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

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

}, keywords = {Female author, Neurodivergent author, Norwegian American author}, url = {https://grist.org/climate-fiction/imagine2200-la-sirene/}, author = {Karen Engelsen} } @booklet {11990, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Last Almond{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Grist/Imagine2200 2024}, year = {2024}, month = {January 22, 2024}, abstract = {

The story is set in California in 2058 and 2090 and concerns the destruction in 2058 of almond trees and the community near them due to flooding following a long drought followed in 2090 with, in a different part of California, the depiction of a way that almond trees and communities could survive even with drought and floods.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, url = {https://grist.org/climate-fiction/imagine2200-the-last-almond/}, author = {Zoe Young} } @booklet {11939, title = {Land of Milk Honey}, year = {2023}, month = {2023}, pages = {234 pp.}, publisher = {Riverhead Books/Penguin Riverhead Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The setting is a post-catastrophe dystopia in which a smog produced by agricultural tests in the United States covers the world and kills most of the plants and animals. The novel, though, follows a woman chef who is recruited by a wealthy man who has created a community of the extremely wealthy above the smog in the Swiss mountains and her experiences their and after the smog dissipates.

}, keywords = {Chinese American author, Female author}, isbn = {9780593538241}, author = {C[henji] Pam Zhang (b. 1990)}, editor = {C. Pam Zhang} } @booklet {11978, title = {The Language of Water}, year = {2023}, month = {2023}, pages = {312 pp.}, publisher = {Aqueduct Press}, address = {Seattle, WA}, abstract = {

The novel is set in a future where there is too much water in some places and too little in others, with the focus on the latter.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-61976-234-3}, author = {Elizabeth Clark-Stern} } @booklet {12003, title = {"Longevity"}, howpublished = {The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction}, volume = {145.5/6}, year = {2023}, month = {November/December 2023}, pages = {90-100}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future that has passed the climate change Redline and requires technology, including implants to survive. The population is divided between the Forevers, those with implants who are close to immortals, and the UnEdited, who are exploited to support the lives of the Forevers. The focus is on the growing relationship between a Forever who helps an UnEdited, who leads a movement to reverse the effects of climate change.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Female author, Singaporean author}, author = {Anya Ow} } @booklet {11749, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Last Brown Roof{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Omenana Speculative Fiction Magazine}, volume = {no. 23}, year = {2022}, month = {September 2022}, abstract = {

The story is set in a struggle between developers and the protectors of heritage in a future Lagos.

}, keywords = {Female author, Nigerian author}, url = {https://omenana.com/2022/07/14/the-last-brown-roof-temitayo-olofinlua/}, author = {Temitayo Olofinlua [Amogunla]} } @booklet {11981, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Last Caretaker{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Save The World: Twenty Sci-Fi Writers Save The Planet}, year = {2022}, month = {2022}, pages = {258-276}, publisher = {Other Worlds Ink}, address = {Sacramento, CA}, abstract = {

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

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {979-8832184425 }, author = {C. J. Erick}, editor = {J. Scott Coatsworth} } @booklet {11484, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Last of the Mbahuku Tribe{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Solarpunk Magazine}, volume = {no. 1}, year = {2022}, month = {January/February 2022}, pages = {33-44, with a note on the author on 45}, abstract = {

Something of a magic realist story set in a future where the Earth has revolted, producing volcanoes, earthquakes, and intense heat from the sun. One focus of the story is a community established to withstand these conditions. While it survives due to the scientific advances of founder and current members, it is an egalitarian, with no classes and complete acceptance of gender differences.

}, keywords = {Male author, Nigerian author}, issn = {2771-2850 }, author = {Oyedotun Damilola} } @booklet {11723, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Last Stand of the E. 12th St. Pirates{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Lightspeed}, volume = {no. 151}, year = {2022}, month = {December 2022}, abstract = {

The story is set in a city parts pf which are flooded but with many of the inhabitants still living there because they have no place else to go. The story takes place as the wealthy, who control the city, are beginning to push those inhabitants out so that the area can be reclaimed for the rich.

}, keywords = {African American author, Female author}, url = {https://www.lightspeedmagazine.com/fiction/last-stand-of-the-e-12th-st-pirates/}, author = {L. D. Lewis} } @booklet {11491, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Letter to J at the Eve of the Hunt{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Solarpunk Magazine}, volume = {no. 2}, year = {2022}, month = {March/April 2022}, pages = {29-30, with a note on the author on 31}, abstract = {

Very brief story in the form of a letter to the younger self of the letter writer. While much of the story is about the limits of the means of communication, the setting is the impact of climate change and the way the future is coping with them.

}, keywords = {Female author, Filipina author}, issn = {2771-2850}, author = {Kristine Ong Muslim (b. 1980)} } @booklet {11554, title = {{\textquotedblleft}A Letter to My Daughter, Emily{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Solarpunk Magazine}, volume = {no. 3}, year = {2022}, month = {May/June 2022}, pages = {16-25}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future devastated by climate change, and the letter described the slow recovery and some unexpected effects of that recovery.

}, keywords = {Female author, Male author, US author}, issn = {2771-2850}, author = {E[lizabeth] E[ve] King and Richard Lau} } @booklet {11493, title = {"Life in the City"}, howpublished = {Solarpunk Magazine}, volume = {no. 2}, year = {2022}, month = {March/April 2022}, pages = {32-45, with a note on the author on 46}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future where the State, having decided that there were too many people, chose to annually cull the population, leaving only the wealthy and those who fled to the remains of abandoned cities. The story focuses those in the city, those who chose to \“walk away,\” and how they treat each other.

}, keywords = {Black author, Female author, Gay author, Malaysian American author}, issn = {2771-2850}, author = {Endria Isa Richardson} } @booklet {11494, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Light into the Abyss{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Solarpunk Magazine}, volume = {no. 2}, year = {2022}, month = {March/April 2022}, pages = {48-58, with a note on the author on 59}, abstract = {

The story is set in a solar powered cafe in a future damaged by climate change. It focuses on plastic waste.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {2771-2850}, author = {Sarena Ulibarri} } @booklet {11765, title = {The Light Pirate}, year = {2022}, month = {2022}, pages = {325 pp.}, publisher = {Grand Central Publishing/Hachette Book Group}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The novel begins as a contemporary climate-change novel in follows a woman born during a hurricane in Florida through the development of the dystopia that develops as the climate gets worse.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-1538708279 }, author = {Lily Brooks-Dalton} } @booklet {11726, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Longest Breath{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Prism Review}, volume = {no. 24}, year = {2022}, note = {

Rpt. illus. in Little Blue Marble (March 10, 2023). https://littlebluemarble.ca/2023/03/10/the-longest-breath/

}, month = {2022}, pages = {37-43}, abstract = {

The story takes place in a Florida retirement home that overlooks a city that is now underwater from the viewpoint of an old Japanese woman who had been a professional diver whose daughter had brought her from Japan and put her in the home.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {2161-0274 }, author = {Lisa Beebe} } @booklet {11488, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Look to the Sky, My Love{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Solarpunk Magazine}, volume = {no. 1}, year = {2022}, month = {January/February 2022}, pages = {52-61, with a note on the author on 61}, abstract = {

A love story set in a future where a continuous party also produces electricity for the surrounding area. There are hints of a troubled past that has been overcome.

}, keywords = {Brazilian author, Male author}, issn = {2771-2850 }, author = {Renan Bernardo (b. 1968)} } @booklet {11881, title = {"The Lost Roads"}, howpublished = {Real Sugar Is Hard to Find: A Collection of Stories}, year = {2022}, month = {2022}, pages = {152-189}, publisher = {Android Press}, address = {Eugene, OR}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future that has decided to abolish the motor car, and the roads are being systematically removed and replaced with native plants, streams, and other green improvements. The protagonist recounts their involvement in one such project and, later in life, their daughter\’s fascination with cars.

}, keywords = {Genderqueer author, US author}, isbn = {978-1958121030}, author = {Sim Kern} } @booklet {11412, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Lucky Ones: Patience is a Virtue{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Nature}, year = {2022}, month = {January 12, 2022}, abstract = {

Dystopia of extreme rich/poor division in a near future United States.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {nature.com/futures. 1476-4687 (web) 0028-0836 (print)}, url = {https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-021-03747-1 }, author = {Aimee Ogden} } @booklet {11570, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Laartammer{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Disruption: New Short Fiction from Africa}, year = {2021}, month = {2021}, pages = {59-75}, publisher = {Short Story Day Africa}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

As a result of the devastating drought produced by climate change, South Africa has introduced water rationing and a one-child policy. The story is told from the viewpoint of a Laatlammer, or late lamb a child born long after its siblings, whose existence has to be hidden.

}, keywords = {Female author, South African author}, isbn = {978-1-946395-57-3 }, author = {J[ulia] S[muts] Louw}, editor = {Rachel Zadok (b. 1972) and Karina Magdalena Szczurek and Jason Myki Snyman} } @booklet {11768, title = {The Last Cuenista}, year = {2021}, month = {2021}, pages = {336 pp.}, publisher = {Levine Querido}, address = {Montclair, NJ}, abstract = {

Young adult novel set on a generations spaceship after Earth was destroyed in a collision with Halley\’s Comet. The protagonist is a twelve-year-old girl whose parents had been chosen to be among those saved and put into \“hypersleep\” to be cared for by generations of Monitors. The Monitors, though, resent their role, form the dystopian Collective, and wake up everybody while erasing their memories, except, by accident, the protagonist\’s. She had always wanted to be a cuenista or storyteller and she fills that role by telling the other children stories of old Earth. The novel won the 2022 Newbery Medal.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-1646140893}, author = {Donna Barba Higuera} } @booklet {11332, title = {The Last Cup of Coffee in the World{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Shoreline of Infinity}, volume = {no. 26}, year = {2021}, month = {September 2021}, pages = {69-76}, abstract = {

The story is set after a slow collapse, known as the Great Decline, and told by one of the few survivors

}, keywords = {Scottish author, Transgender author}, isbn = {2059-2590}, author = {Freiya Benson} } @booklet {11433, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Lay Down Your Heart{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Seasons Between Us: Tales of Identities and Memories}, year = {2021}, month = {2021}, pages = {94-123}, publisher = {Laksa Media}, address = {Calgary, AB, Canada}, abstract = {

The story is set in an alternative future Tanzania that has an authoritarian government and slavery combined with advanced technology. The story focuses on a scientist released from detention who believes slavery is justified and her husband who has become friends with their house slave.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author, Male author}, isbn = {978-1-988140-17-9}, author = {Liz Westbrook-Trenholm and Hayden Trenholm (b. ca. 1955)} } @booklet {11592, title = {Let It Die"}, howpublished = {Dispatches from Anarres: Tales in Tribute to Ursula K. Le Guin}, year = {2021}, month = {2021}, pages = {314-333}, publisher = {Forest Avenue Press}, address = {Portland, OR}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future that severely restricts the use of technology, allowing its use solely to repair visiting spaceships and allows people in their community to die rather than using technology to create treatments for them.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {9781942436485}, author = {Arwen Spicer (b. 1975)}, editor = {Susan DeFreitas} } @booklet {11364, title = {Lights Out in Lincolnwood. A Novel}, year = {2021}, month = {2021}, pages = {533 pp.}, publisher = {Harper Perennial}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The first days of an apocalyptic dystopia (all electricity fails) as seen through the eyes of the members of a dysfunctional family.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {978-0-06-306592-5 }, author = {Geoff[rey William] Rodkey (b. 1970)} } @booklet {11561, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Like Flowers Through Concrete{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Speculative Fiction for Dreamers: A Latinx Anthology}, year = {2021}, month = {2021}, pages = {100-121}, publisher = {Mad Creek Books/Ohio State University Press}, address = {Columbus, OH}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future trying to recover from while still dealing with the devastation of climate change and depicts personal relations within a fairly resilient community.

}, keywords = {Female author, Puerto Rican author, US author}, isbn = {978-0-8142-5798-2}, author = {Louangie Bou-Montes}, editor = {Alex Hernandez and Matthew Anthony Goodwin and Sarah Rafael Garc{\'\i}a} } @booklet {11453, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Line of Demarcation{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Black Sci-Fi Short Stories: An Anthology of New \& Classic Stories}, year = {2021}, month = {2021}, pages = {329-34}, publisher = {Flame Tree Publishing}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future where people working in fulfillment centers are given prosthetic limbs so that they can work more efficiently.

}, keywords = {African American author, Female author, Puerto Rican author}, isbn = {978-1-83964-480-1}, author = {Patty Nicole Johnson} } @booklet {11340, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Listen: A Memoir{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Multispecies Cities: Solarpunk Urban Futures}, year = {2021}, month = {2021}, pages = {11-21}, publisher = {World Weaver Press}, address = {Albuquerque, NM}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future that is recovering from the environmental devastation of the past told by a woman who can hear the birds, trees, and so forth speaking and can sometimes understand what is being said.

}, keywords = {Female author, Indian author}, isbn = {978-1-734054521}, author = {Priya Sarukkai Chabria}, editor = {Christoph Rupprecht and Deborah Cleland and Norie Tamura and Rajat Chaudhuri and Sarena Ulibarri} } @booklet {11602, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Little Kowloon{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Make Shift: Dispatches from the Post-Pandemic Future}, year = {2021}, month = {2021}, pages = {11-25}, publisher = {The MIT Press}, address = {Cambrisge, MA}, abstract = {

The story is set in an independent Scotland during a period of continuing pandemics. Little Kowloon refers to the fact that Edinburgh has become one of the main destinations for the hundreds of thousands of people fleeing Honk Kong.

}, keywords = {Male author, Scottish author}, isbn = {978-0-262-54240-1 }, author = {Adrian Hon}, editor = {Gideon Lichfield} } @booklet {11642, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Looney ka Tabadia (with apologies to Sa{\textquoteright}adat Hassan Manto.{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = { The Gollancz Book of South Asian Science Fiction Volume 2. With a Graphic Preface and Afterword by Manjula Padmanabhan}, year = {2021}, month = {2021}, pages = {148-160}, publisher = {Hachette India}, address = {Gurugram, India}, abstract = {

While the story focuses on an exchange of prisoners at the border between India and Pakistan, it takes place some years after a peace treaty has brought peace and prosperity to the two countries. The Kashmir problem has been solved by turning into a privately owned theme park overseen jointly by both countries in which all Kashmiris are stockholders.

}, keywords = {Female author, Pakistani author, US author}, isbn = {978-93-91028-62-6}, author = {Bina Shah (b. 1972)}, editor = {Tarun K. Saint} } @booklet {11515, title = {"Love at the End"}, howpublished = {khor{\'e}o magazine}, volume = {1.2}, year = {2021}, month = {[May 15], 2021}, pages = {12-27}, abstract = {

Climate change story in which Malaysian and Singapore are mostly under water. It is told backwards from 2060 to 2040.

}, keywords = {Female author, Malaysian author}, author = {Deborah Germaine Augustin} } @booklet {11670, title = {The Last Good Man}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {313 pp.}, publisher = {Bloomsbury}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The novel is set in a post-pandemic world in which the protagonist escapes the crumbling city to a much too perfect village. The villagers write anonymous accusations on a huge wall, which bring the Reckoning. Reminiscent of Shirley Jackson\’s \“The Lottery\” (1948).

}, keywords = {Male author, Scottish author}, isbn = {978-1-526-60924-3 }, author = {McMullan, Thomas} } @booklet {10930, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Last Good Time to Be Alive{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Reckoning 4: Creative Writing on Environmental Justice}, volume = {4}, year = {2020}, note = {

Also published online at https://reckoning.press/the-last-good-time-to-be-alive/ (February 5, 2020).\ 

}, month = {2030}, pages = {33-48}, publisher = {Reckoning Press}, address = {Lake Orion, MI}, abstract = {

The story takes place in a future London facing constant flooding.\ 

}, keywords = {English author}, isbn = {978-09989252-6-4}, url = {https://reckoning.press/the-last-good-time-to-be-alive/}, author = {Waverly SM} } @booklet {11129, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Last of the Goggled Barskys{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Slate}, year = {2020}, month = {June 27, 2020}, abstract = {

The story is set in an apparently eutopian future with no wars or poverty in which everyone wears Goggles that curate their lives, giving three rated choices for every action. In the story, a couple is apparently successfully raising their children with the Goggles, but then decide to introduce uncertainty.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, Male author, US author}, url = {Read a new short story about trying to short-circuit kids{\textquoteright} dependence on tech. (slate.com)}, author = {Joey Siara}, editor = {Brigid Schulte} } @booklet {10880, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Last Testament{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {FIYAH: Magazine of Black Speculative Fiction}, volume = {no. 15}, year = {2020}, month = {Summer 2020}, pages = {22-38}, abstract = {

Set in the future, the story is about the violence against young African American by the Chicago police.\ 

}, keywords = {African American author, Male author}, author = {Aurelius Raines II} } @booklet {10656, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Last to Die{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Clarkesworld}, volume = {no. 160}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {EJournal}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future in which most people have become nearly immortal by uploading themselves into cyborg bodies, and those who could not be uploaded are isolated on islands and cared for by robots.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, url = {http://clarkesworldmagazine.com/chang-eppig_01_20/}, author = {Rita Chang-Eppig} } @booklet {11115, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Last White Rhinoceros{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Monsters in the Garden: An Anthology of Aotearoa New Zealand Science Fiction and Fantasy}, volume = {186-202}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, publisher = {Victoria University of Wellington Press}, address = {Wellington, New Zealand}, abstract = {

Post-apocalyptic (nuclear war) dystopia in which most humans died, most of the remaining preyed on each other, and the few insolated groups of survivors, most notably some M{\={a}}ori, were collected by the new android civilization in hopes of restarting homo sapiens.\ 

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author, M{\={a}}ori author}, isbn = {9781776563104 }, author = {Witi [Tame] Ihimaera[-Smiler] (b. 1944)}, editor = {Elizabeth [Fiona] Knox (b. 1959) and David Larsen} } @booklet {10871, title = {Londonia}, year = {2020}, note = {

This is a revised version of her Hoxton. Np: Lulu Publishing, 2016, which cannot be found. Hoxton is the name of the protagonist in Londonia.\ 

}, month = {2020}, pages = {399 pp.}, publisher = {Tartarus Press}, address = {Leyburn, Eng.}, abstract = {

The novel is set in what remains of London after a series of climate-change catastrophes. It is divided between the \“cincture,\” a wealthy area protected from the climate, and Londonia where people get by as they can. The female protagonist wakes up in Londonia with much of her memory gone, and she makes a life for herself as a \“finder\” of artifacts from before the catastrophe which are traded within Londonia or sold/traded in the cincture. Uses an invented language that combines English with words derived mostly from French. There is a Glossary on 397-99.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Female author, French author}, isbn = {978-1-912856-19-6 }, author = {Kate A. Hardy} } @booklet {10943, title = {The Loop}, year = {2020}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: Chicken House/Scholastic, 2020.

}, month = {2020}, pages = {354 pp.}, publisher = {Chicken House}, address = {Frome, Eng.}, abstract = {

The first volume of a planned young adult trilogy. In this volume a sixteen-year-old boy is being held in prison awaiting execution. As the world outside changes, the world in the prison deteriorates even further as the boy tries to escape.\ The second volume is The Block. Frome, Eng.: Chicken House, 2020. U.S. ed. New York: Chicken House/Scholastic, 2021.

}, keywords = {Male author, Scottish author}, isbn = {978-1-338-58930-6}, author = {Ben Oliver} } @booklet {11915, title = {Losing Eden: Why Our Minds Need the Wild}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, publisher = {Allen Lane/Penguin Random House}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The book is a science based exploration of the point made in the subtitle, but it begins with a brief \“Prologue\” (1-4) and ends with a brief \“Epilogue\” (199-200). The Prologue set in the near future our world where a girl walking outside needs a hat, goggles, and respirator and the girl\’s grandmother explaining about nature and why it ended. The Epilogue is set in a future where the girl can walk outside in the woods.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author, Scottish author}, isbn = {9780241441534}, author = {Lucy Jones} } @booklet {11763, title = {"Love Letter"}, howpublished = {The New Yorker}, volume = {96.7}, year = {2020}, note = {

Rpt. without the illus. in his Liberation Day: Stories (New York: Random House, 2022), 95-104.

}, month = {April 6, 2020}, pages = {54-57}, abstract = {

A letter from a grandfather to his grandson in the near future when a corrupt authoritarian government under the leadership of one man (clearly Donald Trump) who won the presidency three times and then by his son has taken over the U.S. The grandfather reflects on what has grandson should do when a friend has been disappeared.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {9780525509592}, issn = {0028792X}, url = { https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2020/04/06/love-letter-george-saunders }, author = {George Saunders (b. 1958)} } @booklet {11218, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Lyceum. Aiden Part I{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Ignorance is Strength: The Dystopia Triptych 1}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {57-72}, publisher = {Broad Reach Publishing + Adamant Press}, address = {New York/London}, abstract = {

A three-part dystopia in which a company is developing a neurological educational link that will give all children access to knowledge and help in understanding it. The eutopian possibilities of the project are derailed when the teenage son of the developer is killed in an accident, and she becomes fixed on the neurolink, which had named after her son. In the second part, the man who took over its development makes it possible for the link to be shared, and it spreads throughout the population beyond schools, with some seeing the results positively and others seeing them negatively. In the third part, the developer creates an android that can access the neurolink and looks and acts as if it is human.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author, Guyanese author}, isbn = {979-8677287572 979-8677291012 979-8677298424}, author = {Karin Lowachee (b. 1973)}, editor = {John Joseph Adams (b. 1976) and Hugh [Crocker] Howey (b. 1975) and Christine Yant} } @booklet {11083, title = {The Last Conversation}, volume = {No 5 in the Forward Project }, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, publisher = {Amazon Original Stories}, address = {Seattle, WA}, abstract = {

Pandemic/last people dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Paul G. Tremblay (b. 1971)}, editor = {Blake Crouch (b. 1978)} } @booklet {10899, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Last Stand{\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), 171-75.

}, month = {December 27, 2019}, abstract = {

Climate change dystopia about the destruction of the last Redwoods.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-988293-08-0}, url = {https://littlebluemarble.ca/2019/12/27/the-last-stand/}, author = {Christoph Weber} } @booklet {11045, title = {"Lay Low"}, howpublished = {Gross Ideas: Tales of Tomorrow{\textquoteright}s Architecture}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {139-51}, publisher = {The Architecture Foundation and Oslo Architectural Triennale}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future where the .1\% control the world and people exist of allowances allocated for specific things such as water and transport.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, isbn = {DLC 978-1-9996462-3-3}, author = {Maria Smith}, editor = {Edwina Attlee and Phineas Harper and Maria Smith} } @booklet {11276, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Let{\textquoteright}s Make this City and Urban Project Everybody Wants{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {How to Run a City Like Amazon, and Other Fables}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = { 1337-57 [342-47]}, publisher = {Meatspace Press}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

Baltimore is taken over by the seed accelerator Y Combinator. 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 = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-0-9955776-7-1}, author = {Shannon Mattern}, editor = {Mark Graham and Rob Kitchin and Shannon Mattern and Joe Shaw} } @booklet {11377, title = {"Letters From Nowhere"}, howpublished = {Citizens of Nowhere: An Anthology of Utopic Fiction}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {13-31}, publisher = {Cinnamon Press/Rowan Tree Editing}, address = {Gwynedd, Wales}, abstract = {

The protagonist is an elderly, terminally ill woman who begins to receive letters from her doppelganger who lives in a parallel, eutopian world that branched off our timeline in about the eleventh century. She is only one of many receiving such letters, and a picture of the other world is pieced together from the letters.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, isbn = {978-1788640947}, author = {Rowan B. Fortune}, editor = {Rowan B. Fortune} } @booklet {11051, title = {"Life Sentence"}, howpublished = { Lightspeed}, volume = {no. 105}, year = {2019}, note = {

Rpt. in the author\&$\#$39;s\ Why Visit America. Stories (New York: Henry Holt and Co., 2020), 62-90; and in The Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy 2020. Ed. Diana Gabaldon (Boston, MA: Mariner Books/Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2020), 1-25, with a note on the author together with the author\’s note on the story on 392.\ 

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

In this future, criminals are punished by having much of their memory wiped with the story told from the point-of-view of a such a man and narrowly focused on the experiences of the man and his family.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {9781250237200 978-1328613103 }, url = {https://www.lightspeedmagazine.com/fiction/life-sentence/ }, author = {Matthew Baker (b. 1985)} } @booklet {10939, title = {The Light at the Bottom of the World}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {312 pp.}, publisher = {Disney Book Group/Hyperion}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

First volume in a young adult duology to be followed by the Journey the Heart of the Abyss (2021). The protagonist is a young Muslim London girl, but a London that in 2099 is part of a completely submerged world. The novel focus on the girl\’s search for her father, who has been arrested on false charges by the corrupt, authoritarian government. She hopes to gain his release by winning the London Marathon, which is a race of submersibles.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, isbn = {9781368036887}, author = {London Shah} } @booklet {10409, title = {The Lightest Object in the Universe}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, publisher = {Algonquin Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

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

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Kimi Eisele} } @booklet {10551, title = {"Luna 6000"}, howpublished = {Black From the Future: A Collection of Black Speculative Fiction}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {91-107}, publisher = {BLF Press}, address = {Clayton, NC}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which advanced monitoring technology makes life and death decisions.\ 

}, keywords = {African American author, Female author}, author = {Stephanie Andrea Allen}, editor = {Stephanie Andrea Allen and Lauren Cherelle} } @booklet {10526, title = {LaGuardia: A Very Modern Story of Immigration}, year = {2018}, note = {

Collects issues 1 - 4 of LaGuardia from Berger Books, 2018-2019

}, month = {2018-19}, publisher = {Dark Horse Comics}, address = {Milwaukie, OR}, abstract = {

Graphic novel satire on immigration with aliens from space landing in Nigeria and providing the country with the technology to radically improve life, while also mixing their DNA with human DNA. The novel depicts opposition to the aliens as immigrants, particularly in the United States.

}, keywords = {African American author, Female author}, author = {Nnedi[mma Nkemdili] Okorafor (b. 1974)} } @booklet {9948, title = {"Leaving"}, howpublished = {Bikes Not Rockets: Intersectional Feminist Bicycle Science Fiction Stories}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {2-23}, publisher = {Microcosm Publishing}, address = {Portland, OR}, abstract = {

Climate-change dystopia in which eastern and lakefront Canada is under water. In the story a woman struggles over deciding to leave her hometown, which is completely submerged, for one of Human colonies in space. Lesbian themes.\ 

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author}, author = {Monique Cuillerier}, editor = {Elly Blue} } @booklet {10192, title = {"Left to Take the Lead{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Analog Science Fiction and Fact }, volume = {138.7\&8}, year = {2018}, month = {July/August 2018}, pages = {183-97}, abstract = {

The story is set on an Earth with a badly damaged environment, with the protagonist an indentured laborer from a space colony.\ One of her \“Oort Cloud\” stories. Other stories in the series include \“Points of Origin.\” Illus. Keith Negley. Tor.com (November 34, 2015). https://www.tor.com/2015/11/04/points-of-origin-marissa-lingen/.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {1059-2113 }, author = {Marissa [Kristine] Lingen (b. 1978)} } @booklet {10159, title = {"The Levellers"}, howpublished = {Welcome to Dystopia: Forty-five Visions of What Lies Ahead}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {109-23}, abstract = {

Dystopia in in a future where the countryside is dominated by radical environmentalists who take the land of even those who are running sustainable farms if they disapprove of the person.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, South African author, US author}, author = {Deji Bryce Olukotun}, editor = {Gordon Van Gelder (b. 1966)} } @booklet {10002, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Life Is a Devil{\textquoteright}s Bargain{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {All We Ever Wanted: Stories of a Better World}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {90-98}, publisher = {A Wave Blue World}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

A positive future story in comic form about the dan8er of experimenting with DNA.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Justin Zimmerman (b. 1977)}, editor = {Matt Miner and Eric Palicki and Tyler Chin-Tanner} } @booklet {9833, title = {Liquid Reign}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, publisher = {Author}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

A future with both eutopian and dystopian elements. People vote constantly on all sorts of issues. No nations, although there is still regional and national identity. Limit on private wealth. Most of the seventy-two short chapters end with web addresses for additional information.\ 

}, keywords = {German author, Male author}, author = {Tim Reutemann (b. 1982)} } @booklet {11311, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Little Grey Weirdos{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {The Future Fire: Social Political \& Speculative Cyber-Fiction}, volume = {no. 44}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {53-65}, abstract = {

Post-apocalyptic story set in California in which three individuals trying to escape from the dangerous cities and hoping to find a rich uncle\’s bunker come across two people who have found a way to life. It is told by one woman from each side.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {1746-1839}, url = {The Future Fire: 2018.46 fiction littlegreyweirdos }, author = {Anna Ziegelhof} } @booklet {9956, title = {"Livewire"}, howpublished = {Bikes Not Rockets: Intersectional Feminist Bicycle Science Fiction Stories}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {66-80}, publisher = {Microcosm Publishing}, address = {Portland. OR}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future society with deep rich/poor divisions. Its focus is on whether \“bots\” have developed with emotions, with people destroying those they think have.\ 

}, keywords = {Asian-American author, Female author}, author = {Ayame Whitfield}, editor = {Elly Blue} } @booklet {11495, title = {"Logistics"}, howpublished = {Clarkesworld}, volume = {no. 138}, year = {2018}, note = {

Rpt. in Year\’s Best Aotearoa New Zealand Science Fiction and Fantasy Volume 1. Ed. Marie Hodgkinson ([Wellington, Aotearoa New Zealand]: Paper Road Press, 2019), 30-43.

}, month = {April 2018}, abstract = {

Post-apocalyptic (pandemic) dystopia told by an immune survivor wandering south across Europe.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Transgender author}, isbn = {9780473491260}, url = {https://clarkesworldmagazine.com/fitzwater_04_18/ Audio version at https://clarkesworldmagazine.com/audio_04_18c/}, author = {A. J. Fitzwater} } @booklet {10433, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Longing for Earth{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Infinity{\textquoteright}s End}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {251-65}, publisher = {Solaris}, address = {Oxford, Eng.}, abstract = {

The story is set in what appears to be a eutopian future in which Earth has been restored after most people have left to live on one of the many worlds created to reproduce different environments, but then choosing to live as their younger selves in virtual reality. The protagonist is a man who had hoped to win the lottery that allowed people to immigrate to Earth but, after retiring, while waiting, visited these worlds. At the time of the story, he is well over 300 and visiting his thousandth world.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Linda Nagata (b. 1960)}, editor = {Jonathan Strahan (b. 1964)} } @booklet {10200, title = {"Loser"}, howpublished = {Welcome to Dystopia: Forty-five Visions of What Lies Ahead}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {171-92}, publisher = {O/R Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

A dystopia in which a man has been imprisoned for writing in opposition to the policies of the Trump administration and is manipulated into betraying his friends.\ 

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {Matthew Hughes (b. 1949)} } @booklet {9413, title = {The Lamb Will Slaughter the Lion}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {127 pp.}, publisher = {Tor.com/Tom Doherty Associates}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Fantasy novel that includes an anarchist eutopia, Freedom City, Iowa: \“An entire town, abandoned by a dead economy and occupied by squatters and activists and anarchists\” (12). But as people learned of it and moved there, one man took control, dividing the community. One man knew magic and summoned a protector spirit that killed the man, but later that spirit turns on its summoners. The rest of the novel concerns the community\’s attempts to control the spirit. The

}, keywords = {Female author, Transgender author, US author}, isbn = {978-0-7653-9736-2}, author = {Margaret Killjoy (b. 1982)} } @booklet {9645, title = {"Last Chance"}, howpublished = {Sunvault: Stories of Solarpunk and Eco-Speculation}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {91-102}, publisher = {Upper Rubber Boot}, address = {Nashville, TN}, abstract = {

The story set on a planet called Last Chance settled after the Earth\’s ecosystem had been destroyed. At a young age, children are separated from their parents and live in an underground school, under a desert, where they are taught that the settlers had done the same thing to the new planet, but what they are taught is not true. Last Chance is like Earth once was, and the children are being taught what could happen again and must not.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Tyler Young}, editor = {Phoebe Wagner and Bront{\"e} Christopher Wieland} } @booklet {10382, title = {The Last Dog on Earth}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, publisher = {Del Rey/Ebury Publishing}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Post-apocalyptic dystopia (bomb) told from the points-of-view of a dog and his master.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Adrian J. Walker} } @booklet {11086, title = {Leila}, year = {2017}, note = {

Rpt. London: Faber \& Faber, 2018. 265 pp.\ 

}, month = {2017}, publisher = {Simon \& Schuster India}, address = {Noida, Uttar Pradesh, India}, abstract = {

In a future India that is a dictatorship and dealing with climate change, a woman\’s husband is killed, her daughter is abducted, and she is sent to a prison camp. Escaping, she searches for her daughter.\ 

}, keywords = {Indian author, Male author}, isbn = {9780571341313}, author = {Prayaag Akbar (b. 1982)} } @booklet {9740, title = {{\textquotedblleft}A Letter from the Federal Women{\textquoteright}s Prison{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {More Alternative Truths: Stories From the Resistance}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {57-63}, publisher = {B Cubed Press}, address = {Benton City, WA}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which women lose all their rights. Some form an underground railroad to help others escape to Canada. When they are discovered, many are killed, and the others are imprisoned for life.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Stephanie L. Weippert}, editor = {Phyllis Irene Radford (b. 1950) and Rebecca McFarland Kyle and Lou J Berger and Bob Brown} } @booklet {9699, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Letters from the Heartland{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Alternative Truths}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {135-41}, publisher = {B Cubed Press}, address = {Benton City, WA}, abstract = {

A dystopia in which the U.S. has fragmented, climate change has drowned much of the coasts, and the middle of the country has become a dictatorship.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Janka Hobbs}, editor = {Phyllis Irene Radford (b. 1950) and Bob Brown} } @booklet {9760, title = {The Link Boy. A Free World Novel}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, publisher = {Edge Science Fiction and Fantasy}, address = {Calgary, AB, Canada}, abstract = {

Sequel to 2014 Martineck that follows the lives of three people as they navigated life in a world controlled by competing corporations.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Michael J. Martineck (b. 1965)} } @booklet {10359, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Looking Back, Looking Ahead{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {49th Parallels}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {235-49}, publisher = {Bundoran Press}, address = {[Ottawa, ON, Canada]}, abstract = {

A future Toronto dealing with climate change through high rise gardening on what remains of its building. Much of the story gives the feel of a highly structured, perhaps even authoritarian society, but it ends with it also being a radically egalitarian society recognize the value of all people, with, for example, everyone using sign language.\ 

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {Maverick Smith}, editor = {Hayden Trenholm (b. ca. 1955)} } @booklet {9513, title = {Lost in Arcadia}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, publisher = {47North}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which most people in the U.S. are addicted to Arcadia, an immersive virtual-reality system. The effect is to cut people off from each other, and the novel follows one family whose matriarch tries to hold them together.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Sean Gandert} } @booklet {11448, title = {Lotus Blue}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {377 pp.}, publisher = {Talos Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

A complex, multi-faceted post-apocalyptic dystopia set it an Australia with a badly damaged environment, war machines, enhanced soldiers, and other dangers. The main protagonist is a seventeen year old girl struggling to survive. The setting has similarities to the Terry Dowling\’s 1990 Rynosseros series.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Female author}, isbn = {9781940456706}, author = {Cat[riona] Sparks (b. 1965)} } @booklet {10456, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Lowland Clearances.{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Shoreline of Infinity}, volume = {no. 8{\textonehalf} Edinburgh International Book Festival Special Edition }, year = {2017}, month = {Summer 2017}, pages = {61-63}, abstract = {

Satire on the Highland Clearances in which the people of Glasgow are resettled in the Scottish Highlands and replaced by sheep.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Female author, Scottish author}, issn = {2059-2590}, author = {Pippa Goldschmidt (b. 1985)} } @booklet {9390, title = {{\textquotedblleft}A Lack of Congenial Solutions{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Humanity 2.0}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, pages = {61-72}, publisher = {Phoenix Pick/Arc Manor}, address = {Rockville, MD}, abstract = {

Future dystopia in which after killing off the peaceful on Earth, the remaining humans expand into the galaxy killing or enslaving all the multitude of others that they meet, all of human had evolved into extremely varied, but peaceful cultures. Finally, the various cultures cooperate to eliminate humanity but find that doing so has unfortunate effects on their cultures.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Kenneth Schneyer}, editor = {Alex Shvartsman (b. 1975)} } @booklet {8774, title = {The Last Girl. Book One of the Dominion Trilogy}, year = {2016}, pages = {2016}, publisher = {Thomas \& Mercer}, address = {[Seattle, WA}}, abstract = {

Dystopia set in a world in which the birth of girls has dropped to near zero. The novel focuses on a young woman who has been kept in a U.S. research facility for twenty years, having been told that there are no survivors outside. She escapes and discovers that there are survivors, some of whom help her. The Final Trade: Book Two of the Desolation Trilogy. [Seattle, WA]: Thomas \& Mercer, 2016 is a sequel in which the protagonist of the first volume discovers, with the help of her friends, the records on who she and the other captive girls are. In The First City: Book Three of the Dominion Trilogy. [Seattle, WA]: Thomas \& Mercer, 2017, the protagonist manages to get the Seattle, the last city in the country, to find answers.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Joe Hart} } @booklet {10710, title = {"The Last Lagosian"}, howpublished = {Omenana Speculative Fiction Magazine}, volume = {no. 8}, year = {2016}, note = {

\ Rpt. in his Incomplete Solutions. Edinburgh, Scot.: Luna Press, 2019), 100-10, with an author\’s note on 258.

