoritarian dystopia in which everyone lives in an enclosed city. The protagonist, an artist, is given permission to go outside to paint and uses the opportunity to create a subversive work showing his daughter happily swimming with other happy people.
}, keywords = {Male author, Ugandan author}, author = {Dilman Dila (b. 1977)}, editor = {Will Martin and Kat Phan} } @booklet {11669, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Lost Emotion{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Arc. 2.1 Exit Strategies}, volume = {2.1}, year = {2014}, month = {January 2014}, abstract = {Corporate ownership of emotions, which they use primarily in advertising.
}, keywords = {Male author}, issn = {2049-5870}, author = {Adrian Ellis}, editor = {Sumit Paul-Choudhury} } @booklet {10652, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Palestinian Sweets{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {La Femme}, year = {2014}, month = {2014}, pages = {9-35}, publisher = {New Con Press}, address = {[Weston], England}, abstract = {A very odd story in which London is divided into areas dominated by competing religions, with the areas demarcated by smell.\
}, keywords = {Male author, Welsh author}, author = {Stephen Palmer (b. 1962)}, editor = {Ian [George] Whates (b. 1959)} } @booklet {8111, title = {The Scavengers}, year = {2014}, month = {2014}, publisher = {Harper}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Young adult dystopia in which a family escapes an authoritarian environment into a dangerous outside where they live mostly by scavenging in abandoned junk heaps. While, by the end of the novel, the family is able to return to a reformed civilization, the young, female protagonist prefers the outside.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Michael Perry (b. 1964)} } @booklet {8109, title = {Sherwood Nation. A Novel}, year = {2014}, month = {2014}, publisher = {Small Beer Press}, address = {Easthampton, MA}, abstract = {The novel presents the rise of a small eutopian community within the confines of a future dystopian Portland, Oregon, which has been experiencing a long drought. The novel ends with a one-page ad for a nonexistence book on the history of Sherwood Nation by two of the main characters.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Benjamin [I.] Parzybok (b. 1970)} } @booklet {9473, title = {The Adjacent}, year = {2013}, note = {Rpt. London: Titan Books, 2014.\
}, month = {2013}, publisher = {Orion}, address = {London}, abstract = {The complex novel operates on a number of different timelines, but it begins in a near-future dystopia of the Islamic Republic of Great Britain.
Young adult dystopia in which a family joins an underground religious community with a charismatic leader to escape from the world\’s problems.\ \ First volume of a series followed by\ Astray. New York: Random House Books for Young Readers, 2014\ in which the protagonist from\ Gated\ has left the community, which is trying to get her back.\ No further volumes have been published.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Amy Christine Parker} } @booklet {10760, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Hhsaslin{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction}, volume = {125.3\&4 (709) }, year = {2013}, note = {Rpt. in her All Worlds Are Real: Short Fictions (Bonney Lake, WA: Fairwood Press, 2019), 77-101, with an author\’s note on 76.
}, month = {September-October 2013}, pages = {5-27}, abstract = {A dystopian allegory on \“systemic oppression, genocide, and colonialism\” (76).\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {00024-984X }, author = {Susan Palwick (b. 1961)} } @booklet {8313, title = {Looking Toward Eden}, year = {2013}, month = {2013}, publisher = {CreateSpace}, address = {[North Charleston, SC]}, abstract = {Dystopia and an emerging eutopia. As the U.S. faces collapse as a result of liberal policies, a successful secessionist movement develops in the central U.S. which intends to institute conservative policies and return to the U.S. Constitution.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Pellman, Terry} } @booklet {8788, title = {"A Season"}, howpublished = {Looking Landwards: Stories Commemorating the 75th Anniversary of the Institute of Agricultural Engineers}, year = {2013}, note = {Rpt. in\ Digital Dreams: A Decade of Science Fiction by Women. Ed. Ian Whates ([England]: NewCon Press, 2016). EBook.\
}, month = {2013}, pages = {243-53}, publisher = {NewCon Press}, address = {[Weston, Eng]}, abstract = {The story is about a man trying to save his land in a near-future dystopia of climate change and rapacious industrial agriculture.
}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Rebecca J. Payne}, editor = {Ian [George] Whates (b. 1959)} } @booklet {8319, title = {{\textquotedblleft}That the Machine May Progress Eternally{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Rags \& Bones: New Twists on Timeless Tales}, year = {2013}, month = {2013}, pages = {1-27}, publisher = {Little, Brown}, address = {New York}, abstract = {A story inspired by 1909 Forster, \“The Machine Stops,\” in which a boy makes contact with the outside but will not leave the Underneath even when the machine stops
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Carrie Ryan (b. 1978)}, editor = {Melissa Marr and Tim[othy Aaron] Pratt (b. 1976)} } @booklet {8314, title = {Through Many Fires: Strengthen What Remains}, volume = {2nd ed. No evidence of an earlier ed.}, year = {2013}, month = {2013}, publisher = {Camden Cascade Publishing}, address = {Np}, abstract = {The dystopia created when a nuclear bomb is detonated in Washington, DC and then in other cities.\ First volume of a series followed by\ A Time To Endure.\ Strengthen What Remains Book Two. Np: Camden Cascade Publishing, 2014, which is a survivalist dystopia with the threat of civil war;\ and\ Braving the Storms. Strengthen What Remains Book Three. 3rd\ ed. [no indication of earlier eds.]. Np: Camden Cascade Publishing, 2015 in which a flu epidemic strikes the country.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Kyle Pratt} } @booklet {8344, title = {Agenda 21}, year = {2012}, month = {2012}, publisher = {Threshold Editions--Mercury Radio Arts}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Dystopia in which the United Nations has taken over the U.S. and enslaved its citizens. An \“Afterword\” (279-95) has additional information regarding Agenda 21 and includes references to buttress the contentions of the novel. For the 1998 Agenda 21, see https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/content/documents/Agenda21.pdf.\
}, keywords = {Female author, Male author, US author}, author = {Glenn [Edward Lee] Beck (b. 1964) and Harriet Parker} } @booklet {11405, title = {{\textquotedblleft}All Your Futures{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Arc 1.3 Afterparty Overdrive}, volume = {1.3}, year = {2012}, note = {A podcast with the title as \“All Your Futures Are Belong To Us\” can be found on StarShipSofa, no. 480 (April 4, 2017). http://www.starshipsofa.com/blog/2017/04/04/starshipsofa-no-480-david-gullen/ With that title it can be read on the author\’s website at https://davidgullen.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/Free-Fiction-All-Your-Futures-Are-Belong-To-Us.pdf and in his Open Waters. EXAGGERATEDpress, 2013. Not found. Not in the 2009 edition of Open Waters.
}, month = {September 23, 2012}, pages = {EJournal}, abstract = {The story is set in a future eutopia with no government. Major decisions are made collectively through a device that everyone wears for regular interactions that can be used for discussion and decision-making. The story concerns the arrival of a spaceship that had left Earth before the technology was developed that allowed much faster travel and what to do with it and its one surviving crew member.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author, South African author}, issn = {2049-5870}, author = {David Gullen}, editor = {Sumit Paul-Choudhury} } @booklet {9116, title = {Foundlings}, howpublished = {Brave New Love: 15 Dystopian Tales of Desire}, year = {2012}, month = {2012}, pages = {209-35}, publisher = {Robinson/RP Teens}, address = {London/Philadelphia, PA}, abstract = {Dystopia in which a concern for unborn children has led to an authoritarian program to monitor all girls who might get pregnant and control of them if they did.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Diana Peterfreund (b. 1979)}, editor = {Paula Guran} } @booklet {8373, title = {"Reunion"}, howpublished = {After: Nineteen Stories of Apocalypse and Dystopia}, year = {2012}, month = {2012}, pages = {135-65}, abstract = {A dystopia in which soldiers systematically took selected children from their homes to be adopted, killed, or enslaved. The story focuses on the search for one of the children.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Susan Beth Pfeffer (b. 1948)}, editor = {Ellen Datlow and Windling, Terri} } @booklet {10989, title = {Starters}, year = {2012}, month = {2012}, pages = {337 pp.}, publisher = {Delacorte Press/Random House Children{\textquoteright}s Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {First of two volumes of a young adult dystopia set after a biological weapon kills everyone between twenty and sixty, with the younger people called Starters and the older ones known as Enders. The young people struggle to survive, and the protagonist learns of a way of earning money by allowing an Ender to temporarily inhabit her body. A malfunction has her inhabiting an Enders body where she learns of the corruption in the system In the sequel, Enders New York: Delacorte Press/Random House Children\’s Books, 2014, she retains memories from the Enders who had inhabited her body and are trying to use her for their own purposes.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-0385-74237-5}, author = {Lissa Price} } @booklet {6551, title = {"Tangerine, Nectarine, Clementine, Apocalypse"}, howpublished = {Interzone}, volume = { no. 239}, year = {2012}, month = {March-April 2012}, pages = {18-27}, abstract = {Flawed utopia seen through the eyes of a boy who believed its myths until he discovered the flaws.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Suzanne Palmer (b. 1968)} } @booklet {11406, title = {"We Can Do This"}, howpublished = {Arc 1.4: Forever Alone Drone}, volume = {1.4}, year = {2012}, month = {December 5, 2012}, pages = {EJournal}, abstract = {The background to the story is a high-tech New York City that has solved the environmental problems, provides for the homeless, and can cure most diseases, but it focuses on the issues that develop when someone put in suspension because her brain tumor could not be cured is cured and brought out of suspension thirty-five years later.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {2039-5870}, author = {Nancy [Anne Koningisor] Kress (b. 1948)}, editor = {Sumit Paul-Choudhury} } @booklet {6492, title = {"The Ceiling is Sky"}, howpublished = {Interzone}, volume = {no. 234 }, year = {2011}, month = {May-June 2011}, pages = {14-23}, abstract = {Dystopia of a future Earth with extreme poverty and very high unemployment, with most people working short term contracts.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Suzanne Palmer (b. 1968)} } @booklet {6495, title = {The Leftovers}, year = {2011}, month = {2011}, publisher = {St. Martin{\textquoteright}s Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Life after the Rapture (see 1 Corinthians 15:52\ and\ 1 Thessalonians 4: 15-17) with some struggling to create a good society, various religious fanatics, and some of the expected dystopia.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Tom [Thomas R.] Perrotta (b. 1961)} } @booklet {6494, title = {Nine-Tenths}, year = {2011}, month = {2011}, publisher = {Author}, address = {Np}, abstract = {An authoritarian dystopia contrasted with a better alternative, an enclave that is only briefly described and that remains under threat from the dystopia. The conceit of the novel is that a momentary decision can completely change history.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Meira Pentermann} } @booklet {10549, title = {"Acception"}, howpublished = {Baggage}, year = {2010}, note = {Rpt. in The Year\’s Best Australian Fantasy and Horror. Ed. Liz Grzb and Talie Helene (Greenwood, WA, Australia: Ticonderoga Publications, 2011), 141-70; in Baggage: Tales of Speculative Fiction. Ed. Gillian Polack (Holicong, PA:\ Borgo Press/Wildside Press, 2014), 121-53, with an \“Afterword\” on 223-24; and in Sunspot Jungle: The Ever-Expanding Universe of Science Fiction and Fantasy [the cover adds Volume One]. Ed. Bill Campbell (Greenbelt, MD: Rosarium, 2019), 460-86.
}, month = {2010}, publisher = {Eneit Press}, address = {Culcairn, NSW, Australia}, abstract = {Dystopia in which a government agency determining where people can live based on their ethnicity. All those with mixed ethnicity are relegated to what is, in effect, a concentration camp. Much of the story is about the uprising to overthrow the system.
}, keywords = {Australian author, Female author}, author = {Tessa Kum (b. 1981)}, editor = {Gillian Polack} } @booklet {6364, title = {Edge of Apocalypse}, year = {2010}, month = {2010}, publisher = {Zonderavan}, address = {Grand Rapids, MI}, abstract = {Dystopia The first volume of a series on the events leading up the apocalypse. Sequels include\ Thunder of Heaven. The End Series. Book 2. Grand Rapids, MI: Zonderavan, 2011;\ Brink of Chaos. The End Series.Book 3. Grand Rapids, MI: Zonderavan, 2012; and\ Mark of Evil. The End Series. Book 4. Grand Rapids, MI: Zonderavan, 2014.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Tim[othy Framcis] LaHaye (1926-2016) and Craig Parshall} } @booklet {9070, title = {Epitaph Road}, year = {2010}, month = {2010}, publisher = {Egmont USA}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Young adult dystopia set near the end of the twenty-first century where most men died from an illness and the women have eliminated crime and poverty while severely restricting the remaining men. The novel focuses on a young boy trying to save his father.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {David Patneaude (b. 1944)} } @booklet {6388, title = {"Jackie{\textquoteright}s Boy"}, howpublished = {Asimov{\textquoteright}s Science Fiction }, volume = {34.4 \& 5 (411/412) }, year = {2010}, month = {April/May 2010}, pages = {144-80}, abstract = {Dystopia of a collapsed and extremely violent U.S. where animals from zoos have escaped and are slowing making a place for themselves. The story focuses on a boy and talking elephants.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {1065-6298}, author = {Steve[n Earl] Popkes (b. 1955)} } @booklet {8631, title = {The New Millennium}, year = {2010}, month = {2010}, publisher = {Xlibris}, address = {[Bloomington, IN]}, abstract = {Authoritarian dystopia but with the emphasis on the opposition to it.
}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Dennis Pimm} } @booklet {6386, title = {"Personal Jesus"}, howpublished = {Dark Futures}, year = {2010}, month = {2010}, pages = {40-43}, publisher = {Dark Quest Books}, address = {Howell, NJ}, abstract = {Dystopia. The Ecclesiastical States of America includes all of the former U.S. except California and New England. It enforces its fundamentalist morality by requiring everyone to wear a mechanical \"Personal Jesus\" that responds to wrong actions with a shock and informs the authorities if the behavior continues.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Pelland, Jennifer}, editor = {Jason Sizemore} } @booklet {6387, title = {Rut. A Novel}, year = {2010}, month = {2010}, publisher = {Concord Free Press}, address = {Concord, MA}, abstract = {Post-catastrophe dystopia with extensive damage to the environment and continuing warfare.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Scott Phillips (b. 1961)} } @booklet {6378, title = {"Sin{\textquoteright}s Last Stand"}, howpublished = {Dead Neon: Tales of Near-Future Las Vegas}, year = {2010}, month = {2010}, pages = {1-12}, publisher = {University of Las Vegas Press}, address = {Reno, NV}, abstract = {Dystopia in which fundamentalist Christians have taken other the US, established a theocracy, closed all schools, and burned all books except the Bible. Non-believers have been moved to Las Vegas\ and\ then\ massacred. The story focuses on a girl who survived the massacre.
}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Chris Niles}, editor = {Todd James Pierce and Jarret Keene} } @booklet {6383, title = {Urbis Morpheos}, year = {2010}, month = {2010}, publisher = {PS Publishing}, address = {Hornsea, Eng.}, abstract = {Dystopia in which two ecosystems appear to be in conflict, one natural and the other manufactured. Throughout the novel the latter is dominant and the natural exists only in enclaves.
}, keywords = {Male author, Welsh author}, author = {Stephen Palmer (b. 1962)} } @booklet {6384, title = {Utopia for the Devil}, year = {2010}, note = {2nd ed. without the subtitle on the cover. Np: Author, 2011.
}, month = {2010}, publisher = {Author}, address = {Np}, abstract = {An apparent eutopia is actually an authoritarian dystopia that appears to have been defeated at the end of the novel. In the sequel\ Utopia for the Devil: New\ Dawn. Np: Author, 2011, the dystopia remains and must be again defeated, which appears to have occurred by the end of the novel. According to a March 25, 2013, post on the author\’s website, a complete rewriting of the two volumes, to be called\ Phantom Eden, is nearing completion.\
}, keywords = {Male author, UK author}, author = {James Parkes} } @booklet {6244, title = {"Blond Curls"}, howpublished = {Masques}, year = {2009}, month = {2009}, pages = {247-55}, publisher = {CSFG Publishing}, address = {Woden, ACT, Australia}, abstract = {Authoritarian dystopia. Police with flawed technology misidentify a suspect and have the power to completely undo her life.
}, keywords = {Australian author, Female author}, author = {Nicole R. Murphy}, editor = {Gillian Polack and Scott Hopkins} } @booklet {6255, title = {The Bradbury Report. A Novel}, year = {2009}, month = {2009}, publisher = {Weinstein Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Dystopia. A future U.S. where most people have a clone for use in medical care. The clones are kept in Clearances, areas of the U.S. that have been cleared of their previous residences, such as the Dakotas. The novel is about a man whose clone wanders off a Clearance and his attempts to save it from being captured and killed.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Steven Polansky} } @booklet {6251, title = {"Lost in sun and silence: The Golden Age of Communications"}, howpublished = {Nature }, volume = {457.7233 }, year = {2009}, month = {February 26, 2009}, pages = {1174}, abstract = {Dystopia. In a world of constant connectivity, a man tries to escape to silence.
}, keywords = {Italian author, Male author}, author = {Vincenzo Palermo} } @booklet {8633, title = {Lunar Braceros 2125-2148}, year = {2009}, month = {2009}, publisher = {Calaca Press}, address = {National City, CA}, abstract = {Dystopia in which the U.S. has fragmented, and the parts are under corporate control. The poor and minorities are held in enclosed reservations with some sent to the moon to help bury nuclear and toxic waste because there is no longer space on Earth. The novel follows one family on Earth and on the moon.
}, keywords = {Chicana author}, author = {Rosaura S{\'a}nchez and Pita, Beatrice} } @booklet {6272, title = {"Seventeen"}, howpublished = {Masques}, year = {2009}, month = {2009}, pages = {129-42}, publisher = {CSFG Publishing}, address = {Woden, ACT, Australia}, abstract = {Dystopia in which there are deep division between rich and poor with a focus on care for the elderly. The protagonist is a girl whose job is to pretend to be the daughter of an old woman, in which role she leads a good life, and gives some meaning to the old woman\’s life. Outside the retirement community the girl is homeless in a violent world.
}, keywords = {Australian author, Female author}, author = {Cat[riona] Sparks (b. 1965)}, editor = {Gillian Polack and Scott Hopkins} } @booklet {6252, title = {Tomas}, year = {2009}, month = {2009}, publisher = {Quartet}, address = {London}, abstract = {Dystopian satire. Tomas = There\&$\#$39;s Only Money and Sex. Much fantasy. The dominant media network is SHIT-TV, and life is a meaningless round of false pleasure. On the French Riviera, women have such large breasts that they have to support them on mobile trolleys. Extreme corruption. Violence. A time machine hidden in a fairground allows visits to the near and far future. The protagonist, Tomas, is something of a Messiah bent on changing this world.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {James [Rudolph] Palumbo (b. 1963)} } @booklet {6889, title = {Turban Tan}, year = {2009}, month = {[2009]}, publisher = {CreateSpace}, address = {[Scotts Valley, CA]}, abstract = {Corporate dystopia.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Jeff Philips} } @booklet {6254, title = {The War after Armageddon}, year = {2009}, month = {2009}, publisher = {Forge Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Dystopia. After jihadist nuclear attacks on Europe all Muslims are murdered or expelled. The State of Israel is destroyed. A Holy War between Christianity and Islam follows with all Muslims in the world killed. The U.S. becomes a right-wing Christian dictatorship. Most of the novel is on the war.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Ralph Peters} } @booklet {6253, title = {The Witch and the Wizard}, year = {2009}, month = {2009}, publisher = {Little Brown}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Young adult dystopia of a modern-day witch hunt. Sequels include Patterson and Ned Rust. Witch \& Wizard: The Gift. New York: Little, Brown, 2010 which focuses on the resistance to the dystopia; Patterson and Jill Dembowski. Witch \& Wizard: The Fire. Little, Brown, 2011, which focuses on the dystopia; Patterson and Jill Dembowski. Witch \& Wizard: The Kiss. New York: Little, Brown, 2013; and Patterson and Emily Raymond. Witch \& Wizard: The Lost. New York: Little, Brown, 2014.\
}, keywords = {Female author, Male author, US author}, author = {James [Brendan] Patterson (b. 1947) and Gabrielle Charbonnet (b. 1961)} } @booklet {6128, title = {Bad Faith}, year = {2008}, month = {2008}, publisher = {Strident Publishing}, address = {East Kilbridge, Scot.}, abstract = {Religious dystopia from the point of view of a teenage girl.
}, keywords = {Male author, Scottish author}, author = {Philip, Gillian} } @booklet {6127, title = {Escape}, year = {2008}, month = {2008}, publisher = {Picador}, address = {New Delhi, India}, abstract = {Feminist dystopia of a world with no females and the difficulties of the one girl born.\ See 2015 Padmanabhan for a sequel.\
}, keywords = {Female author, Indian author}, author = {Manjula Padmanabhan (b. 1953)} } @booklet {6166, title = {"Ghost Jail"}, howpublished = {2012}, year = {2008}, month = {2008}, pages = {70-86}, publisher = {Twelfth Planet Press}, address = {Yokine, WA, Australia}, abstract = {Largely a horror story, but it is set in an authoritarian dystopia aiming to control all speech.
}, keywords = {Australian author, Female author}, author = {Kaaron Warren (b. 1965)}, editor = {Alisa Krasnostein and Ben Payne} } @booklet {6129, title = {Shark Hunting in Paradise Garden}, year = {2008}, month = {2008}, publisher = {Eraserhead Press}, address = {Portland, OR}, abstract = {Satire in the Bizarro mode on the Garden of Eden, which is visited by religious fanatics from the future who find that it is nothing like they expected.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Cameron Pierce (b. 1988)} } @booklet {6062, title = {"Soft Viscosity"}, howpublished = {2012}, year = {2008}, month = {2008}, pages = {31-52}, publisher = {Twelfth Planet Press}, address = {Yokine, WA, Australia}, abstract = {Dystopia that oil companies and the U.S. create to be able to build pipelines in the indigenous areas of Ecuador.
}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {David Conyers (b. 1971)}, editor = {Alisa Krasnostein and Ben Payne} } @booklet {5979, title = {Black Sheep. {\textquoteright}A Dystopian Novel{\textquoteright}}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, publisher = {Prime Books}, address = {[Rockville, MD]}, abstract = {Dystopia of ethnic separation set in Sydney, Australia, where the African, Asian, and Caucasian communities are physically separated, and multiculturalism is a crime.
}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Ben [Michael] Peek (b. 1976)} } @booklet {6002, title = {"(Coping With) Norm Deviation"}, howpublished = {Tesseracts Eleven}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, pages = {296-312}, publisher = {Edge Science Fiction and Fantasy}, address = {Calgary, AL, Canada}, abstract = {Dystopia that is the story of a film being made. The dystopia focuses on the elimination of people who deviate from the norm.
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {Hugh A[lan] D[ouglas] Spencer}, editor = {Cory [Efram] Doctorow (b. 1971) and Holly Phillips (b. 1969)} } @booklet {6021, title = {Greentopia: Towards a Sustainable Toronto}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, publisher = {Coach House Books}, address = {Toronto, ON, Canada}, abstract = {A collection of forty-three mostly short essays; the third volume presenting a future Toronto plus a \“DirecTOry\” of sources for environmentally friendly sources and activities (261-316). The \“TOmorrow\” section (203-59) is less explicitly utopian than that in the first volume but includes one graphic-novel eutopia, \“Memoirs from the Distant Future\” by Marc Ngui (204-12) depicting a sustainable future Toronto. See 2005 McBride and Wilcox, eds.; Alana Wilcox, Christina Palassio, and Jonny Dovercourt, eds. The State of the Arts: Living with Culture in Toronto. uTOpia Two. Toronto, ON: Coach House Books, 2006; Wayne Reeves and Christina Palassio, eds. HTO: Toronto\’s Water from Lake Iroquois to Lost Rivers to Low-flow Toilets. Toronto, ON, Canada: Coach House Books, 2008; and Christina Palassio and Alana Wilcox, eds. The Edible City: Toronto\’s food from farm to work. Toronto, ON, Canada: Coach House Books, 2009.\
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author, Male author}, editor = {Alana Wilcox and Christina Palassio and Jonny Dovercourt} } @booklet {5977, title = {"The Old World"}, howpublished = {The Fate of Mice}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, pages = {47-72}, publisher = {Tachyon Publications}, address = {San Francisco, CA}, abstract = {Eutopia. The human race suddenly becomes altruistic and compassionate. The story is primarily concerned with a man who thought it all a conspiracy.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Susan Palwick (b. 1961)} } @booklet {5903, title = {"Persephone{\textquoteright}s Library"}, howpublished = {Tesseracts Eleven}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, pages = {89-103}, publisher = {Edge Science Fiction and Fantasy}, address = {Calgary, AL, Canada}, abstract = {Authoritarian dystopia. A small community living at what appears to be the edge of the world is dominated by one man, who prohibits learning predating the event that created the community and takes multiple wives for himself.
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author, Indian author}, author = {[Susan Lynne] [Deefholts] (1942-2015)}, editor = {Cory [Efram] Doctorow (b. 1971) and Holly Phillips (b. 1969)} } @booklet {5976, title = {Rant: An Oral Biography of Buster Casey}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, publisher = {Jonathan Cape}, address = {London}, abstract = {Dystopia. Much of the novel presents an urban dystopia of violence, and a second authoritarian dystopia develops in response to the first.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Chuck [Charles Michael] Palahniuk (b. 1962)} } @booklet {5978, title = {Shelter}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Dystopia. In the twenty-first century compassion is a crime.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Susan Palwick (b. 1961)} } @booklet {5813, title = {"Instinct"}, howpublished = {The Future Is Queer}, year = {2006}, month = {2006}, pages = {45-70}, publisher = {Arsenal Pulp Press}, address = {Vancouver, BC, Canada}, abstract = {Flawed eutopia. Problems with the eutopia of complete gender freedom and the ability to change gender at will. Domed communities in which freedom becomes restricting. Lesbian viewpoint. Isolated communities outside the domes established representing different periods of the past to allow people to choose their own eutopia. Lesbian viewpoint.
}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Joy Parks}, editor = {Richard Labont{\'e} and Lawrence Schimel (b. 1971)} } @booklet {5815, title = {"Juneteenth"}, howpublished = {Jigsaw Nation: Science Fiction Stories of Secession}, year = {2006}, month = {2006}, pages = {130-41}, publisher = {Spyre}, address = {Radford, VA}, abstract = {Dystopia about a U.S. divided between liberals, the Democratic States, and conservatives, the United States, with strong racial themes. Juneteenth is an unofficial holiday to commemorate the end of slavery, a holiday generally ignored by whites in the conservative United States, which is becoming a security state.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {K. M. Praschak}, editor = {Edward J. McFadden III and E[katerina] Sedia (b. 1970)} } @booklet {5814, title = {Life As We Knew It}, year = {2006}, month = {2006}, publisher = {Harcourt}, address = {Orlando, FL}, abstract = {First volume of the Young Adult Last Survivor series. In this volume, a meteor hits the moon pushing it closer to the Earth and causing widespread destruction on the Earth. The novel follows a young woman\&$\#$39;s struggle to survive. The second volume, The Dead and the Gone. New York: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2008, moves the action to New York City but continues the same themes. The third volume, This World We Live In. New York: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2010 continues the same setting and themes as the first volume.\ In the fourth volume, The Shade of the Moon. Boston, MA: Harcourt/Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2013, the protagonist is living in a safe community in Pennsylvania, but his ability to do so depends on his continued success at soccer and obeying the strict rules of the community. He violates the rules by falling in love.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Susan Beth Pfeffer (b. 1948)} } @booklet {5671, title = {"All the Tea in China"}, howpublished = {Neo-Opsis Science Fiction Magazine}, volume = {no. 6 }, year = {2005}, month = {2005}, pages = {60-67}, abstract = {Background of a dystopia of corporate control.
