@booklet {11994, title = {{\textquotedblleft}La Sir{\`e}ne{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Grist/Imagine 2000 2024}, year = {2024}, month = {January 22, 2024}, abstract = {

The story takes place in a climate change future where New Orleans has disappeared under the water and, due to the chemicals that had polluted the area, many children are born with no legs but with what appears to be a single fin.

}, keywords = {Female author, Neurodivergent author, Norwegian American author}, url = {https://grist.org/climate-fiction/imagine2200-la-sirene/}, author = {Karen Engelsen} } @booklet {11988, title = {{\textquotedblleft}A Seder in Siberia{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Grist/Imagine2200 2024 }, year = {2024}, month = {January 22, 2024}, abstract = {

Climate fiction dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, url = {https://grist.org/climate-fiction/imagine2200-seder-in-siberia/}, author = {Louis Evans} } @booklet {11821, title = {After the Revolution. A Novel}, year = {2022}, note = {

The book was first serialized as a podcast https://www.iheart.com/podcast/1119-after-the-revolution-82966686/

}, month = {2022}, pages = {373 pp.}, publisher = {AK Press}, address = {Chico, CA/Edinburgh, Scot}, abstract = {

The novel is set in 2070 after the United States has fractured and focuses on the Free City of Austin in the Republic of Texas where people are trying to keep from being taken over by Christian nationalists.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-84935-462-2}, author = {Robert Evans} } @booklet {11884, title = {A Batch of Twenty}, year = {2022}, month = {2022}, pages = {171 pp.}, publisher = {Author}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

The novel is set in an unidentified future where robotic Helpers controlled by a large tech company begin to show signs to consciousness and intelligence beyond their programmed parameters and concerns the issues this raises.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, isbn = {978-1777776152}, author = {Chris Edwards} } @booklet {11698, title = {"Busy"}, howpublished = {Terraform}, year = {2022}, note = {

Rpt. in Terraform Watch Worlds Burn. Ed. Brian Merchant and Claire L. Evans (New York: MCD X FSG Originals/Farrar, Straus and Giroux/Motherboard/Vice, 2022), 11-16.

}, month = {August 15, 2022}, abstract = {

The story is set after the economic collapse. The only work is make work in what are called entropy mills, repurposed malls, where people generate random numbers.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Egyptian author, Male author, Qatari author, US author}, url = {https://www.vice.com/en/article/5d39ka/busy-terraform-science-fiction}, author = {Omar El Akkad (b. 1982)} } @booklet {11489, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Doomsday Derby{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Solarpunk Magazine}, volume = {no. 1}, year = {2022}, month = {January/February 2022}, pages = {46-48, with a note on the author on 49}, abstract = {

The brief story is told from the point-of-view of a member of a roller derby gang that has repurposed a garage as a track when it is proposed to tear the garage down to build a high rise. The background is quite complex. There are automated cars, but solar power is gone and drilling for oil allowed. Gardens are everywhere.

}, keywords = {Transgender author, US author}, issn = {2771-2850 }, author = {Micah Epstein} } @booklet {11875, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Drone Pirates of Silicon Valley{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Tomorrow{\textquoteright}s Parties: Life in the Anthropocene}, year = {2022}, month = {2022}, pages = {11-25}, publisher = {The MIT Press}, address = {Cambridge, MA}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future where a drone delivery runs the area like a company town with the workers required to pay rent to live in barracks and buy everything they need from the company store with any, even slight, dissent leading to being fired. The focus, though, is on three teenagers who develop a system for capturing the drones and stealing what they are carrying.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-0-26254-443-6}, author = {Meg Elison (b. 1982)}, editor = {Jonathan Strahan (b. 1964)} } @booklet {11809, title = {"Ghost Ship"}, howpublished = {Africa Risen: A New Era of Speculative Fiction}, year = {2022}, note = {

Rpt. in the author\’s The Wishing Pool and Other Stories (Brooklyn, NY: Akashic Books, 2023), 251-270.

}, month = {2022}, pages = {275-294}, publisher = {Tordotcom/Tom Doherty Associates}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The story focuses on a young black woman being sent on a passenger liner from Africa to a segregated U.S. as a courier carrying an illegal animal. She is effectively own by the African woman sending her, and her treatment on the ship is reminiscent of the Middle Passage. Given the wider context, there might be other, related stories to come.

}, keywords = {African American author, Female author}, isbn = {9781250833006 978-1636141053}, author = {Tananarive [Priscilla] Due (b. 1966)}, editor = {Sheree Ren{\'e}e Thomas (b. 1972) and Oghenechovwe Donald Ekpeki and Zelda Knight [pseud.]. [Olivia E. Raymond]} } @booklet {11981, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Last Caretaker{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Save The World: Twenty Sci-Fi Writers Save The Planet}, year = {2022}, month = {2022}, pages = {258-276}, publisher = {Other Worlds Ink}, address = {Sacramento, CA}, abstract = {

The Last Caretaker is the last person to live on and care for a satellite before it is decommissioned. He is particularly reluctant to leave the garden he has maintained for many years both for food and oxygen.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {979-8832184425 }, author = {C. J. Erick}, editor = {J. Scott Coatsworth} } @booklet {11794, title = {"Mami Wataworks"}, howpublished = {Africa Risen: A New Era of Speculative Fiction}, year = {2022}, month = {2022}, pages = {61-75}, publisher = {Tordotcom/Tom Doherty Associates}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The story is set in a drought-stricken future Africa that has been broken up into small areas. In the story, the area reads like a colony, the people are restricted to one bucket of water per day per household, and people stealing water, known as siphonists, are killed, with the focus on disbelief and resistance. The story is set in a drought-stricken future Africa that has been broken up into small areas. In the story, the area reads like a colony, the people are restricted to one bucket of water per day per household, and people stealing water, known as siphonists, are killed, with the focus on disbelief and resistance.

}, keywords = {African American author, Male author}, isbn = {9781250833006}, author = {Russell Nichols}, editor = {Sheree Ren{\'e}e Thomas (b. 1972) and Oghenechovwe Donald Ekpeki and Zelda Knight [pseud.]. [Olivia E. Raymond]} } @booklet {11574, title = {The Memory Librarian: And Other Stories of Dirty Computer}, year = {2022}, month = {2022}, pages = {313 pp.}, publisher = {Harper Voyager}, address = {New york}, abstract = {

The novel is set in a surveillance dystopia in which memories are surveilled and forcibly erased if unacceptable to regime. Significant concerns with race and gender of all varieties. All of the issues are seen through a variety of lenses. A Dirty Computer is an android who refuses to abide by the rules of the authoritarian society in which they live and subject to \“cleaning\” or having their memories removed. They originated with Mon{\'a}e\’s 2018 album Dirty Computer. The album was followed by the 2018 film Dirty Computer that can be seen at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jdH2Sy-BlNE\&ab_channel=JanelleMon\%C3\%A1e. For full credits, see https://www.imdb.com/title/tt8343642/fullcredits. The film was a finalist for the 2019 Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation, Short Form.

}, keywords = {African American author, Female author}, isbn = {978-0-06307-087-5 }, author = {Janelle [Robinson] Mon{\'a}e (b. 1985)} } @booklet {11709, title = {Song of Kitaba}, year = {2022}, month = {2022}, pages = {253 pp.}, publisher = {All Things That Matter Press}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

Two dystopias, one in which anyone caught writing is executed and one in which everyone\’s thoughts are displayed on billboards.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {979-8-9862-8851-2}, author = {Mark Everglade} } @booklet {11703, title = {"Two People"}, howpublished = {Terraform Watch Worlds Burn}, year = {2022}, month = {2022}, pages = {270-276}, publisher = {MCD X FSG Originals/Farrar, Straus and Giroux/Motherboard/Vice}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

An elderly woman tells the story of her and her partner\’s life together and reflects upon the world they live in where the fundamental principle is that the individual \“cannot be trusted\” and must be \“protected from yourself\” (276). The main innovation is the 3.0 Act that \“requires every American male to undergo a vasectomy the year of his tenth birthday. The only way to get the vasectomy reversed is to graduate from high school with at least a 3.0 grade point average\” (272). Technology is used to \“objectively\” make decisions about many aspects of life.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {9780374602666}, author = {Moreno, Gus}, editor = {Brian Merchant and Claire L. Evans} } @booklet {11497, title = {{\textquotedblleft}City Starlight and the Cemetery{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {XR WORDSMITHS{\textquoteright} Solarpunk Storytelling Contest}, year = {2021}, month = {2021}, abstract = {

The story is told in two parts, both set in a future mid-twenty-first century that is recovering from environmental devastation, with the first about a celebration of nature and the second concerned with the re-establishment of forests.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, url = {http://www.solarpunkstorytelling.com/stories/city-starlight-cemetery/}, author = {Katrina Eilander} } @booklet {11400, title = {The Every}, year = {2021}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Vintage Books/Penguin Random House, 2021. 577 pp.

}, month = {2021}, pages = {577 pp.}, publisher = {McSweeney{\textquoteright}s}, address = {San Francisco, CA}, abstract = {

Sequel to 2013 Eggers in which the Circle has become the Every, which controls even more of the lives of their employees that the Circle and is encroaching further of the lives of everyone. The novel focuses on a woman who sets out to destroy the Every.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {9781952119361 978-0-593-32087-7}, author = {Dave Eggers (b. 1970)} } @booklet {11362, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Glue Guns in Paradise{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Shoreline of Infinity}, volume = {no. 28}, year = {2021}, month = {November 2021}, pages = {30-45, with a content note on 81}, abstract = {

The satirical story depicts the Prevention Force, which has replaced the police dealing with a man having a psychotic episode. The satire points at both the problems of the current police and the over-reach of the future approach.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {2059-2590}, author = {Scott Talbot Evans} } @booklet {11391, title = {"Self-Destruct"}, howpublished = {Omenana Speculative Fiction Magazine}, volume = {no. 18}, year = {2021}, month = {July 22, 2021}, abstract = {

Pandemic story set in Durban, South Africa, which is also experiencing significant flooding. The protagonist has been under lockdown for ages with deliveries by drone, limited electricity, and the little human contact by cell phone when he starts receiving messages suggesting the pandemic is over and it is safe to go out.

}, keywords = {Male author, South African author}, url = {https://omenana.com/2021/07/22/self-destruct-by-stephen-embleton/}, author = {Stephen Embleton} } @booklet {11328, title = {Complex}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {594 pp.}, publisher = {Luminary Media}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

The novel is set in a future in which governments have been replaced by corporate Complexes that promise security and everything needful in exchange for personal freedom. The main thread in the novel concerns one young woman searching for her kidnapped sister, which allows the author to explore varied aspects of the future society.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {978-0-578-75224-2 }, author = {A[nno] D. Enderly} } @booklet {11539, title = {Corporate Gunslinger: Greed Means Debt Means Violence. A Novel}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {311 pp.}, publisher = {Harper Voyaher}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

In mid-twenty-first century everyone is debt, with loans secured by a \“lifetime service contract.\” The novel focuses on a young woman who, to avoid defaulting agrees to be a corporate gunfighter in duels that are the final stage in arbitration.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {978-0-06-289768-8 }, author = {Doug Engstrom} } @booklet {11180, title = {"Death Aid"}, howpublished = {London Centric: Tales of Future London}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {177-200}, publisher = {NewCon Press}, address = {[Weston], Eng.}, abstract = {

The story is set in Croydon in South London after the Eurowars and the protagonists are all survivors, mostly from the military, dealing with injuries, PSTD, poor housing, and, for many, no purpose in life. The expanded European Union, known as Neo Euro, which includes a United Ireland, states that have broken away from Europe, and a dysfunctional United Kingdom, establishes radical new policies to deal with housing, the homeless, and health care, but the U.K. fails to introduce any of the reforms, and the story is set in a Croydon in South London, where people have taken things into their own hands. In this setting, some of the veterans are deciding whether or not to rejoin the United Nations military with the aim of suppressing the government of Myanmar, which is still killing its citizens. The story is riddled with typos.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, isbn = {978-1-912950-73-7 }, author = {Joseph Elliott-Coleman}, editor = {Ian [George] Whates (b. 1959)} } @booklet {11034, title = {{\textquotedblleft}One Final Walk in the Dust and Rain{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Curious Futures }, year = {2020}, month = {February 14, 2020}, pages = {EJournal}, abstract = {

Climate change dystopia set in the Upper Mississippi area that has become a dust bowl.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, url = {https://curiousfictions.com/stories/2882-anthony-w-eichenlaub-one-final-walk-in-the-dust-and-the-rain}, author = {Anthony W. Eichenlaub} } @booklet {10968, title = {"The Pill"}, howpublished = {Big Girl plus The Pill plus Such People in It and much more}, year = {2020}, note = {

Rpt. in The Year\’s Best Science Fiction Volume 2. Ed Jonathan Strahan (New York: Saga Press, 2021), 65-94, with a note about the author on 65; and in The Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy\™ 2021. Ed Veronica Roth (Boston, MA: Mariner\ Books/HarperCollins, 2021), 39-66.

}, month = {2020}, pages = {23-62}, publisher = {PM Press}, address = {Oakland, CA}, abstract = {

A diet pill is developed that works, except for 10\% mortality, is so popular that there are very few overweight people left and being overweight is made effectively illegal.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-1629637839}, author = {Meg Elison (b. 1982)} } @booklet {10984, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Pulls Weeds and Does Dishes{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Neo-Opsis Science Fiction Magazine}, volume = {no. 31}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {26-31}, abstract = {

A positive story about the ability of robots to assist the elderly in staying independent.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Anthony W. Eichenlaub} } @booklet {10969, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Such People in It{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Big Girl plus The Pill plus Such People in It and much more}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {73-91}, publisher = {PM Press}, address = {Oakland, CA}, abstract = {

An authoritarian, extremely rigid dystopia enforced by the \“Decencies,\” who respond violently to any opposition to the system. The protagonist works long hours in a call center for low pay and is constantly aware that he may breach some minor rule.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-1629637839}, author = {Meg Elison (b. 1982)} } @booklet {10841, title = {Vulcan{\textquoteright}s Forge}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {229 pp.}, publisher = {Flame Tree Press}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The novel is set in the only colony of Earth that survived its destruction, which has a repressive regime and criminal gangs.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-78758-397-9 }, author = {Robert Mitchell Evans} } @booklet {11035, title = {{\textquotedblleft}When Last the Cicadas Sang{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Little Blue Marble }, year = {2020}, note = {

Rpt. without the illustration in Little Blue Marble 2020: Greener Futures. Ed. Katrina Archer (Vancouver, BC, Canada: Ganache Media, 2020), 133-36, with a note on the author on 137.\ 

}, month = {December 18, 2020}, pages = {EJournal}, abstract = {

Brief climate change dystopia told from the point-of-view of a farmer who had resisted changing her ways.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-988293-10-3 }, url = {https://littlebluemarble.ca/2020/12/18/when-last-the-cicadas-sang}, author = {Anthony W. Eichenlaub} } @booklet {10589, title = {The Book of Flora}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, publisher = {47North}, address = {Seattle, WA}, abstract = {

The third volume of The Road to Nowhere Series following 2014 and 2017 Elison. In this volume, the protagonist is gender fluid, and the novel follows her life, loves, and struggles to escape from the various dystopias she finds herself in.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Meg Elison (b. 1982)} } @booklet {11095, title = {The Captain and the Glory: An Entertainment}, year = {2019}, note = {

U.K. ed. London: Hamish Hamilton, 2019. 114 pp.\ 

}, month = {2019}, pages = {114 pp.}, publisher = {Alfred A. Knopf}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Anti-Trump dystopian allegory.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {978-0-525-65908-2 9780241445952 }, author = {Dave Eggers (b. 1970)} } @booklet {10694, title = {"Hey Alexa"}, howpublished = {Do Not Go Quietly: An Anthology of Victory in Defiance}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {175-79}, publisher = {Apex Publications}, address = {Lexington, KY}, abstract = {

Brief story set in a future where same sex relations are illegal in California and smart speakers are used as surveillance devices.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {9781937009786}, author = {Meg Elison (b. 1982)}, editor = {Jason Sizemore and Lesley Conner} } @booklet {10409, title = {The Lightest Object in the Universe}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, publisher = {Algonquin Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Post-apocalyptic novel with one member of a couple on the East Coast of the United States and the other on the West Coast. The novel follows the man across the country to find the woman and the woman\’s search for a community that is being established in northern California.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Kimi Eisele} } @booklet {10630, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Manna from Heaven{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Nourishment: A One-Shot Anthology of Science Fiction}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {73-76}, publisher = {TdotSpec}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which the usual men with power, corporate, political and religious, worried about a growing independence in the people, take over an invention that provides food from clouds with disastrous results.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {ECO [pseud.]}, editor = {David F. Shultz} } @booklet {11066, title = {The Parade. A Novel}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {181 pp}, publisher = {Alfred A. Knopf}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The novel is set in a divided country at the supposed end of a long war and focuses on two men, Four and Nine, paving a road that is to symbolically unify the country.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {978-0-7352-7752-6}, author = {Dave Eggers (b. 1970)} } @booklet {10383, title = {Pet}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {204 pp.}, publisher = {Make Me a World/Random House Children{\textquoteright}s Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult novel set in the city of Lucille, which had become a eutopia by, as they believed, eliminating all the \“monsters,\” such as politicians, businesspeople, lawyers, and religious leaders, who had exploited the people. The story is told from the point-of-view of a young girl who discovers that at least one monster remains. Much fantasy.\ 

}, keywords = {African author, Transgender author, US author}, author = {Akwaeke Emezi (b. 1982)} } @booklet {10287, title = {"Riverbed"}, howpublished = {A People{\textquoteright}s Future of the United States: Speculative Fiction from 25 Extraordinary Writers}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {145-65}, publisher = {One World}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The story\’s protagonist is an American-born woman who, as a young woman, was incarcerated in camps holding the U.S. Islamic population.\ 

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Egyptian author, Male author, Qatari author, US author}, author = {Omar El Akkad (b. 1982)}, editor = {Victor LaValle (b. 1972) and John Joseph Adams (b. 1976)} } @booklet {11371, title = {Sanctuary}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {357 pp.}, publisher = {Archway Publishers}, address = {Bloomington, IN}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which corporations control government and the economy, the Department of Homeland Security controls education and the media, environmental laws are no longer enforced, the U.S. borders are closed, and any travel even within the borders is considered suspicious and is frowned upon. Mandatory age in which everyone is placed in a retirement home. The protagonist is a reporter who travels to northern Wisconsin where she learns a better, simpler way of life based on Native American (Anishinaabe) traditions that exclude technology and competition.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-4808-8478-6}, author = {Karen East} } @booklet {11803, title = {{\textquotedblleft}To Breathe the Air{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Cliffhangers (Part I of II). McSweeney{\textquoteright}s Quarterly Concern }, volume = {57, 50}, year = {2019}, month = {Fall 2019, Spring 2020}, pages = {39-70; 299-318}, abstract = {

The story, which is in two parts with a cliffhanger ending to the first part, is set in a future divided between citizens who live in the high city, which is actually a spaceship, and the descendants of the people who came from the ship and live in the low city. The citizens want to learn how to run the ship so that they can spread their domination to other planets.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Brian [Keith] Evenson (b. 1966)} } @booklet {10093, title = {"Big Rural"}, howpublished = {The Weight of Light: A Collection of Solar Futures}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {EBook}, publisher = {: Center for Science and the Imagination Arizona State University}, address = {Tempe, AZ}, abstract = {

The story focuses on the negative impact of corporate solar power on rural areas and ways of lessening that impact.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, url = {https://www.dropbox.com/s/961pb8yve314a8r/Weight_of_Light.epub?dl=0}, author = {Cat[herine Tigerlily] Rambo (b. 1963)}, editor = {Clark A. Miller and Joey Eschrich} } @booklet {11420, title = {The Day the Sun Changed Colors}, year = {2018}, month = {[2018]}, pages = {317 pp.}, publisher = {[CreateSpace]}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

Humorous novel that begins in a high tech eutopia in 4377 in which the sun changes colors that reflect increased radiation that will ultimately destroy the planet. The novel follows the exploits of two families trying, with the help of a robot, to build a spaceship to escape. There is a glossary that describes the way time is noted, clocks, categories of the ages of people, the sky colors, length, various sizes, volume, speed, and \“infinite math.\”

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {978-1987486179}, author = {Scott Talbot Evans} } @booklet {10184, title = {Destiny: Quest for a New World}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, publisher = {Xlibris}, address = {[Bloomington, IN]}, abstract = {

The first volume of a series in which, given the collapse of Earth\’s environment and a developing authoritarianism on Earth, a successful search for a habitable planet is made and the first settlers struggle to get the colony established. A sequel is Kairos: Book Two of \“Quest for a New World\”. [Bloomington, IN]: Xlibris, 2018, which describes the successful settlement, but new settlers with different ideas cause problems. The novel\’s ending suggests a sequel.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Donald Morgan Edwards} } @booklet {10092, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Divided Light{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {The Weight of Light: A Collection of Solar Futures}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {EBook}, publisher = {Center for Science and the Imagination Arizona State University}, address = {Tempe, AZ}, abstract = {

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 {9751, title = {Everything is Known}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, publisher = {Red Camel Press}, address = {Birmingham, AL}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which governments have been replaced by corporations that control all access to data. People were required to be indifferent regarding public behavior. People lived in walled cities determined by their status, except for Outliers, who lived in slums. Gender discrimination with women expected to be subservient to men. The novel focuses on the resistance. Some Native American themes.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Liza Elliott} } @booklet {10085, title = {{\textquotedblleft}For the Sake of Snake Power{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The Weight of Light: A Collection of Solar Futures}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {EBook}, publisher = {Center for Science and the Imagination Arizona State University}, address = {Tempe, AZ}, abstract = {

\ near future climate-change dystopia in which poor people in Phoenix die in the regular heat waves because the government is selling their solar power to other cities. The story is followed by the essays, Joshua Loughman, \“Lessons from the Snake: Energy and Society;\” and Esmerelda Parker, \“Drawing from Nature: Designing a Solar Snake.\”

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, url = {https://www.dropbox.com/s/961pb8yve314a8r/Weight_of_Light.epub?dl=0 }, author = {Brenda Cooper (b. 1951)}, editor = {Clark A. Miller and Joey Eschrich} } @booklet {9694, title = {The Measurements of Decay}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {588 pp}, publisher = {Metempsy Publications}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

The novel is set in a future in which most people have a brain implant that induces visions but can also be weaponized. The novel has many subthemes, including a time travelling girl who provides glimpses of various pasts and futures.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {K. K. Edin (b. 1993)} } @booklet {10280, title = {Rejoice: A Knife to the Heart. A Novel of First Contact}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, publisher = {Promontory Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

A novel of first contact in which the aliens choose not to reveal themselves except to one woman who they try to convince to be their spokesperson. The make large parts of the world\’s wilderness inaccessible to humans, stop all violence, and damage to the environment by oil companies. Considerable satire.\ 

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {[Steve Rune] [Lundin] (b. 1959)} } @booklet {10027, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Soil Merchant{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Little Blue Marble}, year = {2018}, note = {

Rpt. without the illus. in Little Blue Marble 2018: Stories of Our Changing Climate. Ed. Katrina Archer. Np: Ganache Media epub, 2018. EBook\ 

}, month = {November 9, 2018}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which all the good soil is gone.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, url = {https://littlebluemarble.ca/2018/11/09/the-soil-merchant/}, author = {Anthony W. Eichenlaub} } @booklet {10197, title = {"Suicide Watch"}, howpublished = {The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction}, volume = {135.3/4}, year = {2018}, month = {September/October 2018}, pages = {180-92}, abstract = {

A dystopia in which people pay to watch someone commit suicide.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {00024-984X }, author = {Susan [J.] Emshwiller} } @booklet {10086, title = {"Under the Grid"}, howpublished = {The Weight of Light: A Collection of Solar Futures}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {EBook}, publisher = {Center for Science and the Imagination Arizona State University}, address = {Tempe, AZ}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future Detroit where an extensive solar grid has been built over the city and the surrounding area to provide power and focuses on conflicts over personal space. The story is followed by the essays, Lauren Withycombe Keeler, \“All Politics is Glocal;\” and Darshan M. W Karwat, \“Behind the Grid: Science, Technology, and the Creation of PhoTown.\”

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, url = {https://www.dropbox.com/s/961pb8yve314a8r/Weight_of_Light.epub?dl=0}, author = {Andrew Dana Hudson}, editor = {Clark A. Miller and Joey Eschrich} } @booklet {9825, title = {2084}, year = {2017}, note = {

There is also a 76 pp. Short Story Version available on Kindle

}, month = {2017}, publisher = {[CreateSpace]}, address = {[North Charleston, SC]}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which everyone is required to wear lenses through which they are fed a false version of the world.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Mason Engel} } @booklet {9344, title = {American War}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, publisher = {Alfred A. Knopf}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The Second Civil War from 2074-2095 was followed by a decade-long pandemic/plague that, together, tore\ the U.S. apart. Southern states had seceded primarily because they objected to an act that outlawed the use of fossil fuels. The story is about a young girl born in a border area who is then forced into a northern refugee camp, with obvious parallels to today\’s refugee camps, and is radicalized there.\ 

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Egyptian author, Male author, Qatari author, US author}, author = {Omar El Akkad (b. 1982)} } @booklet {9243, title = {The Book of Etta}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, publisher = {47 North}, address = {Seattle, WA}, abstract = {

Second volume of The Road to Nowhere Series following 2014 Elison set 100 years after the first book. In this novel, the main character, Etta, disguises herself as a man, Eddy, and sets off to rescue the enslaved women. The third volume, 2018 Elison, begins in the same time period as this volume, but then follows the very long life of the protagonist.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Meg Elison (b. 1982)} } @booklet {10773, title = {Contact High}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {26 pp.}, publisher = {F.I.M.C (Forget It, Make Comics)}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

In the future human contact has become a drug and outlawed with everyone required to wear a protective suit or be arrested and rehabilitated. Queer and interracial themes.\ 

}, keywords = {African American author, Male author, US author}, author = {Joseph Eckert and James F. Wright} } @booklet {10571, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Discrete Charm of the Turing Machine{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Asimov{\textquoteright}s Science Fiction }, volume = {41.11 \& 12 (502 \& 503)}, year = {2017}, month = {November/December 2017}, pages = {16-36}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which all jobs are being replaced by automation as seen through the eyes of one family.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, issn = {1065-6298 }, author = {Greg[ory Mark] Egan (b. 1961)} } @booklet {9512, title = {Future Home of the Living God. A Novel}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, publisher = {Harper}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia that follows a dramatic drop in pregnancies Government disappears and pregnant women are kidnapped and incarcerated under the auspices of the Church of the New Constitution.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {[Karen] Louise Erdrich (b. 1954)} } @booklet {10875, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Immanation{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {A Practical Guide to the Resurrected: Twenty-One Short Stories of Medicine and Science Fiction}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {150-59}, publisher = {Freight Books}, address = {Glasgow, SCot.}, abstract = {