}, month = {November 2016}, pages = {12-18}, abstract = {

Post-catastrophe (unexplained) dystopia.

}, keywords = {Malaysian author, Male author, Nigerian author}, isbn = {978-1-911143-55-0}, url = {https://omenana.com/2016/11/09/the-last-lagosian-wole-talabi/}, author = {Wole Talabi (b. 1986)} } @booklet {10767, title = {"Lawman"}, howpublished = {Fragments: The Anthology of Short Stories}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, publisher = {Author}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future violent, corrupt South Africa with deep rich/poor divisions. Some fantasy.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, South African author}, author = {Caldon Mull} } @booklet {9661, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Le Carr{\'e} rouge{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Solarpunk Press }, year = {2016}, month = {November 7, 2016}, abstract = {

Dystopian depiction of the future of Qu{\'e}bec under a repressive government and powerful corporations, particularly one that, with the cooperation of the government, controls all food production and distribution. The story focuses on the resistance to the dystopia over the lifetime of the protagonist.\ 

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author}, url = {http://www.solarpunkpress.com/stories/2016-11-7/011-le-carr-rouge-by-claudie-arseneault}, author = {Claudie Arseneault} } @booklet {9286, title = {Learning to Speak Tiger"}, howpublished = {SciFutures presents The City of the Future}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, pages = {9-27 with a note about the author on 27-28}, publisher = {SciFutures}, address = {[Burbank, CA]}, abstract = {

The story is set in a very high-tech future Hanoi with strong eutopian elements but with the technology largely integrated into daily life. The story is about a poor, young girl struggle to find her place.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Trina Marie Phillips}, editor = {Trina Marie Phillips} } @booklet {10042, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Leaves No Longer Fall{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {At the Edge}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, pages = {8-28}, publisher = {Paper Road Press}, address = {[Wellington, New Zealand]}, abstract = {

Environmental dystopia.\ 

}, keywords = {Australian author, Female author}, author = {Jodi Cleghorn}, editor = {Dan Rabarts and Lee Murray} } @booklet {8903, title = {Legacy of Shadow}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, publisher = {Zmok Books}, address = {Point Pleasant, NJ}, abstract = {

The novel is mostly adventure, but it is set in a future where there is a multi-species Galactic Council with the goal of the betterment of all species.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Gallant, Craig} } @booklet {10975, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Let Your Light Shine Before Men{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Obsidian}, volume = {42.1-2 Speculating Futures: Black Imagination \& The Arts}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, pages = {19-34}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future where climate change led to the abandonment of New Orleans while saving white areas of the country.\ 

}, keywords = {African American author, Male author, Queer author, Scottish author}, issn = {0888-4412}, author = {Christopher Caldwell} } @booklet {9287, title = {"Light Times"}, howpublished = {SciFutures presents The City of the Future}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, pages = {43-51 with a note about the author on 52}, publisher = {SciFutures}, address = {[Burbank, CA]}, abstract = {

The story is set in Nigeria, which, after a devastating war, is recovering using high-tech and the help of the United Nations.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Ari Popper}, editor = {Trina Marie Phillips} } @booklet {9289, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Love in a Lonely City 2050"}, howpublished = {SciFutures presents The City of the Future}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, pages = {29-42 with a note about the author on 42}, publisher = {SciFutures}, address = {[Burbank, CA]}, abstract = {

The story is set in a very high-tech future London with strong eutopian elements and is about how hard it still can be to find love.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Deborah Walker}, editor = {Trina Marie Phillips} } @booklet {9615, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Lutopia: An Ideal City in an Ideal World{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {{\textquoteleft}A Truly Golden Handbook{\textquoteright}: The Scholarly Quest for Utopia}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, pages = {332-48}, publisher = {Leuven University Press}, address = {Leuven, Belgium}, abstract = {

An essay describing a eutopian 2116 Leuven, then known as Lutopia, with an emphasis of blending heritage an ecology. World-wide people have been concentrated into cities to radically reduce the negative impact of humans on the environment. The essay is an expansion of the ideal city tradition, with in addition to the usual architectural and city-layout details, material on the organization of housing, schooling from elementary through university, energy use, transportation, the economy, labor, the social life, and governance. It ends with a brief comment on the remaining problems.\ 

}, keywords = {Belgian author, Female author}, author = {Hilde Heynen (b. 1959)}, editor = {Veerle Achten and Geert Bouckaert (b. 1958) and Erik Schokkaert} } @booklet {9342, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Luv Story{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Dreaming in the Dark}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, pages = {129-138 with a note about the author on 131 and {\textquotedblleft}Afterword Luv Story{\textquotedblright} on 138}, publisher = {PS Australia}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

A retelling of the story of the Garden of Eden by a girl in a post-catastrophe (climate-change, loss of civilization) dystopia.\ 

}, keywords = {Australian author, Female author}, author = {Kim Westwood}, editor = {Jack [Mayo] Dann (b. 1945)} } @booklet {11909, title = {Lament for the Fallen}, year = {2015}, note = {

Rpt. London: Black Swan/Transworld Publishers, 2017.

Originally published in 2015 as an ebook entitled Tartarus Falls. Np: Qwyre Publishers.

}, month = {2015/2016}, pages = {382 pp.}, publisher = {Doubleday/Transworld Publishers}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The novel is set in a West African community when a space craft crashes nearby with a human-like being who has escaped from Tartarus, \“a place where hope doesn\’t exist\” (back cover). As he heals, he helps his rescuers to a better life, but of course complications arise. A novel set after Lament for the Fallen and with some of the same characters is Usan Abasi\’s Lament, available at https://gavinchait.com/w/X3zHq2t7da4e/.

}, keywords = {Male author, South African author, UK author}, author = {Chait, Gavin} } @booklet {9553, title = {"Land of Light"}, howpublished = {Imagine Africa 500: Speculative Fiction from Africa}, year = {2015}, note = {

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

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

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

}, keywords = {Male author, South African author}, author = {Stephen Embleton}, editor = {Billy Kahora} } @booklet {8900, title = {Land of Promise. Book 1 of the Counter-Caliphate Chronicles}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, publisher = {Liberty Paradigm Publishing}, address = {Moyie Springs, ID}, abstract = {

An anti-Islamic novel that depicts the establishment of a free micro-state eutopia with considerable detail on citizenship, which requires ownership of a minimum of one hectare of land and military service for full citizenship, which gives the individual ten votes. Described as volume one with\ Piece of Resistance\ scheduled for late 2016.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {James Wesley Rawles (b. 1960)} } @booklet {9194, title = {The Language of Paradise}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, publisher = {W.W. Norton \& Co.}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Critique of utopianism. The novel follows the experiences woman whose husband is influenced by a man hoping to create a eutopia, a eutopia that she finds troubling.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Barbara Klein Moss} } @booklet {10780, title = {"The Last Wave"}, howpublished = {Jalada 02: Afrofuture(s)}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, pages = {EJournal}, abstract = {

Climate-change dystopia.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, Zimbabwean author}, url = {https://jaladaafrica.org/2015/01/15/last-wave-by-ivor-w-hartmann/}, author = {Ivor W. Hartmann} } @booklet {11742, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Learning Our Bodies, Healing Our Selves{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The Feminist Utopia Project: Fifty-Seven Visions of a Wildly Better Future}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, pages = {140-146}, publisher = {The Feminist Press at the City University of New York}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Essay on how, beginning with premedical education, to improve medical service for women and others \“whose have identities have been pathologized, whose health and life quality have been systematically undervalued\” (142). Says that \“In my feminist utopia, premedical education would be designed to instill an understanding that health care inequality and unequal distribution of life chances are not genetically programmed inevitabilities, but rather the result of structural oppression\” (143). Also suggests that medical education needs to be more interdisciplinary and specifically mentions medical anthropology, gender studies, and comparative ethnic studies. Free medical education (243). Access to medical care a fundamental right (144).

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {9781558619005}, author = {William Schlesinger}, editor = {Alexandra Brodsky and Rachel Kauder Nalebuff} } @booklet {8239, title = {"Lesbo Island"}, howpublished = {The Feminist Utopia Project: Fifty-Seven Visions of a Wildly Better Future}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, pages = {237-46}, publisher = {The Feminist Press at the City University of New York}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Humorous call for the establishment of a women-only state.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Jill Soloway (b. 1965)}, editor = {Alexandra Brodsky and Rachel Kauder Nalebuff} } @booklet {11084, title = {The Lesson}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, pages = {192 pp}, publisher = {HarperCollins India}, address = {Noida, Uttar Pradesh, India}, abstract = {

Dystopia satire in which the Adjustment Bureau enforces the Conduct Book but people, and women in particular, still do not always follow the rules, and that calls for additional means to bring them under control.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, Indian author}, isbn = {9789351770367}, author = {Sowmya Rajendran} } @booklet {8243, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Let Him Wear a Tutu{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The Feminist Utopia Project: Fifty-Seven Visions of a Wildly Better Future}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, pages = {124-27}, publisher = {The Feminist Press at the City University of New York}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

A very brief eutopia of a gender-neutral childhood. See also 1972 Gould.

}, keywords = {Latina author, US author}, author = {Yamberlie Tavarez}, editor = {Alexandra Brodsky and Rachel Kauder Nalebuff} } @booklet {8852, title = {Lie of the Land}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, publisher = {Polygon}, address = {Edinburgh, Scot.}, abstract = {

Near future post-apocalypse dystopia set in the Scottish Highlands.

}, keywords = {Male author, Scottish author}, author = {Michael F. Russell} } @booklet {9865, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Lightning Jack{\textquoteright}s Last Ride{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction}, volume = {128.1/2}, year = {2015}, note = {

Rpt. in The Best American Science Fiction and FantasyTM 2016. Ed. Karen Joy Fowler (Boston, MA: Mariner/Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2016), 174-95.\ 

}, month = {January/February 2015}, pages = {56-79}, abstract = {

The dystopia created by oil running out.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {00024-984X }, author = {Dale Bailey (b. 1968)} } @booklet {8850, title = {Lost Girl}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, publisher = {Pan Books}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Climate change dystopia.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, English author, Male author}, author = {Adam Nevill (b. 1969)} } @booklet {10697, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Love and Prejudice{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Omenana Speculative Fiction Magazine}, volume = {no. X}, year = {2015}, month = {October 2015}, pages = {18-20}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future where same-sex marriages are the norm, and parents have a legal right to forbid marriages.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, Nigerian author}, url = {https://omenanadotcom.files.wordpress.com/2015/09/omenana-x.pdf}, author = {Dore, Amatesiro} } @booklet {10278, title = {Love in the Anthropocene}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, publisher = {O/R Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

A series of stories set in a future in which the natural world is almost entirely created by humans.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, Male author, US author}, author = {Dale Jamieson (b. 1947) and Bonnie Nadzam} } @booklet {8960, title = {Luna: A New Moon}, year = {2015}, note = {

U.S. Ed. New York: Tor, 2017. The U.K. ed. was published a week before the U.S. one.

}, month = {2015}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a future settled moon where a feudal system has been established with various dynasties fighting for control of the moon\’s resources. First volume in a series. The second volume is Luna: Wolf Moon. London: Gollancz, 2017. U.S. ed. New York: Tor, 2017, which follows the complexities of the fighting among the dynasties. The third volume is Luna: Moon Rising. London: Gollancz, 2019. U.S. ed. New York: Tor, 2019, in which continues the struggles with an apparent resolution at the end.

}, keywords = {Male author, Northern Ireland author}, author = {Ian [Neil] McDonald (b. 1960)} } @booklet {8102, title = {Lagoon}, year = {2014}, month = {2014}, publisher = {Hodder \& Stoughton}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Fantasy is central to the novel, but it is set in the dystopia of contemporary Lagos, Nigeria, but hope is held out for a eutopia of collective identity brought about by a visitor from space. The author says that Lagos is the Portuguese for lagoon.

}, keywords = {African American author, Female author}, author = {Nnedi[mma Nkemdili] Okorafor (b. 1974)} } @booklet {8170, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Land of Two Suns{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Embracing Utopian Horizons}, year = {2014}, month = {2014}, pages = {36-39}, publisher = {Filozofski fakultet u Novum Sadu}, address = {Novi Sad, Serbia}, abstract = {

Brief eutopia that heals a disaffected woman from our time by letting her know that someplace good, where they do not even know\ the word misery, exists.

}, keywords = {Female author, Serbian author}, author = {Katarina Markovi{\'c}}, editor = {Zorica {\DH}ergovi{\'c}-Joksimovi{\'c}} } @booklet {8089, title = {Last Days in Eden}, year = {2014}, month = {2014}, publisher = {Luath Press}, address = {Edinburgh, Scot.}, abstract = {

Dystopia and the revolution that overthrows it. The dystopia is set in a future that has been transformed by climate change.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Ann Kelley (b. 1941)} } @booklet {8076, title = {The Last Supper}, year = {2014}, month = {2014}, publisher = {Hobbes End Publishing}, address = {Aubrey, TX}, abstract = {

Dystopia that follows a disaster. In the dystopia everyone must pass an annual trial called \“Justification;\” those who fail are killed. The book includes an \“Introduction\” (i-xii) by Vincent Hobbes that discusses the characteristics of dystopias.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Allison M. Dickson} } @booklet {9192, title = {Leaving Ashwood}, year = {2014}, month = {2014}, publisher = {North Star Press of St. Cloud}, address = {Saint Cloud, MN}, abstract = {

Sequel to 2010 and 2012 Kraack. In this volume, the protagonists become involved in the process of trying to reestablish democracy in the U.S.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Cynthia Kraack} } @booklet {8189, title = {"Lemuria"}, howpublished = {Embracing Utopian Horizons}, year = {2014}, month = {2014}, pages = {18-20}, publisher = {Filozofski fakultet u Novum Sadu}, address = {Novi Sad, Serbia}, abstract = {

Brief eutopia based on a decentralized political system and education.

}, keywords = {Female author, Serbian author}, author = {Teovanovi{\'c}, Milica}, editor = {Zorica {\DH}ergovi{\'c}-Joksimovi{\'c}} } @booklet {8658, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Lights On Water{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The Short Anthology: Fiction From Photography. The First Issue}, year = {2014}, note = {

Rpt. in his A Killing in the Sun (Yeoville, Johannesburg, South Africa: Black Letter Media, 2014), 86-106.

}, month = {[2014]}, pages = {33-52}, publisher = {Ptd. by Ditto Press}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia in which everyone lives in an enclosed city. The protagonist, an artist, is given permission to go outside to paint and uses the opportunity to create a subversive work showing his daughter happily swimming with other happy people.

}, keywords = {Male author, Ugandan author}, author = {Dilman Dila (b. 1977)}, editor = {Will Martin and Kat Phan} } @booklet {8086, title = {The Little Green Book of Chairman Rahma}, year = {2014}, month = {2014}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia with a green agenda.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Brian [Patrick] Herbert (b. 1947)} } @booklet {9333, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Little Red Suit{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Eat the Sky, Drink the Ocean}, year = {2014}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Margaret K. McElderry Books, 2017), 29-45.\ 

}, month = {2014}, pages = {19-35}, publisher = {Young Zubaan}, address = {New Delhi, India}, abstract = {

Re-telling of Little Red Riding Hood as a climate-change dystopia in which the few remaining people in Sydney, Australia, now an island, live underground.\ 

}, keywords = {Australian author, Female author}, author = {Justine Larbalestier (b. 1967)}, editor = {Kirsty Murray (b. 1960) and Payal Dhar and Anita Roy} } @booklet {10558, title = {Lockstep}, year = {2014}, month = {2014}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The novel is set in a far-future, galaxy-spanning civilization in which hibernation leads to extremely long lives, and the story focuses on the tyrant who controls the system and his brother, who awakes from an immensely long hibernation.\ 

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {Karl Schroeder (b. 1962)} } @booklet {10388, title = {The Long Way to a Small Angry Planet}, year = {2014}, note = {

Rpt. London: Hodder \& Stoughton, 2015. U.S. ed. New York: Harper Voyager, 2015.\ 

}, month = {2014}, publisher = {Author}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

First volume of a series set in a future with many species, including AIs, interacting with each other in mundane, everyday life activities like shopping for food and working together, as well as developing animosities, friendships, and love. The future depicted has both dystopian and eutopian elements with the author stressing the positive more than the negative. The second volume A Closed and Common Orbit. London: Hodder \& Stoughton, 2016. U.S. ed. New York: Harper Voyage, 2016 is mostly about personal relations, and love in particular, with a main character on the Asperger\’s/Autism spectrum. The third volume Record of a Spaceborn Few. London: Hodder \& Stoughton, 2018. U.S. ed. New York: Harper Voyager, 2018 is the history of those who left the decaying Earth and stayed together as a fleet of ships, known as the Exodus Fleet, as it faces a crisis. The fourth volume The Galaxy, and the Ground Within. London: Hodder \& Stoughton, 2018. U.S. ed. New York: Harper Voyager, 2018 focuses on cultural differences among various aliens temporarily trapped on a transit planet.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Becky [Rebecca Marie] Chambers (b. 1985)} } @booklet {8164, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Lost Colony of Roanoke"}, howpublished = {Embracing Utopian Horizons}, year = {2014}, month = {2014}, pages = {13-17}, publisher = {Filozofski fakultet u Novum Sadu}, address = {Novi Sad, Serbia}, abstract = {

Brief community-oriented eutopia where decisions are made collectively, and mutual aid is the norm.

}, keywords = {Female author, Serbian author}, author = {Daniela Hodak}, editor = {Zorica {\DH}ergovi{\'c}-Joksimovi{\'c}} } @booklet {11669, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Lost Emotion{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Arc. 2.1 Exit Strategies}, volume = {2.1}, year = {2014}, month = {January 2014}, abstract = {

Corporate ownership of emotions, which they use primarily in advertising.

}, keywords = {Male author}, issn = {2049-5870}, author = {Adrian Ellis}, editor = {Sumit Paul-Choudhury} } @booklet {11796, title = {A Lovely Way to Burn}, year = {2014}, month = {2014}, publisher = {John Murray}, address = {London}, abstract = {

First volume of the Plague Times Trilogy. This volume depicts the initial impact of a pandemic that kills almost everyone. It was read on BBC Radio 4\’s Book at Bedtime. In Death is a Welcome Space. London: John Murray, 2015, the second volume, two men escape from prison and make their way through the devastated country. No Dominion. London: John Murray, 2017, the third volume, takes place seven years later and involves the protagonist of the second volume leaving the relative safety of Orkney and return to the post-apocalyptic mainland.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Female author, Scottish author}, isbn = {9781848546516 }, author = {Louise Welsh (b. 1965)} } @booklet {8256, title = {The Last President}, year = {2013}, month = {2013}, publisher = {Ace Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Sequel to 2010 and 2012 Barnes in which an effort is being made to bring the remnants of the U.S. back together under a President and Congress.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {John [Allen] Barnes (b. 1957)} } @booklet {8586, title = {The Last Reader}, year = {2013}, month = {2013}, publisher = {Global Activision Limited. EBook}, address = {Melbourne, Vic, Australia}, abstract = {

Dystopia with a deep divide between rich and poor as seen by a poor boy who wants to learn how to read.\ 2013 Norwood,\ Perfectible Animals, is set in the same future.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Thomas Norwood} } @booklet {11456, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Later His Ghost{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {New Statesman}, year = {2013}, note = {

Also online illus. Matt Saunders and Handsome Frank. https://www.newstatesman.com/culture/2014/01/then-later-his-ghost Rpt. in her Madame Zero. 9 Stories (London: Faber and Faber, 2017), 99-119. US ed (New York: Custom House/Harper Collins, 2017), 99-119.

}, month = {December 20, 2013-January 9, 2014}, pages = {85-89}, abstract = {

Climate change dystopia.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, isbn = {9780062657060}, issn = {1364-7431 }, url = {https://www.newstatesman.com/culture/2014/01/then-later-his-ghost}, author = {Sarah Hall (b. 1974)} } @booklet {10452, title = {"Liquid Loyalty"}, howpublished = {The Future Fire: Social Political \& Speculative Cyber-Fiction}, volume = {no. 26}, year = {2013}, note = {

Rpt. without the illus. in Heiresses of Russ 2014: The Year\’s Best Lesbian Speculative Fiction. Ed. Melissa Scott and Steve Berman (Maple Shade, NJ: Lethe Press, 2014), 57-70.\ 

}, month = {2013}, pages = {21-33}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which drugs have been developed so that each person is completely devoted to one and only one other person.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, issn = {1746-1839}, url = {http://futurefire.net/2013.26/fiction/liquidloyalty.html}, author = {Redfern Jon Barrett} } @booklet {10718, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Living in the Singularity{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Bewildering Stories}, volume = {no. 550}, year = {2013}, note = {

Rpt. in Altered States: A Cyberpunk Sci-Fi Anthology. Ed. Roy C. Booth and Jorge Salgado-Reyes (London: Indie Authors Press, 2014), 33-45.\ 

}, month = {November 2013}, pages = {EJournal}, abstract = {

A corporation announces that, in exchange for all their possessions, it can upload a person\’s consciousness into a supercomputer where they will be able to live happily ever after. Millions choose to do so. The story focuses on an individual who resists but finally decides to join his wife.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {978-0-9571130-4-6 }, url = {http://www.bewilderingstories.com/issue550/singularity1.html; http://www.bewilderingstories.com/issue550/singularity2.html; http://www.bewilderingstories.com/issue550/singularity3.html}, author = {Tom Borthwick} } @booklet {8301, title = {Lone Star Daybreak}, year = {2013}, month = {2013}, publisher = {Tate Publishing \& Enterprises}, address = {Mustang, OK}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which political polarization leads Texas to secede and a civil war follows with both sides using nuclear weapons.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Erik L. Larson} } @booklet {8932, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Long Indeed We Do Live. . .{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Looking Landwards: Stories Commemorating the 75th Anniversary of the Institute of Agricultural Engineers}, year = {2013}, month = {2013}, pages = {179-98}, publisher = {NewCon Press in Association with The Institute of Agricultural Engineers}, address = {[Weston, Eng]}, abstract = {

In a future after an undescribed environmental catastrophe, society has developed inside domes with different arbors devoted to different trees. Presented mostly positively. While there is much fantasy in the story, it appears that human life has also adapted to life outside the domes and that here is communication between life outside and the trees inside.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Storm Constantine (1956-2021)}, editor = {Ian [George] Whates (b. 1959)} } @booklet {8309, title = {Looking Backward: 2050-2013}, year = {2013}, month = {2013}, publisher = {CreateSpace}, address = {North Charleston, SC}, abstract = {

The current situation rapidly deteriorates into a dystopia after Sarah Palin (b. 1964) supported by a Congress dominated by the far-right, was elected President in 2020. The U.S. economy collapses. As the price for bailing out the U.S., other countries insisted on the establishment of a world government (the United States of the World) and nation-states disappear. Presented as if a history of the period. Includes biographies of a number of recent and current political figures, some projected into the future.

}, keywords = {Indian author, Male author, US author}, author = {Ravi Morey} } @booklet {8313, title = {Looking Toward Eden}, year = {2013}, month = {2013}, publisher = {CreateSpace}, address = {[North Charleston, SC]}, abstract = {

Dystopia and an emerging eutopia. As the U.S. faces collapse as a result of liberal policies, a successful secessionist movement develops in the central U.S. which intends to institute conservative policies and return to the U.S. Constitution.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Pellman, Terry} } @booklet {8273, title = {"Lotus"}, howpublished = {We See a Different Frontier: A Postcolonial Speculative Fiction Anthology}, year = {2013}, month = {2013}, pages = {89-101}, publisher = {Futurefire.net Publishing}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which much of the world has been inundated by melting ice caps and tsunamis produced by earthquakes and most people life on boats and scavenge from half-submerged buildings.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Female author, Singaporean author, Transgender author}, author = {Joyce Chng}, editor = {Fabio Fernandes and Djibril al-Ayad} } @booklet {8651, title = {Love in the Time of Global Warming}, year = {2013}, month = {2013}, publisher = {Christy Ottaviano Books Henry Holt and Co. }, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult dystopia in which a young girl searches for her family after a devastating earthquake and discovers her own strength. Much fantasy. References throughout to Homer\’s Odyssey.

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Francesca Lia Block (b. 1962)} } @booklet {8367, title = {The Last Diplomat}, year = {2012}, month = {2012}, publisher = {Don F. Marrs}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which nuclear weapons are detonated in U.S. cities and China invades.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Don [F.] Marrs} } @booklet {9900, title = {"The Last Judgment"}, howpublished = {Asimov{\textquoteright}s Science Fiction}, volume = {36.4\&5 (435 \& 436)}, year = {2012}, note = {

Rpt. in his The Promise of Space and Other Stories ([New York]: Prime Books, 2018), 300-75.

}, month = {2012}, pages = {10-49}, abstract = {

This is framed as a detective story in a future in which aliens have removed all men from the planet and women are struggling to adjust. Some of the aliens are having second thoughts, but this theme is not developed. His \“Men Are Trouble.\” Asimov\’s Science Fiction 28.6 (341) (June 2004): 104-35\ is set in the same future and has the same protagonist, Fay Hardaway, a private detective. Compare to Philip Wylie, The Disappearance (1951).

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {1065-6298 }, author = {James Patrick Kelly (b. 1951)} } @booklet {8355, title = {Liberty Gulch: Part One}, year = {2012}, month = {2012}, publisher = {CreateSpace}, address = {[North Charleston, SC]}, abstract = {

Survivalist dystopia after the collapse of the U.S. economy and the government of what it calls large farms and food camps that are in fact concentration camps.\ Continued in his\ Liberty Rekindled. Part Two. [North Charleston, SC: CreateSpace, 2013], in which a small group at one of the camps tries to reestablish some liberty.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {A. G. Fredericks} } @booklet {6544, title = {"Liberty{\textquoteright}s Daughter"}, howpublished = {The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction }, volume = {122.5 \& 6 (701) }, year = {2012}, month = {May/June 2012}, pages = {5-31}, abstract = {

Flawed libertarian utopia that has indentured labor\ and is much more authoritarian than it pretends to be. It is a seastead, a set of man-made islands off the west coast of the U.S. See also 2012 Kiritzer, \“High Stakes,\” 2013 and 2014 Kritzer, and 2015 Kritzer (2).\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {00024-984X }, author = {Kritzer, Naomi} } @booklet {10607, title = {{\textquotedblleft}LIMBs{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Tin House}, volume = {no. 51}, year = {2012}, note = {

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

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

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

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Julia Elliott (b. 1968)} } @booklet {6567, title = {"Lips \& Teeth"}, howpublished = {Interzone}, volume = {no. 239 }, year = {2012}, month = {March-April 2012}, pages = {12-17}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a future North Korea.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Jon Wallace} } @booklet {8364, title = {"Little Hawk"}, howpublished = {Cifiscape Vol. II. The Twin Cities}, year = {2012}, month = {2012}, pages = {159-80}, publisher = {Onyk Neon Press}, address = {[Hillsboro, OR]}, abstract = {

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

}, keywords = {Female author, Male author}, author = {Erica Lindquist and Aron Christensen}, editor = {Chastity West and Kit Martin and Jeffrey Martin and Pat Edmonson and Hannah Byrns-Enoch and Crystal Boyd} } @booklet {6529, title = {Looking Backward: 2162-2012: A View from a Future Libertarian Republic}, volume = {Rev. ed.}, year = {2012}, month = {3012}, publisher = {[CreateSpace]}, address = {[Scotts Valley, CA]}, abstract = {

Libertarian eutopia in which the U.S. has been reorganized into a number of independent nations with a focus on the Free States of America located in the middle west and mountain region. Julian West, the protagonist of 1888 Bellamy lives there.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Beth Cody} } @booklet {6534, title = {The Lost Code. Book One of the Atlanteans}, year = {2012}, month = {2012}, publisher = {Katherine Tegen Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

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

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Emerson, Kevin} } @booklet {8381, title = {Lost Everything}, year = {2012}, month = {2012}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Post-catastrophe dystopia in which war has ravaged the countryside along the Susquehanna River and individuals are struggling to survive and reconnect.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Brian Francis Slattery (b. 1975)} } @booklet {10894, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Last Day of Work{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The Tomorrow Project: Bestselling Authors Describe Daily Life in the Future}, year = {2011}, month = {2011}, pages = {9-17}, publisher = {Intel}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

The story is told by the last man who will ever have to work, with even robots no longer needed.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {978-1934053423}, author = {Douglas Rushkoff (b. 1961)}, editor = {[Brian David] [Johnson]} } @booklet {8403, title = {The Last Election}, year = {2011}, month = {2011}, publisher = {CreateSpace}, address = {[North Charleston, SC]}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia in the U.S. in which an incumbent president sets out to literally eliminate the opposition.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Kevin [C.] Carrigan} } @booklet {6453, title = {"Last of the Guerrilla Gardeners: Seeding a Revolution"}, howpublished = {Nature }, volume = {469.7330 }, year = {2011}, note = {

\ Rpt. without the subtitle or the illustration in his\ Disturbed Universes\ ([Weston, Eng.: NewCon Press, 2016), 21-23; and in the Edinburgh International Science Festival Special Edition of Shoreline of Infinity, no. 11\½ (Spring 2018): 114-17.

}, month = {January 20, 2011}, pages = {438}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which commercial interests with the support of the police are destroying all plants and seeds not owned by companies. The story is continued in \“Seed Dealer.\” Disturbed Universes ([Weston], Eng.: NewCon Press, 2016), 25-36.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {David L. Clements} } @booklet {6495, title = {The Leftovers}, year = {2011}, month = {2011}, publisher = {St. Martin{\textquoteright}s Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Life after the Rapture (see 1 Corinthians 15:52\ and\ 1 Thessalonians 4: 15-17) with some struggling to create a good society, various religious fanatics, and some of the expected dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Tom [Thomas R.] Perrotta (b. 1961)} } @booklet {6478, title = {Legend}, year = {2011}, month = {2011}, publisher = {G. P. Putnam{\textquoteright}s Sons}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult dystopia with the U.S. split into warring nations. The second volume in the series, Prodigy. A Legend Novel. New York: G.P. Putnam\’s Sons, 2013 continues the same themes with the protagonists having to choose sides. The third volume, Champion. A Legend Novel. New York: G.P. Putnam\’s Sons, 2013 is mostly adventure and intrigue but ends with the dystopia improved. The fourth volume and final volume is Rebel: A Legend Novel. New York: Roaring Brook Press/Macmillan, 2019. It is set in Antarctica and focuses on the three main characters from the earlier volumes, but they are older and is told from the points-of-view of two of them. A prequel to the series, Life Before Legend. New York: New York: G. P. Putnam\’s Sons, 2013 was published only as an ebook. There is a graphic novel series: Legend. The Graphic Novel. Adapted by Leigh Dragoon (b. 1976). Illus. Kaari. New York: G.P. Putnam\’s Sons, 2015; Prodigy. The Graphic Novel. Adapted by Leigh Dragoon (b. 1976). Illus. Kaari. New York: G.P. Putnam\’s Sons, 2016; and Champion. The Graphic Novel. Adapted by Leigh Dragoon (b. 1976). Illus. Kaari. New York: G.P. Putnam\’s Sons, 2017.

}, keywords = {Chinese-American author, Female author, US author}, author = {Marie Lu (b. 1984)} } @booklet {6340, title = {The Last Christian. A Novel}, year = {2010}, month = {2010}, publisher = {WaterBrook Press}, address = {Colorado Springs, CO}, abstract = {

Dystopia set in 2088 when the U.S. is no longer Christian and the struggle to re-introduce it.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {David Gregory} } @booklet {6321, title = {"Last Flight to West Bay"}, howpublished = {Dark Spires}, year = {2010}, month = {2010}, pages = {159-73}, publisher = {Wizard{\textquoteright}s Tower Press}, address = {[England]}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a collapsed ecosystem in an overpopulated world.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Roz Clarke}, editor = {Colin Harvey} } @booklet {9676, title = {The Last Trumpet Project. A Novel}, year = {2010}, month = {2010}, pages = {510 pp.}, publisher = {[lulu.com]}, address = {[Middletown, DE]}, abstract = {

In a future in which a significant part of the population has been uploaded into computers and live their lives in alternative realities, both religion and government are set upon keeping power and destroying the hidden computer banks.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Kevin MacArdry} } @booklet {9022, title = {The Legacy}, year = {2010}, month = {2010}, publisher = {Bloomsbury}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Fourth volume in a series; see 2007 and 2008 Malley. See also 2010 Malley, The Returners. In this volume very few children are being born and a plague is devastating the population.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Gemma Malley} } @booklet {9251, title = {Liberal Utopianism Is Destroying the United States: Liberal Secularism Is Destroying Our Christian Values}, year = {2010}, month = {2010}, publisher = {Xulon}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

The U.S. in 2010 as a dystopia as a resulting from liberal policies and liberalisms perceived attack on Christianity. Obama is said to be the forerunner of the coming of the Anti-Christ. Presented as non-fiction.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Charles Keitz (b. 1954)} } @booklet {6417, title = {"Libertarian Russia"}, howpublished = {Asimov{\textquoteright}s Science Fiction }, volume = {34.12 (419)}, year = {2010}, note = {

Rpt. in The Year\’s Best Science Fiction: Twentieth-Eighth Annual Collection. Ed. Gardner Dozois (New York: St. Martin\’s Griffin, 2011), 468-76 with an editor\’s introduction on 468.; and in his Not So Much, Said the Cat (San Francisco, CA: Tachyon, 2016), 182-94.\ 

}, month = {December 2010}, pages = {28-34}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a future depopulated Russia that keeps rigid control of population centers seen through the eyes of someone who hopes to find a libertarian Russia but fails.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {1065-6298}, author = {Michael [J{\"u}rgen] Swanwick (b. 1950)} } @booklet {6326, title = {"Life in the Anthropocene"}, howpublished = {The Mammoth Book of Apocalyptic SF}, year = {2010}, note = {

Rpt. in Cyberpunk: Stories of Hardware, Software, Wetware, Revolution and Evolution. Ed. Victoria Blake (Portland, OR: Underhand Press, 2013), 407-422.

}, month = {2010}, pages = {404-420}, publisher = {Constable/Robinson}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Post-catastrophe society in which all humans live above or below the 45th parallel. Appears to be a high tech eutopia, but it is absolutely dependent on a fragile power supply. Extreme limits on uses of fossil fuels, so very little travel.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Paul [Gerard] Di Filippo (b. 1954)}, editor = {Mike [Michael Raymond Donald] Ashley} } @booklet {6337, title = {The Limping Man}, year = {2010}, month = {2010}, publisher = {Puffin Books}, address = {Rosedale, New Zealand}, abstract = {

Third volume in a series of related young adult dystopias. This volume sees the rise of a dictator in the city who controls his followers with an exceptionally strong mental control. He is ultimately defeated and the peaceful society that had been growing in the countryside is saved. See also 2007 and 2008 Gee.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {Maurice [Gough] Gee (b. 1931)} } @booklet {6343, title = {The Line}, year = {2010}, month = {2010}, publisher = {Dial Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult dystopia in which there is a line at the border of the Unified States that is not to be crossed.\ See also 2011 and 2013 Hall.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Teri Hall} } @booklet {6359, title = {Little Brother{\textquoteright}s World}, year = {2010}, month = {2010}, publisher = {Fantastic Books}, address = {Brooklyn, NY}, abstract = {

Dystopia of extreme rich poor divisions.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {T[homas] Jackson King Jr. (b. 1948)} } @booklet {9037, title = {"The Long Night"}, howpublished = {Dark Tomorrows}, year = {2010}, note = {

Rpt. in Dark Tomorrows. 2nd ed. Ed. J[effrey] L. Bryan (Lexington, KY: CreateSpace, 2011), 202-17.\ 

}, month = {2010}, pages = {88-102}, publisher = {JLBryanbooks.com}, address = {[Atlanta, GA]}, abstract = {

Essentially a horror story, but the background is a religious dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {J[effrey] L. Bryan} } @booklet {6270, title = {The Last Wild Witch}, year = {2009}, month = {2009}, publisher = {Mother Tongue Ink}, address = {Escatada, OR}, abstract = {

Children\&$\#$39;s book describing a \"perfect\" over-organized town improved by a bit of natural wildness.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {[Miriam] [Simos] (b. 1951)} } @booklet {6268, title = {"The Last Word. Writer{\textquoteright}s Block"}, howpublished = {RSA Journal }, volume = {155.5537 }, year = {2009}, note = {

An extract was published as \“Ministry of Fiction.\” The Guardian Review (March 4, 2009): 5.