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author}, author = {Yvonne Provonost} } @booklet {5668, title = {The Necessary Beggar}, year = {2005}, month = {2005}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {The dystopia of present reality contrasted with L{\'e}mabantunk, the Glorious city, which is a eutopia of peace and plenty. Fantasy elements.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Susan Palwick (b. 1961)} } @booklet {5670, title = {"Summer Ice"}, howpublished = {In the Palace of Repose}, year = {2005}, note = {Rpt. in Fantasy Magazine 1.1 (2005): 103-09; and in Best New Fantasy. Ed. Sean Wallace ([Holicong, PA: Prime Books, 2006), 219-37. Rev. ed. ([Holicong, PA]: Prime Books, 2006), 175-95. Rpt. in Shine: An Anthology of Near-future, Optimistic Science Fiction. Ed. Jetse de Vries (Oxford, Eng.: Solaris, 2010), 116-40 with an editor\’s note on 115-16.\
}, month = {2005}, pages = {160-78}, publisher = {Prime Books}, address = {[Holicong, PA]}, abstract = {Beginnings of a eutopia describing a city that is \"greening\", transforming itself by tearing up roads, redesigning buildings, and generally recreating itself ecologically. Work shared by everyone.
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author}, author = {Holly Phillips (b. 1969)} } @booklet {5542, title = {The Church Invisible: A Journey into the Future of the UK Church}, year = {2004}, note = {Part originally published as \"Invisible Church.\"\ Christianity and Renewal\ (July - May 2002): 40-43; 30-32; 28-30; 28-30; 36-38; 46-48; 46-48; 48-49, 50; 42-43; 36-38; 22-23, 25.
}, month = {2004}, publisher = {Zondervan}, address = {Grand Rapids, MI}, abstract = {Dystopia. In fifty years, the church has disappeared in the U.K.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Nick Page (b. 1961)} } @booklet {5543, title = {"[Rated]"}, howpublished = {Agog! Smashing Stories}, year = {2004}, month = {2004}, pages = {174-88}, publisher = {Agog! Press}, address = {Wollongong, NSW, Australia}, abstract = {Dystopia. The Ministry of Sanitation proclaims and enforces different lifestyles for different people. White Anglo-Saxons get a eutopia with sexual restrictions.
}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Ben [Michael] Peek (b. 1976)}, editor = {Cat[riona] Sparks (b. 1965)} } @booklet {5429, title = {Memini}, year = {2003}, month = {2003}, publisher = {Prime Books}, address = {Canton, OH}, abstract = {Satire. A dystopian future with the mentally damaged in power.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Daniel [David] Pearlman (1935-2013)} } @booklet {5327, title = {"All the Room in the World"}, howpublished = {Land/Space: An Anthology of Prairie Speculative Fiction}, year = {2002}, month = {2002}, pages = {37-51}, publisher = {Tesseract Books}, address = {Edmonton, AB, Canada}, abstract = {Overpopulation dystopia in which millions of refugees are being moved to the supposedly empty areas of the world, like northern Canada. There are plans to ship future refugees into space as slave labor.\ Climate-change is part of the reason for needing to move people. Canada has fragmented, and it is no longer possible to move freely among the provinces.\
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author}, author = {Holly Phillips (b. 1969)}, editor = {Candas Jane Dorsey (b. 1952) and Judy Berlyne McCrosky} } @booklet {5330, title = {The American Praetorians. A Novel}, year = {2002}, month = {2002}, publisher = {Trafford}, address = {Victoria, BC, Canada}, abstract = {A dystopia imposed on the U.S. by liberal policies, which include very high taxes, elimination of freedoms enumerated in the Constitution, and a weakened military, results in a new American revolution. The Praetorians motto is \“A man who saves a nation, commits no crime.\”
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Dennis C[arroll] Purdy (b. 1952)} } @booklet {5329, title = {Dawn of the New Man: A Futuristic Novel of Social Change}, year = {2002}, month = {2002}, publisher = {Xlibris}, address = {[Bloomington, IN]}, abstract = {Sequel to 2001 Prugovecki. This volume continues the story of two countries described in the first volume, the libertarian Terra and the authoritarian FWF (Free World Federation). The citizens of the FWF are enslaved and the protagonist initiates a successful struggle to free them.
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {Eduard Prugovecki (1937-2003)} } @booklet {5325, title = {Flowercrash}, year = {2002}, month = {2002}, publisher = {Cosmos Books}, address = {Holicong, PA}, abstract = {Fantasy flawed utopia set in the far future. Struggle to ensure the continuance of the good society.
}, keywords = {Male author, Welsh author}, author = {Stephen Palmer (b. 1962)} } @booklet {5326, title = {Muezzinland}, year = {2002}, month = {2002}, publisher = {Cosmos Books}, address = {Holicong, PA}, abstract = {Dystopia set in Africa in the mid-22nd century. Struggle to escape from the dystopia and find/establish a better society connected with the African past.
}, keywords = {Male author, Welsh author}, author = {Stephen Palmer (b. 1962)} } @booklet {5214, title = {"Blue Neon Iris"}, howpublished = {Aurealis (Melbourne, VIC, Australia)}, volume = { no. 27/28 }, year = {2001}, month = {2001}, pages = {133-38}, abstract = {Dystopia. A society fixated on replaceable human body parts.
}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Miles Parently} } @booklet {5215, title = {Event 16. An Original Screenplay. [A Science Fiction Thriller] Based on the original Screenplay {\textquoteright}History{\textquoteright}}, year = {2001}, month = {2001}, publisher = {Author}, address = {Lower Hutt, New Zealand}, abstract = {No obvious relationship to his 1998 History and is more of a thriller than the other. Includes elements of a contemporary dystopia and the suggestion of a future eutopia.
}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {Derek Pearson (b. 1966)} } @booklet {5217, title = {The Gamekeeper{\textquoteright}s Night Dog}, year = {2001}, month = {2001}, publisher = {Bulldog Press}, address = {Woodside, CA}, abstract = {First volume in an alternative history series in which Britain wins the Boer War, which sets the stage for the development of the dystopia in the later volumes. The first three volumes constitute his Gamekeeper Trilogy.\ In the second volume, The World War. Woodside, CA: Bulldog Press, 2004, Britain invades Germany, Russia and other countries. In the third volume, 10 Downing Street. Woodside, CA: Bulldog Press, 2004, Britain dominates the world, but there is a conflict between monopoly capitalism and communism. Britain Uber Alles. Woodside, CA: Bulldog Press, 2006, the fourth volume, is a sequel to the trilogy set in the twenty-eighth century. Britain has dominated the world for centuries but war looms again. It ends with \“To Be Continued,\” but there is no evidence that it was.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Dave Putnam} } @booklet {11675, title = {Green Music}, year = {2001}, note = {Three chapters were previously published \“in slightly different form\”: Chapter One \“Turtleness.\” Quarry 35.3 (Summer 1986): 18-20. Chapter Two \“Jack and Luna\” as \“The Turtle and the Moon.\” Illus. by the author. Now 4, no. 29 (March 28, 1985): 21. https://nowtoronto.pressreader.com/now-magazine/19850328. Chapter Fourteen \“Telepathic Fish.\” Leviathan I: Into the Grey. Ed. Luke O\&$\#$39;Grady \& Jeff VanderMeer (Tallahassee, FL: Ministry of Whimsy Press, 1996), 67-80.
}, month = {2001}, pages = {234 pp.}, publisher = {Tesseract Books an Imprint of The Book Collective}, address = {[Edmonton, Alberta, Canada]}, abstract = {An odd magic realist novel set in Toronto and an alternative Toronto called Marina, which is also the name of the main protagonist, accessed through a painting by Susan, Marina\’s partner. It is a paradise with people who had drowned in the other world.
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author, Tunisian author}, isbn = {978-1-895836-77-8}, author = {Ursula Pflug (b. 1958)} } @booklet {5216, title = {Memoirs of the Future}, year = {2001}, month = {2001}, publisher = {Cross Cultural Publications}, address = {Notre Dame, IN}, abstract = {Contrasting eutopia and dystopia set 350 years in the future. The eutopia is Terra, which has no government, operates on the basis of local decision-making, and uses an advanced internet for coordination. The dystopia, the Free World Federation (FWF), is an all-encompassing government that uses an advanced internet to monitor and control people. See also 2002 Prugovecki.
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {Eduard Prugovecki (1937-2003)} } @booklet {9077, title = {The Last Book in the Universe}, year = {2000}, note = {. Part originally published as \“The Last Book in the Universe.\” Tomorrowland: 10 Stories About the Future. Comp. Michael Cart (New York: Scholastic Press, 1999), 9-23 with an\ \“Author\’s Note 22-23.\
}, month = {2000}, publisher = {The Blue Sky Press/Scholastic}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Young adult dystopia set many years after a worldwide earthquake destroyed civilization. The novel is in the form of a quest by a young man, an old man in a society controlled by gangs from one area to another under a different gang. Along the way, a child and a genetically enhanced young woman from Eden, a high-tech enclave completely cut off from the surrounding area, joins them.
PDU-1 is an orbiting computer into which the personalities of those convicted of crimes on earth are transported. Primitive eutopia on PDU-1 contrasted with a dystopian earth.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {F[red] E. Potts} } @booklet {10431, title = {The Dream Archipelago}, year = {1999}, note = {Includes the first publication of \“The Equatorial Moment\” (1-6); \“The Negation\” (7-48) originally published in Anticipations. Ed. Christopher Priest (New York: Charles Scribner\’s Sons, 1978), 55-86; \“Whores\” (49-) originally published in New Dimensions 8. Ed. Robert Silverberg (New York: Harper \& Row, 1978), 27-40; \“The Cremation\” (71-114) originally in Andromeda 3. Ed. Paul Weston (London: Futura, 1978); \“The Miraculous Cairn\” (115-85) originally published in New Terrors $\#$2. Ed. Ramsey Campbell (London: Pan, 1980), 11-55; and \“The Watched\” (186-264) originally published in The Magazine of Fantasy \& Science Fiction 54.4 (323) (April 1978): 124-60. Book rpt. London: Gollancz, 2009 with \“The Equatorial Moment\” (1-5); \“The Negation\” (6-44); \“Whores\” (45-65); \“The Miraculous Cairn\” (74-140); \“The Cremation\” (141-81); and \“The Watched\” (182-255-) and two additional stories, \“The Trace of Him\” (66-73) originally published in Interzone, no. 214 (February 2008): 36-38; and \“The Discharge\” (256-301) which was originally published in SciFiction www.scifi.com/scifiction/ Posted February 13, 2002. No longer available online, but it was rpt. in Science Fiction: The Best of 2002. Ed. Robert Silverberg and Karen Haber (Np: ibooks, 2003), 156-210.\
}, month = {1999}, publisher = {Earthlight}, address = {London}, abstract = {The Dream Archipelago is made of thousands of islands in an ocean belt around the middle of a planet with a large continent to the north, with many countries regularly at war, wars that are fought on the continent to the south, which is sparsely populated. Various islanders tell stories, some eutopian, some dystopian, and some with elements of fantasy about their islands. Two further volumes are set in the Dream Archipelago. The first is The Islanders. London: Victor Gollancz, 2011, which as short descriptions of many islands. An excerpt from \“The Drone\” (150-87) was published as \“Fireflies.\” Celebration: An anthology of short stories commemorating the 50th anniversary of the British Science Fiction Association. Ed. Ian Whates ([England]: New Con Press, 2008), 207-14. \“The Trace of Him\” is rpt. from his 2009 The Dream Archipelago retitled \“The Trace\” (235-43). The second is The Gradual. London: Gollancz, 2016; rpt. London: Titan Books, 2016, in which a composer, who is from a fascist dystopia, twice tours the Dream Archipelago.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Christopher [McKenzie] Priest (1943-2024)} } @booklet {8584, title = {"India 2099"}, howpublished = {In a special issue entitled India 999-1999 Millennium Special of Outlook (New Delhi)}, volume = {no. 44}, year = {1999}, note = {Rpt. as \“2099.\” In her Kleptomania. Ten Stories (New Delhi, India: Penguin Books India, 2004), 149-60.
}, month = {November 15, 1999}, pages = {180, 182, 185}, abstract = {Future of India that has been changed first by two atomic bombs, then by Indians establishing space colonies which transform the remaining parts of India into an apparent eutopia.
}, keywords = {Female author, Indian author}, url = {http://www.outlookindia.com/article/india-2099/208405}, author = {Manjula Padmanabhan (b. 1953)} } @booklet {5020, title = {"The Last Dog"}, howpublished = {Tomorrowland: 10 Stories About the Future}, year = {1999}, month = {1999}, pages = {119-41 with an author{\textquoteright}s note on 140-41}, publisher = {Scholastic Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Flawed utopia. A young adult story about a domed community that is rigidly controlled to exclude any possibility of illness and a young man\&$\#$39;s venture outside.
}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Katherine Paterson}, editor = {Michael Cart} } @booklet {5023, title = {The Weatherman}, year = {1999}, month = {1999}, publisher = {Uncle Publishing}, address = {London}, abstract = {Authoritarian dystopia. A warped man gains power and uses it to support his fantasies.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Emmel Pound} } @booklet {4946, title = {White Mars Or, The Mind Set Free: A 21st-Century Utopia}, year = {1999}, month = {1999}, publisher = {Little, Brown}, address = {London}, abstract = {Detailed eutopia in creation on Mars including the presentation of alternative points-of-view. A sub-theme is the initial identification of an alien life form..
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Brian W[ilson] Aldiss (1925-2017) and Roger Penrose (b. 1931)} } @booklet {4926, title = {51st State}, year = {1998}, month = {1998}, publisher = {Viking}, address = {London}, abstract = {A rather unlikely political novel by the long-time Editor of The Guardian in which England joins the United States as the 51st state.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Peter Preston (1938-2018)} } @booklet {4883, title = {Hand of Prophecy}, year = {1998}, month = {1998}, publisher = {Avon Eos}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Dystopia with slavery.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {[Suzanne] [Feldman] (b. 1958)} } @booklet {9728, title = {Harvest}, year = {1998}, note = {Rpt. in Black and Asian Plays (London: Aurora Metro Books/The Peggy Ramsay Foundation, 2000), 10-89. A standalone version of the play with unauthorized cuts was published by the same publisher in 2003. Rev. in Postcolonial Plays: An Anthology. Ed. Helen Gilbert (London: Routledge, 2011), 217-249, with an editor\’s \“Introduction\” (214-216). Rev \& exp. ed. Gurgram, India: Hachette India, 2017 with a new introduction by the author (unpaged); and Wadsworth Anthology of Drama. Ed. W[illiam] B. Worthen. 6th ed. (Boston, MA: Wadsworth Cengage Learning, 2011), 1727-1755.
}, month = {1998}, publisher = {Kali for Women}, address = {Delhi, India}, abstract = {Dystopian play focusing on the sale of body parts by the poor to the rich.
}, keywords = {Female author, Indian author}, author = {Manjula Padmanabhan (b. 1953)} } @booklet {4925, title = {History. A Two Hour Sci-Fi Drama}, year = {1998}, month = {1998}, publisher = {Author/Halcyon Pictures}, address = {Lower Hutt, New Zealand}, abstract = {Authoritarian dystopia but includes a brief depiction of a future eutopian Wellington. See also 2001 Pearson.
}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {Derek Pearson (b. 1966)} } @booklet {4858, title = {"Who Plays with Sin"}, howpublished = {Bending the Landscape:Science Fiction. [Subtitle only on the cover Original Gay and Lesbian Writing] }, year = {1998}, month = {1998}, pages = {283-306}, publisher = {Overlook Press}, address = {Woodstock, NY}, abstract = {Future anti-gay dystopia. Same sex activity is outlawed and very harshly punished. It is not clear whether the laws apply to women as well as men. There are other stories in the volume that suggest this theme, but this is the only one that develops it.
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {Don Bassingthwaite}, editor = {Nicola [Jane] Griffith (b. 1960) and Stephen Pagel} } @booklet {4831, title = {"Canary Land"}, howpublished = {Asimov{\textquoteright}s Science Fiction }, volume = {21.1 (253) }, year = {1997}, note = {Rpt. in\ Isaac Asimov\&$\#$39;s Utopias. Ed. Gardner [Raymond] Dozois and Sheila Williams (New York: Ace Books, 2000), 108-34 with a note on 108.
}, month = {January 1997}, pages = {28-46}, abstract = {Dystopia. The moon is supposed to provide a better life than the overpopulated Earth, but most of the population is only marginally better-off and are exploited by the few powerful. Told from the point of view of an immigrant from Earth.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {1065-6298}, author = {Tom [Thomas Edward] Purdom (1936-2024)} } @booklet {4830, title = {"The City of Ecstasy"}, howpublished = {Women and Urban Environments}, volume = {Volume 2: Feminist Utopian Visions of the City. Student Paper 10}, year = {1997}, month = {1997}, pages = {69-82}, publisher = {Institute of Urban Studies, University of Winnipeg)}, address = {(Winnipeg, MB, Canada}, abstract = {Feminist eutopia.
}, author = {Monica Papendick}, editor = {Mary A. Beavis} } @booklet {4851, title = {"Echoes from the Future"}, howpublished = {Twenty-first Century Anarchism: Unorthodox Ideas For a New Millennium}, year = {1997}, month = {1997}, pages = {181-94}, publisher = {Cassell}, address = {London}, abstract = {A combination of essay and fiction that includes future scenarios after the collapse of states throughout the world, mostly dystopia but with some suggestions of a possible anarchist eutopia.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Colin Wisely}, editor = {Jon Purkis and James Bowen} } @booklet {8572, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Essence of Gandhi{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {New Internationalist Magazine}, volume = {no. 293}, year = {1997}, note = {Rpt. as \“Gandhi-Toxin.\” In her Kleptomania. Ten Stories (New Delhi, India: Penguin Books India, 2004), 91-98.
}, month = {August 1997}, abstract = {Satire on genetic manipulation that begins in a dystopia that controls all genes and then moves toward a eutopia based on the genes of Gandhi.
}, keywords = {Female author, Indian author}, url = {http://newint.org/features/1997/08/05/gandhi/ }, author = {Manjula Padmanabhan (b. 1953)} } @booklet {4746, title = {Fight Club}, year = {1996}, note = {U.K. ed. London: Vintage, 1997.\ A comic book series Fight Club 2, nos. 1-10 and Fight Club 2 Free Comic Book Day 2015 are collected in Fight Club 2: The Tranquility Gambit. Art by Cameron Stewart, Colors by Dave Stewart, Letters and logo by Nate Piekos of Blambot\®, and Cover and chapter break by David Mack. Milwaukie, OR: Dark Horse Books, 2016.
}, month = {1996}, publisher = {W.W. Norton}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Dystopia best known in the 1999 film version directed by David Fincher and with a screenplay by Jim Uhis.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Chuck [Charles Michael] Palahniuk (b. 1962)} } @booklet {4750, title = {Higher Education. A Jupiter{\texttrademark} Novel}, year = {1996}, note = {Includes material first published in\ Future Quartet. Earth in the Year 2042: A Four-Part Invention\ (New York: William Morrow, 1994), 227-94. Rpt. rev. in\ How To Save the World. Ed. Charles Sheffield (New York: Tor, 1995), 275-346; and as \“Higher Education.\” Illus. George H. Krauter. Analog Science Fiction and Fact 116.3 - 6 (February - May 1996): 12-16, 18-20, 22-24, 26-28, 30-32, 34-36, 38-40, 42-44, 46-48, 50-60; 108-144, 104-144, 102-122.
}, month = {1996}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {World divided into the very rich and the very poor. Right wing take on problems of U.S.\
}, keywords = {English author, Male author, US author}, author = {Jerry [Eugene] Pournelle (1933-2017) and Charles [A.] Sheffield (1935-2002)} } @booklet {4748, title = {In Heaven As On Earth: A Vision of the Afterlife}, year = {1996}, month = {1996}, publisher = {Hyperion}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Self-help book presented as a story of heaven. Some eutopian elements.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {M[organ] Scott Peck M.D. (1936-2005)} } @booklet {4747, title = {"The Last Homosexual"}, howpublished = {Asimov{\textquoteright}s Science Fiction }, volume = {20.6 (246) }, year = {1996}, note = {Rpt. in The Year\’s Best Science Fiction Fourteenth Annual Collection. Ed. Gardner [Raymond] Dozois (New York: St. Martin\’s Press, 1997), 167-77.\
}, month = {June 1996}, pages = {36-48}, abstract = {Dystopia in which the U.S. has broken up into individual states, and the story focuses on Louisiana under the New Baptists.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {1065-6298 }, author = {Paul [Claiborne] Park (b. 1954)} } @booklet {4749, title = {Protektor}, year = {1996}, month = {1996}, publisher = {Avon Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Future computer controlled eutopia that develops flaws.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author, US author}, author = {Charles Platt (b. 1945)} } @booklet {8899, title = {"Stolen Hours"}, howpublished = {Hot Death, Cold Soup: Twelve Short Stories}, year = {1996}, note = {Rpt. (Reading, Eng.: Garnet Publishing, 1997), 169-83.\
}, month = {1996}, pages = {188-204}, publisher = {Kali for Women}, address = {New Delhi, India}, abstract = {The setting of a science fiction story is a dystopia of rigid class distinction based on ethnicity and immigration .
}, keywords = {Female author, Indian author}, author = {Manjula Padmanabhan (b. 1953)} } @booklet {4668, title = {"And Baby Makes Five"}, howpublished = {The Final Dream and Other Fictions}, year = {1995}, month = {1995}, pages = {129-62}, publisher = {Permeable Press}, address = {San Francisco, CA}, abstract = {Overpopulation dystopia in which one has to pay penalties for each child.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Daniel [David] Pearlman (1935-2013)} } @booklet {4690, title = {A Dream that needs abuildin{\textquoteright}}, year = {1995}, month = {1995}, publisher = {Chayah Press}, address = {Phoenix, AZ}, abstract = {Architectural eutopia.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Russell Voorhees}, editor = {John Pritchard} } @booklet {4669, title = {Dryland{\textquoteright}s End}, year = {1995}, month = {1995}, publisher = {Richard Kasak}, address = {New York}, abstract = {A matriarchy with problems set in the far future.\
}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Felice Picano} } @booklet {9455, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Farewell Reverberated Vault of Detentions.{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {New and Selected Poems: Mualdjali, Mutuerjaraera }, year = {1995}, note = {Rpt. in The Oxford Book of Modern Australian Verse. Ed. Peter Porter (Melbourne, Vic, Australia: Oxford University Press, 1996), 266.\
}, month = {1995}, pages = {41-42}, publisher = {Hyland House}, address = {South Melbourne, Vic, Australia}, abstract = {Poem depicting the aboriginal eutopia possible without the effects of the white colonizers.\
}, keywords = {Aboriginal author, Australian author, Male author}, author = {Lionel G. Fogarty (b. 1958)}, editor = {Peter Porter} } @booklet {4667, title = {The Mystery of the Third Seal}, year = {1995}, month = {1995}, publisher = {Longman Australia}, address = {Melbourne, VIC, Australia}, abstract = {Young adult flawed utopia. Post-catastrophe society of seeming perfection under the control of the Shepherds, who are like the Morlocks of 1895 Wells.
}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Margaret Pearce} } @booklet {4666, title = {Newtopia}, year = {1995}, month = {1995}, publisher = {PakDonald Publishing Co}, address = {Tigard, OR}, abstract = {A detailed proposal for founding a series of ecological communities based on some similarity, such as race or ethnicity, in the population forming it.\ The author argues that it is completely practical, and compares the idea to the Twin Oaks Community in Louis, VA.
}, author = {D. K. Paul (b. 1914)} } @booklet {8562, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Awakening{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Snows Over Darkover}, year = {1994}, month = {1994}, pages = {102-18 with an introductory note on 118. }, publisher = {DAW Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Free Amazon story.
}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Roxana Pierson}, editor = {Marion Zimmer Bradley (1930-99)} } @booklet {4561, title = {Bachelor Butterflies}, year = {1994}, month = {1994}, publisher = {Roslyn Press}, address = {London}, abstract = {Vaguely dystopian. A country decides to solve its crime problem by deporting all unemployed, single men. Includes a description of the area to which they are deported, but the novel focuses on the personal reactions of an individual man.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Jeff Probst} } @booklet {4578, title = {Future Boston: The History of a City 1990-2100}, year = {1994}, month = {1994}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {A shared future history anthology related to Smith\&$\#$39;s 1993 In the Cube, which was written during the collaboration on this volume. The basic premise is that Boston is sinking and that as it sinks some of it will simply disappear under water and that the remaining sections will struggle for survival and come into conflict with each other. To complicate matters a wide variety of different aliens arrive in Boston and become part of everyday life. One of those aliens is testing humans for admission into the interstellar world. Humanity apparently passes the test and at the end Boston reunites and establishes itself as a separate country. The volume is composed of numerous stories and vignettes, a few previously published, maps of Boston in 1772, 1990, 2014, 2030, 2050, and 2061, and an \"Afterword: How It Came to Be\" (376-82) by David Smith. The contents are Smith, \"\&$\#$39;Boston Will Sink, Claims MIT Prof\&$\#$39;\" (9-10); Sarah [Winthrop] Smith (b. 1947), \"Seeing the Edge\" (12-29); Alexander Jablokov (b. 1956), \"Nomads\" (30-52); Geoffrey A[lan] Landis (b. 1955), \"Projects\" (53-70) rpt. from Isaac Asimov\&$\#$39;s Science Fiction Magazine [the copyright page incorrectly says Analog] 14.6 (157) (June 1990): 104-17; David Smith, \"Dying in Hull\" (71-87) rpt. from Isaac Asimov\&$\#$39;s Science Fiction Magazine 12.11 (136) (November 1988): 62-66, 68-75; and in The Year\&$\#$39;s Best Science Fiction: Sixth Annual Collection. Ed. Gardner [Raymond] Dozois (New York: St. Martin\&$\#$39;s Press, 1989), 497-508 with an Editor\&$\#$39;s note on 496; and in Isaac Asimov\&$\#$39;s Earth. Ed. Gardner [Raymond] Dozois and Sheila Williams (New York: Ace Books, 1992), 19-34. Jon Burrowes, \"The Elephant-Ass Thing\" (89-108); Steven [Earl] Popkes (b. 1952), \"The Parade\" (109-21); Jablokov, \"Seating Arrangement\" (122-32); Burrowes, \"The Uprising\" (133-36); Resa Nelson (b. 1956) and Sarah Smith, \"Fennario\" (137-52); Landis, \"Topology of the Loophole\" (153-56); Popkes, \"Not for Broadcast\" (157-62); David Smith, \"When the Phneri Fell\" (163-66) rpt. from Figment, no. 1 (October 1989): 23-24; which was\ rpt. Figment, no. 15 (Fall 1993): 27-28; Popkes and David Smith, \"Playing Chess with the Bishop\" (168-73); Jablokov, \"Letter to the Editor\" (174-75); David Smith, \"Who Is Venture Capital?\" (176-77); Jablokov, \"IPOB Dining Hall Procedures,\" (178-80); Popkes, \"So You Want to Meet the Bishop\" (181-85); Landis, \"Camomile and Crimson; or, The Tale of the Brahmin\&$\#$39;s Wife\" (186-98) originally published as \"The Tale of the Brahmin\&$\#$39;s Wife.\" Analog Science Fiction/Science Fact 110.5 (April 1990): 135-43; Popkes, \"The Test\" (198-222); Jablokov, \"The Place of No Shadows\" (223-46) rpt. from Isaac Asimov\&$\#$39;s Science Fiction Magazine 14.11\& 12 (162\& 163) (November 1990): 170-86; Jablokov, \"The Lady of Port Moresby Incident\" (248-49); Sarah Smith, \"Three Boston Artists\" (250-66) rpt. from Aboriginal Science Fiction 4.4 (22) (July-August 1990): 2, 59-63 with illus on 3 and 58; Jablokov, \"Focal Plane\" (267-86); Sarah Smith, \"Ye Citizens of Boston\" (287-328); Jablokov, \"The Adoption\" (330-51) rpt. from Isaac Asimov\&$\#$39;s Science Fiction Magazine 15.12\& 13 (177\& 178) (November 1991): 200-15; Jablokov, \"WereWhereWear\" (352-53); and David Smith, \"Sail Away\" (354-75).