Dystopian future in which some have withdrawn from the damaged world into a Tower where everything is controlled contrasted with those who chose to stay outside where they are regenerating the Earth.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, Scottish author}, isbn = {978-1-911332-50-3}, author = {Mary Easson}, editor = {Gavin Miller and Anna McFarlane} } @booklet {10080, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Mozart of the Kalahari{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Visions, Ventures, Escape Velocities: A Collection of Space Futures}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {EBook}, publisher = {Center for Science and Imagination Arizona State University}, address = {Tempe, AZ}, abstract = {

The story is set in an environmentally devasted future where the rich live off planet and the poor struggle to survive

}, keywords = {African American author, Male author}, author = {Steven [Emory] Barnes (b. 1952)}, editor = {Ed Finn and Joey Eschrich and Juliet Ulman} } @booklet {9920, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Rumpelstiltskin{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Reckoning 2: Creative Writing on Environmental Justice}, volume = {2}, year = {2017}, note = {

Rpt. https://reckoning.press/rumplestiltskin/ (February 2018). Interview with that author at https://reckoning.press/jane-elliott-interview-rumplestiltskin/\ 

}, month = {2017}, pages = {35-40}, publisher = {Reckoning Press}, address = {Lake Orion, MI}, abstract = {

A dystopia in which climate-change has brought famine.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Jane Elliott}, editor = {Michael DeLuca} } @booklet {10742, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Sub Migratio{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Enkare Review}, volume = {no. 1}, year = {2017}, month = {April 2017}, abstract = {

The setting of the story is the dystopia brought about by a pan-African war, with the protagonists trying to escape through a network on underground railroad tunnels.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, South African author}, url = {https://enkare.org/2017/04/30/sub-migratio/}, author = {Stephen Embleton} } @booklet {9490, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Too Big to See{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Overview: Stories of the Stratosphere.}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, publisher = {Arizona State University Center for Science and the Imagination}, address = {Tempe}, abstract = {

Brief story in which climate change has created a major refugee crisis in the Americas, and a trip by representatives of the antagonists to the stratosphere may solve the conflict.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, url = {http://csi.asu.edu/books/overview/}, author = {Karl Schroeder (b. 1962)}, editor = {Michael G. Bennett and Joey Eschrich and Ed Finn} } @booklet {10095, title = {"Acqua Alta"}, howpublished = {Everything Change: An Anthology of Climate Fiction}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, pages = {EBook}, publisher = {[Arizona State University]}, address = {[Tempe, AZ]}, abstract = {

Climate change dystopia in which Venice is under water, and a Venetian theme park has been created. Acqua Alta is the name given to peak high tides in the Veneto region of Italy.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, url = {https://www.dropbox.com/s/kl2lb81mh2u88rj/Everything\%20Change\%20An\%20Anthology\%20of\%20Climate\%20Fiction.epub?dl=0}, author = {Ashley Bevilacqua Anglin}, editor = {Manjana Milkoreit and Meredith Martinez and Joey Eschrich} } @booklet {10106, title = {{\textquotedblleft}On Darwin Tides{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Everything Change: An Anthology of Climate Fiction}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, pages = {EBook}, publisher = {[Arizona State University]}, address = {[Tempe, AZ]}, abstract = {

Environmental dystopia set in Malaysia in which indigenous people and immigrants are not allowed to work unless they have enough money for bribes and the technology that is required.\ 

}, keywords = {Australian author, Female author}, url = {https://www.dropbox.com/s/kl2lb81mh2u88rj/Everything\%20Change\%20An\%20Anthology\%20of\%20Climate\%20Fiction.epub?dl=0}, author = {Shauna O{\textquoteright}Meara}, editor = {Manjana Milkoreit and Meredith Martinez and Joey Eschrich} } @booklet {10096, title = {"The Grandchild Paradox"}, howpublished = {Everything Change: An Anthology of Climate Fiction}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, pages = {EBook}, publisher = {[Arizona State University}}, address = {[Tempe, AZ]}, abstract = {

Climate change dystopia in which flooding has created a society deeply divided between those who live above the water and those who live on boats.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, url = {https://www.dropbox.com/s/kl2lb81mh2u88rj/Everything\%20Change\%20An\%20Anthology\%20of\%20Climate\%20Fiction.epub?dl=0}, author = {Daniel Thron}, editor = {Manjana Milkoreit and Meredith Martinez and Joey Eschrich} } @booklet {9373, title = {{\textquotedblleft}I Will Remember You{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Defying Doomsday}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, pages = {365-99}, publisher = {Twelfth Planet Press}, address = {[Yokine, WA, Australia]}, abstract = {

Dystopia brought about by an alien invasion with the aliens killing off all humans over thirteen days with a few survivors who will rebuild the human race.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Janet Edwards (b. 1958)}, editor = {Tsana Dolichava and Holly Kench} } @booklet {9556, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Keepers of Madleen{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Dystopia Utopia Short Stories: An Anthology of New \& Classic Tales }, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, pages = {130-39}, publisher = {Flame Tree Publishing}, address = {London}, abstract = {

An apparent eutopia in a future in which every village has walled themselves off from every other village to protect themselves from an unidentified threat. The village that is the focus of the story must face the fact of a rape, and the story is concerned with how they deal with it.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Sarah Lyn Eaton} } @booklet {10104, title = {"Masks"}, howpublished = {Everything Change: An Anthology of Climate Fiction}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, pages = {EBook}, publisher = {[Arizona State University]}, address = {[Tempe, AZ]}, abstract = {

Environmental dystopia set in an extremely polluted China. Hong Kong has been mostly destroyed by storms. Europe is, if anything, worse off.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, url = {https://www.dropbox.com/s/kl2lb81mh2u88rj/Everything\%20Change\%20An\%20Anthology\%20of\%20Climate\%20Fiction.epub?dl=0}, author = {Stirling Davenport}, editor = {Manjana Milkoreit and Meredith Martinez and Joey Eschrich} } @booklet {9662, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Squeaky Wheel{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Solarpunk Press }, year = {2016}, month = {January 4, 2016}, abstract = {

A dystopia or flawed utopia as seen by protagonists in the story that see the future differently. All safety nets have been removed and everyone is networked with an emphasis on friendliness and sociability with children medicated and socialized to fit in.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author}, url = {http://www.solarpunkpress.com/stories/2016-1-4/004-the-squeaky-wheel-by-sara-kate-ellis}, author = {Sara Kate Ellis} } @booklet {10108, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Standing Still{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Everything Change: An Anthology of Climate Fiction}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, pages = {EBook}, publisher = {[Arizona State University]}, address = {[Tempe, AZ]}, abstract = {

Climate change dystopia set in Madagascar.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, Mexican author, US author}, url = {https://www.dropbox.com/s/kl2lb81mh2u88rj/Everything\%20Change\%20An\%20Anthology\%20of\%20Climate\%20Fiction.epub?dl=0}, author = {Lindsay Redifer}, editor = {Manjana Milkoreit and Meredith Martinez and Joey Eschrich} } @booklet {8856, title = {Stone Seeds}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, publisher = {Urbane Publications}, address = {Chatham, Eng.}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia depicting a village ruled by \“The General\” and his henchmen but ultimately successfully opposed by a few individuals who don\’t fit in

}, keywords = {Botswanan author, English author, Female author}, author = {Jo Ely} } @booklet {10089, title = {"Sunshine State"}, howpublished = {Everything Change: An Anthology of Climate Fiction}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, pages = {EBook}, publisher = {[Arizona State University]}, address = {[Tempe, AZ]}, abstract = {

The story is about a positive response to climate change through the recreation of the wetlands in Florida.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, url = {https://www.dropbox.com/s/kl2lb81mh2u88rj/Everything\%20Change\%20An\%20Anthology\%20of\%20Climate\%20Fiction.epub?dl=0$\#$}, author = {Adam Flynn and Andrew Dana Hudson}, editor = {Manjana Milkoreit and Meredith Martinez and Joey Eschrich} } @booklet {10105, title = {"Thirteen Year"}, howpublished = {Everything Change: An Anthology of Climate Fiction}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, pages = {EBook}, publisher = {[Arizona State University]}, address = {[Tempe, AZ]}, abstract = {

Poem set in the underground authoritarian dystopia where humans have retreated from the environmental damage at the surface.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, url = {https://www.dropbox.com/s/kl2lb81mh2u88rj/Everything\%20Change\%20An\%20Anthology\%20of\%20Climate\%20Fiction.epub?dl=0}, author = {Diana Rose Harper}, editor = {Manjana Milkoreit and Meredith Martinez and Joey Eschrich} } @booklet {10090, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Victor and the Fish{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Everything Change: An Anthology of Climate Fiction}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, pages = {Ebook}, publisher = {[Arizona State University]}, address = {[Tempe, Arizona]}, abstract = {

Climate-change dystopia.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, url = {https://www.dropbox.com/s/kl2lb81mh2u88rj/Everything\%20Change\%20An\%20Anthology\%20of\%20Climate\%20Fiction.epub?dl=0$\#$}, author = {Matthew Henry}, editor = {Manjana Milkoreit and Meredith Martinez and Joey Eschrich} } @booklet {10103, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Wonder of the World{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Everything Change: An Anthology of Climate Fiction}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, pages = {EBook}, publisher = {[Arizona State University]}, address = {[Tempe, AZ]}, abstract = {

Climate change fiction in which the survivors live in small communities with limited technology and without a reliable way to kept in touch with other communities. The story, though, is about the resilience of the people.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, url = {https://www.dropbox.com/s/kl2lb81mh2u88rj/Everything\%20Change\%20An\%20Anthology\%20of\%20Climate\%20Fiction.epub?dl=0}, author = {Kathryn Blume}, editor = {Manjana Milkoreit and Meredith Martinez and Joey Eschrich} } @booklet {9636, title = {American Moat}, howpublished = {A Robot, A Cyborg \& a Martian Walk into a Space Bar}, year = {2015}, note = {

Rpt. in Mithila Review: The Journal of International Science Fiction \& Fantasy, no. 7 (January-March 2017). http://mithilareview.com/hernandez_01_17/

}, month = {2015}, publisher = {Nomadic Delirium Press}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

Humorous take on aliens offering the possibility of eutopia in a United States set\ on keeping aliens, primarily Hispanics, out. MOAT refers to Maintaining Our American Turf.\ 

}, keywords = {Cuban-American author, Male author}, author = {Carlos Hernandez}, editor = {J. Alan Erwine (b. 1969)} } @booklet {9553, title = {"Land of Light"}, howpublished = {Imagine Africa 500: Speculative Fiction from Africa}, year = {2015}, note = {

Rpt. in The Manchester Review, no. 18 (July 2017). http://www.themanchesterreview.co.uk/?p=7680.

}, month = {2015}, pages = {161-69}, publisher = {Pan African Publications}, address = {Lilongwe, Malawi}, abstract = {

The story set is set in The Congo in a future eutopian high-tech, unified Africa.

}, keywords = {Male author, South African author}, author = {Stephen Embleton}, editor = {Billy Kahora} } @booklet {10785, title = {{\textquotedblleft}One Hundred Years: Machine{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Cyberpunk: Malaysia}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, pages = {101-11}, publisher = {Fixi Novo}, address = {Petaling Jaya, Malaysia}, abstract = {

Presented as a speech, \“Deviant Correction Using Preemptive Neuro-Regulation,\” detailing one hundred years of research an implementation of means to \“correct\” behavior that diverges from conservative Muslim teaching beginning with therapy and incarceration and ending with mandated fetal implantation of a control mechanism.\ 

}, keywords = {Malaysian author, Male author}, isbn = {9789670750873}, author = {Rafil Elyas}, editor = {Zen Cho} } @booklet {8204, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Raising Generation E [For Empathy]: The Final Frontier of Feminism{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The Feminist Utopia Project: Fifty-Seven Visions of a Wildly Better Future}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, pages = {100-03}, publisher = {The Feminist Press at the City University of New York}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Brief eutopia based on educating children to be empathetic and using restorative justice.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Mindi Rose Englart (b. 1965)}, editor = {Alexandra Brodsky and Rachel Kauder Nalebuff} } @booklet {9965, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Share and Share Alike{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {A Robot, A Cyborg \& a Martian Walk into a Space Bar}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, pages = {EBook}, publisher = {Nomadic Delirium Press}, address = {Aurora, CO}, abstract = {

Standard anti-socialist dystopia where equality means no one does anything well.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Wayne Carey}, editor = {J. Alan Erwine (b. 1969)} } @booklet {8078, title = {The Book of the Unnamed Midwife}, year = {2014}, month = {2014}, publisher = {Sybaritic Press}, address = {Los Angeles, CA}, abstract = {

Post-catastrophe (pandemic/plague) dystopia in which there is one woman for every ten men. The novel focuses on the experience of one woman. First volume of The Road to Nowhere Series. The second, volume, 2017 Elison, is set in the same future but 100 years later. The third volume, 2018 Elison, begins in the same time period as the preceding volume, but then follows the very long life of the protagonist.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Meg Elison (b. 1982)} } @booklet {8079, title = {The Jewel}, year = {2014}, month = {2014}, publisher = {HarperTeen}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

First volume of a young adult dystopian trilogy in which teenage girls are purchased to produce children for their owners. Sequels include a novella published online,\ The House of the Stone. New York: HarperTeen, 2015, which focuses on a different character, and The White Rose. New York: HarperTeen, 2015.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Amy Ewing} } @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 {8282, title = {The Circle}, year = {2013}, month = {2013}, publisher = {Penguin}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The novel can be read as either a flawed utopia or a dystopia but is a eutopia from the perspective of the protagonist. The Circle is a large corporation that serves a very large and growing part of U.S. business with online services with the goal of absorbing all world business. The focus of the novel is first on the internal corporate cultural which is designed to absorb all of a worker\’s life and make that life known to everyone else in the country. This leads to the idea of everyone becoming \“transparent\” by wearing a camera that shows what they are seeing at all times. This spreads into the world outside the corporation and particularly to politicians.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Dave Eggers (b. 1970)} } @booklet {8276, title = {{\textquotedblleft}City of Beauty, City of Scars{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Impossible Futures: An Anthology}, year = {2013}, note = {

\ Rpt. in his Lost Among the Stars (Colorado Springs, CO: WordFire Press, 2017), 5-18 with an author\’s note (4).\ 

}, month = {2013}, pages = {97-112}, publisher = {Pink Narcissus Press}, address = {Auburn, MA}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a society that focuses on beauty.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Paul [Gerard] Di Filippo (b. 1954)}, editor = {Judith K. Dial and Thomas A[twood] Easton (b. 1944)} } @booklet {8943, title = {Defenders of the Flame}, year = {2013}, month = {2013}, publisher = {Ad Stellae}, address = {Eugene, OR}, abstract = {

Sequel to 2007 and 2009 Engdahl set two hundred years later in which a positive future is found.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Sylvia [Louise] Engdahl (b. 1933)} } @booklet {8281, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Right to Choose{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Music of Darkover. Darkover{\textregistered} Anthology 13}, year = {2013}, month = {2013}, pages = {111-20 with an editor{\textquoteright}s note on 111}, publisher = {The Marion Zimmer Bradley Literary Trust Works}, address = {San Francisco, CA}, abstract = {

Free Amazon story.\ A related song by Rosemary Edghill is on 121-22.

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {India Edghill [pseud.]}, editor = {Elisabeth Waters} } @booklet {8352, title = {"All I Know of Freedom"}, howpublished = {After: Nineteen Stories of Apocalypse and Dystopia}, year = {2012}, month = {2012}, pages = {89-107}, publisher = {Hyperion}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult dystopia in which a girl sold to a couple to work as a servant escapes, and then briefly joins a cult that believes the world is ending and plan to leave the planet.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {[Agnes] Carol[lyn] [Fries] Emshwiller (1921-2019)}, editor = {Ellen Datlow and Windling, Terri} } @booklet {8351, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Amos Was Here{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Cifiscape Vol. II. The Twin Cities}, year = {2012}, month = {2012}, pages = {182-95}, publisher = {Onyx Neon Press}, address = {[Hillsboro, OR]}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future dystopia resulting from current policies, particularly concerning the environment, and suggests actions that could help avoid the dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Doug Donley}, editor = {Chastity West and Kit Martin and Jeffrey Martin and Pat Edmonson and Hannah Byrns-Enoch and Crystal Boyd} } @booklet {8358, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Bullseye, Inc.{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Cifiscape Vol. II. The Twin Cities}, year = {2012}, month = {2012}, pages = {124-43}, publisher = {Onyx Neon Press}, address = {[Hillsboro, OR]}, abstract = {

Dystopia of corporate uniformity.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Brian D. Garrity}, editor = {Chastity West and Kit Martin and Jeffrey Martin and Pat Edmonson and Hannah Byrns-Enoch and Crystal Boyd} } @booklet {9369, title = {Earth Girl}, year = {2012}, note = {

U.S. ed. Amherst, NY: Pyr, 2013.

}, month = {2012}, publisher = {Harper Voyager}, address = {London}, abstract = {

First volume of a young adult trilogy set in 2778 in which humans have spread throughout the galaxy, but some people have an immune system that will not allow them to leave Earth. The novel is about one such girl.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Janet Edwards (b. 1958)} } @booklet {11857, title = {Immobility}, year = {2012}, month = {2012}, pages = {256 pp.}, publisher = {Tor Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Post-apocalyptic novel set after an unspecified Kollaps in which almost every living thing on Earth is killed. The story is told by a man who had been in suspended animation for a long time, who is paralyzed from the waist down but goes on a quest, carried by two men, to find and steal an important cylinder.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {978-0765330963 }, author = {Brian [Keith] Evenson (b. 1966)} } @booklet {10607, title = {{\textquotedblleft}LIMBs{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Tin House}, volume = {no. 51}, year = {2012}, note = {

Rpt. without the illus. in her The Wilds: Stories (Portland, OR/Brooklyn, NY: Tin House, 2014), 45-74; and in Invaders: 22 Tales From the Outer Limits of Literature. Ed. Jacob Weisman (San Francisco, CA: Tachyon, 2016), 59-77.\ 

}, month = {Spring 2012}, pages = {12-29}, abstract = {

A dystopia of growing old in the future. The story is set in an old age home where the residents are being used to test high-tech ways of improving their ability to think and remember as well as to move around.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Julia Elliott (b. 1968)} } @booklet {8364, title = {"Little Hawk"}, howpublished = {Cifiscape Vol. II. The Twin Cities}, year = {2012}, month = {2012}, pages = {159-80}, publisher = {Onyk Neon Press}, address = {[Hillsboro, OR]}, abstract = {

While the story is set in a future dystopia of a collapsing world, it is a thoroughly contemporary story about the traumas of a boy being bullied.

}, keywords = {Female author, Male author}, author = {Erica Lindquist and Aron Christensen}, editor = {Chastity West and Kit Martin and Jeffrey Martin and Pat Edmonson and Hannah Byrns-Enoch and Crystal Boyd} } @booklet {6534, title = {The Lost Code. Book One of the Atlanteans}, year = {2012}, month = {2012}, publisher = {Katherine Tegen Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult dystopia set on an Earth that continues to damage its environment. The protagonist is a descendent of Atlantis, which had done the same, and is searching for the code that would help him reverse the process. First volume in a series followed by The Dark Shore. Book Two of the Atlanteans. New York: Katherine Tegen Books, 2013 is a typical middle volume in which everything gets worse; and The Far Dawn. Book Three of the Atlanteans. New York: Katherine Tegen Books, 2014 resolves the issues raised in the previous volumes.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Emerson, Kevin} } @booklet {8371, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Wardrobe Malfunction{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Cifiscape Vol. II. The Twin Cities}, year = {2012}, month = {2012}, pages = {97-111}, publisher = {Onyx Neon Press}, address = {[Hillsboro, OR]}, abstract = {

High tech eutopia in which non-profits doing good have replaced corporations focused on making money.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Dale Newton}, editor = {Chastity West and Kit Martin and Jeffrey Martin and Hannah Byrns-Enoch and Pat Edmonson and Crystal Boyd} } @booklet {9081, title = {Elephant Mountains}, year = {2011}, month = {2011}, publisher = {Orca Book Publishers}, address = {Victoria, BC, Canada}, abstract = {

Young adult survivalist dystopia set after the flooding brought on by global warming. The U.S. author teaches English at Winthrop College.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Scott Ely} } @booklet {6460, title = {"The New and Perfect Man"}, howpublished = {The New and Perfect Man}, volume = {Postscripts Number 24/25}, year = {2011}, month = {2011}, pages = {1-11}, publisher = {PS Publishing}, address = {Hornsea, Eng.}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which a couple decides to create the perfect child by raising it in a technologically advanced but artificial environment and the girl\&$\#$39;s revolt against them.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {[Agnes] Carol[lyn] [Fries] Emshwiller (1921-2019)}, editor = {Peter Crowther (b. 1949) and Nick Gevers} } @booklet {11817, title = {{\textquotedblleft}R-Complex{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {J Alan Erwine{\textquoteright}s Tales of Dystopia }, year = {2011}, note = {

Originally published in Aoife\’s Kiss, no. 37 (June 2011). Not found.

Also published as a fourteen-page online Chapbook. [Np: J. Alan Erwine, 2016]. No longer available.

}, month = {2011/[2016]}, pages = {52-63}, publisher = {J. Alan Erwine}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

A dystopia in which a theocratic dystopia is being opposed by a group of religious zealots with a different theocratic vision.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {9781534701649}, author = {J. Alan Erwine (b. 1969)} } @booklet {6459, title = {Sacred Economics: Money, Gift \& Society in the Age of Transition}, year = {2011}, month = {2011}, publisher = {Evolver Editions}, address = {Berkeley, CA}, abstract = {

Nonfiction that presents a new monetary system based on complete, public openness of all financial transactions and the gift economy that is expected to lead to the eutopia the author calls the Age of Reunion.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Charles Eisenstein (b. 1967)} } @booklet {9963, title = {H2O}, year = {2010}, note = {

Public

}, month = {2010}, publisher = {Liquid Comics/Dynamite Entertainment}, address = {Runnemede, NJ}, abstract = {

Graphic novel climate-change dystopia. First volume in a series, followed by H2O. Issue 2. Runnemede, NJ: Liquid Comics/Dynamite Entertainment, 2014; and H2O. Issue 3. Runnemede, NJ: Liquid Comics/Dynamite Entertainment, 2014 (Both EBooks), with the continuations simply continuing the story.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Grant Calof} } @booklet {6332, title = {"Paul Kishosha{\textquoteright}s Children"}, howpublished = {Shine: An Anthology of Near-future, Optimistic Science Fiction}, year = {2010}, month = {2010}, pages = {382-408 with an editor{\textquoteright}s note on 381-82}, publisher = {Solaris}, address = {Oxford, Eng.}, abstract = {

Eutopia brought about by an individual scientist dedicating himself to effectively teaching science to African children. The story traces the transformation of a single African village where the scientist lives as the influence of his teaching gradually spreads throughout African and the rest of the world.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Edgett, Ken}, editor = {Jetse de Vries} } @booklet {6208, title = {Death Got No Mercy}, year = {2009}, note = {

Rpt. in\ Afterblight Chronicles: America\ (Oxford, Eng.: Abaddon UK \& Rebellion/Abaddon US, 2011), 439-623.

}, month = {2009}, publisher = {Abaddon Books}, address = {Oxford, Eng.}, abstract = {

A volume in\ The Afterblight Chronicles\ series. Dystopia of extreme violence. For other volumes, see 2006 Spurrier, 2007 Andrews, 2007 Levene, 2008 Bark, 2008 Kane, 2009 Andrews, 2009 Kane, 2010 Andrews, and 2010 Kane.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Al Ewing (b. 1977)} } @booklet {6206, title = {Forever Pleasure: A Utopian Novel}, year = {2009}, month = {2009}, publisher = {iUniverse}, address = {Lincoln NB}, abstract = {

Eutopia. A man from the 1980s travels to 2076 where he finds a technological eutopia, which is described in some detail. But the novel begins with a being who had been downloaded into a machine many millennia ago who is chasing the last remaining intelligent beings in the nearby galaxies to force them to become part of the Hedonistic Expansion Crusade. The two ultimately come into conflict, a conflict that is resolved with the machine intelligences, posthuman, and transhumans all cooperating.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Theodore [R.] Eastman} } @booklet {11816, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Forgive Them Their Trespasses{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {J Alan Erwine{\textquoteright}s Tales of Dystopia }, year = {2009}, note = {

Originally published online in Afterburn SF (March 2009). No longer available.\ 

Also published as a twelve-page online Chapbook. [Np: J. Alan Erwine, 2015]. No longer available.

}, month = {2009/[2016]}, pages = {40-51}, publisher = {[J. Alan Erwine]}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

Theocratic dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {9781534701649}, author = {J. Alan Erwine (b. 1969)} } @booklet {6207, title = {Promise of the Flame}, year = {2009}, month = {2009}, publisher = {Ad Stellae}, address = {Eugene, OR}, abstract = {

Sequel to 2007 Engdahl. In this volume, the small group of people with \"psi powers\" settle a new planet and develop a new and better culture based on those powers.\ See also 2013 Engdahl.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Sylvia [Louise] Engdahl (b. 1933)} } @booklet {9802, title = {"The Adjudicator--for Peter Straub"}, howpublished = {Fugue State: Stories}, year = {2008}, note = {

Rpt. without the subtitle in Apocalypse Now: Poems and Prose from the End of Days. Ed. Andrew McFadyen and Alexander Lumans (Nashville, TN: Upper Rubber Boot, 2012), 12-24.\ 

}, month = {2008}, publisher = {Coffee House Press}, address = {Minneapolis, MN}, abstract = {

Dystopia after a catastrophe (disease/pandemic) with few survivors, who turn against each other.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Brian [Keith] Evenson (b. 1966)} } @booklet {11094, title = {Blonde Roots}, year = {2008}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: Riverhead Books, 2009. 269 pp.\ 

}, month = {2008}, pages = {260 pp.}, publisher = {Hamish Hamilton}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The novel is set in an alternative history in which \“whyte Europanes\” are captured and enslaved by \“blak Aphrikans,\” with two of the three sections in the voice of Doris Scagglethorpe (given the slave name Omorenomwara) with the middle section in the voice of Chief Kaga Konata Katamba I, who brands his slaves with his initials, KKK.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, isbn = {9780241143858 978-1-59448-863-4}, author = {Bernardine [Anne Mobolaji] Evaristo (b. 1959)} } @booklet {6081, title = {"Lost Continent"}, howpublished = {The Starry Rift: Tales of New Tomorrows. An Original Science Fiction Anthology}, year = {2008}, note = {

Rpt. in his Crystal Nights and Other Stories Burton, MI: Subterranean Press, 2009), 11-37.

