@booklet {11995, title = {{\textquotedblleft}A Gift of Coconuts{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Grist/Imagine 2000 2024}, year = {2024}, month = {January 22, 2024}, abstract = {

The story, set in Aotearoa New Zealand and using M{\={a}}ori myth, takes place on what has become the coastline as a family works to survive and protect their coconut farm as one of the new super storms approaches.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Female author}, url = {https://grist.org/climate-fiction/imagine2200-a-gift-of-coconuts/ }, author = {Melissa Gunn} } @booklet {11992, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Gifts We Give to the Sea{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Grist/Imagine 2000 2024 }, year = {2024}, abstract = {

Climate change dystopia set on the shore of the dried out Aral Sea. A glossary of the Kazakh words used in the story is provided at the beginning.

}, keywords = {Female author, Kazakh author, Swedish author}, url = {https://grist.org/climate-fiction/imagine2200-gifts-we-give-to-the-sea/}, author = {Dinara Tengri} } @booklet {11792, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Giver and the World Remade{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Tor.com}, year = {2023}, month = {March 29, 2023}, abstract = {

The story takes place in a future where much land has been flooded and some people have created a society of mutual aid among those living on rafts that they have built out of whatever they could salvage from the water, with raftmates who, for example, weaves houses, another who is a cobbler, and another who makes clothes. The focus of the story is that one the cobbler, the youngest of the three yearns to see the almost mythical land, where other people live with what remains of technology.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, url = {https://www.tor.com/2023/03/29/the-river-and-the-world-remade-e-lily-yu/}, author = {E. Lily Yu} } @booklet {11927, title = {Gone Wolf}, year = {2023}, month = {2023}, pages = {348 pp}, publisher = {Feiwell and Friends}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult dystopia set partially in 2111 in an area known as the Bible Boot, consisting of thirteen former states or parts of states of the US), that is divided into Clones (white) and Blues (black) with the Blues, some of whom are genetic matches of Clones and kept so that their organs can be harvested as needed. In this section every chapter concludes Flash Card explaining the system. The rest of the novel is set in 2022, and each chapter ends with a flash card on Black History for Kids.

}, keywords = {African American author, Female author}, isbn = {9781250850492}, author = {Amber McBride} } @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 {11627, title = {"The Girls Home"}, howpublished = {Unlimited Futures: Speculative, Visionary Blak and Black Fiction}, year = {2022}, month = {2022}, pages = {223-243}, publisher = {Fremantle Press in association with Djed Press}, address = {North Fremantle, WA, Australia}, abstract = {

A future Aboriginal community chooses, without their knowledge, girls who are drugged to temporarily eliminate their memories to put in the dystopian girl\’s home conditions that their forebearers were forced to endure. In the story, the girls find the inner resources to fight back as a community and escape, which appears to be the point.

}, keywords = {Aboriginal author, Australian author, Female author, Queer author}, isbn = {978-1-760990701}, author = {Mykaela Saunders}, editor = {Rafeif Ismail and Ellen van Neerven (b. 1990)} } @booklet {11589, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Give Me English{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction}, volume = {142.5/6}, year = {2022}, month = {May/June 2022}, pages = {37-48}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future in which words are a medium of exchange.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Chinese author, Female author}, author = {Ai Jiang (b. 1997)} } @booklet {11473, title = {Goliath}, year = {2022}, month = {2022}, pages = {336 pp.}, publisher = {Tordotcom}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

People with the means to do so have left Earth for space colonies cannibalizing Earth\’s infrastructure for use in the colonies. The novel is told from multiple perspectives as those remaining on Earth struggle to survive and build a better life there.

}, keywords = {African American author, Male author}, isbn = {978-1250782953}, author = {Tochi [Joshua] Onyebuchi (b. 1987)} } @booklet {11503, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Gabby{\textquoteright}s First Kiss{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {XR WORDSMITHS Solarpunk Storytelling Contest}, year = {2021}, month = {2021}, abstract = {

The story is set on the Florida coast in a community that has moved to higher ground and been designed for resilience told from the viewpoint of two teenagers going about their daily like.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, url = {http://www.solarpunkstorytelling.com/stories/gabby/}, author = {Joe Tankersley} } @booklet {11211, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Garbo on the Skids{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Speculative Los Angeles}, year = {2021}, month = {2021}, pages = {269-82}, publisher = {Akashic Books}, address = {Brooklyn, NY}, abstract = {

The Skids are an area of downtown Los Angeles that has been walled off to contain the poor, homeless, addicts, and petty criminals.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {9781617758645}, author = {A. G Lombardo}, editor = {Denise Hamilton} } @booklet {11343, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Ghost Birds{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {The New Yorker }, volume = {97.32}, year = {2021}, month = {October 11, 2021}, pages = {56-64}, abstract = {

Climate change dystopia with elements of magic realism. All birds have died, people live in sealed houses and, the air being toxic, must wear complete protective gear if leaving the house. Sightings of \“ghost birds\” leads the protagonist to join the Paranormal Birding Society, and he takes his teenage daughter birding.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {0028-792X}, author = {Karen Russell (b. 1981)} } @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 {11974, title = {The Governor{\textquoteright}s Daughter. Book One of Daughters of the New American Revolution}, year = {2021}, month = {2021}, pages = {488 pp. Book Two 469 pp.}, publisher = {Likinpoodle Press}, address = {Round Hill, VA}, abstract = {

The first volume of a series. The novel takes place in a future in which under a white nationalist government women must follow the prescribed Purity Protocols. The protagonist is the daughter of the powerful governor and regularly breaks the rules. Outside the walls of Premier City she finds that most people live a life of poverty, disease, and police violence. The second volume is The Prodigal Daughter. Book Two of Daughters of the New American Revolution. Round Hill, VA: Likinpoodle Press, 2022. 469 pp. It is a typical middle volume where everything gets worse and ends with To Be Continued. Both volumes end with the author\’s comments on the way the novels reflect the current situation in the U.S.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-1737177005 Book Two 978-1737177029 }, author = {Maria Dampmann} } @booklet {11402, title = {The Governor{\textquoteright}s Daughter. Daughters of the New American Revolution Book One}, year = {2021}, month = {2021}, pages = {488 pp.}, publisher = {Lickenpoodle Press}, address = {Roundhill, VA}, abstract = {

The novel is set in a religious, white nationalist patriarchy in which most people live in poverty while a favored few live in a walled city. The point-of-view character, the daughter Governor, discovers the world outside the city. The second volume in the series is to be The Prodigal Daughters.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-737177-0-5}, author = {Maria Ereni Dampman} } @booklet {11508, title = {"Green Witch"}, howpublished = {XR WORDSMITHS Solarpunk Storytelling Contest}, year = {2021}, month = {2021}, abstract = {

A brief story about the joys of life in contact with nature after the recovery from environmental devastation.

}, keywords = {Female author}, url = {http://www.solarpunkstorytelling.com/stories/green-witch/}, author = {Katrina Townsend} } @booklet {11728, title = {Grievers}, year = {2021}, month = {2021}, pages = {208 pp.}, publisher = {AK Press}, address = {Chico, CA/Edinburgh, Scot.}, abstract = {

First volume of a trilogy in which Detroit is ravaged by a pandemic. The second volume is Maroons. Black Dawn Series $\#$3. Chico, CA/Edinburgh, Scot.: AK Press, 2023. 267 pp. In this volume, the protagonist searches the mostly empty city for answers to the disease and for other survivors.\ 

}, keywords = {African American author, Female author}, isbn = {978-1-849354523}, author = {adrienne maree brown (b. 1978)} } @booklet {10684, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Gamecocks{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Lightspeed}, volume = {bo. 117}, year = {2020}, month = {February 2020}, pages = {EJournal}, abstract = {

The story is set in the near future where driverless trucks make sio much money for the companies that it is decided it makes no difference how many people they kill.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, url = {https://www.lightspeedmagazine.com/fiction/the-gamecocks/ }, author = {J. T. Petty} } @booklet {11075, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Gardener{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Social Alternatives (Brisbane, Qld, Australia)}, volume = {39.2}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {71-72}, abstract = {

Vignette the describes a social order based entirely on efficiency, personally, socially, and economically.\ 

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, issn = { 0155-0306 }, author = {Alexander Forbes} } @booklet {11028, title = {Gathering Evidence}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {314 pp.}, publisher = {Atlantic Books}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The novel begins with a new app that is addictive and then moves back to how and why it was developed.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, Scottish author}, isbn = {9781786493453}, author = {Martin MacInnes (b. 1983)} } @booklet {10820, title = {"Ghost Fishing"}, 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), 76-80, with a note on the author on 81.

}, month = {May 19, 2020}, pages = {EJournal}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future where fishing for fish has been replaced by fishing for all the junk dumped in the ocean.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-988293-10-3 }, url = {https://littlebluemarble.ca/2020/05/29/ghost-fishing/}, author = {William Delman} } @booklet {11773, title = {"Ghoul"}, howpublished = {The New Yorker}, volume = {96.35}, year = {2020}, note = {

Rpt. in his Liberation Day: Stories (New York: Random House, 2022), 139-170

}, month = {November 9, 2020}, pages = {50-61}, abstract = {

An odd story taking place in the Hell section of an underground amusement park that the employees never leave. Even the slightest criticism or dissent must be reported and death.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {9780525509592}, url = {https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2020/11/09/ghoul }, author = {George Saunders (b. 1958)} } @booklet {10848, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Gl{\^a}cehouse{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Glass and Gardens: Solarpunk Winters. An Anthology}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {180-208}, publisher = {World Weaver Press}, address = {Albuquerque, NM}, abstract = {

The story is set in an independent Qu{\'e}bec, where English is little understood or spoken outside the major cities. Winter is a thing of the past and immense Gl{\^a}cehouses have been built in which winter is created, but, as it turns out, the Gl{\^a}cehouses create other problems.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {9781732254688}, author = {R. Jean Mathieu}, editor = {Sarena Ulibarri} } @booklet {10942, title = {The Glare}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {327 pp}, publisher = {Little, Brown and Co. }, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult dystopia centered on a computer game that takes over anyone playing it.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-368-00565-4 }, author = {Margot Harrison} } @booklet {11217, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Glass Houses. Letters: Part I{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Ignorance is Strength: The Dystopia Triptych 1}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {46-56}, publisher = {Broad Reach Publishing + Adamant Press}, address = {New York/London}, abstract = {

Dystopia in three parts in which a U. S. President is elected on a Right to Work platform, which turns out to mean that if you don\’t contribute to society at an acceptable level as set by the government, such as doing poorly in high school, you will be forced to work on a farm for minimal food, housing, and wages. The second part is set on such a farm with those who refuse to work on the farm, and anyone considered a danger to society including everyone in jail, are frozen in a cyro chamber. The third part illustrates the conflicts taking place within a family where a child is not doing well at school.

}, keywords = {African American author, Male author, US Virgin Islands author}, isbn = {979-8677287572 979-8677291012 979-8677298424}, author = {Cadwell Turnbull}, editor = {John Joseph Adams (b. 1976) and Hugh [Crocker] Howey (b. 1975) and Christine Yant} } @booklet {11213, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Glasslands. Wrack: Part I{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Ignorance is Strength: The Dystopia Triptych 1}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {15-28}, publisher = {Broad Reach Publishing + Adamant Press}, address = {New York/London}, abstract = {

Three-part story set in a future where people from a different reality arrive on Earth intending to set everything straight and create a eutopia for all. The story is told from the point of view of three people from a band All You Need to Change the World is Faith and a Chainsaw who do not want to be Harmonized, as the invaders call it. Chronologically, the invasion is described as seen by the woman who leads the band members and who immediately wants to start a revolution in \“Spheres and Harmonies. Wrack: Part III.\” or Else the Light: The Dystopia Triptych 3. Ed. John Joseph Adams, Hugh Howey, and Christine Yant (New York/London: Broad Reach Publishing + Adamant Press, 2020), 17-33. In Glasslands. Wrack: Part I.\” Ignorance is Strength: The Dystopia Triptych 1. Ed. John Joseph Adams, Hugh Howey, and Christine Yant (New York/London: Broad Reach Publishing + Adamant Press, 2020), 15-28, a woman who is an artist whose desire to burn her creations is sent a reserve for the disaffected. And in \“Cacophany. Wrack: Part II.\” Burn the Ashes: The Dystopia Triptych 2. Ed. John Joseph Adams, Hugh Howey, and Christine Yant (New York/London: Broad Reach Publishing + Adamant Press, 2020), 17-32, a man who is an urban explorer and would be happy to be if he could explore other realms is not allowed to, so he joins the woman from Part III to invade the reserve.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {979-8677287572 979-8677291012 ‎ 979-8677298424}, author = {Tim[othy Aaron] Pratt (b. 1976)}, editor = {John Joseph Adams (b. 1976) and Hugh [Crocker] Howey (b. 1975) and Christine Yant} } @booklet {11686, title = {Glimpses of Utopia: Real Ideas for a Fairer World}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {479 pp.}, publisher = {Pentera Press}, address = {Seaforth, NSW, Australia}, abstract = {

In one sense this is a straightforward political book, but the author presents her arguments by discussing all the things she thinks need to be done to bring about a good society. A Universal Basic Income and cooperatives are fundamental but in sixty mostly short chapters, she covers a lot of ground.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Female author}, isbn = {978192570089}, author = {Jess Scully} } @booklet {11062, title = {Godshot. A Novel}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {325 pp.}, publisher = {Catapult}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The novel is set in a climate change dystopia, and focuses on a\ young woman abandoned by her mother in an authoritarian religious intentional community and her struggle to find both her mother and herself.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-1948226-48-6 }, author = {Chelsea Bieker (b. 1987)} } @booklet {11163, title = {Goldilocks}, year = {2020}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: Orbit, 2020

}, month = {2020}, pages = {340 pp}, publisher = {Wildfire}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The novel is initially set on an Earth damaged by climate-change and with women treated as inferior beings. It then moves to an all-female starship on its way to a planet in the Goldilocks zone around a sun where humans should be able to live and deals with the tensions and conflicts that occur on the starship. The ending suggests that there will be a sequel.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, Scottish author, US author}, isbn = {9781472267665 978-0316462860}, author = {Laura Lam (b. 1988)} } @booklet {11160, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Green-Up on Aisle 13{\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), 19-27, with a note on the author on 27-28.\ 

}, month = {August 14, 2020}, abstract = {

The story is set in an extremely polluted future in which breathing masks are necessary anywhere outside.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-988293-10-3}, url = {https://littlebluemarble.ca/2020/08/14/green-up-on-aisle-13/ }, author = {Dorie Sarina} } @booklet {10952, title = {"Growing Roots"}, howpublished = {Reckoning 4: Creative Writing on Environmental Justice}, volume = {4}, year = {2020}, note = {

Also published online at https://reckoning.press/growing-roots/ (June 17, 2020)

}, month = {2020}, pages = {199-220}, publisher = {Reckoning Press}, address = {Lake Orion, MI}, abstract = {

The protagonist of the story is a young Chinese American woman exiled to the moon from a United States who has put all those considered non-American into camps and sent anyone of dissents from current policies to the moon. Constant cold and hot war on Earth means the moon is largely abandoned.\ 

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, isbn = {978-09989252-6-4}, url = {https://reckoning.press/growing-roots/}, author = {Alan Bao} } @booklet {10962, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Gulliver{\textquoteright}s Travels Into Several Remote Nations Of The World. Part V: A Voyage To The Island of The Wolves{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Stories of Hope and Wonder in Support of the UK{\textquoteright}S Healthcare Workers}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {460-71}, publisher = {NewCon Press}, address = {Weston, Eng.}, abstract = {

Gulliver is thrown off a hip and ends up on an island that at first appears to be inhabited solely by a community of mostly young vegetarians who do not wear clothes and are promiscuous. But then, in what turns out to be a yearly ceremony, a pack of clothed wolves walking on two legs appear who feed on the humans.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Male author, Welsh author}, author = {Philip Palmer (b. 1960)}, editor = {Ian [George] Whates (b. 1959)} } @booklet {10831, title = {{\textquotedblleft}GAC ATG ATT ACA{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Little Blue Marble }, year = {2019}, note = {

Rpt. without the illus. in Little Blue Marble 2019: Climate in Crisis. Ed. Katrina Archer (Vancouver, BC, Canada: Ganache Media Books, 2020), 168-70; and in the author\’s Alt-Ernate: A Collection of 37 Stories (Wellington, Aotearoa New Zealand: Author, 2021), 118-21.

}, month = {December 19, 2019}, pages = {EJournal}, abstract = {

Brief story with people living underground for generations and trying to keep the gene pool large enough.\ 

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Female author}, isbn = { 978-1-988293-08-0 978-0-473-57089-7}, url = {https://littlebluemarble.ca/2019/12/13/gac-atg-att-aca/}, author = {Melanie Harding-Shaw} } @booklet {10472, title = {Gamechanger}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {573 pp.}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

An extremely high-tech, connected society set in a climate change future with both eutopian and dystopian elements in which individuals gain and lose social capital, which is necessary for almost everything one does, through the responses of people to their actions. See also the author\’s \“Freezing Rain, a Chance of Falling,\” The Magazine and Fantasy and Science Fiction 135.1/2 (July-August 2018): 75-149; and \“The Immolation of Kev Magee.\” By L. X. Beckett [pseud.]. Clarkesworld, no. 167 (August 2020), which are\ set in the same future.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Genderqueer author}, author = {[Alexandra Margaret] [Dellamonica] (b. 1968)} } @booklet {10498, title = {{\textquotedblleft}A Gardener{\textquoteright}s Guide to the Apocalypse{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {If This Goes On}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {95-107, with an editor{\textquoteright}s note on 107}, publisher = {Parvus Press}, address = {Yardley, PA}, abstract = {

Post-apocalyptic dystopia (nuclear war) as seen through the eyes of a gardener trying to grow food.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Lynette Mej{\'\i}a}, editor = {Cat[herine Tigerlily] Rambo (b. 1963)} } @booklet {10714, title = {"Ghost Town"}, howpublished = {McSweeney{\textquoteright}s 58. 2040 A.D.}, volume = {58}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {98-109}, publisher = {McSweeney{\textquoteright}s Quarterly Concern}, address = {San Francisco, CA}, abstract = {

The story is set in Uttarakhand, India, and the oppressive heat of the lowlands gradually reached the mountains and destroyed the crops. Most people leave but one couple stays even after their son leaves and dies in a construction accident in Oman.

}, keywords = {Indian author, Male author, US author}, author = {Kanishk Tharoor} } @booklet {10312, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Give Me Cornbread or Give Me Death{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {A People{\textquoteright}s Future of the United States: Speculative Fiction from 25 Extraordinary Writers}, year = {2019}, note = {

\ Rpt. in Escape Pod: The Science Fiction Anthology. Ed. Mur Lafferty and S. B. Divya [Divya Srinivasan Breed] (London: Titan Books, 2020), 303-11.

}, month = {2019}, pages = {298-306}, publisher = {One World}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

A dystopia in which the 99\% is trying to kill off most of the 99\%, who are fighting back.\ 

}, keywords = {African American author, Female author}, isbn = {9780525508809 9781789095012}, author = {N[ora] K. Jemisin (b. 1972)}, editor = {Victor LaValle (b. 1972) and John Joseph Adams (b. 1976)} } @booklet {10496, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Going north: Injecting hope for a better life{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Nature}, volume = {576.7886}, year = {2019}, month = {December 12, 2019}, abstract = {

Immigration dystopia.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Roxanne Khamsi} } @booklet {10084, title = {Golden State}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, publisher = {Mulholland Books/Little, Brown \& Co. }, address = {New York}, abstract = {

A dystopian future after a disaster in which much of the population of the United States has been wiped out. But the Golden State, which appears to be Los Angeles, remains, reconstituted as a dystopia in which it is illegal to lie and brings significant penalties. The novel focuses on an investigator in one of the many bureaucracies that have been established to enforce the law.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Ben[jamin Allen] H. Winters (b. 1976)} } @booklet {10821, title = {"Good Hunting"}, howpublished = {Patreon}, year = {2019}, note = {

Rpt. Illus. Little Blue Marble (March 13, 2020). https://littlebluemarble.ca/2020/03/13/good-hunting/

}, month = {November 25, 2019}, abstract = {

The story takes place\  in a future that has instituted stringent climate control laws.\ 

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Canadian author, Female author}, url = {https://littlebluemarble.ca/2020/03/13/good-hunting/}, author = {M. Darusha Wehm (b. 1975)} } @booklet {10319, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Good News Bad News{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {A People{\textquoteright}s Future of the United States: Speculative Fiction from 25 Extraordinary Writers}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {307-20}, publisher = {One World}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The future is depicted in a series of short reports, the main one being about racist robots.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, Taiwanese American author}, author = {Charles Yu (b. 1976)}, editor = {Victor LaValle (b. 1972) and John Joseph Adams (b. 1976)} } @booklet {10712, title = {"The Good Plan"}, howpublished = {McSweeney{\textquoteright}s 58. 2040 A.D. }, volume = {58}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {76-87}, publisher = {McSweeney{\textquoteright}s Quarterly Concern}, address = {San Francisco, CA}, abstract = {

The story is set \“somewhere in the Northern Hemisphere\” but concerns Africa. The Good People have the Good Plan to wall themselves off from the rest of the world to protect themselves from refugees, whose memories they take. The protagonist, who is being escorted in chains back to Africa, describes what little he can remember of the Crisis that the Good People blame on everyone but themselves.

}, keywords = {African American author, Male author}, author = {Mikael Awake} } @booklet {10475, title = {"Good Pupils"}, howpublished = {If This Goes On}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {51-57, with an editor{\textquoteright}s note on 57}, publisher = {Parvus Press}, address = {Yardley, PA}, abstract = {

The dystopian school of the near future where all students are controlled by an electronic collar and teachers are armed.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, UK author}, author = {Jack Lothian}, editor = {Cat[herine Tigerlily] Rambo (b. 1963)} } @booklet {10552, title = {The Grace Year}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, publisher = {Wednesday Books/St. Martin{\textquoteright}s}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult dystopia in which at sixteen girls are banished for a year but are hunted by men and are in danger from each other.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Kim Liggett} } @booklet {11002, title = {Gravity Is Heartless: The Heartless Series Book 1}, volume = {1}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {342 pp.}, publisher = {She Writes Press}, address = {Berkeley, CA}, abstract = {

The novel is set about thirty years in the future. By 2030 religious fundamentalism was being enforced by the state. Wars followed and in the post-war under HEXAD (the International Unified Government), religion was legal but monitored and fundamentalism was not tolerated. The world economy collapsed in 2036. Cyborgs are common although facing discrimination and generally limited to fifty percent technology. A range of conflicts are developing, and climate change, which has already remade the globe, is getting worse. The second volume, Nostalgia is Heartless: The Heartless Series Book 2 is scheduled for 2021.\ 

}, keywords = {Australian author, Female author}, isbn = {978-1-63152-872-9}, author = {Sarah Lahey} } @booklet {10145, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Great Dividuation{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {CR: The New Centennial Review }, volume = {19.1}, year = {2019}, month = {Spring 2019}, pages = {85-103}, abstract = {

A dystopia about the breakdown of capitalist accumulation and its effects on individuals and social interaction. For details about dividuation, see https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/Dividuation.\ 

}, keywords = {Australian author, Austrian author, Canadian author, Female author, German author, Male author}, author = {Joel E. Mason and Michael Hornblow and anique yael vered (b. 1984)} } @booklet {10614, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Great Wall of America{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Mithila Review: The Journal of International Science Fiction \& Fantasy}, volume = {no. 11}, year = {2019}, note = {

Rpt. without the illus. Np: Mithila Review, 2019. 40 pp

}, month = {October 2019}, pages = {EJournal}, abstract = {

Dystopia created by using forced labor to build a wall between Mexico and the U.S.

}, url = {https://mithilareview.com/hewitt-10-19/}, author = {Hewitt, David A.} } @booklet {10465, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Green Glass: A Love Story{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {If This Goes On}, year = {2019}, note = {

pt. in The Year\’s Best Science Fiction Volume 1. Ed. Jonathan Strahan (New York: Saga Press, 2020), 453-63, with an editor\’s note on 453; and in her Jewel Box: Stories (New York Erewhon Books/Kensington Publishing, 2023), 59-70.

}, month = {2019}, pages = {1-29, with an editor{\textquoteright}s note on 29}, publisher = {Parvus Press}, address = {Yardley, PA}, abstract = {

The story is set in a climate-change future and stresses the extremely different situations of the rich and poor.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = { 978-0999784211 978-1-5344-4959-6 978-1-64566-048-4}, author = {E. Lily Yu}, editor = {Cat[herine Tigerlily] Rambo (b. 1963)} } @booklet {11004, title = {Green Valley}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {323 pp.}, publisher = {Titan Books}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The novel is part dystopia and part mystery novel involving the search for missing children from Green Valley, the only remaining community that uses invasive digital technology.

}, keywords = {Male author, South African author}, isbn = {9781789090239}, author = {Louis Greenberg} } @booklet {11253, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Grindr City{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {How to Run a City Like Amazon, and Other Fables}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {553-69 [141-48]}, publisher = {Meatspace Press}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

Grindr City starts as an app for gay and bi men to chat and meet, and it evolves into an all-consuming way of life, which then evolves into an actual city. All the stories in the book are responses to a recent book, A New City O/S: The Power of Open, Collaborative, and Distributed Government (Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press, 2017), by Stephen Goldsmith and Neil Kleiman, that proposes, in the editors\’ interpretation, that cities should act more like Amazon in dealing with their citizens.

}, keywords = {English author, Transgender author}, isbn = {978-0-9955776-7-1}, author = {Gavin Brown}, editor = {Mark Graham and Rob Kitchin and Shannon Mattern and Joe Shaw} } @booklet {10627, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Growing Resistance{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Translunar Lounge: A Speculative Fiction Magazine}, volume = {no. 1}, year = {2019}, note = {

Rpt. in Best Vegan Science Fiction \& Fantasy 2019. Ed. B. Morris Allen (Np: Metamorphosis Books, 2020), 23-36.

}, month = {2019}, pages = {EJournal}, abstract = {

Post-apocalyptic (pandemic/plague) dystopia in which a small group was isolated behind a barrier, which, though no longer necessary, separates the better off and the poor, who produce most of the goods needed by those beyond the wall.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Non-binary author, Queer author}, isbn = {978-1-64076-006-6}, url = {https://translunartravelerslounge.com/2019/08/15/growing-resistance-kemp/}, author = {Juliet Kemp} } @booklet {11038, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Growing the New City: London 2039{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Gross Ideas: Tales of Tomorrow{\textquoteright}s Architecture}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {95-101}, publisher = {The Architecture Foundation and Oslo Architectural Triennale}, address = {London}, abstract = {

London in 2039 is becoming a sustainable city after years of demonstrations by the youth of the city.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, isbn = {DLC 978-1-9996462-3-3 }, author = {Robin Robinson (b. 1944)}, editor = {Edwina Attlee and Phineas Harper and Maria Smith} } @booklet {10621, title = {Guava}, howpublished = {Futures A Science Fiction Series}, volume = {[No. 2]}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {25 pp.}, publisher = {Radix Media}, address = {Brooklyn, NY}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopian set on a planet with one continent, presidents chosen through rigged elections, and one Supreme Leader. People are kept on short rations, bread has sand added, people are required to buy any food in surplus. Television must be left on a minimum of three hours a day and has a camera that can record activities. People simply disappear. AAs a population control mechanism, all women sixteen to thirty are drafted into the military and never seen again, which raises the level of harassment and violence directed at women.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Vera Kurian} } @booklet {9996, title = {"Gaea"}, howpublished = {All We Ever Wanted: Stories of a Better World}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {43-50}, publisher = {A Wave Blue World}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

A positive future story in comic form in which Earth has been nursed back to health only for others to arrive set to despoil it again.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Rich Douek}, editor = {Matt Miner and Eric Palicki and Tyler Chin-Tanner} } @booklet {10204, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Galatea in Utopia{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The Magazine of Fantasy of Science Fiction }, volume = {134.1/2}, year = {2018}, month = {January-February 2018}, pages = {158-86}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future in which all but a few people can change their\ gender and all bodily characteristics as often as they want and addresses the relationship issues this creates.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {00024-984X }, author = {Nick [Nicholas] Wolven} } @booklet {9958, title = {"Generations"}, howpublished = {Bikes Not Rockets: Intersectional Feminist Bicycle Science Fiction Stories}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {126-44}, publisher = {Microcosm Publishing}, address = {Portland, OR}, abstract = {

The story is about the settlement of Mars as the people of Earth are dying of radiation poisoning with the settlement a dystopia that replicates colonialism with Africans settled on the worst land with the worst housing a work.