}, month = {Spring 2009}, pages = {50}, abstract = {

Dystopian satire in which the Ministry of Fiction controls the production of fiction. Writers work in offices at desks set in long rows and produce fiction on topics they are set.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Will[iam Woodward] Self (b. 1961)} } @booklet {6192, title = {The Light of Day}, year = {2009}, month = {2009}, publisher = {Booksurge}, address = {[Charleston, SC]}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which the environmental movement has gained power throughout the world and forced everyone underground as a means of protecting nature. An enclave of survivalists continues to live above ground, fight back, and win.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {James Byrd} } @booklet {6283, title = {"Long Stay"}, howpublished = {The Solaris Book of New Science Fiction Volume Three}, year = {2009}, note = {

\ Rpt. in his\ The 1000 Year Reich and Other Stories\ ([Weston], Eng.: NewCon Press, 2016), 189-99 with an author\’s note on 199.\ 

}, month = {2009}, pages = {337-60}, publisher = {Solaris}, address = {Nottingham, Eng.}, abstract = {

Dystopia. The Luton-Stansted car park stretches for twenty-six miles between the two airports with crops growing among the cars. The story focuses on people who got stuck in the car park and have ended up living there permanently.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Ian Watson (b. 1943)}, editor = {George Mann} } @booklet {6251, title = {"Lost in sun and silence: The Golden Age of Communications"}, howpublished = {Nature }, volume = {457.7233 }, year = {2009}, month = {February 26, 2009}, pages = {1174}, abstract = {

Dystopia. In a world of constant connectivity, a man tries to escape to silence.

}, keywords = {Italian author, Male author}, author = {Vincenzo Palermo} } @booklet {8633, title = {Lunar Braceros 2125-2148}, year = {2009}, month = {2009}, publisher = {Calaca Press}, address = {National City, CA}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which the U.S. has fragmented, and the parts are under corporate control. The poor and minorities are held in enclosed reservations with some sent to the moon to help bury nuclear and toxic waste because there is no longer space on Earth. The novel follows one family on Earth and on the moon.

}, keywords = {Chicana author}, author = {Rosaura S{\'a}nchez and Pita, Beatrice} } @booklet {6136, title = {"The Last Actor"}, howpublished = {Future Americas}, year = {2008}, month = {2008}, pages = {188-99}, publisher = {DAW Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia brought about by poor quality education and the growth of mass culture.

}, keywords = {Female author, Male author, US author}, author = {Mike [Michael Diamond] Resnick (1942-2020) and Linda L. Donahue}, editor = {John Helfers and Martin H[arry] Greenberg (1941-2011)} } @booklet {6037, title = {Leaving Fortusa: A Novel in Ten Episodes}, year = {2008}, note = {

Parts originally published as \"The Hard Stuff.\" Nova Scotia: New Scottish Speculative Fiction. Ed. Neil Williamson and Andrew J. Wilson (Edinburgh, Scot.: Crescent Press, 2005), 229-70; \"Q.\" Sci-Fiction (2004) [No longer available online]; \"The Unforbidden Playground.\"\ Postscripts, no. 9\ (Winter 2006): 54-87; and \"The Most Marvelous Story in the Whole Wide World.\"\ Whispers of Wickedness\ [No longer available online].

}, month = {2008}, publisher = {Norilana Books}, address = {Winnetka, CA}, abstract = {

Dystopia in ten loosely related chapters. The epigrams to each chapter suggest a connection to the presidency of George W. Bush (2001-09), but much of the action is set in a variety of futures of growing violence and authoritarian governance. There is some suggestion that in the future of the future a better society will be reestablished.

}, keywords = {Male author, Scottish author}, author = {[Paul le Page] [Barnett] (1949-2020)} } @booklet {6048, title = {"Let Their People Go: The Left Left Behind"}, howpublished = {Postscripts}, volume = {no. 15 }, year = {2008}, note = {

Rpt. as \“The Left Left Behind: \‘Let Their People Go!\’\” In his The Left Left Behind: \‘Let Their People Go!\’ plus Special Relativity and \‘Fried Green Tomatoes\’ Outspoken Interview (Oakland, CA: PM Press, 2009), 11-48.\ 

}, month = {Summer 2008}, pages = {144-63}, abstract = {

Satire on the Left Behind series (see 1995 LaHaye and Jenkins) in which the capitalists, conservatives, and religious bigots \ are removed, which allows the remaining people to begin to create a cooperative, world-wide eutopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Terry [Ballantine] Bisson (1942-2024)} } @booklet {8617, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Letter From Utopia{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Studies in Ethics, Law and Technology [An online journal]}, volume = {2.1}, year = {2008}, month = {2008}, pages = {Article 6}, abstract = {

A letter from a posthuman future. Very general and mostly on the problems of the present.

}, keywords = {Male author, Swedish author, UK author}, url = {http://www.fhi.ox.ac.uk/letters-from-utopia.pdf. Accessed December 4, 2015.}, author = {Nick Bostrom (b. 1973)} } @booklet {6154, title = {Liberation: Being the Adventures of the Slick Six After the Collapse of the United States of America}, year = {2008}, month = {2008}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Humorous dystopia of the economic collapse of the U.S.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Brian Francis Slattery (b. 1975)} } @booklet {9332, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Life Without Crows{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Life Without Crows and Other Stories }, year = {2008}, note = {

Originally published in\ Fusion Fragment. Ed. Cavan Terrill (2008), an on line journal that is no longer available.

}, month = {2010}, pages = {13-24}, publisher = {Hadley Rille Books}, address = {Overland Park, KS}, abstract = {

Post-catastrophe (disease/pandemic) dystopia as seen through the eyes of one of a group of survivors who have lived an isolated life in the mountains for hundreds of years and perceive it as a good life.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Gerri Leen} } @booklet {6073, title = {Little Brother}, year = {2008}, note = {

Rpt. in Little Brother \& Homeland (New York: Tor/Tom Doherty Associates, 2020), 11-317, with an \“Introduction\” by Edward Snowden (7-9).

}, month = {2008}, publisher = {Tor Teen}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult dystopia of U.S. Home Security targeting San Francisco because the administration sees it as too liberal. Home Security is fought by a group of teenage hackers with some success and ends with the administration freeing those responsible and the hackers continuing their opposition. The title refers to \“Big Brother\” in George Orwell\’s Nineteen Eighty-Four. First volume in a loosely connected series; see also his Homeland (2013) and Attack Surface (2020).\ A related novella is his \“Lawful Interception.\” Illus. Yuko Shimizu. Tor.com. http://www.tor.com/stories/2013/08/lawful-interception.\ 

}, keywords = {Canadian author, English author, Male author}, isbn = {9780765319852 978-1-250-77458-3}, author = {Cory [Efram] Doctorow (b. 1971)} } @booklet {6148, title = {Looking for Mr Piggy-Wig}, year = {2008}, month = {2008}, publisher = {Macmillan}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia as background to a detective story. After the Second Battle of Britain, Britain is poor and has rationing, and the world is experiencing the effects of severe global warming.

}, keywords = {Male author, Welsh author}, author = {Andy [Andrew] Secombe (b. 1953)} } @booklet {6067, title = {"Lost Arts"}, howpublished = {Dreaming Again}, year = {2008}, month = {2008}, pages = {299-317, with an "Afterword" (317-18).}, publisher = {HarperCollins Australia}, address = {Sydney, NSW, Australia}, abstract = {

Technological eutopia on a planet colony of Earth that is benevolently controlled by Artificial Intelligences. The focus of the story is how to deal with aberrant behavior in a eutopia.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Stephen Dedman (b. 1959)}, editor = {Jack [Mayo] Dann (b. 1945)} } @booklet {9416, title = {The Lost Colours of the Chameleon}, year = {2008}, month = {2008}, pages = {326 pp.}, publisher = {Picador Africa}, address = {Johannesburg, South Africa}, abstract = {

The novel is set in the fictitious country, Bangula, which was supposed to become a eutopia but is faced with all the usual problems of an ex-colony.\ Satire on the politics of developing nations set on an island after the founder, who had a vision of transforming the lives of the inhabitants, dies.

}, keywords = {Male author, South African author}, isbn = {978-1-77010-0848 }, author = {Mandla Langa (b. 1950)} } @booklet {6081, title = {"Lost Continent"}, howpublished = {The Starry Rift: Tales of New Tomorrows. An Original Science Fiction Anthology}, year = {2008}, note = {

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

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

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

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Greg[ory Mark] Egan (b. 1961)}, editor = {Jonathan Strahan (b. 1964)} } @booklet {6147, title = {Love in the Time of Fridges}, year = {2008}, month = {2008}, publisher = {Bantam Spectra}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a future Seattle, Washington, a walled city, that has become obsessed with health and safety. Considerable humor. There are refrigerators hoping to escape to Mexico where electric goods have rights, and they help the\ protagonist to bring freedom to Seattle. See also 2007 Scott.

}, keywords = {Male author, UK author}, author = {Tim Scott (b. 1962)} } @booklet {5986, title = {Land of the Headless: A Simple Story}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, publisher = {Gollancz}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia of religious fundamentalism.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Adam [Charles] Roberts (b. 1965)} } @booklet {5933, title = {"The Last American"}, howpublished = {Foundation: The International Review of Science Fiction }, volume = {36.100 }, year = {2007}, note = {

Rpt. in his\ The Baum Plan for Financial Independence and Other Stories\ (Easthampton, MA: Small Beer Press, 2008), 241-57.

}, month = {Summer 2007}, pages = {87-100}, abstract = {

Dystopia that follows the history of one man who is instrumental in creating the political and religious system that led to the collapse of the world economy and ecosystem and the end of the human race. Written from the perspective of posthumans.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {John [Joseph Vincent] Kessel (b. 1950)} } @booklet {5990, title = {Last Light}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, publisher = {Orion}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The dystopia brought about by halting global oil production followed by economic and social collapse. See also 2010 Scarrow.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Alex Scarrow (b. 1966)} } @booklet {5899, title = {Let Not the Left (Fifth Episode of Enemies of Society)}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, publisher = {AuthorHouse}, address = {Bloomington, IN}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Fifth of a six volume series. All volumes are concerned with violent conflict between factions, and this volume continues the buildup to war and the war. See also 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006, and 2007 Morituri.

}, keywords = {Male author, UK author}, author = {John David (b. 1955)} } @booklet {6009, title = {Looking Glass}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, publisher = {Flying Pen Press}, address = {Denver, CO}, abstract = {

Cyberpunk dystopia in which a paraplegic can live and work effectively in a virtual world but is still vulnerable there to the usual corporate and governmental plots.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {James R. Strickland} } @booklet {5972, title = {The Lost Art}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, publisher = {David Fickling Books}, address = {Oxford, Eng.}, abstract = {

Young adult post-catastrophe religious dystopia. The central focus of the novel is on a young man who is a member of a religious order that guards the scientific knowledge of the past to keep it from being misused again.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Simon Morden} } @booklet {9188, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Lost Boy: A Reporter at Large{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Eclipse One}, year = {2007}, note = {

Rpt. in her\ After the Apocalypse. Stories (Easthampton, MA: Small Beer Press, 2011), 87-99.\ 

}, month = {2007}, pages = {51-61}, publisher = {Night Shade Books}, address = {San Francisco, CA}, abstract = {

Post-catastrophe dystopia following a nuclear attack on Baltimore. The story is about a boy who lost his memory.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Maureen F. McHugh (b. 1959)}, editor = {Jonathan Stahan} } @booklet {5895, title = {"Love, American Style, 2033"}, howpublished = {2033: The Future of Misbehavior. Interplanetary Dating, Madame President, Socialized Plastic Surgery, and Other Good News from the Future}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, pages = {174-85}, publisher = {Chronicle Books}, address = {San Francisco, CA}, abstract = {

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

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Darcy Cosper}, editor = {The Editors of Nerve.com Instigated by Svedka [a vodka]} } @booklet {5803, title = {The Last Mortal Man. Book One of the Deathless}, year = {2006}, month = {2006}, publisher = {Roc}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia. The Deathless are those who have been turned into nanobiology and are presumably immortal but the technology is being attacked.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Syne Mitchell (b. 1970)} } @booklet {5748, title = {"The Last Straw"}, howpublished = {Glorifying Terrorism: An Anthology of Original Science Fiction}, year = {2006}, month = {2006}, pages = {163-76}, publisher = {Rackstraw Press}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Very near future authoritarian Britain and the terrorist response.

}, keywords = {Male author, Scottish author}, author = {Hal Duncan (b. 1971)}, editor = {Farah Mendlesohn} } @booklet {5746, title = {"Lettuce"}, howpublished = {Paraspheres: Extending Beyond the Spheres of Literary and Genre Fiction: Fabulist and New Wave Fabulist Stories}, year = {2006}, note = {

Rpt. in Ducornet,\ The One Marvelous Thing. Decorated by T[om] Motley\ (Champaign, IL: Dalkey Archive Press, 2008), 123-25.

}, month = {2006}, pages = {238-39}, publisher = {Omnidawn Publishing}, address = {Richmond, CA}, abstract = {

Brief surrealistic dystopia.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Rikki Ducornet (b. 1943)}, editor = {Rusty Morrison and Ken Keegan} } @booklet {5884, title = {"The Library"}, howpublished = {Match to Flame: The Fictional Paths to Fahrenheit 451}, year = {2006}, note = {

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

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

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

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Ray[mond Douglas] Bradbury (1920-2012)}, editor = {Donn Albright and Jon[athan R.] Eller} } @booklet {5852, title = {"The Library of Pi"}, howpublished = {Polyphony 6}, year = {2006}, month = {2006}, pages = {1-16}, publisher = {Wheatland Press}, address = {Wilsonville, OR}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a police state.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Ray Vukcevich (b. 1946)}, editor = {Deborah Layne and Jay [Joseph Edward] Lake [Jr.] (1964-2014)} } @booklet {5814, title = {Life As We Knew It}, year = {2006}, month = {2006}, publisher = {Harcourt}, address = {Orlando, FL}, abstract = {

First volume of the Young Adult Last Survivor series. In this volume, a meteor hits the moon pushing it closer to the Earth and causing widespread destruction on the Earth. The novel follows a young woman\&$\#$39;s struggle to survive. The second volume, The Dead and the Gone. New York: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2008, moves the action to New York City but continues the same themes. The third volume, This World We Live In. New York: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2010 continues the same setting and themes as the first volume.\ In the fourth volume, The Shade of the Moon. Boston, MA: Harcourt/Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2013, the protagonist is living in a safe community in Pennsylvania, but his ability to do so depends on his continued success at soccer and obeying the strict rules of the community. He violates the rules by falling in love.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Susan Beth Pfeffer (b. 1948)} } @booklet {6314, title = {"Long After Midnight"}, howpublished = {Match to Flame: The Fictional Paths to Fahrenheit 451}, year = {2006}, note = {

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

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

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

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Ray[mond Douglas] Bradbury (1920-2012)}, editor = {Donn Albright and Jon[athan R.] Eller} } @booklet {9809, title = {"Labor Day"}, howpublished = {Beacons of Tomorrow: First Collection}, year = {2005}, month = {2005}, pages = {175-89}, publisher = {Tyrannosaurus Press}, address = {New Orleans, LA}, abstract = {

Dystopia set in an ever-growing shopping mall in which people live permanently purchasing and immediately discarding goods.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Patrick Tucker}, editor = {Bret Funk} } @booklet {9187, title = {Last Light. aRESTORATIONovel. Book One}, year = {2005}, month = {2005}, publisher = {Zonderavan}, address = {Grand Rapids, MI}, abstract = {

First volume of a Christian dystopian series in which God takes way all electricity. Followed by Night Light. aRESTORATIONovel. Book Two. Grand Rapids, MI: Zonderavan, 2006; True Light aRESTORATIONovel. Book Three. Grand Rapids, MI: Zonderavan, 2007; and Dawn\’s Light aRESTORATIONovel. Book Four. Grand Rapids, MI: Zonderavan, 2008. The series follows the experiences of\ various people, some of whom trust in God, who restores power at the end.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Terri Blackstock (b. 1957)} } @booklet {9611, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Last Public Event{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Social Alternatives}, volume = {24.1}, year = {2005}, month = {First Quarter 2005}, pages = {49-51}, abstract = {

Dystopia set in an unnamed \“banana republic\” in which people are made brain dead so that they can their organs will remain functioning until their organs can be harvested.\ 

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Peter Murphy} } @booklet {5690, title = {"The Lone and Level Sands"}, howpublished = {Future Washington}, year = {2005}, month = {2005}, pages = {165-85}, publisher = {Washington Science Fiction Association (WSFA)}, address = {Washington, DC}, abstract = {

Libertarian eutopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {L[ester] Neil Smith [III] (1946-2021)}, editor = {Ernest Lilley} } @booklet {5538, title = {The Lady and the Tiger}, year = {2004}, month = {2004}, publisher = {Ace Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Flawed utopia. A planet believed to be perfect is not. A previous novel with the same characters is her Taylor\&$\#$39;s Ark. New York: Ace Books, 1993.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Jody Lynn Nye (b. 1957)} } @booklet {5502, title = {The Last Love Story: A fairytale of the day after tomorrow}, year = {2004}, month = {2004}, publisher = {Picador}, address = {Sydney, NSW, Australia}, abstract = {

City divided between a brutal, religious dystopia and a wealthy, free eutopia. The emphasis of the novel is on the desire and attempt to escape from one to the other. A note by the author (256) refers to the divisions of Germany and Korea and the beginnings of the wall between Israel and Palestine.

}, keywords = {Australian author, English author, Male author}, author = {Rodney Hall (b. 1935)} } @booklet {5458, title = {"Leviathan Wept"}, howpublished = {SciFiction}, year = {2004}, note = {

Rpt. in The Year\&$\#$39;s Best SF: Twenty-Second Annual Collection. Ed. Gardner Dozois (New York: St. Martin\&$\#$39;s Griffin, 2005), 283-99.

}, month = {2004}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia produced by the policies against terrorism in which both sides kill with impunity.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, url = {www.scifi.com/scifiction/ Posted July 7, 2004. No longer available online.}, author = {Daniel [James] Abraham (b. 1969)} } @booklet {5570, title = {"Life in Globus Cassus"}, howpublished = {Globus Cassus}, year = {2004}, month = {2004}, pages = {91-103}, publisher = {Bundesamt f{\"u}r Kultur}, address = {Bern, Switzerland}, abstract = {

Essay briefly describing the eutopian life, which emphasizes equality and freedom, in their newly created space, which is described as \“a successful social sculpture\” (93). Globus Cassus has been created from Earth but is larger than Earth so as to be able to hold Earth\’s large and growing population.

}, keywords = {Male author, Swiss author}, author = {Michael Stauffer and Christian Waldvogel} } @booklet {5509, title = {Life Lottery}, year = {2004}, month = {2004}, publisher = {Pocket Books}, address = {Pymbale, NSW, Australia}, abstract = {

Ecological dystopia. The final volume of the three the author wrote on ecological subjects. See also 2000 and 2003 Irvine. This volume focuses on the disruptions caused by climate change, particularly the radical increase in the number of refugees and the growth of an anti-refugee movement.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Ian Irvine (b. 1950)} } @booklet {8595, title = {The Liberal Masters. A Satire}, year = {2003}, month = {2003}, publisher = {Elderberry Press}, address = {Oakland, OR}, abstract = {

Sequel to 2000 Hale in which authoritarian \“liberals\” from another planet invade Earth and the resistance that develops. Considerable humor.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {David L. Hale} } @booklet {5382, title = {"Line of Defence"}, howpublished = {Aurealis (Australia)}, volume = { no. 32 }, year = {2003}, month = {2003}, pages = {25-29}, abstract = {

Dystopia of Homeland Security.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Stephen Dedman (b. 1959)} } @booklet {5428, title = {"Looking Through Lace"}, howpublished = {Asimov{\textquoteright}s Science Fiction }, volume = {27.9 (332) }, year = {2003}, note = {

Rpt. in\ The James Tiptree Award Anthology 1. Ed. Karen Joy Fowler, Pat Murphy, Debbie Notkin, and Jeffrey D. Smith (San Francisco, CA: Tachyon Publications, 2003), 131-86.

}, month = {September 2003}, pages = {16-52}, abstract = {

A feminist eutopia with female and male languages.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {1065-6298 }, author = {Ruth Nestvold (b. 1958)} } @booklet {5340, title = {The Lapsit Chronicles}, year = {2002}, month = {2002}, publisher = {Dealan-d{\'e} Publishing}, address = {Toronto, ON, Canada}, abstract = {

Environmental dystopia.

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Edith Shaw} } @booklet {5290, title = {Light Music}, year = {2002}, month = {2002}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Sequel to 2000 Goonan In this volume, the Crescent City has become vulnerable to attack and the technology that built it and could rescue it has been lost. Ultimately, alien technology brings about a positive ending. humanity appears to be on the edge of a major evolutionary step forward. Loosely related to 1994 and 1997 Goonan.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Kathleen Ann Goonan (1952-2021)} } @booklet {5265, title = {"Liking What You See: A Documentary"}, howpublished = {Stories of Your Life and Others}, year = {2002}, note = {

Rpt. 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), 113-49.

}, month = {2002}, pages = {281-323 plus author{\textquoteright}s (331).}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Whether this suggests a eutopia or a dystopia is up to the reader. \"Lookism\", or prejudice against unattractive people, has been added to racism and sexism as a social problem and a solution has been found in a neurological treatment that ensures that \"good\" looks do not register with the viewer. A campaign to require the treatment at a college campus fails, but it does so as a result of the enhancement of a speaker against it, a speaker paid by the cosmetics industry.

}, keywords = {Chinese-American author, Male author}, author = {Ted Chiang (b. 1967)} } @booklet {10247, title = {Lion{\textquoteright}s Blood: A Novel of Slavery and Freedom in an Alternate America}, year = {2002}, month = {2002}, pages = {461 pp. }, publisher = {Aspect/Warner Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

An alternative history novel in which Africans are the slave owners and whites the slave in a North America, known as Bilalstan, which is divided among Zulus, Arabs, Aztecs, Vikings and Native Indians. The novel focus on the relationship between the Irish Christian Aidan O\’Dere and his owner the African Muslim African Muslim, Kai ibn Jallaleddin ibn Rashid. A sequel, Zulu Heart. New York: Aspect/Warner Books, 2003. 463 pp. continues the story with O\&$\#$39;Dere, now free, must accept being re-enslaved for the chance of gaining permanent freedom for himself and his sister while his former owner, now friend, struggles with the immorality of the slavery that underpins his status and wealth. A third volume was mentioned in a blog post in 2007 but has not been published.

}, keywords = {African American author, Male author}, author = {Steven [Emory] Barnes (b. 1952)} } @booklet {5260, title = {"Little Sister"}, howpublished = {Land/Space: An Anthology of Prairie Speculative Fiction}, year = {2002}, month = {2002}, pages = {111-25}, publisher = {Tesseract Books}, address = {Edmonton, AB, Canada}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia. Canada disintegrated after Qu{\'e}bec withdrew from the confederation, and most power now is held by corporations. The prairie provinces are extremely poor and the story focuses on the use of prison labor to search in old garbage for antiques to be sold to people in the wealthy provinces.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author}, author = {Donna Bowman}, editor = {Candas Jane Dorsey (b. 1952) and Judy Berlyne McCrosky} } @booklet {5347, title = {"Little Utopias"}, howpublished = {Takahe (Christchurch, New Zealand)}, volume = { 46}, year = {2002}, month = {August 2002}, pages = {49}, abstract = {

A poem that presents an evening at a M{\={a}}ori marae in utopian terms.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Female author}, author = {Jo Thorpe} } @booklet {5294, title = {The Last Human Spring. Silent Spring II, Origin of Species II, Walden III, Nurturome I Vs. Genome: Breakthroughs!}, year = {2001}, note = {

Rev. as The Last Human Spring. Silent Spring II, Origin of Species II, Walden III, Nurturome I Vs. Genome: Breakthroughs! Phoenix, AZ: Nature-Human Society and [Bloomington, IN]: Xlibris, 2002.\ Except for the title and some minor changes throughout, the texts are the same.\ 

}, month = {2001}, publisher = {Nature-Human Society}, address = {Phoenix, AZ}, abstract = {

New Age environmental eutopia.

}, keywords = {US author}, author = {Heatherly, L.S} } @booklet {5195, title = {The Last Jet-Engine Laugh}, year = {2001}, note = {

Rpt. London: Flamingo, 2001. [Book jacket adds\ India 1930-2030: A Novel]. Part was originally published in\ Civil Lines\ (Delhi, India).

}, month = {2001}, publisher = {Harper Collins India}, address = {Noida, UP, India}, abstract = {

The novel is set in a future India that is developing as a military superpower, but the focus is on the relations among the characters rather than on the society.

}, keywords = {Indian author, Male author}, author = {Ruchir Joshi (b. 1960)} } @booklet {5239, title = {The Last Underclass}, year = {2001}, month = {2001}, pages = {396 pp.}, publisher = {Xlibris}, address = {[Bloomington, IN]}, abstract = {

Overpopulation dystopia set in 2152 where AI have taken over many jobs. Genetic engineering controlled by the wealthy, known as Achievers, who plan to transplant the personalities of the wealthy aged into the improved bodies of the poor, known as \“Welfies\”.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {1-4010-2416-5 }, author = {Dean Warren} } @booklet {5166, title = {"The Law, In Its Majestic Equality . . ."}, howpublished = {Absolute Magnitude Science Fiction}, volume = { no. 17 }, year = {2001}, month = {Autumn 2001}, pages = {4-11}, abstract = {

Satire on legal systems and economic status on the Earth and the Moon.

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Mary Catelli} } @booklet {5188, title = {The Legend of New Earth}, year = {2001}, month = {2001}, publisher = {Australian Broadcasting Commission}, address = {Sydney, NSW, Australia}, abstract = {

Eutopia with problems. Children\&$\#$39;s book. After earth was destroyed, humans settled Venus. Primitive but good life, but the cities dominate the countryside for the benefit of the rulers.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Lee [John] Harding (1937-2023)} } @booklet {5104, title = {The Last Albatross}, year = {2000}, month = {2000}, publisher = {Simon \& Schuster Australia}, address = {East Roseville, NSW, Australia}, abstract = {

Dystopia brought about by a collapsing ecology. Ecoterrorism in conflict with a growing authoritarianism. See also 2003 and 2004 Irvine.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Ian Irvine (b. 1950)} } @booklet {9077, title = {The Last Book in the Universe}, year = {2000}, note = {

. Part originally published as \“The Last Book in the Universe.\” Tomorrowland: 10 Stories About the Future. Comp. Michael Cart (New York: Scholastic Press, 1999), 9-23 with an\ \“Author\’s Note 22-23.\ 

}, month = {2000}, publisher = {The Blue Sky Press/Scholastic}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult dystopia set many years after a worldwide earthquake destroyed civilization. The novel is in the form of a quest by a young man, an old man in a society controlled by gangs from one area to another under a different gang. Along the way, a child and a genetically enhanced young woman from Eden, a high-tech enclave completely cut off from the surrounding area, joins them.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Rodman Philbrick (b. 1951)} } @booklet {5098, title = {"Learning to Mind"}, howpublished = {On Spec: The Canadian Magazine of the Fantastic }, volume = {12.4 (43) }, year = {2000}, month = {Winter 2000}, pages = {83-93}, abstract = {

A future authoritarian dystopia where the state controls child-rearing. Escape to an undescribed anarchist eutopia.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {Terry Hayman} } @booklet {5057, title = {Lima Beans Would be Illegal: Children{\textquoteright}s Ideas of a Perfect World}, year = {2000}, month = {2000}, publisher = {Dial Books for Young Readers}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

One sentence descriptions of children\&$\#$39;s views of a better world.

}, editor = {Bender, Robert} } @booklet {5148, title = {The Lost Thing}, year = {2000}, month = {2000}, publisher = {Thomas C. Lothian}, address = {Port Melbourne, VIC, Australia}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Picture book in which the post-industrial dystopia is conveyed through the illustrations rather than the words. Ends with an illustration of a paradise of sorts for things that don\&$\#$39;t belong.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Shaun [Chi Yeong] Tan (b. 1974)} } @booklet {4972, title = {"The Lady Macbeth Blues"}, howpublished = {Interzone (Brighton, Eng.) }, volume = {no. 148}, year = {1999}, month = {October 1999}, pages = {41-47}, abstract = {

Dystopia of immorality.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Stephen Dedman (b. 1959)} } @booklet {5020, title = {"The Last Dog"}, howpublished = {Tomorrowland: 10 Stories About the Future}, year = {1999}, month = {1999}, pages = {119-41 with an author{\textquoteright}s note on 140-41}, publisher = {Scholastic Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Flawed utopia. A young adult story about a domed community that is rigidly controlled to exclude any possibility of illness and a young man\&$\#$39;s venture outside.

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Katherine Paterson}, editor = {Michael Cart} } @booklet {5017, title = {The Last Testament}, year = {1999}, month = {1999}, publisher = {Minerva}, address = {London}, abstract = {

A very odd post-catastrophe novel. The town of Para{\'\i}so in western North America is one of few communities left after the catastrophe. Initially it is completely isolated, but refugees come and the population grows until it becomes a problem. There is a revolution and the town is divided into the states of Para (democratic) and Bator (a Communist dictatorship).

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Marcel M. Monfort} } @booklet {5012, title = {The Letter Girl}, year = {1999}, month = {1999}, publisher = {Picador}, address = {Sydney, NSW, Australia}, abstract = {

Future dystopia in which books are banned.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Andrew Masterson (b. 1961)} } @booklet {4955, title = {"A Life in a Day"}, howpublished = {The Female Odyssey: Visions for the 21st Century}, year = {1999}, month = {1999}, pages = {47-53}, publisher = {The Women{\textquoteright}s Press}, address = {London}, abstract = {

A eutopia where being fat is the norm and honored. The protagonist is a fat woman living comfortably in a society designed for her remembering what it was like to live when being fat was treated as a fault open to criticism.

}, keywords = {Female author, Welsh author}, author = {Shelley Bovey}, editor = {Charlotte Cole and Helen Windrath} } @booklet {4999, title = {"Lifework"}, howpublished = {Interzone}, volume = {no. 144}, year = {1999}, month = {June 1999}, pages = {42-44}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia in which the government believes it knows better than the individual how to achieve an individual\&$\#$39;s happiness. Marriage considered to have been superseded; partners chosen by the state.

}, keywords = {Female author, UK author, US author}, author = {Mary Soon Lee} } @booklet {4981, title = {Lugano Report: On Preserving Capitalism in the Twenty-first Century}, year = {1999}, note = {

New ed. London: Pluto, 2003.

}, month = {1999}, publisher = {Pluto}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia. A report on what is required to keep free market capitalism in control in the future that identifies a number of major issue, the most important being the growth of population in the developing world. The report says that policies should be implemented to ensure that starvation, disease, war, and so forth ensures that this problem is controlled. Compare to 1967 Lewin, Report from Iron Mountain.

}, keywords = {Female author, French author, US author}, author = {Susan George (b. 1934)} } @booklet {4940, title = {Land of the Golden Clouds}, year = {1998}, note = {

An excerpt was published in Walking the Clouds: An Anthology of Indigenous Science Fiction. Ed. Grace Dillon (Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2012), 131-40 with an editor\’s note on 131-32, 247.\ 

}, month = {1998}, publisher = {Allen \& Unwin}, address = {St. Leonards, NSW, Australia}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Set in a post-catastrophe Australia 3000 years in the future. Conflict among the surviving groups, all of whom have taken on at least part of the Aboriginal world view. The groups that are closest to the Aboriginal way of life are presented most positively.

}, keywords = {Aboriginal author, Australian author, Male author}, author = {Archie Weller (b. 1957)} } @booklet {6876, title = {Liam Hannigan{\textquoteright}s Hyperbreed Robowar}, year = {1998}, month = {[1998]}, publisher = {Author}, address = {Wellington, New Zealand}, abstract = {

Comic. First, and apparently last, of a series about a future eutopia based on limited population and the labor of robots. The Hyperbreed are genetically created superior humans. The robots and disaffected Hyperbreed revolt and civil war begins.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {Liam Hannigan (b. 1978)} } @booklet {8582, title = {The Long Sandy Hair of Neftoon Zamora. A Novel}, year = {1998}, month = {1998}, publisher = {St. Martin{\textquoteright}s Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The novel includes both eutopian and dystopian elements and fantasy.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {[Robert] Michael Nesmith (b. 1942)} } @booklet {4850, title = {"Lethe"}, howpublished = {Asimov{\textquoteright}s Science Fiction}, volume = { 21.9 (261) }, year = {1997}, note = {

Rpt. in his\ The Green Leopard Plague and Other Stories\ (San Francisco, CA: Night Shade Books, 2010), 29-59 with an \"Afterword\" on 59-61.

}, month = {September 1997}, pages = {114-44}, abstract = {

Eutopia of cloning. See also 2003 Williams.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {1065-6298 }, author = {Walter Jon Williams (b. 1953)} } @booklet {9927, title = {Life House}, year = {1997}, note = {

Rpt. in\ The Lifehouse Trilogy\ (New York: Simon and Schuster, 2007), 439-632.

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

Dystopia in which it is possible for others to edit a person\’s memories. The third volume of what comes to be called the Lifehouse Trilogy, which includes his 1982 Mindkiller and 1992 Time Pressure.\ 

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author, US author}, author = {Spider Robinson (b. 1948)} } @booklet {4853, title = {Life on Planet Heaven}, year = {1997}, month = {1997}, publisher = {Antonio Zuliani Publisher}, address = {Brisbane, QLD, Australia}, abstract = {

UFO novel in which the abductee visits a planet very similar to Earth that is deeply concerned with the possibility of nuclear warfare on Earth. Heaven is a eutopia with no money. It purports to have gender equality, but women choose to stay out of politics because it requires masculine characteristics. Girls and boys are separated at fifteen for education but encouraged to develop relations with the opposite sex, including sexual relations, outside the educational environment. Generally\ marry after 25. Numbers rather than names. Very religious but no denominational differences. Constant computer surveillance everywhere as a means of social control.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Tony Zuly} } @booklet {4810, title = {Lightpaths}, year = {1997}, month = {1997}, publisher = {Ace Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Orbital habitat that is supposed to be a eutopia undermined by the usual human foibles.\ His\ Standing Wave. New York: Ace Books, 1998 uses the same setting.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Howard V[incent] Hendrix (b. 1959)} } @booklet {4839, title = {"Like the Gentle Rain"}, howpublished = {The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction}, volume = { 93.4 }, year = {1997}, month = {October/November 1997}, pages = {167-81}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which science appears to dominate everything with human considerations considered irrelevant. In fact, extremely wealthy humans control the robotic scientists in order to make even more money. An author\’s note on 167 says that the story \“was presented at an academic conference on J.D. Bernal\’s essay \‘The World, the Flesh and the Devil: An Inquiry into the future of the Three Enemies of the Rational Soul\’.\”

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {Magazine of of Fantasy and Science Fiction}, author = {Lewis [Gordon] Shiner (b. 1950)} } @booklet {4736, title = {A Land Fit for Heroes. Book 4: The Burning Forest}, year = {1996}, month = {1996}, publisher = {Gollancz}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The fourth volume of a four-volume alternative history of a Roman Britain in the late Twentieth Century and the conflicts between the Romans who deforested much of Britain as a source of food and the traditions of the native British. The third of four volumes. See 1993, 1994 and 1995 Mann. In this volume, Rome decides to burn the British forests to use the land for agriculture and a struggle between rational, scientific, technological Rome and the myth-based British ensues.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, English author, Male author}, author = {[Anthony] Phillip Mann (1942-2022)} } @booklet {4710, title = {The Last Capitalist: A Dream of a New Utopia}, year = {1996}, month = {1996}, pages = {91 pp.}, publisher = {Freedom Press}, address = {London}, keywords = {Male author, Scottish author}, isbn = {9780900384820}, author = {Steve Cullen} } @booklet {4725, title = {The Last Glypt on Demeter}, year = {1996}, month = {1996}, publisher = {Vantage Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The history of a planet from its peak to its destruction by aliens as told by the last man. Demeter was a flawed utopia with a world government, a single language, no disease, and with all weapons and weapon delivery systems outlawed. The people lived over 350 years, which required population control. The family had been abolished, couples or singles got an apartment with a garden and aquarium where they produced their own food. But few people ever had jobs, and most people spent their time as spectators at a wide range of games (cards, computer games, and sports).