}, keywords = {Female author, Male author, US author}, author = {David Alexander Smith (b. 1953) and Sarah [Winthrop] Smith (b. 1937) and Alexander Jablokov (b. 1956) and Geoffrey A[lan] Landis (b. 1955) and Jon Burrowes and Steven [Earl] Popkes (b. 1952) and Resa Nelson (b. 1956)}, editor = {David Alexander Smith ed. (b. 1953)} } @booklet {4499, title = {Future Quartet. Earth in the Year 2042: A Four-Part Invention}, year = {1994}, month = {1994}, publisher = {William Morrow}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Dystopia but with some hope of improvement. A future world deeply divided between the rich and the poor but with positive change taking place.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author, US author}, author = {Ben[jamin William] Bova (1932-2020) and Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013) and Jerry [Eugene] Pournelle (1933-2017) and Charles [A.] Sheffield (1935-2002)} } @booklet {4562, title = {My Journey With Aristotle to the Anarchist Utopia}, year = {1994}, month = {1994}, publisher = {III Press}, address = {Gualala, CA}, abstract = {An Australian laborer is beaten by the police and wakes up in and anarchist eutopia in which nation states no longer exist and people live in communities based on the way they want to live. The city that is the main focus is a high-tech society with the technology entirely biologically based, including an about to be launched spaceship. The people are predominantly vegetarian supplemented by fish from the rivers that run through it, chickens raised locally, and game from the surrounding wilderness. Most local transport by bicycle, and there are tunnels for bicycles throughout the city.\ It turns out to be a dream.\
}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Graham Purchase} } @booklet {8561, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Place Between{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Snows of Darkover}, year = {1994}, month = {1994}, pages = {55-79 with an introductory note on 55.}, publisher = {DAW Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Free Amazon story.
}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Diana L. Paxson (b. 1943)}, editor = {Marion Zimmer Bradley (1930-99)} } @booklet {4463, title = {Coelestis}, year = {1993}, note = {U.S. ed. as Celestis. New York: Tor, 1995.\
}, month = {1993}, publisher = {HarperCollins}, address = {London}, abstract = {Dystopia set in a future U.S. with substantial radiation causing genetic damage. Division between humans and aborigines.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Paul [Claiborne] Park (b. 1954)} } @booklet {7010, title = {"The Heart of the Overchild"}, howpublished = {REAL: RE Arts \& Letters }, volume = {19.2 }, year = {1993}, note = {Rpt. in his\ The Final Dream and Other Fictions\ (San Francisco, CA: Permeable Press, 1995), 33-44.
}, month = {Winter 1993/94}, pages = {32-45}, abstract = {Overpopulation dystopia. An Overchild is one who is in excess of the permitted number. Their body parts are used to keep endangered species alive.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Daniel [David] Pearlman (1935-2013)} } @booklet {4462, title = {. . . In a World Not of His Own Making}, year = {1993}, month = {1993}, publisher = {Blue Canary Publishing}, address = {Canton, NY}, abstract = {Ecological dystopia.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Stephen Papson} } @booklet {11517, title = {"Rain"}, howpublished = {It Happened Tomorrow: An Anthology of Select Science Fiction Stories}, year = {1993}, month = {1993}, pages = {242-50}, publisher = {National Book Trust}, address = {New Delhi, India}, abstract = {A climate change story in which everyone lives in domes, with only desert and acid rain outside the domes.
}, keywords = {Male author}, isbn = {9788123706191 }, author = {Kenneth Doyle}, editor = {Bal Phondke} } @booklet {4363, title = {"Requiem for a Tarbaby"}, howpublished = {What on Earth: A Collection of Science Fiction and Related Short Stories by eight southern authors}, year = {1992}, month = {1992}, pages = {16-21}, publisher = {Steep Birancas Operation}, address = {Dunedin, New Zealand}, abstract = {Authoritarian, religious, and pollution dystopia.
}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Female author}, author = {Alice Peattie}, editor = {Tim Jones (b. 1959)} } @booklet {4316, title = {The Skinny Louie Book}, year = {1992}, note = {The first section is her \“A Story About Skinny Louie.\” New Zealand Listener 127.2620 (May 28, 1990): 96, 101-02 as by Fiona Farrell Poole. Story rpt. in Closing the File: American Express Short Story Award Winners, 1984-89 (Auckland, New Zealand: Godwit Press, 1990), 137-52; in Some Other Country: New Zealand\’s Best Short Stories. Ed. Marion McLeod and Bill Manhire. New ed. (Wellington, New Zealand: Bridget Williams Books, 1992), 278-90; and in The New Zealand Short Story Collection. Ed. Marion McLeod and Bill Manhire. 3rd ed. (St. Lucia, QLD, Australia: University of Queensland Press, 1997), 365-81. There is an abridged Talking Books version read by Liddy Holloway. Auckland, New Zealand: Word Pictures, Ltd., [1993].\
}, month = {1992}, publisher = {Penguin}, address = {Auckland, New Zealand}, abstract = {The novel begins with New Zealand history of the post-World War II era with some fantastic elements as seen through the eyes of a girl growing up, going to university, getting pregnant, and beginning her career. It extends to an authoritarian dystopian future of age and class divisions brought about by current government policies and deliberately fostered by the government. It ends with a destroyed New Zealand with few survivors.
}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Female author}, author = {Fiona Farrell (b. 1947)} } @booklet {4261, title = {2084: A Novel}, year = {1991}, month = {1991}, publisher = {Here{\textquoteright}s Life Publishers}, address = {San Bernardino, CA}, abstract = {Eutopia and dystopia contrasting the millennial reign of Christ with the \“World of Imprisoned Souls\” with Biblical references (259-63). Three people from the past are transported to the millennial kingdom, which is nearing the end of the thousand years and approaching Armageddon. Not belonging there, they become a focus for competition between the two realms. Earth, which is composed of 144 kingdoms, each led by a governor appointed by God, has been renovated by God so as to be Eden-like, albeit with cities. Strict deference to authority. All minds open to everyone, but, of course, all thoughts are virtuous. Each person has a \“perfect body\” (70). Animals, such as tigers, are vegetarians.\
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Larry W. Poland Ph.D. (b. 1939)} } @booklet {4258, title = {"A Butterfly Season"}, howpublished = {Renunciates Of Darkover}, year = {1991}, month = {1991}, pages = {110-23 with an introductory note on 110-11}, publisher = {DAW Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Free Amazon story.
}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Diana L. Paxson (b. 1943)}, editor = {Marion Zimmer Bradley (1930-99)} } @booklet {4259, title = {"Dealer"}, howpublished = {Amazing Stories (Lake Geneva, WI)}, volume = {66.5 (562) }, year = {1991}, note = {Rpt. in Washed by a Wave of Wind: Science fiction from the Corridor. Ed. M. Shayne Bell (Salt Lake City, UT: Signature Books, 1993), 277-92.
}, month = {September 1991}, pages = {31-37}, abstract = {Future dystopia in which America has rejected everything foreign.
}, keywords = {Female author}, issn = {0002-6891 }, author = {Michaelene Pendleton (1946-2019)} } @booklet {4255, title = {Fallen Angels}, year = {1991}, note = {U.K. ed. London: Victor Gollancz, 1993.\ An excerpt was published in Niven\’s Playgrounds of the Mind (New York: Tor, 1991), 684-86.\
}, month = {1991}, publisher = {Baen}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Greens produce an anti-technological dystopia.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Larry [Lawrence van Cott] Niven (b. 1938) and Jerry [Eugene] Pournelle (1933-2017) and Michael [Francis] Flynn (1947-2023)} } @booklet {4260, title = {He, She and It}, year = {1991}, note = {U.K. ed. as\ Body of Glass. London: Michael Joseph, 1992.\
}, month = {1991}, publisher = {Alfred A. Knopf}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Complex future dystopia run by corporations with an embattled Jewish eutopia as the central focus.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Marge Piercy (b. 1936)} } @booklet {4257, title = {"Varzil{\textquoteright}s Avengers"}, howpublished = {Renunciates Of Darkover}, year = {1991}, month = {1991}, pages = {231-42}, publisher = {DAW Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Free Amazon story.
}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Diann S. Partridge}, editor = {Marion Zimmer Bradley (1930-99)} } @booklet {4166, title = {Outnumbering the Dead}, year = {1990}, note = {U.S. ed. Illus. Steve Crisp. New York: St. Martin\’s Press, 1992. Rpt. in The Year\’s Best Science Fiction: Tenth Annual Collection. Ed. Gardner [Raymond] Dozois (New York: St. Martin\’s Press, 1993), 519-82. Based on the U.S. publication, Dozois gives date of first publication as 1991.
}, month = {1990}, publisher = {Century}, address = {London}, abstract = {Eutopia with near immortality and the problems for those who are mortal.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013)} } @booklet {4167, title = {"The Permacity Theory: Agap{\'e}-papatuanuku In Action"}, year = {1990}, month = {1990}, publisher = {Auckland, New Zealand}, address = {MPlanning Thesis. University of Auckand}, abstract = {Depicts Sustainable Living Settlements in great detail. Based on transferring the concept of permaculture to the urban area.\
}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {Jonathan S. Port} } @booklet {4165, title = {Transform Node: Science Fiction Mystical Adventures}, year = {1990}, month = {1990}, publisher = {Vantage Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {A collection of related stories with a stress on Extrasensory Perception (ESP) that allows better connections among people. A number of the stories, including the title story, are primarily concerned with mysticism, which will help the people create a future eutopia.\ \
}, keywords = {African American author, Male author}, author = {Ronn Parker} } @booklet {9813, title = {"Two Tomorrow"}, howpublished = {Eidolon: The Journal of Australian Science Fiction and Fantasy}, volume = {no. 3}, year = {1990}, note = {Rpt. in his Shadows on the Wall: Weird Tales of Science Fiction, Fantasy, and the Supernatural (Melbourne, Vic, Australia: IWWG International, 2018), 21-22 with an \“Afterword--Two Tomorrow\” on 23.\
}, month = {December 1990}, pages = {40-41}, abstract = {A dystopia in 650 words that presents a world with very strict population controls. Only people of a certain status can have any children, only the highest status people can have two, and after a child reaches two years, only two generations are permissible, and the oldest must be terminated.\
}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Steven Paulsen (b. 1955)} } @booklet {4159, title = {We, the Arcturians (A True Experience)}, year = {1990}, month = {1990}, publisher = {Athena}, address = {Albuquerque, NM}, abstract = {New age eutopia.
}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Norma J. Milanovich and Betty Rice and Cynthia Ploski} } @booklet {4078, title = {"Cronus"}, howpublished = {Interzone}, volume = {no. 29 }, year = {1989}, month = {May/June 1989}, pages = {28-34}, abstract = {Future dystopia where people are encouraged to live in communities that where everything about their lives is controlled.
}, keywords = {Female author, South African author, UK author}, author = {Marianne Puxley} } @booklet {4076, title = {"The Final Dream"}, howpublished = {Synergy: New Science Fiction}, volume = {Number 4}, year = {1989}, note = {Rpt. in his\ The Final Dream and Other Fictions\ (San Francisco, CA: Permeable Press, 1995), 221-68.
}, month = {1989}, pages = {161-237 with an editor{\textquoteright}s note on 161}, publisher = {Harcourt Brace Jovanovich}, address = {San Diego, CA}, abstract = {Amoral dystopia in which dreams are broadcast to subscribers. The one whose dreams are broadcast and becomes other people\&$\#$39;s dreams becomes insane.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Daniel [David] Pearlman (1935-2013)}, editor = {George Zebrowski (b. 1945)} } @booklet {4077, title = {Free Zone: Volume One of the Epic Unilogy}, year = {1989}, month = {1989}, publisher = {Avon Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Complex, humorous eutopia and dystopia.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author, US author}, author = {Charles Platt (b. 1945)} } @booklet {4075, title = {Island Paradise}, year = {1989}, note = {Rpt. London: Minerva, 1990. The chapter entitled \"The Lens\" was originally published as \"From Two Women in a Boat (Work in Progress).\"\ Writing Women 4.3\ ([1988?]): 8-22.
}, month = {1989}, publisher = {Methuen}, address = {London}, abstract = {A future in which war has been averted, rigid controls on population growth have been put in place, and people are required to die on schedule.
}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Kathy Page (b. 1958)} } @booklet {4074, title = {Winter Vision}, year = {1989}, month = {1989}, publisher = {University of Queensland Press}, address = {St. Lucia, Australia}, abstract = {Dystopia set in the late 1990s. The novel is primarily concerned with the difficulties of a middle-aged schoolteacher, who gets caught up in the machinations of various people who use government policy for their own ends. He becomes involved with protests against nuclear brinksmanship and the novel ends with nuclear war.
}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Geoff Page (b. 1940)} } @booklet {3972, title = {"Taking From the Top"}, howpublished = {Synergy: New Science Fiction}, volume = {Number 2}, year = {1988}, note = {Rpt. in his\ The Final Dream and Other Fictions\ (San Francisco, CA: Permeable Press, 1995), 45-80.
}, month = {1988}, pages = {49-106}, publisher = {Harcourt Brace Jovanovich}, address = {San Diego, CA}, abstract = {Future tale in which death is required after eighty except for those who have made or are making a major contribution to society.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Daniel [David] Pearlman (1935-2013)}, editor = {George Zebrowski (b. 1945)} } @booklet {10050, title = {Turbo Cowboys 1. Jump Start}, year = {1988}, month = {1988}, publisher = {Ballantine Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {The first volume of the ten volume young adult post-catastrophe Turbo Cowboys series in which five of young men fight for freedom on their motorcycles. Other volumes include three more written by Cunningham, Turbo Cowboys 2 Spin Out (New York: Ballantine Books, 1989), Turbo Cowboys 3 Full Throttle (New York: Ballantine Books, 1989), and Turbo Cowboys 4 Spark Fire (New York: Ballantine Books, 1989). The other six volumes were written by Paul Bagdon, Turbo Cowboys 5 Super Charge (New York: Ballantine Books, 1989), Turbo Cowboys 6 Rat Trap (New York: Ballantine Books, 1989), Turbo Cowboys 7 Night Riders (New York: Ballantine Books, 1989), Turbo Cowboys 8 Speed Shift (New York: Ballantine Books, 1990), Turbo Cowboys 9 Duster Trouble (New York: Ballantine Books, 1990), and Turbo Cowboys 10 City of Glass (New York: Ballantine Books, 1990). The Science Fiction Encyclopedia attributes Rat Trap to John Read.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Cunningham, Chet]} } @booklet {3973, title = {Unquenchable Fire}, year = {1988}, month = {1988}, publisher = {Century Hutchinson}, address = {London}, abstract = {A dystopian future United States where magic and ritual are common.\ See her\ Temporary Agency. London: Orbit, 1994 for a sequel.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Rachel [Grace] Pollack (b. 1945)} } @booklet {3869, title = {Amerika}, year = {1987}, month = {1987}, publisher = {Pocket Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Dystopia of the United States dominated by the U.S.S.R.\
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Brauna E. Pouns [pseud.] and Donald Wrye (1934-2015)} } @booklet {3867, title = {The Cruise of the Skuld}, year = {1987}, month = {1987}, publisher = {Sovereign Press}, address = {Rochester, WA}, abstract = {Individualist anarchist eutopia presented mostly in a discussion on a ship.\
}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Marguerite Pedersen} } @booklet {3865, title = {Goodstuff Any Moment}, year = {1987}, month = {1987}, publisher = {Hard Echo Press}, address = {Onehunga, New Zealand}, abstract = {A dystopia based on the usual corruption and cruelties with the emergence of a eutopia based on people helping each other. People create a cooperative system of both education and exchange that allows those living on the margins to improve their lives. Religious overtones with the emergence near the end of an Antichrist figure and the possibility of the Second Coming.
}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {Mike Paterson (b. 1946)} } @booklet {3866, title = {"The Green Man of Knowledge"}, howpublished = {Tesseracts2}, year = {1987}, month = {1987}, pages = {118-29}, publisher = {Porc{\'e}pic Press}, address = {Victoria, BC, Canada}, abstract = {In the future capital punishment is replaced by dying the skin of murderers green. Those dyed green live in the world and work in munitions factories but are generally treated as non-persons. The story is about a terrorist and his punishment.
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author}, author = {Wendy G[ay] Pearson}, editor = {Phyllis [Fay Bloom] Gotlieb (1926-2009) and Douglas Barbour (b. 1940)} } @booklet {3870, title = {Stepfather Bank}, year = {1987}, month = {1987}, pages = {277 pp.}, publisher = {St. Martin{\textquoteright}s Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Authoritarian dystopia set in 2110 under the control of a single monopolistic, fully automated bank that owns the entire world and employs everyone except one man who defies and undermines the system.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {0-312-00687-X}, author = {D[avid] C[harles] Poyer (b. 1949)} } @booklet {3868, title = {The Thanatos Syndrome}, year = {1987}, note = {A limited first edition signed by the author and with a frontispiece by Jim Spanfeller and \“A Special message for the first edition from Walker Percy\” for the members of The Signed First Edition Society. Franklin Center, PA: The Franklin Library, 1987.
}, month = {1987}, publisher = {Farrar Straus Giroux}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Dystopia of the very near future United States in which scientists chemically suppress human individuality. The protagonist\&$\#$39;s name, Dr. Tom More, continues the connection with the author of Utopia mentioned in 1971 Percy.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Walker Percy (1916-90)} } @booklet {8731, title = {Torch}, year = {1987}, month = {1987}, publisher = {Viking Kestrel}, address = {London}, abstract = {Young adult post-catastrophe dystopia in which most civilizations have disappeared, and people live in small settlements scratching a living. The novel focuses on two young people forced to marry who are passed on the last Olympic torch and try to return to its home.\
}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Jill Paton Walsh (b. 1939)} } @booklet {3763, title = {The Coming of the Quantum Cats}, year = {1986}, month = {1986}, publisher = {Bantam Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Presents a number of alternative societies, mostly dystopian. A central one has the United States dominated by Islam with the F.B.I. [Federal Bureau of Investigation] a major political force.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013)} } @booklet {3762, title = {Dreams of an Unseen Planet}, year = {1986}, month = {1986}, publisher = {Arbor House}, address = {New York}, abstract = {The novel is about the interactions between humans and planet Gaea, which is alive. The novel deals in particular with the responses of women. Canadian female author.
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author}, author = {Teresa [Irene] Plowright (b. 1952)} } @booklet {3760, title = {Goodman 2020}, year = {1986}, month = {1986}, publisher = {Indiana University Press}, address = {Bloomington}, abstract = {Future dystopia of corporate power, drugs, and friendship as a commodity for sale. Some hope is held out at the end.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[John] Fred[erick] Pfeil (1949-2005)} } @booklet {3675, title = {The Heir}, year = {1986}, note = {An earlier version appeared as an issue of Drummer, no. 82 (1985).
}, month = {1986}, publisher = {Caliente Press}, address = {Austin, TX}, abstract = {Sadomasochistic eutopia.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {John Preston} } @booklet {3766, title = {The Others}, year = {1986}, month = {1986}, publisher = {Methuen Children{\textquoteright}s Books}, address = {London}, abstract = {Young adult authoritarian dystopia. Designer bred children. Induced mutations to fit people for jobs. Electrodes implanted at birth to condition people to fit their function and education is really continued conditioning. Marriage partners often chosen by the state; free choice possible. Some people without implants mount a struggle against the state, which will ultimately be successful
}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Alison Prince} } @booklet {3674, title = {Black Star Rising}, year = {1985}, month = {1985}, publisher = {Del Rey}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Begins with a dystopia in which China rules the United States.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013)} } @booklet {3619, title = {Dinner at Deviant{\textquoteright}s Palace}, year = {1985}, note = {U.K. ed. London: Chatto \& Windus, 1986.
}, month = {1985}, publisher = {Ace Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Dystopia a generation after a nuclear war focusing on a religious cult.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Tim[othy Thomas] Powers (b. 1952)} } @booklet {3617, title = {"The Mother Quest"}, howpublished = {Free Amazons of Darkover: An Anthology}, year = {1985}, month = {1985}, pages = {111-32 with an introductory note on 110}, publisher = {DAW Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {A Free Amazon story about a mother searching for her lost child.
}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Diana L. Paxson (b. 1943)}, editor = {Marion Zimmer Bradley (1930-99) and The Friends of Darkover [pseud.]} } @booklet {3677, title = {"O Happy Day!"}, howpublished = {Interzone. The First Anthology: New Science Fiction and Fantasy Writing}, year = {1985}, note = {U.S. ed. (New York: St. Martin\’s Press, 1985), 1-35. Rpt. in his Unconquered Countries: Four Novellas (New York: St. Martin\’s Press, 1994), 153-90. U.K. ed. (London: HarperCollins, 1999), 153-90; and in Brave New Worlds. Ed. John Joseph Adams (San Francisco, CA: Night Shade Books, 2011), 69-95; 2nd ed. ed. John Joseph Adams (San Francisco, CA: Night Shade Books, 2012), 69-95; and in Queers Destroy Science Fiction. Ed. Seanan McGuire. Lightspeed, no. 61 (June 2015): 228-57. Not in his The Unconquered Country: A Life History. London: Allen \& Unwin, 1986.\
}, month = {1985}, pages = {1-35}, publisher = {J. M. Dent \& Sons}, address = {London}, abstract = {Dystopia very similar to the concentration camps in Germany under National Socialism. Heterosexual men are in the camp and systematically killed. Gay men run the camp under the direction of women who give electronically.
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author, UK author, US author}, author = {Geoff[rey Charles] Ryman (b. 1951)}, editor = {John Clute and Colin Greenland and David Pringle} } @booklet {6870, title = {"The Place of Circular Enigmas"}, howpublished = {The Best of South African Science Fiction}, volume = {2 vols.}, year = {1985}, month = {[1985]}, pages = {2: 54-63.}, publisher = {[SFSA Science Fiction South Africa]}, address = {[Johannesburg, South Africa]}, abstract = {A dystopia that pits a rural Nazi group awaiting the Second Coming of Hitler against native traditions.
}, keywords = {Male author, South African author}, author = {Clive Poole}, editor = {Tony Davis} } @booklet {8546, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Queendom of Moths. A Story{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Canadian Woman Studies/Les cahiers de la femme }, volume = {6.2}, year = {1985}, month = {Spring 1985}, pages = {38-39}, abstract = {A feminist utopia destroyed by atomic war.
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author}, author = {Giovanna Peel} } @booklet {3618, title = {"The Sanctuary Tree"}, howpublished = {Strange Attractors: Original Australian Speculative Fiction}, year = {1985}, month = {1985}, pages = {151-63}, publisher = {Hale \& Iremonger}, address = {Sydney, NSW, Australia}, abstract = {Dystopia of National Socialism continued into the future.
}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {John Playford}, editor = {Damien [Francis] Broderick (b. 1944)} } @booklet {3690, title = {"The Ungoverned"}, howpublished = {Far Frontiers}, volume = { 3 }, year = {1985}, note = {Rpt. in his\ True Names . . . and Other Dangers\ (New York: Baen Books, 1987), 200-54; in his\ Across Realtime\ (New York: Baen, 1991), 257-300; in\ The Collected Stories of Vernor Vinge\ (New York: Tor, 2001), 91-127 [This ed. has notes by the author]; in\ Give Me Liberty. Ed. Martin Harry Greenberg and Mark Tier (New York: Baen, 2003), 85-139; and in\ Freedom!\ Ed. Martin Harry Greenberg and Mark Tier (New York: Baen, 2006), 71-113.
}, month = {Fall 1985}, pages = {11-69}, publisher = {Baen}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Libertarian eutopia. Mostly about war. Discusses protective associations like those found in 1974 Nozick. Vinge says that his The Peace War (1984) can be thought of as a prequel and his Marooned in Realtime. New York: Bluejay, 1986 as a sequel.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Vernor [Steffen] Vinge (b. 1944)}, editor = {Jerry [Eugene] Pournelle (1933-2017) and Jim Baen} } @booklet {8836, title = {{\textquotedblleft}A Government of India undertaking . . .{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Imprint (Bombay, India)}, volume = {24.1}, year = {1984}, note = {Rpt. in In Other Words: New Writing by Indian Women. Ed. Urvashi Butalia and Ritu Menon (Delhi, India: Kali for Women, 1992), 1-24. \ U.K. ed. (London: The Women\’s Press, 1993), 1-24; U.S. ed. (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1994), 1-24. Rpt. in Critical Quarterly 35.4 (December 1993): 66-79;\ in her Hot Death, Cold Soup: Twelve Short Stories (Delhi, India: Kali for Women, 1996), 111-32. Rpt. (Reading, Eng.: Garnet Publishing, 1997), 99-117; and in her Three Virgins and Other Stories (New Delhi, India: Zubaan, 2013), 17-38.\
}, month = {April 1984}, pages = {88-93, 95-96}, abstract = {Dystopian Kafkaesque satire focusing on the \“Bureau of Reincarnation and Transmigration of Souls--A Government of India Undertaking.\”\
}, keywords = {Female author, Indian author}, author = {Manjula Padmanabhan (b. 1953)} } @booklet {3577, title = {"The Kindly Isle"}, howpublished = {Isaac Asimov{\textquoteright}s Science Fiction Magazine }, volume = {8.11 (84) }, year = {1984}, note = {Rpt. in\ The Year\&$\#$39;s Best Science Fiction: Second Annual Collection. Ed. Gardner [Raymond] Dozois (New York: Bluejay Books, 1985), 320-40 with an editor\&$\#$39;s note on 318.
}, month = {November 1984}, pages = {46-48, 50, 52, 54, 56, 58-71}, abstract = {A man visits a Caribbean island where all the people seem to be particularly nice and discovers that a scientist has developed a virus which he is intent on spreading around the world, creating a eutopia.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {1065-6298 }, author = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013)} } @booklet {3520, title = {The Merchants{\textquoteright} War}, year = {1984}, note = {Rpt. in\ Venus, Inc.\ (New York: Nelson Doubleday, 1985), 159-346.
}, month = {1984}, publisher = {St. Martin{\textquoteright}s Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Satire on an Earth that is run by ad agencies. See 1952 Pohl and Kornbluth.