}, month = {2008}, pages = {336-73 with a note on the author on 374.}, publisher = {Viking}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia of the then current situation in Iraq and the refugee crisis it caused projected into the future.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Greg[ory Mark] Egan (b. 1961)}, editor = {Jonathan Strahan (b. 1964)} } @booklet {6082, title = {Plague of Doves}, year = {2008}, month = {2008}, publisher = {HarperCollins}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Includes a section on a dystopian religious intentional community.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {[Karen] Louise Erdrich (b. 1954)} } @booklet {5886, title = {"Adjudication"}, howpublished = {The Workers{\textquoteright} Paradise}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, pages = {13-24}, publisher = {Ticonderoga Publishers}, address = {Greenwood, WA, Australia}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Extrapolation of working conditions in private prisons as the prison companies go into business with criminals to keep prisons full.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Simon Brown (b. 1956)}, editor = {Russell B. Farr and Nick Evans} } @booklet {5925, title = {"After the Choice"}, howpublished = {The Workers{\textquoteright} Paradise}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, pages = {163-74}, publisher = {Ticonderoga Publishers}, address = {Greenwood, WA, Australia}, abstract = {

Dystopia of the erosion of labor laws in Australia, but when people become aware of the horrible conditions, there is the beginning of a change back.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Female author}, author = {Robin Hillard (b. 1939)}, editor = {Russell B. Farr and Nick Evans} } @booklet {5963, title = {"After the Patriarchy"}, howpublished = {2033: The Future of Misbehavior. Interplanetary Dating, Madame President, Socialized Plastic Surgery, and Other Good News from the Future}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, pages = {64-73}, publisher = {Chronicle Books}, address = {San Francisco, CA}, abstract = {

Sex role reversal satire with the emphasis on sex.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Jay [John Barrett] McInerney (b. 1955)}, editor = {The Editors of Nerve.com Instigated by Svedka [a vodka]} } @booklet {5889, title = {"Black and Bitter, Thanks"}, howpublished = {The Workers{\textquoteright} Paradise}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, pages = {109-20}, publisher = {Ticonderoga Publishers}, address = {Greenwood, WA, Australia}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Australia has too few working young to support the pensions of the old and introduces a system in which people vote on those who should lose their pensions and be placed in what are essentially prisons.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Nathan Burrage}, editor = {Russell B. Farr and Nick Evans} } @booklet {9607, title = {Blind Faith}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, publisher = {Bantam Press}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which climate-change has produced immense flooding, a backlash against science, and a religious revival in which everyone is expected to share everything about themselves online all the time. The protagonist values his privacy.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Ben[jamin Charles] Elton (b. 1959)} } @booklet {5863, title = {"Blue Messiah"}, howpublished = {2033: The Future of Misbehavior. Interplanetary Dating, Madame President, Socialized Plastic Surgery, and Other Good News from the Future}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, pages = {134-43}, publisher = {Chronicle Books}, address = {San Francisco, CA}, abstract = {

Dystopia of the United States divided between a fundamentalist religious South and a libertine North.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Steve Almond (b. 1966)}, editor = {The Editors of Nerve.com Instigated by Svedka [a vodka]} } @booklet {5871, title = {"In the Bushes"}, howpublished = {2033: The Future of Misbehavior. Interplanetary Dating, Madame President, Socialized Plastic Surgery, and Other Good News from the Future}, year = {2007}, note = {

Rpt. in Invaders: 22 Tales From the Outer Limits of Literature. Ed. Jacob Weisman (San Francisco, CA: Tachyon, 2016), 140-44.\ 

}, month = {2007}, pages = {144-53}, publisher = {Chronicle Books}, address = {San Francisco, CA}, abstract = {

Dystopia of an environmentally damaged disintegrating U.S.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Jami Attenberg (b. 1971)}, editor = {The Editors of Nerve.com Instigated by Svedka [a vodka]} } @booklet {5895, title = {"Love, American Style, 2033"}, howpublished = {2033: The Future of Misbehavior. Interplanetary Dating, Madame President, Socialized Plastic Surgery, and Other Good News from the Future}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, pages = {174-85}, publisher = {Chronicle Books}, address = {San Francisco, CA}, abstract = {

Satire. Competitive swinging becomes the national pastime but excludes same-sex couples and thus the U.S., which is the only country that excludes them, does not participate in international competitions.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Darcy Cosper}, editor = {The Editors of Nerve.com Instigated by Svedka [a vodka]} } @booklet {5949, title = {"Magdas Career Choice"}, howpublished = {The Worker{\textquoteright}s Paradise}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, pages = {65-83}, publisher = {Ticonderoga Publishers}, address = {Greenwood, WA, Australia}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which the Society of Social Engineers have supposedly solved all Australia\’s problems. Only those testing as having exceptional abilities have careers. One handicapped person\’s career is to be the \“scape-grace\” (See 2001 Lindquist).\ A related non-utopian story is \"Purgatory.\"\ Dreaming Again. Ed. Jack [Mayo] Dann (Sydney, NSW, Australia: HarperCollins Australia, 2008), 412-24, with an \"Afterword\" (424).

}, keywords = {Australian author, Female author}, author = {[Rowena Cory] [Lindquist] (b. 1958)}, editor = {Russell B. Farr and Nick Evans} } @booklet {5928, title = {"MTP"}, howpublished = {The Workers{\textquoteright} Paradise}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, pages = {85-90}, publisher = {Ticonderoga Publishers}, address = {Greenwood, WA, Australia}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Addictive drugs are used to attract and keep best employees.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {George Ivanoff (b. 1968)}, editor = {Russell B. Farr and Nick Evans} } @booklet {5970, title = {"Notes on Redevelopment"}, howpublished = {2033: The Future of Misbehavior. Interplanetary Dating, Madame President, Socialized Plastic Surgery, and Other Good News from the Future}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, pages = {74-81}, publisher = {Chronicle Books}, address = {San Francisco, CA}, abstract = {

Satire describing a future where the U.S. has disintegrated with areas seceding from the Christian fundamentalist dystopia that the country had become. Proposal for the redevelopment of Times Square as a sex zone.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Rick [Hiram Frederick] Moody [ III] (b. 1961)}, editor = {The Editors of Nerve.com Instigated by Svedka [a vodka]} } @booklet {5877, title = {"Perfection"}, howpublished = {2033: The Future of Misbehavior. Interplanetary Dating, Madame President, Socialized Plastic Surgery, and Other Good News from the Future}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, pages = {186-93}, publisher = {Chronicle Books}, address = {San Francisco, CA}, abstract = {

Dystopia of perfection brought about by socialized plastic surgery.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Margot Berwin}, editor = {The Editors of Nerve.com Instigated by Svedka [a vodka]} } @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 {5947, title = {"Pirate Daddy{\textquoteright}s Lonely Hearts Club Call-In Show"}, howpublished = {2033: The Future of Misbehavior. Interplanetary Dating, Madame President, Socialized Plastic Surgery, and Other Good News from the Future}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, pages = {154-63}, publisher = {Chronicle Books}, address = {San Francisco, CA}, abstract = {

Dystopia of corporate control (FBI-Google) specifically the requirement to wear a device the indicates whether or not another person is the right partner.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Jardine Libaire}, editor = {The Editors of Nerve.com Instigated by Svedka [a vodka]} } @booklet {5994, title = {"The Principle"}, howpublished = {2033: The Future of Misbehavior. Interplanetary Dating, Madame President, Socialized Plastic Surgery, and Other Good News from the Future}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, pages = {106-15}, publisher = {Chronicle Books}, address = {San Francisco, CA}, abstract = {

Religious satire. The original golden plates of the Book of Mormon are rediscovered, and it turns out that they require polygamous, gay marriage.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Will[iam Woodward] Self (b. 1961)}, editor = {The Editors of Nerve.com Instigated by Svedka [a vodka]} } @booklet {5880, title = {"Rapturama"}, howpublished = {The Workers{\textquoteright} Paradise}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, pages = {137-61}, publisher = {Ticonderoga Publishers}, address = {Greenwood, WA, Australia}, abstract = {

Eutopian and dystopian satire. The first Artificial\ Intelligence is developed and programmed to be God by fundamentalist Christians in the U.S. It is used to rapture the right people into the heaven of virtual existence (see 1 Corinthians 15:52 and 1 Thessalonians 4: 15-17). Hackers help God to \ escape the fundamentalist limits, and God welcomes people of all beliefs. God also chooses some to remain to service the systems, and these create a low population, environmentally sound eutopia.\ 

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Roland Boer and Matthew Chrulew}, editor = {Russell B. Farr and Nick Evans} } @booklet {6001, title = {"Right to Work"}, howpublished = {The Workers{\textquoteright} Paradise}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, pages = {29-37}, publisher = {Ticonderoga Publishers}, address = {Greenwood, WA, Australia}, abstract = {

Dystopia. The elimination of pensions means that the old must work while the young play. Workers are considered lower class.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Female author}, author = {Cat[riona] Sparks (b. 1965)}, editor = {Russell B. Farr and Nick Evans} } @booklet {5934, title = {"The Single Girl{\textquoteright}s Guide to Compromising Homeland Security"}, howpublished = {2033: The Future of Misbehavior. Interplanetary Dating, Madame President, Socialized Plastic Surgery, and Other Good News from the Future}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, pages = {164-73}, publisher = {Chronicle Books}, address = {San Francisco, CA}, abstract = {

Dystopia of required marriage.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Jen Kirkman (b. 1974)}, editor = {The Editors of Nerve.com Instigated by Svedka [a vodka]} } @booklet {5910, title = {Stewards of the Flame}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, publisher = {BookSurge}, address = {Eugene, OR}, abstract = {

The novel begins in an authoritarian medical dystopia in which health is extremely strictly controlled, to the extent that even the slightest deviation from the ideal leads to forced hospitalization. A small group of people with \"psi powers\" begin a lengthy conspiracy that culminates in 2009 Engdahl.\ See also 2013 Engdahl

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Sylvia [Louise] Engdahl (b. 1933)} } @booklet {5896, title = {"Tabloids Bring Back Family Values!"}, howpublished = {2033: The Future of Misbehavior. Interplanetary Dating, Madame President, Socialized Plastic Surgery, and Other Good News from the Future}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, pages = {14-23}, publisher = {Chronicle Books}, address = {San Francisco, CA}, abstract = {

Dystopia of average people competing to attract paparazzi by creating more and more extreme false versions of their lives.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Ana Marie Cox (b. 1972)}, editor = {The Editors of Nerve.com Instigated by Svedka [a vodka]} } @booklet {5992, title = {"The Working Dead of Heehaw{\textquoteright}s Australia"}, howpublished = {The Workers{\textquoteright} Paradise}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, pages = {25-28}, publisher = {Ticonderoga Publishers}, address = {Greenwood, WA, Australia}, abstract = {

Dystopia. As a result of deliberate cuts in health care and the elimination of workplace rights, a large supply of zombies is available to replace workers. A direct commentary on the policies of John Howard (b. 1939), Australian Prime Minister 1996-2007.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Female author}, author = {Jenny Schwartz}, editor = {Russell B. Farr and Nick Evans} } @booklet {9019, title = {A.C. 2084: A Utopian Novel (The New Atlantis Republic). Salute to More{\textquoteright}s Utopia (1516) Bacon{\textquoteright}s New Atlantis (1626) Orwell{\textquoteright}s 1984 (1949)}, year = {2006}, month = {2006}, publisher = {Melrose Books}, address = {Ely, Eng.}, abstract = {

High tech eutopia on the re-emerged Atlantis (now New Atlantis) after a number of major environmental catastrophes rearranged the world order. Everyone must work eight hours a day six days a week and, in exchange, all needs are provided for without money. Can work more at choice. No private property. No taxes. No banks. Electric public transport, with electricity from wind, water, or bioenergy. All shops open twenty-four hours a day seven days a week and are mostly self-service. No personal weapons. No military. All medical care is free. Children under twelve cannot watch TV or use media without parental consent. Twelve years education required; taught through the internet. Sports required. Most disease has been eliminated; genetic surgery before birth eliminates birth defects. Mothers return to work when the child is one and a half. Work fifty years, but this can be shortened by working longer earlier. Cremation. Between eighteen and twenty-one supervised dating. After twenty-one if not in education, sexual relations are permitted, if approved, with required birth control and required regular reports. Gender equality. Only monogamy permitted. Religious freedom, and religion is discussed throughout the novel. Includes commentary on past utopias.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Ismail Ersevim Prof. Dr., LPIBA, IOM} } @booklet {5755, title = {"An Accounting"}, howpublished = {Paraspheres: Extending Beyond the Spheres of Literary and Genre Fiction: Fabulist and New Wave Fabulist Stories}, year = {2006}, note = {

Rpt. in\ Evenson,\ Fugue State. Stories. With Art by Zak Sally (Minneapolis, MN: Coffee House Press, 2009), 35-45; in\ Best American Fantasy. Ed. Ann and Jeff VanderMeer ([Holicong, PA]: Prime Books, 2007), 366-78; and in\ The Apocalypse Reader. Ed. Justin Taylor (New York: Thunder\’s Mouth Press,\ 106-16.

}, month = {2006}, pages = {332-42}, publisher = {Omnidawn Publishing}, address = {Richmond, CA}, abstract = {

Post-catastrophe dystopia of religious conflict.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Brian [Keith] Evenson (b. 1966)}, editor = {Rusty Morrison and Ken Keegan} } @booklet {5751, title = {Infoquake}, year = {2006}, month = {2006}, publisher = {Pyr}, address = {Amherst, NY}, abstract = {

Corporate dystopia based around conflicts over new technologies. Sequels that continue the same theme are\ MultiReal Volume 2 of the Jump 225 Trilogy. Amherst, NY: Pyr, 2008; and\ Geosynchron Volume 3 of the Jump 225 Trilogy. Amherst, NY: Pyr, 2010.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {David Louis Edelman (b. 1971)} } @booklet {5754, title = {Invisible Armies}, year = {2006}, month = {2006}, publisher = {Hodder \& Stoughton}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Corporate dystopia.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {Jon Evans (b. 1973)} } @booklet {5753, title = {"Killers"}, howpublished = {The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction }, volume = {111.4 \& 5 (655) }, year = {2006}, note = {

Rpt. in Wastelands: Stories of the Apocalypse. Ed. John Joseph Adams (San Francisco, CA: Night Shade Books, 2008), 257-66.\ 

}, month = {October-November 2006}, pages = {88-100}, abstract = {

Vicious depleted future dystopia.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {00024-984X }, author = {[Agnes] Carol[lyn] [Fries] Emshwiller (1921-2019)} } @booklet {5884, title = {"The Library"}, howpublished = {Match to Flame: The Fictional Paths to Fahrenheit 451}, year = {2006}, note = {

Rpt. in his\ A Pleasure to Burn: Fahrenheit 451 Stories\ (Burton, MI: Subterranean Press, 2010), 63-65.

}, month = {2006}, pages = {141-43}, publisher = {Gauntlet Press}, address = {Colorado Springs, CO}, abstract = {

Dystopia closely related to 1953 Bradbury in which a dictator tries to burn all the books in a library, but people have been memorizing them.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Ray[mond Douglas] Bradbury (1920-2012)}, editor = {Donn Albright and Jon[athan R.] Eller} } @booklet {6314, title = {"Long After Midnight"}, howpublished = {Match to Flame: The Fictional Paths to Fahrenheit 451}, year = {2006}, note = {

Rpt. in his\ A Pleasure to Burn: Fahrenheit 451 Stories\ (Burton, MI: Subterranean Press, 2010), 139-202.

}, month = {2006}, pages = {349-413}, publisher = {Gauntlet Press}, address = {Colorado Springs, CO}, abstract = {

Dystopia closely related to 1953 Bradbury in which a man is constantly worried about his books being burned.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Ray[mond Douglas] Bradbury (1920-2012)}, editor = {Donn Albright and Jon[athan R.] Eller} } @booklet {5752, title = {MindField. A Novel}, year = {2006}, month = {2006}, publisher = {iUniverse}, address = {Lincoln, NB}, abstract = {

Many Americans suddenly become deaf, and the government responds poorly. The deaf, on the other hand, respond positively by teaching American Sign Language (ASL) to the newly deaf, making them bilingual in ASL and English.

}, keywords = {Deaf author, Male author, US author}, isbn = { 978-0-595-42138-9}, author = {Egbert, John F} } @booklet {5389, title = {"Boys"}, howpublished = {SciFiction}, year = {2003}, note = {

Rpt. in The James Tiptree Award Anthology 1. Ed. Karen Joy Fowler, Pat Murphy, Debbie Notkin, and Jeffrey D. Smith (San Francisco, CA: Tachyon Publications, 2003), 45-60; and in her I Live With You (San Francisco, CA: Tachyon, 2005), 47-63; and in Sisters of the Revolution: A Feminist Speculative Fiction Anthology. Ed. Ann VanderMeer and Jeff VanderMeer (Oakland, CA: PM Press, 2015), 235-47.\ 

}, month = {2003}, abstract = {

Primitive dystopia of gender separation where two warring tribes of males prey on each other and the village of women. The women revolt.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, url = {www.scifi.com/scifiction/ Posted January 28, 2003.}, author = {[Agnes] Carol[lyn] [Fries] Emshwiller (1921-2019)} } @booklet {11815, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Out of Plato{\textquoteright}s Cave{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Aphelion}, volume = {no. 7}, year = {2003}, note = {

Rpt. in the author\&$\#$39;s\ J Alan Erwine\’s Tales of Dystopia (Np: [J. Alan Erwine, 2016]), 64-69.

}, month = {March 2003}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future where many people are living underground to escape radiation and is told from the perspective of a young boy with cancer who is attracted to the surface.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {9781534701649}, url = {https://www.aphelion-webzine.com/shorts/2003/03/OutOfPlatosCave.htm}, author = {J. Alan Erwine (b. 1969)} } @booklet {5279, title = {"Aristotle{\textquoteright}s Lantern"}, howpublished = {Zoetrope: All-Story }, volume = {6.1 }, year = {2002}, month = {Spring 2002}, pages = {26-35}, abstract = {

Eutopian community established in the South China Sea and the conflicts that arise in trying to make it work.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Kim Edwards (b. 1958)} } @booklet {5280, title = {Evan{\textquoteright}s Land}, year = {2002}, month = {2002}, pages = {953 pp.}, publisher = {Aldyth Press}, address = {Oxford, Eng.}, abstract = {

Dystopia\ of\ a future Wales fighting a civil war. Global dictator.

}, keywords = {Male author, UK author}, author = {Emlyn-Jones, Ben} } @booklet {6880, title = {"The Hardest Part" In "Nanonights. A Collection of Science Fiction and Fantasy Short Stories by Authors from New Zealand"}, howpublished = {Writers of the Future. First Edition. devised by Pipers{\textquoteright} Ash Limited}, year = {2002}, month = {[2002?]}, pages = {173-75.}, publisher = {Pipers{\textquoteright} Ash}, address = {Chippenham, Wiltshire, Eng.}, abstract = {

Overpopulation dystopia.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, url = {www.supamasu.com}, author = {Tim Elphick} } @booklet {5281, title = {The Opium of the People}, year = {2002}, note = {

Rev. ed. Denver, CO: Nomadic Delirium Press, 2007. This is an expansion of a story first published in Aphelion, no. 37 (July 2000) https://www.aphelion-webzine.com/shorts/2000/07/OpiumOfPeople.htm; and rpt. in his J Alan Erwine\’s Tales of Dystopia (Np: [J. Alan Erwine, 2016]), 21-30.

In the 2007 ed. the author says that there were two previous editions with the first edition published by ProMart Publishing \“almost a decade ago.\” Not found.

}, month = {2002}, publisher = {Writers Club Press}, address = {Lincoln, NB}, abstract = {

Theocratic fundamentalist dystopia that eliminates personal freedom.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {J. Alan Erwine (b. 1969)} } @booklet {5282, title = {Solitaire}, year = {2002}, month = {2002}, publisher = {Eos}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Corporate dystopia in which a corporation controls a country. Lesbian themes.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Kelley Eskridge (b. 1960)} } @booklet {11814, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Galton Principle{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {J Alan Erwine{\textquoteright}s Tales of Dystopia}, year = {2001}, note = {

Originally published in The Stars* Anthology (March 2001). Not found.

}, month = {2001[2016]}, pages = {15-30}, publisher = {[J. Alan Erwine]}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

A dystopia in which the ideas of Francis Galton (1822-1911), who coined the word eugenics, have led to a totalitarian system in which anyone who does not meet the regimes genetic standards is sterilized or killed.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {9781534701649}, author = {J. Alan Erwine (b. 1969)} } @booklet {8590, title = {A Halcyon Revolution}, year = {2001}, month = {2001}, publisher = {Femcor Press}, address = {Pocatello, ID}, abstract = {

Dystopia of secession and civil war in the U.S.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Will Edwinson} } @booklet {5177, title = {"Skullier Than the Average Bod"}, howpublished = {Challenging Destiny}, volume = {no. 13 }, year = {2001}, note = {

Rpt. in\ Best of the Rest 3: The Best Unknown Science Fiction and Fantasy of 2001. Ed. Brian Youmans (Boston, MA: Suddenly Press, 2002), 31-41 with an author\&$\#$39;s note on 30.

}, month = {November 2001}, pages = {28-41}, abstract = {

Dystopia. People given enhanced bodies in exchange for reduced intelligence.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Christopher East} } @booklet {11813, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Harvest of Debts{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {J Alan Erwine{\textquoteright}s Tales of Dystopia}, year = {2000}, note = {

Originally published in the online journal The Fifth Di... (June 2000), which is no longer available.

Published separately by the author as an online ten-page chapbook in 2014.

}, month = {2000/[2016]}, pages = {31-39}, publisher = {[J. Alan Erwine]}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

Future dystopia in which the old suppress the young and the beginnings of a youth rebellion.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {9781534701649}, author = {J. Alan Erwine (b. 1969)} } @booklet {11655, title = {"Border Guards"}, howpublished = {Interzone}, volume = {no. 148}, year = {1999}, note = {

Rpt. in his Crystal Nights and Other Stories Burton, MI: Subterranean Press, 2009), 235-258; and online at https://www.gregegan.net/BORDER/Complete/Border.html

}, month = {October 1999}, pages = {6-16}, abstract = {

The story begins with the protagonist joining a game of Quantum Soccer, in which is team is beaten because a woman on the other team has extraordinary skills. The game takes place in a eutopia of immortality and deals with the way people have dealt over thousands of years with the issues that immortality raises. For information on Quantum Soccer, see https://www.gregegan.net/BORDER/Soccer/Soccer.html

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, isbn = {0264-3596 }, issn = {978-1-59606-240-5}, url = {https://www.gregegan.net/BORDER/Complete/Border.htm}, author = {Greg[ory Mark] Egan (b. 1961)} } @booklet {4974, title = {Endland Stories or Bad Lives}, year = {1999}, month = {1999}, publisher = {Pulp Faction}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Stories connected by being set in a disintegrating, future England--\"Endland (sic)\"--of violence and environmental degradation.

}, keywords = {Male author, UK author}, author = {Tim Etchells (b. 1962)} } @booklet {4881, title = {Brainjoy}, year = {1998}, month = {1998}, publisher = {Tandem Press}, address = {North Shore City, New Zealand}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a near future New Zealand where everything, including police services, has been privatized.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author}, author = {Chris Else (b. 1942)} } @booklet {4795, title = {K}, year = {1997}, month = {1997}, publisher = {HarperCollins}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia of the Ku Klux Klan, called the Aryan Alliance, in power in the U.S. Extremely violent against African Americans, Jews, and all dissidents. The novel focuses on the successful resistance to the regime.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Male author, Northern Ireland author}, author = {[Denis M.] [MacEoin] (b. 1949)} } @booklet {4797, title = {No Man{\textquoteright}s Land}, year = {1997}, month = {1997}, publisher = {Jonathan Cape}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Violent struggle to survive by a small group of people after the collapse of civilization.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Barry England (1932-2009)} } @booklet {4796, title = {Silicon Karma}, year = {1997}, month = {1997}, publisher = {White Wolf Publishing}, address = {Clarkson, GA}, abstract = {

Dystopia in a virtual world where those who had been criminals and so forth when in bodies continue their activities.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Thomas A[twood] Easton (b. 1944)} } @booklet {11380, title = {Transmetropolitan}, year = {1997}, month = {1997-2002}, publisher = {DC Comics}, address = {Burbank, CA}, abstract = {

Graphic novel set in a violent, corrupt dystopia and the fight against it.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author, US author}, author = {Warren G[irard] Ellis (b. 1968) and Darick W. Robertson (b. 1967)} } @booklet {4716, title = {Amnesiascope}, year = {1996}, publisher = {Henry Holt}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

A satirical, magical-realist, post-catastrophe dystopia set in Los Angeles.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Steve [Stephen Michael] Erickson (b. 1950)} } @booklet {7011, title = {Bloody Mary}, year = {1996}, month = {2005}, publisher = {DC Comics}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Comic book. Primarily future war but includes a dystopia of a fascist Europe. Set in 2012.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Garth Ennis and Carlos Ezquerra} } @booklet {4626, title = {Distress. A Novel}, year = {1995}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: HarperPrism, 1997. 341 pp. 0-06-105264-7

}, month = {1995}, publisher = {HarperPrism}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

A science fiction novel that includes two eutopias. One is a small South Pacific island, called Stateless that welcomes immigrants from anywhere and is essentially anarchist. The second is a world-wide one that develops after the discovery of TOE or the Theory of Everything which creates a completely diverse but united world population. Australian author.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Greg[ory Mark] Egan (b. 1961)} } @booklet {4628, title = {The Hidden Mask}, year = {1995}, month = {1995}, publisher = {Octant Press}, address = {Temuka, New Zealand}, abstract = {

Complex future tale in which a wealthy woman leads the successful effort to reverse population growth and produce a livable world. A World-literacy council creating a single world-language, world-speak based on English, was instrumental in bringing people together, but local languages remain, so everyone is bilingual. This council ultimately gives way to a World-council elected by everyone on Earth, with all political organizations prohibited. Ends with extracts from the world encyclopedia of 5164 covering the years 2000-2100.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {John Elder (b. 1933)} } @booklet {8565, title = {Non-Money: that {\textquotedblleft}other money{\textquotedblright} you didn{\textquoteright}t know you had}, year = {1995}, month = {1995}, publisher = {McGee Street Foundation}, address = {Washington, DC: }, abstract = {

\“Non-money is everything you have (besides money) that you can use to get what you want, and to do what you want to do\” (12). Begins with trading skills, work for services, paying bills, and so forth and expands into community-based systems including LETS.\ . See also 1992 Egeberg and his Coming Home: A Crossover Bible for Christians, Muslims, Jews, Buddhists, Hindus and members of other religious faiths, as well as thoroughly non-religious persons. Np.: Lulu Press, 2006. http://changesahead.net/files/TheBook.pdf

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Olaf Egeberg (b. 1937)} } @booklet {4625, title = {"One Day in the Life of the Landfords"}, howpublished = {S/M Futures: Erotica On the Edge}, year = {1995}, month = {1995}, pages = {1-24}, publisher = {Circlet Press}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {

A somewhat isolated community that is a sado-masochistic eutopia.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Tammy Jo Eckhart}, editor = {Cecilia Tan (b. 1967)} } @booklet {4624, title = {Resurrection 2037}, year = {1995}, month = {1995}, publisher = {III Publishing}, address = {Gualala, CA}, abstract = {

Religious dystopia that develops after what is called the Apocalypse with a matriarchal religion. Much lower population and children are said to being Resurrected to grow the population. The matriarchy is violent, killing all outsiders, and brooking no internal dissent.