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Henry M. Greenwald} } @booklet {4747, title = {"The Last Homosexual"}, howpublished = {Asimov{\textquoteright}s Science Fiction }, volume = {20.6 (246) }, year = {1996}, note = {

Rpt. in The Year\’s Best Science Fiction Fourteenth Annual Collection. Ed. Gardner [Raymond] Dozois (New York: St. Martin\’s Press, 1997), 167-77.\ 

}, month = {June 1996}, pages = {36-48}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which the U.S. has broken up into individual states, and the story focuses on Louisiana under the New Baptists.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {1065-6298 }, author = {Paul [Claiborne] Park (b. 1954)} } @booklet {4734, title = {The Last Integrationist}, year = {1996}, month = {1996}, publisher = {Crown Publishers}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia set in a near future U.S. with extremely harsh laws against drugs and public executions enforced by a conservative black Attorney-General.

}, keywords = {African American author, Male author}, author = {Jake Lamar (b. 1961)} } @booklet {4766, title = {Life in Our Solar System}, year = {1996}, month = {1996}, publisher = {Silver Fern Press}, address = {Auckland, New Zealand}, abstract = {

New Age eutopia.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author}, author = {J. H. Vernon (b. 1916)} } @booklet {4655, title = {A Land Fit for Heroes Book 3: The Dragon Wakes}, year = {1995}, month = {1995}, publisher = {Gollancz}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The third volume of a four-volume alternative history of a Roman Britain in the late Twentieth Century and the conflicts between the Romans who deforested much of Britain as a source of food and the traditions of the native British. The third of four volumes. See 1993, 1994 and 1996 Mann. In this volume,\  Rome \ is preparing to conquer those parts of\  Britain \ it does not control.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, English author, Male author}, author = {[Anthony] Phillip Mann (1942-2022)} } @booklet {4606, title = {The Last Real Cirkus: A Futuristic Fairytale}, year = {1995}, month = {1995}, publisher = {Angus \& Robertson}, address = {Sydney, NSW, Australia}, abstract = {

Background is a fairly near future of excessive regulation.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Female author}, author = {Bottari, Bridie} } @booklet {4646, title = {Left Behind: A Novel of Earth{\textquoteright}s Last Days}, year = {1995}, month = {1995}, publisher = {Tyndale House Publishers}, address = {Wheaton, IL}, abstract = {

The first volume of the Left Behind series, which describes those left on earth after the Rapture, a premillennialist belief based on 1 Corinthians 15:52 and 1 Thessalonians 4: 15-17 developed initially in England in the 1830s and included in the Scofield Reference Bible (New York: Oxford University Press, American Branch/London: H. Frowde, 1909. Mostly dystopian, but the last volume, Kingdom Come: The Final Victory (2007), includes the Second Coming of Christ, and there is a eutopia of the community of believers struggling to survive. Other volumes are Tribulation Force: The Continuing Drama of Those Left Behind (1996); Nicolae: The Rise of Antichrist (1997); Soul Harvest: The World Takes Sides (1998); Apollyon: The Destroyer is Unleashed (1999); Assassins: Assignment: Jerusalem, Target: Antichrist (1999); The Indwelling: The Beast Takes Possession (2000); The Mark: The Beast Rules the World (2000); Desecration: Antichrist Takes the Throne (2001); The Remnant: On the Brink of Armageddon (2002); Armageddon: The Cosmic Battle of the Ages (2003); and Glorious Appearing: The End of Days (2004), and Kingdom Come: The Final Victory (2007). Three volumes of prequel include The Rising: Antichrist is Born. Before They Were Left Behind (2005); Regime: Evil Advances. Before They Were Left Behind (2005); and The Rapture: In a Twinkling of an Eye. Before They Were Left Behind (2005). See also Tim LaHaye and Jerry B. Jenkins. Are We Living in the End Times. Wheaton, IL: Tyndale House Publishers, 1999. There are also graphic novels, films, videos, video games, forty books for children, and related products. See http:www.leftbehind.com for all the books and related materials. LaHaye gives what he calls the Biblical basis of the series in Revelation illustrated and Made Plain. rev. ed. Grand Rapids, MI: Zonderaven Publishing House, 1975. Rev. as Revelation Unveiled: A revised and updated edition of Revelation Illustrated and Made Plain. Grand Rapids, MI: Zonderaven Publishing House, 1999.\ See also LaHaye, Jenkins, and Norman B. Rohrer, These Will Not Be Left Behind: Incredible Stories of Lives Transformed After Reading the Left Behind Novels. Wheaton, IL: Tyndale House, 2003. Utopian spinoffs include 2003 Hart and 2003, 2004,\ 2005 Jenkins, and 2010 LaHaye and Parshall.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Tim[othy Framcis] LaHaye (1926-2016) and Jerry B[ruce] Jenkins (b. 1949)} } @booklet {4639, title = {"Living in Paradox: A Utopian Soap Opera"}, howpublished = {Communities: Journal of Cooperative Living }, volume = {no. 86 }, year = {1995}, month = {Spring 1995}, pages = {53-56}, abstract = {

The story depicts a new eutopian college located in Paradox, Kansas based on \“human potential theory\”. Excerpt from a work in progress, and this excerpt focuses on an initial encounter group among the faculty and their partners and an explanation of the purpose of the education, which is to raise awareness.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {John Frederick Heider (1936-2010)} } @booklet {4654, title = {"The Living Theatre{\textquoteright}s Utopia"}, howpublished = {Theater }, volume = {26.1 \& 2 }, year = {1995}, month = {1995}, pages = {71-81}, abstract = {

Notes for a play called\ Utopia\ by Malina with sketches by Reznikov.

}, keywords = {Female author, Male author, US author}, author = {Judith Malina (1926-2015) and Hanon Reznikov (1950-2008)} } @booklet {4660, title = {The Lure of Satyria}, year = {1995}, month = {1995}, publisher = {Black Lace}, address = {London}, abstract = {

In a series of erotica for women. Includes a number of dystopian communities and one, Satyria, that the heroine finds eutopian.

}, author = {Cheryl Mildenhall} } @booklet {4548, title = {A Land Fit for Heroes. Book 2: Stand Alone Stan}, year = {1994}, month = {1994}, publisher = {Gollancz}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The second volume of a four-volume alternative history of a Roman Britain in the late Twentieth Century and the conflicts between the Romans who deforested much of Britain as a source of food and the traditions of the native British. See also 1993, 1995 and 1996 Mann. In this volume, the three young Romans are forced to flee the security of the village in the forests where they found refuge in the first volume.\ 

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, English author, Male author}, author = {[Anthony] Phillip Mann (1942-2022)} } @booklet {4556, title = {Land O{\textquoteright}Goshen}, year = {1994}, month = {1994}, publisher = {A Wyatt Book for St. Martin{\textquoteright}s Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Future war between government and Christian right. Religious dictatorship.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Charles McNair} } @booklet {4574, title = {"Last Resort"}, howpublished = {Aurealis (Melbourne, VIC, Australia)}, volume = {no. 13}, year = {1994}, month = {1994}, pages = {17-24}, abstract = {

Eutopia and dystopia. Rich people can choose a eutopian life inside a computer system.

}, keywords = {Australian author}, author = {Jain Scott} } @booklet {4563, title = {Little Sisters of the Apocalypse}, year = {1994}, note = {

Rpt. in her\ Seven for the Apocalypse. Hanover, NH: Wesleyan University Press/University Press of New England, 1999), 73-203.

}, month = {1994}, publisher = {Black Ice Books}, address = {Boulder, CO}, abstract = {

Unusual dystopia. The \"Little Sisters of the Apocalypse\" are biker nuns who are expert hackers. Focus is on a society of women waiting for men to return from the war.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Kit [Lilian Craig] Reed (1932-2017)} } @booklet {4453, title = {A Land Fit for Heroes. Book 1: Escape to the Wild Wood}, year = {1993}, month = {1993}, publisher = {Victor Gollancz}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The first volume of a four-volume alternative history of a Roman Britain in the late Twentieth Century and the conflicts between the Romans who deforested much of Britain as a source of food and the traditions of the native British. See also 1994, 1995 and 1996 Mann. In this volume, three young Romans flee to the forests and discover the older Britain. The novel stresses the cold rationality of the Romans in contrast to the more feeling British. See the note at 1982 Mann.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, English author, Male author}, author = {[Anthony] Phillip Mann (1942-2022)} } @booklet {4458, title = {The Last Dancer}, year = {1993}, month = {1993}, publisher = {Bantam Spectra}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Third volume in a trilogy. This volume is set in 2076 with the authoritarian United Nations ruling Earth but with various forces, including the two remaining telepaths, opposed to its rule. See also 1988 and 1989 Moran.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Daniel Keys Moran (b. 1962)} } @booklet {4475, title = {Local Code: The Constitution of a City at 42{\textdegree} N Latitude}, year = {1993}, month = {1993}, publisher = {Princeton Architectural Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The presentation of an ideal city through its building code.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Michael [David] Sorkin (1948-2020)} } @booklet {4455, title = {"Love Under Siege"}, howpublished = {Future Sex}, volume = {no. 3 }, year = {1993}, month = {1993}, pages = {52-55}, abstract = {

Dystopian setting for pornography.

}, author = {Carrington McDuffie} } @booklet {4291, title = {"The Last Cardinal Bird in Tennessee"}, howpublished = {Slightly Off Center: Eleven Extraordinarily Exhilarating Tales}, year = {1992}, note = {

Rpt. in The Year\’s Best Science Fiction: Tenth Annual Collection. Ed. Gardner [Raymond] Dozois (New York: St. Martin\’s Press, 1993), 346-56; and in his Other Seasons: The Best of Neal Barrett, Jr. (Burton, MI: Subterranean Press, 2012), 365-79.\ 

}, month = {1992}, pages = {96-106 with an author{\textquoteright}s note on 95}, publisher = {Swan Press}, address = {Austin, TX}, abstract = {

Near future dystopia of a collapsing high-tech society.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Neal [Patrick] Barrett Jr. (1929-2014)} } @booklet {4288, title = {The Last Days of the Pleasurehouse}, year = {1992}, month = {1992}, publisher = {Nexus}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia and revolt. Erotica set in 2031. Sequel to 1991 Anders.

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Agnetha Anders} } @booklet {4319, title = {"The Last Heterosexual"}, howpublished = {By the Light of the Moon}, year = {1992}, month = {1992}, pages = {11-14}, publisher = {dean farran printproductions}, address = {Christchurch, New Zealand}, abstract = {

Dystopia from the perspective of the point-of-view character, who lives in a eutopia from the point-of-view of the rest. See the note at 1952 Gilbert.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {[Garvin Robert] [Gilbert] (b. 1917)} } @booklet {4312, title = {The Last Human}, year = {1992}, month = {1992}, publisher = {Bantam Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Fantasy that includes an attempt to build a eutopia. Mostly action. The first two books--Walker of Worlds (New York: Bantam Books, 1990) and The End-of-Everything Man (Garden City: Doubleday, 1991) are not utopian.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Tom De Haven (b. 1949)} } @booklet {4367, title = {Last Refuge}, year = {1992}, month = {1992}, publisher = {Bantam Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The eutopian Shambala (Shangri-la) and the devastated outer world as a dystopia. Loose sequel to the 1991 Scarborough. For the classic eutopian Shangri-la, see 1933 Hilton.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Elizabeth Ann Scarborough (b. 1947)} } @booklet {4296, title = {Let Us Prey}, year = {1992}, note = {

Rpt. New York: HarperCollins, 1994. U.K. ed. London: HarperCollins, 1995.

}, month = {1992}, publisher = {Black Seal Press}, address = {Carlsbad, CA}, abstract = {

A dystopia of a U.S. with government waste and corruption and the I.R.S. (Internal Revenue Service) as an authoritarian institution trying to collect taxes by any means possible. A taxpayers\&$\#$39; revolt overthrows the system, but the ending suggests further problems to come and possible sequels, but none were published.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Bill Branon} } @booklet {7009, title = {"Looking Back From 2992. A World History, Chapter 13: The Disastrous 21st Century"}, howpublished = {The Economist}, year = {1992}, month = {December 26, 1992-January 8, 1993}, pages = {17-19}, abstract = {

A history of the dystopian twenty-first century written from the perspective of a eutopian thirtieth century.

} } @booklet {11070, title = {The Last Real New Yorker in the World{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Newer York: Stories of Science Fiction and Fantasy About the World{\textquoteright}s Greatest City}, year = {1991}, month = {1991}, pages = {265-69}, publisher = {Roc Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The dystopia of New York City as a theme park.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, Male author, US author}, isbn = {9780451450456 }, author = {James D. Macdonald (b. 1954) and Debra Doyle (1952-2020)}, editor = {Lawrence Watt-Evans (b. 1954)} } @booklet {4194, title = {"Lesson in the Foothills"}, howpublished = {Renunciates Of Darkover}, year = {1991}, month = {1991}, pages = {216-20}, publisher = {DAW Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Free Amazon story.

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Lynne Armstrong-Jones} } @booklet {8876, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Let Me Call You Sweetheart{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Newer York: Stories of Science Fiction and Fantasy About the World{\textquoteright}s Greatest City}, year = {1991}, month = {1991}, pages = {212-28}, publisher = {Roc}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Satire on a future New York that has outlawed candy.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {9780451450456}, author = {Michael A[ustin] Stackpole (b. 1957)}, editor = {Lawrence Watt-Evans (b. 1954)} } @booklet {4225, title = {Lunar Justice}, year = {1991}, month = {1991}, publisher = {Avon}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia focusing on a corrupt legal system.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Charles L[eonard] Harness (1915-2005)} } @booklet {4109, title = {The Land Beyond}, year = {1990}, note = {

Rpt. London: Grafton, 1992.

}, month = {1990}, publisher = {HarperCollins}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Anthropological science fiction presenting a remnant of the people of the far north who are kept in city in the ice working for their captives. The arrival of the Democratic Travelling Circus brings ferment.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Gill[ian] Alderman (b. 1941)} } @booklet {4007, title = {The Largest Theme Park in the World}, howpublished = {The Guardian}, year = {1989}, note = {

Rpt. in his War Fever (London: William Collins Sons, 1990), 73-80; and in his The Complete Short Stories (London: Flamingo, 2001), 1139-44.\ 

}, month = {July 7, 1989}, pages = {29}, abstract = {

Satire on European union. When the single currency is created all Europeans move to the Mediterranean resorts and refuse to return until non-Europeans start to move in to their abandoned properties.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {J[ames] G[raham] Ballard (1930-2009)} } @booklet {4056, title = {The Last of the Green-Toed Fruit-Bats: A Fairy-Tale for Adults}, year = {1989}, month = {1989}, publisher = {Waiake Wordsmiths}, address = {Auckland, New Zealand}, abstract = {

Part dystopia, part fantasy, part feminist eutopia. The story, written as if from 2019-20, is of an island in the eastern Pacific called New Balkland, which has an ecology and history similar to New Zealand. The novel is written from the point-of-view of one woman from her earliest years to her full development as a powerful witch. Her history parallels a series of environmental and political disasters that leads to the destruction of the world, except for New Balkland, which is saved by its women, with the help of the world\&$\#$39;s whales.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Toni Jeffreys} } @booklet {4048, title = {The Long Habit of Living}, year = {1989}, note = {

U.K. ed. London: New English Library, 1989.

}, month = {1989}, publisher = {William Morrow}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Problems of immortality.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Joe [Joseph William] Haldeman (b. 1943)} } @booklet {4070, title = {The Long Run: A Tale of the Continuing Time}, year = {1989}, month = {1989}, publisher = {Bantam Spectra}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia. The middle volume in a trilogy. This volume is primarily adventure as the United Nations Peaceforce tries to eliminate the few remaining telepaths. See also 1988\ and 1993 Moran.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Daniel Keys Moran (b. 1962)} } @booklet {4008, title = {"Love in a Colder Climate"}, howpublished = {Interview Magazine}, year = {1989}, note = {

Rpt. as \“Love in a Cold Climate.\” Observer Magazine (July 16, 1989): 36-37, 39, 40; as \“Love in a Colder Climate.\” In his War Fever (London: Collins, 1990): 65-72; and in The Complete Short Stories (London: Flamingo, 2001), 1124-38.

}, month = {January 1989}, pages = {88-90}, abstract = {

As a result of the AIDS epidemic, sex is made compulsory as part of national service for virgins.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {J[ames] G[raham] Ballard (1930-2009)} } @booklet {3984, title = {"La Vie Continue"}, howpublished = {Other Americas}, year = {1988}, month = {1988}, pages = {179-273 with an "Introduction to {\textquoteright}La Vie Continue{\textquoteright}" on 175-77}, publisher = {Bantam Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a future America that tries to co-opt or, if that fails, kill authors who oppose the current regime.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Norman [Richard] Spinrad (b. 1940)} } @booklet {3963, title = {The Lake At the End of the World}, year = {1988}, note = {

U.K. ed. London: Hodder \& Stoughton, 1988.

}, month = {1988}, publisher = {Viking Kestral}, address = {Ringwood, VIC}, abstract = {

Set in 2025. Story of a post-catastrophe world with few survivors, some of whom are in an underground dystopia with a dictator. Two teenagers bring the people together and move them above ground where a new beginning is possible.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Australian author}, author = {Caroline Macdonald (1948-97)} } @booklet {3922, title = {The Last Bank on Earth}, year = {1988}, month = {1988}, publisher = {Play performed by the Pepperdine University Mini-theatre, April 5, 1988.}, abstract = {

Dystopian satire of a bank after a nucear war.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Michael S. Cummings (b. 1943)} } @booklet {4003, title = {"The Last of the Winnebagoes"}, howpublished = {Isaac Asimov{\textquoteright}s Science Fiction Magazine}, volume = {12.7 (132) }, year = {1988}, note = {

Rpt. in\ The Year\&$\#$39;s Best Science Fiction: Sixth Annual Collection. Ed. Gardner [Raymond] Dozois (New York: St. Martin\&$\#$39;s Press, 1989), 182-222 with an editor\&$\#$39;s note on 181.

}, month = {July 1988}, pages = {18-22, 24-26, 28-30, 32-36, 38-40, 42-44, 46-48, 49-52, 54-72}, abstract = {

Ecological dystopia in which there are severe restrictions on vehicles and travel and most animals have died.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {1065-6298 }, author = {Connie [Constance Elaine Trimmer] Willis (b. 1945)} } @booklet {3906, title = {The Laws of the Micro Giants. An Odyssean Classic}, year = {1988}, month = {1988}, publisher = {Ballmark Publications}, address = {Foremost, AB, Canada}, abstract = {

Detailed eutopia following on his 1961 Cosmocracy, which he here spells \“CosMocRacy.\” This volume also includes a theory of creation first described in his The Cosmic Laws of the Spectrum: Evolution and Government as well as some more personal material. In 1957 the author ran in the Canadian federal election as a candidate in Regina, Saskatchewan for the National Credit Control Party, a party of his own creation. His purpose was to publicize the monetary system he developed. See \“J.B. Ball National Credit Control\” within \“Six Candidates Offer Final Election Message.\” The Leader-Post (Regina, SK, Canada) 48.132 (June 8, 1957): 3. See also 1956 Ball Ahoy for Eternity and National Credit, The Handbook of the Universal Monetary System, and Universal Monetary System of National Credit Control, and The Universal Monetary System of National Credit Control: A Financial Revolution With Nationalized Accounting Merchandising at Cost; 1961 Ball, Cosmocracy: The Universal Monetary System. Regina, SK, Canada: J.B. Ball; 1978 Ball, Permacredit. Universal Finance for Government \& Industry. World Government without Trade Deficits. A Cash System of Accounting without Debt in Industry or Government or Taxes Against Industry or Credit Cards. Foremost, AB: Author; 1980 Ball, The Cosmic Laws of the Spectrum: Evolution and Government. By Barney Ballmark [pseud.]. [Foremost, AB: Ballmark Publications];1982 Ball, Technomics. A Better Economy. International. By Barney Ballmark [pseud.]. [Foremost, AB: Ballmark Publications]; and 1986 Ball, Beyond Capitalism. Foremost, AB: Ballmark Publications. Other versions include Technomics in one corporate world. By Barney Ballmark [pseud.]. [Foremost, AB: Author], [1983]; The Technomic Alliance [subtitle on the cover No Taxes on property or income, the obvious solution, total employment]. 3rd ed. By Barney Ballmark [pseud.]. Foremost, AB: Ballmark Publications, 1984; Pathway to the Stars: Industrial Democracy Beyond Democracy and Christianity Plus the Photon Theory of Creation. Foremost, AB: Ballmark Publications, 1986. [New ed.] as The Pathway to the Stars. The Photon theory of Creation. Poetry. Foremost, AB, Canada: Ballmark Publications, 1987. Rpt. as Pathway to the Stars. Industrial Democracy Beyond Capitalism and Christianity Plus the Photon Theory of Creation. Includes Poetry Selections. Foremost, AB, Canada: Ballmark Publications, 1989. Another ed. as The Pathway to the Stars. By The Hobo Poet [pseud.]. Foremost, AB, Canada: Ballmark Publications, 1990 in four sections, [\“Memoirs, Poetry, and Stories] (1-164),\” \“Industrial Capitalism--Beyond Capitalism\” (165-213), \“Gleaning from Prairie Art Shows\” (214-29), and \“Radiation Properties of Creation\” (230-51); Technomics International. Perpetual Payroll Financing for Government and Industry. Rev. October 1986. [Foremost, AB, Canada: Ballmark Publications, 1986; Industrial Democracy. Beyond Capitalism and Christianity. Includes the Photon Laws of Creation. Foremost, AB, Canada: Ballmark Publications, 1989; and Industrial Democracy. Beyond Capitalism. This concept of world marketing explains how nations can finance total employment, without international debt, or taxation on property and income. New Economic System. Foremost, AB, Canada: Ballmark Publications, 1990. 53 pp.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {J[ohn] B[ernard] Ball (b. 1911)} } @booklet {3932, title = {The Long Orbit}, year = {1988}, note = {

U.K. ed. as\ Exit Funtopia. London: Sphere, 1989.

}, month = {1988}, publisher = {Ballantine Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Complex future dystopia where many people lived fantasy lives and robots did their work for them. The novel focuses on a man who lived the fantasy of being a detective in the 1940s but is hired to be a detective in the real world of corporate conflict.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Mick [Michael Anthony] Farren (1943-2013)} } @booklet {3976, title = {"The Lunatics"}, howpublished = {Terry{\textquoteright}s Universe}, year = {1988}, note = {

Rpt. in his Remaking History (New York: Tor, 1991), 236-63; and\ in Infinity Plus one. Ed. Keith Brooke and Nick Gevers (Leeds, Eng.: PS Publishing, 2001), 255-81; in Brave New Worlds. Ed. John Joseph Adams (San Francisco, CA: Night Shade Books, 2011), 293-313; 2nd ed. as Brave New Worlds: Dystopian Stories. Ed. John Joseph Adams (San Francisco, CA: Night Shade Books, 2012), 293-313; and in Alaya Dawn Johnson and Kim Stanley Robinson. Metamorphosis (Seattle, WA: Aqueduct Press, 2015), 59-91.\ 

}, month = {1988}, pages = {135-68}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia of mining on the moon which is the equivalent of slavery.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Kim Stanley Robinson (b. 1952)}, editor = {Beth Meacham} } @booklet {3850, title = {Legend}, year = {1987}, note = {

Rpt. Great Barrington, MA: Lindisfarne Books, 2002.

}, month = {1987}, publisher = {Freedeeds Library}, address = {Blauvelt, NY}, abstract = {

Complex dystopia on a future Earth after some unidentified catastrophe had destroyed much of the Earth and left the people deeply divided into those few with jobs (the bureaurers), majority of people (the folkers), and the disciples of new, authoritarian religions. At the end no one is left on Earth.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Barry Maher} } @booklet {3848, title = {Life in a Peaceful World}, year = {1987}, month = {1987}, publisher = {Watchtower Bible and Tract Society}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Six page tract depicting the world after the millennium.

} } @booklet {3883, title = {Little Heroes}, year = {1987}, month = {1987}, publisher = {Bantam Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Complex novel depicting a future U.S. dystopia. Commercial control; drugs; financial depression. Reality Liberation Front and rock and roll will provide a touch of hope, but they will probably lose out to commercialization.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Norman [Richard] Spinrad (b. 1940)} } @booklet {3723, title = {Lacey and His Friends}, year = {1986}, note = {

Originally published as \“Nation Without Walls.\” Analog Science Fact--Science Fiction 97.7 (July 1977): 10-14, 16, 18-38; rpt. in his Grimmer Than Hell (New York: Baen, 2003), 268-98; \“The Predators.\” Destinies 1.5 (October-December 1979): 254-94; rpt. in his Grimmer Than Hell (New York: Baen, 2003), 299-328; \“Underground.\” Destinies 2.1 (February-March 1980): 218-72; \“Travellers.\” Destinies 3.1 (Winter 1981): 234-86; rpt. in his Grimmer Than Hell (New York: Baen, 2003), 329-73; and \“Time Safari.\” Destinies 3.2 (1981): 182-270.\ 

}, month = {1986}, publisher = {Baen Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia of constant surveillance and ruthless police.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {David [Allen] Drake (1945-2023)} } @booklet {3719, title = {The Last Election}, year = {1986}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: Vintage, 1987.

}, month = {1986}, publisher = {Andr{\'e} Deutsch}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a future Britain under the policies of Margaret Thatcher (1925-2013; Prime Minister 1979-90).

}, keywords = {Male author, Welsh author}, author = {Pete Davies (b. 1959)} } @booklet {7005, title = {The Last Ranger}, year = {1986}, month = {1986-89}, publisher = {Popular Library}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Post-nuclear war survivalist dystopia. A single heavily armed man fights against a different evil force in each volume as he single-handedly saves America. At the end of the last volume the Earth is completely destroyed.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Jan] [Stacy] (1948-89)} } @booklet {9942, title = {The Last War}, year = {1986}, note = {

US ed. Illus. Greg Ruhl. New York: Collier Books/Macmillan, 1989. 91. pp.\ 

}, month = {1986}, pages = {91 pp}, publisher = {Collier Macmillan}, address = {Don Mills, ON, Canada}, abstract = {

Young adult dystopia set after a nuclear war.\ 

}, keywords = {Canadian author, English author, Male author}, author = {Martyn Godfrey (1949-2000)} } @booklet {3744, title = {Lear}, year = {1986}, publisher = {Hard Echo Press}, address = {Onehunga, Auckland, New Zealand}, abstract = {

Post-catastrophe dystopia in which a group of individuals travel around a devastated New Zealand performing Lear and taking on the roles they play. The author also wrote an environmental political novel aimed at Monsanto\&$\#$39;s herbicide Roundup--Lethal Dose. Onehunga, Auckland, New Zealand: Hard Echo Press, 1991.\ 

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {Mike Johnson (b. 1947)} } @booklet {3761, title = {Less Than Human}, year = {1986}, month = {1986}, publisher = {Avon Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Humor set in a future New York City dystopia. The main character is a flawed robot.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author, US author}, author = {[Charles] [Platt] (b. 1945)} } @booklet {3670, title = {Last Letters from Hav}, year = {1985}, note = {

Rpt. in her Hav comprising\ Last Letters from Hav\ and\ Hav of the Myrmidons\ (London: Faber and Faber, 2006), 1-187.

}, month = {1985}, publisher = {Viking}, address = {Harmondsworth, Eng.}, abstract = {

Description of a visit to an imaginary country, which the author says was intended to reflect her lack of understanding of the countries she had visited and the changes they were undergoing. The country has both eutopian and dystopian elements.

}, keywords = {English author, Transgender author}, author = {Jan Morris (1926-2020)} } @booklet {3666, title = {The Limits of Green}, year = {1985}, month = {1985}, publisher = {Viking Penguin Books (N.Z.)}, address = {Auckland, New Zealand}, abstract = {

An environmental dystopia with elements of a feminist eutopia in which New Zealand, called the \"Sleeping Islands,\" is the site of nuclear and chemical plants that are destroying the environment. In addition, a missile base and warheads for the missiles have been placed in New Zealand. All are under the control of a world power, the RUSA, which has a policy of \"voluntary colonization\" in which small countries agree to be effectively but clandestinely controlled in exchange for investment. A group of people, but one woman and man in particular, learn to communicate with nature, which destroys both the chemical and nuclear power plants and the weapons. Presented as a memoir \"The Harmony of Snails\" with additional material from the RUSA embassy. See also 1987 McAlpine.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Female author}, author = {Rachel McAlpine (b. 1940)} } @booklet {3688, title = {"The Lipton Village Society"}, howpublished = {Strange Attractors: Original Australian Speculative Fiction}, year = {1985}, note = {

Rpt. in her\ My Lady Tongue and Other Stories\ (London: Heinemann, 1990/Port Melbourne, VIC, Australia: William Heinemann Australia, 1990), 213-36; and in her\ Matilda Told Such Dreadful Lies: The Essential Lucy Sussex\ (Greenwood, WA, Australia: Ticonderoga publications, 2011), 135-50.

}, month = {1985}, pages = {14-28}, publisher = {Hale \& Iremonger}, address = {Sydney, NSW, Australia}, abstract = {

This story is tangential to Sussex\&$\#$39;s utopianism in that it posits a group of young people on the margins of society in the process of willing a utopia into existence, one that they have created collectively in their imaginations. Only brief indications of what the utopia will be like.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Australian author, Female author}, author = {Lucy [Jane] Sussex (b. 1957)}, editor = {Damien [Francis] Broderick (b. 1944)} } @booklet {3678, title = {"Lover from Beyond the Dawn of Time"}, howpublished = {The Power of Time}, year = {1985}, month = {1985}, pages = {25-39}, publisher = {Chatto \& Windus/Hogarth Press}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Begins with a highly organized eutopia,but shifts to a horror story.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Josephine [Mary Howard] Saxton (b. 1935)} } @booklet {3559, title = {The Ladies}, year = {1984}, month = {1984}, publisher = {E. P. Dutton}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Three women live an isolated life on an estate in Wales with that life presented as idyllic. Based on a real group called the Ladies of Llangollan, on which see May Gordon,\ Chase the Wild Goose. London: Hogarth Press, 1937.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Doris Grumbach (1918-2022)} } @booklet {3490, title = {"The Land of Ordinary People. For John Lennon"}, howpublished = {Women in Search of Utopia; Mavericks and Mythmakers}, year = {1984}, note = {

Rpt. in her\ Ordinary People: A Collection\ (Seattle, WA: Aqueduct Press, 2005), 3-5.

}, month = {1984}, pages = {257-259}, publisher = {Schocken Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Poem that gives the sense of an anarchist eutopia.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Eleanor [Atwood] Arnason (b. 1942)}, editor = {Ruby Rohrlich and Elaine Hoffman Baruch} } @booklet {3496, title = {The Last Amazon}, year = {1984}, month = {1984}, publisher = {DAW Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Sequel to 1968 Chandler in which women are born and Amazons emerge on the planet New Sparta that was originally all men. John Grimes is instrumental in defeating the Amazons. Graham Stone in his Australian Science Fiction Bibliography (Sydney, NSW, Australia: Graham Stone, 2004), 11 says that its working title was Find the Lady.

}, keywords = {Australian author, English author, Male author}, author = {A[rthur] Bertram Chandler (1912-84)} } @booklet {3556, title = {The Last Patriot}, year = {1984}, month = {1984}, publisher = {Zebra Books/Kensington Publications}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia with one man trying to save the U.S.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {James N[orbert] Frey (b. 1943)} } @booklet {3451, title = {The Lagrangists}, year = {1983}, month = {1983}, publisher = {Tom Doherty Associates}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The Space/colony station described in 1979 is threatened by various forces from Earth. See also 1984 Reynolds and 1985 Reynolds with Ing.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Mack [Dallas McCord] Reynolds (1917-83)} } @booklet {3472, title = {"Lessons Learned"}, howpublished = {WARP: The Magazine of the [New Zealand] National Association for Science Fiction}, volume = {no. 35 }, year = {1983}, month = {July 1983}, pages = {15-16}, abstract = {

Six excerpts from \"A Documentary History of the State of New Zealand, 1982-1998\" published by the Trevor Richards Foundation for Legal Studies, 2004, Hong Kong illustrating the rise of a police state and its ultimate defeat.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author}, author = {Peter Fuller} } @booklet {3377, title = {Lady of Light}, year = {1982}, month = {1982}, publisher = {Timescape}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Mostly fantasy but includes a future post-catastrophe eutopian kingdom.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Diana L. Paxson (b. 1943)} } @booklet {3386, title = {Light on the Sound}, year = {1982}, note = {

Rev. as\ The Dawning Shadow: The Light On the Sound. New York: Bantam Books, 1986. Part previously published as \"The Thirteenth Utopia.\"\ Analog Science Fiction--Science Fact\ [99].4 (April 1979): 144-60, 162-64; which was rpt. in\ The Annual World\&$\#$39;s Best SF 1980. Ed. Donald A. Wollheim (New York: DAW Books, 1980), 20-42; and in his\ Fire from the Wine Dark Sea\ (Norfolk, VA: Donning, 1983), 17-38; and \"Light on the Sound.\"\ Isaac Asimov\&$\#$39;s Science Fiction Magazine\ 4.8 (August 1980): 84-169. Described as the first volume of a trilogy, the series was later extended to four volumes.

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

Religious dystopia that destroys all utopias because of its belief that due to the Fall all utopias are necessarily false. But after the destruction of the twelfth utopia, a thirteenth is discovered that causes those assigned to destroy it to try to save it. The book discusses the nature of utopia. First volume in a series; see\ also 1983, 1984 and 1985 Sucharitkul.

}, keywords = {Male author, Thai author, US author}, author = {Somtow [Papinian] Sucharitkul (b. 1952)} } @booklet {3287, title = {Lanark; A Life in Four Books}, year = {1981}, note = {

Rev. ed. Edinburgh, Scot: Canongate Publishing, 1985. Rpt. London: Picador, 1994. Parts published as \"From the World of Lanark.\" Scottish International, no. 12 (November-December 1970): 30-40 (Chapters 6 and 7); \"Extract from Lanark.\" Words, [no. 1] (Autumn 1976): 3-6; \"Alexander Comes (an extract from Lanark).\" Words 6 [1978]: 5-9 (Chapter 41); \"Prologue to Lanark.\" GUM: Glasgow University Magazine (1974) [Not held by the Glasgow University Library or the Glasgow University Archives]; and \"From Lanark.\" Words (1979) (Chapter 35). See \"Lanark Storyboard\" [A Projected film of Lanark]. Scottish Book Collector 2.1 - 2.6, 2.8 - 2.12, 3.2 - 3.6, 3.9, 3.11, 3.12, 4.3 - 5.1, 5.3, 5.5 - 5.7. 5.9 - 5.10 (August/September 1989 - August/September 1990, December 1990/January 1991 - August/September 1991, December 1991/January 1992 - August/September 1992, February/March 1993, June/July 1993, February/March 1994 - Winter 1996/97, Summer 1997, Autumn 1997): 16-17; 16-17; 16-17; 16-17; 24-25; 28; 31; 19; 32; 30-31; 26-27; 14; 13; 29; 14; 17; 20; 13; 25; 10; 26; 21; 21; 21; 21; 21; 19; 23; 23; 19; 8; 23; 30; 30; 27. The last gives the authors as Gray and Ms. Fairlie Fox; all the others are by Gray.

}, month = {1981}, publisher = {Canongate Publishing/Harper \& Row}, address = {Edinburgh, Scot./New York}, abstract = {

Complex dystopia that follows the character Lanark through the surrealistic city of Unthank, which has severe economic and political problems and is threatened environmentally. Includes a side trip to a version of Hell.

}, keywords = {Male author, Scottish author}, author = {Alasdair [James] Gray (1934-2019)} } @booklet {3273, title = {Land{\textquoteright}s End}, year = {1981}, month = {1981}, pages = {248 pp.}, publisher = {Secker \& Warburg}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Near future dystopia focusing on a dictator for life gaining control through a combination of rewards for behavior he approves and violence. Book burnings. Dissenters and anyone not white is considered a terrorist and can be killed by the police. The novel follows an average school teacher most of whose books had burned who tries to save a wounded Pakistani man whose wife and child had been killed.

}, keywords = {Male author, UK author}, isbn = {0-436-07098-7}, author = {Peter Francis Browne} } @booklet {3277, title = {The Last Crime}, year = {1981}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: Atheneum, 1980.

}, month = {1981}, publisher = {Heinemann}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Computer dystopia with the ultimate elimination of all humans. The last crime is one of the last two humans murdering the other.