The story begins in a eutopian future of low technology and ecological balance, but this is the recurring dream of a boy living in the badly polluted present.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013)} } @booklet {8573, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Sharing Air{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Kleptomania. Ten Stories }, year = {1984}, note = {Originally published in the Sunday Express (New Delhi). Rpt. in The Pioneer (New Delhi) (February 28, 1997); and in The Big Book of Science Fiction: The Ultimate Collection. Ed. Ann and Jeff VanderMeer (New York: Vintage Crime/Black Lizard Vintage Books, 2016), 925-27 with an editors\’ note on 924 giving the date of publication as 1984 but without any indication of where.\
}, month = {[1984?]/2004}, pages = {83-90}, publisher = {Penguin Books India}, address = {New Delhi, India}, abstract = {Dystopia in the future in which everyone has to breathe air from tanks, and all the trees are gone.\
}, keywords = {Female author, Indian author}, author = {Manjula Padmanabhan (b. 1953)} } @booklet {11436, title = {"The Sonic Boom of 1994"}, howpublished = {Another Handful of Stories: Thirty-Seven Stories by Deaf Storytellers Transliterated from the Deaf Storytellers Video Tape Series}, year = {1984}, month = {1984}, pages = {51-54}, publisher = {Division of Public Services, Gallaudet College}, address = {Washington, DC}, abstract = {A brief story in which the United States develops a supersonic passenger plane that can fly between the US and Europe in an hour that produces a sonic boom that deafens the entire country and advantaging those who known sign language.
}, keywords = {Deaf author, Male author, US author}, isbn = {9780913580868 }, author = {Melvin D. Garretsen}, editor = {Ivey B. Pittle and Roslyn Rosen} } @booklet {3568, title = {"The Transition from Sex to Sensuality and Intimacy"}, howpublished = {Marriage and the Family in the Year 2020}, year = {1984}, month = {1984}, pages = {161-82}, publisher = {Prometheus Books}, address = {Buffalo, NY}, abstract = {Discusses the effects of changed attitudes towards sex and sexuality, with the title making the point.\
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Lester A. Kirkendall and Michael E. Perry}, editor = {Lester A. Kirkendall and Arthur E. Gravatt} } @booklet {3522, title = {"The Way It Was"}, howpublished = {Pohlstars}, year = {1984}, month = {1984}, pages = {189-203}, publisher = {Ballantine Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Overpopulation dystopia in which most people are on welfare, which means just barely able to get by living in large dormitories. The story focuses on the sale of body parts to be able to live better, at least briefly.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013)} } @booklet {3578, title = {"The Work/Family Connection in the Year 2020"}, howpublished = {Marriage and the Family in the Year 2020}, year = {1984}, month = {1984}, pages = {207-25}, publisher = {Prometheus Books}, address = {Buffalo, NY}, abstract = {See the note at 1984 Alam. Discusses the effects of changed work patterns based on revolutions in computing, robotics, increased life expectancy, and the colonization of space.
}, keywords = {Female author, Male author, US author}, author = {Joyce Portner and Larry Etkin}, editor = {Lester A. Kirkendall and Arthur E. Gravatt} } @booklet {3523, title = {The Years of the City}, year = {1984}, note = {Rpt. New York: Pocket Books, 1985.
}, month = {1984}, publisher = {Simon \& Schuster}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Five pictures of a future New York beginning with a dystopia (but with a depiction of some techniques for reform including a Universal Town Meeting) and ending with two near eutopias. The second and third futures are presented as transitional.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013)} } @booklet {3449, title = {Ma Windsor}, year = {1983}, month = {1983}, publisher = {The Hillside Press}, address = {Los Angeles, CA}, abstract = {Mostly a political novel, but a woman is elected President of the United States, and she solves the economic and international problems of the country. Includes her political platform.
}, author = {Lorin Peterson} } @booklet {3450, title = {Midas World}, year = {1983}, note = {Parts published previously as 1954 Pohl, \"The Midas Plague\"; \"The Servant of the People.\"\ Analog Science Fiction--Science Fact\ 103.2 (February 1983): 90-105; \"The Man Who Ate the World.\"\ Galaxy Science Fiction\ 13.1 (November 1956): 6-35; \"The Farmer on the Dole.\"\ Omni\ 5.1 (1982): 118-22, 124, 126-27, 164-68; \"The Lord of the Skies.\"\ Amazing Science Fiction\ 57.2 (July 1983): 114-62; and \"The New Neighbors.\"\ The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction\ 64.5 (May 1983): 137-58.
}, month = {1983}, publisher = {St. Martin{\textquoteright}s Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Series of loosely connected stories stemming from his 1954 \"The Midas Plague.\" The only previously unpublished story, \"The Fire-Bringer\" (1-4), serves as an introduction This is followed by 1954 Pohl, \"The Midas Plague\" (5-74). The other stories then depict aspects of the future of the world created in that story. \"The Servant of the People\" (75-97) is about a Congressman (Congress hold interactive electronic meetings with no one physically present) running against a robot. \"The Man Who Ate the World\" (98-137) is about a compulsive consumer when the need to consume is long past. \"The Farmer on the Dole\" (138-75) is about giving redundant robots new jobs, in this case as a mugger who can only mug other robots. \"The Lord of the Skies\" (176-244) is about life in orbital habitats that draw their power from Earth, whose ecology has been destroyed by the need to send power to the habitats. \"The New Neighbors\" (245-76) is about the future destroyed world now inhabited almost entirely by robots.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013)} } @booklet {3378, title = {Duncan{\textquoteright}s Colony}, year = {1982}, month = {1982}, publisher = {Swallow Press/Ohio University Press}, address = {Athens, OH}, abstract = {Dystopian future set in a small intentional community where four people come together in hopes of surviving an expected nuclear war.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Natalie L[evin] M[aines] Petesch (b.1924)} } @booklet {3377, title = {Lady of Light}, year = {1982}, month = {1982}, publisher = {Timescape}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Mostly fantasy but includes a future post-catastrophe eutopian kingdom.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Diana L. Paxson (b. 1943)} } @booklet {3379, title = {Starburst}, year = {1982}, month = {1982}, publisher = {Ballantine Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {The novel presents a dystopia of the near future in a U. S. that is marked by violent protests and widespread disorder. It also presents a eutopia brought about on another planet through the unexplained development of new powers by a group of people sent on a supposedly meaningless trip to a nonexistent planet. They bring a degree of healing to the Earth. Some satire.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013)} } @booklet {3308, title = {The Cool War}, year = {1981}, month = {1981}, publisher = {Ballantine Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Humorous dystopia set in the 2020s. The \"Cool War\" has replaced the Cold War and consists of world-wide sabotage.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013)} } @booklet {3306, title = {Oath of Fealty}, year = {1981}, note = {Also published New York: Timescape, 1981.\ An excerpt was published in Niven\’s Playgrounds of the Mind (New York: Tor, 1991), 436-48.\
}, month = {1981}, publisher = {Phantasia Press}, address = {Huntington Woods, MI}, abstract = {Dystopia and eutopia presenting the ideas of the Italian architect Paolo Soleri (b. 1919).\ \ An arcology is built in the middle of Los Angeles that is home to 250,000 people and provides for all their needs with security of high priority. Conflict with the rest of the city develops, and the strengths and weaknesses of the arcology as a way of life are revealed.\ For Soleri\&$\#$39;s ideas, see, for example, his Arcology: The City in the Image of Man. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 1969. The community Arcosanti in Arizona was built using his ideas.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Larry [Lawrence van Cott] Niven (b. 1938) and Jerry [Eugene] Pournelle (1933-2017)} } @booklet {3341, title = {"Once Upon a Future: the name gathering"}, howpublished = {Communities: Journal of Cooperative Living}, volume = { no. 47 }, year = {1981}, month = {February/March 1981}, pages = {4-7}, abstract = {A story and a story about telling the story to different groups of children with the children\’s reactions determining the direction of the story. The story is an eco-feminist one in which a girl from an ecologically sensitive community meets a girl from a technological community. Name gathering is a rite of passage in which at puberty everyone goes on a solo journey during which they choose their own name.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Pirtle, Sara} } @booklet {9583, title = {The Shiloh Project}, year = {1981}, month = {1981}, publisher = {Avon}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Alternative history in which the Confederacy won the Battle of Gettysburg in 1863, but all that was achieved was a century-long standoff between the North and the South, which is a police state. In the novel, the North has developed the atomic bomb, and it dropped it on Japan. The South is desperate to get its own, and, at the end of the novel, uses it.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {David C[harles] Poyer (b. 1949)} } @booklet {3198, title = {Operation Misfit}, year = {1980}, month = {1980}, publisher = {Ballantine Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Dystopia emphasizing thought control in which the Thought Control Board tries to eliminate a maverick, who appears throughout the series. Much of the novel follows the maverick into space and is mostly adventure. Sequels include\ Operation Longlife. New York: Ballantine Books, 1982, in which a man who is 186 years old is targeted to obtain the secret of his longevity;\ Operation Exile. New York: Ballantine Books, 1986, in which the North American empire is under threat and the series protagonist is hired to protect the emperor\’s wife with, again, much of the novel mostly adventure; and\ Operation Isis. New York: Ballantine Books, 1986, in which the man, after more adventures, retires to Mars.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {E[dgar] Hoffman [Trooper] Price (1898-1988)} } @booklet {3248, title = {"The Perpetual Migration"}, howpublished = {The Moon Is Always Female}, year = {1980}, note = {Rpt. in her\ Circles On the Water: Selected Poems of Marge Piercy\ (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1982), 273-74.
}, month = {1980}, pages = {114-15}, publisher = {Alfred K. Knopf}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Short eutopian poem on the joy of life. Part of her \"The Lunar Cycle\".\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Marge Piercy (b. 1936)} } @booklet {3249, title = {Shadowman}, year = {1980}, month = {1980}, publisher = {Fawcett Gold Medal}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Flawed utopia in which an emotionless society without crime or violence produces an assassin.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Geo[rge] W. Proctor (1946-2008)} } @booklet {3112, title = {"Iceback Invasion"}, howpublished = {Omni }, volume = {1.7 }, year = {1979}, note = {Rpt. in\ The Best of Omni Science Fiction. Ed. Ben Bova and Don Myrus (New York: Omni Society, 1980), 52-59.
}, month = {April 1979}, pages = {60-63, 108, 110-12}, abstract = {Dystopian satire on multiculturalism.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Hayford Pierce (b. 1942)} } @booklet {3113, title = {Jem: The Making of a Utopia}, year = {1979}, note = {Rpt. New York: Bantam Books, 1980. U.K. ed. London: Victor Gollancz, 1979.
}, month = {1979}, publisher = {St. Martin{\textquoteright}s Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {A novel about the discovery of a planet inhabited by three different species, the attempt to exploit it by three different groups from Earth, and the ultimate coming together of all six groups with a very brief depiction of the better society that resulted.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013)} } @booklet {3152, title = {The Talking Coffins of Cryo-City}, year = {1979}, month = {1979}, publisher = {Elsevier/Nelson Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {A young adult novel which describes a flawed utopia based on the control of the weather. The world is run by machines. Criminals are frozen.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Shirley [Laurolyn] Parenteau (b. 1935)} } @booklet {3007, title = {"Escape to the Suburbs"}, howpublished = {Cassandra Rising}, year = {1978}, month = {1978}, pages = {57-65}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {Overpopulation dystopia. Manhattan is cut off from the suburbs. The city government has fled to New Jersey and the tunnels have been blown up. Manhattan is now entirely black and Hispanic, extremely poor, and crowded. Those who try to escape are killed.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Rachel Cosgrove Payes (1922-98)}, editor = {Alice Laurence} } @booklet {3059, title = {An Exercise for Madmen}, year = {1978}, month = {1978}, publisher = {Berkley Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Describes a scientific satellite that is a near eutopia and its corruption by an alien.
}, keywords = {US author}, author = {Barbara [Jeanne] Paul (b. 1931)} } @booklet {3010, title = {The Institute}, year = {1978}, month = {1978}, publisher = {Manor Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Authoritarian dystopia. The Institute is where scientists in the service of a power-hungry government bureaucracy experiment on humans.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Robert Petyo} } @booklet {3008, title = {The King of Hell}, year = {1978}, month = {1978}, publisher = {Robert Hale}, address = {London}, abstract = {A penal colony planet controlled by an apparently eutopian world (Elysium) is a dystopia.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {W[ilfred] D[ennis] Pereira (1921-2014)} } @booklet {3009, title = {"The Leprosarium"}, howpublished = {Seasons Such As These. Two Novels}, year = {1978}, month = {1978}, pages = {7-57}, publisher = {The Swallow Press}, address = {Chicago, IL}, abstract = {Dystopia in which a large insurance company punishes those who deviate from its rules by incarcerating them in the Leprosarium where large numbers of people are kept together but prohibited from most contact, with such contact warranting further physical punishment. Those who survive are sent to isolated islands, where they take large doses of the drug orgone, which causes hallucinations.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Natalie L[evin] M[aines] Petesch (b.1924)} } @booklet {2942, title = {A Dream of Wessex}, year = {1977}, note = {U.S. ed. as\ The Perfect Lover.\ New York: Charles Scribner\&$\#$39;s Sons, 1977.
}, month = {1977}, publisher = {Faber and Faber}, address = {London}, abstract = {The novel presents a future (2135-37) after a series of earthquakes has destroyed much of Britain, and it is a Soviet state, generally presented neutrally. Wessex is an island off the coast that is a holiday resort where many of the rules of the mainland do not apply and, as a result, it attracts many tourists from the Islamic North America. The focus of the novel is on two individuals projected to the future Wessex from the mid-1980s who choose to stay there.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Christopher [McKenzie] Priest (1943-2024)} } @booklet {11892, title = {Worlds for the Grabbing}, year = {1977}, month = {1977}, pages = {222 pp.}, publisher = {Dennis Dobson}, address = {London}, abstract = {As befits the title, the novel is about the corrupt system of colonization and the exploitation of other planets. The main character has too-high ethical standards for the system.
}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, isbn = {9780234720400}, author = {Brenda Pearce (b. 1935)} } @booklet {11485, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Age of Libra{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Science Fiction Discoveries}, year = {1976}, month = {1976}, pages = {51-68}, publisher = {Bantam Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {United States Retirement Services is an answer to overpopulation. It has established 1645 retirement villages, each holding 2900 people for one year. Retirement is mandatory at a specified age, which is lowered within the story but can be chosen earlier.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Scott Edelstein (b. 1954)}, editor = {Carol Pohl (1927-2005) and Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013)} } @booklet {2906, title = {Another Eden}, year = {1976}, month = {1976}, publisher = {Robert Hale}, address = {London}, abstract = {The novel begins in the overpopulation dystopia of Earth, and then moves to a planet being settled to offload population. The people have been told that it is Edenic, but it is in fact extremely dangerous, and then the aliens attack.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {W[ilfred] D[ennis] Pereira (1921-2014)} } @booklet {2908, title = {The Eden Echo}, year = {1976}, month = {1976}, publisher = {Baker{\textquoteright}s Plays}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {Satire in a play on a women\&$\#$39;s only future. Because men were warlike, God had removed all men and women had created a peaceful society. The play shows two older women who are bored, a vehemently anti-male woman, and a young woman who discovers a man in suspended animation. God blinds the anti-male woman so that she can\&$\#$39;t see the man, and he and the girl go off together.
}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Ruth Angell Purkey} } @booklet {2907, title = {"From Utopia to Paradise"}, howpublished = {From Utopia to Paradise}, year = {1976}, month = {1976}, pages = {[1]. 24 pp.}, publisher = {Petamber Persaud}, address = {[Campbellville, Guyana]}, abstract = {Dialect poem of Guyana as eutopia.
}, keywords = {Guyanese author}, author = {Petamber Persaud} } @booklet {2871, title = {"The Little Book of All Colors"}, howpublished = {Papers in Honor of Professor Woodbridge Bingham: A Festschrift for His Seventy-fifth Birthday}, year = {1976}, month = {1976}, pages = {141-269}, publisher = {Chinese Materials Center}, address = {San Francisco, CA}, abstract = {Eutopia describing the country of Seeklaria, a small country located in the European Alps. Constitutional monarchy. Influenced by Christianity and China. Racially mixed and culturally well integrated. A modern society with the charms of the past. Based on interviews with the King. Much comment on current affairs, particularly Vietnam.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {James B[unyan] Parsons (b. 1948)}, editor = {James B[unyan] Parsons (b. 1948)} } @booklet {2872, title = {Woman on the Edge of Time}, year = {1976}, note = {Rpt. New York: Fawcett Crest, 1976. U.K. ed. London: Women\&$\#$39;s Press, 1983.\ [40th anniversary edition]. London: Gollancz, 2016 with \“Introduction to the 2016 Edition\” by Piercy (vii-xi).\
}, month = {1976}, publisher = {Alfred A. Knopf}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Detailed feminist eutopia that is half a realistic novel about the mistreatment of the poor by the police, social workers and the medical/psychiatric profession. Eliminates gendered pronouns; replaced with \"per\".
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Marge Piercy (b. 1936)} } @booklet {2780, title = {"Come Take a Dip With Me in the Genetic Pool"}, howpublished = {Dystopian Visions}, year = {1975}, month = {1975}, pages = {20-24}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, NJ}, abstract = {Dystopia in which an authoritarian genetic council decides who can have children and requires abortions when a relationship is not approved.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Rachel Cosgrove Payes (1922-98)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007)} } @booklet {2782, title = {"Growing Up in Edge City"}, howpublished = {Epoch}, year = {1975}, note = {Rpt. in his\ Pohlstars\ (New York: Ballantine Books, 1984), 126-39.
}, month = {1975}, pages = {103-13}, publisher = {Berkley Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Dystopia describing a totally enclosed city where every person is constantly monitored. One boy discovers a way outside and people living there. Punished, he ultimately arranges for the destruction of those outside to advance his career.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013)}, editor = {Robert Silverberg (b. 1935) and Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007)} } @booklet {2781, title = {The Peter Plan; A Proposal for Survival}, year = {1975}, month = {1975}, publisher = {William Morrow}, address = {New York}, abstract = {A future eutopia based on political participation. An emphasis on ecology.
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author, US author}, author = {Laurence J[ohnston] Peter (1919-90)} } @booklet {2698, title = {"Born Free: A Feminist Fable"}, howpublished = {Woman in the Year 2000}, year = {1974}, month = {1974}, pages = {3-24}, publisher = {Arbor House}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Feminist eutopia. The story follows the first thirteen years of the life of a girl born into an egalitarian society at midnight on January 1, 2000. Each person works twenty-five hours a week with an additional six hours a month of volunteer work, although they can arrange their hours as they choose (11-12). Much of the story concerns childbirth, day-care, which is available everywhere, and education, all with many alternative arrangements. People are completely free to arrange their relationships (6). Male and female contraception is freely available, and abortion is a woman\’s right (7). Cooperative housekeeping (9). All sport, including professional sport is mixed sex (18). Gay people are now completely accepted (22-23). The U.S. is now a parliamentary system rather than a presidential one (4). The female author was an editor of Ms. Magazine.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Letty Cottin Pogrebin (b. 1939)}, editor = {Maggie Tripp} } @booklet {2679, title = {"Eat, Drink, and Be Merry"}, howpublished = {2020 Vision}, year = {1974}, month = {1974}, pages = {121-26}, publisher = {Avon}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Computer dystopia. Computer perfection regulates diet and will not allow a person to get more than five pounds off their ideal weight.
}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Dian Girad}, editor = {Jerry [Eugene] Pournelle (1933-2017)} } @booklet {9030, title = {Inverted World. A Novel}, year = {1974}, note = {U.S. ed. New York: Harper \& Row, 1974. Rpt. without the subtitle New York: New York Review Books, 2008 with an \“Afterword\” by John Clute (315-22).\
}, month = {1974}, publisher = {Faber and Faber}, address = {London}, abstract = {Primarily a science-oriented science fiction novel, but the social setting is an authoritarian, controlling dystopia.
U.S. ed. New York: St. Martin\&$\#$39;s, 1975.
}, month = {1974}, publisher = {Macmillan of Canada}, address = {Toronto, ON, Canada}, abstract = {Most of the world is experiencing a long drought, have little technology, and people are starving. North and South America consists of two empires that have extensive advanced technology and are wealthy, but much of the population is being kept alive by medical science. Unable to survive in drought conditions, people in Africa and Europe invade North America.
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {Bruce [Allen] Powe (1925-2018)} } @booklet {11856, title = {"Pale Hands"}, howpublished = {Orbit}, volume = {15}, year = {1974}, note = {Rpt. in The Future is Female! More Classic Science Fiction by Women Volume 2: The 1970s. Ed. Lisa Yaszek (New York: Library of America, 2023), 202-217, with a biographical note on 458-460 and a note on the text on 485.
}, month = {1974}, pages = {28-40}, publisher = {Harper \& Row}, address = {New York}, abstract = {The story is set in a future New York City where sex is prohibited to control population and Fifth Avenue is lined with masturbation booths.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-59853-732-1}, author = {Doris Piserchia (1928-2021)}, editor = {Damon [Francis] Knight (1922-2002)} } @booklet {2694, title = {"Prognosis: Terminal"}, howpublished = {2020 Vision}, year = {1974}, month = {1974}, pages = {129-48 with an editor{\textquoteright}s note on 127-28}, publisher = {Avon}, address = {New York}, abstract = {The future society is generally presented positively, but there is still significant inequality and violence. Domed cities; light drugs readily available.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Dave [David Edward] McDaniel}, editor = {Jerry [Eugene] Pournelle (1933-2017)} } @booklet {2596, title = {Aftermath 15}, year = {1973}, month = {1973}, publisher = {Robert Hale}, address = {London}, abstract = {Authoritarian dystopia after a nuclear war with the U.S. divided into red, blue, and white zones based on exposure to radiation. Those released from the red to the blue become slaves as do those released from the blue to the white. The white zone includes a huge city, over a mile high which is an overpopulation dystopia except for those at the top. Outside the city is a gold zone for the elite of the elite. Described as the first volume of a trilogy and ends in a manner that requires a continuation, but no evidence can be found of later volumes.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {W[ilfred] D[ennis] Pereira (1921-2014)} } @booklet {2595, title = {Final Solution}, year = {1973}, month = {1973}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {University problems of the 1960s and 1970s projected into a dystopian future. Graduates of universities, including some with graduate degrees, cannot read. Students are kept as children through drugs that delay puberty.\ Children of unwed mothers raised separately with no visits by the mothers. Standard English rejected; Black English required of all students. No grades. Positions like Professor of Shoe Repair. University level driver training.\
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Richard E[arl] Peck (b. 1936)} } @booklet {2650, title = {"For the Good of Society"}, howpublished = {Vertex }, volume = {1.5 }, year = {1973}, note = {Rpt as by T[erri] E. Merritt-Pinckard in\ Ackermanthology: 65 Astonishing, Rediscovered Sci-Fi Shorts. Ed. Forrest J. Ackerman (Santa Monica, CA: General Publishing, 1997), 241-44.
}, month = {December 1973}, pages = {50-52, 79}, abstract = {Dystopia of criminality where the only decent people are in prison and it is prisoners who grow the food and manufacture the goods for the entire society.
}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Terri E. Pinckard (1930-2004)} } @booklet {2499, title = {"2032: A Gay Odyssey"}, howpublished = {Gay News (London)}, volume = {3}, year = {1972}, month = {1972}, pages = {6-7}, abstract = {Future dystopia of a State Registered Homosexual system that provides facilities for a minority of gays who accept an end to political activity. Those not State Registered are subject to harassment.
}, author = {Glenys Parry} } @booklet {2504, title = {Against Arcturus}, year = {1972}, month = {1972}, publisher = {Ace Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {A well-described alien eutopia on a planet that Earth plans to colonize to settle people from overpopulated worlds. This will require the elimination of the indigenous inhabitants, who are spiritually and socially advanced far beyond humans.\
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Susan K. Putney} } @booklet {2503, title = {The Barons of Behavior}, year = {1972}, note = {U.K. ed. London: Dennis Dobson, 1977.
}, month = {1972}, publisher = {Ace Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Dystopia of behavior control.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Tom [Thomas Edward] Purdom (1936-2024)} } @booklet {2502, title = {Fugue for a Darkening Island}, year = {1972}, note = {U.S. ed. entitled\ Darkening Island. New York: Harper \& Row, 1972.
}, month = {1972}, publisher = {Faber \& Faber}, address = {London}, abstract = {Dystopia of racial war.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Christopher [McKenzie] Priest (1943-2024)} } @booklet {2500, title = {"Gantlet"}, howpublished = {Orbit: An Anthology of New Science Fiction Stories}, volume = { 10}, year = {1972}, note = {Rpt. in\ The City 2000 A.D.: Urban Life Through Science Fiction. Ed. Ralph Clem, Martin Harry Greenberg, and Joseph Olander (Greenwich, CT: Fawcett Crest, 1976), 254-65.
}, month = {1972}, pages = {157-68}, publisher = {G.P. Putnam{\textquoteright}s Sons}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Overpopulation and pollution dystopia.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Richard E[arl] Peck (b. 1936)}, editor = {Damon [Francis] Knight (1922-2002)} } @booklet {2501, title = {Genius Unlimited}, year = {1972}, month = {1972}, publisher = {DAW Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Eutopia of geniuses where everyone who works independently has problems, and the people have to learn both to work together and be practical.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {John T[homas] Phillifent (1916-76)} } @booklet {2532, title = {"The Total Influence or Outcome of the Matter: THE SUN." Part 11 of "Laying down the tower"}, howpublished = {off our backs }, volume = {11.9}, year = {1972}, note = {Rpt. as \"Outcome of the Matter: The Sun.\" In her\ Circles on the Water: Selected Poems\ (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1982), 137-38.
}, month = {March 1972}, pages = {18}, abstract = {Fairly vague eutopian poem regarding children and their need for freedom. See also 1970, 1976, 1980, and 1991 Piercy.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Marge Piercy (b. 1936)} } @booklet {2405, title = {"How Can We Sink When We Can Fly?"}, howpublished = {Four Futures: Four Original Novellas of Science Fiction}, year = {1971}, note = {Rpt. in Dream\’s Edge: Science Fiction Stories About the Future of Planet Earth. Ed. Terry Carr (San Francisco, CA: Sierra Club Books, 1980), 130-56.
}, month = {1971}, pages = {93-130}, publisher = {Hawthorn Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {The environmental dystopia of the present contrasted with an ecologically balanced future.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Alexei [Alexis Adams] Panshin (1940-2022)} } @booklet {2406, title = {Love in the Ruins: The Adventures of a Bad Catholic at a Time Near the End of the World}, year = {1971}, note = {U.K. ed. London: Eyre \& Spottiswoode, 1971.
}, month = {1971}, publisher = {Farrar, Straus, \& Giroux}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Dystopia located in Louisiana depicting a general collapse of the U.S. with some local institutions surviving. Racial conflict and, at the end, the northern cities with large African American populations have seceded. The protagonist believes himself to be a collateral descendant of Thomas More and regularly refers to him.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Walker Percy (1916-90)} } @booklet {2309, title = {1989: Population Doomsday}, year = {1970}, month = {1970}, publisher = {Bee Line Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Overpopulation and pollution dystopia.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Don[ald Eugene] Pendleton (1927-95)} } @booklet {2310, title = {Dance the Eagle to Sleep}, year = {1970}, note = {Rpt. Greenwich, CT: Fawcett, 1971; and Oakland, CA: PM Press, 2012, with an \"Introduction to the New Edition\" by the author (vii-ix).
}, month = {1970}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {Dystopia which has a required \"19th Year of Service\" seen through the eyes of various young people who are suppressed by their parents, their schools, and the social order in which they live. This part of the novel reads like a realistic novel which then shifts to the youth rebellion and the rest of the novel focuses on the rebellion, the people involved in it, their relations and conflicts, and the organizations they establish including urban and rural communities. See also 1972, 1976, 1980, and 1991 Piercy.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Marge Piercy (b. 1936)} } @booklet {2276, title = {"Homage to Raphael Hythloday"}, howpublished = {ARK (Journal of the Royal College of Art, London) }, volume = {46 }, year = {1970}, note = {Rpt. without the illus. in Anarchy 115 10.9 (September 1970): 266-268.