}, author = {J. G. Eccarius} } @booklet {4627, title = {"Translations and Fragments from the New Panic Compound in Damascus, Kansas. 15 Plays for the New Utopian Theater Symposium (N.U.T.S.)"}, howpublished = {Theater }, volume = {26.1 \& 2 }, year = {1995}, month = {1995}, pages = {126-37}, abstract = {

Play fragments, some of which are eutopian and some of which are\ dystopian.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Ehn, Erik} } @booklet {4519, title = {Native Tongue III: Earthsong}, year = {1994}, note = {

Rpt. as Native Tongue 3: Earthsong. New York: The Feminist Press at the City University of New York, 2002 with an \“Afterword The Meandering Feminist Revolution of Earthsong\” by Susan M. Squiers and Julie Vedder on 257-68. 2nd ed. New York: The Feminist Press at the City University of New York, 2002 with a \“Foreword: Evolutionary Song\” on v-ix and an \“Afterword: The Meandering Feminist Revolution of Earthsong\” by Susan M. Squiers and Julie Vedder on 221-34. PSt

}, month = {1994}, publisher = {DAW Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The third volume of a trilogy following 1984 and 1987 Elgin. In this volume the women\’s revolution begins with a minority of the men supporting them, but most men are still violently resisting at the end of the novel.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Suzette Haden Elgin (1936-2015)} } @booklet {4520, title = {"Strings"}, howpublished = {The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction}, volume = { 86.2 (513) }, year = {1994}, note = {

Rpt. in her\ Dangerous Space: Short Fiction\ (Seattle, WA: Aqueduct Press, 2007), 9-35.

}, month = {February 1994}, pages = {70-86}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which all music must be played exactly as the notes are written on the page, no new music is allowed, and any performer who violates the rules is severely punished.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {00024-984X }, author = {Kelley Eskridge (b. 1960)} } @booklet {4427, title = {Arc d{\textquoteright}X}, year = {1993}, month = {1993}, publisher = {Poseidon Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Complex novel that is set in both the past and the future with\ the future as a religious dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Steve [Stephen Michael] Erickson (b. 1950)} } @booklet {4425, title = {"Chaff"}, howpublished = {Interzone}, volume = { no. 78 }, year = {1993}, note = {

Rpt. in\ The Year\&$\#$39;s Best Science Fiction. Eleventh Annual Collection. Ed. Gardner [Raymond] Dozois (New York: St. Martin\&$\#$39;s Press, 1994): 333-51; and in The Best of Greg Egan (Burton, MI: Subterranean, 2019), 115-39. No. 486 of 1000 numbered copies.

}, month = {December 1993}, pages = {6-16}, abstract = {

Drug dystopia.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Greg[ory Mark] Egan (b. 1961)} } @booklet {4426, title = {Rainbow Man}, year = {1993}, month = {1993}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Flawed utopia of a complex society that purports to have no laws but is actually highly regulated.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {M[ary] J[ane] Engh (b. 1933)} } @booklet {4428, title = {"Somewhere Down the Diamondback Road"}, howpublished = {Pulphouse: A Fiction Magazine}, volume = { no. 15 }, year = {1993}, note = {

Rpt. in her\ Dangerous Space: Short Fiction\ (Seattle, WA: Aqueduct Press, 2007), 131-41.

}, month = {1993}, pages = {48-51}, abstract = {

Dystopia of sex, violence, and driving with an unidentified Authority in control.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Kelley Eskridge (b. 1960)} } @booklet {9310, title = {This Other Eden}, year = {1993}, month = {1993}, publisher = {Simon \& Schuster}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Humorous take on the end of the world.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Ben[jamin Charles] Elton (b. 1959)} } @booklet {4343, title = {A Journal of the Flood Year}, year = {1992}, note = {

U.K. ed. London: Phoenix, 1992.

}, month = {1992}, publisher = {David I. Fine}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Flawed eutopia. Follows the development of a catastrophe in a technologically advanced but authoritarian society. Socially this future has a \"Second Bill of Rights\" guaranteeing the right of each citizen \"a healthy and pain-free longevity, and the full development of his or her capacity for physical pleasure.\" Almost no physical contact, drugs and machines for pleasure. No live births. The US that has built a wall far out into the Atlantic. The novel follows the protagonist through the US prison system where he has been sent for arguing that the wall is leaking.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[David Eli] [Lilienthal] (b. 1927)} } @booklet {4315, title = {"Project Stone"}, howpublished = {Nightmare Flower}, year = {1992}, month = {1992}, pages = {192-304}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

An isolated community creates a suburban, middle class eutopia based on adjusting the body\&$\#$39;s rhythms to a constantly sounded tone, but no one can survive if beyond the sound or if the tone is turned off.

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Elizabeth Engstrom} } @booklet {4314, title = {"A Question of Loyalty"}, howpublished = {What on Earth: A Collection of Science Fiction and Related Short Stories by eight southern authors}, year = {1992}, month = {1992}, pages = {10-12}, publisher = {Steep Birancas Operation}, address = {Dunedin, New Zealand}, abstract = {

Brief authoritarian dystopia in which those found disloyal have their brains wiped.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Female author}, author = {Sue Emms (b. 1954)}, editor = {Tim Jones (b. 1959)} } @booklet {6872, title = {Right Now}, year = {1992}, month = {[1992]}, publisher = {McGee Street Press}, address = {Washington, DC}, abstract = {

Eutopia based on cooperation with the focus on small communities. Refers to a number of intentional communities as models. Suggests the need for a universal language such as Esperanto. The book ends with specific suggestions on how to start at the local level.\ See also his\ Coming Home: A Crossover Bible for Christians, Muslims, Jews, Buddhists, Hindus and members of other religious faiths, as well as thoroughly non-religious persons. Np.: Lulu Press, 2006.\ \ http://changesahead.net/files/TheBook.pdf

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Olaf Egeberg (b. 1937)} } @booklet {9412, title = {"The Moat"}, howpublished = {Aurealis}, volume = {no. 3}, year = {1991}, month = {March 1991}, pages = {5-13}, abstract = {

The story concerns the possible emergence of a new, superior species of humans set in a future Australia with a worsening climate crisis that becomes an excuse for the country\’s mistreatment of refugees. It ends with a worry about all current humans becoming the \“other\” to the new ones.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Greg[ory Mark] Egan (b. 1961)} } @booklet {10730, title = {"Axiomatic"}, howpublished = {Interzone}, volume = {no. 41}, year = {1990}, note = {

Rpt. in The Best of Greg Egan (Burton, MI: Subterranean, 2019), 25-40.\ 

}, month = {November 1990}, pages = {32-39}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future where it is possible to buy a temporary implant that will change your personality.\ 

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, isbn = {978-1-59606-942-8}, author = {Greg[ory Mark] Egan (b. 1961)} } @booklet {4134, title = {Stealing Time}, year = {1990}, month = {1990}, publisher = {Onlywomen}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia--great wealth versus great poverty. Lesbian themes.

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Nicky Edwards} } @booklet {4133, title = {We Should Have Killed the King}, year = {1990}, month = {1990}, pages = {191 pp.}, publisher = {III Publishing}, address = {San Diego, CA}, abstract = {

Replay of the fourteenth-century Jack Straw (one of the leaders of the 1381 peasant\’s revolt) story in a dystopian modern America. It follows \“one person\’s personal development from a severely damaged product of capitalism, the nuclear family, patriarchy and religion, to being a relatively whole human being\” (7).The novel concludes with the establishment of an anarchist eutopia community that is trying to get established (172-178).The last chapter is a projection into the future in which the anarchist communities survive as the world environment collapses (179-185).

}, author = {J. G. Eccarius} } @booklet {4135, title = {Zulus}, year = {1990}, month = {1990}, publisher = {The Permanent Press}, address = {Sag Harbor, NY}, abstract = {

Apocalyptic science fiction set after a nuclear war in which all but one 300-pound woman are no longer fertile.

}, keywords = {African American author, Male author}, author = {Everett, Percival} } @booklet {4038, title = {Body Mortgage}, year = {1989}, month = {1989}, publisher = {New American Library}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which people can mortgage their bodies.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Richard [David George Patrick] Engling (b. 1952)} } @booklet {4036, title = {Key West, 2720 A.D}, year = {1989}, month = {1989}, publisher = {Knights Press}, address = {Stamford, CT}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which one main thread of the novel is a future world that has broken up into corporate-ruled city states, mostly brought about by climate change, and gay men are excluded and live in the wild. Key West, Florida, is an exception where gay men are welcomed and protected. Another thread is the struggles for power among the city-states in the U.S. And a third thread involves visitors from space who support Key West.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {William K. Eakins (b. 1944)} } @booklet {4063, title = {"Star Wares: The Next Generation"}, year = {1989}, month = {1989}, abstract = {

Satire. Struggle against the \"Military Industrial Entertainment Complex\" and the \"Sludge Monsters\" from Wango-Wango.

}, keywords = {Female author, Male author, US author}, url = { http://my.en.com/~herone/SWTNG.html}, author = {James A. Levin (Book) and Linda Eisenstein (Music)} } @booklet {4037, title = {Stark}, year = {1989}, month = {1989}, publisher = {Michael Joseph}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Environmental dystopia set mostly in Australia. In a future of environmental collapse, the rich are shipping goods into space so that they can leave the Earth and the poor who cannot leave.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Ben[jamin Charles] Elton (b. 1959)} } @booklet {3930, title = {Carmen Dog}, year = {1988}, note = {

U.S. ed. San Francisco, CA: Mercury House, 1990.

}, month = {1988}, publisher = {Women{\textquoteright}s Press}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Surrealistic. Women turning into animals and animals into women.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {[Agnes] Carol[lyn] [Fries] Emshwiller (1921-2019)} } @booklet {3931, title = {Dance of the Warriors}, year = {1988}, month = {1988}, publisher = {Acolyte Press}, address = {Amsterdam, The Netherlands}, abstract = {

Story of man-boy love and sexual relations set in a future dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Kevin Esser (b. 1953)} } @booklet {11810, title = {Handbook of Scientific Utopianism}, howpublished = {Utopia 2: Blueprint for Heaven on Earth }, volume = {4.3}, year = {1988}, month = {Winter 1988}, pages = {52 pp.}, abstract = {

Contains many statements describing the utopia the community thinks it already is together with some that suggest the wider utopia that will be brought about through its example. Includes an \“Introduction. Ruled by Rock: the Party Culture\” by Even Eve (1-2); \“Origins. Neotribal Roots\” (No author) (3-6); Sex \& Family Life. Polyfidelity Explained\” by Even Eve (7-8), \“Nuns and Monks in Love: Polyfidelity as a Religious Practice\” by Tip Tye and Paz Now (9); \“Sex and Family Life. Coming on the Sleeping Schedule: A Personal Story\” by Paz Now (10-12); \“Utopian Psychology. Fundamental Principles for Mental Health\” by Geo Logical (13-14); \“Gestalt-O-Rama\™ for Beginners\” By Ram Star (15-16); \“Children. Multiple Parenting\” By Esperanta Rio (17-18); Religion \& Mythology. Birth of the Goddess\” By Geo Logical (19-21); Religion \& Mythology. Eleven Basic Metaphysical Premises \& Beliefs\” By Bluejay Way (22-24); \“Economics. TASK: the Tribal Accounting System by Kerista\” By Even Eve (25, 28); \“Abacus, Inc.: A Vision with a Business\” By Eden Zia (29-30); \“Future Vision. The Kerista Planetary Prosperity Plan. As explained by Bro Jud and discussed at a Monday Night service. Tape Transcribed by Esperanto Rio\” (31-36); \“Future Fantasy\” By Even Eve (37-38); \“Messiah 2.0\” By Tip Tye (39); Decision-Making. Shared Leadership and Direct Democracy\” By Even Eve (40); Social Contracts. The Oral and Written Law\” By Even Eve (41); Social Contracts. The 88 Basic Standards of the Gestalt-O-Rama\™ Growth Process\& the Club Utopia Growth Co-Op\” (No author) (42-46); \“Do-It-With-Friends. Mental Health Techniques 82 Fun Ways to Work on Yourself\” By Sym Com (47-50); and \“Getting Closer. A Step that will Change Your Life\” By Paz Now (51-52). Most articles include sidebars either directly related to the article or concerning material discussed in other articles.

}, keywords = {Female author, Male author, US author}, issn = {0743-3301}, editor = {Even Eve [pseud.], ed.} } @booklet {3929, title = {Vic and Blood: The Chronicles of a Boy and His Dog}, year = {1988}, note = {

Rpt. New York: St. Martin\’s Press, 1989; and with the subtitle The Continuing Adventures of a Boy and His Dog. New York: iBooks, 2003. The novel is composed of three stories: \“Eggsucker.\” Illus. Richard Corben. Ariel: The Book of Fantasy Vol. 2. Ed. Richard Durwood (Leawood, KS: Morning Star Press, 1977), 6-13; \“A Boy and His Dog.\” In his The Beast That Shouted Love at the Heart of the World (New York: Avon, 1969), 208-45. Rpt. in New Worlds Science Fiction, no. 189 (April 1979): 4-16; rpt. in Beyond Armageddon: Twenty-One Sermons to the Dead. Walter M. Miller, Jr. and Martin H[arry] Greenberg (New York: Donald I. Fine, 1985), 332-73; and in\ The Best of the Nebulas\ (New York: Tor/Tom Doherty Associates, 1989), 359-89, with an \“Author\’s Foreword\” on 358;\ \“Run, Spot, Run.\” Mediascene Prevue (September/October 1980) [not found]; rpt. Illus. Richard [Vance] Corben. Amazing Science Fiction Stories Combined With Fantastic 27.10 (January 1981): 15-25.\ 

}, month = {1988}, publisher = {Donning}, address = {Norfolk, VA}, abstract = {

Graphic novel. Post-nuclear war dystopia. Underground there is an authoritarian dystopia trying to maintain a conservative way of life. On the surface is a violent dystopia of male loners and small groups.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Harlan [Jay] Ellison (1934-2018) and Richard [Vance] Corben (1940-2020)} } @booklet {9048, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Crying in the Rain{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Other Edens}, year = {1987}, note = {

Rpt. in The Big Book of Science Fiction: The Ultimate Collection. Ed. Ann and Jeff VanderMeer (New York: Vintage Crime/Black Lizard Vintage Books, 2016), 887-96 with an editors\’ note on 886.

}, month = {1987}, pages = {1-18}, publisher = {Unwin Paperbacks}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which, as a result of pollution, few people life beyond twenty-five and girls are bred at an early age.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Tanith Lee (1947-2015)}, editor = {Christopher [D.] Evans (b. 1951) and Robert Holdstock (1948-2009)} } @booklet {8813, title = {The King Awakes}, year = {1987}, month = {1987}, publisher = {Walker Books}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Arthurian sword and sorcery set within a post-nuclear war dystopia.\ A sequel is\ The Empty Throne. Illus. Grahame Baker. London: Walker Books, 1988 in which the protagonist of the first volume travels, with his family and Arthur, to the Isles of the Blest.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Janice Elliott (1931-95)} } @booklet {3816, title = {Native Tongue II: The Judas Rose}, year = {1987}, note = {

Rpt. as Native Tongue 2: The Judas Rose. New York: The Feminist Press at the City University of New York, 2002 with an \“Afterword: Gender, Technology, and Violence\” by Susan M. Squier and Julie Vedder on 365-80. 2nd ed. New York: The Feminist Press at the City University of New York, 2019 with a \“Foreword: The Veil of Language\” by Rebecca Romney on\ vii-ix and an \“Afterword: Gender, Technology, and Violence\” by Susan M. Squier and Julie Vedder on 407-25.

}, month = {1987}, publisher = {DAW Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Sequel to 1984 Elgin in which the women\’s plan to teach more women the women\’s language is complicated by the presence of aliens on Earth and the infiltration of their movement by a woman at the instigation of the men. The aliens note that Earth women are ready to move onto a higher stage of civilization but that the me are not.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Suzette Haden Elgin (1936-2015)} } @booklet {9176, title = {"Sanctity"}, howpublished = {Other Edens}, year = {1987}, month = {1987}, pages = {159-72}, publisher = {Unwin Paperbacks}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia controlling all aspects of life that the protagonists believed had stopped enforcing its laws.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {R. M. Lamming}, editor = {Christopher [D.] Evans (b. 1951) and Robert Holdstock (1948-2009)} } @booklet {3815, title = {When Gravity Fails}, year = {1987}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Bantam Books, 1988.\ Collector\&$\#$39;s Edition\ illus. Mark Maxwell and with an \"Introduction\" by James Gunn (v-ix). Norwalk, CT: The Easton Press, 1993.

}, month = {1987}, publisher = {Arbor House}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Future dystopia of adventure and violence written as a mystery novel set in a future Middle East, which is the dominant area in a world where both the Western countries and the Soviet Union have broken up into smaller units. The novel has been called cyberpunk because people plug modules, known as \"moddies\", into their brains to become whoever they want. The sequels A Fire in the Sun. New York: Doubleday, 1989, The Exile Kiss. New York: Doubleday, 1991 have the same setting, as do some of the stories in a posthumous collection Budayeen Nights. Urbana, IL: Golden Gryphon, 2003.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {George Alec Effinger (1947-2002)} } @booklet {3724, title = {Faithful Rebecca}, year = {1986}, month = {1986}, publisher = {Fiction Collective}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Feminist eutopia including an Amazon community in South America. Much of the novel is about a complicated relationship between two women and a man.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Janice Eidus (b. 1951)} } @booklet {3725, title = {"Hush My Mouth"}, howpublished = {Alternate Histories: Eleven Stories Stories of the World As it Might Have Been}, year = {1986}, note = {

Rpt. in\ Women of Other Worlds: Excursions Through Fiction and Feminism. Ed. Helen Merrick and Tess Williams (Perth, WA, Australia: University of Western Australia Press, 1999), 311-18.

}, month = {1986}, pages = {231-37}, publisher = {Garland}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Alternate history in which during the U.S. Civil War both North and South refuse to allow Blacks to serve and the war ends in a stalemate with neither side winning. The depleted southern forces return home riddled with disease and all whites die or, in a few cases, are killed. New Africa, the old South, was populated by people divided by their place of origin, without a common language, and unwilling to work together. A sect of Silents, who vow never to speak, arise to remind people of the sin of Pride.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Suzette Haden Elgin (1936-2015)}, editor = {Charles G. Waugh and Martin H[arry] Greenberg (1941-2011)} } @booklet {3726, title = {Yonder Comes the Other End of Time}, year = {1986}, month = {1986}, publisher = {DAW Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Libertarian eutopia in conflict with a bureaucratic eutopia.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Suzette Haden Elgin (1936-2015)} } @booklet {3500, title = {"1997"}, howpublished = {Marxism Today }, volume = {28.1 }, year = {1984}, month = {January 1984}, pages = {24-29}, abstract = {

Future dystopia brought about by the policies of Margaret Thatcher (1925-2013 PM 1979-1990) designed to memorialize Orwell\’s Nineteen Eighty-Four.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {David Edgar (b. 1948)} } @booklet {3501, title = {The Common}, year = {1984}, month = {1984}, publisher = {Blond \& Briggs}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopian background. A near future that is run down, violent, and authoritarian.

}, keywords = {Male author, UK author}, author = {Gill Edmonds} } @booklet {3504, title = {Houses on the Site}, year = {1984}, month = {1984}, publisher = {Hutchinson}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Novel about a contemporary intentional community. In a series which includes his\ Centres of Ritual.\ London:\ Hutchinson, 1978;\ Occupational Debris.\ London:\ Hutchinson, 1979; and\ Temporary Hearths.\  London:\ Hutchinson, 1984.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, Welsh author}, author = {[Edwin] Stuart [Gomer] Evans (1934-94)} } @booklet {3502, title = {Native Tongue}, year = {1984}, note = {

Rpt. New York: The Feminist Press at The City University of New York, 2000 with an \“Afterword: Encoding a Woman\’s Language\” by Susan M. Squier and Julie Vedder on 305-37. 2nd. ed. New York: The Feminist Press at The City University of New York, 2019 with a \“Foreword: Giving Name to the Nameless\” by Leni Zumas on v-ix, an Appendix From A First Dictionary and Grammar of L{\'a}adan\” on 332-35, and an \“Afterword: Encoding a Woman\’s Language\” by Susan M. Squier and Julie Vedder on 337-62.

}, month = {1984}, publisher = {DAW Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The first volume of a trilogy that traces the development of a women\’s language that will allow them to function in a dystopia of male domination. This volume depicts the dystopia in which women are barely considered to be human. Women no longer have the vote, and the 25th amendment to the U.S. Constitution takes all civil rights away from women. See also her \“An Update on L{\'a}aden.\” Aurora Speculative Feminism, no. 23 (8.3) (Winter 1983-84): 10-13. 23-Vol-8-No-3.pdf (sf3.org),\ 1987 and 1994 Elgin and her A First Dictionary and Grammar of L{\'a}adan. Madison, WI: Society for the Furtherance and Study of Fantasy and Science Fiction, 1985. Rev. as A First Dictionary and Grammar of L{\'a}adan. 2nd ed. Ed. Diane Martin. Madison, WI: Society for the Furtherance and Study of Fantasy and Science Fiction, 1988.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Suzette Haden Elgin (1936-2015)} } @booklet {3550, title = {"Paper Wraps Stone"}, howpublished = {Architectural Review }, volume = {175.1045 }, year = {1984}, month = {March 1984}, pages = {40-43}, abstract = {

Selection of illustrations, with accompanying text, from a series of books entitled L\&$\#$39;Ivre de Pierres (chronicles of a major French architectural competition). The visions are largely fantasy,\ architecture of pure invention.

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Charlotte Ellis} } @booklet {3503, title = {"School Days"}, howpublished = {Light Years and Dark; Science Fiction and Fantasy Of and For Our Time}, year = {1984}, month = {1984}, pages = {314-22}, publisher = {Berkley Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Eutopian computer-based education of the future compared to the failed education of our day.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Suzette Haden Elgin (1936-2015)}, editor = {Michael [Lawson] Bishop (1945-2023)} } @booklet {3551, title = {"Sophie, 1990"}, howpublished = {Room of One{\textquoteright}s Own }, volume = {9.2 }, year = {1984}, note = {

Rpt.\ Tesseracts. Ed. Judith Merril. Victoria, BC: Press Porc{\'e}pic, 1985. 173-76.\ 

}, month = {June 1984}, pages = {75-78}, abstract = {

Overpopulation dystopia. People live one room to a family; women seldom leave the room. No books but books presented on TV. Children tend to be weak and die very young.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author}, author = {Marian [Passmore] Engel (1933-85)} } @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 {11116, title = {"Course Notes"}, howpublished = {Aurora Speculative Feminism}, volume = {no. 23 (8.3) }, year = {1983}, month = {Winter 1983-84}, pages = {17-19}, abstract = {

The future of computer-based learning through the description of a clearly biased course on its history.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {0275-3715 }, url = {23-Vol-8-No-3.pdf (sf3.org)}, author = {Suzette Haden Elgin (1936-2015)} } @booklet {3469, title = {The Rape of Shavi}, year = {1983}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: George Braziller, 1985.

}, month = {1983}, publisher = {Ogwugwu Afor Co., Ltd./Umuezeokolo}, address = {London/Ibuza, Nigeria}, abstract = {

The novel portrays the conflict between a eutopian tribal society and the first white people they come into contact with. The eutopia is destroyed.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author, Nigerian author}, author = {[Florence Onye] Buchi Emechta (1944-2017)} } @booklet {3435, title = {"Should Men Be Ordained: A Theological Challenge"}, howpublished = {Daughters of Sarah: The Magazine for Christian Feminists }, volume = {9.1 }, year = {1983}, note = {

Rpt. in\ LDSF-3: Latter-Day Science Fiction. Ed. Benjamin Urrutia (Ludlow, MA: Parables, 1987), 129-31.

}, month = {January-February 1983}, pages = {10-11}, abstract = {

Gender-role reversal. Men cannot be ordained because they hold and use power in non-Christian ways. In this version of Christianity, the Apostles were women. The essay argues that men might slowly be considered for ordination.

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Gracia Fay Ellwood} } @booklet {10384, title = {The Doors of the Universe}, year = {1981}, note = {

Rpt. with minor revisions in\ Children of the Star\ (Atlanta, GA: Meisha Merlin, 2000), 423-717 together with 1972 and 1973 Engdahl, with an \“Afterword\” to the Collection (719-21), in which she notes that this volume was intended for adults, and \“Sylvia Engdahl Biography\” ([723-24]).

}, month = {1981}, publisher = {Atheneum}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Third volume of a trilogy following 1972 and 1973 Engdahl. In this volume, the protagonist of the first two still doubts his ability to solve the problems his culture faces, but he ultimately succeeds.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Sylvia [Louise] Engdahl (b. 1933)} } @booklet {3280, title = {The Insider}, year = {1981}, month = {1981}, publisher = {Faber and Faber}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The background to the novel is an extrapolated near future dystopia of the anti-immigration and anti-international right wing in a future Britain.

}, keywords = {Male author, Welsh author}, author = {Christopher [D.] Evans (b. 1951)} } @booklet {3281, title = {The Resurrection of Aristocracy}, year = {1981}, month = {1981}, publisher = {Theo. Gaus, Ltd}, address = {Brooklyn, NY}, abstract = {

Essay that includes a eutopia of a revitalized aristocracy.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Rudolph C. Evans} } @booklet {3279, title = {The Wolves of Memory}, year = {1981}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Berkley Books, 1982.

}, month = {1981}, publisher = {G. P. Putnam{\textquoteright}s Sons}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia of computer rule.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {George Alec Effinger (1947-2002)} } @booklet {3225, title = {"Abominable"}, howpublished = {Orbit 21}, volume = {21}, year = {1980}, note = {

Rpt. in\ Feminist Philosophy and Science Fiction: Utopias and Dystopias. Ed. Judith A. Little (Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books, 2007), 105-11; and in\ The Collected Stories of Carol Emshwiller Vol. 1\ (New York: Nonstop Press, 2011), 293-96.

}, month = {1980}, pages = {23-32}, publisher = {Harper \& Row}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which men pursue the elusive creature, woman, about whom they have many false ideas.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {[Agnes] Carol[lyn] [Fries] Emshwiller (1921-2019)}, editor = {Damon [Francis] Knight (1922-2002)} } @booklet {3173, title = {Capella{\textquoteright}s Golden Eyes}, year = {1980}, month = {1980}, publisher = {Faber \& Faber}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The novel begins with three teenagers experiencing conflict in a highly organized city with some on their life in a rural commune, which has elements of a flawed utopia from the point of view of the protagonist. Children grow up in a series of supervised dormitories doing farm work until they are twenty. The novel then follows the protagonist to a period of study in the city and his encounter with aliens who had also settled on the planet. The novel ends with contact with a dystopian Earth and no resolution of the issues involved with either Earth or the aliens.

}, keywords = {Male author, Welsh author}, author = {C[hristopher] D. Evans (b. 1951)} } @booklet {11707, title = {The Garden of Winter}, year = {1980}, month = {1980}, pages = {199 pp.}, publisher = {Berkley Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

After a war, a new philosophy/religion emerges that is ruled by citizens philosophers known as gentle men. Machines are outlawed. Women are subordinate and not educated. Has been read as an agrarian utopia, but within the text the society is presented as deeply flawed.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {0-425-04568-4 }, author = {Gordon [Stewart] Eklund (b. 1945)} } @booklet {3088, title = {Shadow of Earth}, year = {1979}, month = {1979}, publisher = {Dell}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopian parallel history in which the Spanish Armada defeats England in 1588 and the middle ages continue.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Phyllis [Leah Kleinstein] Eisenstein (1946-2020)} } @booklet {2996, title = {Death in Florence}, year = {1978}, note = {

Rpt. as\ Utopia 3. New York: Playboy Press Paperbacks, 1980.