}, keywords = {Male author, Nigerian author}, author = {Osahon Ize-Iyamu}, editor = {Elly Blue} } @booklet {10043, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Gilbert Tong{\textquoteright}s Life List{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Shades Within Us: Tales of Migration and Fractured Borders}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {70-82}, publisher = {Laksa Media Groups}, address = {Calgary, AB, Canada}, abstract = {

A climate-change based dystopia in which the country of Kiribati disappears under the ocean, and under pressure, various countries offer to accept a small number of the refugees. The story is set in Canada, which has settled 5,000 refugees in a fenced-off self-governed area, and then ignored them.\ 

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author}, author = {Kate Heartfield}, editor = {Susan Forest and Lucas K. Law} } @booklet {10167, title = {"Glow"}, howpublished = {Welcome to Dystopia: Forty-five Visions of What Lies Ahead}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {132-41}, publisher = {O/R Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia set in the United States after an election of an anti-immigrant president.\ 

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Australian author, Female author, US author}, author = {J. S. Breukelaar}, editor = {Gordon Van Gelder (b. 1966)} } @booklet {9744, title = {Gods, Monsters, and the Lucky Peach}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, publisher = {Tor.com}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The novel is set in 2267 and in ancient Mesopotamia. In the future, people are beginning to emerge from underground where they had escaped the widespread devastation on the environment, and they hope to restore the damage. Complications arise with the ability to travel to the past.\ 

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Lesbian author}, author = {Kelly Robson (b. 1967)} } @booklet {10012, title = {"Good Time"}, howpublished = {All We Ever Wanted: Stories of a Better World}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {143-48}, publisher = {AWave Blue World}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

A positive future story in comic form in which technology both punishes and rehabilitates in a very short time.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Vasilis Pozios}, editor = {Matt Miner and Eric Palicki and Tyler Chin-Tanner} } @booklet {9789, title = {The Greatest Story Ever Told}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, publisher = {NewCon Press}, address = {Weston, Eng.}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a society with slavery in which some slavers escape and lead a revolt, which is defeated.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Una McCormack (b. 1972)} } @booklet {10025, title = {"The Green Man"}, howpublished = {Reckoning 3: Creative Writing on Environmental Justice}, volume = {3}, year = {2018}, note = {

Rpt. https://reckoning.press/the-green-man/ (January 15, 2019).\ 

}, month = {2018}, pages = {15-28}, publisher = {Reckoning Press}, address = {Lake Orion, MI}, abstract = {

Environmental dystopia in which, with all the bees and other pollinating insects gone, the young poor are hired as pollinators.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Teika Marija Smits}, editor = {Michael DeLuca and Danika Dinsmore and Mohammad Shafiqul Islam and Giselle Leeb and Johannes Punkt and Sakara Remmu and A{\"\i}cha Martine Thiam} } @booklet {11131, title = {"Guardian"}, howpublished = {Pulp Literature}, volume = {no. 19}, year = {2018}, month = {Summer 2018}, pages = {97-104}, abstract = {

The story is set in a world in which everyone must wear a Guardian that limits their ability to feel emotion.\ 

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author}, issn = {2292-2164}, author = {Susan Pieters} } @booklet {9407, title = {"Games Theory"}, howpublished = {Boundaries, Border Crossings, and Reinventing the Future }, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {61-75}, publisher = {Aqueduct Press}, address = {Seattle, WA}, abstract = {

The story is about a multi-generation starship and the relations between the male, white scientists and engineers and the predominantly female, mixed race and ethnicity who are more arts and humanities oriented.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Beth [Ann] Plutchak (b. 1952)} } @booklet {9450, title = {Gather the Daughters. A Novel}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {345 pp.}, publisher = {Little, Brown}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult dystopia that takes place on an isolated island inhabited by a cult in which women are completely controlled by their fathers and husbands except for a brief period at puberty. Women who are past child-bearing age are considered no longer useful and are required to commit suicide.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {9780316501408}, author = {Jennie Melamed} } @booklet {9800, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Ghost in the Machine{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Compostela: Tesseracts Twenty}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {145-58}, publisher = {Compostela: Tesseracts Twenty}, address = {Calgary, AB, Canada}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future that can be read as either eutopian or\ dystopian. It is presented as much better than the past in that war has disappeared, but the future is controlled through an AI. The DNA of boys is analyzed at birth and aggressive and religious features removed.\ 

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author}, author = {Susan Pieters}, editor = {Spider Robinson (b. 1948) and James Alan} } @booklet {9856, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Glitterati{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {2084}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {111-29}, publisher = {Unsung Stories/Red Squirrel Publishing}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a future divided between those devoted to fashion and those who are not.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, Scottish author}, isbn = {9781907389580}, author = {Oliver Langmead}, editor = {George Sandison} } @booklet {9601, title = {Gnomon}, year = {2017}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2018

}, month = {2017}, publisher = {William Heinemann}, address = {London}, abstract = {

A very complex novel depicting what appears to be a flawed utopia in which constant surveillance and a police force that is able to stop crimes before they happen produces a good life for everyone, but it turns out that there are flaws in the system and unaccountable holders of power.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Nicholas] [Cornwall] (b. 1972)}, editor = {Nick Harkaway [pseud.]} } @booklet {9846, title = {"A Good Citizen"}, howpublished = {2084}, year = {2017}, note = {

Rpt. in Best of British Science Fiction 2017. Ed. Donna Scott ([Weston, Eng.]: NewCon Press, 2018), 131-38.

}, month = {2017}, pages = {75-97}, publisher = {Unsung Stories/Red Squirrel Publishing}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia in which there is a daily referendum in which everyone must vote or lose what few privileges they have.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, isbn = {9781907389580}, author = {Anne Charnock (b. 1954)}, editor = {George Sandison} } @booklet {9697, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Good Citizens{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Alternative Truths}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {91-95}, publisher = {B Cubed Press}, address = {Benton City, WA}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which the presidency of Donald Trump (b. 1946) becomes a monarchy that uses nuclear weapons on Iran and Mexico and is at war with China. Any one not of white, multi-generational U.S. ancestry loses their citizenship, as do gays, Jews, Muslims. Some people had escaped, many were killed. The female author has published many non-fiction books for children, mostly on scientific subjects.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Paula Hammond}, editor = {Phyllis Irene Radford (b. 1950) and Bob Brown} } @booklet {11228, title = {"Grass Still Grows"}, howpublished = {Climate Fiction Creative Writing Contest, Massey University}, year = {2017}, note = {

Rpt. as by S. A. McKenzie in New Orbit Magazine, no. 5 (February 2019); and illus. Little Blue Marble (July 16, 2021). https://littlebluemarble.ca/2021/07/16/grass-still-grows/

}, month = {2017}, abstract = {

Climate change dystopia set in Christchurch, New Zealand, which is mostly under water and being dismantled to build new cities inland on higher ground. The story won the 2017 Still Waving Climate Creative Writing Competition.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Transgender author}, url = {https://sites.massey.ac.nz/expressivearts/2017/10/25/winning-climate-change-creative-writing/ https://littlebluemarble.ca/2021/07/16/grass-still-grows/}, author = {Sharron McKenzie} } @booklet {9495, title = {"The Great Wall of Denver"}, howpublished = {Persistent Visions}, year = {2017}, month = {March 3, 2017}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which the U.S. has broken up, and Denver must\ deal with pollution from nuclear waste and winds that can destroy the city, hence the wall around the city.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, url = {https://persistentvisionsmag.com/fiction/great-wall-of-denver-david-ira-cleary}, author = {David Ira Cleary} } @booklet {9621, title = {The Growing Season}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, publisher = {Harvill Secker}, address = {London}, abstract = {

What appears to be a eutopia in which the invention of a pouch that allows anyone to gestate a child outside the body, allowing gay men and single people to carry their own child. The pouch is transferable at will, which allows couples to trade off. The pouch is the monopoly of one company, so, of course, there are problems.

}, keywords = {Female author, Scottish author}, author = {Helen Sedgwick (b. 1978)} } @booklet {9478, title = {The Gender Game}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, publisher = {Nightlight Press}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

The novel is set in a world divided between men\’s and women\’s lands (Patrus and Matrus). In Patrus, women are completely subservient, but the novel focuses on a young woman who is not subservient who leaves Matrus for Patrus on a quest. First volume of a seven-volume series, followed by The Gender Secret. Np: Nightlight Press, 2016; The Gender Lie. Np: Nightlight Press, 2017; The Gender War. Np: Nightlight Press, 2017; The Gender Fall, 2017; The Gender Plan. Np: Nightlight Press, 2017; The Gender End. Np: Nightlight Press, 2017.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Bella Forrest} } @booklet {8983, title = {Gifted}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, publisher = {Feiwel and Friends}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult dystopia in which exceptional talents can be purchased by the privileged, but some talents still occur naturally, and one focus of the novel is a young woman who is from the underclass and is musically gifted in a society that outlaws music making.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {H[eather] A. Swain (b. 1969)} } @booklet {10745, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Girl, Blue Eyes, Boy{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {African Writer}, year = {2016}, note = {

Rpt. in The Naked Convos - Original African Stories (March 6, 2017). http://thenakedconvos.com/girl-blue-eyes-boy/

}, month = {December 12, 2016}, abstract = {

The story is set in Lagos, Nigeria in 3096, which is a high-tech city with Lagoonborg robots designed to help the elderly but becoming ubiquitous. Mars has been settled, and people are being Marsinalized so that they more easily adapt to conditions there. The story ends abruptly, and the author says he is considering a sequel.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, Nigerian author}, url = {https://www.africanwriter.com/girl-blue-eyes-boy-fiction-marvel-chukwudi-pephel/.}, author = {Marvel Chukwudi Pephel} } @booklet {10844, title = {"Give Your All"}, howpublished = {Galaxy{\textquoteright}s Edge}, volume = {no. 15}, year = {2016}, note = {

Rpt. in The Best of Galaxy\’s Edge 2015-2017. Ed. Mike Resnick (Rockville, MD: Arc/Manor/Phoenix Pick, 2018), 197-208.

}, month = {July 2015}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which people are expected to donate body parts to gain status.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, Finnish author}, isbn = {978-1-61242-356-2}, author = {Leena Litkitalo} } @booklet {9557, title = {"Glass"}, howpublished = {Dystopia Utopia Short Stories: An Anthology of New \& Classic Tales}, year = {2016}, pages = {109-16}, publisher = {Flame Tree Publishing}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia that focuses on the need for girls to be thin.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Megan Dorei} } @booklet {9508, title = {The Good Place}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, abstract = {

A comedy and fantasy series set in an afterlife, a eutopian Heaven created by an individual as a reward for a righteous life. The initial focus is on a woman who realizes that she does not belong in Heaven and to stay hides her failings. In the second series, everyone\’s memories are erased with the intent of starting over.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Michael Schur (b. 1975)} } @booklet {10403, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Goodnight New York, New York{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Shoreline of Infinity}, volume = {no. 6}, year = {2016}, note = {

Rpt. in the Edinburgh International Science Festival Special Edition of Shoreline of Infinity, no. 11\½ (Spring 2018): 91-97.\ 

}, month = {Winter 2016/17}, pages = {61-67}, abstract = {

Climate-change story in which the government has consistently lied about conditions in New York, where even some of the tallest buildings are completely submerged.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {2059-2590}, author = {Victoria Zelvin} } @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 {9418, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Great Chasm{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Altered States of the Union}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, pages = {187-206}, publisher = {Crazy 8 Press}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

In the future, the U.S. has divided into two separate countries, the liberal Blue States in the East that enforce a narrow view of liberalism and the absolutist Red States to the West.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, Male author, US author}, author = {Hildy Silverman and David Silverman}, editor = {Glenn Hauman} } @booklet {8322, title = {The Glass Arrow}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, publisher = {Tor Teen}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult dystopia in which girls are marketable products.

}, keywords = {Female author, Japanese American author}, author = {Kristen Simmons} } @booklet {9456, title = {Gold Fame Citrus}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, publisher = {Riverhead Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Climate-change dystopia.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Claire Vaye Watkins (b. 1984)} } @booklet {9851, title = {The Grasshopper Lies Heavy}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, publisher = {Np}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

Alternative history dystopia in which after the South won Civil War, parts of what had been the United States are controlled by different countries, including Britain and the Soviet Union. The novel also has racial subthemes, with slavery still in existence and the British using the Black Panthers as part of an invasion force.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Chandler Duke} } @booklet {8166, title = {"Game"}, howpublished = {The World to Come}, year = {2014}, month = {2014}, pages = {159-69}, publisher = {Spineless Wonders}, address = {Strawberry Hills, NSW, Australia}, abstract = {

Post-catastrophe dystopia in which a virus has supposedly wiped out most humans and animals and an authoritarian government controls access to those areas outside the contained cities.

}, keywords = {Indian author, Male author}, author = {Tabish Khair}, editor = {Patrick West and Om Prakash Dwivedi} } @booklet {8094, title = {A Girl Called Fearless}, year = {2014}, month = {2014}, publisher = {St. Martin{\textquoteright}s Griffin}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult dystopia in which all women, but not girls, have been killed by a synthetic hormone in beef. In the novel a teenager girl is sold by her father into marriage to a powerful politician. She chooses to run away. First of two volumes followed by A Girl Undone. New York: St. Martin\’s Griffin, 2015 in which the dominant political party is undone by the discovery of huge loans from Saudi Arabia given interest-free on the condition that the U.S. restrict women\’s rights. At the end of the novel, women\’s rights are slowly being reestablished.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Catherine Linka} } @booklet {8091, title = {Glory O{\textquoteright}Brien{\textquoteright}s History of the Future. A Novel}, year = {2014}, month = {2014}, publisher = {Little, Brown Books for Young Readers}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The novel is told from the point-of-view of a young woman about to graduate from high school who comes to be able to see the past and future generations of people she meets. Beginning about a third of the way through, there are one and two page reports (a total of ten) entitled \“Glory O\’Briens History of the Future\” that recount the division of the U.S. based on an extreme anti-woman agenda; e.g. no woman can be employed, and a new civil war.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {A[my] S[arig] King (b. 1970)} } @booklet {10331, title = {"Gone Fishing"}, howpublished = {Amok: An Anthology of Asia-Pacific Speculative Fiction}, year = {2014}, month = {2014}, pages = {143-54}, publisher = {Solarwyrm Press}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

The story is set in the Pacific Ocean where competing sea steading sites have been established, some associated together in a Commonwealth that includes some land-based communities. Everyone is struggling to survive in the fished-out ocean.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Jo[anne] Thomas}, editor = {Dominica Malcolm} } @booklet {8097, title = {Goodhouse}, year = {2014}, note = {

U.K. ed. London: Doubleday, 2015. Rpt. London: Transworld, 2016.\ 

}, month = {2014}, publisher = {Farrar, Straus \& Giroux}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which boys who are the sons of convicted felons are tested for a genetic marker, and, if they have it, are incarcerated in a Goodhouse where they are supposedly taught how to control the effects of their inheritance. Based in part on the nineteenth century Preston School of Industry.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Peyton Marshall (b. 1972)} } @booklet {8933, title = {The Grasshopper{\textquoteright}s Child}, year = {2014}, month = {2014}, publisher = {TJoy Books}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

Sequel to 2001, 2002, 2003, 2005, and 2006 Jones. This volume follows people, and one young woman in particular, who are caught up in the dystopia as they struggle, ultimately successfully, to get free.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Gwyneth [Ann] Jones (b. 1952)} } @booklet {8312, title = {Gated}, year = {2013}, month = {2013}, publisher = {Random House Books for Young Readers}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult dystopia in which a family joins an underground religious community with a charismatic leader to escape from the world\’s problems.\ \ First volume of a series followed by\ Astray. New York: Random House Books for Young Readers, 2014\ in which the protagonist from\ Gated\ has left the community, which is trying to get her back.\ No further volumes have been published.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Amy Christine Parker} } @booklet {8287, title = {Glass House 51. A Novel}, year = {2013}, month = {2013}, publisher = {BZFF Books}, address = {Milwaukee, WI}, abstract = {

Corporate dystopia stressing the misuse of information technology.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Hampel, John} } @booklet {8324, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Graveyard Shift{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Tesseracts Seventeen: Speculating Canada from Coast to Coast to Coast }, year = {2013}, month = {2013}, pages = {57-65}, publisher = {EDGE Science Fiction and Fantasy Publishing}, address = {Calgary, AB, Canada}, abstract = {

The background to the story is the dystopia created by online education for those hoping to teach.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author}, author = {Holly Schofield}, editor = {Colleen Anderson and Steve Vernon} } @booklet {8266, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Gray Wings{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Asimov{\textquoteright}s Science Fiction }, volume = {37.4 \& 5 (447 \& 448) }, year = {2013}, note = {

Rpt. in The Year\’s Best Science Fiction. Thirty-First Annual Collection. Ed. Gardner [Raymond] Dozois (New York: St. Martin\’s Griffin, 2014), 140-47 with an editor\’s note on 140.

}, month = {April/May 2013}, pages = {74-80}, abstract = {

The background to the story includes a future that is eutopian for the rich and dystopian for the poor.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {1065-6298 }, author = {Karl Bunker} } @booklet {6536, title = {Gaiastan}, year = {2012}, month = {2012}, publisher = {CreateSpace}, address = {[Scotts Valley, CA]}, abstract = {

Authoritarian, hierarchical (Overmen and Undermen) dystopia with Undermen enslaved. The novel ends with the development of a resistance movement.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Troy J. Grice} } @booklet {8721, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Gift of Touch{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {AfroSF: Science Fiction by African Writers}, year = {2012}, note = {

Rpt. in The Apex Book of World Science Fiction 4. Ed. Mahvesh Murad. Series ed. Lavie Tidhar (Lexington, KY: Apex Publications, 2015), 19-38.\ 

}, month = {2012}, pages = {135-58}, publisher = {StoryTime Press}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

In a future of regular travel in space, there are a number of dystopias presented, including a religious group that practices child sacrifice.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author, Nigerian author}, author = {Chinelo Onwualu}, editor = {Ivor W. Hartmann} } @booklet {8339, title = {Glitch}, year = {2012}, month = {2012}, publisher = {St. Martin{\textquoteright}s Griffin}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult dystopia in which everyone is implanted with a chip that eliminates destructive emotions. First volume of a trilogy followed by\ Override. New York: St. Martin\’s Griffin, 2013, which focuses on the development of a resistance movement; and\ Shutdown. New York: St. Martin\’s Griffin, 2014, which deals with the overthrow of the system.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Heather Anastasiu} } @booklet {8338, title = {Going Home}, year = {2012}, month = {2012}, publisher = {Plume}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

First volume of a survivalist dystopia series. Followed by\ Surviving Home. New York: Plume, 2013; and\ Escaping Home. Book 3 of the Survivalist Series. New York: Plume, 2013, in which they fight the U.S government, which is establishing relocation camps, to stay in their homes; and\ Forsaking Home.\ A Novel. Book 4 of the Survivalist Series. New York Plume, 2014, in which the protagonist plots to bring down the entire system.\ See also 2016 American and Hopf.

}, keywords = {US author}, author = {A[ngery] American [pseud.]} } @booklet {9113, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Good Girl{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Diverse Engines}, year = {2012}, month = {2012}, pages = {145-77}, publisher = {Tu Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia with people living in tunnels in cities. Lesbian themes.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Malinda Lo}, editor = {Tobias S[amuel] Buckell (b. 1979) and Joe Monti} } @booklet {9122, title = {Good Intentions. A Novel}, year = {2012}, month = {2012}, publisher = {Swiss Creek Publications}, address = {Cupertino, CA}, abstract = {

Satire depicting a future dystopian U.S. of complete government control.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Zeidman, Bob} } @booklet {9099, title = {Grid City Overload}, year = {2012}, month = {2012}, publisher = {CreateSpace}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

Dystopia set in Grid City, CO in 2025 stressing the negative effects of technology and the problems of sensory overload. Additional material is available at http://gridcityoverload.blogspot.com/

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Steven T. Bramble} } @booklet {6510, title = {The Gospel of Anarchy. A Novel}, year = {2011}, month = {2011}, publisher = {Harper Perennial}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The novel is set in the late twentieth century and focuses on an urban intentional community trying to create utopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Justin Taylor} } @booklet {6476, title = {The Grass is Always Browner}, year = {2011}, month = {2011}, publisher = {Zeus Publications}, address = {Burleigh, QLD, Australia}, abstract = {

Post-catastrophe dystopia and eutopia. Australia has experienced a Great Famine, Coal Wars, and other disasters, and it is slowly recovering under Aborigine leadership. But its neighbors covet its resources, and it is forced into an Asian alliance, has to change its name to Austrasia, and loses some of its resources. After a time, Aboriginal leadership is re-established and the renamed Australia is again recovering.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author, UK author}, url = {http://www.zeus-publications.com/the_grass_is_always_browner.htm.}, author = {Martin Knox} } @booklet {6514, title = {"Green Future: But Is It Art?"}, howpublished = {Nature }, volume = {471.7336 }, year = {2011}, month = {March 3, 2011}, pages = {130}, abstract = {

A dystopian future London that has been overrun by vegetation and everything is covered by airborne algae. People live in favelas ruled by a matriarch.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Deborah Walker} } @booklet {6431, title = {"Goin{\textquoteright} Down to Anglotown"}, howpublished = {The Dragon and the Stars}, year = {2010}, month = {2010}, pages = {30-46}, publisher = {DAW Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia of future ethnic relations in the U.S. where Asian Americans now dominate on the coasts and the large cities. White ethnic enclaves exist primarily to service and prey on the dominant group. The story plays with the reversal of ethnic expectations.

}, keywords = {Asian-American author, Male author}, author = {William F. Wu (b. 1951)}, editor = {Derwin Mak and Eric Choi} } @booklet {6404, title = {Grace}, year = {2010}, month = {2010}, publisher = {Dutton Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult religious dystopia.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Elizabeth Scott (b. 1972)} } @booklet {9212, title = {{\textquotedblleft}A Great Big Beautiful Tomorrow/Now Is the Best Time of Your Life{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Godlike Machines}, year = {2010}, note = {

Rpt. without the subtitle in his A Great Big Beautiful Tomorrow (Oakland, CA: PM Press, 2011), 9-106. The book also includes his \“Creativity vs. Copyright\” (107-21), \“\‘Look for the Lake\’ Cory Doctorow Interviewed by Terry Bisson\” (123-34), a \“Bibliography) (135-36).\ 

}, month = {2010}, pages = {167-264 with an editor{\textquoteright}s note on 167}, publisher = {Science Fiction Book Club}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The story is about a transhuman teenager living in a post catastrophe (virus) dystopia.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, English author, Male author}, author = {Cory [Efram] Doctorow (b. 1971)} } @booklet {6305, title = {"The Greenman Watches the Black Bar Go Up, Up Up"}, howpublished = {Shine: An Anthology of Near-future, Optimistic Science Fiction}, year = {2010}, month = {2010}, pages = {46-70 with an editor{\textquoteright}s note on 45-46}, publisher = {Solaris}, address = {Oxford, Eng.}, abstract = {

A future of environmental restraint in Brazil that followed an environmental dystopia and a war to establish better practice. The focus of the story is a man tracing the trading of carbon by a corporation trying to avoid the laws.

}, keywords = {Brazilian author, Male author}, author = {Jacques Barcia}, editor = {Jetse de Vries} } @booklet {6296, title = {Grimsdon}, year = {2010}, month = {2010}, publisher = {Random House Australia}, address = {North Sydney, NSW, Australia}, abstract = {

Young adult post-catastrophe dystopia focusing on a group of teenagers surviving in the ruins.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Female author}, author = {Deborah Abela (b. 1966)} } @booklet {6396, title = {"The Guy Who Worked For Money"}, howpublished = {Shareable Futures}, year = {2010}, note = {

Rpt. as \“The Man Who Worked for Money.\” In\ How to Live on Other Planets: A Handbook for Aspiring Aliens. Ed. Joanne Merriam (Nashville, TN: Upper Rubber Boot Books, 2015), 79-94.

}, month = {2010}, abstract = {

A completely connected society. Can be read as both a technological eutopia and a technological dystopia in that it clearly begins as the former but transitions to the latter. Everyone\’s status is based on their contributions to society, but more importantly, how others evaluate those contributions. His \“Falling.\” Illus. Jacey. Nature 437.7058 (September 22, 2005): 594; rpt. Shareable Futures. http://shareable.net/blog/falling\ (July 7, 2010) is set in the same future.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, url = {http://shareable.net/blog/the-guy-who-worked-for money. Posted July 12, 2010. Accessed February 3, 2011.}, author = {Benjamin [Micah] Rosenbaum (b. 1969)} } @booklet {11283, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Galatea{\textquoteright}s Stepchildren{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The Future Fire: Social Political \& Speculative Cyber-Fiction}, volume = {no. 16}, year = {2009}, month = {2009}, pages = {18-35}, abstract = {

In a post-plague U.S. where everything has disintegrated, android women are created, officially for work but mostly used sexually. It is illegal to educated them, but a man allows one to read.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {1746-1839}, url = {The Future Fire: 2009.16 fiction galatea }, author = {Sam S. Kepfield (b. 1963)} } @booklet {6215, title = {Goldstein}, year = {2009}, month = {2009}, publisher = {Trafford Publishing}, address = {Victoria, BC, Canada}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a future fascist U.S. controlled by twelve corporate cartels. The free state of Goldstein, using advanced Chinese technology, overthrows the cartels by disabling their technology.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Troy [J.] Grice} } @booklet {6211, title = {The Good Humor Man, Or, Calorie 3501}, year = {2009}, month = {2009}, publisher = {Tachyon Publications}, address = {San Francisco, CA}, abstract = {

Dystopia where it is illegal to eat fattening foods.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Andrew Fox (b. 1964)} } @booklet {9492, title = {Grasses of a Thousand Colors}, year = {2009}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Dramatists Play Service, 2014. U.K. ed. London: Nick Hern Books, 2009.\ 

}, month = {2009}, publisher = {Theatre Communications Group}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Post-catastrophe (pandemic) dystopia background to a play the focuses on the sexual fantasies and memories of the main character, who caused the pandemic. Play that opened at the Royal Court Theatre, London, May 18, 2009.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {William Shawn (b. 1943)} } @booklet {6220, title = {"The Guerilla Infrastructure HOWTO"}, howpublished = {Future Bristol}, year = {2009}, month = {2009}, pages = {21-47}, publisher = {Swimming Kangaroo Press}, address = {Arlington, TX}, abstract = {

The story describes the beginnings of a ecological eutopia in a corporate controlled future with dystopian elements.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Hawkes-Reed, John}, editor = {Colin Harvey} } @booklet {6030, title = {"The Gambler"}, howpublished = {Fast Forward}, volume = { 2}, year = {2008}, note = {

Rpt. in The Year\’s Best Science Fiction: Twentieth-Sixth Annual Collection. Ed. Gardner Dozois (New York: St. Martin\’s Griffin, 2009), 32-49 with an editor\’s introduction on 32; and in Twenty-First Century Science Fiction. Ed. David G. Hartwell and Patrick Nielsen Hayden (New York: Tor, 2013), 51-72.\ 

}, month = {2008}, pages = {329-56}, publisher = {Pyr}, address = {Amherst, NY}, abstract = {

Dystopia of instant communication with over-reliance on the internet. A sub-theme is environmental collapse.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Paolo [Tadini] Bacigalupi (b. 1972)}, editor = {Lou Anders} } @booklet {10631, title = {Gasoline}, year = {2008}, month = {2008}, publisher = {Merrell}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Post-apocalyptic graphic novel in which one family searches for gasoline and must confront violent nihilists. The family develops a new, better life that is more in touch with nature.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {[Darcy Megan] [Stanger] (b. 1971)} } @booklet {6143, title = {"Gather"}, howpublished = {The Del Rey Book of Science Fiction and Fantasy: Sixteen Original Works by Speculative Fiction{\textquoteright}s Finest Voices}, year = {2008}, note = {

Rpt. in his Telling the Map: Stories Easthampton, MA: Small Beer Press, 2017), 83-95.

}, month = {2008}, pages = {78-90 with an editor{\textquoteright}s note on 77}, publisher = {Ballantine Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Religious dystopia in which God lives on one side of a river and the people live on the other. Only clergy are allowed to go to God\’s side of the river where the only fertile soil is found. It is unclear just who or what God is, but when the protagonist, Gather, and a friend find an image of God, the decide to return it to God\’s side.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Christopher Rowe (b. 1969)}, editor = {Ellen Datlow} } @booklet {6056, title = {"Geriatric Ward"}, howpublished = {Keeper of Dreams}, year = {2008}, note = {

Rpt. Brave New Worlds. Ed. John Joseph Adams (San Francisco, CA: Night Shade Books, 2011), 385-99; 2nd ed. as Brave New Worlds: Dystopian Stories. Ed. John Joseph Adams (San Francisco, CA: Night Shade Books, 2012), 385-99.\ 

}, month = {2008}, pages = {111-31}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a short intense life.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Orson Scott Card (b. 1951)} } @booklet {6166, title = {"Ghost Jail"}, howpublished = {2012}, year = {2008}, month = {2008}, pages = {70-86}, publisher = {Twelfth Planet Press}, address = {Yokine, WA, Australia}, abstract = {

Largely a horror story, but it is set in an authoritarian dystopia aiming to control all speech.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Female author}, author = {Kaaron Warren (b. 1965)}, editor = {Alisa Krasnostein and Ben Payne} } @booklet {6054, title = {Glister}, year = {2008}, month = {2008}, publisher = {Jonathan Cape}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Ecological and authoritarian dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, Scottish author}, author = {John Burnside (b. 1955)} } @booklet {6090, title = {Go-Go Girls of the Apocalypse}, year = {2008}, month = {2008}, publisher = {Simon \& Schuster/Touchstone}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Post-catastrophe dystopia in which the only \"civilization\" left in the U.S. appears to be a chain of strip clubs.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Victor Gischler (b. 1969)} } @booklet {10451, title = {Gone}, year = {2008}, month = {2008}, publisher = {Harper Teen}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The first volume in a long. young adult dystopian series in which everyone over fifteen disappears. Sequels are Hunger. A Gone Novel. New York: Harper Teen, 2009; Lies: A Gone Novel. New York: HarperCollins/Katherine Tegan Books, 2010; Plague. A Gone Novel. New York: HarperCollins/Katherine Tegen Books, 2011; Fear. A Gone Novel. New York: HarperCollins/Katherine Tegen Books, 2012; Light: A Gone Novel. New York: HarperCollins/Katherine Tegen Books, 2013. An additional trilogy set a few years later includes Monster. New York: HarperCollins/Katherine Tegen Books, 2017; Villain. HarperCollins/Katherine Tegen Books, 2018; and Hero. HarperCollins/Katherine Tegen Books, 2019.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Michael Grant} } @booklet {6097, title = {The Gone-Away World}, year = {2008}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: Alfred K. Knopf, 2008.

}, month = {2008}, publisher = {William Heinemann}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a postwar world divided between a livable zone and the rest.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Nicholas] [Cornwall] (b. 1972)} } @booklet {6089, title = {Gool}, year = {2008}, month = {2008}, publisher = {Puffin Books}, address = {Rosedale, New Zealand}, abstract = {

Sequel to 2007 Gee. Young adult fantasy adventure set in a post-catastrophe dystopia where young people must defeat\ a being from outside nature that is destroying what is left of New Zealand. See also 2010 Gee.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {Maurice [Gough] Gee (b. 1931)} } @booklet {6043, title = {"Greenland"}, howpublished = {Interzone}, volume = {no. 218 }, year = {2008}, month = {October 2008}, pages = {16-23. Author{\textquoteright}s note (14).}, abstract = {

Global warming dystopia.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Chris Beckett (b. 1955)} } @booklet {6132, title = {The Grid}, year = {2008}, month = {2008}, publisher = {Peter Owen}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which London has merged with Tokyo under a Commissar. Background to a novel about the Elizabethans and the murder of Christopher Marlowe (1564-93).