}, month = {Spring 1970}, pages = {4-7}, abstract = {A eutopian education, with much criticism of even good contemporary education. In Utopia they teach the parents--which includes everyone who the child chooses to learn from--first. That means that no elementary schools are needed, and there are no age or generational distinctions. No one works but people create and make things as and when they choose.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {David Austin and David Page} } @booklet {2311, title = {Indoctrinaire}, year = {1970}, note = {U.S. ed. New York: Harper \& Row, 1970. U.K. ed. rpt. London: New English Library, 1971. [Rev. ed.] London: Pan, 1979 with an \"Afterword\" by the author (191-92). Part originally published as \"The Interrogator.\"\ New Writings in S-F 15.\ Ed. [Edward] John Carnell (London: Dennis Dobson, 1969), 45-76.
}, month = {1970}, publisher = {Faber and Faber}, address = {London}, abstract = {Anarchist eutopia set in Brazil 200 years in the future. There is no government. All simple decisions are left to individuals, but they are expected to consult on more complex ones, and there is a social hierarchy based on merit that may be consulted.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Christopher [McKenzie] Priest (1943-2024)} } @booklet {2360, title = {"Once Upon a Time: A Fable of Student Power"}, howpublished = {The New York Times Magazine}, year = {1970}, note = {Rpt. in\ Futures Conditional.\ [Ed.] Robert Theobald (Indianapolis, IN: The Bobbs-Merril Co., 1972), 197-202.
}, month = {June 14, 1970}, pages = {6-7}, abstract = {Eutopia. Based on a passage in Henry David Thoreau\&$\#$39;s (1817-62) Walden; or, Life in the Woods (1854) about the need for students to live life rather than just studying, New York City removes students from school and puts them to work cleaning up and repairing the rundown city. Post-secondary students asked to participate and were added.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Neil Postman (1931-2003)} } @booklet {2273, title = {World Well Lost}, year = {1970}, note = {U.S. ed. under the author\&$\#$39;s name. Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1971.
}, month = {1970}, publisher = {Robert Hale}, address = {London}, abstract = {The planet known as Eden, a non-violent eutopia anarchist, vegetarian, is invaded by a violent people, who create a dystopia. A few people choose to reject non-violence and fight back.
}, keywords = {English author, US author}, author = {[John Kempton] [Aiken] (1913-90)} } @booklet {2229, title = {Terminus}, year = {1969}, month = {1969}, publisher = {Essex House}, address = {North Hollywood, CA}, abstract = {Overpopulation dystopia as the vehicle for mild pornography. Mostly sex but some racial and personal violence. Authoritarian state.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Michael Perkins (b. 1942)} } @booklet {2161, title = {The Call of the Planets}, year = {1968}, month = {1968}, publisher = {A. J. Chapple}, address = {Bala, North Wales}, abstract = {Jupiter as a eutopia. No racial prejudice. Women remain beautiful throughout life. Calm, serene inner life. Equality.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {James Ernest William Patterson} } @booklet {2159, title = {The Curious Culture of the Planet Loretta}, year = {1968}, month = {1968}, publisher = {Vantage Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Capitalist eutopia with an area set aside for social experimentation, which experiments, generally being socialist, fail. Stress on responsibility.\
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {William J. Palmer} } @booklet {2193, title = {Killing Ground: The Canadian Civil War}, year = {1968}, note = {Rpt. with a \"Foreword.\" Toronto, ON, Canada: Peter Martin Associates, 1972; and with a brief \"a Word from the Author.\" Markham, ON, Canada: Paperjacks, 1977.
}, month = {1968}, publisher = {Peter Martin Associates}, address = {Toronto, ON, Canada}, abstract = {See the subtitle.
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {[Bruce Allen] [Powe] (b. 1925)} } @booklet {2160, title = {Rite of Passage}, year = {1968}, note = {Rpt. Boston, MA: Gregg Press, 1976 with \"Introduction: The Story of Rite of Passage\" (v-xiv) by the author; and as the Collector\&$\#$39;s Edition. Norwalk, CT: The Easton Press, 1990 illus. Debbie Hughes and with an \"Introduction\" (v-viii) by Edward Bryant; and in\ Alternative Communities: Magazine of the Alternative Communities Movement, no. 22\ (1986): 3-24. To be continued but the journal stopped publication. Part was originally published as \"Door to the Worlds of Men.\"\ Worlds of If Science Fiction 13.3\ (July 1963): 89-112.
}, month = {1968}, publisher = {Ace Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {The novel is concerned with the society that develops on a spaceship and particularly with the rite of passage to adulthood in which young people are put on a colony world to survive or perish. Can be classified as eutopian, dystopian, or a flawed utopia depending on the reader\&$\#$39;s perspective. Related stories are \"What Size Are Giants.\" Worlds of Tomorrow 3.1 (13) (May 1965): 8-47; and \"The Sons of Prometheus.\" Analog Science Fiction Science-Fact 78.2 (October 1966): 50-71.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Alexei [Alexis Adams] Panshin (1940-2022)} } @booklet {2082, title = {Five Against Arlane}, year = {1967}, month = {1967}, publisher = {Ace Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Authoritarian dystopia under the control of one man, who has gained psychological control of almost the entire population. The novel emphasizes the successful revolt against it.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Tom [Thomas Edward] Purdom (1936-2024)} } @booklet {2081, title = {Garbage World}, year = {1967}, month = {1967}, publisher = {Berkley Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Pleasure worlds as dystopias with one asteroid used as a garbage dump for the pleasure worlds.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author, US author}, author = {Charles Platt (b. 1945)} } @booklet {2061, title = {Riot {\textquoteright}71}, year = {1967}, note = {U.S. ed. New York: Walker and Co., 1967.\
}, month = {1967}, publisher = {Hodder \& Stoughton}, address = {London}, abstract = {An economic depression leads to blaming colored immigrants and a fascist, racist dystopia called the Nordic Union.\
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Peter] [Brent] (1931-84)} } @booklet {2039, title = {.... in the stars--The Great Society!}, year = {1966}, month = {1966}, publisher = {Vantage Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Detailed eutopia described by a man from space who shows how it should be applied on Earth, led by the U.S. The book is dedicated to President Lyndon B[aines] Johnson (1908-73. President 1963-69), and the eutopia, although it goes much further, is loosely based on Johnson\&$\#$39;s program for the Great Society. No war, poverty, crime, or disease. Stress on education. Overpopulation defeated by rigorous birth control and eugenic policies. Deformed children and mentally retarded children not allowed to live. Limit on the number of children.
}, keywords = {Canadian author, German author, Male author}, author = {I. M. Pernow [pseud.]} } @booklet {2041, title = {Inner Circle}, year = {1966}, month = {1966}, publisher = {Macmillan}, address = {London}, abstract = {A weird ritualized, overpopulation dystopia set in the far future.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author, Polish author}, author = {Jerzy Peterkiewicz (1916-2007)} } @booklet {2042, title = {The Last Refuge}, year = {1966}, month = {1966}, publisher = {Ronald Whiting \& Wheaton}, address = {London}, abstract = {Authoritarian dystopia. The countryside has been paved over, and private homes have been replaced with huge apartment blocks.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {John Petty (1919-73)} } @booklet {2040, title = {Saga of Lost Earths}, year = {1966}, month = {1966}, publisher = {Ace Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Authoritarian dystopia as setting at the beginning. The bulk of the book is a heroic saga based on the Finnish Kalevala.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Emil [Theodore] Petaja (1915-2000)} } @booklet {6993, title = {"The Age of the Pussyfoot"}, howpublished = {Galaxy Magazine [Galaxy changed its name back to Galaxy Science Fiction with the 24.3 (February 1966) issue.] }, volume = {24.1 - 3 }, year = {1965}, note = {Exp. under the same title New York: Trident Press, 1969. Rpt. New York: Ballantine Books, 1969.
}, month = {October 1965 - February 1966}, pages = {8-70, 158-94, 157-94}, abstract = {Eutopia with problems. In a pleasure-oriented future everyone has a personal computer that provides anything desired, at least for the wealthy. There is widespread drug use, leisure, sexual freedom, and immortality through freezing and resuscitation. While there are various conflicts that drive the plot, the ending is positive.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {0016-4003 }, author = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013)} } @booklet {1998, title = {The Caves of Mars}, year = {1965}, month = {1965}, publisher = {Ace Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Dystopia in which a drug that provides perfect health also makes a person amenable to control.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Emil [Theodore] Petaja (1915-2000)} } @booklet {1999, title = {A Plague of Pythons}, year = {1965}, note = {Rev. as\ Demon in the Skull. New York: DAW Books, 1984. A shorter version was published as \"Plague of Pythons\" in\ Galaxy Magazine\ 21.1 - 2 (October - December 1962): 112-58, 136-89.
}, month = {1965}, publisher = {Ballantine Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Dystopia in the classic power corrupts mode.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013)} } @booklet {2000, title = {Starchild}, year = {1965}, note = {Originally published in a shorter version in\ Worlds of If Science Fiction\ 15.1 -3 (86 - 88) (January - March 1965): 6-52, 101-29, 91-128. Also published in their\ The Starchild Trilogy.\ The Reefs of Space Starchild Rogue Star\ (Garden City, NY: Nelson Doubleday, 1969), 151-286, which includes the third volume, the non-utopian \"Rogue Star.\"\ Worlds of If Science Fiction\ 18.6 - 8 (127 - 29) (June - August 1968): 10-43; 119-59; 125-58; repub. New York: Ballantine Books, 1969. U.K. ed. London: Dennis Dobson, 1969.
}, month = {1965}, publisher = {Ballantine Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Sequel to 1963 Pohl and Williamson, \"The Reefs of Space\". In this volume the computer has tightened its grip but is threatened by unknown forces.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013) and Jack [John Stewart] Williamson (1908-2006)} } @booklet {1960, title = {Davy}, year = {1964}, note = {UK ed. London: Dennis Dobson, 1966. Expanded from \"The Golden Horn.\"\ The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction 22.2\ (129) (February 1962): 98-129; and \"A War of No Consequence.\" 22.3 (130) (March 1962): 51-73.
}, month = {1964}, publisher = {St. Martin{\textquoteright}s Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Future barbarianism but with elements of a dystopia dominated by religion.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Edgar Pangborn (1909-76)} } @booklet {1980, title = {Understanding Money, Unemployment and Inflation: Why New Zealand is a Modern Utopia}, year = {1964}, month = {1964}, publisher = {Vantage Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Non-fiction. New Zealand as a eutopia. In addition to being a natural paradise, New Zealand has more or less accidentally defined money in terms of work, which is the basis of its existence as a eutopia.
}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author, US author}, author = {John Randolph Perkins} } @booklet {1912, title = {"Reefs of Space"}, howpublished = {Worlds of If Science Fiction}, volume = { 13.3 - 5 }, year = {1963}, note = {Repub. New York: Ballantine Books, 1965. U.K. ed. London: Dennis Dobson, 1965. Also published in their The Starchild Trilogy. The Reefs of Space Starchild Rogue Star (Garden City, NY: Nelson Doubleday, 1969), 151-286, which includes the third volume, the non-utopian \“Rogue Star,\” which was originally pub. in Worlds of If Science Fiction 18.6 - 8 (127 - 29) (June - August 1968): 10-43; 119-59; 125-58; and was repub. New York: Ballantine Books, 1969. U.K. ed. London: Dennis Dobson, 1969.\
}, month = {July - November 1963}, pages = {8-56; 60-104; 70-113}, abstract = {Authoritarian dystopia in which the Plan of Man computer has essentially enslaved humankind. 1965 Pohl and Williamson, \"Starchild\" is a sequel.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013) and Jack [John Stewart] Williamson (1908-2006)} } @booklet {1869, title = {"Critical Mass"}, howpublished = {Galaxy Magazine}, volume = { 20.3 }, year = {1962}, note = {Rpt. in their\ The Wonder Effect\ (New York: Ballantine Books, 1962), 11-46.
}, month = {February 1962}, pages = {8-41}, abstract = {Satiric dystopia of a future U.S. obsessed with bomb shelters.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {0016-4003 }, author = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013) and C[yril] M[ichael] Kornbluth (1923-58)} } @booklet {1889, title = {"John Sze{\textquoteright}s Future"}, howpublished = {Great Science Fiction by Scientists}, year = {1962}, month = {1962}, pages = {259-65 with an editor{\textquoteright}s note on 258.}, publisher = {Collier Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {A brief time-travel story in which the protagonist ends up in a future that officially rejects the hard sciences while unofficially using them. The word nuclear is obscene.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {John R. Pierce (1910-2002)}, editor = {Groff Conklin} } @booklet {1830, title = {"A Gentle Dying"}, howpublished = {Galaxy Magazine }, volume = {19.5 }, year = {1961}, note = {Rpt. in their\ The Wonder Effect\ (New York: Ballantine Books, 1962), 47-54.
}, month = {June 1961}, pages = {68-75}, abstract = {Dystopian satire on the innocence of children. A wealthy children\&$\#$39;s book author establishes a research institute to find ways for children to avoid growing up. Successful, the children then eliminate all adults; only the author is allowed to die a natural death.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013) and C[yril] M[ichael] Kornbluth (1923-58)} } @booklet {1829, title = {Pudoria}, year = {1961}, month = {1961}, publisher = {Lyle Stuart}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Open, free love eutopia. Money is considered indecent.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Tom Pease (b. 1893)} } @booklet {1801, title = {"Drunkard{\textquoteright}s Walk"}, howpublished = {Galaxy Magazine}, volume = { 18.5 - 6 }, year = {1960}, note = {Repub. New York: Ballantine Books. U.K. ed. London: Victor Gollancz, 1961. Rpt. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1966.
}, month = {June - August 1960}, pages = {8-56, 132-93}, abstract = {The background to the story includes a dystopian overpopulated, poor society contrasted with the privileged few who pass extremely stringent tests to enter the relative prosperity of university.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {0016-4003 }, author = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013)} } @booklet {1788, title = {The World Today and Tomorrow}, year = {1960}, month = {1960}, pages = {49 pp.}, publisher = {Author}, address = {Chicago, IL}, abstract = {Detailed description of a new economic system called the Collaborative Economic system where capital, labor, the seller-producer, and the buyer are placed in institutional structures that allow them to work together. He briefly discusses associations for credit, purchases, \"buyer-producers for purchases,\" \"buyer-consumers,\" transformation, collective production, insurance, and professional and common unions. The pamphlet ends with two pages of organizational charts.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Panayot Tzv Popoff (1902-87)} } @booklet {1784, title = {World Without Women}, year = {1960}, month = {1960}, publisher = {Fawcett}, address = {Greenwich, CT}, abstract = {Standard dystopia of a world with few women. Most women die and gang wars follow.
}, keywords = {US author}, author = {Leonard Pruyn (1898-1973) and [Gunnard] [Hjerststedt] (1904-69)} } @booklet {1745, title = {Wolfbane}, year = {1959}, note = {Rpt. New York: Garland, 1975. Shorter version in\ Galaxy Science Fiction\ 14.6 - 15.1 (October - November 1957): 8-52; 54-105.
}, month = {1959}, publisher = {Ballantine Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Authoritarian dystopia in which the Earth has been moved by extraterrestrials resulting in the remaining humans dividing into two groups. One, called Sheep by the other group, that reduces its activities to a so as to conserve energy and kills anyone who violates their norms. The other, called Wolves by the first, who are much more active and establish a community of their own. But the aliens have a use for the wolves, and they become part of a machine.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013) and C[yril] M[ichael] Kornbluth (1923-58)} } @booklet {1727, title = {"Golden Age"}, howpublished = {Fantastic Universe }, volume = {10.3 }, year = {1958}, month = {September 1958}, pages = {34-36}, abstract = {Dystopia showing the boredom that comes with too much security and the danger to the system of thinking.
}, author = {Lee Priestley} } @booklet {1707, title = {"Tomorrow{\textquoteright}s Gift"}, howpublished = {Star Science Fiction Stories }, volume = {No. 4}, year = {1958}, note = {Rpt. in his\ Tomorrow\&$\#$39;s Gift\ (New York: Ballantine Books, 1958), 7-15. U.K. ed. (London: Brown, Watson/Digit Books, [1958]), 5-13.
}, month = {1958}, pages = {81-91}, publisher = {Ballantine Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Dystopia of a four-class society based on I.Q. and H.Q. (Happiness Quotient). The classes are administrators, technicians, prefrontals (having failed in one of the top classes), and illiterates.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Edmund Cooper (1926-82)}, editor = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013)} } @booklet {1688, title = {A Land Fit for {\textquoteright}Eros}, year = {1957}, month = {1957}, publisher = {Arco}, address = {London}, abstract = {Primarily humor. Satire on a British movement to root out \"subversives\" similar to that of Senator Joseph R. McCarthy (1908-57) in the U.S. that was known as McCarthyism.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author, Scottish author}, author = {John [Alfred Neville] Atkins (1916-2009) and J[ohn] B[arclay] Pick (1921-2015)} } @booklet {1682, title = {"Lone Star Planet"}, howpublished = {Fantastic Universe}, volume = { 7.3 }, year = {1957}, note = {Rpt. as\ A Planet for Texans. New York: Ace Books, 1958. Ace Double bound with Andre Norton (1912-2005),\ Star Born; and as\ Lone Star Planet. New York: Ace Books, 1979 with no mention of McGuire. Bound with his\ Four-Day Planet, which was originally published New York: G.P. Putnam\&$\#$39;s Sons, 1961.
}, month = {March 1957}, pages = {4-66}, abstract = {A planet settled by Texans with an almost anarchist society. The workings of its political and legal systems are presented positively, although with satirical elements.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {H[enry] Beam Piper (1917-81) and John J[oseph] McGuire (1917-1981)} } @booklet {1683, title = {"My Lady Green Sleeves"}, howpublished = {Galaxy Science Fiction }, volume = {13.4 }, year = {1957}, note = {Rpt. in his\ The Case Against Tomorrow\ (New York: Ballantine Books, 1957), 111-50.
}, month = {February 1957}, pages = {6-43}, abstract = {Dystopia. Class society based on occupation with the Civil Service, which includes Congress, at the top.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {0016-4003 }, author = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013)} } @booklet {11596, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Census Takers{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction }, volume = {10.2 (57) }, year = {1956}, month = {February 1956}, pages = {122-127}, abstract = {A brief dystopia set in a future U.S. with serious population problems divided into Census Areas in which a census is taken annually. It is from the viewpoint of an Area Commander, who appears to have a set limit to the population in the area. While not stated explicitly, it is implied that those are the limit are killed.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {00024-984X }, author = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013)} } @booklet {1635, title = {"Everybody{\textquoteright}s Happy But Me"}, howpublished = {Imagination Science Fiction (Evanston, IL)}, volume = {7.1 }, year = {1956}, note = {Rpt. as \"What To Do Till the Analyst Comes.\" In his\ Alternating Currents\ (New York: Ballantine Books, 1956), 143-54.
}, month = {February 1956}, pages = {64-77}, abstract = {Drug dystopia.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013)} } @booklet {1578, title = {Before Dawn}, year = {1955}, month = {1955}, publisher = {Hutchinson}, address = {London}, abstract = {The novel is about the conflict between Christianity and Communism and the efforts of one man to save the world from Communism.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Hanbury Pawle (1886-1972)} } @booklet {1579, title = {Gladiator-at-Law}, year = {1955}, note = {U.K. London: Victor Gollancz, 1964.\
}, month = {1955}, publisher = {Ballantine}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Capitalist, corporate, machine dominated dystopia with the novel focusing on the struggle to bring down one large, corrupt corporation.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013) and C[yril] M[ichael] Kornbluth (1923-58)} } @booklet {1611, title = {Love and Lunacy: A Satirical Comedy in Three Acts}, year = {1955}, month = {1955}, publisher = {J. Garnet Miller}, address = {London}, abstract = {The three acts take place in Atlantis in the remote past, on an island in the near future, and on Luna and Earth in the remote future. Atlantis is vaguely utopian, but, in the play, it is primarily the setting for a \"peace conference\" among the major powers of the time, which ends with Zeus\&$\#$39;s destruction of Atlantis. The second and third acts are dystopian, with another failed peace conference followed by an authoritarian regime on the moon. The play ends with the death of the dictator.
}, keywords = {Male author, Welsh author}, author = {Peter Philp (1920-2006)} } @booklet {1581, title = {"Rafferty{\textquoteright}s Reasons"}, howpublished = {Fantastic Universe (New York)}, volume = {4.3 }, year = {1955}, note = {Rpt. in his\ Alternating Currents\ (New York: Ballantine Books, 1956), 83-96.
}, month = {October 1955}, pages = {48-59}, abstract = {Dystopia in which people are required to do work that machines could do as well or better and are taught to do that work by the machines.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013)} } @booklet {1541, title = {"Spud Failure Definite"}, howpublished = {A.D. 2500: The Observer Prize Stories 1954}, year = {1955}, month = {1955}, pages = {107-17}, publisher = {William Heinemann}, address = {London}, abstract = {The failure of the potato crop leads to a new Irish famine. Famines are very common and are relieved by delivering tons of canned mouse meat. Most of the story is about the bureaucratic bungling in response.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Noel Peart} } @booklet {1582, title = {"Tunnel Under the World"}, howpublished = {Galaxy Science Fiction (New York)}, volume = { 9.4 }, year = {1955}, note = {Rpt. in his Alternating Currents (New York: Ballantine Books, 1956), 112-43; Tomorrow, Inc. SF Stories About Big Business. Ed. Martin Harry Greenberg and Joseph D. Olander (New York: Taplinger, 1976), 36-66; in The Oxford Book of Science Fiction Stories. Ed. Tom Shippey (Oxford, Eng.: Oxford University Press, 1992), 247-77; and in A Science Fiction Omnibus. Ed. Brian Aldiss (London: Penguin Books, 2007), 242-74.\
}, month = {January 1955}, pages = {6-36}, abstract = {Dystopia of pervasive advertising in which a town is taken over by advertisers as a test market for their ads.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {0016-4003 }, author = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013)} } @booklet {9811, title = {"Foster, You{\textquoteright}re Dead"}, howpublished = {Star Science Fiction Stories }, volume = {No. 3}, year = {1954}, note = {Rpt. in\ The Collected Stories of Philip K. Dick Volume Three: The Father-Thing\ (Los Angeles, CA/Columbia, PA: Underwood/Miller, 1987), 221-37;\ in The Complete Stories of Philip K. Dick Volume Three: Upon the Dull Earth [1953-1954]\ (Burton, MI: Subterranean Press, 2012), 265-84;\ in Philip K. Dick\’s Electric Dreams (London: Gollancz, 2017). U. S. ed. (Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2017), 138-62 with an \“Introduction\” by Kalen Egan and Travis Sentell (135-37).\
}, month = {1954}, pages = {64-85}, publisher = {Ballantine Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Dystopia in which people are chosen for access to fallout shelters based on their ability to contribute to society.
Rpt. in his\ Through a Glass, Clearly\ (London: New English Library, 1967), 7-27; and in Eco-Fiction. Ed. John Stadler (New York: Washington Square Press/Pocket Books, 1971), 178-201.
}, month = {1954}, pages = {1-25}, publisher = {Ballantine Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Future where people have cut themselves off from the natural world.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Isaac Asimov (1920-92)}, editor = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013)} } @booklet {1539, title = {Lovers in Mars}, year = {1954}, note = {}, month = {1954}, publisher = {Sargent House Publishers}, address = {Los Angeles, CA}, abstract = {A eutopian Mars that is extremely wealthy due to\ very advanced technology, an elaborate eugenic program, and a limited population. The focus of the novel is on the group marriage system, which is unappealing to the young lovers from earth.
}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Lucile Palmer} } @booklet {1513, title = {"The Midas Plague"}, howpublished = {Galaxy Science Fiction (New York)}, volume = { 8.1}, year = {1954}, note = {Rpt. in\ All About the Future. Ed. Martin Greenburg (New York: Gnome Press, 1955), 27-80; in\ Spectrum: A Science Fiction Anthology. Ed. Kingsley Amis and Robert Conquest (London: Victor Gollancz, 1961), 13-67; in\ American Utopias: Selected Short Fiction. Ed. Arthur O. Lewis, Jr. New York: Arno Press and The New York Times, 1971. All items separately paged. In this case the text has been reset, there are no page numbers, and the illustrations in the original are not included; and in his\ Midas World\ (New York: St. Martin\&$\#$39;s Press, 1983), 5-74.
}, month = {April 1954}, pages = {6-58}, abstract = {Dystopia. The development of effective fusion power means that anything can be produced cheaply and the human race goes on a production and consumption binge. Over time consumption does not keep up with production, and laws are passed to require consumption. This results in a status system in which the poor must consume at a higher rate than the rich. The story is about a poor man who solves the problem by creating robots that can both produce and consume.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {0016-4003 }, author = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013)} } @booklet {1540, title = {"Peace Agent"}, howpublished = {Science Fiction Stories}, volume = {2nd ed.}, year = {1954}, month = {1954}, pages = {41-67}, publisher = {Columbia Publications}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Dystopia. A conflict is developing between a new social form, the clan, which hires itself out to businesses with guarantees of performance and the old lower classes who are losing their jobs. In one town the conflict is being fostered by one man who runs the town and encourages attacks on the clans. In this town an independent man helps bring peace, but the same pattern is said to be common throughout the US.
}, author = {M. C. Pease}, editor = {Robert W. Lowndes} } @booklet {1514, title = {Search the Sky}, year = {1954}, note = {UK ed. Harmondsworth, Eng.: Penguin, 1970. Rev. ed. New York: Baen Books, 1985. According to a note on the copyright page, this edition is substantially different from the earlier one.
}, month = {1954}, publisher = {Ballantine}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Dystopia. Although humans have colonized space, they have degenerated and are in danger of dying out and few people care. One person is searching for the answer and by the end of the novel it becomes possible to rebuild a vigorous humanity.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013) and C[yril] M[ichael] Kornbluth (1923-58)} } @booklet {10152, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Calibrated People{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Universe Science Fiction}, volume = {no. 2}, year = {1953}, month = {September 1953}, pages = {2-34}, abstract = {The story is set in a highly structured future in which everyone becomes an adult at ten, and, at that point, if\ they meet its educational, physical, and psychological standards, chooses their future education and career.\
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {W[illiam] T[reval] Powers (1926-2013)} } @booklet {10153, title = {"Nightsong"}, howpublished = {Universe Science Fiction}, volume = {no. 3}, year = {1953}, month = {December 1953}, pages = {104-16}, abstract = {The story is set on a dystopian Venus after it has been settled from Earth with the first settlers enslaved by it came under the control of later settlers exploiting Venus\’s resources.\
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {W[illiam] T[reval] Powers (1926-2013)} } @booklet {1471, title = {"Null-ABC"}, howpublished = {Astounding Science Fiction (New York)}, volume = {50.6 - 51.1 }, year = {1953}, note = {Rpt. as\ Null-ABC. Holicong, PA: Wildside Press, 2006. Repub. in a different version as an Ace Double as\ Crisis in 2140. New York: Ace Books, 1957. Bound with an abbreviated edition of 1952 Kornbluth and Merril.