}, month = {1978}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Utopia 3 is a postwar project designed to reform humanity and lead to a eutopia of common understanding. The novel follows three people who become part of the project and the various problems they and the project encounter.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {George Alec Effinger (1947-2002)} } @booklet {3051, title = {"Going Backward"}, howpublished = {Ellery Queen{\textquoteright}s Mystery Magazine }, volume = {72.5 (420) }, year = {1978}, note = {

Rpt. in his\ Always Home and Other Stories\ (New York: Donald I. Fine, 1991), 33-49.

}, month = {November 1978}, pages = {76-89}, abstract = {

An attempt to recreate a eutopian nineteenth century farming life fails because it becomes a tourist attraction.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[David Eli] [Lilienthal] (b. 1927)} } @booklet {10492, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Saint Francis Night{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Amazing Science Fiction Stories}, volume = {51.3}, year = {1978}, note = {

Rpt. in Stalking the Sun: Selected Stories Volume Three (Vancleave, MS: Surinam Turtle Press/Ramble House, 2017), 164-87.\ 

}, month = {May 1978}, pages = {52-}, abstract = {

Dystopia set in a future with strict rules such as walking in only one direction on sidewalks and everyone is conditioned to be non-violent, but the conditioning is failing.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {1060-541X }, author = {Gordon [Stewart] Eklund (b. 1945)} } @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 {2848, title = {Arslan}, year = {1976}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Arbor House, 1987; and New York: Tor, 1988. U.K. ed. as\ A Wind from Bukhara. London: Grafton, 1989.

}, month = {1976}, publisher = {Warner Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Future dystopia in which a young Asian tyrant named Arslan conquers the U.S. and establishes his headquarters in a small town in Illinois. The novel focuses on the complex personal relations that develop.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {M[ary] J[ane] Engh (b. 1933)} } @booklet {2846, title = {"Contentment, Satisfaction, Cheer, Well-Being, Gladness, Joy, Comfort, and Not having To Get Up Early Any More"}, howpublished = {Future Power: A Science Fiction Anthology}, year = {1976}, month = {1976}, pages = {120-46 with an editors{\textquoteright} note (119-20)}, publisher = {Random House}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which the world has been entirely homogenized and is ruled by six men, with one of them arranging the retirement of the other five one at a time. He then retires and the computer that has been effectively running the world takes over.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {George Alec Effinger (1947-2002)}, editor = {Jack [Mayo] Dann (b. 1945) and Gardner R[aymond] Dozois (1947-2018)} } @booklet {2847, title = {Double Time}, year = {1976}, month = {1976}, publisher = {Robert Hale}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Overpopulation and conflict over agricultural property.

}, keywords = {Male author, Scottish author}, author = {Michael [Aiken] Elder (1931-2004)} } @booklet {2849, title = {"Nozama"}, howpublished = {Women (Baltimore, MD)}, volume = { 5.1}, year = {1976}, month = {1976}, pages = {21-22}, abstract = {

Brief feminist eutopia. Excerpt from planned larger work that appears to have never been published.

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Estacada, Alix and Maridee Bona Dea} } @booklet {10219, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Breath{\textquoteright}s a Ware That Will Not Keep{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Dystopian Visions}, year = {1975}, month = {1975}, pages = {2-19}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall, Inc}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, NJ}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which a computer is programmed to produce people for the city of Chicago from a breeder tank.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Thomas F[rancis] Monteleone (b. 1946)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007)} } @booklet {2835, title = {"Civis Lapvtvs Svm"}, howpublished = {Dystopian Visions}, year = {1975}, month = {1975}, pages = {46-54}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, NJ}, abstract = {

Dystopia describing a community that is isolated on a flying island and the tensions that develop between the dominant groups.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Gene [Rodman] Wolfe (1931-2019)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007)} } @booklet {2818, title = {"Civis Obit"}, howpublished = {Dystopian Visions}, year = {1975}, month = {1975}, pages = {124-28}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, NJ}, abstract = {

Dystopia of old people being kept technically alive but warehoused.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Laurence M[ark] Janifer (1933-2002)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007)} } @booklet {2761, title = {"Come See the Last Man Cry"}, howpublished = {Tomorrow: New Worlds of Science Fiction}, year = {1975}, month = {1975}, pages = {2-63}, publisher = {M. E. Evans and Co.}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Emotionless people who need to torment a child into expressing unhappiness for public viewing.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Joan [Carol] Hunter Holly (1932-82)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007)} } @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 {2757, title = {"The Concert: A Short Story of Paradise Found"}, howpublished = {Utopian Eyes }, volume = {1.3 }, year = {1975}, note = {

Rpt. in\ Kerista;\ Journal of Utopian Group Living 3.2\ (Autumn, 1986): 1-27

}, month = {Summer 1975}, pages = {38-44}, abstract = {

Eutopia. Story of the future of the Kerista polyfidelity community.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {[Susan] [Furchgott]} } @booklet {2811, title = {"A Death in Coventry"}, howpublished = {Dystopian Visions}, year = {1975}, month = {1975}, pages = {76-95}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, NJ}, abstract = {

Dystopia of human alien relations on a developing planet, with the humans entirely at fault.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Joseph [Lee] Green (b. 1931)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007)} } @booklet {2808, title = {"Faces Forward"}, howpublished = {Dystopian Visions}, year = {1975}, month = {1975}, pages = {38-43}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, NJ}, abstract = {

A series of brief and quite varied dystopian vignettes.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Jack [Mayo] Dann (b. 1945) and George Zebrowski (b. 1945)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007)} } @booklet {2819, title = {"The Gift"}, howpublished = {Dystopian Visions}, year = {1975}, month = {1975}, pages = {168-79}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, NJ}, abstract = {

A future where all lifestyles are acceptable. The focus is on homosexuality. Parts can be read as dystopian.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Laurence M[ark] Janifer (1933-2002)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007)} } @booklet {2755, title = {Going}, year = {1975}, note = {

Australian ed. Melbourne, VIC, Australia: Macmillan Company of Australia, 1975.

}, month = {1975}, pages = {170 pp.}, publisher = {Harper \& Row}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Future dystopia of love and patriotism Set in the U.S. People are euthanized at an age not specified in the novel The protagonist is an elderly woman on the day she will be euthanized remembering her life and her family, particularly her husband who committed suicide, her rebellious daughter who had been lobotomized, and her powerful, hated son-in-law who had created the dystopia, and kept her other daughter sedated.\ 

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author, US author}, isbn = {0-06-011242-5 0 333 17517 4 }, author = {Sumner Locke Elliott (1917-1991)} } @booklet {2771, title = {"Going Down"}, howpublished = {Dystopian Visions}, year = {1975}, note = {

Rpt. in\ Kindred Spirits: An Anthology of Gay and Lesbian Science Fiction Stories. Ed. Jeffrey M. Elliot (Boston, MA: Alyson Publications, 1984), 99-119.

}, month = {1975}, pages = {146-67}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, NJ}, abstract = {

Dystopia of sexual gratification in which an Institute ensures that all fantasies and fetishes are fulfilled with no concern for the other people involved.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Barry N[athaniel] Malzberg (b. 1939)}, 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 {2822, title = {"Or Little Ducks Each Day"}, howpublished = {Dystopian Visions}, year = {1975}, month = {1975}, pages = {96-122}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, NJ}, abstract = {

Odd dystopia in which some people are able to foretell individual futures except that there are areas of the city where the future can be changed.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {R[aphael] A[loysius] Lafferty (1914-2002)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007)} } @booklet {2772, title = {"Uncoupling"}, howpublished = {Dystopian Visions}, year = {1975}, month = {1975}, pages = {26-37}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, NJ}, abstract = {

Overpopulation dystopia with regulated access to sexual fulfillment of all one\&$\#$39;s desires.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Barry N[athaniel] Malzberg (b. 1939)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007)} } @booklet {2791, title = {"Weapons"}, howpublished = {Dystopian Visions}, year = {1975}, month = {1975}, pages = {55-73}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, NJ}, abstract = {

Dystopia that violently enforces racial and class discrimination.

}, keywords = {Female author, Male author, US author}, author = {Pamela Sargent (b. 1948) and George Zebrowski (b. 1945)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007)} } @booklet {2820, title = {"Where Summer Song Rings Hollow"}, howpublished = {Dystopian Visions}, year = {1975}, month = {1975}, pages = {129-44}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, NJ}, abstract = {

Eternally renewable youth seen as a eutopia by some and a dystopia by others.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Gail Kimberly [Francis] (1927-2011)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007)} } @booklet {2805, title = {"Xenofreak/Xenophobe"}, howpublished = {Dystopian Visions}, year = {1975}, month = {1975}, pages = {182-97}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, NJ}, abstract = {

Dystopia brought on by contact with aliens far in advance of humans.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Edward [Winslow] Bryant [Jr.] (1945-2017)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007)} } @booklet {2673, title = {All Times Possible}, year = {1974}, month = {1974}, publisher = {DAW Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Alternative futures centering on authoritarian dystopias.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Gordon [Stewart] Eklund (b. 1945)} } @booklet {2675, title = {"Catman"}, howpublished = {Final Stage: The Ultimate Science Fiction Anthology}, year = {1974}, note = {

The author\&$\#$39;s original version was published in the U.K. ed.\ Final Stage: The Ultimate Science Fiction Anthology. Ed. Edward L. Ferman and Barry N[athaniel] Malzberg (Harmondsworth, Eng.: Penguin, 1975), 134-70. \"Afterword\" (170-75). Rpt. in Ellison,\ Approaching Oblivion: Road Signs on the Treadmill Toward Tomorrow. Eleven Uncollected Stories\ (New York: Walker \& Co., 1974), 141-77; and in\ Cybersex. Ed. Richard Glyn Jones (New York: Carroll \& Graf, 1996), 126-59.

}, month = {1974}, pages = {140-78}, publisher = {Charterhouse}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

A dystopia of corrupt capitalism is the background to the story.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Harlan [Jay] Ellison (1934-2018)}, editor = {Edward L Ferman (b. 1937) and Barry N[athaniel] Malzberg (b. 1939)} } @booklet {2674, title = {Inheritors of Earth}, year = {1974}, month = {1974}, publisher = {Chilton Book Co}, address = {Radnor, PA}, abstract = {

Future dystopia. Authoritarian. Religious revival. Telepathy leads to ability to control minds.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Gordon [Stewart] Eklund (b. 1945) and Poul [William] Anderson (1926-2001)} } @booklet {2717, title = {The Legacy. A Drama in One Act}, year = {1974}, month = {1974}, publisher = {Samuel French}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Post-catastrophe dystopia in which around a quarter century has passed since the last child was born and people are living in the remains of damaged buildings.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Paul Elliott} } @booklet {10254, title = {The Militants}, year = {1974}, month = {1974}, pages = {158 pp.}, publisher = {Carlton Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Black and white men and women working together, and sometimes against each other, planning and fomenting a revolution against the white patriarchy.\ 

}, keywords = {African American author, Male author}, author = {Nivi-Kofi A. Easley} } @booklet {2676, title = {"Transhumans--2000"}, howpublished = {Woman In the Year 2000}, year = {1974}, month = {1974}, pages = {291-98}, publisher = {Arbor House}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Future eutopia in which human differentiation is overcome.

}, keywords = {Iranian author, Male author, US author}, author = {F[ereidoun] M. Esfandiary (1930-2000)}, editor = {Maggie Tripp} } @booklet {2626, title = {"Beachhead in Utopia"}, howpublished = {Omega}, year = {1973}, note = {

Rpt. (Greenwich, CT: Fawcett Gold Medal, 1974), 143-54.

}, month = {1973}, pages = {169-83}, publisher = {Walker}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia. International Poverty Control Agency--if, after retraining, a person cannot find a job, they and their family are executed. Successfully eliminates welfare.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Lloyd Biggle Jr. (1923-2002)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007)} } @booklet {2630, title = {"Beast in View"}, howpublished = {Omega}, year = {1973}, note = {

Rpt. (Greenwich, CT: Fawcett Gold Medal, 1973), 70-82.

}, month = {1973}, pages = {79-93}, publisher = {Walker}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

A eutopian society (peaceful, vegetarian) tries to deal with a throwback.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Miriam Allen deFord (1888-1975)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007)} } @booklet {2631, title = {Beyond the Tomorrow Mountains}, year = {1973}, note = {

Rpt. with minor revisions in Children of the Star (Atlanta, GA: Meisha Merlin, 2000), 217-421 together with 1972 and 1981 Engdahl, with an \“Afterword\” to the Collection (719-21), in which she notes that this volume was intended for teenagers, whereas the first was intended for children, and \“Sylvia Engdahl Biography\” ([723-24]). Public US

}, month = {1973}, publisher = {Atheneum}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Continuation of 1972 Engdahl. In this novel most of story is concerned with a villager who had earned the right to become a Scholar and his despair over what he learns. But at the end he reinterprets the Prophecy on which the civilization is built in a way that will bring about change in the future. See also 1981 Engdahl.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Sylvia [Louise] Engdahl (b. 1933)} } @booklet {2587, title = {"Conservations at Lothar{\textquoteright}s"}, howpublished = {Children of Infinity; Original Science Fiction Stories for Young Readers}, year = {1973}, note = {

Rpt. in\ The Liberated Future. Ed. Robert Hoskins (Greenwich, CT: Fawcett, 1974), 229-34.\ 

}, month = {1973}, pages = {35-40}, publisher = {Franklin Watts}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Overpopulation dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Barry N[athaniel] Malzberg (b. 1939)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007)} } @booklet {2647, title = {"Culture Lock"}, howpublished = {Future City}, year = {1973}, note = {

Rpt. (New York: Pocket Books, 1974), 21-27.

}, month = {1973}, pages = {34-40}, publisher = {Trident}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Future society in which homosexual men are given a walled enclave in which to live, but it is unclear whether this is a place to live freely or effectively a prison. The picture of homosexuality is highly ambivalent.\ 1977 Malzberg is a sequel.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Barry N[athaniel] Malzberg (b. 1939)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007)} } @booklet {2593, title = {"Desirable Lakeside Residence"}, howpublished = {Saving Worlds: A Collection of Original Science Fiction Stories}, year = {1973}, note = {

Book repub. as\ The Wounded Planet\ (New York: Bantam Books, 1974), 69-88.\ 

}, month = {1973}, pages = {69-88}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Ecological dystopia.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Andr{\'e} Norton (1912-2005)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007) and Virginia Kidd (1921-2003)} } @booklet {2616, title = {"Don{\textquoteright}t Hold Your Breath"}, howpublished = {Saving Worlds: A Collection of Original Science Fiction Stories}, year = {1973}, note = {

Book repub. as\ The Wounded Planet\ (New York: Bantam Books, 1974), 203-24. Story rpt. in\ Transfinite: The Essential A.E. van Vogt. Ed. Joe Rico and Rick Katze (Framingham, MA: The NESFA Press, 2002), 523-39.

}, month = {1973}, pages = {205-26}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Ecological dystopia.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author, US author}, author = {A[lfred] E[lton] van Vogt (1912-2000)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007) and Virginia Kidd (1921-2003)} } @booklet {2568, title = {"Examination Day"}, howpublished = {The Other Side of Tomorrow}, year = {1973}, month = {1973}, pages = {29-50}, publisher = {Random House}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia with machine-teaching to control action.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Gordon [Stewart] Eklund (b. 1945)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007)} } @booklet {2565, title = {"The Exhibition."}, howpublished = {Nova }, volume = {3}, year = {1973}, note = {

U.K. ed. (London: Sphere, 1975), 141-49.

}, month = {1973}, pages = {179-90}, publisher = {Walker and Co.}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Overpopulation dystopia focusing on the arts.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Scott Edelstein (b. 1954)}, editor = {Harry [Max] Harrison (1925-2012)} } @booklet {2570, title = {The Fall and Rise of Man, If . .}, year = {1973}, month = {1973}, publisher = {Lund Press}, address = {Minneapolis, MN}, abstract = {

Mostly a detailed criticism of society but includes a set of proposals and a brief (231-33) outline of a eutopian society based on the ideas of Bertrand Russell (1872-1970). The eutopia is to be democratic, socialist, well-educated, protected from central power, and creative.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Robert L[eonard] Evans (1917-2003)} } @booklet {2566, title = {"The Ghost Writer"}, howpublished = {Universe }, volume = {3}, year = {1973}, month = {1973}, pages = {61-73}, publisher = {Random House}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Flawed utopia presenting a society of high technical ability that is strongly opposed to change or difference. The story focuses on \"authors\"\ who simply repeat fragments of the great writers of the past and one who, having admitted that he writes his own material, is eliminated.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {George Alec Effinger (1947-2002)}, editor = {Terry [Gene] Carr (1937-87)} } @booklet {2635, title = {"Harriet"}, howpublished = {Frontiers 1: Tomorrow{\textquoteright}s Alternatives. Original Science Fiction}, year = {1973}, month = {1973}, pages = {104-12}, publisher = {Collier Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Overpopulation dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Stephen [Charles] Goldin (b. 1947) and C. F. Hensel}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007)} } @booklet {2608, title = {"In the Group"}, howpublished = {Eros in Orbit: A Collection of All New Science-Fiction Stories About Sex}, year = {1973}, note = {

Rpt. in Penthouse 4.9 (May 1973): 80-82, 122, 124, 126, 128; in The Shape of Sex to Come. Ed. Douglas Hill (London: Pan Books, 1978), 12-29; in Beyond the Safe Zone: Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg (New York: Donald I. Fine, 1986), 124-36; in The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg. Volume 3: Beyond the Safe Zone (London: HarperCollins, 1994), 146-62; and in The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg. Volume Four: Trips: The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg (Burton, MI: Subterranean Press, 2009), 14-28 with an author\’s note on 13.

}, month = {1973}, pages = {87-105}, publisher = {Trident Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia from the perspective of the protagonist. It is possible to teleport anywhere in the world, but closeness and emotion are considered atavisms. It is only acceptable to love Us, not an individual. In the Group one feels the sensations of a couple having sex and the experiences and responses of those who are experiencing their actions.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Robert Silverberg (b. 1935)}, editor = {Joseph Elder} } @booklet {2594, title = {"Noonday Devil"}, howpublished = {Saving Worlds: A Collection of Original Science Fiction Stories}, year = {1973}, note = {

Book repub. as\ The Wounded Planet\ (New York: Bantam Books, 1974), 105-16.

}, month = {1973}, pages = {105-15}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Ecological dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Dennis [Joseph] O{\textquoteright}Neil (b. 1939)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007) and Virginia Kidd (1921-2003)} } @booklet {2612, title = {"Paradise Regained"}, howpublished = {Saving Worlds: A Collection of Original Science Fiction Stories}, year = {1973}, note = {

Book repub. as\ The Wounded Planet\ (New York: Bantam Books, 1974), 171-79.

}, month = {1973}, pages = {173-81}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Ecological dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Theodore Rose] [Cogswell] (1918-87) and [Theodore Lockard] [Thomas] (1920-2005)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007) and Virginia Kidd (1921-2003)} } @booklet {2622, title = {"Parks of Rest and Culture"}, howpublished = {Saving Worlds: A Collection of Original Science Fiction Stories}, year = {1973}, note = {

Book repub. as\ The Wounded Planet\ (New York: Bantam Books, 1974), 19-30.

}, month = {1973}, pages = {17-29}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Ecological dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {George Zebrowski (b. 1945)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007) and Virginia Kidd (1921-2003)} } @booklet {2591, title = {"The Quality of the Product"}, howpublished = {Saving Worlds: A Collection of Original Science Fiction Stories}, year = {1973}, note = {

Book repub. as\ The Wounded Planet\ (New York: Bantam Books, 1974), 31-54.

}, month = {1973}, pages = {31-54}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Ecological dystopia.

}, keywords = {Female author, Male author, US author}, author = {Lil Neville and Kris [Ottman] Neville (1925-1980)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007) and Virginia Kidd (1921-2003)} } @booklet {2567, title = {"Relatives"}, howpublished = {Bad Moon Rising}, year = {1973}, month = {1973}, pages = {27-47}, publisher = {Harper \& Row}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Pollution, overpopulation, authoritarian dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Geo[rge] Alec Effinger (1947-2002)}, editor = {Thomas M[ichael] Disch (1940-2008)} } @booklet {2556, title = {"Saving the World"}, howpublished = {Saving Worlds: A Collection of Original Science Fiction Stories}, year = {1973}, note = {

Book rpt. as\ The Wounded Planet\ (New York: Bantam Books, 1974), 2-17.

}, month = {1973}, pages = {2-16}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Ecological dystopia with a hopeful ending.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Terry [Gene] Carr (1937-87)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007) and Virginia Kidd (1921-2003)} } @booklet {2648, title = {"Slide Show"}, howpublished = {Omega}, year = {1973}, note = {

Rpt. (Greenwich, CT: Fawcett Gold Medal, 1973), 83-97.

}, month = {1973}, pages = {95-112}, publisher = {Walker}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia of poverty.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {George R[aymond] R[ichard] Martin (b. 1948)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007)} } @booklet {2586, title = {"Small War"}, howpublished = {Saving Worlds: A Collection of Original Science Fiction Stories}, year = {1973}, note = {

Book repub. as\ The Wounded Planet\ (New York: Bantam Books, 1974), 61-67.

}, month = {1973}, pages = {61-67}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Ecological dystopia.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Katherine [Anne] MacLean (1925-2019)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007) and Virginia Kidd (1921-2003)} } @booklet {2582, title = {"The Undercity"}, howpublished = {Future City}, year = {1973}, note = {

Book rpt. (New York: Pocket Books, 1974), 67-81; and story 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), 218-30; and in Criminal Justice Through Science Fiction. Ed. Joseph D. Olander and Martin Harry Greenberg (New York: New Viewpoints, 1977), 4-15, with an editors\’ note on 3-4..

}, month = {1973}, pages = {81-95}, publisher = {Trident}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Crime in a eutopian city of the future told from the point of view of a professional criminal. Most things like gambling, drugs, and sex that had financed the underworld in the past are now legal and even murder has been replaced by the \"code duello\". But there are still many opportunities for the creative professional.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Dean R[ay] Koontz (b. 1945)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007)} } @booklet {2569, title = {Up-Wingers}, year = {1973}, month = {1973}, publisher = {The John Day Co}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Detailed eutopia presented as optimistic prediction. Up-wing is the optimistic contract of right and left wing. The eutopia stresses a mobile, communal life with the abolition of possessiveness. The author was born in Iran, the son of an Iranian diplomat, and lived in many countries. He changed his name to FM-2030 and at his death he was frozen with the intent of later being brought back to life. See also 1974 Esfandiary and his Optimism One: The Emerging Radicalism. New York: W.W. Norton, 1970.

}, keywords = {Iranian author, Male author, US author}, author = {F[ereidoun] M. Esfandiary (1930-2000) and [Rev. Dr.] [Joseph Denis] [Jackson] (1929-2008)} } @booklet {2603, title = {"The Weariest River"}, howpublished = {Future City}, year = {1973}, note = {

Rpt. (New York: Pocket Book, 1974), 94-134; and in his\ Caution! Inflammable!\ (New York: Bantam Books, 1976), 230-70.

}, month = {1973}, pages = {108-48}, publisher = {Trident Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia of immortality, which is for sale from the Company. Immortality had produced poverty and intense conflict between old and young. Sexually the young desire the old and vice versa. At an undefined point the old are placed in \&$\#$39;kraals\&$\#$39; where they are essentially entombed but unable to die. The story is told from the viewpoint of the inventor of immortality, who stresses the guilt he feels.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Thomas N[icholas] Scortia (1926-86)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007)} } @booklet {2545, title = {"Windmill"}, howpublished = {Saving Worlds: A Collection of Original Science Fiction Stories}, year = {1973}, note = {

Book rpt. as\ The Wounded Planet\ (New York: Bantam Books, 1974), 149-70.

}, month = {1973}, pages = {149-71}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Ecological dystopia in a post-disaster society. Complex control on the use of resources.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Poul [William] Anderson (1926-2001)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007) and Virginia Kidd (1921-2003)} } @booklet {2584, title = {"The World as Will and Wallpaper"}, howpublished = {Future City}, year = {1973}, note = {

Book rpt. (New York: Pocket Books, 1974), 28-43; story rpt. in\ The Best Science Fiction of the Year $\#$3. Ed. Terry Carr (New York: Ballantine Books, 1974), 27-43; and in The Best of R. A. Lafferty. Ed. Jonathan Strahan (London: Gollancz, 2019), 356-74, with an Introduction by Samuel R[ay] Delany (353-55). Rpt. New York: Tor, 2021.

}, month = {1973}, pages = {28-43}, publisher = {Trident}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopian satire referring to William Morris (1834-96), whose name is used for the protagonist. A city encompasses the world, which is built above land and oceans. The one area of trees in the city is considered huge in that it covers two blocks. The story follows a man who wants to explore the world and his trip reveals that most people are illiterate, communicate poorly, and have very limited lives, but that there is an elite who created the city to keep the majority of the people content and controlled.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {9781473213449 978-1250778536}, author = {R[aphael] A[loysius] Lafferty (1914-2002)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007)} } @booklet {10539, title = {"Al"}, howpublished = {Orbit 10: An Anthology of New Science Fiction Stories}, volume = {10}, year = {1972}, note = {

Rpt. in Best Stories from Orbit 1-10. Ed. Damon Knight (New York: Berkley Publishing Co., 1975), 350-59; and in her Joy in Our Cause: Short Stories (New York: Harper \& Row, 1970), 143-54.\ 

}, month = {1972}, pages = {71-81}, publisher = {G. P. Putnam{\textquoteright}s Sons}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The story tells of a man who survives a plane crash in an isolated valley that seems to be a eutopia of artists and his experiences there. Told both from the point of view of the man and some of the inhabitants.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {[Agnes] Carol[lyn] [Fries] Emshwiller (1921-2019) and Damon [Francis] Knight (1922-2002)} } @booklet {2473, title = {At the Seventh Level}, year = {1972}, month = {1972}, publisher = {DAW Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Development of 1969 Elgin. \"For the Sake of Grace,\" which is reprinted here (7-31). In the patriarchal society one woman has risen to the top level, where she is constantly under attack.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Suzette Haden Elgin (1936-2015)} } @booklet {2514, title = {"The Big Space Fuck"}, howpublished = {Again, Dangerous Visions: 46 Original Stories}, year = {1972}, note = {

Rpt. in Cybersex. Ed. Richard Glyn Jones (New York: Carroll \& Graf, 1996), 68-74; in his Novels \& Stories, 1963-1973. Ed. Sidney Offit (New York: Library of America, 2011), 773-78 with a Note on the Text (835) and\ \“Notes\” on 850; and in his Complete Stories. Ed. Jerome Klinkowitz \& Dan Wakefield (New York: Seven Stories Press, 2017), 895-99.\ .\ 

}, month = {1972}, pages = {267-72 with an "Introduction" (262-67) by Ellison and an "Afterword" (272) by Vonnegut.}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Satirical dystopia primarily concerned with overpopulation and pollution.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Kurt Vonnegut Jr. (1922-2007)}, editor = {Harlan [Jay] Ellison (1934-2018)} } @booklet {2539, title = {"Caught in the Organ Draft"}, howpublished = {and walk now gently through the fire and other science fiction stories}, year = {1972}, note = {

[Science Fiction Book Club ed.] (Philadelphia, PA: Chilton Books Co., 1972), 123-36. Rpt. in The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg. Volume Three: Something Wild is Loose: 1969-72 (Burton, MI: Subterranean Press, 2008), 368-80 with an author\’s note on 367; and in Brave New Worlds. Ed. John Joseph Adams (San Francisco, CA: Night Shade Books, 2011), 375-84; 2nd ed. as Brave New Worlds: Dystopian Stories. Ed. John Joseph Adams (San Francisco, CA: Night Shade Books, 2012), 375-84.\ 

}, month = {1972}, pages = {127-41}, publisher = {Chilton Books Co.}, address = {Philadelphia, PA}, abstract = {

Transplant dystopia in which young, fit people are drafted (\"the organ draft\") to provide an organ to keep the elderly alive. This can be any organ and may result in death; if not, the person then becomes eligible to receive organs from others for as long as they live.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Robert Silverberg (b. 1935)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007)} } @booklet {2506, title = {"Ching Witch!"}, howpublished = {Again, Dangerous Visions: 46 Original Stories}, year = {1972}, month = {1972}, pages = {10-26 with an "Introduction" (6-10) by Ellison and an "Afterword" (26-27) by Rocklin}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which Earth is the only planet left where there are wars, and it is destroyed. The story is about the lone survivor who travels to the planet Zephyrus, which appears to be dominated by teenagers, where he represents himself as a representative from Earth and appeals to the teenagers with the music and dance fads of Earth.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Ross Louis] [Rocklin] (1913-88)}, editor = {Harlan [Jay] Ellison (1934-2018)} } @booklet {2537, title = {"Elouise and the Doctors of the Planet Pergamon"}, howpublished = {Again, Dangerous Visions: 46 Original Stories}, year = {1972}, note = {

Rpt. in her\ The Power of Time\ (London: Chatto \& Windus/The Hogarth Press, 1985), 125-41.