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Jeremy Reed (b. 1951)} } @booklet {5892, title = {Genesis}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, publisher = {Baen}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

First volume of an intended trilogy about a multi-generation spaceship. This volume focuses on the struggle to get it launched and the initial conflicts after its launch. \ In the second volume, Exodus: The Ark. New York: Baen, 2009, the people have forgotten their purpose or even that they are on a starship and a religious dystopia develops. A third volume, Revelations: The Ark, was announced but not published.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {Paul Chafe (b. 1965)} } @booklet {9177, title = {The Gladiator. Crosstime Traffic--Book Four}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult dystopia in a series in which travel between parallel timelines, for harvesting resources, has become possible in the late 21st century. This volume is set in a future Italy under Communist rule and Russian domination. The novel focuses on a young women who stands for greater freedom. Other volumes in the series include 2004, 2006, and 2008 Turtledove and two non-utopian volumes, Gunpowder Empire: Crosstime Traffic--Book One. New York: Tor, 2003; and In High Places: Crosstime Traffic--Book Three. New York: Tor, 2006.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Harry [Norman] Turtledove (b. 1949)} } @booklet {5866, title = {"Good Old Days"}, howpublished = {The Future We Wish We Had}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, pages = {81-95}, publisher = {DAW Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Satire. A man in a highly technological eutopia discovers the pleasures of doing something for himself.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Kevin J[ames] Anderson (b. 1962)}, editor = {Martin H[arry] Greenberg (1941-2011) and Rebecca Lickiss} } @booklet {6021, title = {Greentopia: Towards a Sustainable Toronto}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, publisher = {Coach House Books}, address = {Toronto, ON, Canada}, abstract = {

A collection of forty-three mostly short essays; the third volume presenting a future Toronto plus a \“DirecTOry\” of sources for environmentally friendly sources and activities (261-316). The \“TOmorrow\” section (203-59) is less explicitly utopian than that in the first volume but includes one graphic-novel eutopia, \“Memoirs from the Distant Future\” by Marc Ngui (204-12) depicting a sustainable future Toronto. See 2005 McBride and Wilcox, eds.; Alana Wilcox, Christina Palassio, and Jonny Dovercourt, eds. The State of the Arts: Living with Culture in Toronto. uTOpia Two. Toronto, ON: Coach House Books, 2006; Wayne Reeves and Christina Palassio, eds. HTO: Toronto\’s Water from Lake Iroquois to Lost Rivers to Low-flow Toilets. Toronto, ON, Canada: Coach House Books, 2008; and Christina Palassio and Alana Wilcox, eds. The Edible City: Toronto\’s food from farm to work. Toronto, ON, Canada: Coach House Books, 2009.\ 

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author, Male author}, editor = {Alana Wilcox and Christina Palassio and Jonny Dovercourt} } @booklet {5869, title = {Grey}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, publisher = {Night Shade Books}, address = {San Francisco, CA}, abstract = {

Corporate dystopia see from some raised in the corporate enclave. See also 2010\ Armstrong.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Jon Armstrong} } @booklet {5881, title = {Guardener{\textquoteright}s Tale}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, publisher = {Sam{\textquoteright}s Dot Publishing}, address = {Cedar Rapids, IA}, abstract = {

Dystopia with a totally conditioned population that has an almost completely controlled but apparently full life under the watchful eye of the Guardeners. The novel follows one man with whom the conditioning did not take.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Bruce Boston} } @booklet {5722, title = {Genesis}, year = {2006}, month = {2006}, publisher = {Longacre Press}, address = {Dunedin, New Zealand}, abstract = {

Two dystopias. In the first, after an environmental collapse, an authoritarian dystopia is established to protect the remnant from outsiders. In the second, sentient machines have replaced humans and destroy any machines that show initiative.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {Bernard Beckett (b. 1968)} } @booklet {5728, title = {Genetopia}, year = {2006}, month = {2006}, pages = {303 pp.}, publisher = {Pyr/Prometheus Books}, address = {Amherst, NY}, abstract = {

The novel is set in a future where all plants and animals have been engineered to fulfill some purpose, and some characteristics people can be infected with new genes. Those who consider themselves True humans determine which of their offspring are Lost; i.e. not human, and must be exposed in the Wildlands or sold. The novel concerns a girl who is sold by her father, and her brother\ searches for her and what they discover.\ The novel ends with the brother, who has wandered for years in the Wildlands, learning about the many communities that have grown up, finding his sister, living in a community that has become her home.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, isbn = {1-59102-333-5}, author = {Keith [N.] Brooke (b. 1966)} } @booklet {5843, title = {Glasshouse}, year = {2006}, month = {2006}, publisher = {Ace Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia. A future experimental polity ruled by the experimenters as one aspect of a novel about conflict in a high-tech future.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author, Scottish author}, author = {Charles [David George] Stross (b. 1964)} } @booklet {5772, title = {"Go Tell the Phoenicians"}, howpublished = {Tesseracts Ten: A Celebration of New Canadian Speculative Fiction}, year = {2006}, month = {2006}, pages = {157-81}, publisher = {Edge Science Fiction and Fantasy Publishing}, address = {Calgary, AB, Canada}, abstract = {

Eutopia briefly described as part of a story about the difficulties of understanding an alien society. People in the alien society mature quickly without any adolescence, which only occurs at the end of life, which is a period of complete physical indulgence. The children have a scientifically advanced, equitable, and egalitarian society. The alien society is contrasted with the bureaucratic organizations of Earth.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {Matthew Hughes (b. 1949)}, editor = {Robert Charles Wilson (b. 1953) and Edo van Belkom} } @booklet {5832, title = {"Going to See the Beast"}, howpublished = {Helix: A Speculative Fiction Quarterly }, year = {2006}, month = {Summer 2006}, abstract = {

Dystopian humor regarding life after the Rapture (see 1 Corinthians 15:52 and\ 1 Thessalonians 4: 15-17).

}, keywords = {Male author, Native American author}, url = {www.helixsf.com.}, author = {William Sanders (1942-2017)} } @booklet {5831, title = {The Good Society. Compass Programme for Renewal}, year = {2006}, month = {2006}, publisher = {Compass in association with Lawrence \& Wishart}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Very broad and general statement of the current conditions in the U.K. and some things to be done to end poverty and produce both a sustainable and a caring society. This is accompanied by two other volumes, Hetan Shah and Martin McIvor, eds.\ A New Political Economy. Compass Programme for Renewal. London: Compass in association with Lawrence \& Wishart, 2006 proposing a wide range of economic reforms; and Hetan Shah and Sue Goss, eds.\ Democracy and the Public Realm. London: Compass in association with Lawrence \& Wishart, 2006 proposing more direct democracy.

}, editor = {Jonathan Rutherford and Hetan Shah} } @booklet {5696, title = {"Girls and Boys, Come Out to Play"}, howpublished = {Asimov{\textquoteright}s Science Fiction }, volume = {29.7 (354)}, year = {2005}, month = {July 2005}, pages = {112-31}, abstract = {

Humorous eutopia. A future recreated Arcadia with nymphs and satyrs.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {1065-6298 }, author = {Michael [J{\"u}rgen] Swanwick (b. 1950)} } @booklet {5643, title = {The Goodness Gene}, year = {2005}, month = {2005}, publisher = {Dutton Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult dystopia concerned with genetic engineering and cloning.

}, keywords = {Female author, German author, US author}, author = {Sonia Levitin (b. 1934)} } @booklet {5677, title = {"Gypsy Tail Wind"}, howpublished = {The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction}, volume = { 109.2 (642)}, year = {2005}, month = {August 2005}, pages = {71-88}, abstract = {

Dystopias as background. One is a future extremely strict Singapore. A gypsy community has suggestions of eutopia about it. Said to be set in the same future as her Eternity Shift (Not published under that title). See also her \“Green Shift.\” Asimov\’s Science Fiction 29.3 (350) (March 2005): 108-30, which is set in the same future.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {00024-984X}, author = {Mary Rosenblum (1952-2018)} } @booklet {5496, title = {The Galileo Syndrome}, year = {2004}, month = {2004}, publisher = {Canopy Publishing}, address = {Eastsound, WA}, abstract = {

Environmental dystopia in which global warming has forced extreme restrictions on power use.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Daniel H. Gottlieb} } @booklet {5523, title = {The Gift Moves}, year = {2004}, month = {2004}, publisher = {Houghton Mifflin}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {

Young adult eutopia describing a future that\ has little technology and operates on the basis of gifting.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Steve Lyon} } @booklet {5518, title = {Gifts}, year = {2004}, note = {

The three volumes are rpt. in her\ Annals of the Western Shore: Gifts Voices Powers. Ed. Brian Attebery (New York: Library of America, 2020), with\ Gifts\ (1-148),\ Voices\ (149-336), and\ Powers\ (337-614), a Note on the Texts (666), and a list of corrected typographical errors (667). The volume also includes a Chronology (651-65) Le Guin\’s \“The Young Adult in YA: Talk delivered to the American Library Association (2004)\” (617-26, with notes on 668-70) [Originally published in her\ Cheek by Jowl\ (Seattle, WA: Aqueduct Press, 2009), 110-23]; and \“Some Assumptions about Fantasy: Talk delivered at Book Expo America June 4, 2004\” (627-29, with notes on 670) [Originally published in her\ Cheek by Jowl\ (Seattle, WA: Aqueduct Press, 2009), 4-7], and interviews of Le Guin with Paola Castagno 2006 (630-33, with notes on 670-71) [Originally publish in Spanish on Castagno\’s website\ Doce Moradas\ and in English on Le Guin\’s website, http:/www.ursulakleguin.com/doce-moradas], Brian Attebery February 17, 2007 (634-38, with notes on 671-72) [Originally published in\ Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts\ 17.4 (2007): 371-75], and Alexander Chee February 5, 2008 (639-47), with notes on 672) [Originally published in\ Guernica, heets://www.guernicamag.com.breaking_into_the_spell_I/.\ 

}, month = {2004}, publisher = {Harcourt}, address = {Orlando, FL}, abstract = {

First volume of a young adult trilogy. The setting is a country in which individual families have gifts that were mostly destructive and the need to learn to control them. In the second volume, Voices. Orlando, FL: Harcourt, 2006, the people are enslaved by a people who outlaw reading. In the third volume, Powers. Orlando, FL: Harcourt, 2007, a young boy escapes slavery and explores his world and his gift of foreseeing the future.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Ursula K[roeber] Le Guin (1929-2018)} } @booklet {5466, title = {God in the Image of Woman}, year = {2004}, month = {2004}, publisher = {Strebor Books International}, address = {Bowie, MD}, abstract = {

Dystopia where no women are born.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {D[avid] V. Bernard} } @booklet {5528, title = {The Gods and Their Machines}, year = {2004}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: Tor, 2004.

}, month = {2004}, publisher = {O{\textquoteright}Brien Press}, address = {Dublin, Ireland}, abstract = {

Young adult novel depicting conflict between a technological society and a supposedly primitive society. The book cover compares the conflict to that between Israel and the Palestinians. The beginning of reconciliation is brought about by young protagonists from each side.

}, keywords = {Irish author, Male author}, author = {Ois{\'\i}n McGann (b. 1973)} } @booklet {5408, title = {"General Density"}, howpublished = {Challenging Destiny}, volume = {no. 16 }, year = {2003}, note = {

Rpt in\ Northwest Passages: A Cascadian Anthology. Ed. Chris DiMarco (Port Orchard, OR: Fandom Press, 2005), 303-22; and in his\ Counting Tadpoles\ (Hornsea, Eng.: PS Publishing, 2009), 173-91.

}, month = {June 2003}, pages = {6-25}, abstract = {

Dystopian background to a science story. The dystopia developed after both the world economic and environmental systems collapse. Most people left for space colonies around the Earth.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Stephen] [Kaufman] (b. 1947)} } @booklet {5443, title = {Goorg-Chee: A Sci-Fi Quest for Freedom}, year = {2003}, month = {2003}, publisher = {iUniverse}, address = {Lincoln, NB}, abstract = {

Most of the novel is taken up with the gradual meeting of aliens from various civilizations, but it ends with suggestions for bringing about cooperation among the various civilizations.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {C. G. Sherrow} } @booklet {5454, title = {"The Green Leopard Plague"}, howpublished = {Asimov{\textquoteright}s Science Fiction }, volume = {27. 10 \& 11 (333 \& 334) }, year = {2003}, note = {

Rpt. in his\ The Green Leopard Plague and Other Stories\ (San Francisco, CA: Night Shade Books, 2010), 107-63 with an \"Afterword\" on 164-65.

}, month = {October-November 2003}, pages = {10-58}, abstract = {

Eutopia brought about through cloning and biotechnology. Set in the same universe as 1997 Williams.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {1065-6298 }, author = {Walter Jon Williams (b. 1953)} } @booklet {5369, title = {"Greetings"}, howpublished = {SciFiction}, year = {2003}, note = {

Rpt. in his\ Greetings and Other Stories\ (San Francisco, CA: Tachyon Publications, 2005), 191-276.

}, month = {2003}, abstract = {

A story with a theme similar to Trollope\’s (1881-2) \“The Fixed Period\” and others in which there is an agreement to die at a certain age and the effects on people as they approach that age to die, including, in this case, a resistance movement. In the story, people are chosen by lot for the Sunset Brigade and are informed ten days before they must appear. Many people who are terminally ill volunteer, but improved medical care for the young, means that the age at which people are chosen must be lowered, with the man chosen in the story being 70. A \“hemlock kit\” is provided for those who choose to die at home.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, url = {www.scifi.com/scifiction/ Posted September 3 - October 15, 2003). No longer available on line.}, author = {Terry [Ballantine] Bisson (1942-2024)} } @booklet {5318, title = {God Bless Fortress America}, year = {2002}, month = {2002}, publisher = {Writers Advantage}, address = {San Jose, CA}, abstract = {

Dystopia set ten years after the 9/11 attacks. 9/11 was followed by a the purge of \“undesirable\” elements of the U.S. population, such as Arabs; cutting off aid to the rest of the world; shifting spending to defense and security, including building a high tech shield around the country; developing energy independence, largely through oil and gas development throughout the Western Hemisphere, which was unified under an America Fortress plan; and destroying all the enemies of the U.S. with no concern for the civilian populations. At the end the author suggests that this was not the right approach.

}, author = {Henry P. Mitchell [pseud.]} } @booklet {5354, title = {The Golden Age}, year = {2002}, month = {2002}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Future interplanetary flawed utopia; the utopia is not what it appears to be in that it suppresses dissent. First volume of The Golden Age trilogy. The trilogy concerns the original utopia, a rebel against it, and the temporary merging of all sentient life into a supermind. See also 2003 Wright (2). Elements of space opera.

}, keywords = {US author}, author = {John C[harles] Wright (b. 1961)} } @booklet {5267, title = {Green Boy}, year = {2002}, note = {

UK ed. London: Bodley Head, 2002.

}, month = {2002}, publisher = {Margaret K. McElderry Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult novel with children shifting between two worlds, the present and a polluted, overpopulated dystopia. Environmental concerns.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author, US author}, author = {Susan [Mary] Cooper (b. 1935)} } @booklet {5352, title = {Growing Young: An Old Man Who Suddenly Becomes Young Must Help the World Accept an Age Cure}, year = {2002}, month = {2002}, publisher = {Xlibris}, address = {[Bloomington, IN]}, abstract = {

The title is a good summary. When a cure is found for aging, and a newly young man works to avoid the overpopulation dystopia that could result. The ending of the novel implies a sequel, but none has been published.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {9781401051626}, author = {Dean Warren} } @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 {5217, title = {The Gamekeeper{\textquoteright}s Night Dog}, year = {2001}, month = {2001}, publisher = {Bulldog Press}, address = {Woodside, CA}, abstract = {

First volume in an alternative history series in which Britain wins the Boer War, which sets the stage for the development of the dystopia in the later volumes. The first three volumes constitute his Gamekeeper Trilogy.\ In the second volume, The World War. Woodside, CA: Bulldog Press, 2004, Britain invades Germany, Russia and other countries. In the third volume, 10 Downing Street. Woodside, CA: Bulldog Press, 2004, Britain dominates the world, but there is a conflict between monopoly capitalism and communism. Britain Uber Alles. Woodside, CA: Bulldog Press, 2006, the fourth volume, is a sequel to the trilogy set in the twenty-eighth century. Britain has dominated the world for centuries but war looms again. It ends with \“To Be Continued,\” but there is no evidence that it was.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Dave Putnam} } @booklet {5189, title = {Gardener of Stars}, year = {2001}, note = {

Chapters were originally published as \“from Gardener of Stars.\” Hambone, no. 15 (Fall 2000): 73-82; as \“from Gardener of Stars (A Novel.\” Shiny Magazine, no. 9/10 (1999): 193-200; and in\ The World, Jacket, Salt, LVNG, and The Detroit Metro Times.

}, month = {2001}, publisher = {Atelos}, address = {Berkeley, CA}, abstract = {

An experimental novel exploring \"the paradise and wastelands of utopian desire.\"

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Carla Harryman (b. 1952)} } @booklet {5178, title = {Generica}, year = {2001}, month = {2001}, publisher = {Penguin Books Canada}, address = {Toronto, ON, Canada}, abstract = {

Satire. A self-help book that actually works is published and brings too much happiness.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {Will [William Stener] Ferguson (b. 1964)} } @booklet {5176, title = {"A Good Place to Raise a Boy"}, howpublished = {Orb Speculative Fiction (South Preston, VIC, Australia)}, volume = {no. 2 }, year = {2001}, month = {2001}, pages = {30-47}, abstract = {

Dystopia. A complex story of colonization by humans who have forgotten their own past of gender and racial discrimination.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Aidan Doyle} } @booklet {5156, title = {The Gray{\textquoteright}s Anatomy}, year = {2001}, month = {2001}, publisher = {Serpent{\textquoteright}s Tail}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The novel satirically explores various issues (sex and gender, the media, power, etc.) through contact among alien societies and with humans. Although one alien society (the telepathic Grays) is eutopian initially, it is negatively affected by the alien contact.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Rachel Armstrong} } @booklet {5219, title = {"Green England"}, howpublished = {Spectrum }, volume = {7 }, year = {2001}, month = {November 2001}, pages = {104-26}, abstract = {

Sequel to 1989 Redd concerning contact between Green England and the U.S.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, Welsh author}, author = {David Redd (b. 1946)} } @booklet {11675, title = {Green Music}, year = {2001}, note = {

Three chapters were previously published \“in slightly different form\”: Chapter One \“Turtleness.\” Quarry 35.3 (Summer 1986): 18-20. Chapter Two \“Jack and Luna\” as \“The Turtle and the Moon.\” Illus. by the author. Now 4, no. 29 (March 28, 1985): 21. https://nowtoronto.pressreader.com/now-magazine/19850328. Chapter Fourteen \“Telepathic Fish.\” Leviathan I: Into the Grey. Ed. Luke O\&$\#$39;Grady \& Jeff VanderMeer (Tallahassee, FL: Ministry of Whimsy Press, 1996), 67-80.

}, month = {2001}, pages = {234 pp.}, publisher = {Tesseract Books an Imprint of The Book Collective}, address = {[Edmonton, Alberta, Canada]}, abstract = {

An odd magic realist novel set in Toronto and an alternative Toronto called Marina, which is also the name of the main protagonist, accessed through a painting by Susan, Marina\’s partner. It is a paradise with people who had drowned in the other world.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author, Tunisian author}, isbn = {978-1-895836-77-8}, author = {Ursula Pflug (b. 1958)} } @booklet {5128, title = {A Gateway to the Past}, year = {2000}, month = {2000}, publisher = {Vantage Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Trips to the past from an environmentally damaged future in 2500 where everyone has been live underground since 2050, but, due to scientific advances, people will be able to return to the surface. Very little on the future.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Ronald Bast Nelson (d. 2013)} } @booklet {5116, title = {Gathering Blue}, year = {2000}, note = {

UK ed. London: Bloomsbury, 2002.

}, month = {2000}, publisher = {Houghton Mifflin}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {

A companion to but not a sequel to 1993 Lowry in which the author presents an alternative future that is primitive and simple with aspects of savagery. Her\ Messenger. Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin, 2004 and\ Son. Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin, 2012, which includes characters from both 1993 Lowry and this volume but take place in an intentional community.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Lois [Ann Hammersberg] Lowry (b. 1937)} } @booklet {5079, title = {The Generals of October}, year = {2000}, note = {

Second release San Diego, CA: Clocktower Books, 2002. Rpt. New York: ibooks, 2004. The ibooks ed. does not mention the existence of the previous eds.

}, month = {2000}, publisher = {Clocktower Books}, address = {San Diego, CA}, abstract = {

Dystopia. An attempt to re-write the U.S. Constitution through a Second Constitutional Convention leads to chaos and an attempted military coup.

}, keywords = {German author, Male author, US author}, author = {John T. Cullen} } @booklet {8588, title = {Going, Going, Gone}, year = {2000}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: Voyager Books, 2000

}, month = {2000}, publisher = {HarperCollins}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The final volume of the DryCo series. The novel depicts multiple dystopias with the hope of a better world at the end. For other volumes in the series see his 1987 Ambient, 1988 Terraplane, 1990 Heathern, 1993 Elivissey, and 1993 Random Acts of Senseless Violence. Although there are multiple alternative histories in the series, in timeline order, the volumes are 1993 Random Acts of Senseless Violence, 1990 Heathern, 1987 Ambient, 1988 Terraplane, 1993 Elivissey, and 2000 Going, Going, Gone.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Jack [Wylie] Womack [Jr.] (b. 1956)} } @booklet {8767, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Greenhouse Chill{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Analog Science Fiction and Fact }, volume = {120.1}, year = {2000}, note = {

Rpt. in Writers for Relief Volume 3. Ed. Davey Beauchamp and Stuart Jaffe (Np: Sapphire City Press, 2013), 33-55.\ 

}, month = {January 2000}, pages = {72-83}, abstract = {

Climate changing dystopia in which most of the world has disappeared under water with a new ice age to follow.\ Reminiscences of the world before the flood suggest a technological eutopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {1059-2113 }, author = {Ben[jamin William] Bova (1932-2020)} } @booklet {5093, title = {The Gulag Arizona}, year = {2000}, month = {2000}, publisher = {Pentland Press}, address = {Raleigh, NC}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Arizona and some adjacent territory is expelled from the U.S. to become a vast prison when the U.S. prisons are emptied. The freed prisoners are left on their own to create whatever life they can.

}, author = {J. Hada} } @booklet {5110, title = {Gulliver in Cloneland. The Fifth Travel of Gulliver. The Complete Text, including the passages deemed inappropriate for publication by the author}, year = {2000}, month = {2000}, publisher = {The Book Guild}, address = {Lewes, Sussex, Eng.}, abstract = {

Satire on contemporary Egypt set in a land of clones.

}, keywords = {Egyptian author}, author = {[Varoujan] [Kazanjian]} } @booklet {5033, title = {Gardens in the Dunes}, year = {1999}, month = {1999}, publisher = {Simon \& Schuster}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Eutopia. In the beginning and at the end of the novel, the \"gardens in the dunes\" are presented as reflecting a Native American Indian eutopia. The rest of the novel is concerned, among other things, with the dystopia created for Native Americans by U.S. policies toward them.

}, keywords = {Female author, Native American author}, author = {Leslie Marmon Silko (b. 1948)} } @booklet {4947, title = {"The Grammarian{\textquoteright}s Five Daughters"}, howpublished = {Realms of Fantasy}, volume = { 5.5}, year = {1999}, note = {

Rpt. in her\ Ordinary People: A Collection\ (Seattle, WA: Aqueduct Press, 2005), 6-20.

}, month = {June 1999}, pages = {38-41, 65}, abstract = {

Eutopian fantasy in which a poor grammarian gives each daughter a sack of words (nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, and prepositions respectively), and they go off and find a country without those words. Releasing the words transforms each country for the better. Ultimately all five countries are united.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Eleanor [Atwood] Arnason (b. 1942)} } @booklet {5032, title = {The Great Debate: The Need for Constitutional Reform}, year = {1999}, month = {1999}, publisher = {Rampant Lion Press}, address = {Chicago, IL}, abstract = {

Non-fiction critique of the U.S. constitutional system but includes a proposed new constitution (277-305) and a defense of it.\ The proposed constitution is similar to the parliamentary system in that the executive is a prime minister within the legislature.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Rodney D. Scott} } @booklet {5036, title = {Greenhouse Summer}, year = {1999}, month = {1999}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Ecological dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Norman [Richard] Spinrad (b. 1940)} } @booklet {4854, title = {Gertrude and the Printed Page}, year = {1998}, month = {1998}, publisher = {Alpert{\textquoteright}s Bookery}, address = {Nanuet, NY}, abstract = {

A future dystopia where publishing new books is outlawed and the experiences of the owner of the last bookstore.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Stanley L. Alpert} } @booklet {4910, title = {Girl in Landscape}, year = {1998}, note = {

U.K. ed. London: Faber and Faber, 2002.

}, month = {1998}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

The novel begins in a dystopia on Earth brought about by environmental collapse. Everyone must live underground and avoid the sun completely. A family moves to a new planet, and the novel shifts to the relations among the new inhabitants and their relations with the indigenous inhabitants seen through the eyes of a girl as she becomes an adult.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Jonathan [Allen] Lethem (b. 1964)} } @booklet {4937, title = {The Golden Globe}, year = {1998}, month = {1998}, publisher = {Ace Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Libertarian science fiction.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {John [Herbert] Varley (b. 1947)} } @booklet {4822, title = {"Getting to Know You"}, howpublished = {Future Histories: Award-Winning Science Fiction Writers Predict Twenty Tomorrows for Communications}, year = {1997}, note = {

Rpt. in The Year\’s Best Science Fiction: Fifteenth Annual Collection. Ed. Gardner [Raymond] Dozois (New York: St. Martin\’s Press, 1998), 267-87 with an Editor\’s note on 267; and in Cyberpunk: Stories of Hardware, Software, Wetware, Revolution and Evolution. Ed. Victoria Blake (Portland, OR: Underhand Press, 2013), 109-134. Substantially revised in Asimov\’s Science Fiction 22.3 (267) (March 1998): 120-141. Rpt. in Isaac Asimov\’s Utopias. Ed. Gardner [Raymond] Dozois and Sheila Williams (New York: Ace Books, 2000), 62-96 with a note on 62; and in his Getting to Know You (Burton, MI: Subterranean Press, 2007), 255-287.

}, month = {1997}, publisher = {Horizon House Publications}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia of division between the rich and poor with immortality and cloning eliminating both jobs and pre-clone humans. Set in the same world as his 2005 Counting Heads.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {1065-6298 }, author = {David Marusek (b. 1951)}, editor = {Stephen McClelland} } @booklet {4783, title = {"Glass Earth, Inc."}, howpublished = {Future Histories: Award-Winning Science Fiction Writers Predict Twenty Tomorrows for Communications}, year = {1997}, note = {

Rpt. in his\ Phase Space\ (London: HarperCollins/Voyager, 2002), 48-69.

}, month = {1997}, pages = {69-88 with a note on 68}, publisher = {Horizon House Publications}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Flawed utopia in which a murder is committed in a London in which it is possible for the police to view the incident as it was happening and from all angles.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Stephen [Michael] Baxter (b. 1957)}, editor = {Stephen McClelland} } @booklet {4809, title = {Glimmering: A Novel}, year = {1997}, note = {

Rev. ed. Portland, OR: Underland Press, 2012 with \"Author\&$\#$39;s Notes to This Revised Edition\" (xiii-xiv) and Kim Stanley Robinson, \"Introduction\" (xvii-xviii).

}, month = {1997}, publisher = {HarperPrism}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Near future (1999) ecological dystopia. The new edition is revised throughout but does not change the fundamentals.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Elizabeth [Francis] Hand (b. 1957)} } @booklet {4818, title = {The Great Wheel}, year = {1997}, month = {1997}, publisher = {Harcourt Brace}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia in what used to be Africa and a flawed utopia in Europe.

}, keywords = {Male author, Northern Ireland author}, author = {Ian R[oderick] MacLeod (b. 1956)} } @booklet {8897, title = {Gulliverzone}, year = {1997}, note = {

Rpt. in Web 2027 (London: Millennium, 1999), 1-102.\ 

}, month = {1997}, publisher = {Orion Children{\textquoteright}s Books and Dolphin Paperbacks}, address = {London}, abstract = {

GulliverZone is a virtual reality theme park based on Swift\’s\ Gulliver\’s Travels\ (1726), and, on World Peace Day, it is freely open to everyone, even children. But GulliverZone is a dystopia with real Lilliputians being dominated by an evil woman.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Stephen [Michael] Baxter (b. 1957)} } @booklet {4764, title = {Gibbon{\textquoteright}s Decline and Fall}, year = {1996}, month = {1996}, publisher = {Bantam Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a future that is becoming increasingly anti-woman. There is cooperation between the Vatican, Islamic leaders, and right-wing Christians to force women to be subservient to men.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Sheri [Shirley] S[tewart] Tepper (1929-2016)} } @booklet {4609, title = {Gaia{\textquoteright}s Toys}, year = {1995}, month = {1995}, pages = {317 pp.}, publisher = {Tor/Tom Doherty Associates}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Genetic engineering dystopia where genetic manipulation is standard practice. Deep rich-poor division, those without a job have no option but to become a drone for the military, and saving endangered species is a fad for the rich. Eco-terrorists are trying to stop the government\’s plan for a new genetic mutation that will take away the last vestiges of personal freedom.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {0-312-85781-0 }, author = {[Rebecca Bard] [Brown] (b. 1948)} } @booklet {11159, title = {"Genesis"}, howpublished = {Coming Home in the Dark}, year = {1995}, note = {

Rpt. in The Best of Owen Marshall\’s Short Stories (Auckland, New Zealand: Vintage/Random House, 1997), 354-56.

}, month = {1995}, pages = {108-11}, publisher = {Vintage}, address = {Auckland, New Zealand}, abstract = {

Brief satire on Heaven which is a corporation known as G.O.D. Lucifer is in charge of Creations and Gabriel goes around him directly to G.O.D. to propose\ a new creation, Earth, which Lucifer concludes is very poorly design both as a planet and in its proposed inhabitants,\ 

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, isbn = {9781869413361 }, author = {[Owen Marshall] [Jones] (b. 1941)} } @booklet {4613, title = {"Great State."}, howpublished = {QSFx2: Queer Science Fiction}, year = {1995}, month = {1995}, pages = {13-44}, publisher = {Badboy}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Gay male eutopia with the emphasis on the sex.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Clay Caldwell} } @booklet {4530, title = {"Gaia, The Planetary Religion: The Sacred Marriage of Art and Science"}, year = {1994}, month = {1994}, publisher = {Dissertation}, address = {Massachusetts, Amherst}, abstract = {

New Age eutopia. See also 1988 Hubbard and 2002 Bufe and Hubbard.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {[Elizabeth known as Libby] [Hubbard] (b. 1956)} } @booklet {4504, title = {"Galac 19"}, howpublished = {Honcho Overload}, year = {1994}, note = {

Rpt. in\ QSFx2: Queer Science Fiction. By Lars Eighner and Clay Caldwell (New York: Badboy, 1995), 77-87.\ 

}, month = {February 1994}, abstract = {

Mostly an excuse for homosexual erotica. Presents sexual slavery as desirable.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Clay Caldwell} } @booklet {4588, title = {Genetic Soldier}, year = {1994}, note = {

Rpt. New York: AvoNova, 1995.