}, month = {February - March 1953}, pages = {12-54, 112-53}, abstract = {Dystopia. Future society where illiterates dominate a small group of literates.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {H[enry] Beam Piper (1917-81) and John J[oseph] McGuire (1917-1981)} } @booklet {1490, title = {"Potemkin Village"}, howpublished = {Startling Stories }, volume = {29.1}, year = {1953}, month = {February 1953}, pages = {84-105}, abstract = {Totalitarian dystopia.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Murray] Fletcher Pratt (1897-1956)} } @booklet {1470, title = {West of the Sun}, year = {1953}, note = {Rpt. New York: Dell, 1980.
}, month = {1953}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {The establishment of a new society on a previously unexplored planet that has various alien societies, some at war with each other and the humans and some peaceful and helpful. Concerned with the integration of alien and human, ending the war among the aliens, and the creation of an ideal small community.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Edgar Pangborn (1909-76)} } @booklet {1430, title = {"No Greater Wisdom"}, howpublished = {Amazing Stories }, volume = {26.1 }, year = {1952}, note = {Rpt. In Future Science Fiction, no. 11 (September 1953): 4-9, 85-91, 93, 95-96.\
}, month = {January 1952}, pages = {112-27}, abstract = {Technological eutopia.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {0002-6891 }, author = {[Roger Phillip] [Graham] (1909-65)} } @booklet {1413, title = {The Space Merchants}, year = {1952}, note = {U.K. ed. London: William Heinemann, 1955. U.S. ed. rpt. in American Science Fiction: Four Classic Novels 1953-1956. Ed. Gary K. Wolfe (New York: The Library of America, 2012), 1-155 with \“Biographical Notes\” (777-79) \“Notes on the text\” (783-86) and \“Notes\” (789-99); and in Venus, Inc. (New York: Nelson Doubleday, 1985), 1-158. [21st Century ed.]. New York: Thomas Dunne Books/St. Martin\’s Griffin, 2011, with \“Preface The Story of the Space Merchants\” (v-xii). A different version, was published as \“Gravy Planet.\” Galaxy Science Fiction (New York) 4.3 - 5 (June - August 1952): 4-61, 108-59, 104-59. This version has some wording differences, mostly minor, throughout the text and three concluding chapters not found in the book. These three chapters are rpt. in the Library of American edition (791-99).\
}, month = {1952/1953}, publisher = {Ballantine Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Advertising, overpopulation and corporate dystopia. See also 1984 Pohl.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013) and C[yril] M[ichael] Kornbluth (1923-58)} } @booklet {9205, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Tolliver{\textquoteright}s Travels{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {New Tales of Space and Time}, year = {1951}, note = {U.K. ed. (London: Weidenfeld \& Nicolson, 1952), 45-67. \ Rpt. New York: Pocket Books, 1952), 44-66.\
}, month = {1951}, publisher = {Henry Holt \& Co.}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Flawed utopia in which everyone must be happy or they are eliminated. Everything provided. Marriage only by permission.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Frank Fenton and Joseph Petracca}, editor = {Raymond T. Healy} } @booklet {11373, title = {"The Plagiarist"}, howpublished = {New Worlds }, volume = {3.7}, year = {1950}, note = {Rpt. without the illus. in Future Tense: New and Old Tales of Science Fiction. Ed. Kendell Foster Crossen (New York: Greenberg/Toronto, ON, Canada: Ambassador Books, 1952), 3-44.
}, month = {Summer 1950}, pages = {54-74}, abstract = {The story is set in a future that has rejects anything that is not quantifiable. A young boy still has an imagination that keeps getting him in trouble.\ Some undeveloped suggestions of significant social changes.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Peter Phillips (1920-2012)} } @booklet {1363, title = {"Summer Day{\textquoteright}s Dream: A Play in Two Acts"}, howpublished = {The Plays of J.B. Priestley. Volume III }, year = {1950}, month = {1950}, pages = {403-76 76 with a note by Priestley on xiii-xiv}, publisher = {William Heinemann}, address = {London}, abstract = {The play is set in midsummer 1975 after an atomic catastrophe which has resulted in England reverting to a simple agrarian life that is presented as a eutopia.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {J[ohn] B[oynton] Priestley (1894-1984)} } @booklet {1324, title = {"The Portal in the Picture"}, howpublished = {Startling Stories (Springfield, MA)}, volume = {20.1}, year = {1949}, note = {Rpt. as by Lewis Padgett [pseud.] and C[atherine] L[ucille] Moore as\ Beyond Earth\&$\#$39;s Gates. New York: Ace, 1954. Ace Double bound with Andre Norton,\ Daybreak--2250 A.D., which was originally published as\ Star Man\&$\#$39;s Son: 2250 A.D.\ New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1952.
}, month = {September 1949}, pages = {9-78}, abstract = {Technological authoritarian dystopia set on a parallel world. Mostly adventure.
}, keywords = {Female author, Male author, US author}, author = {Henry Kuttner (1914-58) and [Catherine Lucille] [Moore] (1911-87)} } @booklet {1296, title = {The Carnelian Cube; A Humorous Fantasy}, year = {1948}, month = {1948}, publisher = {Gnome Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Satire in which the protagonist visits a series of worlds. The first is a purely rational world, followed by a world of individualism, and then a world of science with a medieval touch. All are unsatisfactory.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {L[yon] Sprague De Camp (1907-2000) and [Murray] Fletcher Pratt (1897-1956)} } @booklet {8515, title = {Councils of the Mighty}, year = {1947}, month = {1947}, publisher = {The Christopher Publishing House}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {Occult, spiritualist eutopia with the eutopia in the higher spheres above the human.
}, author = {W. H. Perrins} } @booklet {1288, title = {"Jesting Pilot"}, howpublished = {Astounding Science Fiction (New York)}, volume = {39.3 }, year = {1947}, month = {May 1947}, pages = {79-89}, abstract = {An authoritarian dystopia set in a city that has been isolated from the outside world for 600 years to protect it from the wars of the overpopulated world. The city was designed to be a eutopia precisely fitted to the needs of its citizens, who are all hypnotized. The Controllers of the city are bred and raised to run the world until the Barrier around the city is raised. The citizens know nothing of them.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Henry] [Kuttner] (1914-58)} } @booklet {1289, title = {"Tomorrow and Tomorrow"}, howpublished = {Astounding Science-Fiction (New York)}, volume = {38.5 - 6}, year = {1947}, note = {Rpt. in his\ Tomorrow and Tomorrow and The Fairy Chessman\ (New York: Gnome Press, 1951), 9-108. U.K. ed. London: World Distributors, 1963.
}, month = {January - February 1947}, pages = {6-36; 140-72, 174-77}, abstract = {After a brief, aborted World War II, the GPC or Global Peace Commission rules the world and limits research to approved topics and prohibits space exploration. An underground movement wants to overthrow it in the name of an undescribed utopia.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Henry] [Kuttner] (1914-58)} } @booklet {1284, title = {The Twenty-One Balloons}, year = {1947}, month = {1947}, publisher = {Viking}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Children\&$\#$39;s eutopia. Krakatoa before the volcano erupted is described as having a eutopian civilization with many nonsensical inventions and a social organization based on eating tastes.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {William [Sherman] P{\`e}ne Du Bois (1916-93)} } @booklet {1278, title = {The World The World Wants (A Sociocratic Order)}, year = {1947}, month = {1947}, publisher = {np}, address = {S{\~a}o Paulo, Brasil}, abstract = {Detailed eutopia with one world-wide corporation, a universal language (English), one currency, and one flag. The World Corporation will own the productive resources of the world and will build a new city for its headquarters. Free education and health care.
}, keywords = {Brazilian author, Female author, Male author}, author = {[Octavio] Felix Pedroso (d. 1944) and Elizabeth Pedroso} } @booklet {1282, title = {"Worlds to Watch and Ward"}, howpublished = {The Quest for Utopia; An Anthology of Imaginary Societies}, year = {1947}, month = {[1947]/1952}, pages = {592-99}, publisher = {Henry Schumann}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Eutopia of democratic socialism and the rule of law.
}, editor = {Glenn Negley and J. Max Patrick} } @booklet {1257, title = {The 21st Century Looks Back}, year = {1946}, month = {1946}, publisher = {The William-Frederick Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Reformed capitalist eutopia. The reforms stress improved and open transportation and communications. There is a Global Statistical Service, a free flow of manpower and goods, no monopolies, and a Global Stabilization Fund. There will be some world government, universal health care, and expanded education. Taxation is based on land values, following Henry George (1839-97). For Henry George\&$\#$39;s explanation of the single tax, see his Progress and Poverty. An Inquiry Into the Cause of Industrial Depressions and Of Increase of Want With Increase of Wealth. The Remedy. San Francisco, CA: W.M. Hinton, 1879. Fiftieth Anniversary Ed. New York: The Robert Schalkenbach Foundation, 1929.\ See also 1942 Posnack and his World Without Barriers--A Perspective View of Our Present and Future in a World of Economic and Ideological Conflict. New York: William Morrow, 1956, which is mostly a critique of Communism but includes a brief summary of his alternative and its positive results.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Emanuel R[obert] Posnack (b. 1897)} } @booklet {1207, title = {"Captain Marvel Finds Utopia"}, howpublished = {Whiz Comics (New York)}, volume = { 7.39 }, year = {1943}, month = {January 27, 1943}, pages = {4-18}, abstract = {Captain Marvel traces a Nazi to Utopia.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Bill [William H.] Parker (author) and C[harles] C[larence] Beck (artist)} } @booklet {1205, title = {"The Iron Standard"}, howpublished = {Astounding Science Fiction 32.4 (December 1943)}, year = {1943}, month = {1943}, pages = {74-94, 96-98}, abstract = {Flawed utopia on a Venus that sees its system, thousands of years old, as perfect and allows no innovation, which benefits those in power. Men from Earth upset the system
}, keywords = {Female author, Male author, US author}, author = {[Henry] [Kuttner] (1914-58) and [Catherine Lucille] [Moore] (1911-87)} } @booklet {1232, title = {{\textquotedblleft}They Came to a City. A Play in Two Acts{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Three Plays }, year = {1943}, note = {Rpt. without the subtitle in his Four Plays (New York: Harper \& Brothers, 1944), 151-221. Rpt. as \“They Came to a City: A Play in Two Acts.\” In The Plays of J.B. Priestley. Volume III (London: William Heinemann, 1950), 139-201 with a brief note by Priestley on xi.\
}, month = {1943}, pages = {147-216}, publisher = {William Heinemann}, address = {London}, abstract = {The eutopia that might be possible in post-war Britain as seen through the eyes of characters representative of contemporary Britain. Only some see it positively.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {J[ohn] B[oynton] Priestley (1894-1984)} } @booklet {1172, title = {The 21st Century Sizes Us Up}, year = {1942}, month = {1942}, pages = {79 pp.}, publisher = {Loder Appeal Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Introduction to 1946 Posnack emphasizing the current situation from the perspective of the 21st century. The last few pages lay out what he is going to cover in the later book.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {E[manuel] Robert Posnack (b. 1897)} } @booklet {1185, title = {The People{\textquoteright}s Plan for a New Order: Giving Twenty-four Points for Reconstruction of the Present Orthodox System of Economics}, year = {1942}, month = {1942}, publisher = {The Unity Press Ltd}, address = {Auckland, New Zealand}, abstract = {Proposes the establishment of New Zealand Ltd. which would issue \"negotiable, non-interest bearing debentures\" that must be used within a specified period of time. New Zealand Ltd. would provide all national and local finance and hold all national and local assets and liabilities. Dividends paid to all citizens over 21 (40 in the first year), all of whom are required to work if needed. There is no evidence that this is connected with The People\&$\#$39;s Plan of the Dominion Reconstruction Conference of the same year.
}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {Chas. [Charles] E[dward] Phillips J.P., A.P.A.N.Z.} } @booklet {8513, title = {The New World Order And How It Will Be Established: The World, As it was; As it is; And as it will be. An intensely interesting and thought-provoking book}, year = {1941}, month = {[1941]}, publisher = {[Ptd by Clarke \& Stuart]}, address = {[Vancouver, BC, Canada}, abstract = {British Israelism detailing the Mosaic system of representation (the decimal systems used by John Eliot and others) and the way that the Israel nations will become united. Includes a \“Lecture Delivered by Request to the British Israel World Federation October 18th, 1939\” (158-62) and a one page \“Articles of Association Brotherhood of United Israel\” (163).
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {J[oseph] E[dward] Paynter (1868-1960)} } @booklet {9379, title = {Read What Happened on the Island of Nogi, or Why Business is Bad}, year = {1941}, month = {[1841?]}, pages = {8 pp.}, publisher = {J. W. Parker Optometrist}, address = {Kansas City, MO}, abstract = {Anti-capitalist allegory set on the island of Nogi, which was a successful, balanced economy until a capitalist arrived and destroyed the economy. \". . . the moral of this story is that the insurance companies, the food trust and other large corporations are taking away from the public billions of dollars in excess profits which they are unable to either use or lend. The result is exactly what we should expect.\” (7). See also 1935 Parker.\
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {J[oseph] W[illiam] Parker} } @booklet {1145, title = {When the Soviets Come to America}, year = {1940}, month = {1940}, publisher = {Fortuny{\textquoteright}s}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Dystopia reflecting the title followed by a successful revolution.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {C[lement] E[verett] Puterbaugh} } @booklet {1105, title = {The Way Out: An Essay on the Means of Averting the Recurring Disaster}, year = {1939}, month = {1939}, publisher = {Halstead Press}, address = {Sydney, NSW, Australia}, abstract = {Essay describing the book as an answer to the problem they posed in their Whither Away? A Study of Race Psychology and the Factors Leading to Australia\&$\#$39;s National Decline (1934), which focused on the falling birth rate. Their solution, a Federal Union of countries, is based on Clarence K[irshman] Streit (See 1939 Streit). In addition, they argue that people must be educated for democracy (both in improved teaching of citizenship in democracies and in the elements of democracy in non-democratic countries), the political system must be reformed so as to attract the best people, and there must be much more community involvement. See also 1972 Nye.
}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {[John] [Bostock] (b. 1892) and [Leslie John Jarvis] [Nye] (1891-1976)} } @booklet {1055, title = {"The Dream"}, howpublished = {Tomorrow (Christchurch, New Zealand) }, volume = {3.20 }, year = {1937}, month = {August 4, 1937}, pages = {620-22}, abstract = {Brief socialist eutopia.
}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author}, author = {Pickles, L.} } @booklet {1042, title = {A Love Starved World}, year = {1937}, month = {1937}, publisher = {The Yale Pub. Co}, address = {Los Angeles, CA}, abstract = {Eutopia with emphases on good medical care, a healthy sex life, and eugenics.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Jacob Leon Pritcher} } @booklet {1056, title = {Morwyn or the Vengeance of God}, year = {1937}, month = {1937}, publisher = {Cassell}, address = {London}, abstract = {Hell as dystopia.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author, US author, Welsh author}, author = {John Cowper Powys (1872-1963)} } @booklet {1018, title = {The Hesperides: A Looking-Glass Fugue}, year = {1936}, month = {1936}, publisher = {Martin Secker \& Warburg}, address = {London}, abstract = {Dystopia. Art and imagination discouraged. No emotions. Eating and sleeping completely private and are considered impolite.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {John [Leslie] Palmer (1885-1944)} } @booklet {6799, title = {The Owl of Athene}, year = {1936}, month = {[1936]}, publisher = {Hutchinson \& Co}, address = {London}, abstract = {Story told by the owl about the gods\&$\#$39; concern with human conflict. The gods produce conflict between humans and crabs which forces the human race to work together. A vaguely described eutopia results.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Eden Phillpotts (1862-1960)} } @booklet {968, title = {Doctor Crosby{\textquoteright}s Strange Experience or a New World By 1944}, year = {1935}, note = {Some copies have Kansas City crossed out and replaced with Chicago, IL, and the press moved to Chicago at this time.
}, month = {1935}, pages = {96 pp.}, publisher = {The Peerage Press}, address = {Kansas City, MO}, abstract = {Detailed socialist eutopia based on the ideas of Edward Bellamy and set in Kansas City and its environs. Private property only in personal effects. All work for the government, guaranteed lifetime income. No money. Education to 25; work 26 years; retire at 50 or, by choice, continue to work. Hours of work determined by demand and difficulty. Considerable concern with farming, which is scientifically based and uses technology extensively.\ See also [1941?] Parker.\
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Joseph W[illiam] Parker} } @booklet {969, title = {God{\textquoteright}s Secret}, year = {1935}, month = {1935}, publisher = {Charles Scribner{\textquoteright}s Sons}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Life without death. Last chapter describes a very general eutopia of peace and plenty.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Arthur Stanwood Pier (1874-1966)} } @booklet {990, title = {Lift Up Your Eyes}, year = {1935}, month = {1935}, publisher = {Robertson \& Mullens}, address = {Melbourne, VIC, Australia}, abstract = {Religious eutopia, mostly seen in the planning stages. Orphans are educated to be missionaries.
}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Ambrose [Goddard Hesketh] Pratt (1874-1944)} } @booklet {936, title = {Manifesto: Being the Book of The Federation of Progressive Societies and Individuals}, year = {1934}, month = {1934}, publisher = {George Allen \& Unwin}, address = {London}, abstract = {Similar to 1912 The Great State in that the essays collectively describe a vision of a future eutopia\ that is, in essence, a socialist world state.\ See also\ Plan for World Order and Progress: A Constructive Review\ (The Federation of Progressive Societies and Individuals) 1.1 - 1.9 (April - September 1934), which published a review of the\ Manifesto\ by Aldous Huxley in 1.4 (July 1934): 7, 15.
}, keywords = {English author, Female author, Male author}, author = {C[yril] E[dwin] M[itchinson] Joad (1891-1953) and Allan Young and W[illiam Edward] Arnold-Forster and Francis Meynell and W[illiam] Olaf Stapledon (1886-1950) and Janet Chance and D[ennis] N[owell] Pritt and Clough Williams-Ellis and G[eoffrey] M[axwell] Boumphrey and Archibald Robertson and J[ohn] C[arl] Flugel}, editor = {C[yril] E[dwin] M[itchinson] Joad (1891-1953)} } @booklet {876, title = {Celestalia. A Fantasy A.D. 1975}, year = {1933}, month = {1933}, publisher = {The Canberra Press}, address = {Sydney, NSW}, abstract = {The background to a romance describes a future history of racial conflict and mass migrations with racial conflict in Australia and racial civil war in the U.S.
}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {A. L. Pullar} } @booklet {6786, title = {If I Were Dictator of Australia}, year = {1932}, month = {[1932?]}, pages = {7 pp.}, publisher = {The Ruskin Press}, address = {Melbourne, VIC, Australia}, abstract = {A brief (seven page) but detailed eutopia including reformed religion, government by experts rather than elected legislators, nationalization of banks, universal disarmament using the money spent on the military to convince other countries to follow Australia\&$\#$39;s lead, the elimination of unemployment, and a six-hour workday six days a week, old-age pensions, the establishment of cooperatives, and other reforms. The pamphlet is a series of statements of what the author would do if he had the power to dictate to the churches, schools, and so forth.
}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Richard Proctor} } @booklet {835, title = {So a Leader Came}, year = {1932}, month = {1932}, publisher = {Ray Long \& Richard R. Smith}, address = {New York}, abstract = {The dystopia of the present day requires a strong leader for the period of transition. Most of the novel is about the development of the leader, the struggle for power, and his success. The ending suggests that a better society results.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Frederick Palmer (1873-1958)} } @booklet {850, title = {The Temple of S{\"a}hr}, year = {1932}, note = {Australian ed. Melbourne, VIC, Australia: Lothian Pub. Co., 1932. Rpt. Sydney, NSW, Australia: Graham Stone, 1994.
}, month = {1932}, publisher = {Cecil Palmer}, address = {London}, abstract = {Lost race authoritarian dystopia led by a European scientist in the middle of Australia.
}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {[William Talbot] [Pearson] (1907-1991)} } @booklet {851, title = {"A Voice Across The Years"}, howpublished = {Amazing Stories Quarterly (Dunnellen, NJ)}, volume = { 5.1 }, year = {1932}, note = {Rpt. as\ Alien Planet. New York: Avalon, 1962; and New York: Ace Books, 1962.
}, month = {Winter 1932}, pages = {2-73}, abstract = {Mostly interplanetary adventure but describes a scientifically advanced alien civilization. Eugenics--children are tested and sterilized or killed if they have criminal tendencies. Rigid class system run by scientists. Young adults are tested by having to survive in a wilderness where killing is the norm. Cities are all in very tall buildings generally built on unproductive land. Education through sleep teaching.
}, keywords = {English author, Female author, Male author}, author = {[Inga Marie Stephens] [Pratt] (1906-70) and [Murray] Fletcher Pratt (1897-1956)} } @booklet {805, title = {"Emperors of Space"}, howpublished = {Wonder Stories (Mt. Morris, IL)}, volume = { 3.6 }, year = {1931}, month = {November 1931}, pages = {762-79}, abstract = {Yellow wave fiction describing a future dystopia ruled by Orientals.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Jerome Gross and Richard Penny} } @booklet {8494, title = {Chronos or the Future of the Family.}, year = {1930}, month = {1930}, publisher = {Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner}, address = {London}, abstract = {Mostly an argument that the family as then known was coming to an end for economic and sexual reasons. Also argues that from the point-of-view of child-rearing, large families are better than small ones because children should interact with other children rather than adults. Suggests that in the future related and unrelated adults with and without children of their own but with a talent for parenthood raising a group of children, again related and unrelated, in large homes. Refers positively to two existing examples, the Beacon Hill School founded in 1927 by Dora and Bertrand Russell, which closed in 1947, and the Caldecott Community, which still exists.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Maurice] Eden Paul M.D. (1865-1944)} } @booklet {757, title = {"The City of the Living Dead"}, howpublished = {Science Wonder Stories }, volume = {1.12}, year = {1930}, note = {Rpt. in Startling Stories 4.1 (July 1940): 94-104; and Avon Fantasy Reader, no. 2 (1947): 108-30.
}, month = {May 1930}, pages = {1100-07, 1136-37}, abstract = {Dystopia. Everyone spends their time dreaming in machines and the human race degenerates.
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author, US author}, author = {Laurence [Edward] Manning (1899-1972) and [Murray] Fletcher Pratt (1897-1956)} } @booklet {8495, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The High School Library of the Future{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Wilson Library Bulletin }, volume = {4}, year = {1930}, month = {May 1930}, pages = {447-48, 466}, abstract = {Satire on the library of the future where knowledge is provided chemically and the librarians choose what students should know.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Aniela Poray} } @booklet {778, title = {"Vampires of Venus"}, howpublished = {Astounding Stories (New York)}, volume = {2.1 }, year = {1930}, month = {April 1930}, pages = {47-59}, abstract = {Mostly adventure but very briefly describes a eutopia on Venus based on eugenics and gender equality.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Anthony Pelcher (1897-1981)} } @booklet {700, title = {What I Know! Reflections by a Philosophic Punter. With an extraordinary dream of {\textquoteright}The Cosmic Mystery Cup{\textquoteright} run at Randwick}, year = {1928}, month = {1928}, publisher = {Cornstalk Pub. Co}, address = {Sydney, NSW, Australia}, abstract = {Satire describing a horse race among religions, plus the Agnosticism, Idealism, Materialism, and Pragmatism, but there is no winner. Includes an argument against betting on races.
}, keywords = {Australian author, English author, Male author}, author = {[Rev.] [Wyndham Selfe] [Heathcote] (1862-1955)} } @booklet {679, title = {The Ideal Island}, year = {1927}, month = {1927}, publisher = {Old Royalty Book Publishers}, address = {London}, abstract = {Mostly an adventure story but includes the establishment of a communal experiment on an isolated island and a presentation of the social and economic ideals motivating it.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {C[harles] V[ictor] A[lexander] Peel (1869-1931)} } @booklet {6768, title = {A War on Poverty}, year = {1925}, month = {[1925]}, publisher = {[Wallingford Press]}, address = {[Winnipeg, MB, Canada]}, abstract = {Detailed eutopia, particularly in the chapter \"Things As They Might Be\" (109-56). Cooperative commonwealth. Designed for Western Canada (British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, and part of Ontario), the area to be called COALSAMAO and created as a separate country. It will have a unicameral legislature of 25 members elected annually. Something like 1888 Bellamy\&$\#$39;s Industrial Army in that local control is in Camps of 3500-7000 people organized to carry out work. The book is mostly quotations.
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {[Edward Alexander] [Partridge]} } @booklet {6765, title = {God{\textquoteright}s Holy Kingdom of United Israel. A Remarkable Book. A Bible Study for all Thinking People. The Kingdom of Melchezedek--The Construction by Him of the Great Pyramid, God{\textquoteright}s Witness, or {\textquoteright}The Bible in Stone{\textquoteright}--The Discontinuance of the Kingdom of Melchezedek and the Covenant with Abraham--The Kingdom Transferred to Israel; the Two Houses of Israel, the Two Witnesses of Jehovah--Anglo Saxons the House of Israel--The Coming Union of Israel and Judah--The Sealing of the 144,000 out of the Twelve Tribes of Israel and their Administration of Affairs in {\textquoteright}The New Earth{\textquoteright}--The New Heaven and the New Earth, and the New Covenant with United and Restored Israel. The Book of the Hour. Every Student of the Bible should read and study it}, year = {1924}, month = {[1924]}, publisher = {United Israel Publishing Department}, address = {Regina, SK, Canada}, abstract = {Eutopia of the saints.
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {J[oseph] E[dward] Paynter (1868-1960)} } @booklet {607, title = {Venus}, year = {1924}, month = {1924}, publisher = {Dorrance \& Co}, address = {Philadelphia, PA}, abstract = {Eutopia. Telepathy in an idyllic society about two thousand years in advance of Earth. Much romance and the picture of Venus comes out through the interactions of two Venusians with people on Earth during a visit to Earth.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Rena Oldfield Pettersen} } @booklet {589, title = {The Day of Judgment and the Celestial Missionaries of Life}, year = {1923}, month = {1923}, pages = {72 pp.}, publisher = {Author}, address = {[Cleveland, OH]}, abstract = {Socialist eutopia introduced to Earth by visitors from space. People from Earth then carry the message to other planets.\
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Louis Pauer} } @booklet {590, title = {Eurekanian Paternalism. For an economic expedition to explore and exploit Eurekania, the New State in the Realm of Utopia. With Aims and Plans of Providence, final and immediate, for the Development of the Latent Qualities and Resources inherent in Society under Advanced Organization, Production and Distribution through the Administration, eventually, of a Non-Politic, Quasi-Public Economic Institution, which shall be promoted, in the early stages of its development, by a Foundation Society and other Subsidiary Organizations}, year = {1923}, month = {1923}, publisher = {Np}, address = {Cleveland, OH}, abstract = {Odd version of a cooperative eutopia that combines considerable public control and privately owned corporations with limits on profit.\
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Louis Pauer} } @booklet {599, title = {The Lavender Dragon}, year = {1923}, month = {1923}, publisher = {Grant Richards}, address = {London}, abstract = {A delightful satire with a rational, vegetarian dragon and a rather dull knight. The dragon creates a eutopia by picking up unhappy people and children from the area and bringing them to an isolated area where they create a eutopia of equality without money. Includes a reflection, by the dragon, on the positive and negative aspects of human hope and dreaming.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Eden Phillpotts (1862-1960)} } @booklet {8492, title = {Canadian Money and Progress}, year = {1921}, note = {2nd\ ed. [Tantallon, SK, Canada]: Np., 1924. 27 pp. Rpt. as\ The Trumpet Call of Canadian Money and Progress. An Ideal Handbook of Monetary Reform. 3rd\ ed. [Tantallon, SK: Canada]: Np, 1931. 61 pp. 4th\ ed. as\ The Trumpet Call of Canadian Money and Progress. An Ideal Handbook of Monetary Reform. Illus. covers. [Tantallon, SK: Canada]: Np, 1932. 71 pp.