}, keywords = {Male author, UK author}, author = {John Domatilla (b. 1936)} } @booklet {3338, title = {"The Last Piece of Trade in America"}, howpublished = {On the Line: New Gay Fiction}, year = {1981}, month = {1981}, pages = {171-74}, publisher = {Crossing}, address = {Trumansberg, NY}, abstract = {

Future in which gay men dominate generally presented positively.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {John Mitzel}, editor = {Ian Young} } @booklet {3187, title = {The Last President}, year = {1980}, month = {1980}, publisher = {William Morrow \& Co}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The Watergate scandal following the break-in at the headquarters of the Democratic Party national headquarters in June 1972 turns the U.S. into an authoritarian dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Michael [Joseph] Kurland (b. 1938) and [Barton Stewart] [Whaley] (1918-2013)} } @booklet {10277, title = {"Life"}, howpublished = {Microcosmic Tales: 100 Wondrous Science Fiction Short-Short Stories}, year = {1980}, note = {

Rpt. (New York: DAW Books, 1992), 204-06.\ 

}, month = {1980}, publisher = {Taplinger}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Brief story set in an overpopulated world.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Dennis R. Caro (b. 1944)}, editor = {Isaac Asimov (1920-92) and Martin H[arry] Greenberg (1941-2011) and Joseph D[avid] Olander (b. 1939)} } @booklet {3193, title = {Lifekeeper}, year = {1980}, month = {1980}, publisher = {Avon}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia of computer perfection and the problems that develop as the computer appears to start wars.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Mike [Michael Dennis] McQuay (1949-95)} } @booklet {3196, title = {Logan{\textquoteright}s Search}, year = {1980}, note = {

Rpt. in\ Logan: A Trilogy. Baltimore, MD: Maclay and Associates, 1986), 261-384. Rpt. with the same pagination New York: Dell, 1992.

}, month = {1980}, publisher = {Bantam Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Sequel to 1967 Nolan and Johnson and 1977 Nolan. Mostly adventure but some on the eutopia from 1977 Nolan.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {William F[rancis] Nolan (1928-2021)} } @booklet {3220, title = {"{\textquoteright}Looking Backward{\textquoteright} from 2030 (with apologies to Edward Bellamy)"}, howpublished = {Journal of Clinical Child Psychology }, volume = {9.2 }, year = {1980}, month = {Summer 1980}, pages = {144-47}, abstract = {

History of the period from the mid-twentieth century to 2030 with a focus on child-rearing and education, both of which change to take individual differences into account.\ Governmentally supported childcare facilities. Parents are encouraged to raise their children at home and are provided with financial support to do so after taking parenting courses.

}, keywords = {Female author, Male author, US author}, author = {Jayne Burks and Melvin Rubenstein} } @booklet {3241, title = {The Lost Philosophy of Love}, year = {1980}, note = {

Rev. ed. illus. Fold-out map. Brisbane, QLD: Love Publications, 1982. 61 pp.

}, month = {1980}, pages = {44 pp.}, publisher = {Author}, address = {Brisbane, QLD, Australia}, abstract = {

Eutopia called Many Waters of about 2,000 people based on agriculture and light industry. Calls it a commune. Common meals. Has its own school. A lot of New Age healing. The second edition is illustrated. The author says that an alternative title could be The Way to Utopia.

}, keywords = {Australian author, English author, Male author}, isbn = {9780959368017 9780959368000 }, author = {[Roy Victor] [Wallace] (1927-1917)} } @booklet {3251, title = {The Love Explosion}, year = {1980}, month = {1980}, publisher = {New American Library}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Another of Rimmer\&$\#$39;s novels of the good life through sex. In this novel two couples have sexual and other revelations while on a vacation on Guadeloupe, which produces a temporary utopia, which is then incorporated into their lives.\ See also 1966, 1968, 1975, 1978, 1982, and 2000 Rimmer.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Robert H[enry] Rimmer (1917-2001)} } @booklet {3114, title = {Lagrange Five}, year = {1979}, month = {1979}, publisher = {Bantam Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

A space colony/station is a eutopia of great beauty, but the eutopia is undermined by what seems to be almost an illness that strikes from time to time in which people become claustrophobic. See also 1983 and 1984 Reynolds and 1985 Reynolds with Ing.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Mack [Dallas McCord] Reynolds (1917-83)} } @booklet {3157, title = {The Land}, year = {1979}, month = {1979}, publisher = {Manor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Women are rulers and men are \"Beasts\" not considered human. One woman starts a movement to free the Beasts, who almost enslave the women, until a balance is achieved with hope of turning the dystopia into a eutopia.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {[Mary Vigliante] [Szydlowski] (b. 1946)} } @booklet {3126, title = {Land of the Possible: A Report of the First Visit to Prire}, year = {1979}, month = {1979}, publisher = {Warner Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

A very detailed eutopia depicting Prire, a long established, isolated country that welcomes its first visitor in many years. Variety of ways of life, with the novel depicting Capital City, Blue Lake Village, which is a cooperative, Mountgate, a village of artists, Ponyo City, which has a university, and Shin, a factory town. There is also an area set aside for those who simply want to be left alone. Experiments are being constantly run to provide the evidence for policy choices. Stress on the small, local face-to-face community using appropriate technology that was available in the late 1970s. Every person from age twelve has two jobs, a community service job as well as an occupation. Life-long education. Gender and age equality.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Mary Alice White Ph.D. (1920-2000)} } @booklet {3072, title = {"The Legend of Lady Bruna"}, howpublished = {Legends of Hastur and Cassilda}, year = {1979}, note = {

Rpt. in Marion Zimmer Bradley and The Friends of Darkover. Free Amazons of Darkover: An Anthology. Ed. Marion Zimmer Bradley (New York: DAW Books, 1985), 24-32 with an introductory note on 23. No copy of the Legends appears to be held in any library. Information from Catherine Coker, \“The Friends of Darkover: An Annotated Bibliography and History.\” Foundation 37.104 (Winter 2008): 52.\ 

}, month = {1979}, pages = {6-9}, publisher = {Friends of Darkover}, address = {[Berkeley, CA]}, abstract = {

This is a story of a strong woman who fought to keep her people free and is one of the legends of the Free Amazons.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Marion Zimmer Bradley (1930-99)} } @booklet {3093, title = {Legion}, year = {1979}, month = {1979}, publisher = {Berkley Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Post-catastrophe authoritarian dystopia set in 2257 as background. Part of a series that follows the same family from 1976 and 1977 Grant.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Charles L[ewis] Grant (1942-2006)} } @booklet {3100, title = {Leviathan{\textquoteright}s Deep}, year = {1979}, month = {1979}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Conflict within a world dominated by women over how to respond to contact and growing conflict with Earth. Part of the solution is to educate the men on the woman-dominated world.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {[Margery (known as Marj) A.] [Krueger] (1941-2006)} } @booklet {3156, title = {Long Talking Bad Conditions Blues}, year = {1979}, note = {

Parts originally published under the same title in\ Granta, [no. 1]\ (Spring 1979): 181-90;\ Luna Park; and\ Ploughshares, no. 18\ (5.3) (Fall 1979): 165-76.

}, month = {1979}, publisher = {Fiction Collective}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia of modern life with some elements of science fiction.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Ronald Sukenick (1932-2004)} } @booklet {3099, title = {The Long Walk}, year = {1979}, note = {

Rpt. in\ The Bachman Books: Four Early Novels by Stephen King. Rage, The Long Walk, Roadwork, The Running Man\ (New York: New American Library, 1985), 133-322 with \"Why I Was Bachman\" (v-x); and separately New York: Signet, 1996 with \"The Importance of Being Bachman\" (v-xiii).

}, month = {1979}, publisher = {Signet}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia in which one hundred teenage boys participate in an annual ritual of walking until only one is left alive, most of the rest having been shot for infractions of the rules.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Stephen Edwin] [King] (b. 1947)} } @booklet {3123, title = {The Love Siege}, year = {1979}, month = {1979}, publisher = {Routledge \& Kegan Paul}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Near future authoritarian dystopia. In 1983 \"political\" meetings of any sort are forbidden, with even school staff meetings having to have a government official in attendance. Nonconformists are killed. But there is successful resistance.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Tom [Donald] Wakefield (1935-96)} } @booklet {9582, title = {The Last Days of the Sunshine People}, year = {1978}, month = {1978}, pages = {58 pp.}, publisher = {Nuclassics and Science Publishing}, address = {Washington, DC}, abstract = {

A play about a plan to eliminate all Blacks in the U.S. showing the stages it goes through and the failure of Blacks to believe warnings. Closely related to his 1973\ Count-Down to Black Genocide\ in that in both, a \“Black Day\” is proclaimed as a holiday to honor blacks, but it is actually the day on which the slaughter of blacks is to happen. At the end, some Blacks do come to believe the plan is real inspired by a man who has been given a book called\ The Code of the Black Brotherhood. These blacks decide to create a new nation, Afro-America, also mentioned in\ Count-Down to Black Genocide. See also 1971, 1974, and 1975 (2).

}, keywords = {African American author, Male author}, author = {[Carl Lee] [Shears] (1937-79)} } @booklet {3043, title = {The Last Rose of Summer}, year = {1978}, month = {1978}, publisher = {Corgi Books}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia with governmental control through computers that provided everything to the people except freedom. See also 1983 Gallagher.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Stephen Gallagher (b. 1954} } @booklet {3009, title = {"The Leprosarium"}, howpublished = {Seasons Such As These. Two Novels}, year = {1978}, month = {1978}, pages = {7-57}, publisher = {The Swallow Press}, address = {Chicago, IL}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which a large insurance company punishes those who deviate from its rules by incarcerating them in the Leprosarium where large numbers of people are kept together but prohibited from most contact, with such contact warranting further physical punishment. Those who survive are sent to isolated islands, where they take large doses of the drug orgone, which causes hallucinations.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Natalie L[evin] M[aines] Petesch (b.1924)} } @booklet {8535, title = {A Long Walk to Wimbledon}, year = {1978}, month = {1978}, publisher = {Macmillan}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which extensive fighting has broken out in London, which lays in ruins as the conflicts continue. The novel focuses on one man who must navigate his way across the devastated city.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {H[enry] R[eymond] F[itzwalter] Keating (1926-2011)} } @booklet {3013, title = {Love Me Tomorrow}, year = {1978}, month = {1978}, publisher = {New American Library}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Revision of Edward Bellamy\&$\#$39;s Looking Backward (1888) to produce a highly eroticized eutopia. Although the theorist of the society presents himself as a reincarnation of Bellamy, and wrote a book entitled Looking Backward II, the economics are based on the people\&$\#$39;s corporation proposed by Louis Kelso (1913-91) and the political system on the ideas of Rexford G. Tugwell (1891-1979). The Church of United Love or Unilove is related to Tantrism and based in part on the ideas of Wilhelm Reich (1897-1957). There is also a new language called Loglan, which is used together with English.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Robert H[enry] Rimmer (1917-2001)} } @booklet {2975, title = {The Last Transaction}, year = {1977}, month = {1977}, publisher = {Pinnacle Books}, address = {Los Angeles, CA}, abstract = {

Dystopia set in the near future when people gain control of U.S. nuclear reactors and try to force the country to disarm and establish a world government.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Barry N[athaniel] Malzberg (b. 1939)} } @booklet {2922, title = {A Little Knowledge}, year = {1977}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Berkley, 1978.\ Substantially revised in His The City and the Cygnet: An Alternative History of the Atlanta Urban Nucleus in the 21st Century (Bonney Lake, WA : Kudzu Planet Productions/Fairwood Press, 2019), 228-97.

}, month = {1977}, publisher = {Berkley/Putnam}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia of Christian fundamentalism and religious revivals in a future fragmented United States and the arrival of Aliens.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Michael [Lawson] Bishop (1945-2023)} } @booklet {2941, title = {Logan{\textquoteright}s World}, year = {1977}, note = {

Rpt. in\ Logan: A Trilogy\ (Baltimore, MD: Maclay \& Associates, 1986), 139-259. Rpt. with the same pagination New York: Dell, 1992.

}, month = {1977}, publisher = {Bantam Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Sequel to 1967 Nolan and Johnson in which Logan and the other runners settle a new world. Although there are problems that drive the plot, a nonviolent society is created that operates without a leader. See also 1980 Nolan.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {William F[rancis] Nolan (1928-2021)} } @booklet {2857, title = {"Last Man"}, howpublished = {A Night Tide}, year = {1976}, month = {1976}, pages = {98-104}, publisher = {Randen}, address = {Culver City, CA}, abstract = {

Future eutopia of homosexual men with one brutish earlier man left. Clearly a utopia, but the homosexual men are presented as generally negative stereotypes.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Jon Inouye} } @booklet {2861, title = {The Last Thing You{\textquoteright}d Want To Know}, year = {1976}, month = {1976}, publisher = {Tundra Books}, address = {Montr{\'e}al, QC, Canada}, abstract = {

A witch becomes President of the U.S. Struggle between reason and unreason. Presented by an advocate of reason (an ex-Nazi) who sells out at the end.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, German author, Male author}, author = {Eric Koch (b. 1919)} } @booklet {2850, title = {Lifeline}, year = {1976}, month = {1976}, publisher = {Robert Hale}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a Soviet occupied U.K. in 1998.

}, keywords = {Male author, UK author}, author = {[Jerome] [Gardner] (b. 1932)} } @booklet {2871, title = {"The Little Book of All Colors"}, howpublished = {Papers in Honor of Professor Woodbridge Bingham: A Festschrift for His Seventy-fifth Birthday}, year = {1976}, month = {1976}, pages = {141-269}, publisher = {Chinese Materials Center}, address = {San Francisco, CA}, abstract = {

Eutopia describing the country of Seeklaria, a small country located in the European Alps. Constitutional monarchy. Influenced by Christianity and China. Racially mixed and culturally well integrated. A modern society with the charms of the past. Based on interviews with the King. Much comment on current affairs, particularly Vietnam.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {James B[unyan] Parsons (b. 1948)}, editor = {James B[unyan] Parsons (b. 1948)} } @booklet {2885, title = {The Lost Traveller; A Motorcycle Grail Quest Epic and Science Fiction Western}, year = {1976}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: St. Martin\&$\#$39;s Press, 1977.\ 

}, month = {1976}, publisher = {Macmillan}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Post-catastrophe dystopia centered on biker gangs.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Steve Wilson (b. 1943)} } @booklet {2777, title = {"Letter from London, 1985"}, howpublished = {The Collapse of Democracy}, year = {1975}, note = {

U.S. ed. (New Rochelle, NY: Arlington House, 1976), 21-35. Updated ed. (London: Abacus, 1977), 23-34.

}, month = {1975}, pages = {21-35}, publisher = {Temple Smith}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Socialist dystopia. Buckingham Palace is now the Ministry of Equality. Northern Ireland and Scotland have declared independence. The U.S. has been expelled from what is now the Socialist United Nations. Rationing. While the dystopia is presented as economically unsuccessful, it uses its majority in Parliament to push through all the changes it wants to make.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Robert Moss (b. 1946)} } @booklet {2740, title = {"The Life and Times of Multivac"}, howpublished = {The New York Times Magazine }, year = {1975}, month = {January 5, 1975}, pages = {12, 51, 56, 58, 70}, abstract = {

Flawed utopia in which everyone lives well, but all important decisions are made by a large computer, which, for example, decides who can have children and when. Also, people are only allowed to do unimportant work and that only with permission.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Isaac Asimov (1920-92)} } @booklet {2815, title = {The Log of a Superfluous Son. A Novel}, year = {1975}, month = {1975}, publisher = {John McIndoe}, address = {Dunedin, New Zealand}, abstract = {

The novel focuses on the experiences and thoughts of a successful lawyer who chooses to quit his well-paying job and work on a cattle boat between Auckland, New Zealand and Guam, but in the background is the contemporary dystopia of the Vietnam War and a growing authoritarianism and militarism in New Zealand.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {Michael Henderson (b. 1942)} } @booklet {2699, title = {The Last Days of the American Empire}, year = {1974}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: St. Martin\&$\#$39;s, 1975.

}, month = {1974}, publisher = {Macmillan of Canada}, address = {Toronto, ON, Canada}, abstract = {

Most of the world is experiencing a long drought, have little technology, and people are starving. North and South America consists of two empires that have extensive advanced technology and are wealthy, but much of the population is being kept alive by medical science. Unable to survive in drought conditions, people in Africa and Europe invade North America.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {Bruce [Allen] Powe (1925-2018)} } @booklet {2705, title = {The Last of the Country House Murders}, year = {1974}, note = {

Rpt. London: Faber and Faber, 1986.

}, month = {1974}, publisher = {Jonathan Cape}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Authoritarian overpopulation dystopia.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author, Scottish author}, author = {Emma [Christina] Tennant (1937-2017)} } @booklet {2717, title = {The Legacy. A Drama in One Act}, year = {1974}, month = {1974}, publisher = {Samuel French}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

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

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Paul Elliott} } @booklet {2714, title = {Life and Times of Michael K}, year = {1974}, note = {

U.K. ed. London: Secker \& Warburg, 1983.

}, month = {1974}, publisher = {Ravan Press}, address = {Johannesburg, South Africa}, abstract = {

Dystopia that follows a poor, uneducated man through the turmoil of social conflict/civil war with South Africa under the control of the military.

}, keywords = {Male author, South African author}, author = {J[ohn] M[axwell] Coetzee (b. 1940)} } @booklet {6997, title = {"Love Conquers All"}, howpublished = {Galaxy Science Fiction}, volume = { 35.11 - 36.1 }, year = {1974}, note = {

Repub. New York: Ace Books, 1979. Rev. ed. New York: Baen, 1985.

}, month = {November 1974 - January 1975)}, pages = {4-60; 45-93; 102-47}, abstract = {

Dystopia based on Zero Population Growth.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {0016-4003 }, author = {Fred [Thomas] Saberhagen (1930-2007)} } @booklet {2680, title = {"Lust in Action"}, howpublished = {The Fatal Woman}, year = {1974}, month = {1974}, pages = {117-72}, publisher = {Anansi}, address = {Toronto, ON, Canada}, abstract = {

Lesbian dystopia. All men are castrated at age twenty. Any insult to a woman before that age results in prison and a band around the penis that causes intense pain if there is an erection. The women are generally presented negatively. The story takes place within a prison.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {John [Stinsom] Glassco (1909-81)} } @booklet {2601, title = {Left On! The Glorious Bourgeois Cultural Revolution}, year = {1973}, month = {1973}, publisher = {Quadrangle/The New York Times Book Co.}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Satire on U.S. politics seen through a eutopia of \"evolutionary democracy\", which has striking affinities to aspects of China under Mao Tse-tung (1893-1976), including a \"Cultural Revolution\". Some have read it as intending to present a eutopia; others have read it as an attack on the left. The inside front and back covers have a Chronology of the period covered by the book (July 1972 to February 1975).

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Harry [Heinrich August] Rositzke (1911-2003)} } @booklet {2581, title = {The Leisure Riots; A Comic Novel}, year = {1973}, month = {1973}, publisher = {Tundra Books}, address = {Montr{\'e}al, QC, Canada}, abstract = {

Dystopia of vast unemployment. People riot against leisure activities.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, German author, Male author}, author = {Eric Koch (b. 1919)} } @booklet {2636, title = {"Life in the Year 2000"}, howpublished = {Royal Institute of British Architects Journal}, volume = { 80.7}, year = {1973}, month = {July 1973}, pages = {318-21}, abstract = {

General overview of a better society. See also 1947 Goodman and Goodman and 1977 Goodman.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Percival Goodman (1904-89)} } @booklet {2564, title = {"London Times, 2075 July 15. Reporter Visits Lincoln. First Reporter in 100 Years"}, howpublished = {1973 American Anthropological Association Experimental Symposium on Cultural Futuristics: Pre-Conference Volume}, year = {1973}, pages = {Separately paged}, publisher = {[Office for Applied Social Science and the Future, University of Minnesota]}, address = {[Minneapolis, MN]}, abstract = {

Detailed eutopia--ecologically sound society that stresses the human scale.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Marion L[undy] Dobbert (b. 1943)} } @booklet {2560, title = {"Lone Warrior"}, howpublished = {Two Views of Wonder}, year = {1973}, month = {1973}, pages = {26-40 with an editor{\textquoteright}s note on 25}, publisher = {Ballantine Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The story begins with the death by torture of a member of the opposition to an authoritarian dystopia with his lover being forced to watch and continues with her systematic attempt to reconnect with the opposition movement and get revenge.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Miriam Allen deFord (1888-1975)}, editor = {Thomas N[icholas] Scortia (1926-86) and Chelsea Quinn Yarbro (b. 1942)} } @booklet {2598, title = {Looking Backward, From the Year 2000}, year = {1973}, note = {

U.K. edition. Morley, West Yorkshire, Eng.: Elmfield Press, 1976.

}, month = {1973}, publisher = {Ace Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Julian West, the protagonist of 1888 Bellamy, waking in Reynold\’s future, described here in the most eutopian of his novels. Everything automated. New world language. The woman he falls in love with rejects him as a throwback.\ See also 1977 Reynolds,\ Equality.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Mack [Dallas McCord] Reynolds (1917-83)} } @booklet {9837, title = {The Lynchers}, year = {1973}, month = {1973}, publisher = {Harcourt Brace Jovanovich}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

As a part of their protest against the dystopia created for blacks in the United States, four black man plan on lynching a white policeman.\ 

}, keywords = {African American author, Male author}, author = {John Edgar Wideman (b. 1941)} } @booklet {8782, title = {Lear}, year = {1972}, note = {

Rpt. in his Plays: Two (London: Methuen Drama, 1989), 1-102.

U.S. ed. New York: Hill and Wang, 1972.

}, month = {1972}, publisher = {Eyre Methuen}, address = {London}, abstract = {

A reimagining of Shakespeare\’s\ Lear\ as a vicious, paranoid autocrat who tries to keep out imaginary enemies by building a wall. Sometimes called the most violent play ever staged.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Edward Bond (1934-2024)} } @booklet {11474, title = {Les Blancs. A Drama in Two Acts. Final Text Adapted by Robert Nemiroff}, year = {1972}, note = {

Also published in Les Blancs: The Collected Last Plays of Lorraine Hansberry. Ed. Robert Nemiroff. New York: Random House, 1972. \“Les Blancs is 47-172, with \“A Critical Background\” (35-46) and \“Postscript\” by Neimroff (173-86) that discusses reviews of the play. Includes materials not part of the Broadway production. The play is also analyzed by Julius Lester in his \“Introduction\” (3-32).

}, month = {1972}, pages = {120 pp.}, publisher = {Samuel French}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The play explores the dystopia of colonialism in Africa. The title refers to Jean Genet\’s Les N{\`e}gres (1958).

}, keywords = {African American author, Female author}, author = {Lorraine [Vivian] Hansberry (1930-65)} } @booklet {2459, title = {The Light That Never Was}, year = {1972}, note = {

Rpt. New York: DAW Books, 1973.

}, month = {1972}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Some dystopia and some satire. The novel is set on a planet that is devoted to art and once produced many great artists but is now flooded with mediocre artists selling to hordes of tourists. The plot centers on pogroms against non-human aliens.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Lloyd Biggle Jr. (1923-2002)} } @booklet {2441, title = {"The Lathe of Heaven"}, howpublished = {Amazing Stories }, volume = {44.6 - 45.1 }, year = {1971}, note = {

Repub. New York: Charles Scribner\&$\#$39;s Sons, 1971. Rpt. New York: Avon, 1973. U.K. ed. London: Gollancz, 1972.\ 

}, month = {March - May 1971}, pages = {6 -61; 6-65, 121-23}, abstract = {

Begins with a dystopian background stressing pollution and overpopulation. Search for eutopia driven by a power-hungry psychiatrist controlling a man whose dreams can change reality.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {0002-6891 }, author = {Ursula K[roeber] Le Guin (1929-2018)} } @booklet {2416, title = {Little Dog{\textquoteright}s Day. A Novel}, year = {1971}, month = {1971}, publisher = {Allison \& Busby}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Future authoritarian bureaucratic dystopia and an anti-bureaucratic movement.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Jack Trevor Story (1917-91)} } @booklet {10491, title = {The Lorax}, year = {1971}, month = {1971}, publisher = {Random House}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Children\’s picture book depicting the creation of an environmental dystopia through logging an area until no tree is left, and all the wildlife have fled. Terri Birkett wrote a response to defend logging, The Truax. illus. Orrin Lundgren Memphis, TN: Hardwood Forest Foundation, 1995, which was sponsored by the National Wood Flooring Manufacturers\’ Association. http://www.myteacherpages.com/webpages/NDow/files/TRUAX1.pdf.\ A TV adaptation was aired on CBS February 14, 1972. A feature film directed by Chris Renaud (b. 1966) with a screenplay by Cinco Paul (b. 1964) and Ken Daurio (b. 1972) was released March 2, 2012. A musical version with music and lyrics by Charlie Fink (b. 1986) ran at the Old Vic in London from December 2, 2015, to January 16, 2016, returned in 2017, and has toured in the U.S.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Theodor Seuss] [Geisel] (1904-91)} } @booklet {2423, title = {Los Angeles A.D. 2017}, year = {1971}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Popular Library, nd.

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

Overpopulation and pollution dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Philip [Gordon] Wylie (1902-71)} } @booklet {2406, title = {Love in the Ruins: The Adventures of a Bad Catholic at a Time Near the End of the World}, year = {1971}, note = {

U.K. ed. London: Eyre \& Spottiswoode, 1971.

}, month = {1971}, publisher = {Farrar, Straus, \& Giroux}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia located in Louisiana depicting a general collapse of the U.S. with some local institutions surviving. Racial conflict and, at the end, the northern cities with large African American populations have seceded. The protagonist believes himself to be a collateral descendant of Thomas More and regularly refers to him.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Walker Percy (1916-90)} } @booklet {2336, title = {"Last of the Urbanites"}, howpublished = {Man Junior (Sydney, NSW, Australia) }, volume = {NS 34.2 }, year = {1970}, month = {October 1970}, pages = {10-12, 17, 72-73}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Technology and cities are destroyed.

}, author = {Coughlan, L.W} } @booklet {2337, title = {"Learning in the Age of Wonder"}, howpublished = {The Guelph Papers}, year = {1970}, note = {

Rpt. in\ Visions 2020. Ed. for the Canadian Forum by Stephen Clarkson (Edmonton, AB, Canada: M.G. Hurtig, 1970), 183-88.

}, month = {1970}, pages = {8-14}, publisher = {Peter Martin Associates}, address = {Toronto, ON, Canada}, abstract = {

Eutopia of future education that is free and individualized and begins with parenting education.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {Lloyd [Arthur] Dennis (1923-2012)}, editor = {Robert F. Nixon} } @booklet {2324, title = {Leatherjacket. A Thriller}, year = {1970}, month = {1970}, publisher = {Weidenfeld and Nicolson}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Mostly adventure but based around a movement to revive National Socialism.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Arthur Wise (1923-83)} } @booklet {2355, title = {"Looking Back on Illth"}, howpublished = {Visions 2020: Fifty Canadians in Search of a Future}, year = {1970}, month = {1970}, pages = {88-93}, publisher = {M. G. Hurtig}, address = {Edmonton, AB, Canada}, abstract = {

Eutopia of medicine in the future. Mostly a critique of the past, but describes \"one-stop\" health care.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {John T. McLeod}, editor = {Stephen Clarkson For the Canadian Forum} } @booklet {2317, title = {"The Lost Continent."}, howpublished = {Science Against Man}, year = {1970}, note = {

U.K. ed. London: Macdonald Science Fiction, 1971), 9-56. Rpt. in his\ The Star-Spangled Future\ (New York: Ace Books, 1979), 335-401 with an \"Introduction to The Lost Continent\" (331-33).

}, month = {1970}, pages = {9-56}, publisher = {Avon Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Satire with Africa dominant and the U.S. degenerated due to extensive pollution.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Norman [Richard] Spinrad (b. 1940)}, editor = {Anthony Cheetham} } @booklet {2349, title = {Lustopia}, year = {1970}, month = {1970}, publisher = {Pendulum Books}, address = {Los Angeles, CA}, abstract = {

Erotica describing a commune where all sexual desires can be fulfilled.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Scott Harford} } @booklet {2206, title = {The Last Continent}, year = {1969}, note = {

U.K. ed. London: Hodder \& Stoughton, 1970. Rpt. London: Hodder Paperbacks, 1971.

}, month = {1969}, publisher = {Dell}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Advanced blacks from Mars return to Earth and find primitive whites in a tropical Antarctica. Interracial conflict and interracial love.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Edmund Cooper (1926-82)} } @booklet {2223, title = {The Left Hand of Darkness}, year = {1969}, note = {

Also published New York: Walker and Co., 1969. The New York: Ace Books, 1976 edition has an unnumbered six-page introduction by Le Guin which is rpt. in her\ The Language of the Night: Essays on Fantasy and Science Fiction. Ed. Susan Wood (New York: G.P. Putnam\&$\#$39;s Sons, 1979), 155-59; Rev. ed. ed. Ursula K[roeber] Le Guin (London: Women\&$\#$39;s Press, 1989), 130-34. 1st American ed. (New York: HarperCollins, 1989), 150-54. Collector\&$\#$39;s Edition illus. Frank Kelly Freas and Laura Brodian Kelly Freas with an \"Preface\" by Joan D. Vinge (v-xiii) and the 1976 \"Introduction\" by Le Guin xv-xviii). Norwalk, CT: The Easton Press, 1992. The 25th anniversary ed. New York: Walker, 1994 contains an important \"Afterword\" (287-93) and appendices (295-345) concerning the issue of gendered language. The 40th Anniversary ed. London: Gollancz, 2009 includes an \"Introductory Note for the 40th Anniversary Edition\" (ix-xii), 1995 Le Guin (249-68), \"Some Kardish Words, and Two Songs from the Domain of Estre\" (269-72), and \"Author\&$\#$39;s working sketch map\" (273).\ The Library of America edition reprints the 1969 Ace Books edition; Hainish Novels \& Stories Volume One. Rocannon\’s World Planet of Exile City of Illusions The Left Hand of Darkness The Dispossessed Stories. Ed. Brian Attebery (New York: Library of America, 2017), 385-611 with a \“Note on the Text\” (1083), \“Notes\” (1090-91), and \“Introduction to The Left Hand of Darkness (1023-27).\ The London: Gollancz, 2017 ed. has an \“Introduction\” by China Mi{\'e}ville (ix-xii) and the 1976 \“Introduction\” by Le Guin (xiii-xvii), albeit not identified as such.\ 50th Anniversary Edition. New York: Ace Books, 2019, with an \“Introduction\” by David Mitchell (ix-xiv) and an \“Afterword\” by Charlie Jane Anders (305-15).

}, month = {1969}, publisher = {Ace Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Eutopia and dystopia. The novel is best known for its depiction of a hermaphrodite or ambisexual (both words are used in the text) society in which the people are neuter most of the time but can become female or male for a period with another person and can both sire and give birth to children. The novel is primarily concerned with relations between two countries on the planet and within each country during the period after initial contact with an envoy from off planet. A related story is her \"Winter\&$\#$39;s King.\" Orbit 5. Ed. Damon [Francis] Knight (New York: G. P. Putnam\&$\#$39;s Sons, 1969), 67-88; rev. with the pronouns changed to they\ in her The Wind\&$\#$39;s Twelve Quarters: Short Stories (New York: Harper \& Row, 1975), 75-95, which has some revisions (see the note on 75); and in New Eves: Science Fiction About Extraordinary Women of Today and Tomorrow. Ed. Janrae Frank, Jean Stine, and Forrest J. Ackerman (Stamford, CT: Longmeadow Press, 1994), 301-16 with an editors\&$\#$39; note on 200; and in Hainish Novels \& Stories Volume One. Rocannon\’s World Planet of Exile City of Illusions The Left Hand of Darkness The Dispossessed Stories. Ed. Brian Attebery (New York: Library of America, 2017), 923-43 with a \“Note on the Text\” (1083), and the original Orbit 5 version (1044-64).\ See also, 1995 Le Guin, \"Coming of Age in Karhide.\"\ Three stories by Stevan Allred set in Gethen are \“Ib \& Nib and the Ice Berries\”, \“Ib \& Nib and the Golden Ring\”, and \“Ib \& Nib and the Hemmens Tree\” in Dispatches from Anarres: Tales in Tribute to Ursula K. Le Guin. Ed. Susan DeFreitas (Portland, OR: Forest Avenue Press, 2021), 76-82, 216-223, 358-362.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Ursula K[roeber] Le Guin (1929-2018)} } @booklet {2266, title = {Light a Last Candle}, year = {1969}, note = {

Rpt. London: Tandem, 1971

}, month = {1969}, publisher = {Rapp \& Whiting}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia of alien invaders who have created mutated humans. The few normal people are outlaws. The focus of the novel is on the struggle.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Rex Thomas] [Vinson] (1935-2000)} } @booklet {2220, title = {Looking Forward}, year = {1969}, month = {1969}, publisher = {A.S.Barnes\Thomas Yoseloff}, address = {South Brunswick, NJ\London}, abstract = {

Technological eutopia. \"Part II A Projection of Our Future\" (87-195) is a computer-based eutopia using atomic power. Government replaced by computers. Extensive genetic engineering. Production and distribution computer controlled, and no industrial work for people. Human work is administrative and creative. People sleep little. Extremely healthy with constant automated health checks at home. No Money. The third part, \"Looking Forward,\" is a single chapter, \"Education for Change\".\ See also 1995, 2002, and 2007 Fresco and https://www.thevenusproject.com/the-venus-project/jacque-fresco/. PSt holds a folder that contains: Venus Project brochure (4 pp); 2 copies of highlights of an interview with Jacque Fresco (6 pp); photocopy of an article by the author entitled \“Designing the Future: A Cybernetic City for the Next Century\” published in The Futurist 28.3 (May-June 1994): 29-33; promotional materials including a color sheet with images of the model home and a color sheet with various conceptual renderings. At the University of Pennsylvania, the Daniels Millennium Collection, Box 329, includes a copy of the book, \“Introduction to the Venus Project\” (http://www.nas.com/venus/intro.shtml), \“The Venus Project Mission Statement: (http://www.nas.com/venus/ms01.shtml), and other material. There is considerable repetition in the Fresco material.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Kenneth S. Keyes Jr. (1921-95) and Jacque Fresco (1916-2017)} } @booklet {2228, title = {Lovely}, year = {1969}, month = {1969}, publisher = {Essex House}, address = {North Hollywood, CA}, abstract = {

A dystopian pornographic series depicting a future bureaucratic, militaristic dystopia in the U.S.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {David Meltzer (1937-2016)} } @booklet {2122, title = {Ladies{\textquoteright} Day}, year = {1968}, month = {1968}, pages = {110-72}, publisher = {Belmont Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Gender-role reversal dystopia. Woman had taken over after another war. A revolt of men is put down, but a movement toward equality is beginning.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Robert [Albert] Bloch (1917-94)} } @booklet {2192, title = {Land of the Moobs}, year = {1968}, month = {1968}, publisher = {Ptd. by the South China Morning Post}, address = {Hong Kong}, abstract = {

Satire in which\ the inhabitants of the Moon, called Moobs, are divided into Royalists and Rebels. The Rebel society is run by a Chief Bureaucrat, who is corrupt and power-hungry. War between Rebels and Royalists. \"Spoilers\" is a dystopia in which Communists control most of the world and many religious groups were forced to migrate to the moon.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Seymour O. Kopf} } @booklet {2176, title = {The Last Starship from Earth}, year = {1968}, month = {1968}, publisher = {Weybright and Talley}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Eugenic dystopia and the struggle against it. Science rules.\ Everyone is classified according to their talents and can only marry within their caste.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Boyd Bradfield] [Upchurch] (1919-2013)} } @booklet {2183, title = {"Lines of Power: We, in Some Strange Power{\textquoteright}s Employ, Move on a Rigorous Line"}, howpublished = {The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction }, volume = {34.5 (204) }, year = {1968}, note = {

Rpt. as \“We, in Some Strange Power\’s Employ, Move on a Rigorous Line.\” In his\ Distant Stars\ (New York: Bantam Books, 1981), 293-352. Rpt. (New York: ibooks, 2004), 293-352; in his\ Driftglass. Ten Tales of Speculative Fiction\ (New York: New American Library, 1971), 139-90. Book rpt. without the subtitle. New York: Gregg Press, 1977. Book Club edition (Garden City, NY: Nelson Doubleday, 1971), 130-84. Rpt. Illus. Michael Sorkin. in his\ Distant Stars\ (New York: Bantam Books, 1981), 293-352;\ rpt. illus. Michael Sorkin\ (New York: ibooks, 2004), 293-352; in his Driftglass (Garden City: Nelson Doubleday, 1971), 130-83; in his Driftglass/Starshards (London: Grafton, 1993), 155-222;\ and in his\ Aye and Gomorrah. Stories\ (New York: Vintage Books, 2003), 122-81.\ 

}, month = {May 1968}, pages = {4-46}, abstract = {

Conflict between two visions of a better life, one technologically based and one off the grid. The law requires that every community above a certain very small size must be provided with electrical power whether it is wanted or not.