}, month = {1994}, publisher = {William Morrow}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The novel begins in a simple, fairly primitive future earth that practices eugenics. Conflict arises when a starship returns from its search for a new earth.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {George [Reginald] Turner (1916-97)} } @booklet {4570, title = {"Go Down, Moses"}, howpublished = {The Patternmaker: Nine Science Fiction Stories}, year = {1994}, month = {1994}, pages = {21-27}, publisher = {Omnibus Books}, address = {Norwood, SA, Australia}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a future world divided between vegetarians and meat eaters with the meat eaters killing any vegetarians who wander into their territory.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Female author}, author = {Gillian [Margaret] Rubinstein (b. 1942)}, editor = {Lucy [Jane] Sussex (b. 1957)} } @booklet {4538, title = {"Golden Swan"}, howpublished = {Interzone}, volume = {no. 79 }, year = {1994}, month = {January 1994}, pages = {25-28}, abstract = {

World with few children and its effects.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author, US author}, author = {Leigh Kennedy (b. 1951)} } @booklet {4547, title = {Gun, With Occasional Music}, year = {1994}, note = {

U.K. ed. London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1995. Rpt. London: Faber \& Faber, 2001.

}, month = {1994}, publisher = {Harcourt Brace}, address = {San Diego, CA}, abstract = {

Future authoritarian dystopia presented as a mystery novel set in the future. Drugs, including \"Forgettol\", \"Acceptol\", and \"Regrettol\" which do what their names suggest, and can be blended to produce a combination. Detectives are known as Inquisitors. Personal questions considered impolite. Sex change operations are common. There are evolved animals.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Jonathan [Allen] Lethem (b. 1964)} } @booklet {10100, title = {"The Garden"}, howpublished = {Worlds of Women: Sapphic Science Fiction Erotica}, year = {1993}, note = {

Rpt. in The New Worlds of Women. Exp. ed. Ed. Cecilia Tan (Boston, MA: Circlet Press, 1996), 63-77; and in The Circlet Treasury of Lesbian Erotic Science Fiction and Fantasy. Ed. Cecilia Tan (New York: Riverdale Avenue Books, 2013), 156-67.\ 

}, month = {1993}, pages = {19-30}, publisher = {Circlet Press}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {

While the emphasis in the story is on the sex, it is set in a future in which men and women do not know of the existence of the other. The female protagonist resents the authoritarianism of the women leaders and breaks the rule by regularly visiting a prohibited area.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Alayne Gelfand}, editor = {Cecilia Tan (b. 1967)} } @booklet {4450, title = {The Giver}, year = {1993}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Dell. U.K. ed. London: Lions, 1994. A\ graphic novel version is\ The\ Giver. Based on the novel by Lois Lowry. Adapted by P. Craig Russell. Illus. P. Craig Russell, Galen Showman, and Scott Hampton. Colorist Lovern Kindzierski. Letterer Rich Parker. Scanning, cleanup, and digital coordination by Wayne Arnold Harold. Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin, 2019.\ 

}, month = {1993}, publisher = {Houghton Mifflin}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {

Young adult flawed utopia that is technologically sophisticated but overly controlled. See also 2000 Lowry. Her\ Messenger. Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin, 2004 and\ Son. Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin, 2012, which includes characters from both this volume and 2000 Lowry but take place in an intentional community.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Lois [Ann Hammersberg] Lowry (b. 1937)} } @booklet {4420, title = {Glory}, volume = {Book One of The Goldenwing Cycle}, year = {1993}, month = {1993}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Primarily an adventure novel but includes a future society on the planet Voerster based on South African apartheid. Sequels include\ Glory\’s War. Book Two of\ The Goldenwing Cycle. New York: Tor, 1995; and\ Glory\’s People. Book Three of\ The Goldenwing Cycle. New York: Tor, 1996.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Alfred[o] [Jos{\'e} Ara{\~n}a-Marini y] Coppel [Jr.] (1921-2004)} } @booklet {4409, title = {Glory Season}, year = {1993}, month = {1993}, publisher = {Bantam Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Male--female conflict in a future matriarchal society.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Glen] David Brin (b. 1950)} } @booklet {10051, title = {"Goodfood"}, howpublished = {Journeys to the Twilight Zone}, year = {1993}, month = {1993}, pages = {15-32}, publisher = {DAW Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future (eutopian or dystopian is left to the reader) in which food that is deemed not good for you is illegal, culinary porn (old cookbooks) are kept in locked sections of libraries, and to be married a couple must be tested for serum cholesterol. An underground system of dealers and grillers provide bacon and eggs, hamburgers, and so forth. The F.F.F. or Food Freedom Fighters torch saladerias, bomb Goodfood rallies and fight back in other ways. The Goodfood Bureau of Investigation enforces the laws.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {W[alter] Warren Wagar (1932-2004)}, editor = {Carol Serling} } @booklet {4417, title = {"Granddads Last Swim"}, howpublished = {Phoenixine: The Phoenix Science Fiction Society Newsletter}, volume = {no. 44 }, year = {1993}, note = {

Rpt. as by Catherine Clark in\ Rutherford\&$\#$39;s Dreams: A New Zealand Science Fiction Collection. Ed. Warwick Bennett and Patrick Hudson (Wellington, New Zealand: IPL Books, 1995), 165-71.

}, month = {March 1993}, pages = {6-9}, abstract = {

Pollution dystopia in which few people live past twenty.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Female author}, author = {Cath[erine] Clark} } @booklet {4565, title = {Green Mars}, year = {1993}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: Bantam Books, 1994. Based on a shorter piece of the same title in Isaac Asimov\’s Science Fiction Magazine 9.9 (September 1985): 112-82; rpt. in The Year\’s Best Science Fiction: Third Annual Collection. Ed. Gardner [Raymond] Dozois (New York: Bluejay Books, 1986), 552-619 with an editor\’s note on 551. Chapter one was also published as \“A Martian Childhood.\” Asimov\’s Science Fiction 18.2 (212) (February 1994): 128-74.\ 

}, month = {1993}, publisher = {HarperCollins}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Complex social science and science fiction about the terraforming of Mars and the growth of societies there. Mars is threatened by a dystopian Earth of corporate power and environmental degradation that hopes to exploit Mars\’s resources rather than create healthy societies. Sequel to 1992 Robinson, Red Mars. See also 1996 Robinson, Blue Mars. Materials related to the trilogy were published as The Martians. New York: Bantam Books, 1999. U.K. edition. London: HarperCollins, 1999, which reprints his \“Exploring Fossil Canyon.\” Universe 12. Ed. Terry Carr (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1982), 26-47; \“Sexual Dimorphism.\” Asimov\’s Science Fiction 23.6 (281) (June 1999): 28-39; and \“A Martian Romance.\” Asimov\’s Science Fiction 23.10[/11] (285) (October-November 1999): 14-28.\ In addition, The Martians includes poems \“Six Poems from If Wang Wei Lived on Mars rpt. in his Stan\’s Kitchen: A Robinson Reader. Ed. David C. Grubbs (Framingham, MA: NESFA Press, 2020), 125-143 [\“Crossing Mather Pass\” (311-11/127-28), \“Invisible Owls\” (315-16/129-30), \“Tenzing\” (317-19/131-33), \“The Red\’s Lament\” (322/23/135-136), \“A Report on the First Recorded Case of Areophagy\” (320-21/137-39)], and \“Two Years\” (324/27/141-43), and the story \“Arthur Sternbach Brings the Curveball to Mars\” (179-88/171-79).

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Kim Stanley Robinson (b. 1952)} } @booklet {4469, title = {Gulliver}, year = {1993}, month = {1993}, pages = {176 pp.}, publisher = {Autonomedia}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Jonathan Swift\’s Gulliver\’s Travels re-done with a distinctively anarchist message. All the countries of the former are visited under different names and with more explicitly political and economic characteristics. They are: Grossartiga--Lilliputians. Pretense is the rule. The poor are kept in their place. Plintablandina--Giants. No property. No money. Worship nature. Craftsmanship. Free sexuality among young. Poetry very important. The wisest are chosen as administrators. Academica (Conflict within education), Lexonomia (Language satire), Freedonia (Free Market), and Several Other Remote Regions, including Carnivalia, Imperia. Land of the Retrievers (Dogs), which is also called Ecologia --No exploitation.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Michael Ryan} } @booklet {4366, title = {Galax-Arena}, year = {1992}, note = {

Rpt. Ringwood, VIC, Australia: Puffin Books, 1994. U.K. ed. London: William Heinemann, 1993. U.S. ed. New York: Simon \& Schuster Books for Young Readers, 1995. Rev. ed. Ringwood, VIC, Australia: Puffin Books, 2001.

}, month = {1992}, publisher = {Hyland House}, address = {South Yarra, VIC, Australia}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which children are kidnapped by aliens to entertain them by doing dangerous acts. Some hope held out as the children begin to cooperate with each other. See also her 2001\ Terra Farma. \ \ 

}, keywords = {Australian author, English author, Female author}, author = {Gillian [Margaret] Rubinstein (b. 1942)} } @booklet {4376, title = {Gehenna}, year = {1992}, month = {1992}, publisher = {Creation House}, address = {Lake Mary, FL}, abstract = {

A trip through Hell.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {[Thomas] Paul Thigpen (b. 1954)} } @booklet {4358, title = {Glass Houses}, year = {1992}, month = {1992}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Environmental dystopia inside and outside a domed New York City.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Laura J. Mixon (b. 1954)} } @booklet {9537, title = {The Guns of the South: A Novel of the Civil War}, year = {1992}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Ballantine Books, 1993.\ 

}, month = {1992}, publisher = {Ballantine Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

With the help from future South African supporters of apartheid, who provide Robert E. Lee with AK-47s, the South wins the Civil War. After the war, Lee wants to gradually abolish slavery, and the Confederacy has to defeat the technologically advanced South Africans before that becomes possible. Other, non-utopian, alternative futures by Turtledove set after the South won the Civil war are How Few Remain. New York: del Rey/Ballantine Books, 1997; and The Great War: American Front. New York: Del Rey, 1998.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Harry [Norman] Turtledove (b. 1949)} } @booklet {4271, title = {A Generation of the Dark Heart}, year = {1991}, month = {1991}, publisher = {Sinclair-Stevenson}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Surreal dystopia created through the fantasies of one man.\ Extremely violent.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Sorel-Cameron, James} } @booklet {4208, title = {Ghost of Chance}, year = {1991}, note = {

Rpt. London: Serpent\&$\#$39;s Tail, 1995.

}, month = {1991}, publisher = {Library Fellows of the Whitney Museum of American Art}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Complex short work that includes a suggestion of a eutopia based on Libertalia settlement possibly established by the pirate Captain Misson (ca 1660-ca 1690s) on Madagascar together with an authoritarian dystopia that fails to contain plagues unleashed by its own actions. 1981 Burroughs is also partially based on the pirate settlement.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {William S[eward] Burroughs (1914-97)} } @booklet {9960, title = {The Gilda Stories. A Novel}, year = {1991}, note = {

[25th Anniversary ed.]\ San Francisco, CA: City Lights Books, 2016, with a \“Foreword\” by the author (xi-xii) and an \“Afterword. Blood Relations: Gilda and the Stakes of Our Future\” by Alexis Pauline Gumbs \ (253-59). U. K. ed. London: Sheba Feminist Press, 1992. Parts previously published as \“. . . Night.\”\ The American Voice, no. 4 (Fall 1986): 42-46; \“No Day Too Long.\”\ Lesbian Fiction: An Anthology. Ed. Elly Bulkin (Watertown, MA: Persephone Press, 1981), 219-24; rpt. in\ Worlds Apart: An Anthology of Lesbian and Gay Science Fiction and Fantasy. Ed. Camilla DeCarin, Eric Garber, and Lyn Paleo (Boston, MA: Alyson Publications, 1986), 215-23. \“Woman Who Loved the Moon.\”\ The Village Voice Literary Supplement.\ 

}, month = {1991}, publisher = {Firebrand Books}, address = {Ithaca, NY}, abstract = {

The novel is composed of separate stories set in different time periods beginning in Louisiana in 1850. The protagonist is a slave who becomes a vampire who is a lesbian, and most of the novel is set in places and periods (\“Yerba Buena: 1890,\” \“Rosebud, Missouri: 1921,\” \“South End: 1955, \“Off-Broadway: 1971,\” and \“Down by the Riverside: 1981\”) that allow the author to explore the situation of African Americans, gay people, and other outsiders in that time and place. The last two stories (\“Hampton Falls, New Hampshire: 2020\” (219-31) and \“Land on Enchantment: 2050\” (233-52) are set in a future devastated by climate change and in which outsiders remain at risk. Her \“Houston.\” In her Don\’t Explain. Short Fiction (Ithaca, NY: Firebrand Books, 1998), 148-60 is set between these two stories. The title is pronounced like the New York city street, not like the Texas city. \ \“Caramelle 1864.\” Black From the Future: A Collection of Black Speculative Fiction. Ed. Stefanie Andrea Allen and Lauren Cherelle (Clayton, NC: BLF Press, 2019), 9-29 is set near the end of the Civil War. The most recent Gilda story, \“Merida, Yucatan: 2060.\” Baffling Magazine, no. 1 (October 2020) https://www.bafflingmag.com/issue-one/merida-yucatan-2060 begins at what had been the U.S. Mexico border before Trump\’s policies had exacerbated climate change and destroyed and depopulated the area with Gilda moving toward the south where she plans to join others leaving the planet. Often compared to Octavia E. Butler\’s Kindred (1979).\ 

}, keywords = {African American author, Female author, Native American author}, author = {Jewelle [Lydia] Gomez (b. 1948)} } @booklet {4172, title = {The Game}, year = {1990}, month = {1990}, publisher = {Walker Books}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The Furies of Greek mythology give humans all their corrupted natures wish for, which produces an authoritarian dystopia. A group of children manage to defeat the system.

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Enid Richemont} } @booklet {4171, title = {A Gift Upon the Shore}, year = {1990}, month = {1990}, publisher = {Ballantine Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Post-catastrophe novel that\ includes a dystopian religious intentional community as a focus.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {[Martha Kay] [Renfroe] (1938-2016)} } @booklet {4127, title = {God Is Love (Get It In Writing)}, year = {1990}, month = {1990}, publisher = {Fourth Estate}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Satire on religion as big business.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Jeremy Clarke} } @booklet {4067, title = {Gentle Warriors}, year = {1989}, month = {1989}, publisher = {Knights Press}, address = {Stamford, CT}, abstract = {

Very near future dystopia from a homosexual perspective. AIDS a deliberate creation of the CIA (U.S. Central Intelligence Agency).

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Geoff Mains} } @booklet {4098, title = {The Glimpses}, year = {1989}, month = {1989}, publisher = {Macmillan Children{\textquoteright}s Books}, address = {London}, abstract = {

A young adult dystopia in which a fascist political party gains power through violence. A second theme is genetic manipulation, which produces a group of super children.

}, keywords = {Male author, UK author}, author = {Laurence [Frederick] Staig (b. 1950)} } @booklet {4059, title = {Good News From Outer Space}, year = {1989}, month = {1989}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Set in 1999 and centers on the belief in the approaching millennium. Dystopian background. Strong Christian fundamentalism.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {John [Joseph Vincent] Kessel (b. 1950)} } @booklet {4012, title = {Gorgon Child}, year = {1989}, month = {1989}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Sequel to 1983 Barnes. In this volume, the hero of the first volume has to fight against a religious dystopia. See also 1993 Barnes.

}, keywords = {African American author, Male author}, author = {Steven [Emory] Barnes (b. 1952)} } @booklet {4080, title = {"Green and Pleasant Land"}, howpublished = {Interzone}, volume = {no. 32 }, year = {1989}, month = {November/December 1989}, pages = {43-47}, abstract = {

Authoritarian, ecological dystopia. See also 2001 Redd

}, keywords = {Male author, Welsh author}, author = {David Redd (b. 1946)} } @booklet {4040, title = {"Green-eyed Monstera"}, howpublished = {Interzone}, volume = {no 29 }, year = {1989}, month = {May/June 1989}, pages = {47-49}, abstract = {

Future story with advanced technology producing a society with dystopian elements.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Andrew Ferguson (b. 1963)} } @booklet {3990, title = {The Gate to Women{\textquoteright}s Country}, year = {1988}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Bantam Books, 1989

}, month = {1988}, pages = {278 pp.}, publisher = {Foundation Books/Doubleday/Bantam Doubleday Dell}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Post-catastrophe world divided into a women\’s and men\’s communities in which the women try to keep alive the best of the post-catastrophe world and the men are warriors. There is a mixed carnival once a year, and boys stay with their mothers until five, when they join their fathers, visiting their mothers twice a year. At fifteen the boys choose to be warriors or live with their mothers with some having been rejected by their fathers. The novel begins with two ceremonies, the first on a boy\’s fifteen birthday and the second at a boy\’s fifth birthday, both reflecting the pain experienced by the mothers. In fact, the women have been using birth control and selecting the men who father children to try to breed out male violence. There are a number of subplots that make it a quite complicated novel.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {0-385-24709-5}, author = {Sheri [Shirley] S[tewart] Tepper (1929-2016)} } @booklet {3949, title = {The General{\textquoteright}s President}, year = {1988}, month = {1988}, publisher = {Baen}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Political novel set in a future dystopia in which, after a depression and rioting, the President and Vice President resign, and the Join Chiefs of Staff chooses the next President. He establishes a dictatorship but is also independent minded.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[John Robert] [Jones] (b. 1926)} } @booklet {3994, title = {Genesis: An Epic Poem}, year = {1988}, month = {1988}, publisher = {Saybrook Publishing Co}, address = {Dallas, TX}, abstract = {

Poem about the terraforming of Mars and the conflicts it engenders with a mild dystopia as background.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author, US author}, author = {Frederick Turner (b. 1943)} } @booklet {3909, title = {Genocide The Anthology}, year = {1988}, month = {1988}, publisher = {Knights Press}, address = {Stamford, CT}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which all gays are suppressed. The author presents this as actually expected in the future.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Tim[othy Patrick] Barrus (b. 1950)} } @booklet {3975, title = {The Gold Coast}, year = {1988}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Tor/Tom Doherty Associates, 1988; and in Three Californias\ (New York: Tom Doherty Associates, 2020), 293-653, with an introduction \“Triptych, with Softball\” by Francis Spufford (7-12). U.K. ed. London: Futura, 1989.\ 

}, month = {1988}, publisher = {St. Martin{\textquoteright}s Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

An affluent future that could be read as a eutopia or as a dystopia depicting the effects of the military-industrial complex, but the discontent of the main characters suggests the latter. See also 1984 Robinson, The Wild Shore, and 1990 Robinson, Pacific Edge, which are reprinted in Three Californias. New York: Tom Doherty Associates, 2020, with an introduction \“Triptych, with Softball\” by Francis Spufford (7-12), The Wild Shore (13-292), The Gold Coast (293-653), and Pacific Edge (655-895).\ The three volumes have the same physical location, but the futures presented are different.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Kim Stanley Robinson (b. 1952)} } @booklet {3915, title = {Greenland}, year = {1988}, month = {1988}, publisher = {Methuen in association with the Royal Court Theatre}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Two act play. The first act presents contemporary Britain almost as a dystopia. The second act is set seven hundred years in the future in an apparently anarchist eutopia. The author describes it as the culmination of his attempts to create a utopia on the stage, preceded by Sore Throats (first performed in 1978 at the Royal Shakespear Company\&$\#$39;s Warehouse Theatre in London), available in his Sore Throats \& Sonnets of Love and Opposition (London: Eyre Methuen, 1979), 5-31; and with the subtitle \"An Intimate Play in Two Acts\" in his Plays: One (London: Methuen, 1986), 337-90; and Bloody Poetry. London: Methuen, 1985 (first performed in 1984 at the Foco Novo Theatre in Hampstead, England).

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Howard [John] Brenton (b. 1942)} } @booklet {3812, title = {God Help the Queen}, year = {1987}, month = {1987}, publisher = {Abacus}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Britain as an authoritarian dystopia. All people are shareholders but are poor.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author, UK author}, author = {Geoffrey Cush (b. 1956)} } @booklet {3865, title = {Goodstuff Any Moment}, year = {1987}, month = {1987}, publisher = {Hard Echo Press}, address = {Onehunga, New Zealand}, abstract = {

A dystopia based on the usual corruption and cruelties with the emergence of a eutopia based on people helping each other. People create a cooperative system of both education and exchange that allows those living on the margins to improve their lives. Religious overtones with the emergence near the end of an Antichrist figure and the possibility of the Second Coming.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {Mike Paterson (b. 1946)} } @booklet {3866, title = {"The Green Man of Knowledge"}, howpublished = {Tesseracts2}, year = {1987}, month = {1987}, pages = {118-29}, publisher = {Porc{\'e}pic Press}, address = {Victoria, BC, Canada}, abstract = {

In the future capital punishment is replaced by dying the skin of murderers green. Those dyed green live in the world and work in munitions factories but are generally treated as non-persons. The story is about a terrorist and his punishment.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author}, author = {Wendy G[ay] Pearson}, editor = {Phyllis [Fay Bloom] Gotlieb (1926-2009) and Douglas Barbour (b. 1940)} } @booklet {3741, title = {Ghost}, year = {1986}, month = {1986}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia of an energy-depleted earth as a background.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Piers Anthony Dillingham] [Jacob] (b. 1934)} } @booklet {3709, title = {Gilpin{\textquoteright}s Space}, year = {1986}, note = {

Book I \“Owl\’s Flight\ Geoffrey Cormac\” (1-77) was originally published as \“Gilpin\’s Space.\”\ The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction\ 64.2 (February 1983): 4-60.\ 

}, month = {1986}, publisher = {Ace Science Fiction Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Earth is a dystopia with three factions, corporations, the Soviets, and a group forcing conformity that calls itself the Individualist People\’s Party. A group of people manage to leave Earth and find another Earth-like planet to settle where they begin to create a better world.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Reginald Bretnor (1911-92)} } @booklet {3760, title = {Goodman 2020}, year = {1986}, month = {1986}, publisher = {Indiana University Press}, address = {Bloomington}, abstract = {

Future dystopia of corporate power, drugs, and friendship as a commodity for sale. Some hope is held out at the end.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[John] Fred[erick] Pfeil (1949-2005)} } @booklet {3604, title = {The Garbage Chronicles; Being an account of the adventures of Tom Javik and Wizzy Malloy in the faraway land of catapulted garbage}, year = {1985}, month = {1985}, publisher = {Berkley Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Humor on the consumer society of the future.\ Sequel to his non-utopian\ Sydney\’s Comet: Being an Account of the Remarkable Events Which Occurred During the Approach of the Great Garbage Comet. New York: Berkley Books, 1983.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Brian [Patrick] Herbert (b. 1947)} } @booklet {3627, title = {"Girls Will Be Girls"}, howpublished = {Free Amazons of Darkover: An Anthology}, year = {1985}, month = {1985}, pages = {275-85 with an introductory note on 274}, publisher = {DAW Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

A story about adjusting to life among the Free Amazons.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Patricia Shaw-Mathews}, editor = {Marion Zimmer Bradley (1930-99) and The Friends of Darkover [pseud.]} } @booklet {3609, title = {The Glass Hammer}, year = {1985}, month = {1985}, publisher = {Bluejay Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

A dystopia set in a violent future.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {K[evin] W[ayne] Jeter (b. 1950)} } @booklet {3672, title = {The Golden Age}, year = {1985}, note = {

Rpt. in\ Australia Plays: New Australian Drama\ (London: Nick Hern Books, 1989), 89-178. 2nd ed. of the play Sydney, NSW, Australia: Currency Press, 1989. U.S. [Rev. ed.] Woodstock, IL: Dramatic Publishing Co., 1988.

}, month = {1985}, publisher = {Currency Press in association with Playbox Theatre Company, Melbourne, VIC, Australia}, address = {Sydney, NSW, Australia}, abstract = {

A play, based on an apparently true story, about the discovery in 1939 of a lost community founded by convicts in Tasmania. The community had been established to create a good life for its original inhabitants. It has degenerated over time due, among other things, to interbreeding, but there is still a system of mutual support. The speech of the descendants of the convicts is based on 1840s lower class language and slang and a glossary is provided.\ 

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Louis Nowra (b. 1950)} } @booklet {3648, title = {"The Government in Exile"}, howpublished = {Urban Fantasies}, year = {1985}, note = {

Rpt. in his\ The Government in Exile and other stories\ (Melbourne, VIC, Australia: Sumeria, 1994), 25-36; and in\ The Best Australian Science Fiction Writing: A Fifty Year Collection. Ed. Rob Gerrand (Melbourne, VIC, Australia: Black Inc., 2004), 326-34.

}, month = {1985}, pages = {83-91}, publisher = {Ebony Books}, address = {Melbourne, VIC, Australia}, abstract = {

Dystopia of violence and class division. A completely collapsed system in which everyone has quit trying, and the unemployed are killed for sport and food.\ 

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Australian author, English author, Male author}, author = {Paul [A.] Collins (b. 1954)}, editor = {David King and Russell [Kenneth] Blackford} } @booklet {3684, title = {"Green Days in Brunei"}, howpublished = {Isaac Asimov{\textquoteright}s Science Fiction Magazine }, volume = {9.10 (96) }, year = {1985}, note = {

Rpt. Rpt. in\ The Year\&$\#$39;s Best Science Fiction: Third Annual Collection. Ed. Gardner [Raymond] Dozois (New York: Bluejay Books, 1986), 85-128 with an editor\&$\#$39;s note on 84; in his in\ Crystal Express\ (Sauk City, WI: Arkham House, 1989), 107-54; rpt. (New York: Ace Books, 1990), 113-64; and in\ The Ultimate Cyberpunk. Ed. Pat Cadigan (New York: ibooks, 2002), 276-340.

}, month = {October 1985}, pages = {136-81}, abstract = {

A dystopian future where Brunei has run out of oil.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {1065-6298 }, author = {[Michael] Bruce Sterling (b. 1954)} } @booklet {3625, title = {"Growing Pains"}, howpublished = {Free Amazons of Darkover: An Anthology}, year = {1985}, month = {1985}, pages = {287-301 with an introductory note on 286}, publisher = {DAW Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

A story about a young woman having difficulties adjusting to the ways of the Free Amazons.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Susan Schwartz}, editor = {Marion Zimmer Bradley (1930-99) and The Friends of Darkover [pseud.]} } @booklet {3528, title = {The Golden People}, year = {1984}, month = {1984}, publisher = {Baen}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Genetically superior people in conflict with humanity.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Fred [Thomas] Saberhagen (1930-2007)} } @booklet {8836, title = {{\textquotedblleft}A Government of India undertaking . . .{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Imprint (Bombay, India)}, volume = {24.1}, year = {1984}, note = {

Rpt. in In Other Words: New Writing by Indian Women. Ed. Urvashi Butalia and Ritu Menon (Delhi, India: Kali for Women, 1992), 1-24. \ U.K. ed. (London: The Women\’s Press, 1993), 1-24; U.S. ed. (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1994), 1-24. Rpt. in Critical Quarterly 35.4 (December 1993): 66-79;\ in her Hot Death, Cold Soup: Twelve Short Stories (Delhi, India: Kali for Women, 1996), 111-32. Rpt. (Reading, Eng.: Garnet Publishing, 1997), 99-117; and in her Three Virgins and Other Stories (New Delhi, India: Zubaan, 2013), 17-38.\ 

}, month = {April 1984}, pages = {88-93, 95-96}, abstract = {

Dystopian Kafkaesque satire focusing on the \“Bureau of Reincarnation and Transmigration of Souls--A Government of India Undertaking.\”\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, Indian author}, author = {Manjula Padmanabhan (b. 1953)} } @booklet {3511, title = {Greenhouse: It Will Happen in 1997}, year = {1984}, month = {1984}, publisher = {Donald I. Fine}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Satire/dystopia about the greenhouse effect in a high-tech world of the future and on postmodernism and higher education.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Bernard] [John] James (b. 1922)} } @booklet {8543, title = {The Greening of Mars}, year = {1984}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: St. Martin\’s/Marek, 1984.

}, month = {1984}, publisher = {Andr{\'e} Deutsch}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The novel is mostly about the terraforming of Mars, the trip to Mars by immigrants, and their initial adjustment to the new planet, but the main protagonist,\  briefly presents Mars in eutopian terms. All manual work performed by robots. Everyone is vegetarian. Every book and article ever published on Earth is available electronically. Growing social diversity. No guns. Very limited crime.\ Lovelock was the founder of the Gaia theory that Earth is a living entity.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Michael Allaby (b. 1933) and James [Ephraim] Lovelock (1919-2022)} } @booklet {3546, title = {"Growing Up Slowly: Another Century of Childhood"}, howpublished = {Marriage and the Family in the Year 2020}, year = {1984}, month = {1984}, pages = {106-17}, publisher = {Prometheus Books}, address = {Buffalo, NY}, abstract = {

Discusses childhood in the future with an emphasis on the variety that will be available and the technology that will help make that variety possible.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Larry L. Constantine}, editor = {Lester A. Kirkendall and Arthur E. Gravatt} } @booklet {3483, title = {"The Game"}, howpublished = {Pathfinder (New Zealand)}, year = {1983}, month = {Spring 1983}, pages = {6-8, 38}, abstract = {

Eutopia/dystopia with similarities to James Hilton\&$\#$39;s Lost Horizon (1933).

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author}, author = {Barry Rosenberg} } @booklet {3434, title = {Gifts from Eykis}, year = {1983}, month = {1983}, publisher = {Simon and Schuster}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

New age eutopia. While Uranus and its the inhabitants appear to be identical to Earth and its inhabitants, they differ profoundly. Uranians have no concepts of danger or harm, are incapable of lying, and while they know a future exists, they live entirely in the present. Anxiety is a phenomenon caused by airborne particles, the arrival of which can be forecast, and neuroses and guilt also have known physical causes and treatments. The book described many other similar differences from Earth.