}, month = {[1921]}, pages = {12 pp.}, publisher = {Np}, address = {[Tantallon, SK, Canada]}, abstract = {Proposal for a new monetary system that would have no interest or credit and no debt. Says that the medium of exchange should be \“As elastic and plentiful as the goods and services to be exchanged.\” Based on the Harmony Co-operative Industrial Association\” founded in Saskatchewan in 1895 that issued script within the community and lasted for five years. Proposes the same for Canada as legal tender. This would be a \“scientific money, owned and controlled by the Sovereign People as plentiful as the commodities or services to be exchanged, we would lay the foundation for uniform and permanent commercial progress that would grow and expand without any setback, to the limit of the labour power to be obtained\” (11). Would be issued by a central bank. Stresses its compatibility with Christianity. Most of the changes among additions are added quotations from other people.
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {W[illiam] C[harles] Paynter (1866-1934)} } @booklet {6751, title = {The Great Image}, year = {1921}, month = {[1921]}, publisher = {Odhams Press}, address = {London}, abstract = {Conflict between capitalists and socialists set one hundred years in the future. The world is decimated but gradually rebuilds.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Charles Beresford] [Painter] (1878-1946)} } @booklet {512, title = {Aristokia}, year = {1919}, month = {1919}, publisher = {The Century Co.}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Humor set in an imaginary country. Contrasts an over-technological society (motorized shoes, food tablets) with a better, less mechanized society, which is then overthrown.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {A[lphonso] Washington Pezet (b. 1889)} } @booklet {511, title = {Crucible Island; A Romance, An Adventure and an Experiment}, year = {1919}, note = {U.K. ed. London: Harding \& More, 1920.
}, month = {1919}, publisher = {Manhattanville Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Anti-socialist dystopia showing weaknesses of a seemingly good society. The society had been established as an island prison for subversives but allowed to rule themselves and the initial depiction of the society implies that it is an entirely successfully socialist eutopia, but this is a centralized, state socialist system and those holding power use their position for their own advantage.\
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Cond{\'e} B[enoist] Pallen (1858-1929)} } @booklet {6738, title = {The Kingdom of Content}, year = {1918}, month = {[1918]}, publisher = {Mills \& Boon}, address = {London}, abstract = {Rule by trusts followed by revolution and war. A small group survive and create an Eden.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Charles Beresford] [Painter] (1878-1946)} } @booklet {6733, title = {The Millionaire Socialist or the Cure for Poverty}, year = {1915}, month = {[1915?]}, publisher = {Watkins, Tyler \& Tolan}, address = {Wellington, New Zealand}, abstract = {Short didactic novel describing a successful socialist colony. Its success forces Britain and then the rest of the world to adopt socialism.
}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {[Joseph R.] [Renner]} } @booklet {6724, title = {The Brain City. A Fantasy}, year = {1913}, month = {[1913]}, publisher = {Museum Arts \& Letters Assoc}, address = {London}, abstract = {Allegory on reason and science using an ideal rational city.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Marmaduke A. Prickett} } @booklet {406, title = {The Little Wicket Gate. An Experience ex nihilo}, year = {1913}, month = {1913}, publisher = {A.C. Fifield}, address = {London}, abstract = {A eutopia with problems, primarily population pressure. Religion. Equality of the sexes. Marriage for life. Three-and-a-half-hours workday. No money. No prisons. Stress on self-expression.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Petworth, Algernon} } @booklet {404, title = {Looking Forward. The Strange Experience of the Rev. Fergus McCheyne}, year = {1913}, month = {1913}, publisher = {William Briggs}, address = {Toronto, ON, Canada}, abstract = {The United Church of Canada, which was created in 1925, has brought about eutopia by becoming deeply involved in the community and leading on both practical and moral issues.\
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {Rev. Hugh Pedley B.A., D.D. (1852-1923)} } @booklet {405, title = {Shelter Island or The Power of God. A Novel. A Story of Truth}, year = {1913}, month = {1913}, publisher = {The Pelton Pub. Co.}, address = {Denver, CO}, abstract = {Christian Science eutopia.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Ben H[iram] Pelton (b. 1854)} } @booklet {394, title = {Life--the Jade}, year = {1912}, month = {1912}, publisher = {Everett \& Co.}, address = {London}, abstract = {Dystopia brought about by the discovery of a substance that granted immortality. Set between its discovery in 1921 and the rediscovery of the need to love and bear children in 2021.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Martin H[enry] Potter (1871-1955)} } @booklet {6717, title = {"The New Gulliver"}, howpublished = {The New Gulliver and Other Stories}, year = {1912}, month = {[1912]}, pages = {3-84}, publisher = {T. Werner Laurie}, address = {London}, abstract = {Dystopia. Two class-society in which the lower class is bred as slaves to the upper class. The upper class is sexless, long-lived, and lives underground. Stress on moderation and safety. High technology. Live on pills and water.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Barry [Eric Odell] Pain (1864-1928)} } @booklet {8725, title = {Spectres of Night and Morning Light}, year = {1912}, month = {1912}, publisher = {Every Where Publishing Co. }, address = {New York}, abstract = {While mostly a love and mystery story wrapped up in discussions about religion and spiritualism, the novel also includes the hollow earth, which is the abode of angels, and a description of the Garden of Wisdom that followed upon Eden.
}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {J[oseph] E[dward] Paynter (1868-1960)} } @booklet {393, title = {Under Home Rule. A Novel}, year = {1912}, month = {1912}, publisher = {Baines \& Scarsbrook}, address = {London}, abstract = {Anti-Irish, but particularly anti-Roman Catholic, dystopia describing the horrors of Home Rule. Stresses the need to expel the Roman Catholic Church from Ireland and ends, that having been done, with Ireland now a \"happy and prosperous\" part of the U.K. (168).
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {William Palmer} } @booklet {290, title = {Redemption}, year = {1909}, month = {1909}, publisher = {Author}, address = {Independence, MO}, abstract = {Proposal for an intentional community with a constitution. City on about 2500 acres plus 5000 acres of agricultural land. All land and property are\ held in common. No money. No lawyers. Christian but without ministers.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {E[phraim] Peterson} } @booklet {292, title = {The Vision of New Clairvaux or Ethical Reconstruction Through combination of Agriculture and Handicraft, under Conditions which exercise Emotion, Sentiment and Imagination, with loyalty to a supreme Ideal}, year = {1909}, month = {1909}, publisher = {Sherman, French and Company}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {Intentional community modeled on the vision of Bernard of Clairvaux (1090-1153), founder of the Cistercian monastery of Clairvaux. It is called \"an ethical experiment station\" (19), and stresses the advantages of country life, handicrafts, and small industries.\ The author, a Unitarian minister, founded such a community in Montague, Massachusetts in the 1890s.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Edward Pearson Pressey (b. 1869)} } @booklet {273, title = {"A Conservative Utopia"}, howpublished = {The Eagle (St. John{\textquoteright}s College, Cambridge, Eng.) }, volume = {29}, year = {1908}, month = {Easter term 1908}, pages = {334-35}, abstract = {Poem, possibly satirical, presenting a conservative position.
}, author = {R. F. P.} } @booklet {6699, title = {Robinson Crusoe{\textquoteright}s Return}, year = {1906}, note = {Rpt. New York: Arno Press, 1976.
}, month = {[1906]}, publisher = {Hodder \& Stoughton}, address = {London}, abstract = {Satire on Crusoe\&$\#$39;s return to modern England.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Barry [Eric Odell] Pain (1864-1928)} } @booklet {200, title = {The Scarlet Empire}, year = {1906}, note = {Rpt. New York: Grosset \& Dunlap, [1911]; New York: Arno Press and The New York Times, 1971; and Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 2001.
}, month = {1906}, publisher = {The Bobbs-Merrill Company}, address = {Indianapolis, IN}, abstract = {Authoritarian dystopia set in Atlantis practicing precise equality, to the extent of limiting the number of words spoken each day. A full quarter of the population are inspectors to ensure that the rules are obeyed. Satire attacking socialism and labor unions.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {David M[aclean] Parry (1852-1915)} } @booklet {170, title = {An Ideal City for an Ideal People}, year = {1905}, month = {1905}, publisher = {[Author]}, address = {[Independence, MO]}, abstract = {Eutopia of Christian socialism including a proposal for an intentional community.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {E[phraim] Peterson} } @booklet {130, title = {Our Story of Atlantis. Written down for the Hermetic Brotherhood}, year = {1903}, note = {A later ed. adds to the subtitle and\ The Future Rulers of America. Together with an Introduction, Biography, Prologue, Notes and Epilogue By R. Swinburne Clymer, M.D.\ Quakertown, PA: The Philosophical Publishing Co., 1937.
}, month = {1903}, publisher = {Hermetic Book Concern}, address = {San Francisco, CA}, abstract = {Atlantis as eutopia including details about the island, which in this version is in the Caribbean, its institutions, and its people.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author, US author}, author = {W[illiam] P. Phelon M.D. (1834-1902)} } @booklet {96, title = {"The Constitution of Carnegia"}, howpublished = {North American Review}, volume = { 175}, year = {1902}, note = {Rpt.\ Current Literature\ 33 (September 1902): 269-71.
}, month = {August 1902}, pages = {243-53}, abstract = {Eutopia. At the age of sixty all property is given to the state and support is provided for life with people working as and at what they choose. No military because it is too expensive.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {James Raymond Perry (1863-1953)} } @booklet {97, title = {No Rates and Taxes; A Romance of Five Worlds}, year = {1902}, month = {1902}, publisher = {J.W. Arrowsmith}, address = {Bristol, Eng.}, abstract = {Satire. Proposes that a city should own the land on which it is built, with rents paid to the city providing support for the poor and other public expenses. All the rich moved to where there were no rates or taxes and took to petty theft. Men have degenerated and women are dominant. Science had made muscles unnecessary. Three year marriage contracts. Live for the present--The \". . . chief aim of female government was jubilation, cheerfulness, joyousness\" (82).
}, keywords = {Male author, UK author}, author = {Thomas [Andrew] Pinkerton (1850-1914)} } @booklet {77, title = {The Great White Way: A Record of an Unusual Voyage of Discovery, and some Romantic Love Affairs amid Strange Surroundings. The Whole Recounted by one Nicholas Chase, Promoter of the Expedition, whose Reports have been Arranged for Publication by Albert Bigelow Paine}, year = {1901}, note = {Rpt. New York: Arno Press, 1975
}, month = {1901}, publisher = {J.F. Taylor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {The last chapter describes a eutopia at the South Pole. Telepathy. No technology and opposed to technological development. Few laws, no money.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Albert Bigelow Paine (1861-1937)} } @booklet {85, title = {"Inoculation Day"}, howpublished = {Fancy Free}, year = {1901}, month = {1901}, pages = {210-20}, publisher = {Methuen}, address = {London}, abstract = {Dystopia in which there is an inoculation for character and to eliminate emotions.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Eden Phillpotts (1862-1960)} } @booklet {6689, title = {Mark Chester: or A Mill and A Million. A Tale of Southern California}, year = {1901}, month = {[1901]}, publisher = {Benner of Light Publishing Co}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {A poverty-stricken young man proves worthy of divine intervention and is told where to find a large gold deposit. He uses some of the money to establish a city called Millennial to house the homeless. He also built a large Spiritual Temple there. Spiritualists in the area then built more cities to help the poor.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Carlyle Petersilea (1844-1903)} } @booklet {6685, title = {Introductory to a New Model for Concourse, Called Utopia, where life Is Eternal--Death Excluded}, year = {1900}, month = {[1900]}, pages = {8 pp.}, publisher = {Adams Printing Co}, address = {Phoenix, AZ}, abstract = {The brief text reads like early New Age material in which a utopia of eternal life is said to be possible, but it ends with a proposal for a Home for selected people over sixty five sponsored by the Mental Science College of Phoenix.
}, author = {G. W. Pike} } @booklet {48, title = {Letters from New America; or an Attempt at Practical Socialism}, year = {1900}, month = {1900}, pages = {89 pp.}, publisher = {Charles H. Kerr \& Company}, address = {Chicago, IL}, abstract = {Detailed socialist eutopia. Everyone is employed by the government and all property is public. Advancement is through the civil service and complaints about service limits such advancement. Slums removed and good and varied housing built. Cities are all mid-size to combine the advantages of city and country living. Churches are not regulated, and there is a free press as well as government sponsored newspapers. Public education from kindergarten through college and then three years of technical training. Stress on individual variety and the need to keep the system flexible to take this into account.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Clark Edmund Persinger (b. 1873)} } @booklet {47, title = {The World a Department Store. A Story of Life Under a Co{\"o}perative System}, year = {1900}, note = {Rpt. New York: Arno Press and\ The New York Times, 1971. U.K. ed. London: Gay and Bird, [1900].
}, month = {1900}, publisher = {Bradford Peck}, address = {Lewiston, ME}, abstract = {Eutopia. The Cooperative Association of America converts the nation to a cooperative system in twenty-five years.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Bradford Peck (1853-1935)} } @booklet {8474, title = {"The City Beyond: A Story of One Who Dwells in the Next Planet{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Godey{\textquoteright}s Magazine (New York)}, volume = {136 - 137.817 - 18 }, year = {1898}, month = {July - August 1898}, pages = {49-62, 161-72}, abstract = {A very detailed first heaven (there are higher ones) as a eutopia
}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Agnes L. Pratt} } @booklet {8051, title = {The Revolt of the Horses}, year = {1898}, month = {1898}, publisher = {Grant Richards}, address = {London}, abstract = {Novel based on 1726 Swift. The Houyhnhnms lead a revolt of the horses in Great Britain and establish a Houyhnhnm state. The Yahoos are only adept at killing each other.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Walter Copland Perry (1814-1911)} } @booklet {8026, title = {The War of the Wenuses. Translated from the Artesian of H.G. Pozzuoli By C. L. Graves and E. V. Lucas}, volume = {Vol. 78 of Arrowsmith{\textquoteright}s Bristol Library. }, year = {1898}, note = {Rpt. New York: Arno Press, 1975; and London: Routledge/Thoemmes Press, 1998.
}, month = {1898}, publisher = {J.W. Arrowsmith}, address = {Bristol, Eng.}, abstract = {Satire. Invasion by women from Venus. Parody of H.G. Wells\&$\#$39;s The War of the Worlds (London: William Heinemann, 1898) with minimal utopian elements.
}, keywords = {English author, Irish author, Male author}, author = {C[harles] L[arcom] Graves (1856-1944) and E[dward] V[errall] Lucas (1868-1938)} } @booklet {8015, title = {The Ivory Queen: A Story of Strange Adventure}, year = {1897}, month = {1897}, publisher = {Osgood, McIlvaine \& Co}, address = {London}, abstract = {Lost race novel. Mostly adventure but ends with a eutopia in Africa which is a successful agricultural society in an isolated valley under a white king descended from early Egyptian settlers. Odd novel for the period in that it includes successful cross-dressing and, together with some fairly standard racism, a successful interracial marriage.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {John Pendleton (1848-1926?)} } @booklet {8469, title = {The Banker Hypnotized: A Fiction. Sequel to {\textquotedblleft}The Banker{\textquoteright}s Dream. A Fiction. Sequel to {\textquotedblleft}The Banker{\textquoteright}s Dream.{\textquotedblright} An Argument for the Free Coinage of Silver}, year = {1896}, month = {1896}, publisher = {Progressive Book Publishing}, address = {Vineland, NJ}, abstract = {The protagonist from 1895 Proctor is hypnotized and experiences the eutopia that is possible if power is taken from the capitalists and their bought politicians and restored to the people. Public utilities owned by the government. Labor well paid. Government replaces banks and is the source of all loans and the recipient of all interest.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Thomas H. Proctor (b. 1842)} } @booklet {7970, title = {The Sixteenth Amendment}, volume = {Dillingham{\textquoteright}s American Library No. 13}, year = {1896}, month = {1896}, pages = {229 pp}, publisher = {G. W. Dillingham}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Founding of the Legion of Labor which is similar to 1888 Bellamy\’s Industrial Army. Under this system everyone will be able to exchange their \“labor for a sufficiency of food, clothing, shelter and enjoyment\” (83). There will still be private property. Plans to clear slums by moving the people to rural areas. The entire amendment is given on 221-29.
}, keywords = {Male author, UK author, US author}, author = {[Stephen Henry] [Emmens]} } @booklet {8462, title = {The Banker{\textquoteright}s Dream. A Fiction. An Argument for the Free Coinage of Silver}, year = {1895}, note = {Rpt. New York: Arno Press, 1975.
}, month = {1895}, publisher = {Progressive Book Publishing Co. }, address = {Vineland, NJ}, abstract = {Capitalist dystopia.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Thomas H. Proctor (b. 1842)} } @booklet {7940, title = {An Ideal Republic or Way Out of the Fog}, volume = {No. 10 of American Politics, February 1896}, year = {1895}, month = {1895}, publisher = {W.L. Reynolds}, address = {Chicago, IL}, abstract = {Eutopia. Reformed capitalism with a limit on wealth.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Corwin Phelps} } @booklet {7903, title = {Journey to Mars. The Wonderful World: Its Beauty and Splendor; Its Mighty Races and Kingdoms; Its Final Doom}, year = {1894}, note = {Rpt. Westport, CT: Hyperion Press, 1974.
}, month = {1894}, publisher = {G.W. Dillingham}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Eutopia but much of the novel is an adventure story. There is a linear city that is 2,000 miles long and 20 miles wide with a population of twenty-five million and eleven other slightly smaller linear cities. Universal language. One religion. Highly advanced technically and artistically. Monarchy with some living in luxury. There is differential wealth but no poverty. Three peoples with red, yellow, or blue skin color who are all equal. Pluto was once inhabited, and a few Plutonians survive on Mars.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Gustavus W[illiam] Pope M.D. (1828-1902)} } @booklet {7902, title = {The Lords of Misrule; A Tale of Gods and of Men}, year = {1894}, month = {1894}, publisher = {Laird and Lee}, address = {Chicago, IL}, abstract = {A series of future dystopias. The excesses of capitalism are replaced by the excesses of state socialism, which collapses into simple rule by violence. Suggests that the United States in the 1890s was a eutopia.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {William C[urtis] Pomeroy} } @booklet {7884, title = {Mary Anne Carew: Wife, Mother, Spirit, Angel}, year = {1893}, note = {U.K. ed. London: James Burns, Progressive Library, 1893.
}, month = {1893}, publisher = {Colby and Rich}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {Domestic heaven. Spiritualism. Reflects the ideas of Emanuel Swedenborg (1668-1772).
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Carlyle Petersilea (1844-1903)} } @booklet {7858, title = {National Life and Character. A Forecast}, year = {1893}, note = {2nd ed. London: Macmillan, 1894. Rpt. London: Macmillan, 1913.
}, month = {1893}, publisher = {Macmillan}, address = {London}, abstract = {Forecast of a coming dystopia. Anti-socialist and racist. The higher (white) races are limited to the temperate zone. Family declining. General decay in character.
}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author, UK author}, author = {Charles H[enry] Pearson (1830-94)} } @booklet {7859, title = {The Open Secret}, year = {1893}, month = {1893}, pages = {62 pp.}, publisher = {Arena Publishing Co}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {Spiritualism. Martians with highly refined bodies. No marriage or birth, but there is love and sex, but without lust. The spiritual body is created during life and only those who through their moral goodness have created a refined spiritual body pass on the life after death.
}, author = {A Priest [pseud.]} } @booklet {8459, title = {A Witch of the Nineteenth Century}, year = {1893}, month = {1893}, publisher = {The Hermetic Publishing Co.}, address = {Chicago, IL}, abstract = {Mostly spiritualism, but the novel contains a brief description of an underground eutopia that will be created by those advanced spiritually. It is also technologically advanced.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author, US author}, author = {W[illiam] P. Phelon M.D. (1834-1902)} } @booklet {7827, title = {"The Alien Thread"}, howpublished = {Munsey{\textquoteright}s Magazine}, volume = { 8.3 }, year = {1892}, note = {Rpt. as \"Citizen 504.\"\ Argosy\ 23.3 (December 1896): 443-48.
}, month = {December 1892}, pages = {281-86}, abstract = {Future tale in which a Marriage Bureau arranges marriages. Potential for problems described even though there is the required happy ending.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Charles H. Palmer} } @booklet {7767, title = {"Architecture Under Nationalism"}, howpublished = {The American Architect and Builders News }, volume = {29.759, 760, 764, 766, 768, 770; 30.772 }, year = {1890}, note = {Rpt. without the letters\ Boston ,\ MA : The Nationalist Educational Association, 1890. \
}, month = {July 12, 19, August 16, 30, September 13, 27, October 11, 1890}, pages = {21-25, 40-42, 98-99, 134-35, 168-70, 199-202; 20-23}, abstract = {Part essay on architecture and sanitation; part description of future architecture, including an argument for cooperative living in apartment buildings. The author was born as John Amory Putnam but later took his father\&$\#$39;s name. He was a Boston architect, best known for pioneering apartment buildings, some of which still stand. See his \"The Apartment House.\" The American Architect and Builders News 27.732 (January 4, 1890): 3-5.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {J[ohn] P[ickering Putnam (1847-1917)} } @booklet {7740, title = {The God of Civilization. A Romance}, year = {1890}, month = {1890}, publisher = {Eureka Pub. Co}, address = {Chicago, IL}, abstract = {Mostly a romantic adventure tale but includes a description of a South Seas island eutopia where the people are naturally good.
}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Mrs. M. A. [Weeks] Pittock} } @booklet {6635, title = {God{\textquoteright}s Kingdom on Earth. Just Laws. Organised Work. The Religion of Jesus. Social Science Tract.--No 9}, year = {1890}, month = {[1890s]}, pages = {8 pp.}, publisher = {E. Tipper, Printer}, address = {West Maitland, NSW, Australia}, abstract = {Pamphlet describing the eutopia that can be brought about through Christian socialism. See also 1932 Proctor.\ The author also wrote works in Biblical form advocating Christian socialism. See his The Epistle of Richard. A Late Addition to the English Bible. By the Author of the \“New Evangel\” [pseud.]. West Maitland, NSW, Australia: E. Tipper, Printer, 1893. 7 pp.; and The Second Epistle of Richard. By the Author of the \“New Evangel\” [pseud.]. West Maitland, NSW, Australia: E. Tipper, Printer, 1894. 8 pp. Other related works are his The New Evangel, According to Richard Proctor, Christian Socialist. Maitland, NSW, Australia: T. Dimmock, 1891; A New Religion [Sydney, NSW, Australia: Ptd. by Kingston Press], 1922; Reform or Revolution Which? Melbourne, VIC, Australia: The Ruskin Press, [1926?]; and The New Evangel Way. Melbourne, VIC, Australia: The Ruskin Press, [1930].
}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {R[ichard] Proctor} } @booklet {7739, title = {Life in Utopia; Being a Faithful and Accurate Description of the Institutions that Regulate Labour, Art, Science, Agriculture, Education, Habitation, Matrimony, Law, Government, and Religion in this Delightful Region of Human Imagination}, year = {1890}, month = {1890}, publisher = {Authors{\textquoteright} Cooperative Publishing Company}, address = {London}, abstract = {Fairly standard socialist eutopia.\ See also 1870 and 1876 Petzler, his\ Die sociale Baukunst; oder Gr{\"u}nde und Mittel f{\"u}r den Umsturz und Wiederaufbau der gesellschaftlichen Verh{\"a}ltnisse, besonders wie solche sich in neuester Zeit in England, dem grossen Musterstaat der modernen Civilisation, ausgebildet haben. 2 vols. Hottingen-Z{\"u}rich, Switzerland: Verlag der Schweizerischen Volksbuchhandlung, 1879, 1880; and his\ Grosse Jubil{\"a}umsfeier und imposanter Triumphzug in Erinnerung des hundertj{\"a}hrigen Bestehens der social-demokratischen Staatsseinrichtung in Britannien. N{\"u}rnberg, Germany: Selbstverlag des Berfassers, 1897 (L).\
}, keywords = {English author, German author, Male author}, author = {John [Aloys] Petzler (1814?-1898)} } @booklet {7766, title = {"Yea Fifteen Years Hence. A Vision"}, howpublished = {Yea Chronicle (Yea, VIC, Australia)}, volume = { no. 246 }, year = {1890}, month = {July 31, 1890}, pages = {[3]}, abstract = {Letter to the editor describing the author\&$\#$39;s vision of the town of Yea as a bustling, well planned town in the near future.
}, keywords = {Australian author}, author = {The Prophet [pseud.]} } @booklet {7717, title = {"Arcadia in Futuris. Dedicated to the Women of New Zealand"}, howpublished = {Wanganui Herald (New Zealand)}, volume = { 23 }, year = {1889}, month = {February 19, March 6, 13, 19, April 4, 17, May 1, 2, 5, 8, 22, 28, 29}, pages = {2, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4}, abstract = {A eutopia set in 2004 in which much larger, healthier people live in an Arcadian world. The process toward the eutopia begins with women in New Zealand getting the vote, which in fact they gained in 1893. A sub-plot that is not resolved is the isolation of China from the rest of the world and a plan to invade it.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Charles Patrick} } @booklet {6619, title = {The Coming Event}, year = {1889}, month = {[1889]}, pages = {16 pp.}, publisher = {J. Broadbent \& Co}, address = {Huddersfield, Eng.}, abstract = {An independent Ireland as a eutopia. While Ireland is not mentioned directly it is pictured on the cover.
}, author = {A Parachutist [pseud.]} } @booklet {7674, title = {California 350 Years Ago. Manuelo{\textquoteright}s Narrative. Translated from the Portuguese}, year = {1888}, month = {1888}, publisher = {Samuel Carson \& Co./C.T. Dillingham}, address = {San Francisco, CA/New York}, abstract = {Mostly an adventure story, but much of the novel is set among noble savages clearly living the good life.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Cornelius] [Cole]} } @booklet {6616, title = {The Capture of London}, year = {1887}, month = {[1887?]}, publisher = {General Publishing Co}, address = {London}, abstract = {Dystopia. A Channel Tunnel is the route for the invasion of Britain by France and Russia. Britain becomes a republic, which is overthrown at the end. Attack on Gladstone and his party. William Ewart Gladstone (1809-98) was Prime Minister four times between 1868 and 1892.
}, author = {James Peddie [pseud?]} } @booklet {7637, title = {Cromwell the Third: or The Jubilee of Liberty. A Letter Written by Julius Boanerges to His Son}, year = {1886}, month = {1886}, publisher = {Author}, address = {London}, abstract = {Authoritarian eutopia/dystopia set in A.D. 1951. Inhabited world in the center of the earth. Socialist revolution with good and bad results. There is a strong man named Tertius Cromwell. Money abolished. All royals, the clergy, and the English army imprisoned in \"lunatic asylums for life.\" Ireland had disappeared in an earthquake in 1892 and later most of the United States is destroyed in another earthquake. Adam and all his descendants have returned causing over-population.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {John Parnell} } @booklet {7612, title = {The Recognition of Friends in Heaven. Published at the Direction of the Cathedral Union, November 24th, 1884}, year = {1884}, month = {1884}, pages = {8 pp.}, publisher = {Whitcombe \& Tombs}, address = {[Christchurch, New Zealand]}, abstract = {Eight page pamphlet in which two pages vaguely describe a classic \"domestic\" heaven where one is surrounded by friends and family.