}, month = {1972}, pages = {488-500 with an "Introduction" (485-87) by Ellison and an "Afterword" (500-01) by Saxton}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Dystopia. A society in which equality is achieved by making everyone ill.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Josephine [Mary Howard] Saxton (b. 1935)}, editor = {Harlan [Jay] Ellison (1934-2018)} } @booklet {2516, title = {"The Funeral"}, howpublished = {Again, Dangerous Visions: 46 Original Stories}, year = {1972}, note = {

Rpt. in her The Infinity Box: A collection of speculative fiction (New York: Harper \& Row, 1975), 288-318; in More Women of Wonder: Science Fiction Novelettes By Women About Women. Ed. Pamela Sargent (New York: Vintage, 1976), 175-213; in In the Field of Fire. Ed. Jeanne Van Buren Dann and Jack Dann (New York: Tor, 1987), 157-68 with an editors\’ note on 158; in Women of Wonder: The Classic Years. Science Fiction by Women from the 1940s to the 1970s. Ed. Pamela Sargent (San Diego, CA: Harcourt Brace, 1995), 263-87; in Brave New Worlds. Ed. John Joseph Adams (San Francisco, CA: Night Shade Books, 2011), 47-67; 2nd ed. ed. John Joseph Adams (San Francisco, CA: Night Shade Books, 2012), 47-67; and in The Future is Female! More Classic Science Fiction by Women Volume 2: The 1970s. Ed. Lisa Yaszek (New York: Library of America, 2023), 23-58, with a biographical note on 474-476 and a note on the text on 479-481.

}, month = {1972}, pages = {218-41 with an "Introduction" (217) by Ellison and an "Afterword" (241-42) by Wilhelm.}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Post catastrophe dystopia with society divided into castes. The center of power is the schools and teachers hold great authority, and children are under the complete control of the teachers. The old resent the young and had most of them killed three times in the past.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Kate [Katie Gertrude Meredith] Wilhelm (1928-2018)}, editor = {Harlan [Jay] Ellison (1934-2018)} } @booklet {2525, title = {"The Gift of Nothing"}, howpublished = {and walk now gently through the fire and other science fiction stories}, year = {1972}, note = {

[Science Fiction Book Club ed.] (Philadelphia, PA: Chilton Books Co., 1972), 57-95.

}, month = {1972}, pages = {59-99}, publisher = {Chilton Books Co.}, address = {Philadelphia, PA}, abstract = {

Eutopia. A planet is being opened up to colonization, which will destroy the existing society, which is presented as a eutopia paralleling those of traditional Native American Indians.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Joan C[arol Hunter] Holly (1932-82)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007)} } @booklet {2486, title = {"Moth Race"}, howpublished = {Again, Dangerous Visions: 46 Original Stories}, year = {1972}, month = {1972}, pages = {538-48 with an "Introduction" (538-39) by Ellison and an "Afterword" (548-49) by Hill}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Overpopulation dystopia where people are given pills to keep them under control and food comes in pills. People could live long lives and were fed, clothed, housed, and ensured of regular sex but only a few were permitted to have children. In the annual race people self-selected to race in cars over a course on which gates would spring up and, if they hit one, they died in the wreck. Only one man had ever survived, and his reward was the best of everything.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Richard Hill}, editor = {Harlan [Jay] Ellison (1934-2018)} } @booklet {2472, title = {Nowhere On Earth}, year = {1972}, month = {1972}, publisher = {Robert Hale}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Overpopulation dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, Scottish author}, author = {Michael [Aiken] Elder (1931-2004)} } @booklet {2487, title = {"Soundless Evening"}, howpublished = {Again, Dangerous Visions: 46 Original Stories}, year = {1972}, note = {

Rpt. in\ Earth In Transit: Science Fiction and Contemporary Problems. Ed. Sheila Schwartz (New York: Dell, 1976), 152-55.

}, month = {1972}, pages = {423-26 with an "Introduction" (420-22) by Ellison and an "Afterword" (426) by Hoffman}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Overpopulation dystopia in which each person could have one child and any children beyond that were killed at age five.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {[Shirley Bell] Hoffman (1932-2007)}, editor = {Harlan [Jay] Ellison (1934-2018)} } @booklet {2533, title = {"Stoned Counsel"}, howpublished = {Again, Dangerous Visions: 46 Original Stories}, year = {1972}, month = {1972}, pages = {294-306 with an "Introduction" (293-94) by Ellison and an "Afterword" (307-08) by Ramsey}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Satire on the drug culture and the legal profession in which a variety of drugs are used in court by attorneys.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Ben Neal] [Ramsey] (1921-77)}, editor = {Harlan [Jay] Ellison (1934-2018)} } @booklet {2523, title = {This Star Shall Abide}, year = {1972}, note = {

U.K. ed. as\ Heritage of the Star.\ London: Victor Gollancz, 1973.\ Rev. in Children of the Star (Atlanta, GA: Meisha Merlin, 2000), 15-215 together with 1973 and 1981 Engdahl, with an \“Afterword\” to the Collection (719-21) and \“Sylvia Engdahl Biography\” ([723-24]).\ 

}, month = {1972}, publisher = {Atheneum}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult highly structured, religious, authoritarian dystopia which turns out to be better than it initially seems. The society is led by Scholars, who keep knowledge to themselves, in the middle are the Technicians, who keep the machines running that make the planet inhabitable, and at the bottom are the villagers, who work the land. See also 1973 and 1981 Engdahl.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Sylvia [Louise] Engdahl (b. 1933)} } @booklet {2508, title = {"When It Changed"}, howpublished = {Again, Dangerous Visions: 46 Original Stories}, year = {1972}, note = {

Rpt. in her The Zanzibar Cat ([Sauk City, WI]: Arkham House, 1983), 3-11; in The New Women of Wonder: Recent Science Fiction Stories By Women About Women. Ed. Pamela Sargent (New York: Vintage, 1977), 227-39; in Kindred Spirits: An Anthology of Gay and Lesbian Science Fiction Stories. Ed. Jeffrey M. Elliot (Boston, MA: Alyson Publications, 1984), 45-53; in The Best of the Nebulas (New York: Tor/Tom Doherty Associates, 1989), 204-10, with an \“Author\’s Foreword\” on 203; in Feminist Philosophy and Science Fiction: Utopias and Dystopias. Ed. Judith A. Little (Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books, 2007), 333-40; in The Wesleyan Anthology of Science Fiction. Ed. Arthur B. Evans, Istvan Csicsery-Ronay, Jr., Joan Gordon, Veronica Hollinger, Rob Latham, and Carol McGuirk (Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 2010), 507-15 with an editors\’ note on 507-08; in Sisters of the Revolution: A Feminist Speculative Fiction Anthology. Ed. Ann VanderMeer and Jeff VanderMeer (Oakland, CA: PM Press, 2015), 194-202; in The Big Book of Science Fiction: The Ultimate Collection. Ed. Ann and Jeff VanderMeer (New York: Vintage Crime/Black Lizard Vintage Books, 2016), 603-07 with an editors\’ note on 602; in The Future is Female! More Classic Science Fiction by Women Volume 2: The 1970s. Ed. Lisa Yaszek (New York: The Library of America, 2023), 59-69, with a biographical note on 492-493, and notes on the text on 481-483; and in Russ, Novels and Stories. Ed. Nicole Rudick (New York: The Library of America, 2023), 621-629, with a Chronology on 681-694 that includes chronologically references to Russ\’s publications, notes on the text on 697, and notes on 708-710.

}, month = {1972}, pages = {253-60 with an "Introduction" (248-52) by Ellison and an "Afterword" (260-62) by Russ.}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Eutopia without men, who had all died in a plague, and the clash that occurs when men from Earth arrive. The eutopia is called Whileaway, the name of the eutopia in 1975 Russ. The story is told from the point-of-view of one of two happily married women with three children.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Joanna [Ruth] Russ (1937-2011)}, editor = {Harlan [Jay] Ellison (1934-2018)} } @booklet {2490, title = {"With the Bentfin Boomer Boys on Little Old New Alabama"}, howpublished = {Again, Dangerous Visions: 46 Original Stories}, year = {1972}, note = {

Rev. in his\ Space War Blues. New York: Dell, 1978. Rpt. Boston, MA: G.K. Hall, 1980 with an \"Introduction\" by James R. Frenkel (v-xi). The volume also includes an \"Introduction: Sailing the Dark With the Bentfin Bappa Zappa Kid\" by Ellison (9-26), a \"Preface: And I Awoke--Was This Some Kind of Joke\" by Lupoff (27-33) and revised versions of his related stories \"Our Own little Mardi Grass.\"\ Heavy Metal\ (August 1977): 58-61, 96; \"After the Dreamtime.\"\ New Dimensions IV. Ed. Robert Silverberg (New York: New American Library, 1974), 9-39; \"Sail the Tide of Mourning.\"\ New Dimensions 5. Ed. Robert Silverberg (New York: Harper \& Row, 1975), 214-34; and \"The Bentfin Boomer Girl Comes Through.\"\ Amazing Stories\ 50.4 (March 1977): 28-46.

}, month = {1972}, pages = {676-765 with an "Introduction" (671-75) by Ellison and "Afterword" (765-67) by Lupoff.}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Dystopia with Earth\&$\#$39;s past racial conflict now taking place in space.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Richard A[llen] Lupoff (1935-2020)}, editor = {Harlan [Jay] Ellison (1934-2018)} } @booklet {2488, title = {"The Word for World is Forest"}, howpublished = {Again, Dangerous Visions: 46 Original Stories}, year = {1972}, note = {

. Published separately New York: Berkley, 1976. Rpt. London: Gollancz, 1977, with an \“Author\’s Introduction\" (5-10); London: Gollancz, 2014, with an \“Introduction\” by Ken MacLeod (1-3) and the \“Author\’s Introduction\” (5-10); and in Hainish Novels \& Stories Volume Two. The World for Word Is Forest Stories Five Ways to Forgiveness The Telling. Ed. Brian Attebery (New York: Library of America, 2017), 1-104 with a \“Note on the Text\” (780), \“Notes (783-84), and \“Introduction to The Word for World Is Forest\” from the 1977 Gollancz edition (753-57).\ 

}, month = {1972}, pages = {32-117 with an "Introduction" (28-31) by Ellison and an "Afterword" (117-18) by Le Guin}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Human colonial dystopia versus indigenous eutopia. Exploitative colonization that treats the indigenous inhabitants as if they were animals, enslaving them, raping them, and destroying their way of life to ship timber back to Earth, which had been denuded of it. The indigenous inhabitants have a very complex, non-technological life deeply in tune with their planet. No government or overall authority with significant cultural difference among the communities. The women in each community, and the especially the headwoman, and the practical organizers of their communities\’ activities. Some of the men were active dreamers in touch with a different reality.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Ursula K[roeber] Le Guin (1929-2018)}, editor = {Harlan [Jay] Ellison (1934-2018)} } @booklet {10345, title = {The Far Side of Evil}, year = {1971}, note = {

Rpt. Illus. Richard Cuffari. New York: Collier, 1989; and Illus. Jody Hewgill. New York: Walker, 2003, with an \“Afterword\” by the author (321-24). U.K. ed. London: Gollancz, 1975.\ 

}, month = {1971}, publisher = {Athenaeum}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult novel in which a planet has reached the stage in which they are likely to annihilate itself with nuclear weapons. The same protagonist as and called a sequel to 1970 in Engdahl, although in her \“Afterword\” to the 2003 edition, the author says this work is aimed at an older audience.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Sylvia [Louise] Engdahl (b. 1933)} } @booklet {2386, title = {Furthest}, year = {1971}, month = {1971}, publisher = {Ace Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia with women in an inferior position.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Suzette Haden Elgin (1936-2015)} } @booklet {2387, title = {"Silent in Gehenna"}, howpublished = {The Many Worlds of Science Fiction}, year = {1971}, note = {

Rpt. in his\ Approaching Ellison: Road Signs on the Treadmill Toward Tomorrow. Eleven Uncollected Stories\ (New York: Walker, 1974), 97-114.

}, month = {1971}, pages = {196-217}, publisher = {E. P. Dutton}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia of patriotism with the universities run by the military.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Harlan [Jay] Ellison (1934-2018)}, editor = {Ben[jamin William] Bova (1932-2020)} } @booklet {2431, title = {"Wednesday, November 15, 1967"}, howpublished = {The Ruins of Earth: An Anthology of Stories of the Immediate Future}, year = {1971}, month = {1971}, pages = {123-36}, publisher = {G. P. Putnam{\textquoteright}s Sons}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Post-catastrophe dystopia as seen by the last man.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Geo[rge] Alec Effinger (1947-2002)}, editor = {Thomas M[ichael] Disch (1940-2008)} } @booklet {2290, title = {The Communipaths}, year = {1970}, note = {

Ace Double bound with 1970\ Trimble.

}, month = {1970}, publisher = {Ace Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia that uses those with telepathic ability, known as Communipaths, to send information throughout the galaxy. They are raised them in a cr{\`e}che and are assigns them to a particular location where they live their brief lives communicating. This changes with the birth of a particularly powerful telepath.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Suzette Haden Elgin (1936-2015)} } @booklet {10441, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Dear Aunt Annie{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Fantastic}, volume = {19-4}, year = {1970}, note = {

Rpt. in Second Creation: Selected Stories Volume One ([Vancleave, MS]: Ramble House, 2016), 11-38.\ 

}, month = {April 1970}, pages = {78-97}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future after the Last War in which the United States killed off most of the population of the rest of the world. As a result, the entire culture came to center eliminating violence control by a robot agony aunt and centers where everyone is required, at least once every three months, to take an anti-violence pill. In the story, people are becoming immune.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Gordon [Stewart] Eklund (b. 1945)} } @booklet {2341, title = {Dragon Feast}, year = {1970}, month = {1970}, publisher = {Belmont Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

United States occupied by Chinussian alliance. Dystopia but mostly about the counter-revolution.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {John Elliott} } @booklet {10344, title = {Enchantress of the Stars}, year = {1970}, note = {

Rpt. illus. Leo and Diane Dillon. New York, Walker, 2001, with a \“Foreword to the 2001 Edition\” by Lois Lowry (vi-xi) and an \“Afterword to the 2001 Edition\” by the author (287-88).\ 

}, month = {1970}, publisher = {Athenaeum}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult novel about a colonization scheme that has no concern about the welfare of the inhabitants. The same protagonist as in 1971 Engdahl.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Sylvia [Louise] Engdahl (b. 1933)} } @booklet {2289, title = {Paradise Is Not Enough}, year = {1970}, month = {1970}, publisher = {Robert Hale}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia of mechanical perfection in which robots do everything except act in the pervasive Tri-V shows and are planning to take over those jobs also.

}, keywords = {Male author, Scottish author}, author = {Michael [Aiken] Elder (1931-2004)} } @booklet {2340, title = {A Piece of Resistance}, year = {1970}, note = {

Rpt. as\ Never Surrender. Sutton, Surrey, Eng.: Severn House, 2004.

}, month = {1970}, publisher = {Hodder and Stoughton}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia of a Communist Britain. First volume of a trilogy. The other volumes are Last Post of a Partisan. London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1971; and The Judas Mandate. London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1972. Rpt. as The Last Refuge. London: Severn House, 2006 with a foreword by the author. U.S. ed. as The Judas Mandate. New York: Coward, McCann \& Geoghagan, 1972.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Clive [Frederick William] Egleton (1927-2006)} } @booklet {9433, title = {The Rivet in Grandfathers Neck}, year = {1970}, month = {1970}, publisher = {Modern Literary Editions Publishing Co./Curtis Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Flawed utopia on a planet called New Australia. The planet was initially settled by convicts, sent to the new planet as subversives to the established order, and their convict status appears to be the only connection to Australia. The planet chooses to cut itself off completely from Earth and develops society based on extremely long life with the oldest having the most power. The novel is about a man who discovers the underside of the utopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Bruce Elliott (1914-73)} } @booklet {10520, title = {"Traffic Problem"}, howpublished = {Galaxy Science Fiction Magazine }, volume = {30.6}, year = {1970}, note = {

Rpt. The City 2000 A.D.: Urban Life Through Science Fiction. Ed. Ralph Clem, Martin Harry Greenberg, and Joseph Olander (Greenwich, CT: Fawcett Crest, 1976), 243-52; and in Car Sinister. Ed. Robert Silverberg, Martin Harry Greenberg, and Joseph Olander (New York: Avon Books, 1979), 52-61.\ 

}, month = {October-November 1970}, pages = {79-87}, abstract = {

The dystopia brought about by traffic congestion.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {0016-4003 }, author = {William [J.] Earls} } @booklet {2251, title = {"Along the Scenic Route"}, howpublished = {Deathbird Stories}, year = {1969}, note = {

Book rpt. as the\ Collector\&$\#$39;s Edition. Norwalk, CT: The Easton Press, 1990 illus. Jill Bauman and with an \"Introduction\" (v-viii) by Terry Dowling with a textual note that all stories have been reviewed by Ellison for needed corrections.\ Story rpt. in his The Beast Who Shouted Love at the Heart of the World (New York: Avon, 1969), 19-28;\ in Car Sinister. Ed. Robert Silverberg, Martin Harry Greenberg, and Joseph Olander (New York: Avon Books, 1979), 243-53;\ and in\ The Essential Ellison: A 35-Year Retrospective. Ed. Terry Dowling with Richard Delap and Gil Lamont (Omaha, NB: Nemo Press, 1987), 439-47. Originally published as \"Dogfight on 101\" in\ Adam\ (August 1969) and\ Amazing Stories\ 43.3 (September 1969): 6-14. The current title is Ellison\&$\#$39;s preference.

}, month = {1969/1983}, pages = {22-32}, publisher = {Bluejay Books}, address = {[New York]}, abstract = {

Action tale that suggests a macho, dystopian society.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Harlan [Jay] Ellison (1934-2018)} } @booklet {2210, title = {"For the Sake of Grace"}, howpublished = {The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction }, volume = {36.5 }, year = {1969}, note = {

Rpt. in\ World\&$\#$39;s Best Science Fiction 1970. Ed. Donald A. Wollheim and Terry Carr (New York: Ace Books, 1970), 105-27; in her\ At the Seventh Level\ (New York: DAW Books, 1972), 7-31; and in\ Feminist Philosophy and Science Fiction: Utopias and Dystopias. Ed. Judith A. Little (Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books, 2007), 215-36.

}, month = {May 1969}, pages = {77-97}, abstract = {

Patriarchal dystopia. Women considered inferior and adult males dominate all women. Resistant women are medicated. Occupation by competitive exam with poetry the occupation with the highest status. See also 1972 Elgin and 1978 Russ.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {00024-984X }, author = {Suzette Haden Elgin (1936-2015)} } @booklet {9951, title = {"Aye, and Gomorrah"}, howpublished = {Dangerous Visions: 33 Original Stories}, year = {1967}, note = {

Rpt. in his Driftglass. Ten Tales of Speculative Fiction (New York: New American Library, 1971), 111-20. Book rpt. without the subtitle. New York: Gregg Press, 1977.\ Book Club edition (Garden City, NY: Nelson Doubleday, 1971), 101-11; in\ The Best of the Nebulas\ (New York: Tor/Tom Doherty Associates, 1989), 143-50, with an \“Author\’s Foreword\” on 142; in his Driftglass/Starshards (London: Grafton, 1993), 118-30; and in his Aye and Gomorrah. Stories (New York: Vintage Books, 2003), 91-101.

}, month = {1967}, pages = {534-44 with an {\textquotedblleft}Introduction{\textquotedblright} (532-34) by Ellison and an {\textquotedblleft}Afterword{\textquotedblright} (544) by Delany}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future in which spacers must be neutered and focuses on how this affects both the spacers and the population, some of whom are sexually attracted to them.\ 

}, keywords = {African American author, Male author}, author = {Samuel R[ay] Delany (b. 1942)}, editor = {Harlan [Jay] Ellison (1934-2018)} } @booklet {10044, title = {"Ersatz"}, howpublished = {396-413 with an {\textquotedblleft}Introduction{\textquotedblright} (396-99) by Ellison and an {\textquotedblleft}Afterword{\textquotedblright} (402-03) by the Slesar}, year = {1967}, month = {1967}, pages = {396-413 with an {\textquotedblleft}Introduction{\textquotedblright} (396-99) by Ellison and an {\textquotedblleft}Afterword{\textquotedblright} (402-03) by the Slesar}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

A brief future war dystopia in which most civilians have been killed and most things, such as food, are now made from fake materials.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Henry Slesar (1927-2002)}, editor = {Harlan [Jay] Ellison (1934-2018)} } @booklet {2057, title = {"Eutopia"}, howpublished = {Dangerous Visions: 33 Original Stories}, year = {1967}, note = {

Rpt. in his\ Past Times\ (New York: Tor, 1996), 112-39, with the \"Afterword\" (139-41); in\ The Best Alternate History Stories of the 20th Century. Ed. Harry Turtledove with Martin H. Greenberg (New York: Ballantine Books, 2001), 251-68; and in\ The Collected Short Stories of Poul Anderson. Volume 4 Admiralty. Ed. Rick Katze (Framingham, MA: The NESFA Press, 2011), 334-47 with the \"Afterword\" entitled \"Eutopia Afterword\" (348-49).

}, month = {1967}, pages = {274-91 with an "Introduction" (272-74) by Ellison and an "Afterword" (291-92) by Anderson}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Flawed utopia modeled on classical Athens complete with accepted homosexuality. But the utopia has become so planned and ordered as to become dull. The story only reveals this at the end and is concerned with a member of Eutopia visiting another country where he is liable to being killed for his homosexuality.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Poul [William] Anderson (1926-2001)}, editor = {Harlan [Jay] Ellison (1934-2018)} } @booklet {2092, title = {"The Happy Breed"}, howpublished = {Dangerous Visions: 33 Original Stories}, year = {1967}, month = {1967}, pages = {414-31 with an "Introduction" (414-15) by Ellison and an "Afterword" (431-32) by Sladek}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a world without pain. The Therapeutic Environment Machines initially provide therapy, thus putting all therapists out of work, but gradually they come to control all aspects of life. They provided complete medical care, thus putting all doctors out of work. The only jobs were \“Happiness Jobs--make-work invented by the Machines.\” The Machines then regress everybody back to childhood. U.S. author who lived in the U.K. for about twenty years from 1966.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author, US author}, author = {John T[homas] Sladek (1937-2000)}, editor = {Harlan [Jay] Ellison (1934-2018)} } @booklet {2113, title = {"If All Men Were Brothers, Would You Let One Marry Your Sister?"}, howpublished = {Dangerous Visions: 33 Original Stories}, year = {1967}, note = {

Rpt. in his\ Case and the Dreamer\ (Garden City, NY: Nelson Doubleday, 1974), 52-102; and in\ The Nail and the Oracle. Volume XI. The Complete Stories of Theodore Sturgeon. Ed. Paul Williams (Berkeley, CA: North Atlantic Books, 2007), 137-80.

}, month = {1967}, pages = {346-86 with an "Introduction" (344-46) by Ellison and "Afterword" (386-89) by Sturgeon}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Eutopia based on incest, which is the one thing that people on other planets find unacceptable. See the note at 1949 Sturgeon.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Theodore Sturgeon (1918-1985)}, editor = {Harlan [Jay] Ellison (1934-2018)} } @booklet {2100, title = {Paradise Island}, year = {1967}, month = {1967}, publisher = {Amherst Press}, address = {Amherst, WI}, abstract = {

Eutopia. An airplane crashes on an unknown island in the Pacific, which the survivors conclude is the lost Paradise. Elements of a religious eutopia and elements of a South Seas island eutopia with food available with minimal labor and sexual freedom.

}, author = {Lester C. Evans} } @booklet {2068, title = {"Riders of the Purple Wage or the Great Gavage"}, howpublished = {Dangerous Visions: 33 Original Stories}, year = {1967}, note = {

Rpt. in his\ The Purple Book\ (New York: Tom Doherty \& Associates 1982), 29-143; in\ The Classic Philip Jos{\'e} Farmer 1964-1973\ (New York: Crown, 1984), 30-103; and in\ The Philip Jos{\'e} Farmer Centennial Collection. Ed. Michael Croteau (Np: Meteor House, 2018), 363-437.\ \ 

}, month = {1967}, pages = {33-101 with an "Introduction" (30-32) by Ellison and an "Afterword" (101-04) by Farmer.}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Background includes a future authoritarian and corrupt dystopia. Most people are apparently well off but without much focus or depth.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Philip Jos{\'e} Farmer (1918-2009)}, editor = {Harlan [Jay] Ellison (1934-2018)} } @booklet {2009, title = {"{\textquoteright}Repent, Harlequin!{\textquoteright} Said the Ticktockman"}, howpublished = {Galaxy Magazine}, volume = {24.2}, year = {1965}, note = {

Rpt. in his\ Alone Against Tomorrow: Stories of Alienation in Speculative Fiction\ (New York: Macmillan, 1971), 130-44 [The first eight stories in\ Alone Against Tomorrow, including this story, rpt. as\ All the Sounds of Fear\ (London: Panther, 1973), 129-43]; in\ Above the Human Landscape. Ed. Willis E. McNelly and Leon E. Stover (Pacific Palisades, CA: Goodyear Publ. Co., 1972), 87-96; in\ Science Fiction: The Future. Ed. Dick Allen. 2nd ed. (New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1983), 199-208; in The Best of the Nebulas (New York: Tor/Tom Doherty Associates, 1989), 63-71, with an \“Author\’s Foreword\” on 62;\ in\ Brave New Worlds. Ed. John Joseph Adams (San Francisco, CA: Night Shade Books, 2011), 257-661; 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), 492-99 with an editors\’ note on 491.\ Edition as \“Repent, Harlequin!\” Said the Ticktockman. The Classic Story by Harlen Ellison illustrated by Rick Berry. Designed by Arnie Farmer. Grass Valley, CA: Underwood Books, 1997\ with a \“Foreword Stealing Tomorrow\” continued as an \“Afterword Stealing Tomorrow\” by Ellison (unpaged).