}, keywords = {US author}, author = {Dr. Wayne [Walter] Dyer (b. 1940)} } @booklet {3473, title = {Golden Witchbreed}, year = {1983}, month = {1983}, publisher = {Victor Gollancz}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Although mostly an adventure novel, it includes one society that can be called eutopian that lives in telestre or a group of 50 to 500 living together on\ the land and supporting themselves.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Mary [Rosalyn] Gentle (b. 1956)} } @booklet {3391, title = {Games of the Strong}, year = {1982}, note = {

Rpt. North Ryde, NSW, Australia: Sirius, 1987. U.S. ed. New York: Cane Hill Press, 1989.

}, month = {1982}, publisher = {Angus and Robertson}, address = {Melbourne, VIC, Australia}, abstract = {

Complex dystopia--partially Orwell and partially Kafka. The main character, a young woman who identifies with the rebels, wends her way, seemingly almost by accident, through the bureaucracy and society of the Complex, an authoritarian dystopia. The Games of the Strong, which are barely mentioned, are games designed to distract the population from their miserable lives.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Australian author, Female author}, author = {Glenda [Emilie] Adams (1939-2007)} } @booklet {3363, title = {The Godmothers}, year = {1982}, month = {1982}, publisher = {The Women{\textquoteright}s Press}, address = {London/New York}, abstract = {

Feminist novel with a stress on struggle but that includes eutopian and dystopian elements. The novel is set on four timelines: the witch-burning past, the present in which a group of feminists are targeted by anti-feminists, a feminist eutopian future which is threatened by those who worship mathematics, and the period of the Godmothers, a period in which the ties among women are affirmed.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Female author}, author = {Sandi Hall (b. 1942)} } @booklet {3417, title = {The Golden Space}, year = {1982}, note = {

Parts published earlier as \"The Summer\&$\#$39;s Dust.\"\ The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction\ 61.1 (362) (July 1981): 68-97; Rpt. in\ The Best of Pamela Sargent. Ed. Martin H[arry] Greenberg (Chicago, IL: Academy Chicago, 1987), 148-96; and in her\ The Mountain Cage and Other Stories\ (Atlanta, GA: Meisha Merlin, 2002), 283-322. \"Afterword to \&$\#$39;The Summer\&$\#$39;s Dust\&$\#$39;\" (323); and \"The Renewal\" which was originally published in slightly different form in\ Immortal: Short Novels of the Transhuman Future. Ed. Jack Dann (New York: Harper \& Row, 1978), 13-147.

}, month = {1982}, publisher = {Timescape}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia that develops as a result of the discovery of immortality.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Pamela Sargent (b. 1948)} } @booklet {3414, title = {The Great Divide}, year = {1982}, month = {1982}, publisher = {Rawson, Wade}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Near future U.S. divided into rich and poor based on access to energy resources.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Frank M[alcolm] Robinson (1926-2014) and John Levin} } @booklet {7000, title = {"Green City"}, howpublished = {Veridian }, volume = {2.5 - 3.2, 4.1 }, year = {1982}, month = {September 1982 - November 1983, February 1984}, pages = {5-6, 10; 1, 5-7; 5-6, 16 ; 1, 5-6 ; 16, 14-13; 11-13 }, abstract = {

Bloomington, Indiana turned into an ecological eutopia five years after a worldwide economic collapse. Much of the story concerns a controversy between those wanting more centralization, described as \"old-time leftists\", and those wanting continued decentralization.

}, keywords = {US author}, author = {D. J. L. Neruda} } @booklet {3405, title = {"A Green Hill Far Away"}, howpublished = {Perpetual Light}, year = {1982}, month = {1982}, pages = {204-36 with a brief note on 204}, publisher = {Warner Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Whether it is eutopian or dystopian is an open question. A new religious order, the Rule of St. Abbenew the Galactic, designed for life enforces morality and act as both police (the Benedictine Infantry) and the judicial system. The story is about a monk whose faith is tested.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Michael Paul] [McDowell] (b. 1954)}, editor = {Alan Ryan} } @booklet {3331, title = {Gathering}, year = {1981}, month = {1981}, publisher = {Greenwillow Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Sequel to 1981 Hamilton. In this volume, the protagonists battle the ruler of the dystopian future, win, and return home.

}, keywords = {African American author}, author = {Virginia [Esther] Hamilton (1934-2002)} } @booklet {3278, title = {Gor Saga}, year = {1981}, month = {1981}, publisher = {Eyre Methuen}, address = {London}, abstract = {

A novel about a boy whose mother was a gorilla set in a class divided dystopia controlled by computers.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Maureen [Patricia] Duffy (b. 1933)} } @booklet {3346, title = {The Green Futures of Tycho}, year = {1981}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Puffin, 1991; and\ New York: Starscape, 2005.\ This ed. includes a \"Reader\&$\#$39;s Guide\" (115-21). U.K. ed. London: Macdonald, 1988.

}, month = {1981}, publisher = {E. P. Dutton}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Children\&$\#$39;s time travel book that includes a future authoritarian dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {William [Warner] Sleator [III] (1945-2011)} } @booklet {3333, title = {The Guardian of Isis}, year = {1981}, month = {1981}, publisher = {Hamish Hamilton}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Young adult dystopia which expels a young woman. A new world is created.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author}, author = {Monica [Mary] Hughes (1925-2003)} } @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 {3211, title = {The Gardens of Delight}, year = {1980}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: Timescape, 1982.

}, month = {1980}, publisher = {Victor Gollancz}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Eutopia and dystopia based on the Hieronymus Bosch (c. 1450-1516) painting,\ The Gardens of Earthly Delights, which is in the Museo del Prado in Madrid. The novel has three sections similar to the triptych, the Gardens, which open and close the novel. Hell, and Eden.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Ian Watson (b. 1943)} } @booklet {3162, title = {Good News}, year = {1980}, note = {

An excerpt was published under the same title in\ TriQuarterly, no. 48 (Spring 1980): 273-95.

}, month = {1980}, publisher = {E. P. Dutton}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Post-catastrophe conflict between collapsed cities and the resurgent countryside.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Edward [Paul] Abbey (1927-89)} } @booklet {3175, title = {Gordonstown; A New Design for America}, year = {1980}, month = {1980}, publisher = {Gordonstown Press}, address = {Dillon, CO}, abstract = {

Eutopia describing a technologically advanced village.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Stuart Gordon (b. 1924)} } @booklet {3256, title = {Green is for Galanx}, year = {1980}, month = {1980}, publisher = {Atheneum}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult novel in which a dystopian society puts the gifts of unusually talented children into androids. Social control through entertainment.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {[Jeanne] [Dixon] (b. 1936)} } @booklet {1962, title = {Gallagher{\textquoteright}s Glacier}, year = {1979}, note = {

Part originally published as \"Gallagher\&$\#$39;s Glacier.\"\ Analog Science Fact--Science Fiction 74.3\ (November 1964): 37-42. Short version published New York: Ace Books, 1970.

}, month = {1979}, publisher = {Ace Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia in which the universe is ruled by giant corporations. Rebellion.

}, keywords = {Female author, Male author, US author}, author = {Walt[er R.] Richmond (1922-77) and Leigh [Tucker] Richmond (1911-95)} } @booklet {3091, title = {The Good Society; A personal account of its struggle with the world of social planning and a dialectical inquiry into the roots of radical practice}, year = {1979}, month = {1979}, publisher = {MIT Press}, address = {Cambridge, MA}, abstract = {

Eutopia. Between fiction and non-fiction. See also 1976 Friedmann and 1979 Friedmann, Communalist Society.

}, keywords = {Austrian author, Canadian author, Male author, US author}, author = {John Friedmann (b. 1926)} } @booklet {3149, title = {The Granville Hypothesis}, year = {1979}, month = {1979}, publisher = {Manor Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Flawed utopia. Computer perfect world under attack.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Ted Mancuso (b. 1950)} } @booklet {9434, title = {The Great Change}, year = {1979}, month = {1979}, publisher = {Trinidad Press}, address = {Trinidad, CA}, abstract = {

Detailed socialist eutopia using a version of the \“sleeper wakes\” in which a labor leader in the mid-twentieth century comes back to San Francisco in 2012. Quite a bit on the transition. Much is provided free or inexpensively. Much more on the details of the workplace and production than in many comparable works. Partnership between management and unions. Annual turnover in many leadership positions. A lot of bureaucracy but working the way it should.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Jack Wagner} } @booklet {3006, title = {Garh City. Book II of Daily Lives in Nghsi-Altai}, year = {1978}, month = {1978}, publisher = {New Directions}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Second volume of four about a eutopia about a Southeast Asian country that has a fairly simple, agricultural life but a complex mythology. This volume describes a technologically sophisticated city (e.g., they have monorails and an advanced solar power system) with traditional kinships systems. See 1977 Nichols, the note there, and 1979 (2) Nichols.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Robert [Molise Boyer] Nichols (1919-2010)} } @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 {3066, title = {The Grasshopper: Games, Life and Utopia}, year = {1978}, note = {

U.K. ed. Edinburgh, Scot.: Scottish Academic Press, 1978. Rpt. with a new Introduction by Thomas Hurka (7-20) and additional material. Peterborough, ON, Canada: Broadview Press, 2005. This should be read with his \"The Grasshopper: Posthumous Reflections on Utopia.\"\ Utopias. Ed. Peter Alexander and Roger Gill (London: Duckworth, 1984), 197-209; first published as \"Games and Utopia: Posthumous Reflections.\"\ Simulation and Games 15.1(March 1984): 5-24.

}, month = {1978}, publisher = {University of Toronto Press}, address = {Toronto, ON, Canada}, abstract = {

A fictional consideration of the nature of utopia that discusses a number of possible utopias. The basic position is that utopia would be the playing of games or activities valued only for themselves rather than being instrumental.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author, US author}, author = {Bernard [Herbert] Suits (1925-2007)} } @booklet {2956, title = {A Generation Removed}, year = {1977}, month = {1977}, pages = {188 pp.}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Dystopia of generational conflict in which the young rule with all teenagers having the vote. Retirement at 55, no medical care, and euthanasia for the ill. The dust jacket adds \“In this brave new world, aging is a crime.\” Euth Centres staffed by teenagers Anyone over 55 with a euthable disease was euthanized, and almost everything was euthable.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {0-385-11549-0}, author = {Gary K[enneth] Wolf (b. 1941)} } @booklet {11104, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Gillan Is Not All{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Janus}, volume = {no. 8 (3.2)}, year = {1977}, month = {[Summer] 1977}, pages = {61-64}, abstract = {

Domed city on another planet where complete obedience is the norm, memories are wiped, and the basic myth is that there is nothing outside the dome.

}, keywords = {Male author}, issn = {0275-3715}, url = { 08-Vol-3-No-2-edit.pdf (sf3.org)}, author = {Jonathan Farris} } @booklet {2914, title = {"Getting Away"}, howpublished = {Galaxy Science Fiction}, volume = { 37.1 }, year = {1976}, note = {

Rpt. in his\ When or Where\ (Hornsea, Eng.: PS Publishing, 2006), 45-54.

}, month = {January 1976}, pages = {148-55}, abstract = {

Dystopia of environmental collapse as background to a time travel story.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {0016-4003 }, author = {Steven [D.] Utley (1948-2013)} } @booklet {2911, title = {"Glutt"}, howpublished = {Guthrie New Theater}, volume = {1}, year = {1976}, month = {1976}, pages = {186-213}, publisher = {Grove Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which a man is executed for his lack of community feeling and involvement.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Gladden Schrock}, editor = {Eugene Lion and David Ball} } @booklet {2894, title = {The Good Society: A Primer of Its Social Practice}, year = {1976}, month = {1976}, publisher = {[School of Architecture and Urban Planning, UCLA]}, address = {[Los Angeles, CA]}, abstract = {

Eutopia. Small, person-centered, focusing on dialogue. It appears to be the first version of 1979 Friedmann, The Good Society\ A personal account of its struggle with the world of social planning and a dialectical inquiry into the roots of radical practice. See also 1979 Friedmann, Communalist Society.

}, keywords = {Austrian author, Canadian author, Male author, US author}, author = {John Friedmann (b. 1926)} } @booklet {2893, title = {The Governor-General}, year = {1976}, month = {1976}, publisher = {Widescope International Publishers}, address = {Camberwell, VIC, Australia}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Authoritarian dictatorship in Australia in the form of a political novel describing conflicts within the Labour Party, the seizure of power by the Governor-General, and interference by the United States government.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Christopher [John Douglass] Forsyth (b. 1939)} } @booklet {2883, title = {Gulliver{\textquoteright}s Visit to Walden III; A Report on Values in Education}, year = {1976}, month = {1976}, publisher = {Kappa Delta Pi Press}, address = {West Lafayette, IN}, abstract = {

Detailed eutopia stressing education. A descendant of Lemuel Gulliver visits Walden III, which is described as \"a laboratory, not only to introduce intuitive innovations, but to test hypotheses about the nature of a (not the) good society and how it might be built\" (x). The book proposes a model of education based on what the author calls \"The Seven Worlds\" that include the mental, physical, aesthetic, social, political, economic, and ethical aspects of life.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {William Clark Trow (1894-1982)} } @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 {8742, title = {The Girl Who Owned a City}, year = {1975}, note = {

Adapted by Dan Jolley. Illus. Jo{\"e}lle Jones. Colored by Jenn Manley Lee. Letters by Grace Lu. Minneapolis, MN: Graphics Universe\™, 2012. There are quite a few other editions and reprints.\ 

}, month = {1975}, publisher = {Lerner Publications}, address = {Minneapolis, MN}, abstract = {

Young adult post-catastrophe dystopia in which all adults die, and the children struggle to survive. The novel focuses on a girl who takes over a high school building to provide security for her group.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {O. T. Nelson} } @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 {2829, title = {Grimus}, year = {1975}, month = {1975}, publisher = {Victor Gollancz}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Something of a metaphysical adventure novel with science fiction elements. The main society described is labeled \"utopian\" (186) because it functions on a basis of rough equality and with no money.

}, keywords = {English author, Indian author, Male author}, author = {[Ahmed] Salman Rushdie (b. 1947)} } @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 {2760, title = {Growing Up in Tier 3000}, year = {1975}, month = {1975}, publisher = {Ace Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Grotesque dystopia in which children kill parents as part of the rites of passage because constraint on energy resources necessitates a limit on population. People have implants that greatly expand physical powers, and instruments are available to measure all bodily functions. Rule by clones of past leaders.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Felix C[harles] Gotschalk [Jr.] (1929-2002)} } @booklet {2662, title = {The Godwhale}, year = {1974}, note = {

U.K. ed. London: Eyre Methuen, 1975. Part originally published as \"Rorqual Maru.\" Illus.\ Galaxy Science Fiction\ 32.4\ (January-February 1972): 58-86, 88-91.

}, month = {1974}, publisher = {Ballantine Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The novel includes societies that are very advanced in biology, societies that are degenerating, and authoritarian dystopias. On the whole, the human race and its societies are presented as first improving and then degenerating.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Thomas J.] [Bassler] [M.D.] (1932-2011)} } @booklet {2688, title = {Gomorrah}, year = {1974}, month = {1974}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Dystopia of violence.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Marvin Karlins (b. 1941) and Lewis M. Andrews (b. 1946)} } @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 {2606, title = {"The Girl Who Was Plugged In"}, howpublished = {New Dimensions}, volume = { 3}, year = {1973}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Tor, 1989. Tor Double bound with Vonda N[eel] McIntyre (1948-2019). Screwtop [Originally published in The Crystal Ship: Three Original Novellas of Science Fiction. Ed. Robert Silverberg (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson, 1976), 151-208]; in her Her Smoke Rose Up Forever ([Sauk City, WI:] Arkham House, 1990), 44-79; in Cybersex. Ed. Richard Glyn Jones (New York: Carroll \& Graf, 1996), 178-213; in The Ultimate Cyberpunk. Ed. Pat Cadigan (New York: ibooks, 2002), 74-120; in The James Tiptree Award Anthology 3. Ed. Karen Joy Fowler, Pat Murphy, Debbie Notkin, and Jeffrey D. Smith (San Francisco, CA: Tachyon Publications, 2007), 151-90; 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), 135-184, with a biographical note on 469-471 and notes on the text on 483-485.

}, month = {1973}, pages = {60-97}, publisher = {Nelson Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

A eutopia that outlaws any misrepresentation of a product (advertising) is being successfully undermined by corporate interests.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-59853-732-1}, author = {[Alice Bradley] [Sheldon] (1915-87)}, editor = {Robert Silverberg (b. 1935)} } @booklet {2619, title = {The God Machine}, year = {1973}, month = {1973}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a fascist United States creating a police state. There is an opposition movement that uses \"The God Machine\" to shrink people so that they can escape the authorities. In the end the opposition wins.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {William Jon Watkins (b. 1942)} } @booklet {2654, title = {"The Great Wall of Mexico"}, howpublished = {Bad Moon Rising}, year = {1973}, note = {

U.K. ed. without the T. in his name (London: Hutchinson of London, 1974), 125-58. Rpt. without the T. in his name in his\ Keep the Giraffe Burning\ (London: Panther, 1977), 168-99; and again without the T. in his name in SciFiction www.scifi.com/scifiction/ Posted December 22, 2005. No longer available online.

}, month = {1973}, pages = {114-146}, publisher = {Harper \& Row}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Future satirical U.S. dystopia in which there is an incompetent president, the government spies on everyone, the elderly are warehoused, and a wall is built to keep out illegal immigrants. 1971 Waskow is probably the basis for this.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author, US author}, isbn = {06-011046-5}, author = {John T[homas] Sladek (1937-2000)}, editor = {Thomas M[ichael] Disch (1940-2008)} } @booklet {2562, title = {The Green Gene}, year = {1973}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: Pantheon, 1973. Rpt. New York: DAW Books, 1975.

}, month = {1973}, publisher = {Hodder \& Stoughton}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Humorous dystopia in which Apartheid has been designed to exclude all Celts, who are literally green. The humor is directed both at the English and at the Celts and the Irish in particular.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Peter [Malcolm de Brissac] Dickinson (1927-2015)} } @booklet {2500, title = {"Gantlet"}, howpublished = {Orbit: An Anthology of New Science Fiction Stories}, volume = { 10}, year = {1972}, note = {

Rpt. in\ The City 2000 A.D.: Urban Life Through Science Fiction. Ed. Ralph Clem, Martin Harry Greenberg, and Joseph Olander (Greenwich, CT: Fawcett Crest, 1976), 254-65.

}, month = {1972}, pages = {157-68}, publisher = {G.P. Putnam{\textquoteright}s Sons}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Overpopulation and pollution dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Richard E[arl] Peck (b. 1936)}, editor = {Damon [Francis] Knight (1922-2002)} } @booklet {2497, title = {"Generation Gaps"}, howpublished = {Analog Science Fiction--Science Fact }, volume = {90.1}, year = {1972}, month = {September 1972}, pages = {98-109}, abstract = {

Dystopia of generational conflict.

}, issn = {1059-2113 }, author = {Clancy O{\textquoteright}Brien} } @booklet {2501, title = {Genius Unlimited}, year = {1972}, month = {1972}, publisher = {DAW Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Eutopia of geniuses where everyone who works independently has problems, and the people have to learn both to work together and be practical.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {John T[homas] Phillifent (1916-76)} } @booklet {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 {2456, title = {"Goat Song"}, howpublished = {The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction }, volume = {42.2 }, year = {1972}, note = {

Rpt. in\ The Collected Short Stories of Poul Anderson. Volume 4 Admiralty. Ed. Rick Katze (Framingham, MA: NESFA Press, 2011), 281-306.

}, month = {February 1972}, pages = {5-53}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a computer-run stable society balanced by a wild country in which violence is permissible. A constant population is maintained.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction}, author = {Poul [William] Anderson (1926-2001)} } @booklet {2392, title = {Gadget Man}, year = {1971}, note = {

Based on a story of the same name in\ The Magazine of Science Fiction and Fantasy\ 35.6 (December 1968): 100-27.

}, month = {1971}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia set in a future Republic of Southern California with a focus on a rebellion against the dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Ron[ald Joseph] Goulart (1933-2022)} } @booklet {2410, title = {"Going"}, howpublished = {Four Futures: Four Original Novellas of Science Fiction}, year = {1971}, note = {

Rpt. in\ The Collected Stories of Robert Silverberg. Volume Three: Something Wild is Loose: 1969-72\ (Burton, MI: Subterranean Press, 2008), 106-55 with an author\&$\#$39;s note on 105-06.

}, month = {1971}, pages = {131-95}, publisher = {Hawthorn Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia of population control through voluntary suicide.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Robert Silverberg (b. 1935)} } @booklet {2438, title = {Gray Matters}, year = {1971}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Ace Books, 1972.

}, month = {1971}, publisher = {Simon \& Schuster}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which brains are kept alive and required to follow the directions of a central computer.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {William [Reinhold] Hjortsberg (1941-2017)} } @booklet {11618, title = {The Great 24 Hour {\textquoteleft}Thing{\textquoteright}}, year = {1971}, month = {1971}, pages = {187 pp.}, publisher = {The Orpheus Series/Bee-Line Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Mildly erotic satire in which, as a joke, two of the beings that oversee Earth decide to mess with their sector by granting all males their sexual desires for twenty-four hours.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Andrew J[efferson] Offutt [V] (1934-2013)} } @booklet {2435, title = {A Guest of Honour}, year = {1971}, month = {1971}, publisher = {Jonathan Cape}, address = {London}, abstract = {

As with much of Gordimer\&$\#$39;s fiction, the novel is concerned with racial strife in the dystopia that is South Africa, with what she calls \"the interregnum\", and, in this case, with the future of South Africa.

}, keywords = {Female author, South African author}, author = {Nadine Gordimer (1923-2014)} } @booklet {2326, title = {The Guardians}, year = {1970}, month = {1970}, publisher = {Hamish Hamilton}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Overcrowded cities for the proletariat. Rural life for the aristocracy. Maintained by psychological conditioning and brain surgery.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Sam] [Youd] (1922-2012)} } @booklet {2417, title = {Gardens 12345}, year = {1969}, note = {

U.K. ed. London: Faber and Faber, 1971.

}, month = {1969}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which social experiments are run on people by placing them in gardens and observing their actions when changes are made.

}, keywords = {Male author, Welsh author}, author = {Peter Tate (b. 1940)} } @booklet {2201, title = {"Give-and-Take Utopia"}, howpublished = {New Statesman }, volume = {78.2006 }, year = {1969}, month = {August 22, 1969}, pages = {243-44}, abstract = {

A personal view of eutopia, which he calls a \"half-way utopia\" and a \"more-or-less Merry England\". It will be planned but not predictable, permissive but not lawless, safe but not dull, and patriotic but not racist. Among other things, there will be a limit on income, and everyone must work.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Alan Brien (1925-2008)} } @booklet {2215, title = {The Glass Cage}, year = {1969}, note = {

U.K. ed. London: Dennis Dobson, 1972.

}, month = {1969}, publisher = {Arcadia House}, address = {[New York]}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Post-catastrophe society inside a sealed city. Religion and politics combine to keep people inside after the need to do so is over.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Kenneth W[ayne] Hassler (1932-99)} } @booklet {2156, title = {A Gift from Earth}, year = {1968}, month = {1968}, publisher = {Ballantine Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Transplant dystopia showing the power of doctors.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Larry [Lawrence van Cott] Niven (b. 1938)} } @booklet {2127, title = {The God Machine. A Novel}, year = {1968}, note = {

Rpt. without the subtitle. New York: Baen, 1989.

}, month = {1968}, publisher = {E. P. Dutton}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Computer dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Martin Caidin (1927-97)} } @booklet {2138, title = {The Great Leap Backward}, year = {1968}, note = {

U.K. ed. London: Robert Hale,\ 1968.\ 

}, month = {1968}, publisher = { McClelland \& Stewart}, address = {Toronto, ON, Canada}, abstract = {

Contrast between a dystopia of automated cities and a naturalist countryside.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {Robert Green (b. 1935?)} } @booklet {2191, title = {Guide to Survival}, year = {1968}, month = {1968}, publisher = {Tyndale House/Coverdale House/Salem Kirban, Inc.}, address = {Wheaton, IL/London/Huntingdon Valley, PA}, abstract = {

The dystopia that will follow the Rapture (see 1 Corinthians 15:52 and 1 Thessalonians 4: 15-17) and surviving it. Antichrist and Armageddon (See Revelation 16). His Your Last Goodbye. Huntingdon Valley, PA: Salem Kirban, Inc., 1969 is similar. See also 1970, 1974 Kirban; and Kirban\’s Book of Charts on Prophecy. Huntington Valley, PA: Salem Kirban, Inc., 1969. Kirban published around fifty books on these and related subjects.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Salem Kirban (1925-2010)} } @booklet {2081, title = {Garbage World}, year = {1967}, month = {1967}, publisher = {Berkley Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Pleasure worlds as dystopias with one asteroid used as a garbage dump for the pleasure worlds.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author, US author}, author = {Charles Platt (b. 1945)} } @booklet {2083, title = {The Gogglers: A Political Satire}, year = {1967}, month = {1967}, publisher = {Saturn Books}, address = {Los Angeles, CA}, abstract = {

Satire set in an imaginary country with comments on politics, race relations, and relations between the sexes.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Edward Raiden} } @booklet {2084, title = {"Golden Acres"}, howpublished = {Mister da V. and other Stories}, year = {1967}, note = {

Rpt. in\ Above the Human Landscape: A Social Science Fiction Anthology.\ Ed. Willis E. McNelly and Leon E. Stover (Pacific Palisades, CA: Goodyear Publishing Co., 1972), 51-66; and in\ Voyages: Scenarios for a Ship Called Earth. Ed. Rob Sauer (New York: Zero Population Growth/Ballantine Books, 1971), 170-90.

}, month = {1967}, pages = {172-94}, publisher = {Faber and Faber}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopian old age home. An elderly couple moves into an old age home and quickly find that all the rules and regulations mean that their lives are completely controlled.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Kit [Lilian Craig] Reed (1932-2017)} } @booklet {2019, title = {Giles Goat-Boy or, The Revised New Syllabus}, year = {1966}, month = {1966}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Complex comic novel that includes a dystopia set in a university and ruled by a computer. Giles is a boy raised as an animal who becomes a spiritual leader at New Tammany College (the U.S.).

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {John [Simmons] Barth (b. 1930)} } @booklet {1981, title = {The God Killers}, year = {1965}, note = {

Rpt. in New Worlds Science Fiction 50.163 - 164 (June - July 1966): 4-65, 74-129; and as The Off-Worlders. New York: Ace Books, 1966. Ace Double bound with Lin Carter, The Star Magicians.\ 

}, month = {1965}, publisher = {Horwitz}, address = {Melbourne, VIC, Australia}, abstract = {

Authoritarian, religious, anti-science dystopia.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {John [Martin] Baxter (b. 1939)} } @booklet {2013, title = {"The Good New Days"}, howpublished = {Galaxy Magazine}, volume = {24.1 }, year = {1965}, note = {

Rpt. in The Best of Fritz Leiber (New York: Ballantine, 1974), 295-310; and\ in\ The Best of Fritz Leiber\ (Garden City: Nelson Doubleday, 1974), 271-84.

}, month = {October 1965}, pages = {151-64}, abstract = {

Humorous dystopia. Robots have replaced humans for all productive work and humans are valued depending on the number of meaningless jobs they hold. There is a statue honoring a twelve-job man.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {0016-4003 }, author = {Fritz [Reuter] Leiber [Jr.] (1910-92)} } @booklet {1976, title = {"Gas Mask"}, howpublished = {The Ruins of Earth: An Anthology of Stories of the Immediate Future}, year = {1964}, note = {

Originally pub. in\ Nugget\ (1964).

}, month = {1964}, pages = {113-22}, publisher = {G.P. Putnam{\textquoteright}s Sons}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Overpopulation and pollution dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {James D. Houston}, editor = {Thomas M[ichael] Disch (1940-2008)} } @booklet {1857, title = {"Gadget Vs. Trend"}, howpublished = {Analog Science Fact--Science Fiction}, volume = { 70.2 }, year = {1962}, note = {

Rpt. in\ Spectrum IV: A Science Fiction Anthology. Ed. Kingsley Amis and Robert Conquest (London: Victor Gollancz, 1965), 55-69; in\ Give Me Liberty. Ed. Martin Harry Greenberg and Mark Tier (New York: Baen, 2003), 65-83; and in\ Freedom!\ Ed. Martin Harry Greenberg and Mark Tier (New York: Baen, 2006), 55-69.

}, month = {October 1962}, pages = {70-82}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Effect of a machine allowing complete privacy and inviolability. Through the device, the U.S., which had been becoming too conformist, becomes too individualist.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {1059-2113 }, author = {[Harry C.] [Crosby] [Jr.] (1925-2009)} } @booklet {1865, title = {The Garthians}, year = {1962}, month = {1962}, publisher = {Arthur H. Stockwell}, address = {Ilfracombe, Eng.}, abstract = {

Technologically advanced eutopia in which the basis for the good society is the correct early training of children.

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Decima Leach} } @booklet {10194, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Good Morning! This Is the Future{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Rogue}, year = {1962}, note = {

Rpt. in Microcosmic Tales: 100 Wondrous Science Fiction Short-Short Stories. Ed. Isaac Asimov, Martin H. Greenberg, and Joseph D. Olander (New York: Taplinger Publishing Co., 1980); rpt. (New York: DAW Books, 1992), 118-23.\ 

}, month = {August 1962}, abstract = {

Brief vignettes of three men who had had themselves frozen being awakened into a dystopia worse than what they had been trying to escape.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Henry Slesar (1927-2002)} } @booklet {1873, title = {The Great Explosion}, year = {1962}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: Distributed by Dodd, Mead, 1962. Rpt. New York: Avon, 1975. Part originally published as \" . . . And Then There Were None.\"\ Astounding Science Fiction 47.4\ (June 1951): 7-65; story rpt. in\ Alternative Communities: Magazine of the Alternative Communities Movement, no. 14 - 17\ (1983 - 84): 2-13; 2-15; 2- 14; 2-10; in\ Major Ingredients: The Selected Short Stories of Eric Frank Russell. Ed. Rick Katze (Framingham, MA: The NESFA Press, 2000), 24-75; in\ Give Me Liberty. Ed. Martin Harry Greenberg and Mark Tier (New York: Baen, 2003), 291-381; and in\ Freedom!\ Ed. Martin Harry Greenberg and Mark Tier (New York: Baen, 2006), 233-305.