}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {T. Gluyas Pascoe} } @booklet {7588, title = {Beyond the Gates}, year = {1883}, note = {U.K. ed. London: Chatto \& Windus, 1883.\ Selections of Beyond the Gates rpt. in Daring To Dream: Utopian Stories by United States Women, 1836-1919. Ed. Carol Farley Kessler (London: Pandora Press, 1984), 111-16 with an editor\’s note on 104-06.\ The three volumes were published together as Three Spiritualist Novels by Elizabeth Stuart Phelps. The Gates Ajar (1868) Beyond the Gates (1883) and The Gates Between (1887) (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2000), with an \“Introduction\” by Nina Baym (vii-xxiii). The Gates Ajar is on 1-138, Beyond the Gates on 139-232, and The Gates Between on 233-340.
}, month = {1883}, publisher = {Houghton, Mifflin}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {Heaven as a eutopia in line with the Swedish thinker Emanuel Swedenborg (1668-1772) and the American spiritualist Andrew Jackson Davis (1826-1910), who published descriptions of what he called the Summer Land in a number of books between 1847 and 1878. The Gates Ajar presents a heaven in which one is reunited with relatives and gives a glimpse of a more fulfilling life for the female protagonist. Between the Gates is the eutopia of the series in that it is explicitly a criticism of the current social order as it affects women and shows a Heaven in which women can lead fulfilling lives. The third volume, Beyond the Gates, focuses on a domineering man who is reformed in heaven. The Gates Ajar provoked considerable controversy. Attacks include J.S.W. Antidote to \“The Gates Ajar\”. London: Aylesbury, 1870. 2nd ed. London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1871. U.S. ed. New York: G.W. Carleton, 1872; \“The Gates Ajar\” Critically Examined. By A Dean [pseud.]. London: Hatchards, 1871; \“The Gates Ajar\” Criticised and Corrected. By An Englishwoman [pseud.]. London: Geo. John Stevenson, 1872; E[dgar] Stanway Jackson, Faith or Fancy? An Examination of \“The Gates Ajar\”. London: Elliott Stock, 1871; Charlotte Elizabeth Tidy, The Door Was Shut: An Answer to \“Gates Ajar\”. London: William Macintosh, 1873; and Watching at the Gates. A Reply to \“The Gates Ajar\”. London: S.W. Partridge, [1871]. A defense is What Shall We Say About \“The Gates Ajar\”. Some Thoughts Suggested by the proposed \“Antidote\”. London: Elliott, [1871].\ In her \“Introduction.\” Three Spiritualist Novels by Elizabeth Stuart Phelps. The Gates Ajar (1868) Beyond the Gates (1883) and The Gates Between (1887) (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2000), Nina Baym rejects the label utopian for the novels because \“they lack the Utopian thrust toward realizable social reform\” and places them in the context of spiritualism (viii). Carol Farley Kessler calls Beyond the Gates a utopia in \“A Heavenly Utopia--Heaven for Women.\” Elizabeth Stuart Phelps (Boston, MA: Twayne Publishers, 1982), 20-42. So does Lori Duin Kelly in her \“Phelps\’ Religious Writings: Household Saints in a Feminist Utopia.\” The Life and Works of Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, Victorian Feminist Writer (Troy, NY: Whitson Publishing Co., 1983), 25-47.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Elizabeth Stuart Phelps (1844-1911)} } @booklet {7571, title = {Arimas}, year = {1881}, month = {1881}, publisher = {Simpkin, Marshall, \& Co.}, address = {London}, abstract = {Satire but describes the group of islands that make up Arimas as a simple, agricultural country that is eutopian in its simplicity.
}, author = {H. Peckwater A.M.} } @booklet {7559, title = {The Angel of the Prairies; A Dream of the Future}, year = {1880}, month = {1880}, publisher = {Deseret News Printing and Publishing Establishment}, address = {Salt Lake City, UT}, abstract = {Tract presenting a future Mormon eutopia.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Parley Parker Pratt [Jr.] (1837-97)} } @booklet {7558, title = {"A Century Hence"}, howpublished = {A Century Hence and Other Poems}, year = {1880}, month = {1880}, pages = {7-13}, publisher = {Ramsey, Millett \& Hudson}, address = {Kansas City, MO}, abstract = {Eutopia mostly based on technology. Weather controlled by individuals; flora and fauna of all the world wherever they are wanted; manned flight but individuals also have wings. The area from Egypt to China, including Australasia, is in ruins because people had abandoned all areas of \"ignorance, vice and oppression\" (11). St. Louis is the capitol of the U.S., which stretches from Panama to the North Pole
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {W[illiam] M[cClary] Paxton (1819-1916)} } @booklet {7527, title = {Skyward and Earthward}, year = {1875}, month = {1875}, pages = {279 pp.}, publisher = {Samuel Tinsley}, address = {London}, abstract = {Voyages by balloon to various locations beginning with an inhabited moon, which is presented as a satire on Earth customs. They then visit Mars that is a simple eutopia with friendly people, tame birds, and a diet of fruit. No government or laws. No disease or old age. After their return to Earth, the novel is one of adventure and romance.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[George Theodosius Boughton] [Kyngdon] (1821-1916)} } @booklet {7520, title = {"A Dream within a Dream"}, howpublished = {Independent (New York)}, volume = {26 }, year = {1874}, note = {All but a small part of the text rpt. in Daring To Dream: Utopian Stories by United States Women, 1836-1919. Ed. Carol Farley Kessler (London: Pandora Press, 1984), 107-11 with an editor\’s note on 104-06. Complete text rpt. in Daring To Dream: Utopian Stories By United States Women Before 1950. Ed. Carol Farley Kessler. 2nd ed. (Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 1995), 63-67 with an editor\’s note on 61-63.
}, month = {February 19, 1874}, pages = {1}, abstract = {A dream of an egalitarian marriage ceremony.
}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Elizabeth Stuart Phelps (1844-1911)} } @booklet {7464, title = {"Peter Pipers Letters. Peter{\textquoteright}s Vision"}, howpublished = {Tuapeka Times (New Zealand) }, volume = {2.83 }, year = {1869}, month = {September 11, 1869}, pages = {3}, abstract = {Dystopia brought about by the land in Otago being broken up into small landholdings.
}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author}, url = {http://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast}, author = {Old Peter Piper [pseud.]} } @booklet {7414, title = {"Labour{\textquoteright}s Utopia"}, howpublished = {Modern Manicheism, Labour{\textquoteright}s Utopia, and Other Poems}, year = {1857}, note = {Published shortened under the author\&$\#$39;s name in his On Labour; Its Wrongful Claims and Rightful Dues. Its Actual Present and Possible Future (London: Macmillan, 1869), 434-39. 2nd ed. with a few pages of text added (London: Macmillan, 1870), 460-68.
}, month = {1857}, pages = {29-39}, publisher = {John W. Parker and Son}, address = {London}, abstract = {Poem depicting a eutopia of abundance and leisure in which people work at things they enjoy doing.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[William Thomas] [Thornton] (1813-80)} } @booklet {7393, title = {The Happy Colony. Dedicated to the Workmen of Great Britain}, year = {1854}, note = {Rpt. New York: Garland, 1985 bound with Benjamin Ward Richardson\&$\#$39;s Hygeia: A City of Health (1876).
}, month = {1854}, publisher = {Saunders and Otley}, address = {London}, abstract = {A eutopia designed to be established in New Zealand and based on a reformed educational system. It was never established. There are two fold out designs showing the layout of the proposed colony and of the colleges.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Robert Pemberton (1788-1879)} } @booklet {7390, title = {Charles Hopewell; or, Society As It Is, and As It Should Be}, year = {1853}, month = {1853}, publisher = {Longley \& Brother}, address = {Cincinnati, OH}, abstract = {Cooperative and women\&$\#$39;s rights eutopia. Includes reformed (Bloomer) dress. The main female character started a school where she taught a course in physiology for women. The school was attacked by the locals, and she was forced to close it. Most of the book is concerned with an exposition of ideas and opposition to them, both from conservatives and other radicals.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {John Patterson} } @booklet {7381, title = {The Geral-Milco; or The Narrative of a Residence in a Brazilian Valley of the Sierra-Paricis With Map and Illustrations}, year = {1852}, note = {Later ed. without the author\&$\#$39;s name entitled Rambles in Brazil, or, A Peep at the Aztecs. By One Who Has Seen Them [pseud.]. 2nd ed. New York: C.B. Norton, 1854.
}, month = {1852}, publisher = {Charles B. Norton}, address = {New York}, abstract = {A detailed eutopia in the mountains of Brazil that was established by Aztecs and Incas fleeing the Spanish conquest and generally based on what was known of these civilizations at the time; somewhat romanticized.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {A. R. Middletoun Payne} } @booklet {7379, title = {Gulliver Joi: His Three Voyages; Being an Account of His Marvelous Adventures in Kailoo, Hydrogenia and Ejario}, year = {1851}, month = {1851}, publisher = {Charles Scribner}, address = {New York}, abstract = {Gulliveriana. Kailoo is an Earth-like planet that travels very rapidly around its sun, and the people are also speeded up with lives that are correspondingly short, except for the royal family, which lives longer, to the equivalent of thirty. The Earth is Kailoo\&$\#$39;s moon. In Hydrogenia air is used like water on Earth, and water is a stimulant like alcohol. The people are much larger than humans. In Ejario women are stronger, more active, and braver than men.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Elbert Perce (ed.) [written by] (1831-69)} } @booklet {7366, title = {"Mellonta Tauta"}, howpublished = {Godey{\textquoteright}s Lady{\textquoteright}s (Philadelphia, PA)}, volume = {38}, year = {1849}, note = {Rpt. in Amazing Stories Science Fiction 8.7 (November 1933): 124-32;\ in Collected Works of Edgar Allan Poe: Tales and Sketches 1843-1849. Ed. Thomas Olive Mabbott with the assistance of Eleanor D. Kewer and Maureen C. Mabbott (Cambridge, MA: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1978), 1291-1305 with editorial notes on 1305-09; and in Sense of Wonder: A Century of Science Fiction. Ed. Leigh Ronald Grossman (Rockville, MD: Wildside Press, 2011), 69-72 with an editor\’s note on 69.
}, month = {February 1849}, pages = {133-38}, abstract = {Satire on a future which is technologically advanced but with individualism and democracy gone.
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Edgar Allan Poe (1809-49)} } @booklet {7343, title = {"The Monster Mine (Written especially for the South Australian Odd Fellows{\textquoteright} Magazine, Vol. 103, No. 5)"}, howpublished = {The South Australian Odd Fellows{\textquoteright}; Magazine [Each issue has the title Odd Fellows{\textquoteright} Magazine, but the first page of the volume has the full title]}, volume = { 2.9 }, year = {1845}, note = {Rpt. in Australian Science Fiction. Ed. Van Ikin (St. Lucia, QLD, Australia: University of Queensland Press, 1982), 4-6. Book rpt. (Chicago, IL: Academy Publishers, 1984), 4-6.
}, month = {August 1845}, pages = {107-09}, abstract = {Technological eutopia one hundred years in the future brought about by the riches of a copper mine. Little social change.
}, keywords = {Australian author}, author = {PGM [pseud.]} } @booklet {9902, title = {My First and Last Book. A Book for the Crisis and A Crisis for the Book}, year = {1844}, month = {[1844] Anno 1, new era, 1 qr. Year is given on p. 46}, pages = {64 pp. }, publisher = {Np}, address = {[Massachusetts?]}, abstract = {All humans belong to one universal brotherhood. Marriage for life between one man and one woman. Sex only for reproduction. Extended childhood under parents\&$\#$39; care. \“The child then becomes a member of the common brotherhood or community, where through the whole there is impartial, social sympathy and equal love, and in which there is a perfect supply of all the wants of every member, and all the means essential to a perfect developement [sic] of character\” (15). Common property. If people life correctly, they will have no need of doctors. Good food, fruit and vegetables being the best, clean air, regular exercise; mentions no corsets for women. No need for clergy. Lays out a new calendar (48-51).
}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {A Plain Man, A native of Massachusetts} } @booklet {7316, title = {"The Atlantis: A Southern World,--Or a Wonderful Continent,--Discovered in the Great Southern Ocean, and Supposed to be The Atlantis of Plato, or The Terra Australis Incognita of Dr. Swift, During a Voyage Conducted by Alonzo Pinzon Commander of The American Metal Ship Astrea"}, howpublished = {The American Museum of Science, Literature and the Arts (Baltimore, MD)}, volume = { 1.1-4 - 2.1, 5-6 }, year = {1838}, month = {September - December 1838, January, May - June 1839}, pages = {42-65, 222-55, 321-41, 421-46; 37-41, 365-72, 481-84}, abstract = {Eutopia. Describes the city of Saturnia, the capital city of Atlantis, which appears to be a middle ground between this life and Heaven. Emperors like Nero and Tiberius are porters and servants here, as are similarly behaved Cardinals, Bishops, and other \"great men\". Others, better men, like Benjamin Franklin live, converse, and continue their work in the arts and sciences. Very few are married to those they were married to in their previous lives. The government is similar to that of the U.S., and George Washington is President. Mostly presented through conversations among the great and good of the past and with the contemporary visitor, who asks them questions about their works.
}, author = {Peter Prospero L.L.D. [pseud?]} } @booklet {7317, title = {Oxford in 1888, A Fragmentary Dream}, year = {1838}, month = {1838}, publisher = {Henry Slatter}, address = {Oxford, Eng.}, abstract = {Eutopia describing a dream of a future Oxford, complete with town plans.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {[Richard] [Walker]}, editor = {R. P. [pseud.]} } @booklet {7315, title = {A World of Wonders; Or Divers Developments, Showing the Thorough Triumph of Animal Magnetism in New England. Illustrated by the Power of Prevision in Mrs. Matilda Fox, and the Point of the Pencil, by D.C. Johnston}, year = {1838}, note = {2nd and 3rd eds. Boston, MA: Robert S. Davis, 1838.
}, month = {1838}, publisher = {Robert S. Davis}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {The Moon, Saturn, Jupiter, and the Sun are visited. Some utopias on other planets, including a Cockaigne on the sun. The moon is inhabited by strange creatures who live in social groups, Saturn is depicted as a eutopia with nine great cities, with all homes a quarter mile high. The people wear few clothes and are vegetarian. Jupiter is a planet early in its evolution. Reference is made to a second volume, but none exists.
}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Joel R. Peabody M.B. Fellow of the College of {\textquoteleft}Pothecaries} } @booklet {11137, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Junction of the Ocean. A Tale of the Year 2098{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Bengal Annual; A Literary Keepsake for 1835 }, year = {1835}, note = {Rev. in the author\’s Bole Ponjis, Containing the Tale of the Buccaneer; A Bottle of Red Ink; The Decline and Fall of Ghosts; and Other Ingredients. 2. vols. (London/Calcutta, India: W. Thacker \& Co., 1851), 1: 132-215. https://archive.org/details/boleponjisconta01parkgoog/page/n2/mode/1up; rpt. in Science Fiction in Colonial India, 1835-1905: Five Tales of Speculative Fiction and Resistance. Ed. Mary Ellis Gibson (London: Anthem Press, 2019), 38-75, with an editor\’s introduction on 29-37.\
}, month = {1835}, pages = {1-55}, abstract = {Disaster/dystopian story told by a survivor. The construction of the Panama Canal produces a massive flood when the two oceans come together, ultimately inundating most of the world.\
}, keywords = {English author, Indian author, Male author}, isbn = {978-78-308863-8}, url = {https://archive.org/details/boleponjisconta01parkgoog/page/n2/mode/1up}, author = {Henry Meredith Parker (1796-1868)} } @booklet {7275, title = {The Course of Time, A Poem, in Ten Books. To Which are Prefixed a Brief Memoir of the Author, an Analysis of the Poem, and an Index to the Principle Passages, Sentiments, or Descriptions. By Rev. William Jenks, D.D.}, volume = {2 vols.}, year = {1827}, note = {3rd American from 3rd Edinburgh ed. Boston, MA: Crocker and Brewster/New York: Jonathan Leavitt/ Philadelphia, PA: John Grigg/Baltimore, MD/Cushing and Jewett, 1828. At least 25 editions were published.
}, month = {1827}, publisher = {William Blackwood/Thomas Cadell}, address = {Edinburgh, Scot./London}, abstract = {Book length poem on Biblical themes including the apocalypse and the return of Christ. The poem describes the history of humankind from a Biblical perspective from the Creation through the final division between saved and damned. About mid-way (end of Book V) is a description of the millennium. Church and state are separated, and the state has righteous leaders. The Jews have returned to a restored Jerusalem. No disease. No war. Abundance. No crime. Animals no longer in conflict with each other or humans.
}, keywords = {Male author, Scottish author}, author = {Robert Pollok, A.M. (1798-1827)} } @booklet {7263, title = {Heaven on Earth, or the New Lights of Harmony. An Extravaganza, in Two Acts}, year = {1825}, month = {1825}, publisher = {Np}, address = {Philadelphia, PA}, abstract = {Dystopian satire on the New Harmony community in Indiana founded by Robert Owen (1771-1858).
}, author = {Peter Puffem [pseud.]} } @booklet {7135, title = {A New Description of Merryland. Containing A Topographical, Geographical, and Natural History of That Country}, volume = {5th ed. [Probably 1st ed.].}, year = {1741}, note = {Rpt. as Thomas Stretzer. Merryland. Privately Issued. New York: Robin Hood House, 1932.
}, month = {1741}, publisher = {Ptd. for W. Jones [Actually Edmund Curll]}, address = {Bath, Eng. [Actually London]}, abstract = {A real problem. It certainly uses the utopian form, but pronouncing the surname of the pseudonym will reveal its true character, early pornography. Merryland is a woman\&$\#$39;s body, but the presentation is as a country. The author wrote a critique of his own work--[Thomas Stretser], Merryland Displayed: or, Plagiarism, Ignorance, and Imprudence, Detected. Being Observations upon a Pamphlet Intitled A New Description of Merryland. 2nd ed. [probably 1st ed.]. Bath, Eng.: Ptd. by the Author [Actually London: Edmund Curll], 1741. Two other Merryland works, probably by the same author are The Potent Alley: or, Succours from Merryland. With Three Essays in Praise of the Cloathing of That Country; and the Story of Pandora\&$\#$39;s Box. To Which is added, [Erotopolis]. The Present State of Bettyland. By Philo-Britanniae [pseud.]. 2nd ed. [Probably 1st ed.]. Paris: Ptd. by Direction of the Author [Actually London: Edmund Curll], 1741; and A Short Description of the Roads Which Lead to that Delightful country Called Merryland. To Which are subjoined, An History of the Gallantries of Bettyland. With some Carnal Recreations in Prose and Verse. London: Ptd. for E[dmund] Curll, 1743. An additional Merryland item is The History of Apprius, King of Merryland. Extracted from the Chronicle of the World, From Its Creation, Translated from a Persian Manuscript Found in the Library of Schah-Hussain, Sophi of Persia, dethroned by Mamut in 1722. By a Gentleman who served in the Persian Armies [pseud.]. 3rd ed. [Probably 1st ed.]. To Which is added, A Compleat Key .London: Ptd. by T. Hinton, 1741 (PSt). The Key translates the names given in the text, with many of them being sexual in nature. For example, Apprius equals Priapus.
}, author = {[Thomas] [Stretser] [pseud?]} } @booklet {6573, title = {A Journey to the World in the Moon. A Dream Containing An Historical RELATION, (as receiv{\textquoteright}d from a Lunar Philosopher) from above an Hundred Years last past, to the present Time, of the most Material Occurrences, as to the Religion, Politics, \& c. of the INHABITANTS of that GLOBE. And particularly, Their Manner of ELECTIONS}, year = {1740}, note = {Rpt. in Modern British Utopias 1700-1850. Ed. Gregory Claeys. 8 vols. (London: Pickering \& Chatto, 1997), 2: 1-47.
}, month = {[1740]}, publisher = {Charles Corbett}, address = {London}, abstract = {Satire on contemporary Britain.
}, author = {Pythagorolunister [pseud.]} } @booklet {7106, title = {An Historical and Geographical Description of Formosa, an Island Subject to the Emperor of Japan. Giving an Account of the Religion, Customs, Manners, \& c. of the Inhabitants. Together with a Relation of what happen{\textquoteright}d to the Author in his Travels; particularly his Conferences with the Jesuits, and others, in several Parts of Europe. Also the History and Reasons of his Conversion to Christianity, with his Objections against it (in defence of Paganism) and their Answers. To which is prefix{\textquoteright}d, A Preface in Vindication of himself from the Reflections of a Jesuit lately come from China, with an Account of what passed between them}, year = {1704}, note = {Rpt. as Vol. II of the Library of Imposters. London: Robert Holden \& Co., 1926. 2nd ed. London: Ptd. for Mat. Wotton, 1705.
}, month = {1704}, publisher = {Ptd. for Dan. Brown, G. Strahan, and W. Davis, and Fran. Coggan}, address = {London}, abstract = {Detailed description of an imaginary Formosa, good, bad, and satire, presented as if it were real.\
}, keywords = {French author, UK author}, author = {George Psalmanaazaar [pseud.]} } @booklet {7104, title = {The Adept{\textquoteright}s Case, Briefly Shewing: I. What Adepts are; and what they are said to perform. II. What Reason there is, to think that there are Adepts. III. What would invite them to appear, and be beneficial in a Nation. IV. What Arguments there are, for and against, the taking of such Measures}, year = {1700}, month = {1700}, publisher = {Np}, address = {London}, abstract = {Sequel to 1698 A Philadept. An Essay Concerning Adepts appealing for adepts to identify themselves. The former essay is longer and develops the utopian aspects more explicitly, but here the author proposes that if Adepts appear they should be made naturalized citizens and declared sacred to protect them. They will be allowed to have 15,000 pounds of gold and silver minted each year as long as they pay the government 5,000 pounds each year. See also 1700 Annus Sophiae Jubilaeus.
}, author = {A Philadept [pseud.]} } @booklet {7100, title = {An Essay Concerning Adepts: or, A Resolution of this Inquiry, How it cometh to pass that Adepts, if there are any in the World, are no more Beneficial to Mankind than they have been known hitherto to be, and whether there could be no way to Encourage them to Communicate themselves. With some Resolutions concerning the Principles of the Adeptists; And a Model, Practicable, and Easy, of living in Community}, year = {1698}, note = {Rpt. in Restoration and Augustan British Utopias. Ed. Gregory Claeys (Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 2000), 207-33.
}, month = {1698}, publisher = {Ptd. by J. Mayos}, address = {London}, abstract = {Presentation of a community on the Spartan model after a discussion of the Hermetic tradition. Everyone must be married but live separately. No men and women dancing together; \"no range must be allowed on the Subjects of Love, nor drinking.\"\ See also 1700\ Annus Sophiae Jubilaeus\ and 1700\ The Adept\’s Case.
}, author = {A Philadept [pseud.]} } @booklet {7096, title = {An Essay towards the Present and Future Peace of Europe by the Establishment of an European Dyet, Parliament or Estates}, year = {1693}, note = {Rpt. in The Political Writings of William Penn. Ed. Andrew R. Murphy (Indianapolis, IN: Liberty Fund, 2002), 401-19.
}, month = {1693}, publisher = {Np}, address = {London}, abstract = {A proposal for a federation of European governments with the aim of establishing permanent peace. One of numerous such proposals, often called utopias; the best known is probably Immanuel Kant\&$\#$39;s (1724-1804) Perpetual Peace (1795).
}, keywords = {English author, Male author, US author}, author = {William Penn (1644-1718)} } @booklet {7085, title = {The Informer{\textquoteright}s Doom, or An Amazing and Seasonable Letter from Utopia Directed to the Man in the Moon. Giving a full and pleasant Account of the Arraignment, Tryal, and Condemnation, of all those grand and bitter Enemies that disturb and molest all Kingdoms and States, throughout the Christian World. To which is added (as a caution to honest Country-men) the Arraignment, Tryal, and Condemnation of the Knavery and Cheats that are used in every particular Trade in the city of London. Presented to the consideration of all the Tantivy-Lads and Lasses in Urope, by a true Son of the Church of England. Curiously Illustrated with about Threescore Cuts}, year = {1683}, month = {1683}, publisher = {Ptd. for John Dunton}, address = {London}, abstract = {A trial in Utopia of those, from the Pope on down, who threaten the kingdom.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[John] [Dunton] (1659-1733)} } @booklet {6572, title = {A Country Not Named}, howpublished = {A Country Not Named (MS. Sloane 913, fols. IR-33R). An edition with an annotated primary bibliography and an introductory essay on Lodwick and his intellectual context by William Poole}, year = {1675}, note = {Also in Francis Lodwick, On Language, Theology and Utopia. Ed. Felicity Henderson and William Poole (Oxford, Eng.: Clarendon Press, 2010), 265-87.
}, month = {[1675-79?]/2007}, pages = {81-108 with a "textual Introduction" (71-79) and "Textual notes to CNN" (109-10).}, publisher = {ACMRS (Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies)}, address = {Tempe, AZ}, abstract = {Eutopia. Detailed records kept on all people and all \"matters notable\" in each division of the country. The people had been monotheists, became polytheists, then returned to monotheism, and ultimately became Christians. Ideal language, which was one of the author\&$\#$39;s interests. Compulsory education from six with separate schools for girls with women teachers, with the education for girls the same as that for boys except that they are taught sewing and not taught gymnastics. Few laws and those read out to the population once a month.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Francis Lodwick (1619-1695)}, editor = {William Poole} } @booklet {7063, title = {"A Country-life"}, howpublished = {Poems By the most deservedly Admired Mrs. Katherine Philips The Matchless Orinda. To Which is added Monsieur Corneille{\textquoteright}s Pompey \& Horace, Tragedies. With several other Translations out of French}, year = {1664}, note = {Rpt. (London: Ptd. by J.M., 1667), 88-91; (London: Ptd. by T.N., 1678), 88-91; and (London: Ptd. by Jacob Tonson, 1710), 111-14. An unauthorized edition of her poems was published as Poems by the incomparable Mrs. K.P. London: Ptd, for J.G. for Rich. Marriott, 1664 and withdrawn after a few days, with this poem on pages 177-82 [Wing 286:08]. The differences are minimal.
}, month = {1664/1667}, pages = {88-91}, publisher = {Ptd. by J.M.}, address = {London}, abstract = {Life in the country as eutopia.
}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Katherine [Fowler] Philips (1631-64)} } @booklet {7027, title = {"To Penshurst"}, howpublished = {The Forrest.{\textquotedblright} In The Workes of Benjamin Jonson: neque me vt miretur turba, laboro: contentus paucis lectoribus}, year = {1616}, note = {Rpt in in Ben Jonson. Volume VIII The Poems The Prose Works. Ed. C.H. Herford Percy and Evelyn Simpson. Corr. ed. (Oxford, Eng.: Clarendon Press, 1965), 93-96;\ in\ Poems of Ben Jonson. Ed. George Burke Johnson (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1955), 76-79; and ed. Colin Barrow in The Cambridge Edition of the Works of Ben Jonson. Ed. David Bevington, Martin Butler, and Ian Donaldson. Electronic ed. David Gants. Associate eds. Karen Britland and Eugene Giddens. 7 vols. (Cambridge, Eng.: Cambridge University Press, 2012), 5: 209-14.
}, month = {1616}, pages = {818-21}, publisher = {W. Stansby}, address = {London}, abstract = {An English country estate as a eutopia with elements of the cockaigne.
}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Ben[jamin] Jonson (1573?-1637)}, editor = {C. H. Herford Perry and Evelyn Simpson} }