}, keywords = {African American author, Male author}, issn = {00024-984X }, author = {Samuel R[ay] Delany (b. 1942)} } @booklet {2195, title = {Little Big Mouth: The Story of a Little Girl Who Became Prime Minister}, year = {1968}, month = {1968}, publisher = {Cockerel Print}, address = {Wellington, New Zealand}, abstract = {

A little girl who talks constantly and becomes known as \"Little Big Mouth\" but no one listened. When the Prime Minister couldn\&$\#$39;t talk, she was made PM because she was the only person who could talk constantly and only by talking constantly could politicians ensure that no one listened. She chose to say nothing, which kept the politicians from doing their usual stupid things. When the PM recovered his voice and tried to throw her out, the people rose up and demanded that she become PM; she agreed.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Australian author, Male author}, author = {Neil Rowe (1941-2003)} } @booklet {2136, title = {The Lucifer Cell}, year = {1968}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: Atheneum, 1968.

}, month = {1968}, publisher = {Hodder and Stoughton}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia with a background of Britain as occupied by China.

}, keywords = {Male author, UK author}, author = {[Ian Campbell] [McDougal} } @booklet {2080, title = {Logan{\textquoteright}s Run}, year = {1967}, note = {

Rpt. in\ Logan: A Trilogy\ (Baltimore, MD: Maclay \& Associates, 1986), 21-137. Rpt. with the same pagination New York: Dell, 1992.\ 

}, month = {1967}, publisher = {Dial}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which everyone is killed at 21 but those who manage to win a race get to live. See also 1977 and 1980 Nolan, which focus on, Logan, the protagonist.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {William F[rancis] Nolan (1928-2021) and George Clayton Johnson (1929-2015)} } @booklet {2099, title = {Lord of Light}, year = {1967}, note = {

UK ed. London: Faber \& Faber, 1968. Rpt. London: Victor Gollancz, 2006 with an \"Introduction\" by George R[aymond] R[ichard]\ Martin (vii-xii). Chapter 2 was previously published as \"Dawn\" and Chapter 3 as \"Death and the Executioner.\" The\ Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction\ 32.4, 6 (April, June 1967): 4-36; 4-36.\ 

}, month = {1967}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia based on control of technology by a group ruling as the Hindu pantheon.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Roger [Joseph] Zelazny (1937-95)} } @booklet {2070, title = {Lords of the Starship}, year = {1967}, note = {

UK ed. London: Sphere, 1971. Rpt. in his\ The Books of the Wars\ (New York: Baen, 2009), 15-205.

}, month = {1967}, publisher = {Ace Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia of militarism in a post-catastrophe world.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Mark S[ymington] Geston (b. 1946)} } @booklet {2042, title = {The Last Refuge}, year = {1966}, month = {1966}, publisher = {Ronald Whiting \& Wheaton}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia. The countryside has been paved over, and private homes have been replaced with huge apartment blocks.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {John Petty (1919-73)} } @booklet {2011, title = {The Loafers of Refuge}, year = {1965}, note = {

Rpt. London: Pan, 1967. Earlier version published in\ New Worlds Science Fiction\ as \"The Colonist.\" 41.121 (August 1962): 4-34; \"The-Old-Man-In-The-Mountain.\" 44.131 (June 1963): 4-30; and \"Refuge.\" 44.132 (July 1963): 4-41.

}, month = {1965}, publisher = {Victor Gollancz}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Blending of two branches of humanity on a distant planet, one stressing technology and one stressing mental control. Problems and possibilities of both but with a particularly sympathetic portrayal of the latter.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Joseph L[ee] Green (b. 1931)} } @booklet {1997, title = {The Lost Diaries of Albert Smith}, year = {1965}, note = {

Later ed. as\ After all, this is England. Harmondsworth, Eng.: Penguin, 1967.

}, month = {1965}, publisher = {Jonathan Cape}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which Fascists come to power in Britain.

}, keywords = {Male author, UK author}, author = {Robert Muller (b. 1925)} } @booklet {1892, title = {Let the Spacemen Beware!}, year = {1963}, note = {

U.K. ed. London: Dennis Dobson, 1963.\ 

}, month = {1963}, publisher = {Ace}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Flawed eutopia in that the people of an apparently eutopian planet have a homicidal instinct.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Poul [William] Anderson (1926-2001)} } @booklet {1901, title = {The Living Gem}, year = {1963}, month = {1963}, publisher = {Brown, Watson}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia with a Health Police. There is a small free love sect.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Paul [Samuel] Charkin (1907-86)} } @booklet {1852, title = {The Lani People}, year = {1962}, note = {

U.K. ed. London: Transworld, 1962.

}, month = {1962}, publisher = {Bantam Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

A planet is inhabited by beautiful women who have been bred to perfectly please men and are only happy if completely naked. They are shipped throughout the galaxy.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {J[esse] F[ranklin] Bone (1916-2002)} } @booklet {1882, title = {"Last Year{\textquoteright}s Grave Undug"}, howpublished = {Great Science Fiction by Scientists}, year = {1962}, note = {

Rpt. in\ It Walks in Beauty: Selected Prose of Chandler Davis. Ed. Josh Lukin (Seattle, WA: Aqueduct Press, 2010), 141-66.

}, month = {1962}, pages = {103-21 with an editor{\textquoteright}s note on 102}, publisher = {Collier Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia that is the result of two fascists fighting for power in the U.S. and destroying it. .

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author, US author}, author = {[Horace] Chan[dler] Davis (b. 1926)}, editor = {Groff Conklin} } @booklet {1851, title = {A Life for the Stars}, year = {1962}, note = {

UK ed. London: Faber \& Faber, 1964. Also published in Analog Science Fact--Science Fiction 70.1 - 2 (September - October 1962): 6-51, 111-61. Part of a series collected in his Cities in Flight (New York: Avon, 1970), 131-234.\ 

}, month = {1962}, publisher = {G.P. Putnam{\textquoteright}s Sons}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The novel begins with a dystopia of an Earth depleted of resources with entire cities leaving Earth as physical units to roam space looking for work. The focus of the novel is a young man who is impressed into the work force of a leaving city and then traded to another city.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {James [Benjamin] Blish (1921-75)} } @booklet {1816, title = {The Lovers}, year = {1961}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Ballantine Books, 1972. Rev. ed. New York: Ballantine Books, 1979; rpt. New York: Ballantine, 1980. Earlier short version under the same title in\ Startling Stores 27.1 (August 1952): 12-63; rpt. in The Philip Jos{\'e} Farmer Centennial Collection. Ed. Michael Croteau (Np: Meteor House, 2018), 55-141.

}, month = {1961}, publisher = {Ballantine Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia of an overpopulated theocratic society, which appears to have Islamic roots. In North America, there is only when area, the Hudson Bay Wildlife Preserve, that is not fully built-up. There are rigid controls on all aspects of life, and a minder assigned to individuals. Everyone must wear a hood when eating. Married couples never see each other nude, and sex is considered an unpleasant duty. Uniforms indicate class with badges to indicate rank, and even access to elevators is by rank. The regime is looking for new planets to colonize with no concern for the indigenous populations. Most people are specialists, and the protagonist is a linguist who is sent to one such planet with the avowed purpose of learning about the indigenous population. But his real mission is to find and excuse for exterminating them. The dystopia provides the background to a story about interspecies love.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Philip Jos{\'e} Farmer (1918-2009)} } @booklet {1803, title = {"Life on Mars"}, howpublished = {This Week Magazine (New York Herald Tribune)}, year = {1960}, month = {April 24, May 1, 8, 1960}, pages = {8-10, 12-13, 28-29; 28-35; 18, 20, 22-25}, abstract = {

Eutopia on Mars based on unlimited electrical power.

}, keywords = {German author, Male author, US author}, author = {Werner [Wernher Magnus Maximilian] Von Braun (1912-77)} } @booklet {9206, title = {Last Division}, year = {1959}, month = {1959}, pages = {78 pp.}, publisher = {Human \& Rousseau}, address = {Cape Town, South Africa}, abstract = {

Poem. The first section briefly describes a technological eutopia and asks the question, \“What happened to that curious lot/Of legislators in that Southern Land?\” (5). The first Canto that follows is a satire on the stupidities of the human race and ends by focusing on South Africa and apartheid. The rest of the poem is a satire on South African politics. One of the politicians is Satan and takes all of them to Hell.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, South African author}, author = {Anthony [Ronald St. Martin] Delius (1916-89)} } @booklet {1746, title = {Level 7}, year = {1959}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: McGraw-Hill, [1960]. U.K. ed. rpt. London: New English Library, 1962; London: Allison \& Busby, 1981. Chicago, IL: Lawrence Hill Books, 1989; and ed. David Seed. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 2004.\ 

}, month = {1959}, publisher = {William Heinemann}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which the U.S. government, preparing for nuclear war, builds many fallout shelters at various levels, with level one for civilians, and others for the elite, government officials, and the military. Level 7 is the deepest and designed for those who will push the buttons to send the missiles. The novel is presented as a diary by X-127, one of the button-pushers, and presents the society created. When the war comes, apparently accidentally with automated responses on both sides, the world is destroyed, and the shelters all fail.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Mordecai [Marceli] Roshwald (1921-2015)} } @booklet {1764, title = {"A Life and A Half"}, howpublished = {If Worlds of Science Fiction }, volume = {8.6 }, year = {1959}, note = {

Rpt. in his The Abominable Earthman (New York: Ballantine Books, 1963), 48-54.\ 

}, month = {July 1959}, pages = {74-79}, publisher = {Ballantine Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Overpopulation dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Frederik George] [Pohl] [Jr.] (1919-2013]} } @booklet {1742, title = {The Lunatic Republic}, year = {1959}, month = {1959}, publisher = {Chatto and Windus}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Satiric authoritarian dystopia on the moon, the Lunatic Republic, in which everyone does the same thing at the same time. Names are three letters and a number. The moon had been mostly destroyed by war, which is why the part we see is desolate. On Earth the novel is set after the Chinese, which dominates the Prosperity Union of Asia, defeats of Russia. There is also a Welfare State of Europe, and the U.S. dominates all of North and South America.

}, keywords = {Male author, Scottish author}, author = {[Edward Montague] Compton Mackenzie (1883-1972)} } @booklet {9821, title = {"The Last Letter"}, howpublished = {Galaxy Science Fiction}, volume = {16.2}, year = {1958}, note = {

Rpt. in his A Pail of Air (New York: Ballantine Books, 1964), 132-44; and in The Worlds of Fritz Leiber (New York: Ace Books, 1976), 219-32. Rpt. (Boston, MA: Gregg Press, 1979), 219-32.\ 

}, month = {June 1958}, pages = {45-56}, abstract = {

Satire on a technologically oriented society that uses most of the technology for advertising. People live in hives overseen by a Queen Mother and every boy in the hive must marry one of the \“Girls Next Door.\”

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {0016-4003 }, author = {Fritz [Reuter] Leiber [Jr.] (1910-92)} } @booklet {1701, title = {"The Last of the Deliverers"}, howpublished = {The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction}, volume = { 14.2 (81) }, year = {1958}, month = {February 1958}, pages = {85-95}, abstract = {

Conflict between Freeborn and Communist communities showing flaws in both systems. The Freeborn community appears to be a capitalist eutopia, but there is very little economic activity.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {00024-984X }, author = {Poul [William] Anderson (1926-2001)} } @booklet {1733, title = {The Living City}, year = {1958}, month = {1958}, publisher = {Horizon Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Architectural eutopia describing Wright\’s eutopias Usonia and Broadacre City. Includes both building designs and layouts for towns and cities plus an argument for the beneficial effects of his ideas. See also his\ The Disappearing City. New York: William Farquhar Payson, 1932;\ When Democracy Builds. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1945; and \“Broadacre City: An Architect\’s Vision.\”\ The New York Times\ (March 20, 1932): 8.

}, keywords = {US author}, author = {Frank Lloyd Wright (1869-1959)} } @booklet {1688, title = {A Land Fit for {\textquoteright}Eros}, year = {1957}, month = {1957}, publisher = {Arco}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Primarily humor. Satire on a British movement to root out \"subversives\" similar to that of Senator Joseph R. McCarthy (1908-57) in the U.S. that was known as McCarthyism.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author, Scottish author}, author = {John [Alfred Neville] Atkins (1916-2009) and J[ohn] B[arclay] Pick (1921-2015)} } @booklet {1696, title = {"The Language of Love"}, howpublished = {Galaxy Science Fiction (New York)}, volume = {14.1 }, year = {1957}, note = {

Rpt. in The Collected Short Fiction of Robert Sheckley. Book Two (Eugene, OR: Pulphouse Publishing, 1991), 369-80;\ in his\ The Masque of Ma{\~n}ana. Ed. Sharon L. Sbarsky (Framingham, MA: The NESFA Press, 2005), 375-84; and in Store of the Worlds: The Stories of Robert Sheckley. Ed. Alex Abramovich and Jonathan Lethem (New York: New York Review Books, 2012), 253-65 with an \“Introduction\” to the collection by the editors (vii-xi).

}, month = {May 1957}, pages = {39-50}, abstract = {

The setting of the story is a future eutopian earth in which the entire landscape is carefully tended, it rains as needed in the middle of the night, and all animals are in zoos. The story is about an inarticulate young man learning the rational language of love of extinct aliens and its effects.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {0016-4003 }, author = {Robert Sheckley (1928-2005)} } @booklet {1658, title = {"License"}, howpublished = {The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction }, volume = {12.4 }, year = {1957}, note = {

Rpt. in his\ Seven Conquests\ (New York: Collier Books, 1969), 140-66. UK ed. as\ Conquests\ (London: Granada, 1981), 157-86.

}, month = {April 1957}, pages = {85-108}, abstract = {

Overpopulation dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {00024-984X }, author = {Poul [William] Anderson (1926-2001)} } @booklet {1682, title = {"Lone Star Planet"}, howpublished = {Fantastic Universe}, volume = { 7.3 }, year = {1957}, note = {

Rpt. as\ A Planet for Texans. New York: Ace Books, 1958. Ace Double bound with Andre Norton (1912-2005),\ Star Born; and as\ Lone Star Planet. New York: Ace Books, 1979 with no mention of McGuire. Bound with his\ Four-Day Planet, which was originally published New York: G.P. Putnam\&$\#$39;s Sons, 1961.

}, month = {March 1957}, pages = {4-66}, abstract = {

A planet settled by Texans with an almost anarchist society. The workings of its political and legal systems are presented positively, although with satirical elements.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {H[enry] Beam Piper (1917-81) and John J[oseph] McGuire (1917-1981)} } @booklet {1644, title = {The "Lomokome" Papers}, year = {1956}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Pocket Books, 1968. Also published illus. Bernard Perlin in\ Collier\&$\#$39;s 137.4\ (February 17, 1956): 69-84. The illustrations in the book and magazine versions are completely different but the texts are identical.

}, month = {1956}, publisher = {Simon and Schuster}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Satire on the arms race in which the two countries of Lomokome and Lomadine practice \"responsible war\" because war is necessary for their economies and morale. Responsible war includes the regular announcement of war by a College of Judges followed by moving to a war economy, the invention but not building of new weapons, voluntary death by young men, the announcement of victory by the College of Judges, and the death of some of the leaders of the losers. Lomokome and Lomadine present themselves as very different but are quite similar. In the \"Preface to the Paperback Edition,\" Wouk says that it was written in 1949 and that \"Lomokome\" is Hebrew for Utopia or Nowhere.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Herman Wouk (b. 1915)} } @booklet {1637, title = {"Love Incorporated"}, howpublished = {Playboy }, volume = {3.9 }, year = {1956}, note = {

Rpt. as \"Pilgrimage to Earth.\"\ Spectrum: A Science Fiction Anthology.\ Ed. Kingsley Amis and Robert Conquest (London: Victor Gollancz, 1961), 209-20; U.S. ed. (New York: Harcourt, Brace and World, 1961), 209-20; in\ The Collected Short Stories of Robert Sheckley. Book Two\ (Eugene, OR: Pulphouse Publishing, 1991), 7-18; and in his\ The Masque of Ma{\~n}ana.\ Ed. Sharon L. Sbarsky (Framingham, MA: The NESFA Press, 2005), 347-56.

}, month = {September 1956}, pages = {16-18, 62, 76-77}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Earth, exhausted of its natural resources, is a vacation planet selling true love (by hypnotizing the women), vicarious violence, and sexual perversion.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Robert Sheckley (1928-2005)} } @booklet {1606, title = {"Life, Incorporated"}, howpublished = {Fantastic Universe }, volume = {3.3 }, year = {1955}, month = {April 1955}, pages = {59-74}, abstract = {

Eutopia where everyone knows their life span is visited by a thief from Earth who temporarily brings corruption.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Alice Eleanor Jones (1916-81)} } @booklet {1562, title = {"Little Orphan Android"}, howpublished = {Galaxy Science Fiction (New York)}, volume = {10.6 }, year = {1955}, note = {

Rpt. in his\ Future Imperfect\ (New York: Bantam Books, 1964), 17-45.

}, month = {September 1955}, pages = {4-34}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which androids and robots almost completely control humans and wipe human memories for disobedience. A small group of humans begin to educate themselves so that they can regain power over their lives. One theme is consumer androids developed to keep industrial society consuming goods at the highest possible level, which is similar to 1954 Pohl, \"The Midas Plague.\"

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {0016-4003 }, author = {James E[dwin] Gunn (1923-2020)} } @booklet {8752, title = {"Live in Amity"}, howpublished = {Science Fiction Stories }, volume = {5.6}, year = {1955}, month = {May 1955}, pages = {36-54}, abstract = {

Authoritarian religious dystopia.

}, author = {D. A. Jourdon} } @booklet {1554, title = {The Long Tomorrow}, year = {1955}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Ballantine Books, 1974.\ 

}, month = {1955}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

After an atomic war the New Mennonites become powerful because they know how to survive on the land. They pass the thirtieth amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which reads \"No city, no town, no community of more than one thousand people or two hundred buildings to the square mile shall be built or permitted to exist anywhere in the United States of America.\" Other religious groups are even more extreme than the New Mennonites. There is a small, threatened enclave that hopes to bring back the old technology.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Leigh [Douglass] Brackett (1915-78)} } @booklet {1551, title = {"The Long Way Home"}, howpublished = {Astounding Science Fiction (New York)}, volume = {55 }, year = {1955}, note = {

Repub. London: Panther, 1975. US ed. New York: Ace Books, 1978. Abridged ed. as\ No World of Their Own. New York: Ace Books, 1955; and New York: Ace Books, 1955 as an Ace Double bound with Isaac Asimov\&$\#$39;s\ The Thousand-Year Plan. Original Title:\ Foundation, abridged from New York: Gnome, 1951; rpt. as\ The Long Way Home. Boston, MA: Gregg Press, 1975 with an \"Introduction\" (v-vi) by the author. The copyright page says that the book is a reprint of the Ace edition; Anderson\&$\#$39;s introduction says that it restores the\ Astounding Science Fiction\ version. Anderson\&$\#$39;s version is correct.

}, month = {April - July 1955}, pages = {8-46, 107-41, 119-52, 112-47}, abstract = {

Wide-ranging authoritarian dystopia with Anderson\’s usual libertarian themes in opposition

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Poul [William] Anderson (1926-2001)} } @booklet {1572, title = {Looking Beyond}, year = {1955}, note = {

UK ed. as\ The Unexpected Island. London: William Heinemann, 1955.

}, month = {1955}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Detailed conservative eutopia based on classical Greek models on an island in the mid-Pacific set in the early 21st century. Stress on traditional gender relations. Outside World War IV has ended, and the Democratic World Commonwealth tries to maintain peace.

}, keywords = {Chinese author, Male author, US author}, author = {Lin Yutang (1895-1976)} } @booklet {1611, title = {Love and Lunacy: A Satirical Comedy in Three Acts}, year = {1955}, month = {1955}, publisher = {J. Garnet Miller}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The three acts take place in Atlantis in the remote past, on an island in the near future, and on Luna and Earth in the remote future. Atlantis is vaguely utopian, but, in the play, it is primarily the setting for a \"peace conference\" among the major powers of the time, which ends with Zeus\&$\#$39;s destruction of Atlantis. The second and third acts are dystopian, with another failed peace conference followed by an authoritarian regime on the moon. The play ends with the death of the dictator.

}, keywords = {Male author, Welsh author}, author = {Peter Philp (1920-2006)} } @booklet {1546, title = {"The Laminated Woman"}, howpublished = {Fantastic Universe}, volume = { 2.5 }, year = {1954}, month = {December 1954}, pages = {25-38}, abstract = {

Satire in which women regularly change their skin and hair color and body shape.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Evelyn E. Smith (1927-2000)} } @booklet {1528, title = {"The Last of the Masters"}, howpublished = {Orbit Science Fiction}, volume = { 1.5 }, year = {1954}, note = {

Rpt. in Robots, Androids, and Mechanical Oddities: The Science Fiction of Philip K. Dick. Ed. Patricia Warrick and Martin H[arry] Greenberg (Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1984), 103-28; in The Collected Stories of Philip K. Dick. Volume 3 The Father-Thing (Los Angeles, CA/Columbia, PA: Underwood/Miller, 1987), 75-99. The paperback edition has it in The Collected Stories of Philip K. Dick. Volume 3 Second Variety (New York: Citadel Twilight, 1991), 75-99; in The Early Work of Philip K. Dick. Volume Two: Breakfast at Twilight \& Other Stories. Series ed. Gregg Rickman ([Rockville, MD]: Prime Books, 2009), 97-131, with a note on the story on 283; in The Complete Stories of Philip K. Dick Volume Three: Upon the Dull Earth [1953-1954]. Burton, MI: Subterranean Press, 2012), 93-122; and illus. Blair Gauntt in AnarchoSF: Science Fiction and the Stateless Society [Cover adds Volume 1]. Ed. Dana Rich (Victor, IA: Obsolete Press, 2014), 93-124.

}, month = {[November-December 1954]}, pages = {32-57}, abstract = {

Conflict between the last of the robots that had dominated an authoritarian system and the anarchist league that overthrew them.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Philip K[indred] Dick (1928-82)} } @booklet {1500, title = {The Long Way Back}, year = {1954}, note = {

US ed. New York: Coward-McCann, 1955.

}, month = {1954}, publisher = {The Bodley Head}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Future authoritarian dystopia of science in Africa whose explorers discover primitive life in Britain.

}, keywords = {Australian author, English author, Female author, Scottish author}, author = {Margot M. Bennett (1912-80)} } @booklet {1507, title = {Lord of the Flies}, year = {1954}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: Coward-McCann, 1955. Rpt. New York: Penguin Putnam, 1999. 50th anniversary ed. New York: Berkley, 2004. Rpt. New York: Penguin Books, 2016 with a \“Foreword\” by Lois Lowry (xi-xv), an \“Introduction\” by Stephen King (xvii-xxii) rpt. from the London: Faber \& Faber, 2011 edition, \“On Reading and Teaching Lord of the Flies\” by Jennifer Buehler (263-76), \“Suggestions for Further Exploration\” by Jennifer Buehler (277-93), \“Introduction to the 1962 Edition\” by E.M. Forster (295-300), and \“Notes on Lord of the Flies from the 1959 Edition\” by E[dmund] L. Epstein (301-07). Films in 1963 directed and with a screenplay by Peter Brook (b. 1925) and in 1990 directed by Harry Hook with the screenplay by Jay [Jacqueline] Presson Allen (1932-2006) writing as Sara Schiff [pseud.]. A TV takeoff on the book appeared as on \“Das Bus.\” The Simpsons. Season 9, Episode 14 (February 15, 1998), written by David S. Cohen in which Bart, Lisa and other children from Springfield Elementary School are stranded on an island and are forced to work together.\ 

}, month = {1954}, publisher = {Faber \& Faber}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Children left alone on a island revert to a violent, primitive existence showing that civilization is only a veneer.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {William Golding (1911-93)} } @booklet {1539, title = {Lovers in Mars}, year = {1954}, note = {

}, month = {1954}, publisher = {Sargent House Publishers}, address = {Los Angeles, CA}, abstract = {

A eutopian Mars that is extremely wealthy due to\ very advanced technology, an elaborate eugenic program, and a limited population. The focus of the novel is on the group marriage system, which is unappealing to the young lovers from earth.

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Lucile Palmer} } @booklet {1481, title = {"Lady With a Past"}, howpublished = {Astounding Science-Fiction}, volume = { 5.3 }, year = {1953}, month = {May 1953}, pages = {58-74}, abstract = {

Earth a rational eutopia based on More\&$\#$39;s Utopia.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Irving E[ngland] Cox Jr. (1917-2001)} } @booklet {1478, title = {"Land of the Matriarchs"}, howpublished = {Fantastic Adventures}, volume = { 15.3}, year = {1953}, month = {March 1953}, pages = {101, 130}, abstract = {

Standard sexist gender-role reversal satire.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {E. Bruce Yachen} } @booklet {1491, title = {"Limbo"}, howpublished = {Nebula (Glasgow, Scot.) }, volume = {1.3}, year = {1953}, month = {[1953]}, pages = {3-35}, abstract = {

Dystopia of National Socialists ruling Earth.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {William F[rederick] Temple (1914-89)} } @booklet {1488, title = {The Lost Valley}, year = {1953}, month = {1953}, publisher = {Hodder and Stoughton}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Adventure novel with elements similar to 1933 Hilton.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Hector Hawton (1901-1975)} } @booklet {1477, title = {Love Among the Ruins; A Romance of the Near Future. With decorations by varying eminent hands including the author{\textquoteright}s}, year = {1953}, note = {

Very slightly shorter version illustrated by Mervyn Peake published in\ Lilliput 32.6\ (May-June 1953): 73-96.

}, month = {1953}, publisher = {Chapman and Hall}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a dreary dingy life in the welfare state. Reformatories are the best place to live and within them the best places go to murderers followed by sex offenders.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Evelyn [Arthur St. John] Waugh (1903-66)} } @booklet {1427, title = {The Last Adam}, year = {1952}, month = {1952}, publisher = {Dennis Dobson}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The dystopia of being the last man, but the last man finds the last woman. He chooses not to repopulate the world.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Ronald [Frederick Henry] Duncan (1914-82)} } @booklet {8904, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Last Days of Shandakor{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Startling Stories }, volume = {25.3}, year = {1952}, note = {

Rpt. \ without the illus.\ in Sense of Wonder: A Century of Science Fiction. Ed. Leigh Ronald Grossman (Rockville, MD: Wildside Press, 2011), 346-52 with an editor\’s note on 346.\ 

}, month = {April 1952}, pages = {104-23}, abstract = {

The story is set on an inhabited Mars, and Shandakor is the eutopian city of Mars\’s past, now in its last stages.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Leigh [Douglass] Brackett (1915-78)} } @booklet {1419, title = {Limbo}, year = {1952}, note = {

Rpt. Illus. London: Gollancz, 2016 xi + 413 pp. , with an \“Introduction to Bernard Wolfe\” by Harlan Ellison (ix-xi) (Excepts had appeared in Again, Dangerous Visions. Ed Harlan Ellison. Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1972; other excerpts originally appeared in the Los Angeles Times (September 23, 1974); and an \“Introduction to Limbo by David Pringle (1-2) Originally published in Science Fiction: The 100 best novels: An English-Language Selection, 1949-1984. Ed. David Pringle (New York: Carroll \& Graf, 1985); New York: Ace Books, [1963]; and New York: Carroll \& Graf, 1987. U.K. ed. as Limbo \‘90. London: Secker \& Warburg, 1953. 438 pp.

A story that became part of the novel is \“Self Portrait.\” Illus. Martin Schneider.\ Galaxy Science Fiction 3.2 (November 1951): 58-83.

}, month = {1952}, pages = {438 pp.}, publisher = {Random House}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia. After a world war that has destroyed most countries, the U.S. becomes the center for men voluntarily amputating limbs to stop them from waging war. The prosthetics are very advanced and are perceived as enhancing human abilities. War resumes anyway.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Bernard Wolfe (1915-85)} } @booklet {1435, title = {"Lion{\textquoteright}s Mouth"}, howpublished = {Fantastic Adventures }, volume = {14.6 }, year = {1952}, note = {

Rpt. in\ Looking Forward: An Anthology of Science Fiction.\ Ed. Milton [S.] Lesser (New York: The Beechhurst Press, 1953), 195-210.

}, month = {June 1952}, pages = {44-55}, abstract = {

Dystopia. After an alien invasion, children are brainwashed to become the enforcers of the alien rule. They regularly review people, including their relatives, and the story is about such a situation, but ends with some escaping and finding a better society being established in the countryside.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Stephen Marlowe (1928-2008)} } @booklet {1412, title = {Lord Lollypop: A Timely Allegory}, year = {1952}, month = {1952}, publisher = {Exposition Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Satirical anti-communist poem.

}, author = {Hope Robertson Norburn} } @booklet {11374, title = {"Love Story"}, howpublished = {Future Tense: New and Old Tales of Science Fiction}, year = {1952}, month = {1952}, pages = {352-64}, publisher = {Greenberg/Ambassador Books}, address = {New York/Toronto, ON, Canada}, abstract = {

Satire in which children in the United States discover that their parents tell them one thing and then behave differently and decide that what they are told is the truth. They then kill all the adults. The story is set many years later depicts the results.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Kendall Foster] [Crossen] (1910-81)}, editor = {Kendall Foster Crossen (1910-81)} } @booklet {1409, title = {"The Luckiest Man in Denv"}, howpublished = {Galaxy Science Fiction (New York)}, volume = { 4.3}, year = {1952}, note = {

Rpt. in his The Mindworm (London: Joseph, 1955), 188-202; in Nightmare Age. Ed. Frederik [George] Pohl, [Jr.] (New York: Ballantine Books, 1970), 179-93; in Cities of Wonder. Ed. Damon [Francis] Knight (New York: Macfadden-Bartell, 1967), 151-63; in The Best of C.M. Kornbluth. Ed. Frederik [George] Pohl, [Jr.] (Garden City, NY: Nelson Doubleday, 1976), 70-82; The Best of C.M. Kornbluth. Ed. Frederik [George] Pohl, [Jr.] (New York: Ballantine Books, 1977), 70-83; and in His Share of Glory: The Complete Short Science Fiction of C.M. Kornbluth. Ed. Timothy P. Szczesuil (Framingham, MA: The NESFA Press, 1997), 108-17. Merril, MoU-St, PSt

}, month = {June 1952}, pages = {147-59}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia. People live in huge high-rise buildings with their status determining how high they live. Constant war. The story focuses on intrigue in trying to move up the building.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {0016-4003 }, author = {C[yril] M[ichael] Kornbluth (1923-58)} } @booklet {1394, title = {"The Last Story"}, howpublished = {Startling Stories }, volume = {24.1 }, year = {1951}, month = {September 1951}, pages = {130-32}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which an overly rational society destroys fiction.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Alexander Samuelson} } @booklet {1370, title = {Late Final}, year = {1951}, month = {1951}, publisher = {J.M. Dent}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a future where the human race has relapsed into barbarianism.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Joseph Walter] [Cove] (b. 1891)} } @booklet {1352, title = {The Land of Forgotten Women}, year = {1950}, month = {1950}, publisher = {Skeffington and Son}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopian lost race matriarchy that practices human sacrifice.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {F[rederick] A[nnesley] M[ichael] Webster (1886-1949)} } @booklet {1360, title = {"Let Freedom Ring"}, howpublished = {Amazing Stories (Chicago, IL)}, volume = { 24.4 }, year = {1950}, note = {

Rpt. with the same pagination in Amazing Stories Quarterly Reissue (Chicago, IL) (Fall 1950). Also rpt. in Thrilling Science Fiction (New York), no. 23 (February 1972): 4-48. U.K. ed. Amazing Stories (London) (2nd series), [no. 1] (nd): 90-134.\ 

}, month = {April 1950}, pages = {90-134}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia that drafts men to almost certain death.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {0002-6891 }, author = {Fritz [Reuter] Leiber [Jr.] (1910-92)} } @booklet {8905, title = {"The Little Black Bag"}, howpublished = {Astounding Science Fiction}, volume = {44.5 }, year = {1950}, note = {

Rpt. without the illus. in Sense of Wonder: A Century of Science Fiction. Ed. Leigh Ronald Grossman (Rockville, MD: Wildside Press, 2011), 415-21 with an editor\’s note on 415.

}, month = {July 1950}, pages = {132-50, 152-61}, abstract = {

A medical bag from an obviously medically eutopian future accidently appears in a contemporary slum and transforms the lives of the doctor who cared for the slum dwellers even though he had been prohibited from practicing and the people of the slum. Then the future takes the bag back.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {C[yril] M[ichael] Kornbluth (1923-58)} } @booklet {1323, title = {The Last Space Ship}, year = {1949}, month = {1949}, publisher = {Frederick Fell}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia. Technology that allows government to punish selected individuals at a distance leads to universal tyranny. Emphasis on a successful revolt.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[William Fitzgerald] [Jenkins] (1896-1975)} } @booklet {1317, title = {"Late Night Final"}, howpublished = {Astounding Science Fiction (New York)}, volume = { 42.4 }, year = {1948}, note = {

Rpt in\ Major Ingredients: The Selected Short Stories of Eric Frank Russell. Ed. Rick Katze (Framingham, MA: The NESFA Press, 2000), 287-313.

}, month = {December 1948}, pages = {39-69}, abstract = {

Libertarian eutopia.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Eric Frank Russell (1905-78)} } @booklet {1309, title = {The Life and Times of the Shmoo}, year = {1948}, note = {

U.K. ed. London: Convoy Publications, 1949. Rpt. as \"The Shmoo: 1948.\" In his\ The Short Life and Happy Times of the Shmoo\ (Woodstock, NY: Overlook Press, 2002), 1-93. All the strips rpt. in\ Al Capp\&$\#$39;s Shmoo: The Complete Newspaper Strips. Milwaukie, OR: Dark Horse Books, 2011. See also\ Al Capp\&$\#$39;s Shmoo Comics, no. 1 - 5\ (July 1949 - April 1950). 5 vols. New York: Toby Press, 1949 - 50 [held by Michigan State University]. Some rpt. in\ Washable Jones and the Shmoos, no. 1\ (June 1953) [all published. Held by Michigan State University]. Rpt. in\ Shmoo. The Complete Comic Books. Milwaukee, WI: Dark Horse Books, 2008.

}, month = {1948}, publisher = {Simon and Schuster}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Comic strip. The Shmoo is a creature who provides all the food anyone wants, thus producing a classic Cockaigne. The strips recount the eutopia produced, the troubles this gives rise to, and the attempts of government and business to destroy the Shmoo. Other Shmoo material includes Gerald Marks and Al Capp,\ Shmoo Songs. New York: Bristol Music Corp., 1949 [held by the Los Angeles Public Library]; and a series of Hanna-Barbera films in 1979 (Fred and Barney Meet the Shmoo) and 1987-88 (sixteen films). See also Al Capp,\ The Return of the Shmoo. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1959. Rpt. as \“The Shmoo: 1959.\” In his\ The Short Life and Happy Times of the Shmoo\ (Woodstock, NY: Overlook Press, 2002), 93-143; rpt. in\ Shmoo. The Complete Comic Books. Milwaukee, WI: Dark Horse Books, 2008.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Alfred Gerald] [Caplin] (1909-79} } @booklet {1314, title = {"The Lottery"}, howpublished = {The New Yorker }, volume = {24.18}, year = {1948}, note = {

Rpt. in her\ The Lottery or The Adventures of James Harris\ (New York: Farrar, Straus and Co., 1949), 291-302; in\ ovels and Stories: The Lottery The Haunting of Hill House We Have Always Lived in the Castle Other Stories and Sketches. Ed Joyce Carol Oates\ (New York: The Library of America, 2010), 227-35;\ in\ Brave New Worlds. Ed. John Joseph Adams (San Francisco, CA: Night Shade Books, 2011), 3-10; 2nd\ ed. as\ Brave New Worlds: Dystopian Stories. Ed. John Joseph Adams (San Francisco, CA: Night Shade Books, 2012), 3-10; and illus. Garrett Grove.\ The New Yorker\ 96.21 (July 27, 2020): 50-53.\ 

}, month = {June 26, 1948}, pages = {25-28}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which each year every community chooses one person by lot to be stoned to death in the belief that this will make for a better year to come.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {9781598530728}, issn = { 0028-792X }, author = {Shirley Jackson (1916-65)} } @booklet {1255, title = {"The Little Things"}, howpublished = {Thrilling Wonder Stories (New York) }, volume = {29.1 }, year = {1946}, note = {

Rpt. in his Bypass to Otherness (New York: Ballantine Books, 1961), 101-14.\ 

}, month = {Fall 1946}, pages = {85-91}, abstract = {

Future society perceived as a dystopia by the hero. In fact, it is a society designed to avoid war, and thus is a eutopia, but secrecy and some authoritarianism are necessary to achieve this end.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Henry Kuttner (1914-58)} } @booklet {1263, title = {"The Living Lies"}, howpublished = {New Worlds: A Science Fiction Magazine of the Future}, volume = {no. 2}, year = {1946}, note = {

Rpt. in\ Other Worlds Science Stories 2.4\ (8) (November 1950): 96-130.