}, month = {1962}, publisher = {Dennis Dobson}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Earth sends groups of people into space to practice their own beliefs, and three societies of the far future are described. The first is the result of a planet peopled by transported criminals. They develop into a series of isolated strongholds adept at war and opposed to labor and includes a group of nomadic Romany or Gypsies. The second, Hygeia, was settled by Naturists, is inhabited by healthy people, and is a eutopia. The third, Gands, was founded on Gandhian principles and is \ an anarchist eutopia. Important slogans are F-I.W. (Freedom-I Won\’t) and Myob (Mind your own business).\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Eric Frank Russell (1905-78)} } @booklet {1830, title = {"A Gentle Dying"}, howpublished = {Galaxy Magazine }, volume = {19.5 }, year = {1961}, note = {

Rpt. in their\ The Wonder Effect\ (New York: Ballantine Books, 1962), 47-54.

}, month = {June 1961}, pages = {68-75}, abstract = {

Dystopian satire on the innocence of children. A wealthy children\&$\#$39;s book author establishes a research institute to find ways for children to avoid growing up. Successful, the children then eliminate all adults; only the author is allowed to die a natural death.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013) and C[yril] M[ichael] Kornbluth (1923-58)} } @booklet {10020, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Girls and Nugent Miller{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction}, volume = {18.3 (106)}, year = {1960}, note = {

Rpt. in The Collected Short Fiction of Robert Sheckley. Book Three (Eugene, OR: Pulphouse Publishing, 1991), 227-37.\ 

}, month = {March 1960}, pages = {58-67}, abstract = {

The only male survivor of an atomic war, a mild-manner pacifist, discovers some young women led an older woman who tries to kill him. He loses his pacifism.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {00024-984X }, author = {Robert Sheckley (1928-2005)} } @booklet {9143, title = {"Goodbye"}, howpublished = {The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction }, volume = {19.13}, year = {1960}, month = {September 1960}, pages = {26-51}, abstract = {

Story of a Kafakesque encounter with an authoritarian dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {00024-984X }, author = {Burton [Nathan] Raffel (1928-2015)} } @booklet {1756, title = {A Gap in the Spectrum}, year = {1959}, month = {1959}, publisher = {New Authors Ltd}, address = {London}, abstract = {

A woman \"remembers\" a eutopian country called Micald and compares it to the contemporary world, which is described in dystopian terms. The eutopian world is only briefly described but appears to be much more family oriented with various formal rites of passage. London, where she \"awakes\" was the name of a dystopian city she and her sister invented as children. According to Duckworth Micald is New Zealand and while better in some ways is narrow and boring.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Female author}, author = {Marilyn Duckworth (b. 1935)} } @booklet {1758, title = {God Gives Us Time}, year = {1959}, month = {1959}, publisher = {Vantage Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Heaven as eutopia and Hell as dystopia.

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Pearl Alice Freeman} } @booklet {1749, title = {The Great Man{\textquoteright}s Life 1925-2000 A.C}, year = {1959}, month = {1959}, publisher = {Utopian Publishers, Inc}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Detailed eutopia. Improved democracy based on a more egalitarian government structure. Prosperity assured by establishing a fund to guarantee a minimum income. Generally eliminates government regulations. A.C. stands for After Christ. See also 1972 and 1989 Van Petten.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Albert Archer Van Petten (1925-2005)} } @booklet {1727, title = {"Golden Age"}, howpublished = {Fantastic Universe }, volume = {10.3 }, year = {1958}, month = {September 1958}, pages = {34-36}, abstract = {

Dystopia showing the boredom that comes with too much security and the danger to the system of thinking.

}, author = {Lee Priestley} } @booklet {1719, title = {The Golden Phoenix}, year = {1958}, month = {1958}, pages = {69 pp.}, publisher = {Vantage Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Visit to a eutopian planet named Oopana. Technically advanced, no poor, with each continent having a monarchy. Religious. Large military for fear of other planets. Each class (rich, middle, lower) based on intelligence and skill and can advance with higher education. Each class lives in a separate district with more or less elaborate housing (47) and wear different clothing (53). Deported if unwilling to work. Traditional gender roles.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Mary Shaffer Carlton} } @booklet {1732, title = {The Good Society: The Goal of Law and of the Religion of Jesus, the Unconscious Goal of Creative Evolution, and the Coming Purposeful Goal of Life}, year = {1958}, month = {1958}, pages = {642 pp.}, publisher = {Vantage Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Criticism of contemporary society that includes a section describing some of the institutions of a future eutopia. The author contends that it is not \"another dream utopia\" but a realistic set of proposals based on Christ\&$\#$39;s plan.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Hugh Evander Willis (b. 1875)} } @booklet {1677, title = {The Gates of Ivory, The Gates of Horn}, year = {1957}, month = {1957}, publisher = {Mainstream Publishers}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia with an emphasis on a corrupt legal system following the basic precept of the society, \"One nation indivisible with efficiency and punishment for all\" (25 Original emphasis).

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Thomas McGrath (1916-1990)} } @booklet {1675, title = {The Green Kingdom}, year = {1957}, note = {

Rpt. with an \"Introduction\" (ix-xiv) by Nancy A. Walker. Nashville: University of Tennessee Press, 1993. Rachel Maddux Series Vol. 4.

}, month = {1957}, publisher = {Simon \& Schuster}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Primitive, Arcadian eutopia with little social content. Much of the novel is concerned with the responses of and difficulties experienced by the five people who find and live in the Green Kingdom.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Rachel Maddux (1912-83)} } @booklet {1647, title = {The Genesis of Nam: A New Earth With Its Own Blue Heaven}, year = {1956}, month = {1956}, publisher = {Dorrance \& Co}, address = {Philadelphia, PA}, abstract = {

Eutopia. Better world on Earth and a founding of a new and even better world in space.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Goodrich, Charles} } @booklet {1632, title = {The Golden Archer; A Satirical Novel of 1975}, year = {1956}, month = {1956}, publisher = {Twayne}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Satirical dystopia of an overly efficient U.S. state under the combined rule of church and state. The urban Catholics of the North and the rural Protestants of the South had joined forces and eliminated freedom of religion. Only New Orleans retains any freedom of worship. Efficiency is symbolized by an \“Efficiency Calendar\” in which each month starts on a Monday.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Gregory Mason (1889-1968)} } @booklet {1636, title = {The Golden Kazoo}, year = {1956}, month = {1956}, publisher = {Rinehart}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Satire on American presidential elections, which are run by ad men rather than politicians. The novel follows a specific future election.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {John Schneider (1909-64)} } @booklet {1634, title = {Gumption Island; A Fantasy of Coexistence}, year = {1956}, month = {1956}, publisher = {Caxton}, address = {Caldwell, ID}, abstract = {

Conservative, capitalist eutopia founded on an island after a world-wide catastrophe caused by a \"time-bomb\" that temporarily separated the island in time from the rest of the U.S. with three years on the island being three days outside it. Includes a constitution.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Felix M[uskett] Morley (1894-1982)} } @booklet {1591, title = {The Girls from Planet 5}, year = {1955}, month = {1955}, publisher = {Ballantine Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Satire. Women rule the US and Texas is a man\&$\#$39;s state. Men take over again because the women had done a bad job.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Richard Wilson (1920-1987)} } @booklet {1579, title = {Gladiator-at-Law}, year = {1955}, note = {

U.K. London: Victor Gollancz, 1964.\ 

}, month = {1955}, publisher = {Ballantine}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Capitalist, corporate, machine dominated dystopia with the novel focusing on the struggle to bring down one large, corrupt corporation.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013) and C[yril] M[ichael] Kornbluth (1923-58)} } @booklet {8517, title = {{\textquotedblleft}A Glimpse into the Future{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Library Review (New York) }, volume = {15.113 }, year = {1955}, month = {Spring 1955}, pages = {24-26}, abstract = {

While a future technological information system is presented as eutopian in that it has radically improved people\’s understanding and cultural level, a librarian is wedded to fine books. Set in England

}, author = {J. Harley} } @booklet {1593, title = {The Golden Promise; A Novel of the Coming Era}, year = {1955}, month = {1955}, publisher = {Pageant Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Eutopia of the Global Union, a unification of all races and nations. The equality and empowerment of women, called Fem-Mancipation, is an essential condition for the development of the eutopia. The country of Canarica is presented in which everyone is happy.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {Zuber, Stanley} } @booklet {1614, title = {"Granny Won{\textquoteright}t Knit"}, howpublished = {Galaxy Science Fiction}, volume = {8.2 }, year = {1955}, note = {

Rpt. in All About the Future. Ed. Martin Greenburg (New York: Gnome Press, 1955), 161-214; and in Bright Segment. Volume VIII: The Complete Stories of Theodore Sturgeon. Ed. Paul Williams (Berkeley, CA: North Atlantic Books, 2002), 115-74.

}, month = {May 1954}, pages = {6-61}, abstract = {

Dystopia of extreme privacy. Children raised in cr{\`e}ches and sent to patriarchal, authoritarian families (one boy and one girl each). Some contrast to a eutopia of openness.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {0016-4003 }, author = {Theodore Sturgeon (1918-1985)} } @booklet {1575, title = {The Great Beyond. A.D. 2500. A Trilogy on Progress}, year = {1955}, month = {1955}, publisher = {Torch Pub. Co}, address = {[Manchester, Eng.]}, abstract = {

Occult novel leading to a eutopia in 2500. One religion, one world government with one unified economy, and no prejudice.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Leonard Melling} } @booklet {1453, title = {Good-bye White Man; A Novel of A.D. 2711}, year = {1953}, month = {1953}, publisher = {Exposition Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Eutopia in which the Chinese are the dominant race through their adoption of Christianity. World empire. Marriage between races is illegal.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Frederic Vernon Bouic} } @booklet {1464, title = {The Green Millennium}, year = {1953}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Ace Science Fiction Books, 1953; and New York: Lion Books, 1954. U.K. ed. London: Abelard-Shuman, 1959, which is rpt. Boston, MA: Gregg Press, 1980 with an \“Introduction\” by Deborah L. Notkin (v-xi).\ 

}, month = {1953}, publisher = {Abelard Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopian satire in which the U.S. is ruled by the Federal Bureau of Loyalty, which has replaced most of the government bureaucracy, loosely cooperating, but also competing, with Fun, Inc., which controls the drug trade, gambling, and so forth. There is also a Federal Bureau of Morality.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Fritz [Reuter] Leiber [Jr.] (1910-92)} } @booklet {1465, title = {The Grim Tomorrow}, year = {1953}, month = {1953}, publisher = {Wright \& Brown}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Future war from the perspective of a briefly described eutopia created by the survivors after the war. An author\&$\#$39;s note says that while fiction it is intended as a warning of what will happen unless people come together to oppose war.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author, South African author}, author = {[Kathleen] [Lindsay] (1903-73)} } @booklet {1429, title = {Glass-sharp and Poisonous}, year = {1952}, month = {1952}, publisher = {Caxton Press}, address = {Christchurch, New Zealand}, abstract = {

Surreal dystopia. One focus of this short (85 page) work is a small country at war and the patriotism that can lead to killing local \"aliens\". Another focus is on a hospital in the country in which a patient will be killed rather than allowed to leave. The title refers to a mountain behind the hospital.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {G[arvin] R[obert] Gilbert (b. 1917)} } @booklet {1408, title = {Gunner Cade}, year = {1952}, note = {

Also published in\ Astounding Science Fiction\ 49.1 - 3 (March - May 1952): 8-53; 114-60; 108-54. Rpt. in their\ Spaced Out: Three Novels of Tomorrow\ (Framingham, MA: The NESFA Press, 2008), 9-135. Abbreviated as an Ace Double bound with 1957 Piper and McGuire. New York: Ace Books, 1957. UK ed. London: Victor Gollancz, 1964.

}, month = {1952}, publisher = {Simon and Schuster}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Future society that has become stultified in a caste structure. Shows the difficulty of convincing people that their ideology does not reflect the true state of affairs.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author, Male author, US author}, author = {C[yril] M[ichael] Kornbluth (1923-58) and [Judith (Josephine Juliet Grossman)] [Merril] (1923-97)} } @booklet {1376, title = {The Great Idea}, year = {1951}, note = {

U.K. ed. as Time Will Run Back. London: Ernest Benn Ltd., 1952. Rev. ed. as Time Will Run Back: A Novel About the Rediscovery of Capitalism. New Rochelle, NY: Arlington House, 1966. Rpt. Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 1986.\ 

}, month = {1951}, publisher = {Appleton-Century-Crofts}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Anti-communist dystopia. Conflict between the dictatorship of Wonworld (capital Moscow; calendar A.M. = After Marx) and Freeworld. Freeworld wins the war, and democracy and free enterprise is established and begins to succeed.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Henry Hazlitt (1894-1993)} } @booklet {1318, title = {A Giant{\textquoteright}s Strength: Drama in Three Acts}, year = {1948}, note = {

Rpt. as\ A Giant\&$\#$39;s Strength: A Three Act-Drama of the Atomic Bomb.\ Girard, KS: Haldeman-Julius Publications, 1948. U.K. ed. London: T.W. Laurie, [1948].

}, month = {1948}, publisher = {Author}, address = {Monrovia, CA}, abstract = {

Nuclear war dystopia with a brief eutopian vignette at the end. The play follows a family through the bombing of Hiroshima, the buildup to the war, the planted bombs exploding throughout the country, and the retaliation. They escape to a cave in South Dakota where they begin to learn to live in the new circumstances, but two members leave with very different dreams of building a new life.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Upton [Beall] Sinclair (1878-1968)} } @booklet {6834, title = {Gone to Grass}, year = {1948}, note = {

US ed. as The Roaring Dove. By Susan Kerby [pseud.]. New York: Dodd, Mead, 1948.

}, month = {[1948]}, publisher = {Hutchinson}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Anti-socialist satire stressing the dullness of utopia.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author}, author = {[Alice Elizabeth] [Burton] (b. 1908)} } @booklet {1320, title = {"The Great Judge"}, howpublished = {Fantasy Book}, volume = {1.3}, year = {1948}, note = {

Rpt. in\ Authentic Science Fiction, no. 71\ (July 1956): 127-32; in his\ Away and Beyond\ (New York: Avon, 1952), 69-73; (New York: Berkeley, 1959), 35-39; New ed. (New York: Berkeley, 1963); 40-45; U.K. ed. (London: Panther, 1963), 41-45; in Microcosmic Tales: 100 Wondrous Science Fiction Short-Short Stories. Ed. Isaac Asimov, Martin H. Greenberg, and Joseph D. Olander (New York: Taplinger Publishing Co., 1980); rpt. (New York: DAW Books, 1992), 104-09; and in\ Transfinite: The Essential A.E. van Vogt. Ed. Joe Rico and Rick Katze (Framingham, MA: The NESFA Press, 2002), 329-32.

}, month = {1948}, pages = {4-7}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia as background.\ 

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author, US author}, author = {A[lfred] E[lton] van Vogt (1912-2000)} } @booklet {1258, title = {God{\textquoteright}s Fool!}, year = {1946}, month = {1946}, publisher = {New Age Publications}, address = {Wellesley, MA}, abstract = {

A mother and son leave the Amana Colony to experience the life of the world. They experience poverty, war, and America\&$\#$39;s rejection of God and return to Amana, which they now see as better.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Frederick Ellsworth Wolf} } @booklet {1251, title = {The Golden Recovery Revealing A streamlined cooperative Economic System compiled from the best authorities of the World, both ancient and modern}, year = {1946}, month = {1946}, publisher = {[Murray \& Gee]}, address = {[Hollywood, CA]}, abstract = {

While much of the novel concerns the life histories of three young men, two rich whites and one poor black, who were raised together, the novel builds to a final focus on an intentional community in Southern California based on the principles of Robert Owen (1771-1858). The hero is the African-American.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Werter L[ivingston] Gross} } @booklet {1219, title = {The Green Isle of the Great Deep}, year = {1944}, note = {

Rpt. [London]: Souvenir Press, 1975; and Edinburgh, Scot.: Polygon, 2006.

}, month = {1944}, publisher = {Faber and Faber}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Heaven as an authoritarian dystopia. Takeover by those attempting to achieve social perfection while God is busy meditating. Same characters as his Young Art and Old Hector. London: Faber and Faber,1942.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, Scottish author}, author = {Neil M[iller] Gunn (1891-1973)} } @booklet {1196, title = {"Gather, Darkness!"}, howpublished = {Astounding Science Fiction (New York)}, volume = {31.3 - 5 }, year = {1943}, note = {

Repub. New York: Pellegrini \& Cudahy, 1950. Rpt. New York: Grosset \& Dunlap, 1951; New York: Berkley Medallion, [1962]; New York: Pyramid, 1969; New York: Ballantine Books, 1975; and Boston, MA: Gregg Press, 1980.

}, month = {May - July 1943}, pages = {9-59; 109-59; 118-48, 150-52, 154-62}, abstract = {

Religious dystopia ruled by hereditary priests who work in twos so they can spy on each other. There is a rigid class system of religious and commoners, and the majority are controlled by keeping them ignorant.\ Something of a response to 1941 Heinlein.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Fritz [Reuter] Leiber [Jr.] (1910-92)} } @booklet {1202, title = {"The Gladiators"}, howpublished = {Startling Stories (Chicago, IL)}, volume = {9.1}, year = {1943}, month = {January 1943}, pages = {106-15}, abstract = {

Dystopia. After wars had devastated the earth, the remaining population inhabited two domes of 25,000 people each with a third dome of forest. Twice a year gladiators provided entertainment by fighting to the death in the third dome as representatives of one of the inhabited domes. Most people led dull, boring lives, and the gladiators and other entertainers provided the only breaks in the monotony. The gladiators and entertainers revolt and are expelled from the domes, only to discover that the earth had recovered.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Walt Dennis and Ernest Tucker} } @booklet {1173, title = {Grand Canyon}, year = {1942}, note = {

U.S. ed. with the subtitle\ A Novel. New York: Doubleday, Doran, 1942.

}, month = {1942}, publisher = {Michael Joseph}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia and eutopia. Germany wins World War II and Japan is defeated by the U.S., but peace last only briefly until Germany and Japan attack the U.S. During the attack a few people escape to the bottom of the Grand Canyon, where they create a good, cooperative society.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {V[ictoria Mary] Sackville-West (1892-1962)} } @booklet {1165, title = {The Great Conflict}, year = {1942}, month = {1942}, publisher = {Ptd. by the Haynes Corp}, address = {Los Angeles, CA}, abstract = {

Eutopia set in 2009. A man who had been living in a remote, isolated valley returns to find a new civilization. The US New Deal program is completed and produces a eutopia, which is made possible by extending democracy beyond the merely political.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Hal [Harold Curtis] Hall} } @booklet {1104, title = {"Giants of Anarchy"}, howpublished = {Weird Tales (New York)}, volume = { 34.1 }, year = {1939}, month = {June-July 1939}, pages = {5-36}, abstract = {

Negative depiction of an anarchist society.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Earl Andrew] [Binder] (1904-65) and [Otto Oscar] [Binder] (1911-75)} } @booklet {9581, title = {God{\textquoteright}s Earth. A Novel}, year = {1939}, month = {1939}, pages = {370 pp.}, publisher = {Logan-Price Publishing Co}, address = {Cleveland, OH}, abstract = {

The novel starts in the depths of the Depression and shows its effects on individuals. An instrument that makes viewing the future possible reveals that a religious eutopia will develop. The utopia is based on a policy of Production for All, which is actually a system of centralized planning in which a Board of Control will determine how much of a product is needed and factories will be assigned a quota. Civil service based rather than under political control. The book includes details of a new constitution for the United States, most of which concerns with government structure and the economy. Everyone must work but are free to choose work with wages adjusted to attract workers. The title refers to the fundamental premise that the earth belongs to God, and, as such, cannot be owned by anyone, only used.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {J[oseph] Arthur Horne (b. 1881)} } @booklet {9869, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Greater Than Gods{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Astounding Science Fiction }, volume = {23.5}, year = {1939}, month = {July 1939}, pages = {135-62}, abstract = {

The story projects two dystopia futures depending on which woman a scientist marries. One ends in apathy; the other ends in a dictatorship.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {C[atherine] L[ucille] Moore (1911-87)}, editor = {C. L. Moore} } @booklet {1085, title = {General Manpower}, year = {1938}, month = {1938}, publisher = {Simon and Schuster}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia. A man creates a company to provide a labor force for any company in the world and troops for any military need. The company includes a breeding program for future workers. Lower level leaders in the company try to use the military for world power and are defeated.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {John S. Martin} } @booklet {1068, title = {Glorious Morning; A Play in Three Acts}, year = {1938}, note = {

Rpt. London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1939 with photographs from the play. The novel is based on a play with the same title first produced at the Duchess Theatre, London, May 26, 1938. The play was published as \"Glorious Morning: A Play in Three Acts.\" In\ Famous Plays 1938-1939\ (London: Victor Gollancz, 1939), 337-453; and as the Acting ed. London: Samuel French Ltd., 1939.

}, month = {1938}, publisher = {Victor Gollancz}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Standard authoritarian dystopia in a fictional Eastern European country. Unsuccessful rebellion.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author, Scottish author}, author = {Norman MacOwan (1877-1961)} } @booklet {8508, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The God and the Man: A Saga of the Uphrigees{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The Californian (Pomona, CA) }, volume = {3.4}, year = {1936}, month = {Spring 1936}, pages = {27-34}, abstract = {

Satire about the god Zoohm, who creates a eutopia where every person knows how they are to live and do so contentedly without thought. But Zhoom gets bored and asks a brother god for a troublesome human to shake things up. Initially the outsider has no impact, but then Zhoom grants the people the ability to think and act for themselves, and the human manages to start a revolution. Zhoom enjoys the result until the human tries to replace Zhoom, who kills him but quickly regrets his act and destroys Uphrigee.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Isaacson, Charles D.} } @booklet {1023, title = {Greener Pastures; A Fable of Past, Present and Future}, year = {1936}, month = {1936}, publisher = {The Caxton Printers}, address = {Caldwell, ID}, abstract = {

Satire. God has illusions of grandeur and thinks He is Franklin Delano Roosevelt (1882-1945. President 1933-45).

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Howard Wolf} } @booklet {969, title = {God{\textquoteright}s Secret}, year = {1935}, month = {1935}, publisher = {Charles Scribner{\textquoteright}s Sons}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Life without death. Last chapter describes a very general eutopia of peace and plenty.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Arthur Stanwood Pier (1874-1966)} } @booklet {981, title = {Going West}, year = {1935}, month = {1935}, publisher = {Cobden-Sanderson}, address = {London}, abstract = {

A god creates an island (Land of Perpetual Love) and peoples it, expecting it to become eutopian. It has to be destroyed.

}, keywords = {Male author, UK author}, author = {James Bramwell (1911-1995)} } @booklet {970, title = {The Green Child: A Romance}, year = {1935}, note = {

Rpt. without the subtitle London: Grey Walls Press, 1945 with illustrations by Felix Kelley; New York: New Directions, 1935 with an introduction by Graham Green, which is rpt. London: Eyre \& Spottiswoode, 1947; and Harmondsworth, Eng.: Penguin, 1969.

}, month = {1935}, publisher = {William Heinemann}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Two imaginary countries. The first is located in South America and is a benevolent dictatorship. The second is under England, and, in it, mental perfection is the goal of life.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Herbert [Edward] Read (1893-1968)} } @booklet {916, title = {Gay Hunter}, year = {1934}, note = {

Rpt. Edinburgh, Scot.: Polygon, 1989.\ An excerpt illus. by Monica Burns is published in\ Shoreline of Infinity, no. 4 (Summer 2016): 89-99 with an introduction, \“SF Caledonia,\” by Monica Burns (84-87).\ Rpt. in the Edinburgh International Book Festival Special Edition of Shoreline of Infinity, no. 8\½ (Summer 2017): 178-91 with an introduction, \“SF Caledonia,\” by Monica Burns (175-78).

}, month = {1934}, publisher = {William Heinemann}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia set 20,000 years in the future after an atomic war where there is a foiled attempt to establish a fascist regime. The Scottish author frequently used the pseudonym Lewis Grassic Gibbon.

}, keywords = {Male author, Scottish author}, author = {J[ames] Leslie Mitchell (1901-35)} } @booklet {881, title = {Glory}, year = {1933}, note = {

US ed. London: Macmillan, 1933.

}, month = {1933}, publisher = {Victor Gollancz}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which an airline takes over governments, which gradually cede power. War results.

}, keywords = {Irish author, Male author}, author = {[Henry] Francis [Montgomery] Stuart (1902-2000)} } @booklet {8496, title = {The Gas War of 1940. A Novel. Being an account of the world catastrophe as set down by Raymond Denning, the first Dictator of Great Britain}, year = {1931}, note = {

Rpt. as\ Valiant Clay. By Eric Bell [pseud.]. London: Collins, 1934.

}, month = {1931}, publisher = {Eric Partridge at the Scholaris Press}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Most of the novel focuses on a war of all nations using advanced weapons that leads to the destruction of human civilization. The Prologue (9-27) describes the emergence of the dictator of the subtitle.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Stephen] [Southwold] (1887-1964)} } @booklet {800, title = {The Grand Mysterious Secret Marriage Temple}, year = {1931}, month = {1931}, publisher = {Np}, address = {Manitowoc, WI}, abstract = {

Eugenic eutopia. Heredity and eugenics taught in schools. Two different marriage certificates, one permitting children for the eugenically fit and one prohibiting children for the eugenically unfit. Tax bachelors. Married men paid more than unmarried and retained over unmarried men in times of economic downturn. Only men between 55 and 70 to fight in wars, which would produce fewer wars.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {H. George Schuette (1850-1935)} } @booklet {754, title = {"Graphopolis--A Utopia for Literature"}, howpublished = {The Nineteenth Century and After. A Monthly Review (London)}, volume = {108}, year = {1930}, month = {August 1930}, pages = {255-65}, abstract = {

A eutopia for artists that specifically rejects the technological utopia, saying \"Poetry is the eternal protest against the mechanising trends towards Utopia\" (256).

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Albert [Joseph] Gu{\'e}rard (b. 1914).} } @booklet {739, title = {"The Goat: Cardiff A.D. 1935"}, howpublished = {Barbarian Stories}, year = {1929}, month = {1929}, pages = {275-290}, publisher = {Jonathan Cape}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Near future tale in which each year one of the rich is chosen by lot to be executed. Background of extreme poverty.

}, keywords = {Female author, Scottish author}, author = {Naomi [Margaret] Mitchison (1897-1999)} } @booklet {709, title = {Greed{\textquoteright}s Grip Broken or the Right to Live}, year = {1928}, month = {1928}, publisher = {The Avondale Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The United States has fallen completely into the hands of the plutocrats, who plan to abolish the republic. War. Monopolists defeated. Stress is on the conflict, but in the final chapter, a eutopia is outlined. Nationalization of railroads, telegraph, telephone, and public utilities. Worker representation on the boards of companies; sharing of profit with the citizenry. Child labor eliminated. Required voting. Amendments to the Constitution go to referenda in each state. Possible limitation on the right of suffrage. Universal education.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Joseph W[eber] Savage (b. 1861)} } @booklet {633, title = {"Gazetted for Matrimony"}, howpublished = {Yellow Magazine (London)}, volume = {17.108 }, year = {1925}, month = {October 30, 1925}, pages = {255-65}, abstract = {

Humor. Eugenics--between 2000 and 2150 marriage was prohibited to the unfit and required of the fit. A man required to marry is unhappy with the choices available and runs away, where he meets a woman who had also run away after rejecting her choices. The illustrations depict a far from fit man and an attractive woman, but the illustrations do not fit the story.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {[Robert Coutts] [Armour] (1874-1958?)} } @booklet {6765, title = {God{\textquoteright}s Holy Kingdom of United Israel. A Remarkable Book. A Bible Study for all Thinking People. The Kingdom of Melchezedek--The Construction by Him of the Great Pyramid, God{\textquoteright}s Witness, or {\textquoteright}The Bible in Stone{\textquoteright}--The Discontinuance of the Kingdom of Melchezedek and the Covenant with Abraham--The Kingdom Transferred to Israel; the Two Houses of Israel, the Two Witnesses of Jehovah--Anglo Saxons the House of Israel--The Coming Union of Israel and Judah--The Sealing of the 144,000 out of the Twelve Tribes of Israel and their Administration of Affairs in {\textquoteright}The New Earth{\textquoteright}--The New Heaven and the New Earth, and the New Covenant with United and Restored Israel. The Book of the Hour. Every Student of the Bible should read and study it}, year = {1924}, month = {[1924]}, publisher = {United Israel Publishing Department}, address = {Regina, SK, Canada}, abstract = {

Eutopia of the saints.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {J[oseph] E[dward] Paynter (1868-1960)} } @booklet {608, title = {The Green Machine}, year = {1924}, month = {1924}, publisher = {Noel Douglas}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Gigantic rational ants on Mars. Before meeting the ants, the protagonist has run into various Martian monsters. The human population of Mars had been conquered by the ants and enslaved, after which they degenerated into monkeys. The ants were socialist with their position in society determined at birth. No word for \"I\", only for \"we\" or the plural \"you\". No war; no religion.

}, keywords = {Male author, UK author}, author = {[Francis Ambrose] Ridley (1897-1994)} } @booklet {580, title = {The Golden Age or The Depth of Time}, year = {1923}, month = {1923}, publisher = {The Roxburgh Pub. Co}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {

Eutopia 1000 years in the future. Science. Reason. Easy travel in the solar system; other planets being inhabited by people from Earth. Rural life with 2-10 acres per home to grow food, which is then liquefied because food is only consumed in liquid form.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Fred M. Clough} } @booklet {586, title = {"Golgotha \& Co."}, howpublished = {Fantastica; Being the Smile of the Sphinx and Other Tales of Imagination}, year = {1923}, note = {

U.S. ed. (New York: Macmillan, 1923), 129-375 with a brief \"Foreword\" by John Masefield (xi-xii) and without Romances of Idea.