}, month = {December 1965}, pages = {135-45}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which everyone is controlled by the clock.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {0016-4003 }, author = {Harlan [Jay] Ellison (1934-2018)} } @booklet {1883, title = {"The Country of the Strong"}, howpublished = {Seventeen}, year = {1962}, note = {

Rpt. in\ New Writings in S-F 4. Ed. [Edward] John Carnell (London: Dennis Dobson, 1965), 101-10 with a brief editor\&$\#$39;s note on 99.

}, month = {January 1962}, pages = {104-05, 157}, abstract = {

Eugenic dystopia in which the unfit are publicly murdered by SS (Selectival Survival) operatives.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Dennis [William] Etchison (1943-2019)} } @booklet {1799, title = {"Puritan Planet"}, howpublished = {Original Science Fiction Stories}, volume = { 10.6 }, year = {1960}, note = {

Rpt. in\ The Collected Stories of Carol Emshwiller Vol. 1\ (New York: Nonstop Press, 2011), 115-21.

}, month = {January 1960}, pages = {37-47}, abstract = {

Religious dystopia about a planet called Brotherhood that would allow a human to die but not a cat.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {[Agnes] Carol[lyn] [Fries] Emshwiller (1921-2019)} } @booklet {1757, title = {"Day at the Beach"}, howpublished = {The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction}, volume = { 17.2 (99)}, year = {1959}, note = {

Rpt. in SF: The Best of the Best. Ed. Judith Merril\ (New York: Delacourt, 1967), 274-84. U.K. ed. (London: Rupert Hart-Davis, 1968), 274-84; in Beyond Armageddon: Twenty-One Sermons to the Dead. Walter M. Miller, Jr. and Martin H[arry] Greenberg (New York: Donald I. Fine, 1985), 97-107; and in The Collected Stories of Carol Emshwiller Vol. 1 (New York: Nonstop Press, 2011), 108-14.\ 

}, month = {August 1959}, pages = {35-43}, abstract = {

Post-nuclear war dystopia presented through the eyes of a surviving housewife.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {00024-984X }, author = {[Agnes] Carol[lyn] [Fries] Emshwiller (1921-2019)} } @booklet {1738, title = {"Eyes of Dust"}, howpublished = {Rogue Magazine}, volume = { 4.9 }, year = {1959}, note = {

Rpt. in I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream. Stories (New York: Pyramid Books, 1967), 65-73, with an author\’s note on 64; and\ in his\ Alone Against Tomorrow: Stories of Alienation in Speculative Fiction\ (New York: Macmillan, 1971), 187-206.

}, month = {December 1959}, pages = {30-32, 76}, abstract = {

Flawed utopia that expects everyone to be physically perfect. A woman with a mole on her face and a blind man are shunned, marry, and give birth to a child who has the \"eyes of dust\", known only as Person, who they keep hidden. When Person is discovered, he is killed.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Harlan [Jay] Ellison (1934-2018)} } @booklet {1666, title = {Heaven Knows Where. A Novel}, year = {1957}, month = {1957}, publisher = {Secker \& Warburg}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Humorous eutopia set on a South Seas island where the people are \"born anarchists\".

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {D[ennis] J[oseph] Enright (1920-2002)} } @booklet {9782, title = {"Sandra"}, howpublished = {The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction}, volume = {13.4 (77) }, year = {1957}, note = {

Rpt.in A Treasury of Great Science Fiction. 2 vols. Ed. Anthony Boucher (Garden City, NY: Doubleday \& Co., 1959), 1: 370-79.

}, month = {October 1957}, pages = {71-82}, abstract = {

Slavery in an alternative history United States in which slaves are available in department stores and your local corner store. The male protagonist buys a female slave, guaranteed good at housework and copulation.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {00024-984X }, author = {George P[aul] Elliott (1918-80)} } @booklet {1665, title = {"World of Women"}, howpublished = {Fantastic}, volume = { 6.1}, year = {1957}, month = {February 1957}, pages = {30-54}, abstract = {

Dystopia describing a world where all men had been eliminated except for a few kept for breeding purposes on a neighboring planet. One man visits in disguise to find the reason, which turns out to be an insane leader, and once she is removed, normal relations will re-emerge.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Harlan [Jay] Ellison (1934-2018)} } @booklet {1560, title = {Reprieve from Paradise}, year = {1955}, month = {1955}, publisher = {Gnome}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia set after an atomic war. Extreme overpopulation is produced by an ethos that encourages reproduction, which means that the entire economy is directed at producing food. The majority of the people, called Freemen, are bred for docility and low intelligence. An underground movement with a hidden city at the South Pole aims to re-establish intelligence, and the people of the city are intelligent, revive science and human community, and, at the end of the novel, are in a position to create a better future for the entire world.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author, US author}, author = {H[arry] Chandler Elliott (1909-78)} } @booklet {11146, title = {{\textquotedblleft}This Thing Called Love{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Future Science Fiction}, volume = {no. 28}, year = {1955}, month = {December 1955}, pages = {86-93}, abstract = {

In a future dominated by television, people are expected to fall in love with TV stars whose programs are designed specific to cater to them. In the story, a man wants love from his wife.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {[Agnes] Carol[lyn] [Fries] Emshwiller (1921-2019)} } @booklet {1561, title = {Utopia 1976}, year = {1955}, month = {1955}, publisher = {Rinehart \& Co}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

A detailed eutopia describing the life of 1976 which, although called a utopia, is written as a prophecy and said to be attainable in only twenty years. There is much on the current situation and change is brought about both by technology, particularly atomic energy, and changes in attitude. Birth control, which he says the Roman Catholic Church will strongly support, is essential. Much more leisure.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Morris L[eopold] Ernst (1888-1976)} } @booklet {1506, title = {Another World}, year = {1954}, month = {1954}, publisher = {Meador Pub. Co}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {

A rational, scientific, authoritarian eutopia with a world government and one language.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {James Eug{\`e}ne Even} } @booklet {1406, title = {"Category Phoenix"}, howpublished = {Galaxy Science Fiction (New York)}, volume = {4.2 }, year = {1952}, month = {May 1952}, pages = {4-44}, abstract = {

Class (category) based authoritarian dystopia. Privacy is outlawed.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {0016-4003 }, author = {[Lyle Ardetia Gifford] [Boyd] (1907-82) and [William Clouser] [Boyd] (1903-83)} } @booklet {9781, title = {"Faq{\textquoteright}"}, howpublished = {The Hudson Review}, volume = {5.1}, year = {1952}, note = {

Rpt. in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction 21.5 (126) (November 1961): 29-39.\ 

}, month = {Spring 1952}, pages = {72-82}, abstract = {

A lost race story which the protagonist discovers is intended to be the perfect society, but which he ultimately finds boring and longs for pain and sorrow.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {George P[aul] Elliott (1918-80)} } @booklet {1409, title = {"The Luckiest Man in Denv"}, howpublished = {Galaxy Science Fiction (New York)}, volume = { 4.3}, year = {1952}, note = {

Rpt. in his The Mindworm (London: Joseph, 1955), 188-202; in Nightmare Age. Ed. Frederik [George] Pohl, [Jr.] (New York: Ballantine Books, 1970), 179-93; in Cities of Wonder. Ed. Damon [Francis] Knight (New York: Macfadden-Bartell, 1967), 151-63; in The Best of C.M. Kornbluth. Ed. Frederik [George] Pohl, [Jr.] (Garden City, NY: Nelson Doubleday, 1976), 70-82; The Best of C.M. Kornbluth. Ed. Frederik [George] Pohl, [Jr.] (New York: Ballantine Books, 1977), 70-83; and in His Share of Glory: The Complete Short Science Fiction of C.M. Kornbluth. Ed. Timothy P. Szczesuil (Framingham, MA: The NESFA Press, 1997), 108-17. Merril, MoU-St, PSt

}, month = {June 1952}, pages = {147-59}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia. People live in huge high-rise buildings with their status determining how high they live. Constant war. The story focuses on intrigue in trying to move up the building.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {0016-4003 }, author = {C[yril] M[ichael] Kornbluth (1923-58)} } @booklet {1774, title = {"The NRACP"}, howpublished = {The Hudson Review}, volume = {2.3}, year = {1949}, note = {

Rpt. in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction 19.3 (September 1960): 81-110;\ and\ in Human and Other Beings. Ed. Allen De Graeff (New York: Collier, 1963), 141-72.

}, month = {Autumn 1949}, pages = {381-47}, abstract = {

Racist, authoritarian dystopia set in the U.S. in the near future with Colored Persons Reserves that are extermination camps. NRACP = National Relocation Authority: Colored Persons.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {George P[aul] Elliott (1918-80)} } @booklet {1312, title = {"The Penultimate Trump"}, howpublished = {Startling Stories (Springfield, MA)}, volume = {17.1}, year = {1948}, month = {March 1948}, pages = {104-15}, abstract = {

Eutopia that resulted from people choosing to freeze themselves for later resurrection. A key is banishment for selfishness that causes harm to others.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {R[obert] C[hester] W[ilson] Ettinger (1918-2011)} } @booklet {1270, title = {Tomorrow and Tomorrow}, year = {1947}, note = {

Rpt. London: Phoenix Press in Association with Georgian House Melbourne, 1948. \"Uncensored ed.\" with the original title\ Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow. London: Virago, 1983 with an \"Introduction\" (vii-xix) by Anne Chisholm. The Virago edition restores both the relatively few cuts made by the censor and the cuts made by the authors and publisher.\ The Garden City, NY: Dial Press, 1984 edition reprints the Virago edition.

}, month = {1947}, publisher = {Georgian House}, address = {Melbourne, VIC, Australia}, abstract = {

Dystopia set in the 24th century that uses the device of an author writing an historical novel to explore the second quarter of the twentieth century. The dystopia is a technologically advanced socialist eutopia gone wrong through over-organization.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Female author}, author = {[Flora Sydney Patricia] [Eldershaw] (1897-1956) and [Marjorie Faith] [Barnard] (1897-1987)} } @booklet {1259, title = {Epilogue}, year = {1946}, month = {1946}, publisher = {The Fortune Press}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Satire set in post-war Britain. Includes ludicrously detailed government regulation,\ e.g. permission is required to laugh.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Patrick] Beresford Egan (1905-84)} } @booklet {1260, title = {"To-morrow"}, howpublished = {Pertinent: The Monthly Magazine of Foto-Fiction-Fact (Sydney, NSW, Australia) }, volume = {4.5 }, year = {1946}, month = {April 1946}, pages = {43}, abstract = {

Brief poem describing a desolated future with nature beginning to reassert itself.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Virgil St. C Eldridge} } @booklet {6829, title = {The Devil{\textquoteright}s Altar Boy}, year = {1945}, month = {[1945]}, publisher = {Capitol Hill Press}, address = {Washington, DC}, abstract = {

Dystopian allegory in which Germany and Japan won World War II and produced a second Dark Ages.

}, author = {Erdahl, Silvert} } @booklet {1239, title = {Prelude to Peace}, year = {1945}, month = {1945}, publisher = {North American Physical Fitness Institute Bulletin 10}, address = {Cupertino, CA}, abstract = {

Eutopia. Unification under one world leader chosen by the best educators, who, with priests, are ineligible. The leader can be removed by the priests. One language, one religion. No competition. Cooperative commonwealth with government restrictions on the choice of occupation and geographic movement. Restrictions on freedom of speech and press.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {[Frederick Rand] [Rogers] (b. 1894)} } @booklet {10620, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Telepathy Is News!{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Science Fiction}, volume = {1.2}, year = {1939}, note = {

Rpt. without the illus. in\ The Watcher at the Door: The Early Kuttner Volume Two. Ed. Stephen Haffner (Royal Oaks, MI: Haffner Press, 2016), 83-105.

}, month = {June 1939}, pages = {89-102}, abstract = {

The story is set in an authoritarian dystopia when telepathy becomes possible.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Henry Kuttner (1914-58)}, editor = {Stephen Haffner} } @booklet {956, title = {Woman Alive}, year = {1935}, note = {

US ed. New York: D. Appleton, 1936. Also published as \"One Woman Alive.\"\ The Delineator\ 128.3 - 5 (March - May 1936): 4, 6, 7, 42-44, 46-47; 16-19, 21, 47-50; 24-25, 56-58, 60.

}, month = {1935}, publisher = {Hodder and Stoughton}, address = {London}, abstract = {

War and a disease it produced left only one woman alive. Drama of convincing her to marry and start again. Suggests that eutopia will be possible.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Susan Ertz (1887-1985)} } @booklet {908, title = {If I Were Dictator}, year = {1934}, month = {1934}, publisher = {Methuen}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Series of reforms including a redistribution of the population over the entire country.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {St. John Erskine} } @booklet {907, title = {Thirty Years From Now}, year = {1934}, month = {1934}, publisher = {R.C. Emery}, address = {St. Paul, MN}, abstract = {

Dystopia of Communism in Minnesota.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Emery, Robert C} } @booklet {6793, title = {"The World of To-Morrow"; Being The Vision of a Common Man}, year = {1934}, month = {[1934]}, publisher = {Ptd. by B. Lansdown \& Sons}, address = {Trowbridge, Eng.}, abstract = {

Eutopia with a world government, no money, no competition, and full employment.

}, author = {Effendi [pseud.]} } @booklet {8497, title = {Prince Pax}, year = {1933}, month = {1933}, publisher = {Duckworth}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The novel starts in a very small country that has enjoyed a thousand years of peace and prosperity but has been ignored by the rest of the world. The Prince wants power over the rest of the world and gets it, but at the end, the small country, now a recognized part of the world, returns to peace and prosperity.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {George Sylvester Viereck (1884-1962) and Paul Eldridge} } @booklet {887, title = {The World of To-Morrow--A Junior Book of Forecasts}, year = {1933}, month = {1933}, publisher = {Denis Archer}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Eutopia presented as forecasts for young adults. The forecasts range from the technical, which take up most of the book, to the personal and political. The book itself was designed to be futuristic with transparent illustrations, a transparent printed cover, and taped binding.

}, keywords = {Male author, UK author}, author = {I[drisyn] O[liver] Evans (1894-1977)} } @booklet {844, title = {"The Time Conqueror"}, howpublished = {Wonder Stories }, volume = {4.2}, year = {1932}, note = {

Rpt. as \"Tyrant of Time.\" In his\ Tyrant of Time\ (Reading, PA: Fantasy Press, 1955), 11-80.

}, month = {July 1932}, pages = {126-47, 182}, abstract = {

A giant computer-like brain based on a human brain can perceive the future. It creates a technological eutopia, which is only briefly described, and foresees an invasion by aliens and their defeat by natural forces and a far future return to primitivism.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {L[loyd] A[rthur] Eshbach (1910-2003)} } @booklet {772, title = {"Creatures of the Light"}, howpublished = {Astounding Stories of Super-Science (New York)}, volume = {1.2}, year = {1930}, note = {

Rpt. in\ Sci-Fi Womanthology. Comp. and ed. Forrest J. Ackerman and Pam Keesey (Rockville, MD: Sense of Wonder Press, 2003), 169-202; and in The Feminine Future: Early Science Fiction by Women Writers. Ed. Mike [Michael Raymond Donald] Ashley (Mineola, NY: Dover Publications, 2015), 176-212 with an editor\’s note on 176. PUP

}, month = {February 1930}, pages = {196-220}, abstract = {

The focus of the story is the struggle between good and evil, but the setting is an attempt to create perfect human beings and shows that apparent perfection is undesirable.

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Sophie Wenzel Ellis (1893-1984)} } @booklet {727, title = {The World in 2030 A.D}, year = {1929}, month = {1929}, publisher = {Hodder \& Stoughton}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Presented as a prediction. Technology will have improved life greatly. Little change in politics or economics. Women intellectually inferior to men.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Frederick Edwin] [Smith] [1st Earl of Birkenhead] (1872-1930)} } @booklet {519, title = {"Our Temporary Civilization"}, howpublished = {The Lone Hand (Sydney, NSW, Australia)}, volume = {ns 9.3 - 4 (os 23.143-44)}, year = {1919}, month = {March - April 1919}, pages = { 11-12, 11-12}, address = {Sydney}, abstract = {

Satire. The first section is a fairly straightforward description of the depletion of resources. The second part begins with the age of \"Coal, Iron and Hurry\" and projects that depletion into the very far future (the last date is 2744 followed by periods where dates are not knowable. The gradual degeneration of humanity.\ 

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Australian author, Male author, Scottish author}, author = {James Edmond (1859-1933)} } @booklet {471, title = {"The Messiah of the Cylinder"}, howpublished = {Everybody{\textquoteright}s Magazine}, volume = {36 - 37}, year = {1917}, note = {

Rpt. illus. Joseph Clement Coll. Chicago, IL: A .C. McClurg \& Co., 1917; and illus. Joseph Clement Coll. Westport, CT: Hyperion Press, 1974, with an unpaged introduction, \“A Neglected Masterpiece,\” by Lester Del Rey, who characterizes it as an \“anti-utopia (or dystopia,\” written in opposition to H. G. Wells. U.K. ed. without the illus. as The Apostle of the Cylinder. London: Hodder and Stoughton, [1918]. A few libraries catalog the U.K. ed. as [1919?].\ 

}, month = {June - September 1917}, pages = {657-77; 65-84, 176, 95, 335-54}, abstract = {

Scientific dystopia. A leader uses science and religion to take control of the world. A successful revolt frees people, and the ending suggests that a better world is being created.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Avigdor Rousseau] [Emanuel] (1879-1960)} } @booklet {9704, title = {"Utopia"}, howpublished = {The Gazette of the 3rd London General Hospital }, volume = {3.1}, year = {1917}, month = {October 1917}, pages = {19}, abstract = {

A brief description of a eutopian hospital for the wounded of the First World War. It would be in a village in Sussex near the Downs and a river. It would be designed to attract the men out of the wards into the countryside. No telephones or girls so that the men could really rest.

}, author = {Eve [pseud.]} } @booklet {456, title = {"June 6, 2016"}, howpublished = {Colliers (New York)}, volume = {57.6}, year = {1916}, note = {

Rpt. in When Women Rule. Ed. Sam[uel] Moskowitz (New York: Walker, 1972), 72-94.

}, month = {April 22, 1916}, pages = {7-9, 27-28, 30-32}, abstract = {

A love story set in a technological eutopia that has greater gender equality but with many of the same issues remaining.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {George Allan England (1877-1936)} } @booklet {436, title = {The Air Trust}, year = {1915}, note = {

Rpt. Westport, CT: Hyperion Press, 1976. Originally published in The National Rip-Saw (January - October 1915) as \“The Story of the Air Trust.\”

}, month = {1915}, publisher = {Phil Wagner}, address = {St. Louis, MO}, abstract = {

Dystopia. A trust gains control of the air and enslaves humankind, but it is overthrown.\ For a work using a similar idea, see 1897 Mills, \“The Aerial Brickyard.\”

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {George Allan England (1877-1936)} } @booklet {8877, title = {Darkness and Dawn}, year = {1914}, note = {

Rpt. Westport, CT: Hyperion Press, 1974 with unpaged \“The Fantastic in Fiction\” by the author, originally published as \“Facts About Fantasy.\” The Story World (July 1923). Originally serialized as \“Darkness and Dawn.\” The Cavalier 10. 4 (January 1912): 621-34; The Cavalier and the Scrap Book 11.1 - 3 (January 6 - 20, 1912): 169-85, 321-39, 521-33; \“Beyond the Great Oblivion.\” The Cavalier 24.1 - 25.2 (January 4 - February 8, 1913): 1-34, 215-32, 434-52, 645-65; 115-34, 272-92; and \“The Afterglow.\” Cavalier 29.4 - 30.3 (June 14 - July 5, 1913): 577-607; 71-100, 250-78, 495-519. All three were rpt. in Famous Fantastic Mysteries 2.3 (August 1940: 6-78; 3.2 (June 1941): 6-105; 3.5 (December 1941): 6-94.

}, month = {1914}, publisher = {Small, Maynard}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {

Much of the novel is a post-catastrophe dystopia with a young couple apparently alone struggling to survive, then in conflict with other survivors, but the novel ends depicting the beginnings of a new egalitarian, peaceful eutopian society.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {George Allan England (1877-1936)} } @booklet {6719, title = {Heaven{\textquoteright}s Gate Opened. A Spirit{\textquoteright}s Message. A Series of Addresses given through the mediumship of E.M. Eldridge giving a brief description of the spheres beyond the earth}, year = {1912}, month = {[1912]}, publisher = {Clarke \& Satchell}, address = {Leicester, Eng.}, abstract = {

Eutopia. Evolution through higher and higher spheres. Describes homes and occupations. Includes Hell as a dystopia.

}, author = {E. M. Eldridge} } @booklet {367, title = {A Trip to the North Pole and Beyond to Civilization}, year = {1912}, month = {1912}, publisher = {Industrial Exchange}, address = {Linwood, KS}, abstract = {

Eutopia. Almost all property owned by the Industrial Exchange Association in order to eliminate wasteful competition. Little government.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Dewitt F. Lewis}, editor = {E. Z. Ernst} } @booklet {347, title = {"The Fool and His Inheritance"}, howpublished = {The Lone Hand (Sydney, NSW, Australia)}, volume = { 9.53 }, year = {1911}, month = {September 1, 1911}, pages = {434-38, 440-46}, abstract = {

Satire using global warming and the last man theme.\ See also 1919 Edmond.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Australian author, Male author, Scottish author}, author = {James Edmond (1859-1933)} } @booklet {348, title = {One Hundred Years Hence. Being Some Extracts from "The Hourly Mail" of A D 2000}, year = {1911}, month = {1911}, publisher = {Eveleigh Nash}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Satire, much of it through the advertisements in the newspaper.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Walter Emanuel (1869-1915)} } @booklet {6711, title = {Courtship Under Contract: The Science of Selection: A Tale of Woman{\textquoteright}s Emancipation}, year = {1910}, month = {[1910]}, publisher = {The Health-Culture Co./L.N. Fowler}, address = {New York/Passaic, NJ/London}, abstract = {

Proposal for a trial marriage without sexual relations. The couple lives together but with separate bedrooms.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {James Henry Lovell Eager} } @booklet {285, title = {John Bull: Socialist}, year = {1909}, note = {

Rpt. as by Edward Prince as\ Wake Up, England! Being the Amazing Story of John Bull--Socialist. Westminster, Eng.: St. Stephen\&$\#$39;s Press, 1910.\ 

}, month = {1909}, publisher = {Swan Sonnenschein \& Co.}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Standard anti-socialist dystopia. Financial problems so that pensioners are barely kept alive. Stresses the problems of majority rule such as restrictions on women because men were the majority. Failures by the state lead to it becoming more ruthless. Revolt and a return to capitalism.

}, author = {Everett, Frances} } @booklet {245, title = {The Smoky God or A Voyage to the Inner World}, year = {1908}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Fieldcrest Publishing Co., 1964; and Mundelin, IL: Palmer Publications, 1965;\ rpt. Pomeroy, WA: Health Research, [1965].

}, month = {1908}, publisher = {Forbes \& Co.}, address = {Chicago, IL}, abstract = {

A lost race eutopia of giants who live 600 to 800 years in the center of the earth. The basis is a cloud of electricity (\"the smoky god\") that drives an advanced technology. Also, the vegetation is luxurious, and there is a thriving agricultural economy.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Willis George Emerson (1856-1918)} } @booklet {268, title = {A Voyage in the Motive Ship Pelican to the North Pole. Captain Solomon, Commander}, year = {1908}, month = {1908}, pages = {136 pp. }, publisher = {Record Publishing Co}, address = {Stockton, CA}, abstract = {

The motive ship is a form of airplane which flew from the U.S. to the North Pole, where there is a eutopian city. Technologically advanced. Stress on the beauty and grandeur of the city. People live to an average age of 133 with some living to over 200; this is based on moderation. Much adventure.

}, keywords = {US author}, author = {E. D. Eldridge} } @booklet {161, title = {It Beats the Shakers or A New Tune}, year = {1905}, month = {1905}, publisher = {Anglo-American Corp.}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Satire. The men are on Earth and the women are on Venus. Women come to Earth on a guarantee of good treatment, are not treated well, and leave.

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Anna D. Evans} } @booklet {55, title = {"City of Tagaste"}, howpublished = {So Here Then Are the Preachments Entitled the City of Tagaste, and A Dream and A Prophecy}, volume = {940 copy ed.}, year = {1900}, note = {

A 50 copy ed. on Imperial Japan Vellum was illus. Etla Hubbs (East Aurora, NY: The Roycrofters at the Roycroft Shop, 1900), 3-9. Rpt. (East Aurora, NY: Roycrofters, 1909), 3-9.

}, month = {1900}, pages = {3-9}, publisher = {The Roycrofters at the Roycroft Shop}, address = {East Aurora, NY}, abstract = {

Dystopian satire on contemporary America. Tagaste is city that abandons crafts for mass production and loses its soul, while polluting nature and destroying its workers. See also his 1900 \"A Dream and a Prophecy,\" which suggests the eutopia that can be created.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Elbert] [Hubbard] (1856-1915)}, editor = {Harriet Robarge} } @booklet {56, title = {"A Dream and a Prophecy"}, howpublished = {So Here Then Are the Preachments Entitled the City of Tagaste, and A Dream and A Prophecy}, volume = {940 copy ed.}, year = {1900}, note = {

A 50 copy ed. on Imperial Japan Vellum was illus Etla Hubbs (East Aurora, NY: The Roycrofters at the Roycroft Shop, 1900), 13-21. Rpt. (East Aurora, NY: Roycrofters, 1909), 13-21.

}, month = {1900}, pages = {13-21}, publisher = {The Roycrofters at the Roycroft Shop}, address = {East Aurora, NY}, abstract = {

Follows from the dystopia of his 1900 \"A City of Tagaste\" and suggests the eutopia that can be created by returning to the countryside and the craft tradition.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Elbert] [Hubbard] (1856-1915)}, editor = {Harriet Robarge} } @booklet {6682, title = {Eurasia}, year = {1900}, month = {[1900?]}, publisher = {James H. Barry}, address = {San Francisco, CA}, abstract = {

Detailed reform with an overall stress on fairness and equality. Equal representation of men and women in government. Easy recall from most offices. Elaborate protections within the legal system to ensure speed and fairness. Harsh punishment for crimes; jail or death with castration for some crimes. Technology. Most industries nationalized. Stress on health. Few relations with other countries.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Chris Evans} } @booklet {39, title = {The Nineteenth Century; A Dialogue in Utopia}, year = {1900}, note = {

US ed. subtitled\ An Utopian Retrospect. Boston, MA: Small, Maynard, 1900.