}, month = {October 1946}, pages = {2-20}, abstract = {

Racial dystopia on Venus where there are many different skin colors.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[John Wyndham Parkes Lucas Beynon] [Harris] (1903-69)} } @booklet {1242, title = {The Lost Government; or, Do You Really Like It? A Fairy Tale for Grown-ups}, year = {1945}, month = {1945}, publisher = {Nicholson \& Watson}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Satire. After World War II a government in exile returns, finds that the people have taken over and have no need for them, and leaves.

}, keywords = {Czech author, English author, Male author}, author = {Jiri Weiss (1913-2004)} } @booklet {1218, title = {The Lights Were Going Out}, year = {1944}, month = {1944}, publisher = {Quality Press}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The dystopia that will follow peace without victory with the National Socialists gaining influence over Britain and the U.S.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Arthur Guirdham (1905-92)} } @booklet {1200, title = {Let{\textquoteright}s Triumvirate or Man, Government and Happiness. A Philosophy of Man and a World-Wide Government Founded Upon Laws of Nature}, year = {1943}, month = {1943}, publisher = {Author}, address = {San Diego, CA}, abstract = {

Detailed eutopia based on Uupolach or the universal urge principle of love and happiness, which is \". . . a strong desire or urge for, a thrilling, joyous ecstasy or emotion of order, harmony, concord, betterment, pleasure, happiness, contentment, universal love, charity, kindness and gratitude\" (18). Argues that there is evidence of a former eutopia on Earth. The first step to the new eutopia is \"honest information\", and he gives \"A Code for Honest Information\" (235-55). The new \"Triumvirate System\" will divide the world into equal parts (suggested maps are provided), with various subdivisions so that every voter (all adults) will know personally the person they vote for.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Oswald Francis Zahn (b. 1874)} } @booklet {1199, title = {The Lost Traveller}, year = {1943}, note = {

Rpt. with the Craxton drawings and \"An Attempt at a Preface\" (1-6) by the author. New York: Dover Publications, Inc., 1968.

}, month = {1943}, publisher = {The Grey Walls Press}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Surrealist fantasy of an imaginary country that is an authoritarian dystopia.\ At the end the protagonist turns into a bird.

}, keywords = {Male author, Scottish author}, author = {Ruthven [Campbell] Todd (1914-78)} } @booklet {1144, title = {The Last Man}, year = {1940}, note = {

U.S. ed. as\ No Other Man. New York: Frederick A. Stokes, 1940. Rpt. Philadelphia, PA: J.B. Lippincott, 1946.

}, month = {1940}, publisher = {John Murray}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The dystopia of being the last man, but the last man finds the last woman, so they think. He battles another man, and then they discover a group beginning to rebuild what they hope will be a better world.

}, keywords = {US author}, author = {Alfred Noyes (1880-1958)} } @booklet {6809, title = {Loss of Eden: A Cautionary Tale}, year = {1940}, note = {

Rpt. as If Hitler Comes: A Cautionary Tale. London: Pub. for The British Publishers Guild by Faber and Faber, 1941. There are small differences between the editions.

}, month = {[1940]}, publisher = {Faber and Faber}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which Germany wins World War II. New Zealand narrator.

}, keywords = {US author}, author = {Douglas [Frank Lambert] Brown (1921-64) and Christopher Serpell (1910-91)} } @booklet {1094, title = {"Lord of Tranerica"}, howpublished = {Dynamic Science Stories (Chicago, IL)}, volume = { 1.1 }, year = {1939}, note = {

Repub. New York: Avalon, 1966.

}, month = {February 1939}, pages = {12-58}, abstract = {

Satire. Hereditary dictatorship in a supposedly computer-perfect, business-based, and leisure-oriented society set in the 25th century. Robots do all the work, and there are mechanical judges that decide cases and sentences. Tranerica is North and South America combined.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Stanton A[rthur] Coblentz (1896-1982)} } @booklet {8510, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Last Act (A.D. 1995){\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The Woman Clothed With the Sun and Other Stories}, year = {1937}, month = {1937}, pages = {307-43}, publisher = {Cassell}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which the world is divided between those nations subservient to Japan (Asia to the Urals and Australasia) and Germany (Europe, Asia Minor, and Africa), with the Pan-American Union between them. The story details the dystopia as it exists in the areas controlled by Germany and ends with the human race destroyed.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {F[rank] L[aurence] Lucas (1894-1967)} } @booklet {1042, title = {A Love Starved World}, year = {1937}, month = {1937}, publisher = {The Yale Pub. Co}, address = {Los Angeles, CA}, abstract = {

Eutopia with emphases on good medical care, a healthy sex life, and eugenics.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Jacob Leon Pritcher} } @booklet {1008, title = {The Lost Civilization: A Story of Adventure in Central Australia}, year = {1936}, month = {1936}, publisher = {St. George Pub. Coy}, address = {Sydney, NSW, Australia}, abstract = {

Lost race utopia in the center of Australia. A scientifically advanced society with similarities to both ancient Egypt and the Mayans. Vegetarian. Peaceful. Use Telepathy. There is an authoritarian monarch and vestal virgins, who cannot marry. All work for the good of the community and all needs are provided. Men marry whom they choose; women not consulted.\ Believe in a Supreme Being. Equality except for a few nobles. Standard evil High Priest, prohibited love, adventure, some escape.\ 

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Val[entine Voltaire] Heslop (1894-1936)} } @booklet {10863, title = {"Lost Paradise"}, howpublished = {Weird Tales}, volume = {28.1}, year = {1936}, month = {July 1936}, pages = {75-91}, abstract = {

A story in the author\’s series about the character Northwest Smith in which he visits the far past when the inhabited moon was called Seles and in a golden age.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {0898-5073}, author = {C[atherine] L[ucille] Moore (1911-87)} } @booklet {967, title = {Land Under England}, year = {1935}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: Simon \& Schuster, 1935. Rpt. with an \“Introduction\” by Anthony Storr (1-4). Woodstock, NY: The Overlook Press, 1981.\ 

}, month = {1935}, publisher = {Victor Gollancz}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Lost race dystopia of a Roman civilization under England in which all but a few people are absorbed mentally into the whole. Children are taught only what they need to know for their station in life.

}, keywords = {Irish author, Male author}, author = {[John] Joseph O{\textquoteright}Neill (1886-1953)} } @booklet {988, title = {The Laughing Buccaneer}, year = {1935}, note = {

Rpt. with the subtitle on the cover A Romantic Story of the South Seas. Sydney, NSW, Australia: Frank Johnson, [1942].Also published as a supplement to the Australian Women\’s Weekly 6.17 (October 1, 1938): 1-24.

}, month = {1935}, publisher = {Angus and Robertson}, address = {Sydney, NSW, Australia}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Amazons enslave men but a white man conquers and enslaves the women.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Australian author, Male author}, author = {Will[iam] Lawson (1876-1957)} } @booklet {990, title = {Lift Up Your Eyes}, year = {1935}, month = {1935}, publisher = {Robertson \& Mullens}, address = {Melbourne, VIC, Australia}, abstract = {

Religious eutopia, mostly seen in the planning stages. Orphans are educated to be missionaries.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Ambrose [Goddard Hesketh] Pratt (1874-1944)} } @booklet {905, title = {Landslide}, year = {1934}, month = {1934}, publisher = {Victor Gollancz}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Political novel set in an alternative future in which nothing was done after World War I to support the peace and another brief war followed that united Europe as the Confederation of Western Powers, which continued after the war under a leader who became a dictator.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Monica [Mary] Curtis (1892-1956)} } @booklet {933, title = {"{\textquoteright}Lemuel Gulliver in Distia. (Omitted from all published editions of the famous Travels{\textquoteright})"}, howpublished = {Truth Christmas Number 1934 (London)}, volume = {116 }, year = {1934}, month = {December 25, 1934}, pages = {5-8}, abstract = {

Political satire about a nude lost race. The nudity is a recent innovation.

}, author = {R. M. F[reeman]} } @booklet {6986, title = {"London Utopia: Democracy in Disarray"}, year = {1934}, month = {1934-38}, publisher = {MS. University of Missouri-St. Louis}, address = {Birmingham, Eng.}, abstract = {

Presents a utopian experiment of 1750 people in London named Cosmopolitan House or London Utopia with restaurants, gymnasium, indoor pool, library, nursery, and so forth. Various nationalities represented and one goal was to overcome national animosities.

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {[Adelaide Ann] [Boodle]} } @booklet {8502, title = {The Lost City of Light}, year = {1934}, month = {1934}, publisher = {Frederick Warne}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Most of the novel is about the quest by a descendant of the Templars for a lost Christian city, during which he is captured and taken to a dystopian Chinese city that has enslaved the Christians, who are allowed, at night, to live in their own city and govern themselves. He leads them to freedom.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {F[rederick] A[nnesley] M[ichael] Webster (1886-1949)} } @booklet {9411, title = {The Last of the Japs and Jews}, year = {1933}, month = {1933}, publisher = {H.W. Lefkowitz}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Primarily a future war story, but it begins in 2940 when all Jews have been eliminated and whites are slaves. The world is under the control of China, India, and Turkey with the Western Hemisphere a protectorate of these three inhabited by its indigenous peoples. Includes some of the characters in his other works. See also 1940 and 1946 Cruso.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Solomon Cruso (1877-1977)} } @booklet {8748, title = {{\textquotedblleft}A Library of the Future{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Library Journal}, volume = {58.1 - 2}, year = {1933}, month = {December 1, 1933}, pages = {971-75, 1023-25}, abstract = {

Eutopian library of the future.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Angus Snead Macdonald (1883-1961)} } @booklet {871, title = {Life in a Technocracy; What It Might Be Like}, year = {1933}, note = {

Rpt. \“With a New Introduction by Howard P. Segal.\” Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 1996.\ 

}, month = {1933}, publisher = {Viking Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Non-fiction that includes a partial description of the social, political and economic changes that would be brought about by technocracy, a system in which engineers and scientist are politically empowered. Emphasis is on the economic dimension.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Harold Loeb (1891-1974)} } @booklet {8735, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Life in the Year 2106{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The Rotarian}, volume = {43}, year = {1933}, month = {August 1933}, pages = {6-9, 59-60}, abstract = {

A brief but detailed eutopia.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {H[erbert] G[eorge] Wells (1866-1946)} } @booklet {890, title = {Little Arthur{\textquoteright}s History of the Twentieth Century}, year = {1933}, note = {

Parts originally published in\ Time and Tide 14.6 - 12\ (February 11 - March 19, 1933): 141-43; 174-76; 210-12; 243-45; 283-85; 314-16; 351-53.\ 

}, month = {1933}, publisher = {J.M. Dent \& Sons}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Transition to a world state. Satire both on failed experiments and on the uniformity of the future world state.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Cicely [Mary] Hamilton (1875-1952)} } @booklet {866, title = {Lost Horizon}, year = {1933}, note = {

UK ed. London: Macmillan \& Co., 1933. Films directed by Frank Capra (1937) and Charles Jarrott (1973).

}, month = {1933}, publisher = {William Morrow \& Co}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Classic lost race eutopia set in Tibet. Longevity.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author, US author}, author = {James Hilton (1900-54)} } @booklet {836, title = {Last Men in London}, year = {1932}, note = {

2nd ed. London: Methuen, 1934. There do not appear to be any differences in the editions. First ed. rpt. Boston, MA: Gregg Press, 1976 with an \"Introduction\" by Curtis C. Smith and Harvey J. Satty (v-xiv). Excerpts rpt. in An Olaf Stapledon Reader. Ed. Robert Crossley (Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 1997), 11-14.

}, month = {1932}, publisher = {Methuen}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Loosely related to 1930 Stapledon, Last and First Men, but, even though it begins with a message from the last humans of two thousand million years in the future, the book is more restricted in scope. The people of this future have both evolved and re-designed themselves to live on Neptune. Children spend their first thousand years in a children\&$\#$39;s club, which they run, and which includes basic education. The second thousand years is spent on a separate continent, the Land of the Young. There are 96 sub-sexes. Telepathic. More leisure than work with each person specializing. Most of the book is then concerned with the modern world before, during, and after World War I. It then ends back on Neptune and with an \"Epilogue\" by Stapledon.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {W[illiam] Olaf Stapledon (1886-1950)} } @booklet {823, title = {"The Last Woman"}, howpublished = {Wonder Stories (Mt. Morris, IL)}, volume = { 3.1}, year = {1932}, note = {

Rpt. in When Women Rule. Ed. Sam[uel] Moskowitz (New York: Walker, 1972), 131-48.

}, month = {April 1932}, pages = {1238-44}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Last woman and the man who came to love her killed in a world of macho men.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Thomas S. Gardner (1908-1963)} } @booklet {838, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Liberalism and the Revolutionary Spirit. Address to the Liberal Summer School at Oxford, July 1932{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Forward View The Young Liberal{\textquoteright}s{\textquoteright} Paper }, volume = {7.67}, year = {1932}, note = {

Rpt. in his After Democracy: Addresses and Papers on the Present World Situation (London: Watts \& Co., 1932), 1-28. A badly cut version appeared in The Ladies\’ Home Journal (August 1932): 393.\ 

}, month = {August 1932}, pages = {73-79}, abstract = {

Eutopia. World state and the Open Conspiracy (see 1928 Wells), called the X Society and elaborated in the footnote.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {H[erbert] G[eorge] Wells (1866-1946)} } @booklet {6783, title = {The Lost Children}, year = {1931}, month = {[1931]}, publisher = {Hutchinson}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Although it all turns out to be a dream, the novel describes the eutopia formed where the children were taken by the Pied Piper of Hamelin. Simple life. Arcadian. Crafts.

}, keywords = {Belgian author, English author, Male author}, author = {H[enry] Herman Chilton (1863-1945)} } @booklet {764, title = {Last and First Men: A Story of the Near and Far Future}, year = {1930}, note = {

U.S. ed. as by W[illiam] Olaf Stapledon. New York: Jonathan Cape and Harrison Smith, 1931. Rpt. in his To the End of Time: The Best of Olaf Stapledon with editorial cuts and \“Foreword to the Original American Edition\” (3). Ed. Basil Davenport (New York: Funk \& Wagnalls, 1953), 1-220; rpt. (Boston, MA: Gregg Press, 1975), 1-220; and in Last and First Men \& Star Maker: Two Science-Fiction Novels (New York: Dover, 1968), 1-246, which includes \“Foreword to the Original American Edition\” (3) and \“Preface to the English Edition (9). Excerpts rpt. in An Olaf Stapledon Reader. Ed. Robert Crossley (Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 1997), 3-11; and in The Way to the End Times: Classic Tales of the Apocalypse. Ed. Robert Silverberg (New York: Three Rooms Press, 2016), 436-52, with an \“Editor\’s Introduction\” on 434-35. Chapter IX: Earth and Mars in rpt. in The Book of Mars: An Anthology of Fact and Fiction. Ed. Stuart Clark (London: London: Head of Zeus/Apollo/Bloomsbury, 2022), 57-70.

}, month = {1930}, publisher = {Methuen}, address = {London}, abstract = {

One of Stapledon\’s visions of the far, far future where the human race has been replaced by more advanced species. It begins with an Introduction by One of the Last Men and then moves initially to World War I and after and the relatively near future. It then traces humanity through millions of years with both eutopian and dystopian periods to the end where a eutopian cosmic consciousness is developing and humans as such will disappear. Loosely related is 1932 Stapledon, Last Men in London.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[William] Olaf Stapledon (1886-1950)} } @booklet {773, title = {The Lost Garden}, year = {1930}, month = {1930}, publisher = {Chapman \& Hall}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Golden Ages at various times and places beginning with Atlantis and ending in the contemporary world. None are quite as \“golden\” as the myth suggests.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Geo[rge] Cecil Foster (1893-1975)} } @booklet {730, title = {"The Last Man"}, howpublished = {Amazing Stories (New York)}, volume = {3.11}, year = {1929}, note = {

Rpt. in\ Amazing Stories 40.5 (April 1966): 64-87; and in\ When Women Rule. Ed. Sam[uel] Moskowitz (New York: Walker, 1972), 104-30.

}, month = {February 1929}, pages = {1030-40}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Sexless women rule a dull and dying world.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {0002-6891 }, author = {Wallace G[eorge] West (1900-80)} } @booklet {744, title = {"Letter of the Twenty-Fourth Century"}, howpublished = {Amazing Stories (Jamaica, NY)}, volume = {4.9}, year = {1929}, note = {

Rpt. in Sci-Fi Womanthology. Comp, and ed. Forrest J. Ackerman and Pam Keesey (Rockville, MD: Sense of Wonder Press, 2003), 9-13; and in \“The Conquest of Gola\” and Other Stories by Leslie F. Stone. Ed. Batya Weinbaum (Beau Bassim, Mauritius: JustFiction! Edition//International Book Market Service/Omniscriptum Publishing Group, 2021), 23-28 with an editor\’s note on 23.

}, month = {December 1929}, pages = {860-61}, abstract = {

Brief depiction of a future eutopia based on a rural world-wide democracy.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {0002-6891 }, author = {[Leslie Frances] [Silberberg] (1905-1991)} } @booklet {715, title = {The Light In the Sky}, year = {1929}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Arno Press, 1978.

}, month = {1929}, publisher = {Coward-McCann}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Lost race novel that is more of a eutopia than many. Descendants of the Aztecs who are advanced scientifically live in caverns under Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean. They do not die and use both a spoken language and telepathy. The people live well, and there is a project designed to end war everywhere. As in most lost race novels, a struggle takes place and the protagonist and the princess escape while the society is destroyed.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Herbert Clock (1890-1979) and Eric Boetzel} } @booklet {690, title = {"The Little Husbands"}, howpublished = {Weird Tales (New York)}, volume = {12.1 }, year = {1928}, month = {July 1928}, pages = {126-30}, abstract = {

Minor gender-role reversal story. Seventy-foot-tall Amazons with normal sized husbands.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {David H[enry] Keller M.D. (1880-1966)} } @booklet {661, title = {The Light from Sealonia}, year = {1927}, month = {1927}, publisher = {The Four Seas Co}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {

Mostly romance and adventure but includes a lost race eutopia at the North Pole with a racist theme. \“The Nodolians are not our equals, and their tainted blood would soon contaminate your racial purity, for history proves that they are not assimilable\” (83).

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Arthur W. Barker} } @booklet {6772, title = {The Lamentations of a New Jeremiah. Translated out of the original tongues: and with the former translations diligently compared and revised. Appointed to be Read Surreptitiously in Churches}, year = {1926}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: Brentano\’s, 1926?.

}, month = {[1926?]}, publisher = {Allen and Unwin}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Satire on England using the form of a jeremiad.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Herbert Vivian (1865-1940)} } @booklet {6774, title = {Lucullus The Food of the Future}, year = {1926}, month = {[1926]}, publisher = {Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Future history ending in a eutopia. Considerable satire presented through a speech by a scholar in the far future. First vegetarians win the day; then Neo-Vegetarians, who won\&$\#$39;t eat plants; then scientists create chemical food. A backlash against science occurs when Glasgow is destroyed during an experiment and then all science is regulated and begins to develop things that are useful. General decentralization occurs and people return to eating meat.

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Olga Hartley and Mrs. C. F. [Hilda] Leyel (1880-1957)} } @booklet {632, title = {Latin Blood}, year = {1925}, month = {1925}, publisher = {Authors Pub. Corp}, address = {Hollywood, CA}, abstract = {

The novel presents two islands -- an authoritarian dystopia and a capitalist eutopia with a good government -- and relations among them. The dystopia is destroyed in a natural disaster.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {[David Graham] [Fischer]} } @booklet {629, title = {Looking Forward}, year = {1925}, month = {1925}, publisher = {Author}, address = {Los Angeles, CA}, abstract = {

Detailed cooperative, democratic eutopia with a new world constitution with five national governments and an international government. All property to be under the control of the governments.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Arthur Williams} } @booklet {9186, title = {Lysistrata: Or, Woman{\textquoteright}s Future and Future Woman With a Foreword by Norman Haire, Ch.M., M.B.}, year = {1925}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: E.P. Dutton, 1925.\ 

}, month = {1925}, pages = {110 pp.}, publisher = {K. Paul, Trench, Trubner}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Most of the short book is about the current position from a conservative viewpoint. The last chapters \“Woman\’s Future\” (66-90) and \“Future Woman\” (91-125) project as the better future women staying home, caring for the husbands, and raising children.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Anthony M[ario] Ludovici (1882-1971)} } @booklet {610, title = {The Last of My Race. A Dream of the Future}, year = {1924}, month = {1924}, publisher = {J.W. Ruddock \& Sons/Simpkin Marshall Hamilton Kent}, address = {Lincoln, Eng./London}, abstract = {

In the very far future Homo sapiens, now known as Homo Ignorans, has long disappeared and been replaced by what was then called Homo sapiens, who was then replaced by Homo Sapiens Varius, a species far above the human race, who was then replaced by Sapiens minimus, who is close to pure intelligence.

}, keywords = {Male author, UK author}, author = {J[ohn] Lionel Tayler M.R.C.S. (1874-1930)} } @booklet {616, title = {"The Lost Car"}, howpublished = {Odds and Ends (Miscellaneous Writings)}, year = {1924}, note = {

In his \"Note The Lost Car\" (xvii-xxi) the author says that the story was originally published in \"over a dozen installments\" in the \"Journal\", previously the\ Sewanee Banner\ (presumably Sewanee, OH). No such paper appears to survive.

}, month = {1924}, pages = {3-68}, publisher = {Privately ptd. [Plimpton Press]}, address = {([Norwood, MA]}, abstract = {

Detailed eutopia of New Hellas (later just Hellas), a society of four million square miles in the Southern Hemisphere descended from classical Greece, which has chosen to remain isolated until the rest of the world becomes peaceful The story includes both a description of the eutopia by an outsider and a history of the eutopia by a resident. No poverty because land cannot be privately owned, and everyone works. Taxation based on the use of the land, which covers all costs. A brief vignette at the end set in 3003 AD shows contact between the Hellenes and future, peaceful humanity with wings but no legs.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {James J. Hayden} } @booklet {6760, title = {The Last Millionaire; A Tale of the Old World and the New}, year = {1923}, month = {[1923]}, publisher = {Heath Cranton}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Nationalization of land and a limit on income brings a eutopia.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Duncan Campbell} } @booklet {599, title = {The Lavender Dragon}, year = {1923}, month = {1923}, publisher = {Grant Richards}, address = {London}, abstract = {

A delightful satire with a rational, vegetarian dragon and a rather dull knight. The dragon creates a eutopia by picking up unhappy people and children from the area and bringing them to an isolated area where they create a eutopia of equality without money. Includes a reflection, by the dragon, on the positive and negative aspects of human hope and dreaming.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Eden Phillpotts (1862-1960)} } @booklet {568, title = {The Lost Chord: A Description of the Future Society}, year = {1922}, month = {1922}, publisher = {np}, address = {Chicago, IL}, abstract = {

Eutopia. Cooperative commonwealth and workers\&$\#$39; control.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Carl M. Ofsthun (b. 1885?)} } @booklet {561, title = {"Lolly-pop Land. A Poem"}, howpublished = {The Brownies{\textquoteright} Book}, volume = { 2.4 (16)}, year = {1921}, note = {

Rpt. in facsimile in\ The Best of the Brownies\&$\#$39; Book. Ed. Dianne Johnson Feelings (New York: Oxford University Press, 1996), 316-17.

}, month = {April 1921}, pages = {112-13}, abstract = {

A children\&$\#$39;s cockaigne. The Brownies\&$\#$39; Book was a periodical for African-American children founded in 1920 by W[illiam] E[dward] B[urghardt] Du Bois (1868-1963).

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Minna B. Noyes} } @booklet {517, title = {The Land of Whereisit}, year = {1919}, month = {1919}, publisher = {Judd Publishing Co}, address = {Sydney, NSW, Australia}, abstract = {

Eutopian allegory in which God teaches lessons to the leaders of a country who are only concerned with maintaining their power and benefiting themselves.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Henry E[rnest] Boote (1868-1949).} } @booklet {503, title = {"A Londoner{\textquoteright}s Dream on Returning from Petrograd"}, howpublished = {The Nineteenth Century and After}, volume = {85}, year = {1919}, note = {

Repub. as\ London Under the Bolsheviks: A Londoner\&$\#$39;s Dream on Returning from Petrograd. London: Russian Liberation Committee. No 4 of Russian Liberation Committee Publications, 1919.

}, month = {February 1919}, pages = {383-94}, abstract = {

Anti-communist dystopia. The author was born in Russia and lived in the US from age ten, except for 1912-30, which he spent in England. The author contends that this is factual rather than fictional.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author, Russian author, US author}, author = {John Cournos (1881-1966).} } @booklet {476, title = {"The Limit"}, howpublished = {Red Magazine (London) }, volume = {34.204}, year = {1917}, month = {October 1, 1917}, pages = {515-22}, abstract = {

Satire. Gender-role reversal set in 2676. Having returned to a set of villages, London is presented in eutopian terms.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {[Robert Coutts] [Armour] (1874-1958?)} } @booklet {416, title = {The Laborers{\textquoteright} Catechism: The Open Road to the New Utopia}, year = {1913}, note = {

2nd ed.\ The Laborers\&$\#$39; Catechism: or The Wide Way to a New Republic. New York: The Society for the True Republic, 1914; 3rd ed 1916; 4th ed. 1928 New York with the 2nd ed. title.

}, month = {1913}, publisher = {The Society for the True Republic}, address = {St. Paul, MN}, abstract = {

Literally a catechism with questions and answers. Proposes various reforms in the financial and political systems that produce a eutopia and provides apparently fictional examples of the results of specific reforms. A new voting system is designed to include all the proposed voting reforms of the time. New system of taxation at 2\% per year on personal and real property.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Thomas Jefferson Sandford} } @booklet {413, title = {The Last Days; or, Time of the End! Nearness of "The Great and Dreadful Day." Tribulations to Come! Armageddon--A Descent on Palestine--The Dominions to the Rescue--Russia and Turkey to be Overthrown--"Babylon" and "The Beast"--Germany and Japan{\textquoteright}s Action. The Millennium! Christ{\textquoteright}s Coming--His Kingdom on Earth--Conversion of the Jews--"My Servant David" of England--His Reign at Jerusalem}, year = {1913}, note = {

Rpt. in\ Heine and the Apocalypse. some poetry and prose by John Liddel Kelly. an edition prepared by F[rank] W[illiam] Nielsen Wright\ (Te Aro, Wellington, New Zealand: Cultural and Political Booklets, 1997), 55-103 with \"An Afternote on Kelly\&$\#$39;s The Last Days by F[rank] W[illiam] Nielsen Wright\" (104-111).

}, month = {1913}, pages = {31 pp.}, publisher = {Ptd. for the Author by The Wanganui Chronicle}, address = {Wanganui, New Zealand}, abstract = {

Eutopia of British Israelism with the Second Coming of Christ being a member of the British Royal Family. 1928 will be the end of the current age and the beginning of the Reign of Righteousness.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author, Scottish author}, author = {J[ohn] Liddell Kelly (1850-1925)} } @booklet {406, title = {The Little Wicket Gate. An Experience ex nihilo}, year = {1913}, month = {1913}, publisher = {A.C. Fifield}, address = {London}, abstract = {

A eutopia with problems, primarily population pressure. Religion. Equality of the sexes. Marriage for life. Three-and-a-half-hours workday. No money. No prisons. Stress on self-expression.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Petworth, Algernon} } @booklet {415, title = {Looking Forward: A Study in Social Justice Looking to Co-operation as Offering the Solution of Difficulties}, year = {1913}, month = {1913}, publisher = {Roberts \& Co.}, address = {Philadelphia, PA}, abstract = {

Cooperative eutopia presented through the reports of various conferences from the present until the establishment of the eutopia. Equal suffrage for women is the first step. Cooperation is seen as an expression of Christianity.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Isaac Roberts} } @booklet {404, title = {Looking Forward. The Strange Experience of the Rev. Fergus McCheyne}, year = {1913}, month = {1913}, publisher = {William Briggs}, address = {Toronto, ON, Canada}, abstract = {

The United Church of Canada, which was created in 1925, has brought about eutopia by becoming deeply involved in the community and leading on both practical and moral issues.\ 

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {Rev. Hugh Pedley B.A., D.D. (1852-1923)} } @booklet {407, title = {The Love of Meltha Laone; or, Beyond the Sun}, year = {1913}, month = {1913}, pages = {262 pp.}, publisher = {Roxburgh Publishing Company}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {

This is a much-expanded ed. of 1896 Stump at the end of which the protagonist\&$\#$39;s interest in Meltha Laone is mentioned but not developed. Detailed eutopia set on a planet on the opposite side of the sun. No money. Technology. \“Everybody has all of everything they need and can use and consume. . .\” (33). Stress on the family. No pets. Refers to a related work entitled A Romance of Two Planets that appears to be lost.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {David Leroy Stump} } @booklet {362, title = {Lady Ermyntrude and the Plumber; A Love Tale of MCMXX}, year = {1912}, note = {

Rpt.\ London: S. Swift, 1919

}, month = {1912}, publisher = {S. Swift}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The Great Compulsory Work Act requires that everyone work. For example, the monarch is paid by the job for ceremonial duties, and the Queen takes in paying guests. No House of Lords. Illegal to give credit.

}, keywords = {Australian author, English author, French author, Male author}, author = {Percy [Arthur Perceval] Fendall (1850-1917)} } @booklet {394, title = {Life--the Jade}, year = {1912}, month = {1912}, publisher = {Everett \& Co.}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia brought about by the discovery of a substance that granted immortality. Set between its discovery in 1921 and the rediscovery of the need to love and bear children in 2021.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Martin H[enry] Potter (1871-1955)} } @booklet {8726, title = {The Lover{\textquoteright}s Baedeker and Guide to Arcady}, year = {1912}, month = {1912}, publisher = {Frederick A. Stokes Co. }, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Humorous eutopia describing the joys and pitfalls of love. Arkady, the capital and chief city of Arcadia, is \“the Mecca of all Lovers\” (1). In Dan Cupid\’s Heartware shop, broken hearts can be repaired while you wait (54).\ 

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Carolyn Wells (1862-1942)} } @booklet {6714, title = {The Laws of Leflo}, year = {1911}, month = {[1911]}, publisher = {John Ouseley}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Leflo is a lost colony in Africa that has been isolated for over a century. The community was established with very strict laws that were to be followed to the letter. The result was a peaceful community, but the negative effects outweighed the positive. An example is that at eighteen girls must choose to marry or not. They are provided for by the community whatever their choice, but if they choose not to they wear distinctive dress and can never marry. Much of the novel is romance.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {[Beatrice May Butt] [Allhusen] (1853-1918)} } @booklet {301, title = {"The Land of the Blow (After the method of Swift, who followed Lucian, and was himself followed by Voltaire and many others.)"}, howpublished = {Collected Works}, year = {1909}, note = {

Rpt. (New York: Gordian Press, 1966), 89-196; and in\ The Fall of the Republic and Other Political Satires. Ed. S.T. Joshi and David E. Schultz (Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 2000), 32-74. According to Joshi and Schultz \"The Land of the Blow\" is composed of a number of short stories previously published as follows: \"Sons of the Fair Star.\"\ San Francisco Examiner (June 10, 1888): 11; \"An Interview with Gnarmag-zote\" (published as \"The Golampians.\"\ San Francisco Examiner (November 24, 1889): 11; \"The Tamtonians: Some Account of Politics in the Uncanny Islands.\"\ San Francisco Examiner (November 11, 1888): 9; \"Marooned on Ug.\"\ San Francisco Examiner (February 20), 1898): 18; \"The War with Wug.\"\ San Francisco Examiner (September 11, 1898), 20; \"The Dog in Ganewag.\"\ New York American (May 12, 1904): 14; \"A Conflagration in Gharagarod.\"\ Cosmopolitan (New York) (February 1906): 457-58; \"An Execution in Batrugia.\" from \"A Letter from Btrugumian.\"\ New York American (April 30, 1903): 16; \"Small Contributions.\"\ Cosmopolitan (New York) (May 1907): 96-97; \"The Jumjum of Gokeetle-guk\" (published as \"Trustland: A Tale of a Traveller\").\ San Francisco Examiner (November 19, 1899): 15; and \"The Kingdom of Tortirra.\"\ San Francisco Examiner (April 22, 1888): 12.

}, month = {1909}, pages = {89-196}, publisher = {Neale Publishing Co.}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Gulliveriana. The protagonist visits a number of countries which provide the basis for wide-ranging satire, particularly on religion, capitalism, and politics.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Ambrose [Gwinett] Bierce (1842-1914?)} } @booklet {296, title = {The Last Persecution}, year = {1909}, month = {1909}, publisher = {Grant Richards}, address = {London}, abstract = {

A successful Chinese invasion of Europe is possible due to a falling away from God. A religious revival brings the overthrow of the Chinese.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {S[idney] N[ewman] Sedgwick (1872-1941)} } @booklet {277, title = {The Lunarian Professor and His Remarkable Revelations Concerning the Earth, the Moon and Mars. Together with an Account of the Cruise of the Sally Ann}, year = {1909}, month = {1909}, publisher = {Np}, address = {Minneapolis, MN}, abstract = {

Presents a variety of pictures of the future. In the main eutopia a reformed government for the United States is shown, which puts more power in the House of Representatives. Strict control of population. People have an instinct to work for the community and to respect others. In one the single tax system is tried and fails. The idea of a single tax on land originated with Henry George (1839-97).\ For Henry George\&$\#$39;s explanation of the single tax, see his Progress and Poverty. An Inquiry Into the Cause of Industrial Depressions and Of Increase of Want With Increase of Wealth. The Remedy. San Francisco, CA: W.M. Hinton, 1879. Fiftieth Anniversary Ed. New York: The Robert Schalkenbach Foundation, 1929.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {James B[radun] Alexander (1831-1914)} } @booklet {246, title = {The Last Generation: A Story of the Future}, year = {1908}, note = {

Rpt. in his Collected Prose (London: G. Bell and Sons, 1920), 1-32; rpt. (London: William Heinemann, 1922), 1-32; and in The Way to the End Times: Classic Tales of the Apocalypse. Ed. Robert Silverberg (New York: Three Rooms Press, 2016), 46-64, with an \“Editor\’s Introduction\” on 44-45. Expanded version of a story first published in his privately printed The Best Man. Eights Weeks, 1906. Oxford: np, 1906), 9-13.\ 

}, month = {1908}, publisher = {New Age Press}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia produced by trying to achieve eutopia. People stopped producing children in order to live better. Horrors of the last generation.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {James [Herman] Elroy Flecker (1884-1915)} } @booklet {257, title = {Legions of the Dawn. A Novel}, year = {1908}, note = {

Rpt. in Political Future Fiction: Speculative and Counter-Factual Politics in Edwardian Fiction. Ed. Kate Macdonald. Volume 2 Fictions of a Feminist Future. Ed. Kate Macdonald (London: Chatto \& Windus, 2013), 1-67 with \“Commentary on the Texts\” (267-74, 285) and \“Editorial Notes\” (287-96).\ 

}, month = {1908}, publisher = {T. Fisher Unwin}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Gender-role reversal set in a hidden area of Africa with some satire but presented somewhat more positively than most such fiction in that one of the men chooses to stay.

}, keywords = {UK author}, author = {[G. H.] [Davis]} } @booklet {263, title = {The Liberators; A Story of Future American Politics}, year = {1908}, month = {1908}, publisher = {B.W. Dodge \& Company}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Eutopia based on the nationalization of utilities and railroads. The attention of the book focuses on one individual who fights throughout the entire time for these changes, including battles in the streets and almost class war. The ultimate conversion of one of the capitalists due to the love of his daughter for this man is the key to getting the railroad bill passed.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Isaac N. Stevens (1858-1920)} } @booklet {8481, title = {Light of Centuries: The Forecast of a Practical Millennium. Peace Progress Prosperity Will Perfect Present Order. Dangers and Fallacies of both Socialism and Capitalism Exposed}, year = {1908}, month = {1908}, publisher = {Century Publishing Co. }, address = {Chicago, IL}, abstract = {

1908 Rosewater, Frank (1856-1934). Light of Centuries: The Forecast of a Practical Millennium. Peace Progress Prosperity Will Perfect Present Order. Dangers and Fallacies of both Socialism and Capitalism Exposed. Chicago, IL: Century Publishing Co. NN

Proposes what he calls \“Centrism,\” a two-money system, one used by buyers the other by sellers, which is given when receiving money. The system will require that money be spent. No usury.\ See also 1894, 1908 Rosewater, The Making of\ a\ Millennium,\ 1917, 1920, and 1924 Rosewater.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Frank Rosewater (1856-1934)} } @booklet {256, title = {A Lord of Lands}, year = {1908}, month = {1908}, publisher = {Henry Holt \& Co}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Formation of an intentional community for a group of poor people from a city with the usual trials and tribulations.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {[Percival] Ramsey Benson} } @booklet {233, title = {The Light of Mars: An Extraordinary Communication}, year = {1907}, month = {1907}, publisher = {Ptd. for the Proprietor by the Co-operative Printing Works}, address = {Sydney, NSW, Australia}, abstract = {

A conversation with a man from Mars, who lectures the man from Earth on the failings of Earth and describes a eutopian Mars. Earth is primarily faulted for its religious superstitions, its class system, and the way it chooses its leaders. Mars stresses reason/knowledge, has no money and no competition, is egalitarian (including economic, gender, and racial equality), is spiritually advanced and can communicate with the dead, and has evolved past war. Politically it is described as scientific anarchism and has evolved past socialism, although socialism is described as better than the Earth\&$\#$39;s competitive capitalism.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Will[iam] Ford} } @booklet {219, title = {The Limit of Wealth}, year = {1907}, month = {1907}, publisher = {Macmillan}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Eutopia in which a limit on wealth is the solution to all social problems. Stresses morality.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Alfred L. Hutchinson} } @booklet {213, title = {Lord of the World}, year = {1907}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Dodd, Mead, 1908; New York: Arno Press, 1975; South Bend, IN: St. Augustine\&$\#$39;s Press, 2001; and in British Future Fiction. Ed. I.F. Clarke. 8 vols. (London: Pickering \& Chatto, 2001), 8: 101-481, with a brief note by the editor (97-99).