}, month = {1923}, pages = {175-515}, publisher = {Chatto and Windus}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which plutocrats try to use Christianity to help them control the proletariat. It backfires when people take Christianity seriously.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Robert [Malise Bowyer] Nichols (1893-1944)} } @booklet {591, title = {"Gopher Prairie--A.D. 2000"}, howpublished = {School and Society (New York)}, volume = {18.452 }, year = {1923}, month = {August 25, 1923}, pages = {211-16}, abstract = {

Educational eutopia with a stress on culture.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {David [Samuel] Snedden (1868-1951)} } @booklet {564, title = {The Girl in the Golden Atom}, year = {1922}, note = {

Textual differences in U.S. ed. New York: Harper, 1923. Rpt. Westport, CT: Hyperion Press, 1974; and Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2005. Part originally published as \“The Girl in the Golden Atom.\” All-Story Weekly (New York) 95.1 (March 15, 1919): 1-29. This was rpt. in Famous Fantastic Mysteries (New York) 1.1 (September-October 1939): 75-99; Super Science and Fantastic Stories 1.20 (October 1945): 4-29; Fantastic Novels Magazine 5.1 (June 1951): 40-69; and Famous Science Fiction 1.1 (Winter 1966/67): 11-60. Part was also originally published as \“The People of the Golden Atom.\” All-Story Weekly (New York) 106.2 - 107.3 (January 24 - February 28, 1920): 161-81, 173-89, 583-602; 127-41, 296-316, 373-89, 445-60. This was rpt. in Fantastic Novels (New York) 1.2 (September 1940): 6-117; and in Under the Moons of Mars: A History and Anthology of \“The Scientific Romance\” in the Munsey Magazines, 1912-1920. Ed. Sam[uel] Moskowitz (New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1970), 175-219.\ 

}, month = {1922}, publisher = {Methuen}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Gulliveriana with the world in an atom. Monarchy with advisers (half men and half women). No money.\ See also 1924 and 1958 Cummings.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Ray[mond King] Cummings (1887-1957)} } @booklet {6751, title = {The Great Image}, year = {1921}, month = {[1921]}, publisher = {Odhams Press}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Conflict between capitalists and socialists set one hundred years in the future. The world is decimated but gradually rebuilds.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Charles Beresford] [Painter] (1878-1946)} } @booklet {531, title = {The Golden Book of Springfield. Being the review of a book that will appear in the autumn of the year 2018, and an extended description of Springfield, Illinois, in that year}, year = {1920}, note = {

Rpt. Chicago: Charles H. Kerr, 1999 with an \"Introduction\" by Ron Sakolsky (xi-cxvii). See \"The Golden Book of Springfield Containing a Brief Prospectus of a Book With Wings That Will Appear in Various Forms in Springfield, November, A.D. 2018.\"\ The Little Magazine\ 2nd imprint (1920) and 3rd imprint (1925): Both 109-24.

}, month = {1920}, publisher = {Macmillan}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Eutopia set in 2081 in Springfield, Illinois with a world-renowned University of Springfield at its core. Much on mysticism but some on the social system. Racial intermarriage. Drugs. A world government that is not presented entirely positively.\ Refers to 1919 Cram.\ See also 1909, 1913, 1914, and 1925 (2) Lindsay.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Nicholas] Vachel Lindsay (1879-1931)} } @booklet {6745, title = {Gullible{\textquoteright}s Travels in Little-Brit}, year = {1920}, month = {[1920]}, publisher = {Westall \& Co}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Satire on British politics and manners.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {William Hodgson Burnett} } @booklet {399, title = {The Gay Rebellion}, year = {1913}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Arno Press, 1975. 298 pp.

Parts published earlier in Hampton\’s Magazine--\“Amourette.\” 26.5 (May 1911): 530-47; \“A Matter of Eugenics.\” 26.6 (June 1911): 675-86; \“Pro Bono Publico: Further Developments in the Eugenist Suffragette Campaign.\” 27.1 (July 1911): 19-30; \“Lords of Creation.\” 27.2 (August 1911): 131-43; and \“A Daughter of the Revolution.\” 27.3 (September 1911): 330-40 with 337-38 misnumbered as 339-336.\ 

}, month = {1913}, pages = {298 pp.}, publisher = {D. Appleton}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Satire on women\&$\#$39;s rights. Includes a women\&$\#$39;s community that tries to throw off male domination through the use of eugenics.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Robert W[illiam] Chambers (1865-1933)} } @booklet {398, title = {Goslings}, year = {1913}, note = {

Rpt. Boston, MA/Brooklyn, NY: HiLo Books, 2013 with an \“An Un-Cozy Atmosphere. Introduction\” by Astra Taylor (13-17); and Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2022, with the introduction by Astra Taylor retitled \“Introduction: Out of the Wreckage (xiii-xx). xx + 318 pp. U.S. ed. as A World of Women. New York: Macauley Co., 1913. Rpt. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2022, with the introduction by Astra Taylor retitled \“Introduction: Out of the Wreckage (xiii-xx). xx + 318 pp.

}, month = {1913}, pages = {325 pp. }, publisher = {William Heinemann}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The novel describes the results of a plague that mostly affects men but not women. One focus is on a group of women who organize a generally successful community based on the principle that everyone earned a right through labor to a share in what could be produced. After contact is made with parts of the world less affected by the plague, the outlines are given of a future eutopia based on greater gender equality.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {J[ohn] D[avys] Beresford (1873-1947)} } @booklet {6718, title = {The Garden of Adam}, year = {1912}, month = {[1912]}, publisher = {John Ouseley Ltd}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Includes a brief socialist eutopia for Britain and the Empire (219-20).

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Alf[red] Brunton Aitken} } @booklet {370, title = {The Great Analysis: A Plea for a Rational World-Order}, year = {1912}, note = {

[2nd ed.] under the author\&$\#$39;s name London: Williams \& Norgate, 1931.

}, month = {1912}, publisher = {Methuen}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Begins with an analysis of contemporary society by showing the effects on Yorkshire of a disaster that cuts it off from the rest of the world and illustrates how a better society could be built. The key is population control. This is then extended to the world.

}, keywords = {Male author, Scottish author}, author = {[William] [Archer] (1856-1924)} } @booklet {363, title = {The Great State: Essays in Construction}, year = {1912}, note = {

US ed. as\ Socialism and the Great State: Essays in Construction. New York: Harper \& Bros., 1912. Includes H[erbert] G[eorge] Wells, \"The Past and the Great State\" (1-46), also published as \"Socialism.\"\ Harper\&$\#$39;s Magazine 124.740 - 741\ (January - February 1912): 197-204, 403-09; and as \"The Great State.\" In his\ An Englishman Looks at the World: Being a Series of Unrestrained Remarks upon Contemporary Matters\ (London: Cassell and Co., 1914), 95-131; rpt. in\ The Works of H.G. Wells Atlantic Edition. Volume XVIII The Passionate Friends A Novel and Three Essays\ (New York: Charles Scribner\&$\#$39;s Sons, 1926), 405-44. [Wells published many other utopias; see the Author Index for a list];\ The Countess of Warwick (Frances Evelyn Warwick), \"The Great State and the Country-side\" (47-66), also published in\ The Fortnightly Review, ns 91\ (March 1, 1912): 427-36; L[eo] G[eorge] Chiozza Money, \"Work in the Great State\" (67-119); Ray Lankester, \"The Making of New Knowledge\" (121-39); C[harles] J[ohn] Bond, \"Health and Healing in the Great State\" (141-80); E[dmund] S[idney] P[ollock] Haynes, \"Law and the Great State\" (181-94); Cecil Chesterton, \"Democracy and the Great State\" (195-218); Cicely [Mary] Hamilton, \"Women in the Great State\" (219-47); Roger Fry, \"The Artist in the Great State\" (249-72); G[eorge] R[obert] S[tirling] Taylor, \"The Present Development of the Great State\" (273-99); Conrad Noel, \"A Picture of the Church in the Great State\" (301-23), which, as fiction, is separately listed in this bibliography; Herbert Trench, \"The Growth of the Great State\" (325-56); and Hugh P. Vowles, \"The Tradition of the Great State\" (357-78).

}, month = {1912}, publisher = {Harper and Bros}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Essays by different authors describing aspects of a future eutopia. While they were written for this volume, they do not all agree with each other.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author, Male author}, editor = {[Francis Evelyn] [Warwick] (1861-1938) and G[eorge] R[obert] S[tirling] Taylor and H[erbert] G[eorge] Wells (1866-1946)} } @booklet {346, title = {"The Great Lock-Out: What Happened when the Spooks took charge of the Printing Trade"}, howpublished = {The Lone Hand (Sydney, NSW, Australia) }, volume = {8.47}, year = {1911}, month = {March 1, 1911}, pages = {382-90}, abstract = {

Anti-capitalist humor in which the dead are put to work, but dead labor leaders organize them into a successful union.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {C[larence] [Michael] J[ames] Dennis (1876-1938)} } @booklet {317, title = {"Gulliver Redivivus"}, howpublished = {Essays in Imitation }, year = {1910}, month = {1910}, pages = {59-128}, publisher = {John Murray}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Satire. Lemuel Gulliver from 1726 Swift had visited an island called Callimago during his voyages and married a woman of the island. In this work a descendant of theirs visits England or Isotaria and Ireland or the Isles of Saints and describes their oddities.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Algernon Cecil (1879-1953)} } @booklet {304, title = {"A Glimpse into the Future"}, howpublished = {Popular Electricity and the World{\textquoteright}s Advance (Chicago, IL) }, year = {1909}, month = {October 1909}, pages = {279-80}, abstract = {

Technological utopia.\ \ War still exists. Communication with the other planets.

} } @booklet {310, title = {"The Golden-Faced People. A Story of Chinese Conquest of America"}, howpublished = {War Bulletin, no. 1 (July 19, 1909): Reprint no. 3}, year = {1909}, note = {

Rpt. in The Crisis (November 1914): 36-42; and in The Prose of Vachel Lindsay complete \& with Lindsay\’s drawings. Ed. Dennis Camp (Peoria, IL: Spoon River Poetry Press, 1988), 1: 85-93.

}, month = {July 19, 1909}, pages = {136-39}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Satire on U.S. race relations seen through the eyes of a white American subservient to the Chinese.\ See also 1913, 1914, 1920, and 1925 (2) Lindsay.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Nicholas] Vachel Lindsay (1879-1931)} } @booklet {297, title = {The Great Red Dragon or the Flaming Red Devil}, year = {1909}, month = {1909}, publisher = {Guiding Star Pub. House}, address = {Estero, FL}, abstract = {

Japan and China overrun the earth but ultimately Christianity and astrology win. See also his The Cellular Cosmogony or The Earth a Concave Sphere. Estero, FL: Guiding Star Pub. House, 1905. A community based on Teed\&$\#$39;s ideas was established in Florida.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Cyrus Reed] [Teed] (1838-1908)} } @booklet {248, title = {Geyserland; Empiricisms in Social Reform. Being Data and Observations Recorded By the Late Mark Stubble, M.D., Ph.D. [A Tentative Edition]}, year = {1908}, month = {1908}, publisher = {Ptd. for Richard Hatfield}, address = {Washington, DC}, abstract = {

Eutopia. No money. All property common. Eugenics with no marriage or families. Stress on prudential restraint. Elders or a Council of Doctors administers the island; there is also a representative government. Jobs are rotated. Occupation and status revealed by dress. Much of the text is composed of lectures to the reader.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Richard Hatfield, ed. [written by] (b. 1853)} } @booklet {251, title = {"Goliah"}, howpublished = {The Red Magazine}, volume = { 2.7 }, year = {1908}, note = {

Rpt. in The Bookman (New York) 30.6 (February 1910): 620-32; in his Revolution and Other Essays (London: William Heinemann, 1910), 73-116; as Goliah: A Utopian Essay. Berkeley, CA: Thorp Springs Press, [1973]; in Curious Fragments: Jack London\’s Fantasy Fiction. Ed. Dale L. Walker (Post Washington, NY: National University Publications/Kennkat [sic] Press, 1975), 87-108 with an editor\&$\#$39;s note on 87; in The Science Fiction of Jack London: An Anthology. Ed. Richard Gid Powers (Boston, MA: Gregg Press, 1975), separately paged;\ and in The Complete Short Stories of Jack London. Ed. Earle Labor, Robert C. Leitz, III and I. Milo Shepard. 3 vols. (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1993), 2: 1201-21.\ 

}, month = {December 1908}, pages = {115-29}, abstract = {

Socialist eutopia in which all labor is gradually abolished. It is brought about by a man with a powerful weapon who forces individuals and countries to accept his dictates.\ See also 1907 London, 1908 London \“A Curious Fragment\”, and 1909 London.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Jack [John Griffith] London (1876-1916)} } @booklet {198, title = {The Great Weather Syndicate}, year = {1906}, month = {1906}, publisher = {F.V. White}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Weather is controlled initially for political purposes, but it is then controlled to improve life.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[George Chetwynd Griffith] [Jones] (1857-1906)} } @booklet {169, title = {The God of this World: A Story for the Times}, year = {1905}, month = {1905}, publisher = {Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The novel is mostly on a revolution against a religion that worshipped Mammon, but it ends with the creation of a eutopia with elements of anarchism, socialism, religion, and the single tax.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[John] [Bagot] (1844-1925)} } @booklet {177, title = {A Greater Heaven or From Pulpit to Paradise: A Christmas Eve Story}, year = {1905}, month = {1905}, pages = {16 pp.}, publisher = {Ptd. by Geddis \& Blomfield}, address = {Auckland, New Zealand}, abstract = {

Poem that presents a heaven that welcomes all people of all religions and is a place of joy and companionship shown in a dream of a dour Scots Presbyterian minister who then changes his preaching from threats to hopes.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {William Cooper (b. 1852)} } @booklet {140, title = {Green Mansions: A Romance of the Tropical Forest}, year = {1904}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1916 with a \“Foreword\” by John Galsworthy (vii-xvi). Rpt. with illus. by Keith Henderson. London: Duckworth, 1926. Rpt. with illus. by Edward A. Wilson and an \“Introduction\” by William Beere (vii-x). New York: Limited Editions Club, 1935; with illus. by E. McKnight Kauffer New York: Random House, 1944; London: Guild Books, 1950; London: Collins, 1957 with an \“Introduction\” by H. E. Bates (11-16); New York: AMS Press, 1968 with A Note on Hudson\’s Romances\” by Edward Garnett (v-ix); and New York: Dover, 1989; with Paintings and Drawings by Horacio Butler. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1959. Also rpt. without the subtitle Mount Vernon, VA: Peter Pauper Press, 1943; with the subtitle With illustrations reproducing drawings for early editions and photographs of contemporary scenes together with an introductory biographical sketch of the author and anecdotal captions by Edwin Way Teale. New York: Dodd, Mead, 1949; with the subtitle on the cover but not the title page London: Robin Clark, 1990; and without the subtitle ed. Ian Duncan. Oxford, Eng.: Oxford University Press, 1998.

}, month = {1904}, publisher = {Duckworth}, address = {London}, abstract = {

A love story set in the tropical\  forest \ of\  South America , with, for a time, the forest providing its Adam and Eve with an idyllic existence. The author was born in Argentina and immigrated to England in 1874.

}, keywords = {Argentinian author, English author, Male author}, author = {W[illiam] H[enry] Hudson (1841-1922)} } @booklet {125, title = {The Gates of Afree A.D. 1928: A Romance of the New Empire}, year = {1903}, month = {1903}, publisher = {W.H. White \& Son}, address = {Edinburgh, Scot.}, abstract = {

The novel, with characters and incidents the author describes in the Preface as symbols of the forces at work in South Africa, suggests the eutopia based on technology and a form of socialism that is possible in South Africa as long as it is part of the British Empire. Racist.

}, keywords = {Dutch author, English author, French author, Male author}, author = {Henri Van Laun (1820-96)} } @booklet {127, title = {Gulliver Joe}, year = {1903}, month = {1903}, publisher = {Isbister}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Gulliverian satire on Joseph Chamberlain (1836-1914), who was Secretary of State for Colonies at the time.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Cecil Eldred] [Hughes] (1875-1941) and [Edward Harold] [Begbie] (1871-1929)} } @booklet {126, title = {"Gulliver{\textquoteright}s Last Voyage"}, howpublished = {The Monthly Review }, volume = {12.34}, year = {1903}, note = {

Rpt. London: The Monthly Review, 1903.

}, month = {July 1903}, pages = {1-17}, abstract = {

Utopian satire describing the characteristics of the people of the seven Internecine Islands in the Antipacific Ocean.

} } @booklet {80, title = {"A Glance Ahead; Being a Christmas Tale of A.D. 3568"}, howpublished = {Over the Plum-Pudding}, year = {1901}, note = {

Rpt. in\ Ancestral Voices: Anthology of Early Science Fiction. Ed. Douglas Menville and R[obert] Reginald [pseud.] [Michael Roy Burgess] (New York: Arno Press, 1974), with each story using its original pagination.

}, month = {1901}, pages = {105-35}, publisher = {Harper \& Brothers}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Satire. The entire Western Hemisphere is the United States; Europe and Asia are now combined; all African Americans have returned to Africa, which is united, and Africans are now mercenaries for the rest of the world. Technological advances. Immortality; no births. All businesses are controlled by the government and make huge profits.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {J[ohn] K[endrick] Bangs (1862-1922)} } @booklet {77, title = {The Great White Way: A Record of an Unusual Voyage of Discovery, and some Romantic Love Affairs amid Strange Surroundings. The Whole Recounted by one Nicholas Chase, Promoter of the Expedition, whose Reports have been Arranged for Publication by Albert Bigelow Paine}, year = {1901}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Arno Press, 1975

}, month = {1901}, publisher = {J.F. Taylor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The last chapter describes a eutopia at the South Pole. Telepathy. No technology and opposed to technological development. Few laws, no money.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Albert Bigelow Paine (1861-1937)} } @booklet {87, title = {"The Greatest Thing in the World"}, howpublished = {The Nineteenth Hole: Being Tales of the Fair Green}, year = {1901}, month = {1901}, pages = {107-30}, publisher = {Harper \& Brothers}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Humor set in 1999. Golf has so swept the U.S. that in 1950 the presidencies of the country and the U.S. Golfing Association have been combined under the latter title. In 1952 Congress passed the Compulsory Golf Bill for all citizens, both men and women, between eighteen and forty-five. Most people played golf full time and could earn a living and pension doing so. Huge technical advances in clubs and balls. Ends with golfing being overthrown in a revolution.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[William Gilbert] Van Tassel Sutphen (1861-1945)} } @booklet {61, title = {God{\textquoteright}s . . . . . Suggestions. God{\textquoteright}s Appeal to Humanity. God{\textquoteright}s Appeal to Theologians. God{\textquoteright}s World Suggestions. God Authorises the Millennium}, year = {1900}, month = {1900}, publisher = {Ptd. by the New Zealand Times}, address = {Wellington, New Zealand}, abstract = {

The first of many books, pamphlets, and leaflets in which the author claims that God has appointed him to proclaim God\&$\#$39;s policies for the world, and he comes to see himself as the Second Messiah. He proposes a eutopia based on a state bank, the issuance of paper money, more governmental activity, administrative science, spiritualism, and the British empire. He presents New Zealand as the New Palestine.\ See also his\ The New Palestine and the New Idealist. \“Idealism,\” God\’s Ideal Church founded by His Ideal Son 1900 Years Ago. [At the head of the title\ The Plan of the Ages Fulfilled The Third Dispensation The Fulness of Time]. By The Ideal Physician [pseud.]. Pahiatua, New Zealand: Alex Baillie \& Co., 1900;\ The Millennium. The Christian World\’s long looked for Grand Culmination of Theologic, Philosophic, Social, Political, and Economic Knowledge transcending the ignorance of and superstition of the past. By The Inspired Author of the Following Books, Pamphlets, Essays, Etc., Etc. [pseud.]. [Lists twenty items]\ Concise reprints of most of the above works are reproduced in this, the 20th\ volume the author has published. The Passing from the Second to the Third Dispensation in the Plan of the Ages. The Church of Rome. The Coming Church of Great Britain and the Second Messiah.\ The Millennium. The Christian World\’s long looked for Grand Culmination for Theologic, Philosophic, Social, Political, and Economic Knowledge transcending the ignorance and superstition of the past. By The Inspired Author of the Following Books, Pamphlets, Essays, Etc., Etc.\ [Lists nineteen followed by Etc., Etc., Etc.]\ Concise reprints of most of the above works are reproduced in this, the 20th\ volume the author has published. The Passing from the Second to the Third Dispensation in the Plan of the Ages. The Church of Rome The Coming Church of Great Britain and The Second Messiah. [cover title and how it is cataloged at ATL\ The Second Messiah\’s Plans and Schemes for the Millennium]. Johnsonville, New Zealand: Ptd. by the New Zealand Times, [1913] (M);\ The Way to Wealth or Products Realisation Scheme. Supplement to The New Zealand Times, Tuesday June 18th, 1901; Essays on Burning Political Questions. State Banking and Paper Money. By the President of the New Zealand State Currency Association. Wellington, New Zealand: Printed by the New Zealand Times, Co., 1910 (VUW);\ Armageddon and A Soldier in Khaki. By The Captain of the Day [pseud.]. Wellington, New Zealand: Ptd. By the New Zealand Times Co., 1918 (VUW only);\ The Millennium: Christ\’s Way of Salvation for All Races of Mankind. Auckland, New Zealand: Printed by the Queen City Press, [1933] in which he says that the appointed time has come;\ Jesus Christ\’s Scheme of Finance. Auckland, New Zealand: Wright \& Jaques, Printer, [c1930];\ New Zealand\’s Centennial Wonder Book. God\’s Own System of Credit, Currency and Banking. The Free Distribution of the World\’s Wealth for the World\’s People. Auckland, New Zealand: Printed by Wright \& Jaques, [1940];\ State Banking and State Distribution of God\’s Gifts to Mankind. Auckland, New Zealand: Printed by Wright \& Jaques, [1940];\ The World\’s Money Fakers. Auckland, New Zealand: Wright \& Jaques, [1940]; and\ The Divine Goodness of Almighty God and the Satanic Consequences of Human Greed. Auckland, New Zealand: Wright \& Jaques, [c1940]. (All but the one noted are at ATL).

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {[Francis Thomas (Frank)] [Moore] (1867-1940)} } @booklet {51, title = {The Great Bread Trust}, year = {1900}, month = {1900}, publisher = {Abbey Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which men gain control of wheat and then the world.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {W[illiam] H[enry] Wright} } @booklet {43, title = {"The Great Good Place"}, howpublished = {Scribner{\textquoteright}s Magazine}, volume = { 27 }, year = {1900}, note = {

Rpt. in\ The Novels and Tales Of Henry James. New York Edition. \ vol. 16 (New York: Charles Scribner\&$\#$39;s Sons, 1909), 222-63; The Short Stories of Henry James. Ed. Clifton Fadiman (New York: The Modern Library, 1945), 385-422, with \"A Note on The Great Good Place\" (413-15);\ \ The Complete Tales of Henry James. 11 1900-1903. Ed Leon Edel (London: Rupert Hart-Davis, 1964), 13-42; and in his Complete Stories 1898-1900 (New York: Library of America, 1996), 152-77, with a Note on the Text (940) and Notes (943) by Denis Donoghue..

}, month = {January 1900}, pages = {99-112}, abstract = {

A man with extreme stress from overwork dreams of a eutopia of rest similar to a monastery.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author, US author}, author = {Henry James (1843-1916)} } @booklet {13, title = {The Godhood of Man. His Religious, Political and Economic Development and the Sources of Social Inequality}, year = {1899}, month = {1899}, publisher = {Author}, address = {Chicago, IL}, abstract = {

Eutopia. Mostly religion but also shows the human race in harmony with nature.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Nicholas] [Michels]} } @booklet {12, title = {The Great Awakening: The Story of the Twenty-second Century}, year = {1899}, month = {1899}, publisher = {George Book Publishing Company}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {

Eutopia. A colony, called the Money Republic, founded in Africa spreads around the world. It is based on the equal division of wealth among all who work.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Albert Adams Merrill (1875-1952)} } @booklet {24, title = {"The Great Calamity on Robinson{\textquoteright}s Island"}, howpublished = {The Commercial Exchange Gazette. The Official Organ of the New Zealand Exchange Co., Ltd. (New Zealand) }, volume = {1.5 }, year = {1899}, month = {February 1, 1899}, pages = {4-6}, abstract = {

Establishment of a commercial exchange bank and the concomitant ability to trade without money brings eutopia.\ See also 1896 Fl{\"u}rsheim and the two other 1899 Fl{\"u}rscheims.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, German author, Male author}, author = {Michael Fl{\"u}rscheim (1844-1912)} } @booklet {8473, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Gloria Mundi{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The Cosmopolitan: A Monthly Illustrated Magazine }, volume = {24.3 - 26.1 }, year = {1898}, note = {

Repub. Chicago: Herbert S. Stone, 1898. U.K. ed. London: William Heinemann, 1898. Rpt. ed. Larry Bromley as The Harold Frederic Edition. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1986, with a \“History of the Text\” (345-70), \“Textual Introduction\” (371-87), and \“Textual Apparatus\” (387-481).

}, month = {January - November 1898}, pages = {259-76, 375-91, 493-508; 610-27; 35-55, 165-82, 265-82, 385-402; 511-26, 627-42; 33-43}, abstract = {

A romance and a depiction of English life but including a brief description of a community that can be thought of as utopian and a presentation of the emancipation of women. The American author was the London correspondent for The New York Times from 1884 until his death.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Harold Frederic (1856-1898)} } @booklet {8041, title = {Golden Gleams from the Heavenly Light}, year = {1898}, month = {1898}, publisher = {Star Publishing Co}, address = {Springfield, MA}, abstract = {

Domestic Heaven. See also 1880 Twing, 1881 Twing,\ Samuel Bowles, Spirit and Mrs. Carolinn E[dna] S[kinner] Twing, Medium. Visiting in Heaven. Springfield, MA: Star Publishing Co., 1909, which consists primarily of Bowles\’s interviews with other spirits, and is only very marginally utopian, and her Henry Drummond in Spirit Life. Springfield, MA: Star Publishing Co., [1902]\ (MoU-St).

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Samuel Bowles (Spirit) (1826-78) and Mrs. Carolinn E[dna] S[kinner] Twing (Medium) (b. 1844)} } @booklet {7994, title = {The Great Seven--The Greater Nine; A Story for the People}, year = {1897}, month = {1897}, publisher = {W.B. Conkey}, address = {Chicago, IL}, abstract = {

Struggle against monopolies is successful, and this brings about a better society with much of the novel on the dystopia created by the monopolies.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Jno. [John] H[eber] Flood, Jr.} } @booklet {7932, title = {The Garden of Eden, U.S.A.: A Very Possible Story}, volume = {Library of Progress No. 15 (May 1895)}, year = {1895}, month = {1895}, publisher = {Charles H. Kerr}, address = {Chicago, IL}, abstract = {

Eutopia with an emphasis on equality, particularly between men and women in North Carolina built by a wealthy man. Everyone one must work, but much work is mechanized. The author believes his Eden is possible, and there is an Appendix entitled \"Why Not an Eden?\" (357-69). A love story runs throughout the novel. No tobacco, no alcohol.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {W[illiam] H[enry] Bishop} } @booklet {7931, title = {Government by the People}, year = {1895}, month = {1895}, publisher = {Bliss, Sands and Foster}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Non-fiction presentation of a detailed scheme for a new political system stressing administration over politics and how to bring it about. Includes chapters on the civil service; the national assembly, which has no speaker or prime minister, and its committees; \"The Chamber of Experts\", which has educational qualifications for membership; local government; the constitution; rights of minorities; and social ethics.\ 

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Australian author, English author, Male author}, author = {[Lewis Henry] [Berens] (?-1914) and [Ignatius] [Singer] (ca. 1853-1926)} } @booklet {7939, title = {The Great Secret. A Tale of To-morrow}, year = {1895}, month = {1895}, publisher = {F.V. White}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Begins as a novel of adventure with a conflict between anarchists set on destruction and the passengers and crew of a ship. The anarchists kill all the others and most of the anarchists come to a bad end. Three of the dead pass through the River Styx to a spirit world of almost static perfection where all the perfected spirits of the past together with a few immortals live in their own civilizations, which have been stripped of their imperfections. Two of the anarchists are reformed and become the center of a good society on an isolated island, which is only briefly described.\ \ See also 1893, 1902 and 1905 Nisbet.\ 

}, keywords = {Australian author, English author, Male author, Scottish author}, author = {[James] Hume Nisbet (1848-1921)} } @booklet {7944, title = {The Great Social Boycott; or, Society Readjusted and the Causes Leading to its Establishment. This is a small Picture Gallery and your portrait hangs in it}, year = {1895}, month = {1895}, publisher = {Author}, address = {Brownwood, TX}, abstract = {

Eutopia. A world without vice in 1905 brought about by women refusing to have anything to do with men who were in any way touched by vice. Complete gender equality:\ both men and women are bound by the same law of chastity.

}, keywords = {US author}, author = {A. B. Wilkes} } @booklet {7961, title = {"Guesses at Futurity"}, howpublished = {Pall Mall Magazine}, volume = {6 }, year = {1895}, month = {May 1895}, pages = {facing page 278}, abstract = {

One of a series of one-page satirical sketches. See 1894-95 Jane for the rest of the series.

}, author = {Francis Masey} } @booklet {6955, title = {"Guesses at Futurity"}, howpublished = {Pall Mall Magazine }, volume = {4 - 6}, year = {1894}, month = {October 1894 - April 1895}, pages = {facing pages 289, 515, 701; 161, 342, 502, 619; 97.}, abstract = {

A series of one-page satirical sketches.

}, keywords = {English author}, author = {Fred[erick] T[homas] Jane (1865-1916)} } @booklet {7851, title = {The Great Revolution of 1905; or, The Story of the Phalanx, With an Introductory Account of Civilisation in Great Britain at the Close of the Nineteenth Century}, year = {1893}, note = {

Rpt. in Late Victorian Utopias: A Prospectus. Ed. Gregory Claeys. 6 vols. (London: Pickering \& Chatto, 2009), 4: 165-420. Editor\’s notes, 163, 422-30. Rpt. London: Clarion Newspaper Co., 1894. Also published as State Industrialism: The Story of the Phalanx. With an Account of Civilisation in Great Britain at the Close of the Nineteenth Century. London: William Reeves, 1901. Bellamy Library No. 34.\ 

}, month = {1893}, publisher = {Robert Forder}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Detailed socialist eutopia describing the development to eutopia with considerable material on the political steps involved. The \"Introduction\" (Forder\ v-lxviii/Claeys 169-200/State Industrialism v-lxviii) is a critique of contemporary capitalism or individualism, which is then compared to the preferred collectivism or state industrialism.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Frederick W[illiam] Hayes (1848-1918)} } @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 {7812, title = {The Goddess of Atvatabar; Being the History of the Discovery of the Interior World and Conquest of Atvatabar}, year = {1892}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Arno Press, 1975.