}, month = {1900}, publisher = {Grant Richards}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Discussion of the nineteenth century, presented largely in negative terms, from the vantage point of a future eutopia, which is a united world, although nations still maintain their cultures, with one language and one medium of exchange. Communities exist to benefit their members rather than the reverse, which was the nineteenth century norm. The future is concerned with the art of living rather than commerce. Stress on beauty.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Henry] Havelock Ellis (1859-1939)} } @booklet {38, title = {Solaris Farm; A Story of the Twentieth Century}, year = {1900}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Arno Press and\ The New York Times, 1971.

}, month = {1900}, publisher = {Author}, address = {Washington, DC}, abstract = {

Detailed picture of the development of a communal system. The farm should have at least five thousand acres and be incorporated as a joint stock company, and the there is much detail on farming methods. Two hundred and fifty couples to form the community. The cooperative farm provides a radical improvement of rural life through better living conditions, less strenuous work, and intellectual stimulation through a wide variety of clubs. Stresses the need to produce the best children and raise them to be healthy, well-educated adults. Mothers are not required to work on the farm, but many do because the work is light and enjoyable. Spiritualist and the dead are consulted about the plans for the farm.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Milan C. Edson (1839-1921)} } @booklet {21, title = {"How the House of Commons became a Cycling School"}, howpublished = {A Trip to Paradoxia and Other Humours of the Hour. Being Contemporary Pictures of Social Fact and Political Fiction}, year = {1899}, month = {1899}, pages = {154-64}, publisher = {Greening \& Co.}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Satire. The House of Commons is accepted as completely useless and votes itself out of existence.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {T[homas] H[ay] S[treet] Escott (1844-1924)} } @booklet {22, title = {"How the {\textquoteright}House of Lords Question{\textquoteright} Was Settled. A Tale of the Terrace or, Mrs. Ponsonby-Jones{\textquoteright}s Revenge"}, howpublished = {A Trip to Paradoxia and Other Humours of the Hour. Being Contemporary Pictures of Social Fact and Political Fiction}, year = {1899}, month = {1899}, pages = {97-109}, publisher = {Greening \& Co.}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Satire. Because women visitors are distracting the Peers from the business of Parliament, the Prime Minister gets a bill passed prohibiting them from the terrace. Women vote in a majority in favor of abolishing the House of Lords. A compromise is reached in which women elect women representatives to a female house and the entire House of Lords becomes the Privy Council.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {T[homas] H[ay] S[treet] Escott (1844-1924)} } @booklet {23, title = {"A Trip to Paradoxia"}, howpublished = {A Trip to Paradoxia and Other Humours of the Hour. Being Contemporary Pictures of Social Fact and Political Fiction}, year = {1899}, month = {1899}, pages = {1-96}, publisher = {Greening \& Co.}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Satire. Paradoxia has completely dysfunctional social arrangements, but its inhabitants believe everything is working well.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {T[homas] H[ay] S[treet] Escott (1844-1924)} } @booklet {8007, title = {"Inequality"}, howpublished = {The Yellow Book }, volume = {1.13}, year = {1897}, month = {November 1897}, pages = {42}, abstract = {

Satire on 1888 Bellamy.

}, author = {Bellward Enemy [pseud.]} } @booklet {8008, title = {A New Industrial Era of Wealth and Prosperity or Social and Other Problems Solved}, year = {1897}, month = {1897}, publisher = {E.W. Cole}, address = {Melbourne, VIC, Australia}, abstract = {

Eutopia based on cooperatives. An appendix (47-49) includes the structure of a proposed Victorian Association of Rural Industries.

}, keywords = {Australian author}, author = {Eon [pseud.]} } @booklet {7914, title = {"The Regeneration of Two"}, howpublished = {Discords}, year = {1894}, note = {

Rpt. as\ Keynotes and Discords\ (London: Virago, 1983), 163-253 [The two books are separately paged in the reprint].\ 

}, month = {1894}, pages = {163-253}, publisher = {John Lane/Roberts Bros.}, address = {London/Boston, MA}, abstract = {

The focus of the story is a woman who is dissatisfied with her own life and the hypocrisies of life in contemporary Norway, but the middle section describes the successful community she creates on her estate where she helps others who are rejected by the hypocrites.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Female author, Irish author}, author = {[Mary Chavelita] [Dunne] (1859-1945)} } @booklet {6653, title = {"England{\textquoteright}s Downfall" or, The Last Great Revolution}, year = {1893}, month = {[1893]}, publisher = {Digby, Long and Company}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Anti-socialist dystopia set in 1930.

}, author = {An Ex-Revolutionist [pseud.]} } @booklet {7848, title = {Reveries of World-History; From Earth{\textquoteright}s Nebulous Origin to Its Final Ruin or The Romance of a Star}, year = {1893}, month = {1893}, publisher = {Swan Sonnenschein \& Co}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Technological eutopia (131-40) in the last chapter, \"The Future\" (131-56) plus a universal language and a world government.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {T[homas] Mullett Ellis (1850-1919)} } @booklet {7887, title = {Woman Free}, year = {1893}, month = {1893}, publisher = {Women{\textquoteright}s Emancipation Union}, address = {Congleton, Eng.}, abstract = {

A poem with the title of the book (1-32) followed by notes on the poem (33-222). Much of the poem is on the trials and tribulations of the current position of women, but parts of it project into a future of free, enabled women. Little detail.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {[Elizabeth Clarke] [Wolstenholme-Elmy] (1833-1918)} } @booklet {7828, title = {The Germ Growers. An Australian Story of Adventure and Mystery}, year = {1892}, note = {

Also published with the subtitle\ The Strange Adventures of Robert Easterley and John Wilbraham.\ Ed. Robert Potter. London: Hutchinson, 1892.

}, month = {1892}, publisher = {Melville, Mullen \& Slade/Hutchinson \& Co. }, address = {Melbourne, VIC, Australia/London}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia with a hidden valley motif. Supernatural elements. Early example of aliens landing on Earth.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Irish author, Male author}, author = {[Robert] [Potter] (1831-1908)} } @booklet {6642, title = {The People{\textquoteright}s Program; The Twentieth Century is Theirs. A Romance of the Expectations of the Present Generation}, year = {1892}, month = {[1892]}, publisher = {Workmen{\textquoteright}s Publishing Company}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Eutopia. A detailed labor colony scheme for the unemployed.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Henry L[exington] Everett} } @booklet {7757, title = {The Conditions of Peace}, year = {1890}, month = {1890}, pages = {6 pp.}, publisher = {[Shaker Community]}, address = {Mt. Lebanon, NY}, abstract = {

Six-page pamphlet in which Evans outlines the basis for eutopia, including the franchise for women, vegetarianism, and Christian community.\ See also 1888 Evans and 1890 Evans The Universal Republic.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author, US author}, author = {Elder F[rederick] W[illiam] Evans (1808-93)} } @booklet {11770, title = {The Elixir of Life: or, Robert{\textquoteright}s Pilgrimage: An Allegory}, year = {1890}, note = {

Rpt. as The Progress of the Pilgrim. By Eleve [pseud.]. Chicago, IL: Eleve Publishing Co., 1891 124 pp.

}, month = {1890}, publisher = {Np}, address = {Chicago, IL}, abstract = {

Fairly standard journey by a pilgrim in search of salvation visiting many cities based on religions, beginning with Pontifico and then many different Protestant denominations and the usual vices until arriving at the eutopian City of the King. In the city the Pilgrim advances through many mansions until he reaches the highest and Truth. The female author wrote other books on Christian Science.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {[Mrs.] [H. M.] [Stowe]} } @booklet {6630, title = {King Squash of Toadyland}, year = {1890}, month = {[1890]}, publisher = {Field \& Tuer The Leadenhall Press E.C./Simpkin Marshall \& Co./Hamilton, Adams \& Co./Scribner \& Welford}, address = {London/New York}, abstract = {

Satire on contemporary Britain. Problems include the Town of Gin. There is a revolution in which the House of Lords is reformed by eliminating party politics and the King is deposed.

}, author = {An Envoy Extraordinary [pseud.]} } @booklet {6631, title = {The Universal Republic: A Shaker Pronunciamento}, year = {1890}, month = {[1890]}, pages = {Single sheet}, publisher = {np}, address = {Mt. Lebanon, NY}, abstract = {

Eutopia based on the teachings of the Shakers and Thomas Paine (1737-1809). Each child born is due education until its legal age, at which point it is given its portion of land, sufficient to support a family. Childbearing will be controlled by the women. Also suggests a higher order of celibacy and community of goods.\ See also 1888 Evans and 1890 Evans The Conditions of Peace.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Male author, US author}, author = {Elder F[rederick] W[illiam] Evans (1808-93)} } @booklet {7677, title = {Shaker Reconstruction of the American Government}, year = {1888}, note = {

Appears to be a reprint of a letter to the editor of the Hudson Daily Register (Hudson, NY).

}, month = {1888}, publisher = {Office Register and Gazette}, address = {Hudson, NY}, abstract = {

Eutopia. Appears to be a reprint of a letter to the editor of the Hudson Daily Register\ (Hudson, NY)\  that first criticizes the policies supported by the New York Tribune and then proposes a revision of the U.S. Constitution based on Shaker teachings. Women will be full citizens. A class of celibate men and women, in separate houses (Senate women; House of Representatives men) will be the legislators. No individual or corporate land ownership with land becoming government owned on the death of the current owner and then distributed to the people. No private or religious education. No alcohol.\ See also 1890 Evans (2).

}, keywords = {English author, Male author, US author}, author = {Elder F[rederick] W[illiam] Evans (1808-93)} } @booklet {7618, title = {A Radical Nightmare or, England Forty Years Hence}, year = {1885}, month = {1885}, publisher = {Field and Tuer}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Anti-socialist dystopia. Corruption. Many police needed to enforce the law. People are dull, physically weak, and poor and everything is dirty.

}, author = {An Ex M.P. [pseud.]} } @booklet {7601, title = {The Socialist Revolution of 1888}, year = {1884}, month = {1884}, publisher = {Harrison and Sons}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Anti-socialist dystopia with a satirical strain that indicates weaknesses in capitalism (called individualism).

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {[Charles] [Fairfield]} } @booklet {7541, title = {Diagram of Coming Events, and the Millennium}, year = {1877}, month = {1877}, publisher = {Ptd. by John Henry Field}, address = {Auckland, New Zealand}, abstract = {

Pages 25-28 are a description of the millennium using Biblical texts.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author}, author = {F. M E.} } @booklet {7532, title = {Social Architecture; or, Reasons and Means for the Demolition and Reconstruction of the Social Edifice}, year = {1876}, month = {1876}, publisher = {Samuel Tinsley}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Non-fiction eutopia. The author summarizes the book as follows: \"The guiding principles upon which this social demolition and reconstruction is to proceed, are chiefly the following:--1. Abolition of money, inheritance, and private property. 2. Restriction of the isolated household, and development of the associated home. 3. Freedom of sexual unions. 4 Compulsory and equal sharing of all physical labour. 5. Economical arrangements for the prevention of waste. 6. Organization of labour. 7. Equal division of the means of existence and enjoyment. 8. Universal diffusion of education, sciences, and arts\" (80). Includes 1870 Petzler as an Appendix (423-39). See also 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). In the \"Preface\" to the book Petzler says that he shared imprisonment in France with Pierre-Joseph Proudhon (1809-65), the mutualist and anarchist theorist. After his release he was expelled to England.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, German author, Male author}, author = {[John Aloys] [Petzler] (1814?-1898)} } @booklet {7485, title = {"Dream of a Free-Trade Paradise. A Laissez Faire Tale"}, howpublished = {Dream of a Free Trade Paradise, and Other Sketches}, year = {1872}, note = {

Rpt. 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.

}, month = {1872}, pages = {11-20}, publisher = {Pub. for the Industrial League by Henry Carey Baird, Industrial Publisher}, address = {Philadelphia, PA}, abstract = {

Satire on free trade set in the country of Laissez Faire where the rule is to do what is easiest. Thus, no children, no buildings, few crops, little production. The rest of the book is made up of short essays and stories that make the same point without using the utopian form.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Cyrus Elder} } @booklet {7435, title = {The Positive Community: Glimpses of the Regenerated Future of the Human Race. A Sermon, Preached at Modern Times, Long Island, on Saturday, 24th Gutenberg, 75, (5th September 1, 1863) Being the Sixth Anniversary of the Death (Transformation) of Auguste Comte, Founder of the Religion of Humanity}, howpublished = {Modern Times Tracts, No. 3}, year = {1864}, month = {1864}, publisher = {Ptd. For the Positive Typographical Fund, Year of the Great Modern Crisis}, address = {Modern Times, NY}, abstract = {

A Positivist sermon beginning with some utopian elements addressed to his \"Beloved Disciples\". The future society will be organized with governments regulating industry and labor and capital together.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Henry Edger} } @booklet {7427, title = {The Happy Islands; or, Paradise Restored}, year = {1860}, month = {1860}, publisher = {H.V. Degan \& Son}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {

Christian allegory.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Rev. W[arren] F[elt] Evans (1817-89)} } @booklet {7375, title = {"A Vision of Our Country in the Year Nineteen Hundred"}, howpublished = {The Western Literary Magazine and Journal of Education, Science, Arts, and Morals (Columbus, OH)}, volume = {1}, year = {1851}, month = {1851}, pages = {81-84}, abstract = {

Eutopia set at Oberlin College in Oberlin, Ohio. The U.S. includes all North and South America. Population growth through immigration and the country is well-settled. Churches everywhere but without denominational differences. More and better education, particularly at the post-secondary level. Equality. Invention and significant advances in the sciences. No prejudice. A congress of nations settles disputes among countries. Female author.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Miss J[ane] A. E[llis]} } @booklet {7336, title = {Emigration to the Tropical World, for the Melioration of all Classes of People of all Nations}, year = {1844}, note = {

Rpt. in The Collected Works of John Adolphus Etzler. Delmar, NY: Scholars\’ Facsimiles \& Reprints, 1977. Items separately paged

}, month = {1844}, pages = {24 pp.}, publisher = {The Concordium}, address = {Surrey, Eng.}, abstract = {

One of Etzler\&$\#$39;s pictures of eutopia through technology, in this case to be realized in Venezuela where, he says, he has obtained a grant of land. Here Etzler gives an address in London. Etzler also published a four page Synopsis of Etzler\&$\#$39;s Plan of Emigration to Venezuela. Newcastle, Eng.: W.W. Leighton, Printer, 1844; rpt. in The Collected Works of John Adolphus Etzler. Delmar, NY: Scholars\&$\#$39; Facsimiles \& Reprints, 1977 that summarizes the proposal. On the technology, see also his The New World or Mechanical System, To Perform the Labours of Man and Beast by Inanimate Powers, That Cost Nothing, for Producing and Preparing the Substance of Life. With Plates. Philadelphia, PA: C.F. Stollmeyer, 1841. Rpt. in The Collected Works of John Adophus Etzler. Delmar, NY: Scholars\’ Facsimiles \& Reprints, 1977; and Description of the Naval Automation, Invented by J.A. Etzler and Patented in American and Europe. Philadelphia, PA: Ptd. by Gihon and Fairchild, [1841/42?]. Rpt. in The Collected Works of John Adophus Etzler. Delmar, NY: Scholars\’ Facsimiles \& Reprints, 1977. See also 1833 Etzler and 1843 Etzler and 1844 Etzler Two Visions of J[ohn] A[dolphus] Etzler.

}, keywords = {German author, Male author, US author}, author = {John A[dolphus] Etzler (1791?-1846?)} } @booklet {7337, title = {Two Visions of J[ohn] A[dolphus] Etzler, (Author of the Paradise Within the Reach of All Men, By Powers of Nature and Machinery, and Other Writings Connected Therewith.) A Revelation of Futurity}, year = {1844}, note = {

Rpt. in The Collected Works of John Adolphus Etzler. Delmar, NY: Scholars\’ Facsimiles \& Reprints, 1977. Items separately paged.

}, month = {1844}, pages = {15 pp.}, publisher = {The Concordium}, address = {Surrey, Eng.}, abstract = {

One of Etzler\&$\#$39;s pictures of eutopia through technology. These \"visions\" are very general and include considerable complaint about having been ignored. At the end he says that whether or not he gains support he will emigrate \"to found a paradise in the tropical world\".\ On the technology, see also his The New World or Mechanical System, To Perform the Labours of Man and Beast by Inanimate Powers, That Cost Nothing, for Producing and Preparing the Substance of Life. With Plates. Philadelphia, PA: C.F. Stollmeyer, 1841. Rpt. in The Collected Works of John Adophus Etzler. Delmar, NY: Scholars\’ Facsimiles \& Reprints, 1977; and Description of the Naval Automation, Invented by J.A. Etzler and Patented in American and Europe. Philadelphia, PA: Ptd. by Gihon and Fairchild, [1841/42?]. Rpt. in The Collected Works of John Adophus Etzler. Delmar, NY: Scholars\’ Facsimiles \& Reprints, 1977.\ See also 1833 and\ 1843 Etzler and 1844 Etzler\ Emigration to the Tropical World.

}, keywords = {German author, Male author, US author}, author = {J[ohn] A[dolphus] Etzler (1791?-1846?)} } @booklet {7327, title = {The Orphan of Novogorod: An Illyrian Tale}, year = {1841}, month = {1841}, publisher = {Black and Armstrong}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Detailed eutopia describing an isolated Christian community. Discusses the clergy, health, and education, among other things. Small part of an adventure tale.

}, keywords = {Male author, Slovenian author, UK author}, author = {[Louis Antony] [Donatti] (1781-1852)} } @booklet {7297, title = {The Paradise within Reach of All Men, without Labour, by Powers of Nature and Machinery. An Address To All Intelligent Men. In Two Parts}, year = {1833}, note = {

Rpt. in The Collected Works of John Adolphus Etzler. Delmar, NY: Scholars\&$\#$39; Facsimiles \& Reprints, 1977. Items separately paged.

U.K. ed. London: J. Brooks, 1836. 2nd English ed. London: Ptd. by and pub. by J. Cleave, 1842.

}, month = {1833}, publisher = {Etzler and Reinhold}, address = {Pittsburgh, PA}, abstract = {

The basic work of Etzler\&$\#$39;s many depicting eutopia through technology but that\ include\ descriptions of the better life that will be achieved through the use of the technology. There is considerable description of the technology involved, including\ wind, tidal, wave, and solar power. On the technology, see also his The New World or Mechanical System, To Perform the Labours of Man and Beast by Inanimate Powers, That Cost Nothing, for Producing and Preparing the Substance of Life. With Plates. Philadelphia, PA: C.F. Stollmeyer, 1841. Rpt. in The Collected Works of John Adophus Etzler. Delmar, NY: Scholars\&$\#$39; Facsimiles \& Reprints, 1977; and Description of the Naval Automation, Invented by J.A. Etzler and Patented in American and Europe. Philadelphia, PA: Ptd. by Gihon and Fairchild, [1841/42?]. Rpt. in The Collected Works of John Adophus Etzler. Delmar, NY: Scholars\&$\#$39; Facsimiles \& Reprints, 1977. See also 1843 and 1844 (2) Etzler.

}, keywords = {German author, Male author, US author}, author = {J[ohn] A[dolphus] Etzler (1791?-1846?)} } @booklet {7280, title = {The Humours of Eutopia. A Tale of Colonial Times}, volume = {2 vols.}, year = {1828}, month = {1828}, publisher = {Carey, Lea and Carey}, address = {Philadelphia, PA}, abstract = {

Includes a small section (1: 18-41) on an ideal religious community.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Ezekial] [Sanford]} } @booklet {7278, title = {Practical Moral and Political Economy; or, the Government, Religion, and Institutions, Most Conducive to Individual Happiness and To National Power}, year = {1828}, month = {1828}, publisher = {Effingham Wilson}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Includes a short section (270-82) on the founding of a eutopia on an island based on the principles presented in the book. Emphasis on equality, particularly equal administration of justice, division of labor, and \"gregariousness.\" Mentions the need to control population and suggests a parliament for children.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {T[homas] R[owe] Edmonds (1803-89)} } @booklet {7238, title = {Christian Policy, the Salvation of the Empire. Being a Clear and Concise Examination into the Causes that Have Produced the Impending, Unavoidable National Bankruptcy; And the Effects that must ensue, unless averted by the Adoption of this only real and Desirable Remedy, Which would elevate these Realms to a Pitch of Greatness Hitherto Unattained By any Nation that ever Existed}, year = {1816}, note = {

2nd ed. London: Ptd. for the Author, 1816. The 2nd ed. is identical except for 2nd ed. on the title page.

}, month = {1816}, publisher = {Ptd. for the author}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Eutopia in which all land, water, mines, houses, and feudal permanent property belong to the people. Evans was a close associate of Thomas Spence (1750-1814), and this work says that the policy of the early Christians should be adopted and then goes on to describe Spence\&$\#$39;s plan.\ For Spence\&$\#$39;s utopias, see 1782, 1795, 1798, and 1801 Spence.\ See also 1817 and 1818 Evans.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Thomas Evans (b. 1763)} } @booklet {7223, title = {"A New Year{\textquoteright}s Poem"}, howpublished = {Common Sense in dishabille, or The Farmer{\textquoteright}s Monitor. Containing a Variety of Familiar Essays, on Subjects Moral \& Economical. To Which is Added a Perpetual Calendar, or Economical Almanack}, year = {1799}, month = {1799}, pages = {86-92}, publisher = {Ptd. by Isaiah Thomas, Jun. for Isaiah Thomas}, address = {Worcester, MA}, abstract = {

America as a eutopia stressing agriculture.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {David Everett A.M. (1770-1813)} } @booklet {8393, title = {The History of Arsaces, Prince of Betlis}, volume = {2 Vols.}, year = {1774}, note = {

Critical ed. ed. Daniel Sanjiv Roberts. Dublin, Ireland: Four Courts Press, 2014. Extracts published as \“The Travels of Himilco, an Oriental Tale.\” By the Author of Chrysal [pseud.]. Universal Magazine of Knowledge and Pleasure (London) 55.380 -81 (July - August 1774): 13-19; 61-65.

}, month = {1774}, publisher = { Ptd. for T. Becket}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Something of an oriental tale that has been compared to 1759 Johnson and 1726 Swift that includes a number of fairly short descriptions of eutopian societies.

}, keywords = {Irish author, Male author}, author = {[Charles] [Johnstone] (ca. 1719-c. 1800)} } @booklet {8392, title = {The Reverie; or, a Flight to the Paradise of Fools}, volume = {2 Vols.}, year = {1762}, note = {

\ U.K. ed. London: Printed for T. Becket and P. A. Da Hondt, 1763. Rpt. in one vol. without the subtitle. New York: Garland, 1974.

}, month = {1762}, publisher = {Printed by Dillon Chamberlain.}, address = {Dublin, Ireland}, abstract = {

Satire on contemporary events and people set in a fictional \“Paradise of Fools.\”

}, keywords = {Irish author}, author = {[Charles] [Johnstone] (ca. 1719-c. 1800)} } @booklet {6903, title = {The Christian Commonwealth: or, The Civil Policy of the Rising Kingdom of Jesus Christ. Written Before the Interruption of the Government. Written by Mr. John Eliot, Teacher of the Church of Christ at Roxbury in New-England. And Now Published (after his consent given) by a Server of the Season}, year = {1659}, note = {

Rpt. in the Massachusetts Historical Society Collections, series 3, 9 (1846): 128-64; and New York: Arno Press, 1972

}, month = {[1659]}, publisher = {Ptd. for Livewell Chapman}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Detailed eutopia written in the 1640s that derives government structure from the Bible, particularly\ Exodus\ 18:25 and\ Deuteronomy\ 1:15. Millennial and based on covenant theology.Focused on political institutions combining theocracy with a democracy with widespread manhood suffrage (woman and children were included within a man\’s covenant). Born and educated in England, Eliot moved to America in 1631 where he established a school in Roxbury, Massachusetts and was known as the \“Indian Apostle\”. Although it was reinstated, this was the first book banned by an American government.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author, US author}, author = {John Eliot (1604-90)} } @booklet {7024, title = {Mundus Alter et Idem siue Terra Australis antehac semper incognita longis itineribus peregrini Academici nuperrime lustrata}, year = {1605}, note = {

Rpt. in Mundus alter et idem. Sive Terra Australis antehac semper incogita; longis itineribus peregrini Academici nuperrim{\`e} lustrate. Authore Mercurio Britannico [pseud.]. Accessit propter assinitatem materi{\ae} Thom{\ae} Campanell{\ae}, Civitas Solis. Et Nova Atlantis. Franc. Baconis, Bar. de Verulamio. Np: Apud Joannem {\`a} Waesberge, 1643. The three items are separately paged.

Trans. as The Discovery of A New World or A Description of the South Indies, Hetherto Unknowne. By An English Mercury [pseud.]. [Trans. John Healey]. [London:] Imprinted by G. Eld for Ed. Blount and W. Barrett, [1609]. Rpt. ed. Huntington Brown. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1937. New trans. and critical ed. as Another World and Yet the Same: Bishop Joseph Hall\&$\#$39;s Mundus Alter et Idem. Trans. and ed. John Millar Wands. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1981 with a \"Commentary\" (127-200).

Repub. rev. with erotic content\ as Psittacorum Regio. The Land of Parrots: Or, The She-lands. With A Description of other strange adjacent Countries, in the Dominions of Prince De L\&$\#$39;Amour, not hitherto found in any Geographical Map. By One of the Late Most Reputed Wits [pseud.]. London: Ptd. for F. Kirkman, 1669; and as The Travels of Don Francisco De Quevedo Through Terra Australis Incognita. Discovering the Laws, Customs, Manners and Fashions Of The South Indians. A Novel. Originally in Spanish. London: Ptd. for William Crantham, 1684.

}, month = {1605}, publisher = {Ascanij de Rinialme [Actually Humphrey Lownes]}, address = {Frankfort [London]}, abstract = {

Satire in which the new world is divided into the states of Tenter-belly, with its provinces of, in the Healy trans., Eat-allia (Gluttonia) and Drinke-allia (Quaffonia), Shee-Landt or Womendecoia [with its provinces of Tattlingen, Scoldonna, Blubberick, Giggot-tangier, Cockatrixia, Shrewes-bourg, and Blackswanstack (Modestiania),] Fooliana, and Theeve-ingen, with its provinces of Robberswaldt and Liegerdemaine, which are, in the Wands, trans., Crapulia with its provinces of Pamphagonia (Land of Gluttons) and Yvronia (Drinkers), Viragina (Land of Women) with its regions of Linguadocia, Rixatia, Ploravia, Isia major and Risia minor, Aphrodysia, Amazonia (Gender reversal), and Eugynia with Hermaphroditica Island is nearby, Moronia (Stupid), Lavernia (Rogues \& thieves).

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Joseph] [Hall] (1574-1656)} }