}, month = {1892}, publisher = {J.F. Douthitt}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Lost race novel set inside the earth describing a flawed utopia that has a living goddess and a religion based on the\ \“. . . worship of the human soul under a thousand forms. . . .\” (84). Problems arise when the living goddess and the main protagonist from the surface fall in love.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {William R[ichard] Bradshaw (1851-1927)} } @booklet {7819, title = {The Golden Bottle; or, The Story of Ephraim Benezet of Kansas}, year = {1892}, note = {

Rpt. Upper Saddle River, NJ: The Gregg Press, 1968.

}, month = {1892}, publisher = {D.D. Merrill Company}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The \"Preface\" says that the book \". . . is intended to explain and defend, in the thin disguise of a story, some of the new ideas put forth by the People\&$\#$39;s Party. . . .\" A man obtains a bottle that can produce gold. After a great struggle with vested interests, he is able to establish a eutopia on the basis of cooperation, free medical care, owner-occupied homes, cheap governmentally owned transportation, and the eight-hour day.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Ignatius [Loyola] Donnelly (1831-1901)} } @booklet {7825, title = {Golf in the Year 2000; or, What We Are Coming To}, year = {1892}, note = {

Rpt. under the author\&$\#$39;s name. Nashville, TN: Rutledge Hill Press, 1998.

}, month = {1892}, publisher = {T. Fisher Unwin}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Satire in which the women work and the men play golf.

}, author = {[J.] [McCullough]} } @booklet {10128, title = {The Great Boo-Boo: A Tale of Fun and Fancy, Replete with Love, Wit, Sentiment and Satire. A Novel}, year = {1892}, note = {

Rpt. without A Novel as part of the title.\ [Vancleave, MS]: Ramble House, 2019

}, month = {1892}, publisher = {J. B. Swinburne}, address = {Des Moines, IA}, abstract = {

A mildly pornographic lost race dystopian novel that includes lesbianism and homoeroticism in which, in the King Monop\’s island, a license is required to speak.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Henry S. Wilcox (1855-1924)} } @booklet {7837, title = {"The Great Strike"}, howpublished = {The Woman{\textquoteright}s Herald }, volume = {5.168 - 169, 172, 174, 176 }, year = {1892}, month = {January 16 - 23, February 13, 27, March 12, 1892}, pages = {6; 4; 4; 6; 11}, abstract = {

In 1920 the Equal Rights Union calls a strike against men. This short piece is the story of the first day of the successful strike told from the point of view of a man who is loosely sympathetic but resents the inconveniences. The few male members of the union were exempt from the strike.

}, author = {M. L. C.} } @booklet {10440, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Girl of the Future{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Universal Review}, volume = {7.25}, year = {1890}, month = {May 1890}, pages = {49-64}, abstract = {

A satirical essay that criticizes the current marriage system as marriage for the man and prostitution for the woman as well as the new education for women that cultivated their brains but neglected their bodies and, specifically, ignored sex. He then suggests the eutopia that would be possible if women were fully emancipated and given the sort of education that would prepare them for motherhood, mentally and physically.\ 

}, keywords = {Canadian author, English author, Jamaican author, Male author, US author}, author = {[Charles Grant Blairfindie] [Allen] (1848-99)} } @booklet {7755, title = {Gloriana; or, The Revolution of 1900}, year = {1890}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: Standard Publishing Co., 1892 (CaSt). There is a brief \"An American Introduction\" (xiii-xiv) to the U.S. ed. by George Noyes Miller, author of The Strike of a Sex (1890). Repub. under the title\ The New Woman, or The Revolution of 1900. New York: Holland Publishing Co., 1896.\ The New Woman\ does not contain the \"Preface\" (vii-x) or \"Maremma\&$\#$39;s Dream. Introduction to\ Gloriana; or, A Dream of the Revolution of 1900\" (1-4).

}, month = {1890}, publisher = {Henry and Company}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The novel is concerned with the struggle for women\&$\#$39;s rights and includes a few pages (345-50) of a future eutopia in 1999 at the end. London countrified. Righteous government. Federated republic with an Imperial Assembly. No poverty.

}, keywords = {Female author, Scottish author}, author = {Lady Florence [Caroline] Dixie (1855-1905)} } @booklet {7740, title = {The God of Civilization. A Romance}, year = {1890}, month = {1890}, publisher = {Eureka Pub. Co}, address = {Chicago, IL}, abstract = {

Mostly a romantic adventure tale but includes a description of a South Seas island eutopia where the people are naturally good.

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Mrs. M. A. [Weeks] Pittock} } @booklet {6635, title = {God{\textquoteright}s Kingdom on Earth. Just Laws. Organised Work. The Religion of Jesus. Social Science Tract.--No 9}, year = {1890}, month = {[1890s]}, pages = {8 pp.}, publisher = {E. Tipper, Printer}, address = {West Maitland, NSW, Australia}, abstract = {

Pamphlet describing the eutopia that can be brought about through Christian socialism. See also 1932 Proctor.\ The author also wrote works in Biblical form advocating Christian socialism. See his The Epistle of Richard. A Late Addition to the English Bible. By the Author of the \“New Evangel\” [pseud.]. West Maitland, NSW, Australia: E. Tipper, Printer, 1893. 7 pp.; and The Second Epistle of Richard. By the Author of the \“New Evangel\” [pseud.]. West Maitland, NSW, Australia: E. Tipper, Printer, 1894. 8 pp. Other related works are his The New Evangel, According to Richard Proctor, Christian Socialist. Maitland, NSW, Australia: T. Dimmock, 1891; A New Religion [Sydney, NSW, Australia: Ptd. by Kingston Press], 1922; Reform or Revolution Which? Melbourne, VIC, Australia: The Ruskin Press, [1926?]; and The New Evangel Way. Melbourne, VIC, Australia: The Ruskin Press, [1930].

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {R[ichard] Proctor} } @booklet {7750, title = {"God{\textquoteright}s Own Country"}, howpublished = {Lays and Lyrics. God{\textquoteright}s Own Country and Other Poems}, year = {1890}, note = {

Rpt. in\ Ballads of Thomas Bracken\ (Palmerston North, New Zealand: The Dunmore Press, 1975), 13-17. Said to have been originally published in the\ Yea Chronicle [Yea, Australia 1890] and rpt. in the\ New Zealand Herald\ (May 28, 1892): 9, although the Herald says it was written especially for it.

}, month = {1890/1893}, pages = {5-9}, publisher = {Brown, Thomson \& Co.}, address = {Wellington, New Zealand}, abstract = {

New Zealand as a eutopia. Origin of the word Godzone to describe New Zealand.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Australian author, Irish author, Male author}, author = {Thomas Bracken (1843-98)} } @booklet {10068, title = {The Golden Lake or the Marvellous History of a Journey Through the Great Lone Land of Australia}, year = {1890}, note = {

Colonial Ed. Melbourne, Vic, Australia: E. A. Petherick, 1891.\ 

}, month = {1890}, publisher = {Trischler and Co. }, address = {London}, abstract = {

Typical lost race dystopia in which intrepid explorers discover a lost race, complete with the required beautiful blond woman, who they rescue and who marries one of the explorers.

}, keywords = {Australian author, English author, Male author}, author = {Carlton [William Lanyon] Dawe (1865-1945)} } @booklet {8440, title = {Gulliver in Mammonland: Being a Suppressed Chapter of Gulliver{\textquoteright}s Travels}, year = {1890}, month = {1890}, pages = {39 pp.}, publisher = {H. Grube}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Satire set on the Isle of Mammon where the inhabitants are described as mechanical beings driven by greed. Newspapers the Schemer\’s Guardian and the Users Diurnal. Book The Whole Art of Diddling. Magazine The Gospel of Greed. The Great National Temple is the Stock Exchange. The \“editor\” says it is a fake in that the paper bears the watermark 1890.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Richard Chandler, ed. [written by]} } @booklet {7702, title = {Gobi or Shamo; A Story of Three Songs}, year = {1889}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Arno Press, 1978.

}, month = {1889}, publisher = {Longmans, Green and Company}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Lost race novel with a eutopian Athenian society.

}, keywords = {Australian author, English author, Male author}, author = {G[eorge] G[ilbert] A[im{\'e}] Murray (1866-1957)} } @booklet {7711, title = {God{\textquoteright}s Reign on Earth, or Social Science and Christian Government}, year = {1889}, month = {1889}, publisher = {Author}, address = {Dunedin, New Zealand}, abstract = {

Eutopia. God will set up a Court of Arbitration to which people can appeal from local law. People choose their own arbitrator. God will make decisions by people drawing lots when they cannot resolve disputes. There is a divine plan for reviving trade.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {Blackwell, William} } @booklet {7705, title = {The Graftons; or, Looking Forward. A Story of Pioneer Life}, howpublished = {The Kansas Commoner (Newton, KS) }, volume = {2.37 - 3.13 }, year = {1889}, note = {

Rpt. as\ The Graftons; or, Looking Forward. A Story of Pioneer Life. By S.L. Rogers [pseud.]. Chicago, IL: Milton George, 1893. Rev. ed. under the author\’s real name as\ Looking Forward; or, The Story of an American Farm. Illus. [Tacoma, WA]: Spike Publishing Co., 1898.\ 

}, month = {May 10 - November 22, 1889}, pages = {All the installments are on page 1.}, publisher = {Milton George}, address = {Chicago, IL}, abstract = {

The bulk of the novel is concerned with the problems currently faced by farmers followed by the campaign to bring about change, but it ends with a brief description of a populist eutopia. A central issue is the usury that regularly\ put farmers into permanent debt. This will be made illegal although old debts will have to be paid (201-02).\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {J[ohn] R[ankin] Rogers (1838-1901)} } @booklet {7708, title = {The Great War Syndicate}, year = {1889}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Dodd, Mead and Co., 1899. Rpt. in The Novels and Stories of Frank R. Stockton. Volume 6 The Great Syndicate, Etc. (New York: Charles Scribner\&$\#$39;s Sons, 1900), 3-128; and separately Upper Saddle River, NJ: Literature House, 1970.

}, month = {1889}, publisher = {P.F. Collier}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Future war story that ends with the suggestion of a eutopia of peace and prosperity. As a war between the U.S. and Britain threatens, a war the U.S. will lose, a syndicate of rich capitalists agrees a contract with the U.S. to conduct the war, which they win by using new technology. Most of the book is about the war and the technology used.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Frank R[ichard] Stockton (1834-1902)} } @booklet {7665, title = {Glimpses of the Future: Suggestions as to the Drift of Things (To Be Read Now and Judged in the Year 2000)}, year = {1888}, note = {

Much originally published as parts of a regular column of predictions in the\ Record and Guide\ (New York) and revised here.

}, month = {1888}, publisher = {G. P. Putnam{\textquoteright}s Sons}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Predictions, although often fudged with an assertion that science will determine or it is unknowable, that add up to a generally better future. Many topics are covered.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {David Goodman Croly (1829-89)} } @booklet {7685, title = {The Great Irish "Wake"}, year = {1888}, month = {1888}, publisher = {Clement-Smith}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Anti-Home Rule and anti-Irish satire that ends with a peaceful and prosperous Ireland part of England.

}, author = {One Who Was There [pseud.]} } @booklet {7661, title = {The Gospel of Reason, Bible of Truth, Justice and Correctness, and the Monarch of Literature. The Key to Solve All the Perplexed Social Problems. The only Infallible Guide to True Humanity, Genuine Enlightenment and the Highest Civilization. Containing: A True Definition of Social Science and Irrefutable Principles and Doctrines of all Rights, Duties and Universal Reform. Designed to Effect an Absolute Remedy of Our Great Wrongs and Evils, secure a Durable Peace Among all Nations, Restore Harmony and Contentment Among all Classes, bring Lasting Love and Joy to Every Family, and Lead every Man to the Acme of Happiness}, year = {1887}, month = {1887}, publisher = {Author}, address = {San Francisco}, abstract = {

No. 1 includes \“The Constitution of the Communion of Mankind\” (13-60). Among other things, he says that women will be equal in the organization. Everyone to be better educated. Marriage to be universal and obligatory, and that he will \“introduce one government in the world, one universal language, one uniform standard of money, and uniformity of all other means of communication; abolish all standing armies and wars among nations\” (15). No. 2 is mostly on religion. No. 3 calls of farmers to join. No. 4 calls on women to join. In no. 2 the author describes himself as the Founder and President of the Communion of Mankind. Other works include his The Universal League of Justice. Its Principle, Platform, Teaching, Purpose and Aim. Chapter 1. To be published in successive chapters. Price of each Chapter, Ten Cents. San Francisco, CA: Np, August 1887; and a broadside entitled Proclamation by the Prince of Rebels [San Francisco, CA: Author, [1880], where he calls himself \“Fool of Fools, Crank of Cranks, Maniac of Maniacs!\”

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Joseph Wieser} } @booklet {7641, title = {The Great Irish Rebellion of 1886, Retold by a Landlord}, year = {1886}, note = {

There were at least four identical editions published in 1886.\ 

}, month = {1886}, pages = {48 pp.}, publisher = {Harrison and Sons}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Anti-Irish satire. A brief attempt at independence is put down by Britain.

} } @booklet {7621, title = {The Great Bread Riots and What Came of Fair Trade}, year = {1885}, note = {

Serialized in\ The Daily Mail\ (1885). Rpt. with minor revisions and with the author\&$\#$39;s name as J. St. Loe Strachey as\ The Great Bread Riots: A Political Romance.\ London: Smith, Elder, \& Co., 1903.

}, month = {1885}, publisher = {J.W. Arrowsmith}, address = {Bristol, Eng.}, abstract = {

Dystopia brought about by protective tariffs.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[John] S[aint] L[oe] Strachey (1860-1927)} } @booklet {7627, title = {The Great Statesman. A Few Leaves From the History of Antipodea Anno Domini 3000}, year = {1885}, month = {1885}, publisher = {Edward Lee, Steam Machine Printer}, address = {Sydney, NSW, Australia}, abstract = {

Detailed conservative eutopia brought about by a single leader. No votes for women. English the world language and Christianity the world religion. Australia inhabited only by Anglo-Saxons.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {[Joseph Broadbent] [Holmes]} } @booklet {7580, title = {Garrison in Heaven. A Dream}, year = {1882}, note = {

Rpt. Wellesley, MA: Denton Publishing Co., 1884. U.K. ed. Liverpool, Eng.: J.J. Morse, 1890.

}, month = {1882}, publisher = {Mrs. E.M.F. Denton, Publisher}, address = {Wellesley, MA}, abstract = {

The Abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison (1805-79) goes to Heaven. He discovers that everyone he respects is in Hell, and admission to Heaven is based on the preference of the clergy on earth. He decides to empty Hell and reform Heaven.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {William Denton (1823-83)} } @booklet {7568, title = {The Great Romance}, volume = {2 Vols.}, year = {1881}, note = {

Vol. 1 rpt. ed. Dominic Alessio.\ Science-Fiction Studies\ 20.3 (November 1993): 311-40; and\ Kotare:\ New Zealand Notes and Queries\ 1.1 (October 1998): 62-101. Vol. 2 rpt. ed. Dominic Alessio.\ Kotare:New Zealand Notes and Queries\ 2.1 (May 1999): 48-79. Rpt. together ed. Dominic Alessio. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2008.\ Extract rpt. in Monsters in the Garden: An Anthology of Aotearoa New Zealand Science Fiction and Fantasy. Ed. Elizabeth Knox and David Larsen (Wellington, New Zealand: Victoria University of Wellington Press, 2020), 53-60.\ 

}, month = {1881}, publisher = {Printed at the Daily Times}, address = {Dunedin}, abstract = {

Eutopia set in 2143. The focus in the eutopia is on the ability to read thoughts and its effect on behavior. Women are less able to control their thoughts than men. Crime becomes impossible. Marry young. Scientifically advanced. Much of both volumes is taken up with interplanetary travel; there is considerable material on the supposed flora and fauna of Venus including a brief description of a humanoid couple whose simple life could be considered eutopian. It is clear that a third volume was planned, but there is no evidence that it was published.\ In a number of articles, Alessio argues that it influenced Edward Bellamy\’s popular U.S. eutopia\ Looking Backward\ (1888). Although these are remarkable volumes for their time and place, influence is doubtful.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {[Henry] [Honor]} } @booklet {8414, title = {{\textquotedblleft}A Glance into the Future; or, The World in the Twenty-Ninth Century{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Godey{\textquoteright}s Lady{\textquoteright}s Book and Magazine (Philadelphia, PA)}, volume = {98.585 }, year = {1879}, month = {March 1879}, pages = {262-65}, abstract = {

Technological eutopia combined with satire on technology\’s ability to create a utopia.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {E[lizabeth] T. Corbett (b. 1830)} } @booklet {8685, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Good Spirit of Space; Or, an Unappreciated Genius{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Hood{\textquoteright}s Comic Annual for 1879. Thirty Pages of Illustrations By Eminent Artists Engraved By the Brothers Dalziel }, year = {1879}, month = {1879}, pages = {198-10}, publisher = {Pub. by the Proprietors at the Fun Office}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Satirical poem on an overpopulation dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {J[ames] F. Sullivan} } @booklet {9905, title = {The Great Commune}, year = {1878}, month = {1878}, pages = {32 pp.}, publisher = {Author}, address = {Portland, [ME]}, abstract = {

Essay proposing how the world should respond to the threat of socialism. A \“universal order\” needs to be formed based on chivalry. It will be male, armed, and hierarchical, with titles of nobility. Workers, who will be thrown out of work by machinery, should be stopped from breeding by taxing children, and no married man should be employed by any government or the order. Racist. Develops ideas put forth in his The Great Republic. Portland, [ME]: Author, 1878. 16 pp. There is emphasis is on government, with limits on citizenship and censorship of all publications. Important to have an order of nobility.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Frederic Gregory Forsyth (1856-1925)} } @booklet {7486, title = {"Glimpses of the Future"}, howpublished = {Blackwood{\textquoteright}s Magazine }, volume = {112 }, year = {1872}, month = {September 1872}, pages = {282-305}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a near future economic collapse brought about by paying workers too much.

} } @booklet {7451, title = {The Great Republic: A Poem of the Sun}, year = {1867}, month = {1867}, publisher = {Brotherhood of the New Life}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Spiritualism with vaguely described paradises in a 261 page poem.\ \ See 1854 Harris; his\ The New Republic: A Discourse of the Prospects, Dangers, Duties and Safeties of the Times. Santa Rosa, CA: Fountain Grove Press, 1891; and his\ Brotherhood of the New Life. Its Fact, Law, Method and Purpose. Letters from Thomas Lake Harris, with passing reference to recent criticisms. 1.2 of the Fountaingrove Library. Santa Rosa, CA: Fountaingrove Press, T.L. Harris, Publisher, 1891.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Thomas L[ake] Harris (1823-1906)} } @booklet {7440, title = {"Good, Rapturous Scenes. A New Way of Enjoyment! The Quintessent Value of Everything! All You Want"}, howpublished = {Titus Petronius Arbiter, The Satyricon; or, Trebly Voluptuous}, year = {1866}, note = {

Also separately paged (twice but with textual differences) in Life Among the Nymphs: A New Excursion through the Empire of Venus. New York: Calvin Blanchard, 1867.

}, month = {1866}, pages = {Separately paged 39 pp}, publisher = {Calvin Blanchard}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Free love eutopia. See also 1858, 1862, 1864, the note there, 1865, and Blanchard, \“The Great Transformation. Human Nature Completely Unchained! Love in Earnest. Virtue and Vice Obsolete! Pleasure Without Measure. Everybody Perfectly Happy. The Crowning Triumph of Art.\”

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Calvin Blanchard (1808-1868)} } @booklet {7444, title = {"The Great Transformation. Human Nature Completely Unchained! Love in Earnest. Virtue and Vice Obsolete! Pleasure Without Measure. Everybody Perfectly Happy. The Crowning Triumph of Art"}, howpublished = {Secret History of a Votary of Pleasure. His Own Confessions}, year = {1866}, note = {

Also pub. bound in Life Among the Nymphs: A New Excursion through the Empire of Venus. New York: Calvin Blanchard, 1867 but without separate publishing information.

}, month = {1866}, pages = {132-43}, publisher = {Calvin Blanchard}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

While the book is presented as an autobiography, this section is a typical Blanchard eutopia. See also 1858, 1862, 1864 1865, and 1866 Blanchard, \“Good, Rapturous Scenes. A New Way of Enjoyment!\”

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Calvin Blanchard (1808-1868)} } @booklet {7438, title = {"A Glimpse of Utopia"}, howpublished = {The Eclectic and Congregational Review (UK)}, volume = { ns 9}, year = {1865}, month = {October 1865}, pages = {344-58}, abstract = {

The laws of the first five books of the Bible (the Pentateuch) as depicting a eutopia with \"Good law, honestly administered, and honestly obeyed\" (346) and a stress on duties rather than rights. For example, there is slavery for crimes against property where the thief cannot pay restitution and capital punishment for murder.

} } @booklet {7391, title = {The Great Southern Revolution: A Chapter in the History of the United States of South Africa. 1894-1934}, year = {1853}, month = {1853}, pages = {35 pp.}, publisher = {Darter Bros. \& Walton}, address = {Cape Town, South Africa}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Law passed disenfranchising all \"coloureds\"; law passed excluding English from schools; law passed requiring \"coloureds\" to have surgery to enhance their intelligence; law passed excluding all \"coloureds\" from school after age ten to force them onto the labour market. Coloureds became more attractive. Law passed that all students matriculated in university get the vote and coloureds enrolled. By 1930 a majority of voters are coloured. Discriminatory laws repealed except that brain enhancement was prohibited to whites because they had used their intellectual superiority poorly in the past.

}, keywords = {Male author, South African author}, author = {Jaapie Ahmet de Villers Smith} } @booklet {7381, title = {The Geral-Milco; or The Narrative of a Residence in a Brazilian Valley of the Sierra-Paricis With Map and Illustrations}, year = {1852}, note = {

Later ed. without the author\&$\#$39;s name entitled Rambles in Brazil, or, A Peep at the Aztecs. By One Who Has Seen Them [pseud.]. 2nd ed. New York: C.B. Norton, 1854.

}, month = {1852}, publisher = {Charles B. Norton}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

A detailed eutopia in the mountains of Brazil that was established by Aztecs and Incas fleeing the Spanish conquest and generally based on what was known of these civilizations at the time; somewhat romanticized.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {A. R. Middletoun Payne} } @booklet {7379, title = {Gulliver Joi: His Three Voyages; Being an Account of His Marvelous Adventures in Kailoo, Hydrogenia and Ejario}, year = {1851}, month = {1851}, publisher = {Charles Scribner}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Gulliveriana. Kailoo is an Earth-like planet that travels very rapidly around its sun, and the people are also speeded up with lives that are correspondingly short, except for the royal family, which lives longer, to the equivalent of thirty. The Earth is Kailoo\&$\#$39;s moon. In Hydrogenia air is used like water on Earth, and water is a stimulant like alcohol. The people are much larger than humans. In Ejario women are stronger, more active, and braver than men.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Elbert Perce (ed.) [written by] (1831-69)} } @booklet {7291, title = {Great Britain in 1841; or, The Results of the Reform Bill}, year = {1831}, note = {

2nd ed. London: Roake and Varty, 1831, which is rpt. in Modern British Utopias 1700-1850. Ed. Gregory Claeys. 8 vols. (London: Pickering \& Chatto, 1997), 7: 235-49.

}, month = {1831}, publisher = {Roake and Varty}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia as a result of passing the Reform Act of 1832 that gave more representation in the House of Commons to cities and increased the size of the electorate. In the future religion is under attack.

} } @booklet {7262, title = {Gulliver{\textquoteright}s Last Voyage, Describing Ballymugland, or the Floating Island}, year = {1825}, note = {

2nd ed. London: William Cole, 1825.

}, month = {1825}, publisher = {William Cole}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Utopian satire in which Lemuel Gulliver of 1726 Swift visits an island floating in the Pacific Ocean and driven by paddle wheels and steered by windmills. A significant part of the satire is directed at the religious control of the people, and women in particular.

} } @booklet {7243, title = {The Golden Key, Proving an Internal Spiritual Sense to the Holy Word; and Containing A Variety of Interesting and Entertaining Subjects, Introduced as Dreams of Translations into Paradise}, year = {1817}, month = {1817}, publisher = {Ptd. for the Author by W. Simpkin \& R. Marshall}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Allegory of spiritual exploration and discovery together with descriptions of visits to Paradise. Strongly influenced by Emanuel Swedenborg (1668-1772). Includes many extracts from other authors, both identified and unidentified.

} } @booklet {7185, title = {The Golden Age: or; Future Glory of North-America Discovered by An Angel to Celadon. In Several Entertaining Visions. Vision I}, year = {1785}, month = {1785}, publisher = {Np}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

Depicts a future America. The angel is one of those who were appointed to oversee the colonies and inspire \“your statesmen and heroes with courage\” (6). While America cannot be protected \“from the usual vicissitudes of fortune. . . . The States will doubtless watch over one another with the strictest vigilance\” and thus protect the country from \“gross innovation\” (7). It will benefit from the \“continual emigration\” of the \“poor, the oppressed, and the persecuted\” and will prosper as long as the people do not give in to \“pride and luxury\” (9). New states will be added, including Savagenia, for Indians and Nigrania for Negroes after the end of slavery. And given the size of the country, there may well be states for Jews and for those arriving from other countries, with only European ones mentioned.

}, keywords = {US author}, url = { https://quod.lib.umich.edu/e/evans/N34108.0001.001/1:3?rgn=div1;view=fulltext}, author = {Celadon [pseud.]} } @booklet {9178, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Geographical Description of Bachelor{\textquoteright}s Island{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The European Magazine and London Review }, volume = {1}, year = {1782}, note = {

\ Rpt. in The American Museum, or Repository of Ancient and Fugitive Pieces 8 (October 1790): 186-87; The Boston Magazine 1 (December 1783): 48; The Universal Asylum and Columbian Magazine 4 (April 1790): 213-14; Impartial Gazetteer, and Saturday Evening Post 4.197 (February 18, 1792); The Massachusetts Magazine or Monthly Museum 2.12 (December 1790): 747-48; The Philadelphia Minerva 1.41 (November 14, 1795), [4]; The Rural Magazine 1.44 (December 15, 1798) [2]; and as \“The Bachelor\’s Island.\” The Federal Gazette and Daily Advertiser 1.59 (March 19, 1798).

}, month = {March 1782}, pages = {169-70}, abstract = {

Satiric allegory.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {[Richard] [Johnson]} } @booklet {7178, title = {"Geographical Description of the Isle of Matrimony"}, howpublished = {The European Magazine and London Review}, volume = {1}, year = {1782}, note = {

Rpt. in The Massachusetts Magazine or Monthly Museum 2.11 (November 1790): 689-90; The Universal Asylum and Columbian Magazine 7 (August 1791): 102-03 without the R.J.; and Impartial Gazetteer, and Saturday Evening Post 4.196 (February 11, 1792).

}, month = {February 1782}, pages = {101-02}, abstract = {

Satiric allegory.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {R[ichard] J[ohnson]} } @booklet {7146, title = {A General Idea of the College of Mirania; with a sketch of the Method of Teaching Science and Religion, in the several classes and some account of its rise, establishment and buildings. Address{\textquoteright}d more immediately to the consideration of the trustees nominated, by the Legislature, to receive proposals etc. relating to the establishment of a college in the province of New York}, year = {1753}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Johnson Reprint, 1969 with an \“Introduction\” by Edward M. Griffin (v-xv); and in The Works of William Smith, D.D. Late Provost of the College and Academy of Philadelphia. 2 vols. (Philadelphia, PA: Hugh Maxwell and William Fry, 1803), 1: 165-229. The 2nd ed. corrected was published as A General Idea of the College of Mirania as Appendix Second. Number I of his Additional Discourses and Essays. Being a Supplement To the First Edition of Discourses on several Public Occasions during the War in America. Published for the Use of the Purchasers of that Edition. London: Ptd. for A. Millar and R. Griffiths, 1762. The appendices are separately paged with Mirania on 37-106 with \“Postscript\” on 104-06.\ 

}, month = {1753}, publisher = {Ptd. by J. Parker and W. Weyman}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Eutopian educational system. The Miranians believe that a good education is required for a good society and that a common education is needed to bring together the varied peoples who inhabited the country. The students were divided into two groups taught by different people in separate institutions, those intended for the learned professions and those intended for \“Mechanic Professions, and all the remaining People of the Country\” (14). The first are taught learned languages; the rest are not and finish their education at age fifteen. Those intended for the professions are taught English and Latin to age 15 then one year each of Greek; mathematics; philosophy, meaning ethics and physics; rhetoric and poetry; and agriculture and history. Much concern with the ability to speak and write well. Includes specific details of the education of the first group. Although there is an earlier Christian allegory, this is the earliest known utopia published in what became the United States. Influenced the founders of both King\’s College, now Columbia University, and the Academy and College of Philadelphia, now the University of Pennsylvania.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, Scottish author, US author}, author = {[William] [Smith] (1727-1803)} } @booklet {7087, title = {"The Golden Age. A Paraphrase on a Translation out of French"}, howpublished = {Poems Upon Several Occasions: With a Voyage to the Island of Love}, year = {1684}, note = {

Rpt. in The Works of Aphra Behn. 4 vols. Ed. Janet Todd (London: William Pickering, 1992), 1: 30-35.

}, month = {1684}, pages = {1-12}, publisher = {Ptd. for R. Tonson and J. Tonson}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Eutopia. Poem about the Golden Age adapted from the poem Aminta (1573) by the Italian poet Torquato Tasso (1544-95).

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Aphra Behn (1640-89)} } @booklet {7076, title = {Gerania: A New Discovery of a Little sort of People Anciently Discoursed of, called Pygmies. With a lively Description Of their Stature, Habit, Manners, Buildings, Knowledge, and Government, being very delightful and profitable}, year = {1675}, month = {1675}, publisher = {Ptd. by W.G. for Obadiah Blagrave}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Agrarian, monarchical eutopia. The people are Christian and appear to be naturally good. No desire for riches. The people recognize their interdependence, and everyone has an occupation that helps others.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Joshua Barnes (1654-1721)} }