}, month = {1907}, publisher = {Sir Isaac Pitman \& Sons, Ltd}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Armageddon (See Revelation 16) after split between secular humanism and the Roman Catholic Church. See 1911 Benson for an alternative future.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Robert Hugh Benson (1871-1914)} } @booklet {232, title = {"Love Hath Wings. Time: 2007"}, howpublished = {The Lone Hand (Sydney, NSW, Australia)}, volume = { 1.1}, year = {1907}, month = {May 1907}, pages = {10-15}, abstract = {

Eugenic marriage laws enforced by the Sydney Marriage Bureau of the Co-operative Commonwealth in conflict with love. Hygienic clothes for all. Notes that for all the control of marriage, most people had false teeth and had to wear glasses.

}, keywords = {Australian author, English author, Male author}, author = {Henry Fletcher (1856-1932)} } @booklet {201, title = {The Land of Nison}, year = {1906}, month = {1906}, publisher = {C.W. Daniel}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Nison means no sin and generally the language is simply the reversal of letters. Rule of wisdom. Few institutions. Women are considered to be inferior to men.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Charles Percy] [Sanger] (1871-1930)} } @booklet {196, title = {Looking Forward; The Phenomenal Progress of Electricity in 1912}, year = {1906}, month = {1906}, publisher = {Valley View Publishing Company}, address = {Northampton, MA}, abstract = {

Eutopia by 1912 through cooperation and electricity. Based on 1888 Bellamy.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {H[arry] W. Hillman (b. 1870)} } @booklet {163, title = {The Land of Unreason. A Satire}, year = {1905}, month = {1905}, publisher = {Simpkin, Marshall \& Co}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Satire on British life using the imaginary country approach.

}, author = {Dean Gulliver [pseud.]} } @booklet {164, title = {Laputa Revisited by Gulliver Redivivus in 1905}, howpublished = {1905}, year = {1905}, note = {

3rd ed. London: Hirschfeld Brothers, 1906.\ 

}, month = {1905}, publisher = {Hirschfeld Brothers}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Standard satire. Laputa, the floating island from 1726 Swift, has degenerated, every institution is poorly managed, and contradictions in behavior are common.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {[Theophilus Bulkeley] [Hyslop] [M.D.] (1863-1933)} } @booklet {6697, title = {Life in a Thousand Worlds}, year = {1905}, note = {

Sold by subscription only. Harrisburg, PA: The Minter Company, 1905; Illus. Sold by subscription only. Boston, MA: James B. Earle \& Co., 1906; and New York: Arno Press and The New York Times, 1971, which reprints the Minter Company edition. All the versions are identical except for the title page.\ 

}, month = {[1905]}, publisher = {Pub. By G. Holzapfel}, address = {Cleona, PA}, abstract = {

Brief pictures of various worlds. Many of the worlds visited are only briefly described with only a few of the characteristics of the inhabitants indicated. Anti-capitalist, particularly concerned with the evils of monopolies and depicting a number of worlds with monopolies. Various worlds are eutopias based on socialist principles, a rigidly enforced moral system, a national health system, or technology. There is repeated stress on the need for non-combustible building materials. Concerned with the religious practices of the planets described. Sexual purity is important. The concluding chapter describes Heaven.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Rev. W[illiam] S[huler] Harris (1865-1956)} } @booklet {6966, title = {London{\textquoteright}s Transformation; A Suggestive Sketch of Days to Come"}, howpublished = {Knowledge and Scientific News}, volume = {ns. 2 - 5 (os. 12 - 15) }, year = {1905}, note = {

Repub. London: King, Sell \& Olding, 1906.

}, month = {November 1905 - February 1906)}, pages = {283-86, 311-14, 339-42, 365-68}, abstract = {

England and the United States, which becomes a monarchy, are at war. The U.S. invades England. The British aided by Canada and the other colonies invade the U.S. Peace is brought by the Emperor\&$\#$39;s daughter marrying the King.

}, author = {Tems Dyvirta [pseud.]} } @booklet {141, title = {Light Ahead for the Negroes}, year = {1904}, note = {

Rpt. New York: AMS Press, 1975; and in Black Sci-Fi Short Stories: An Anthology of New \& Classic Stories (London: Flame Tree Publishing, 2021), 335-77.

}, month = {1904}, pages = {vi + 132 pp. }, publisher = {Grafton Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Set in 2006 in an improved but still segregated South, which is presented as a much better situation for African-Americans. Very paternalistic attitudes by whites, so much so that there may be an element of satire. Unions opened to Negroes, and, in separate meetings, to women; the unions train the men, and Schools of Domestic Science were opened to professionally train the women. The first part of the work is a description of the situation of the black at the beginning of the twentieth century (21-98). The economy has been partially nationalized. Blacks and whites \“naturally\” associate with their own people. Southern cotton plantations bought, broken up, and re-sold to African-Americans at low prices at which time they are given assistance and training. Technologically advanced with electric cars that run on dedicated elevated tracks. In Adam vs. Ape-Man and Ethiopia. Illus. New York: Ptd. by J. J. Little and Ives Co., 1931, he argues that American Negroes are descended from Ethiopians, which were the first civilization in Africa.

}, keywords = {African American author, Male author}, author = {E[dward] A[ustin] Johnson (1860-1944)} } @booklet {108, title = {Limanora. The Island of Progress}, year = {1903}, note = {

2nd ed. London: Humphrey Milford, Oxford University Press, 1931. No differences between editions.

}, month = {1903}, publisher = {G.P. Putnam{\textquoteright}s Sons}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Detailed eutopia divided into two books, \"The Outer or Material Civilisation\" and \"The Inner Life of a Self-Selected People\". Both technically and spiritually advanced, with spiritual advancement more important than technical. The Limanorans can fly due to a combination of technical advances and re-modeling of their bodies. Concerned with overcoming the physicality of the body. Education lasts fifty plus years. See also 1901 and 1920s Brown.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author, Scottish author}, author = {[John Macmillan] [Brown] (1846-1935)} } @booklet {6961, title = {"The Lake of Gold: A Narrative of the Anglo-American Conquest of Europe"}, howpublished = {Argosy }, volume = {41.1 - 42.4}, year = {1902}, note = {

Repub. as by George Griffith [pseud.]. London: F.V. White, 1903.

}, month = {December 1902 - July 1903}, pages = {63-85, 279-94, 485-98, 698-711; 149-62, 333-47, 518-29, 713-23}, abstract = {

Eutopia. Power of money used for good--free trade, trusts abolished, no strikes or lockouts, arbitration, and no war.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[George Chetwynd Griffith] [Jones] (1857-1906)} } @booklet {60, title = {The Last Man. A Novel}, year = {1900}, month = {1900}, publisher = {The Neale Company}, address = {Washington, DC}, abstract = {

Set in 1926 when the U.S. has expanded to fifty states, and it is depicted in eutopian terms. African-Americans are presented as uneducated servants. In this case the last man is the last survivor of the Northern army in the U.S. Civil War, and the novel is primarily his life story. The novel includes one chapter (186-94) describing a colony established for ex-soldiers.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {N[athan] Monroe McLaughlin} } @booklet {44, title = {Let There Be Light; The Story of a Workingmen{\textquoteright}s Club, Its Search for the Causes of Poverty and Social Inequality, Its Discussions, and Its Plan for the Amelioration of Existing Evils}, year = {1900}, month = {1900}, publisher = {G. P. Putnam{\textquoteright}s Sons}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Religious belief and practice will bring about a eutopia based on equality and justice. The novel follows the trajectory of a workingman\&$\#$39;s club over eight months, reporting the talks given at the club.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {David Lubin (1849-1919)} } @booklet {48, title = {Letters from New America; or an Attempt at Practical Socialism}, year = {1900}, month = {1900}, pages = {89 pp.}, publisher = {Charles H. Kerr \& Company}, address = {Chicago, IL}, abstract = {

Detailed socialist eutopia. Everyone is employed by the government and all property is public. Advancement is through the civil service and complaints about service limits such advancement. Slums removed and good and varied housing built. Cities are all mid-size to combine the advantages of city and country living. Churches are not regulated, and there is a free press as well as government sponsored newspapers. Public education from kindergarten through college and then three years of technical training. Stress on individual variety and the need to keep the system flexible to take this into account.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Clark Edmund Persinger (b. 1873)} } @booklet {6959, title = {Life-Theory and Socialism: Essays}, year = {1900}, month = {[19?]}, publisher = {Milner \& Co}, address = {London}, abstract = {

State socialist eutopia.

}, author = {O. C Ironside} } @booklet {8062, title = {The Light of Reason. Showing The First Step The Nation Should Take Toward A Social Order Based On Justice}, year = {1899}, month = {1899}, publisher = {Charles H. Kerr}, address = {Chicago, IL}, abstract = {

Socialist eutopia with land and all natural resources owned collectively. Much discussion of the need to go off the gold standard. The work is structured as a book within a book with the fictional elements at the beginning and end.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {A[braham] B[enjamin] Franklin} } @booklet {11, title = {Looking Ahead: Twentieth Century Happenings}, year = {1899}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Arno Press and\ The New York Times, 1971.\ 

}, month = {1899}, publisher = {F. Tennyson Neely}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Struggle among all religions for control of holy places with arguments for each religion and a decision by a council giving them to the Jews. In the buildup to the conclusion an Anglo-Saxon Confederation of the British Empire and Canada and the U.S. is formed with a federal constitution based on that of the U.S. Also, a document was drawn up by Christians and Jews that established the basis for the eutopia to come.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {H[enry] Pereira Mendes (1852-1937)} } @booklet {8056, title = {Looking Forward; A Dream of the United States of the Americas in 1999}, year = {1899}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Arno Press and\ The New York Times, 1971.\ 

}, month = {1899}, publisher = {[Press of L.C. Childs \& Son]}, address = {[Utica, NY]}, abstract = {

Eutopia stressing patriotism and the manifest destiny of the United States. The U.S. governs the entire Western Hemisphere, which is now known as the United States of the Americas\ and controls the Philippines. English is the universal language. The national capital moves to Mexico but is still known as Washington. The Papacy has moved to Rio de Janeiro. Technologically advanced. Racist with all Blacks transferred to Venezuela. Highly moral tone with,\ for example,\ cursing outlawed. Kissing prohibited as dangerous to health.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Arthur Bird} } @booklet {8053, title = {Looking Through the Mists; or, Every Hearth Knoweth Its Own Sorrow}, year = {1899}, month = {1899}, publisher = {F. Tennyson Neely}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Mostly romance but includes a scheme to help the poor build a town and industries.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {L. Norton Thomson} } @booklet {8032, title = {The Last War or The Triumph of the English Tongue. A Story of the Twenty-Sixth Century, Compiled from the Official Notes of Newman, Reporter to the President of the United America}, year = {1898}, month = {1898}, publisher = {Charles H. Kerr}, address = {Chicago, IL}, abstract = {

Eutopia of a united Europe, the Americas, and the rest of the English-speaking world dominated by white Anglo-Saxons that have followed the lead of the U.S., which, after the voluntary, supported migration of blacks to Africa, has established a reformed capitalism. Limit on wealth; corporations replaced by large cooperative industries; and everyone is a property-holder with a homestead. Temperance. Eugenic laws and the examination of morals make marriage more difficult, but divorce is easier. The causes of crime have been eliminated. The text, though, is mostly on the preparations for war with a new Holy Empire led by the Czar-pope of the Russian Empire, which the Anglo Saxons win.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {S[amuel] W. Odell (1864-1948)} } @booklet {8036, title = {The Legal Revolution of 1902}, year = {1898}, note = {

Rpt. incorrectly attributed to William Stanley Child. New York: Arno Press and The New York Times, 1971.

}, month = {1898}, pages = {334 pp.}, publisher = {Charles H. Kerr}, address = {Chicago, IL}, abstract = {

Populist eutopia. The revolution takes place through calling a constitutional convention to amend the U. S. Constitution, with details given on the amendments. Direct election of the President, Vice-President, and Senate. Graduated income tax. Future amendments possible by a direct vote of the people. Proportional representation. All property held by an individual over $500,000 to revert to the government. Concern to create uniform laws across the country. Nationalization of agriculture with huge irrigated, technologically sophisticated farms.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Bert J.] [Wellman]} } @booklet {8002, title = {Loma; A Citizen of Venus}, year = {1897}, month = {1897}, publisher = {Windsor and Lewis}, address = {St. Paul, MN}, abstract = {

Eutopia set on Venus and based on phrenology. Women and men are more nearly equal than they were at the time. Free love with the emphasis on love rather than sex.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {William Windsor (b. 1857?)} } @booklet {8471, title = {The Lost Tribes And The Land of Nod. An Original Natural Gas Story}, year = {1897}, month = {1897}, pages = {73 pp.}, publisher = {Press of the Indiana Newspaper Union}, address = {Indianapolis, IN}, abstract = {

Lost race eutopia in which people rarely ate anything but fruits and vegetables, and men and women wear similar clothing. Simple furniture. Ten large households. Little work needed; men fished, and women did spun\ and wove. Gold common. The visitor from the outside (brought by a tornado) establishes a school to teach English and then various technologies that introduce complexity and conflict.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Artemus P. Kerr (1851-1901)} } @booklet {7967, title = {The Light of Eden or A Historical Narrative of the Barbarian Age. A Scientific Discovery}, year = {1896}, month = {1896}, publisher = {S. Burg}, address = {Seattle, WA}, abstract = {

Detailed single tax eutopia called Eden. Government guarantees full employment.\ For Henry George\&$\#$39;s explanation of the single tax, see his Progress and Poverty. An Inquiry Into the Cause of Industrial Depressions and Of Increase of Want With Increase of Wealth. The Remedy. San Francisco, CA: W.M. Hinton, 1879. Fiftieth Anniversary Ed. New York: The Robert Schalkenbach Foundation, 1929.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {[Swan] [Burg]} } @booklet {7929, title = {Labor As Money: A Story With a Purpose. Presenting a Practical, Automatic Currency of Stationary Value, Contracting and Relaxing According to the Demands of the Country for Exchange}, year = {1894}, note = {

Versions of the same argument were made in\ Automated Elastic Currency. Omaha, NB: National Magazine Association, 1915; Exp. as\ My Country! My Congress!\ Omaha, NB: National Magazine Association, 1917. 69 pp.; and\ Debts of Today and Hell To Pay. Illus. Maps. Omaha, NB: National Magazine Association, 1918. 88 pp. An extract had been published in\ Successful Farming\ (Des Moines, IA) (February - March 1915).\ 

}, month = {1894}, publisher = {Arena Publishing Co}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {

Economic novel that includes a proposal for Labor Certificates replacing U.S. currency that is expected to lead to a eutopia. The Appendix (202-12) includes the proposed legislation.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {John O[tho] Yeiser (1866-1928)} } @booklet {7895, title = {The Land of the Changing Sun}, year = {1894}, note = {

Rpt. Boston, MA: Gregg Press, 1975.

}, month = {1894}, publisher = {Merriam Company}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Lost race novel set inside the Earth. On the whole the society is presented positively and can be considered a technological utopia. The exception to the positive presentation is that dissidents are banished to a barren waste and almost certain death. At the end a natural disaster threatens to destroy the society, and the people choose to become Christians, divide their wealth equally, and return to the surface.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Will[iam] N[athaniel Harben (1858-1919)} } @booklet {7920, title = {"The Land of the Hereafter"}, howpublished = {St. Paul{\textquoteright}s (London)}, year = {1894}, note = {

Rpt. as part of the serial by [George Locke], \“Cheap Century Return.\” By Ethan Barlass [pseud.] (London: Ferret Fantasy, [2004]), unpaged. The serial ran in Ferret Fantasy book catalogs between 2003 and 2008. In a 2013 email to me Locke\ told me that Barlass was a pseudonym he used.

}, month = {August 11 and 18, 1894}, pages = {439-41; 466-69}, abstract = {

A means of freezing people for a specified number of years replaces other forms of punishment. A man is sentenced for a crime of passion and wakes up in a future eutopia in which educated apes do all the work.

} } @booklet {7902, title = {The Lords of Misrule; A Tale of Gods and of Men}, year = {1894}, month = {1894}, publisher = {Laird and Lee}, address = {Chicago, IL}, abstract = {

A series of future dystopias. The excesses of capitalism are replaced by the excesses of state socialism, which collapses into simple rule by violence. Suggests that the United States in the 1890s was a eutopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {William C[urtis] Pomeroy} } @booklet {7862, title = {A League of Justice or Is It Right To Rob Robbers?}, year = {1893}, month = {1893}, publisher = {The Commonwealth Society}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {

Eutopia. A league of men who take from the rich and give to the poor gradually transform society. Start a free newspaper (first monthly, then weekly, then daily) in all the major languages of the world. Attack lawyers, abolish political parties, improve education, and bring about a revolution.\ See also 1903 and 1911 Swift,\ his\ Vicarious Philanthropy. [New York: np, 18?],\ and his\ The Evil Religion Does. Boston, MA: The Liberty Press, 1917.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Morrison I[saac] Swift (1856-1946)} } @booklet {7883, title = {"Leeward Land. An Account of a Visit to the United States of America in 1992"}, howpublished = {San Francisco Chronicle}, year = {1893}, note = {

There appears to be no chapter 13, which should have been in the December 16, 1893 issue. While the December 30 issue says to be continued, it does not continue in 1894.

}, month = {September 16 - December 30, 1893 skipping November 25 and December 16, 1893}, pages = {All on page 14}, abstract = {

Technological eutopia with lots of inventions. Cable station in the middle of the Atlantic. Little pollution. Sewage no longer dumped. Balloons for rapid transportation and deliveries. Animal breeding, including fish. Physical exercise, including for women. Prohibition. All buildings absolutely fireproof. Race mixing considered bad. Abolishing study of dead languages has radically improved education. Electric ads. Poor sent to the country farm after the fifth request for support.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Felix L[eopold] Oswald (1845-1906)} } @booklet {7860, title = {Looking Within. The Misleading Tendencies of "Looking Backward" Made Manifest}, year = {1893}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Arno Press and\ The New York Times, 1971.

}, month = {1893}, publisher = {A.S. Barnes}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Anti-utopia written against 1888 Bellamy. Life in Bellamy\&$\#$39;s Boston shown in an unfavorable light, with inequality, alcoholism, and violence common. People shirk work whenever possible.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {J[ohn] W. Roberts (1824-1900)} } @booklet {6645, title = {Looking Ahead! A Tale of Adventure (Not by the Author of "Looking Backward")}, year = {1892}, note = {

2nd ed. corr. and rev. with a brief \"Preface to the Second Edition\". London: Henry \& Co., [1892]

}, month = {[1892]}, publisher = {Henry \& Co}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Anti-socialist novel depicting the failure of a socialist revolution and the beginning of a new feudal system.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {[Alfred] [Morris] (1859-1932)} } @booklet {7808, title = {"Looking Forward"}, howpublished = {Belford{\textquoteright}s Monthly and Democratic Review }, volume = {8.47}, year = {1892}, month = {April 1892}, pages = {181-90}, abstract = {

Dystopian satire. An inventor creates an instrument for looking into the future on fifty years in the future Birmingham, Alabama is the national capital and Susan B. Anthony (1820-1906) is President for life. Women have gained power and taken the vote away from men. Men stay at home and care for the children, but, over time, there are fewer children. The race problem has been eliminated through the ability to change skin color and straighten hair, thus eliminating all non-whites. Education is through technology, with knowledge passed electronically from the brain of the teacher to the brains of the pupils. Crime has been almost eliminated by having magistrates read everyone\&$\#$39;s brain regularly, and the few crimes of passion are treated in hospitals. Almost all domestic chores like cooking and dish washing have been fully automated with food delivery by aircraft. The women mess up, the country is run down, and men take back power and women return to the home. But the men mess up as badly.

}, author = {J. O. Andrew} } @booklet {6646, title = {Looking Upwards; or, Nothing New. In Two Parts.--Part I. The Up Grade: From Henry George Past Edward Bellamy on to Higher Intelligences}, year = {1892}, month = {[1892]}, publisher = {H. Brett}, address = {Auckland, New Zealand}, abstract = {

Eutopia brought about through the nationalization of land and industry.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {[Arthur William] [Sanford] (1859-1932)} } @booklet {8458, title = {The Lost Island}, year = {1892}, note = {

Rpt. illus. in\ The Cosmopolitan\ 14.3 (January 1893): 365-84. Rpt. without the author\’s names as\ The Lost Island with a Conclusion by William Lloyd Garrison\ as\ The Sterling Weekly\ 2.3 (February 13, 1897): entire issue with \“Concluding Chapter\” (31-35).\ 

}, month = {1892}, publisher = {Fels Fund of America }, address = {Cincinnati, OH}, abstract = {

Satire in which a ship is wrecked on an unknown island that turns out to be owned by one of the sailors. He imposes a capitalist system until the others build a raft and leave him behind. On the single tax, see Henry George, Progress and Poverty. An Inquiry Into the Cause of Industrial Depressions and Of Increase of Want With Increase of Wealth. The Remedy. San Francisco, CA: W.M. Hinton, 1879. Fiftieth Anniversary Ed. New York: The Robert Schalkenbach Foundation, 1929.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, Male author}, author = {Edward J. Austen and Louise V[escelius] Sheldon} } @booklet {7798, title = {Labor Town. An Address Delivered by Frederic Jones to the Presidents and Secretaries of New South Wales Trades Unions at the Temperance Hall, Sydney, September 15th, 1891, Mr. P.J. Brennan in the Chair}, volume = {Cover says 2nd ed. }, year = {1891}, month = {1891}, pages = {16 pp.}, publisher = {Printed by Higgs \& Townsend}, address = {Sydney, NSW, Australia}, abstract = {

Proposal for a socialist town of 5000 acres five miles from Sydney, including a map showing the precise location. The government is asked to lease the land to Labor Town for 99 years. The author proposes establishing a bank and building a tramline to connect with the already established lines. Most of the pamphlet consists of practical details of the proposed town.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Frederic Jones} } @booklet {7792, title = {Laws \& Habits of People Who Live in Other Worlds}, year = {1891}, note = {

Another volume was planned, but there is no evidence it was published.

}, month = {1891}, publisher = {Hector Ross}, address = {Sydney, NSW, Australia}, abstract = {

Eutopia on another planet that can be contacted from Earth through spiritualism. Much technological improvement. Temperance was the key reform. Marriage with children only allowed between healthy people. Those unhealthy or deformed could marry but were prohibited from having children. Blacks cannot marry whites. Improved, free health care; better, free education; and no poverty. Phrenology is considered a science.\ 

}, author = {Carlenent [pseud.]} } @booklet {6638, title = {Looking Beyond. A Sequel to "Looking Backward" by Edward Bellamy, and An Answer To "Looking Further Forward," by Richard Michaelis}, year = {1891}, note = {

UK ed. London: William Reeves, 1891. U.K. ed rpt. New York: Arno Press and The New York Times, 1971.

}, month = {[1891]}, publisher = {L. Graham and Son}, address = {New Orleans, LA}, abstract = {

Pro-1888 Bellamy eutopia which follows on from Michaelis\&$\#$39;s 1890 sequel to Bellamy. In this book, the future Boston depicted by Michaelis is a nightmare and Julian West wakes up in the future Boston of Bellamy rather than that of Michaelis. In this future the demoted Professor deserved demotion, and all is fine.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {L[udwig] A. Geissler} } @booklet {7802, title = {The Lost Colony}, year = {1891}, month = {1891}, publisher = {T.B. Peterson \& Brothers}, address = {Philadelphia, PA}, abstract = {

Much of the novel is concerned with family life in the American South before the Civil War and about events during the war, but about halfway through the focus sporadically shifts to an isolated island that is settled by a set of well-provisioned castaways, who had been deliberately marooned for opposing the Confederacy. The castaways were three men, including one stereotyped black man, who did the cooking and carried the provisions but is described as a friend. They sail to another island that has not had contact with the outside world since the early seventeenth century, speaks the English of that period, and has created a largely egalitarian eutopia. At twenty-one, a man gets a tract of land. Upon marriage, a house is built. Six-hour workday for men; no outside labor for women. No money. No alcohol. No crime. All change is prohibited, but the arrival of the outsiders poses problems.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {James F. Raymond (b. 1826)} } @booklet {6950, title = {"Lady Gwen, or, The Days That Are To Be"}, howpublished = {Cymru Fyad}, volume = { 3.3 - 4.2}, year = {1890}, month = {June 1890 - March 1891}, pages = {335-44, 385-96, 471-80, 529-36, 593-501, 558-77; 28-40, 171-83, 220-25}, abstract = {

Detailed eutopia of Wales in 2000 inspired by 1889 Vogel. Wales is an independent member of the Imperial Empire with a young woman as Prime Minister. A reformed Calvinism played a significant part in bringing about the change.

}, keywords = {Welsh author}, author = {A Welsh Nationalist [pseud.]} } @booklet {7769, title = {"The Last Sinner"}, howpublished = {Overland Monthly}, volume = {2nd ser. 15.90}, year = {1890}, month = {June 1890}, pages = {618-28}, abstract = {

Anti-utopian story set some time into the future of 1888 Bellamy when Nationalism has become authoritarian. A throwback to capitalism rallies opposition, which leads to war.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {H. Elton Smith} } @booklet {7736, title = {A Leap into the Future; or, How Things Will Be. A Romance of the Year 2000}, year = {1890}, month = {1890}, publisher = {Weed, Parsons \& Co., Printers}, address = {Albany, NY}, abstract = {

Eutopia although much is a criticism of the past. Standard support of 1888 Bellamy using Bellamy\&$\#$39;s setting and characters, with his Julian West the protagonist. Technologically advanced with food from chemicals. Cemeteries have been abolished, the bodies disinterred and cremated, and the land turned into parks. Judges write the few laws needed. No lawyers. No appeal from the court\&$\#$39;s decision. Young men and women work in separate jobs because women working with men lose their femininity. Seen as still improving.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Donald McMartin} } @booklet {8442, title = {Life in the Stone Age: The History of Atharael, Chief Priest of a Band of Al-Aryans; An Outline History of Man. Written Through the Mediumship of U.G. Figley}, year = {1890}, month = {1890}, pages = {91 pp.}, publisher = {U.G. Figley}, address = {Defiance, OH}, abstract = {

Lost race and spiritualist novel that includes a brief description of a eutopian future based on cooperation and democracy that will ultimately be followed by renewed war.

}, keywords = {US author}, author = {U.G. Figley (b. 1864)} } @booklet {7739, title = {Life in Utopia; Being a Faithful and Accurate Description of the Institutions that Regulate Labour, Art, Science, Agriculture, Education, Habitation, Matrimony, Law, Government, and Religion in this Delightful Region of Human Imagination}, year = {1890}, month = {1890}, publisher = {Authors{\textquoteright} Cooperative Publishing Company}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Fairly standard socialist eutopia.\ See also 1870 and 1876 Petzler, his\ Die sociale Baukunst; oder Gr{\"u}nde und Mittel f{\"u}r den Umsturz und Wiederaufbau der gesellschaftlichen Verh{\"a}ltnisse, besonders wie solche sich in neuester Zeit in England, dem grossen Musterstaat der modernen Civilisation, ausgebildet haben. 2 vols. Hottingen-Z{\"u}rich, Switzerland: Verlag der Schweizerischen Volksbuchhandlung, 1879, 1880; and his\ Grosse Jubil{\"a}umsfeier und imposanter Triumphzug in Erinnerung des hundertj{\"a}hrigen Bestehens der social-demokratischen Staatsseinrichtung in Britannien. N{\"u}rnberg, Germany: Selbstverlag des Berfassers, 1897 (L).\ 

}, keywords = {English author, German author, Male author}, author = {John [Aloys] Petzler (1814?-1898)} } @booklet {7742, title = {Looking Backward; and What I Saw}, volume = {2nd ed.}, year = {1890}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Arno Press and The New York Times, 1971.

}, month = {1890}, publisher = {[Harrison and Smith]}, address = {[Minneapolis, MN]}, abstract = {

Written against 1888-Bellamy and Henry George, the theorist of the single tax. The protagonist is R.E. Former and other names are similar. Proposes standard reforms of the times.\ For Henry George\&$\#$39;s explanation of the single tax, see his Progress and Poverty. An Inquiry Into the Cause of Industrial Depressions and Of Increase of Want With Increase of Wealth. The Remedy. San Francisco, CA: W.M. Hinton, 1879. Fiftieth Anniversary Ed. New York: The Robert Schalkenbach Foundation, 1929.

}, keywords = {US author}, author = {W. W. Satterlee} } @booklet {7762, title = {"Looking Forward"}, howpublished = {Liberty (Boston, MA) }, volume = {7.13 }, year = {1890}, month = {October 18, 1890}, pages = {7}, abstract = {

Satire on the power of unions.

} } @booklet {7745, title = {Looking Further Backward. Being a Series of Lectures Delivered to the Freshman Class at Shawmut College, by Professor Won Lung Li (Successor of Professor Julian West), Mandarin of the Second Rank of the Golden Dragon and Chief of the Historical Section of the Colleges in the North-Eastern Division of the Chinese Province of North America. Now, For the First Time, Collected, Edited and Condensed}, year = {1890}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Arno Press and\ The New York Times, 1971.

}, month = {1890}, publisher = {Albany Book Company}, address = {Albany, NY}, abstract = {

Anti-1888 Bellamy dystopia. The title indicates the situation; the future described by Bellamy proved weak militarily, and the Chinese successfully invaded.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Arthur Dudley Vinton (1852-1906)} } @booklet {7737, title = {Looking Further Forward; An Answer to Looking Backward by Edward Bellamy}, year = {1890}, note = {

Rpt. Arno Press and\ The New York Times, 1971; and Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Library Digital Collections, 1996 with\ Looking Further Forward [1890]\ on the cover. Also published as\ Looking Forward. Chicago, IL: Rand McNally, 1890; and\ A Sequel to Looking Backward or \"Looking Further Forward.\"\ London: William Reeves, [1891]. This ed. drops the final chapter of the first ed. An Australian ed. was published as\ A Social Tangle. Being a Sequel and Reply to Bellamy\&$\#$39;s \"Looking Backward\".\ Melbourne, VIC, Australia: E.W. Cole, [1891]. In German as\ Ein Blick in die Zukunft, Ein Antewort auf Ein Ruckblick von Edward Bellamy. Chicago, IL: Rand McNally, 1890.

}, month = {1890}, publisher = {Rand McNally}, address = {Chicago, IL}, abstract = {

Anti-1888 Bellamy. The author shows Julian West starting his teaching job and being confronted by the Professor he replaced, who is now a janitor because he did not follow the party line. The \“real\” future Boston is corrupt, class-ridden, and authoritarian. The final chapter, dropped in some reprints, depicts the murder of West, the professor and Dr. Leete and the abduction of Edith Leete, who had refused to marry the leader of the radical opposition. But in this version it had all been a dream, and West wakes up in nineteenth century Boston. 1891 Geissler is a response.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Richard Michaelis (1839-1909)} } @booklet {8445, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Looking Rearward{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Liberty (Boston, MA) }, volume = {6.26 (158)}, year = {1890}, month = {1890}, pages = {3, cols. 1-2}, abstract = {

Satire on 1888 Bellamy in which all names have been abolished and replaced with a number that is tattooed on the forehead and the forearm.

} } @booklet {7719, title = {"The Ladies Triumph"}, howpublished = {Colonial Couplets: Being Poems in Partnership}, year = {1889}, month = {1889}, pages = {5-8}, publisher = {Simpson and Williams}, address = {Christchurch, New Zealand}, abstract = {

Satiric poem on the success of women getting the vote.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {George Phipps Williams (1847-1909) and W[illiam] P[ember] Reeves (1857-1932)} } @booklet {8436, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Lady of the Bush. The Dream of an English Traveller{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Adelaide Advertiser (Adelaide, SA, Australia)}, year = {1889}, note = {

Also in the\ Clarence and Richmond Examiner and New England Advertiser\ (Grafton, NSW, Australia). The Adelaide paper says that it was written for the\ Advertiser. The Grafton paper says it was originally published in the\ Daily Telegraph.

}, month = {September 21, 1889}, pages = {5}, abstract = {

Australia in the future as a metropolitan eutopia. The eutopia is in the last paragraph only with the rest a vision of the Australian bush.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {David Christie Murray (1847-1907)} } @booklet {9930, title = {The Last American: A Fragment From the Journal of Khan-Li Prince of Dimph-yoo-chur and Admiral in the Persian Navy}, year = {1889}, note = {

Extract rpt. with illus. in The End of the World and Other Catastrophes. Ed. Mike [Michael Raymond Donald] Ashley (London: British Library, 2019), 111-48, with an editor\’s note on 109.\ Rpt. New York: Frederick A. Stokes Co., 1893. Exp. as Edition Deluxe. Illus. in Color by F. W. Read. With Decorative Designs by Albert D. Blashfield and illus. by the Author. New York: Frederick A. Stokes Co., 1902. 151 pp. Rpt. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Literature House, 1970. U. K. ed. London: Gay and Bird, [1894].\ 

}, month = {1889}, pages = {78 pp.}, publisher = {Frederick A. Stokes \& Brother}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which a future expedition from Persia visits a devastated New York and Washington, DC. Much misinterpretation of what they find. In DC, they discover the three last Americans alive, and when one of the Persians tries to kiss the woman, a fight breaks out, and many Persians and all the Americans are killed.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {J[ohn] A[mes] Mitchell ] (1845-1918), ed. [written by]} } @booklet {7694, title = {Lesbia Newman}, year = {1889}, note = {

Rpt. in\ British Future Fiction. Ed. I.F. Clarke. 8 vols. (London: Pickering \& Chatto, 2001), 4: 371-702, with a brief note by the editor (367-69).

}, month = {1889}, publisher = {George Redway}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Eutopia. Rights for women with training so they can exercise them effectively. Roman Catholic church allows priestesses.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Henry Robert S[amuel] Dalton (1835-1902?)} } @booklet {7720, title = {"Looking Forward A D 1976"}, howpublished = {Belford{\textquoteright}s Magazine }, volume = {4.19 }, year = {1889}, month = {December 1889}, pages = {49-50}, abstract = {

Anti-capitalist dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {C. Howard Wilson} } @booklet {7706, title = {The Lost Inca; A Tale of Discovery in the Vale of the Inti-Mayu}, year = {1889}, month = {1889}, publisher = {Cassell}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Lost Incan society with advanced technology presented as a eutopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Alfred] [Sears] (1826-1911)} } @booklet {7663, title = {Looking Backward: 2000-1887}, year = {1888}, note = {

Canadian ed. Toronto, ON, Canada: William Bryce, [1888]. 2nd ed. Boston, MA: Houghton, Mifflin, 1889. Rpt. as Looking Backward--If Socialism Comes 2000-1887. London: W. Foulsham, [1930]; and under the original title Vancouver, BC, Canada: The Totem Press, 1934. Critical editions include ed. John L. Thomas. Cambridge, MA: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1967, with an \“Introduction\” (1-89); ed. Alex MacDonald. Peterborough, ON, Canada: Broadview Press, 2003, with an \“Introduction\” (1-42) and appendices that include material by Bellamy and others; and ed. Matthew Beaumont. London: Oxford University Press, 2007, with an \“Introduction\” (vii-xxxvi) and \“Explanatory Notes\” (198-220), which includes notes on the changes from the first to the second edition. Chapters I-IX of the 1888 ed. rpt. in Dystopia Utopia Short Stories: An Anthology of New \& Classic Tales (London: Flame Tree Publishing, 2016), 21-56.\ It was adapted as a play by C. Bernard Jackson that was first performed in April 1974 in Los Angeles, CA.

}, month = {1888}, publisher = {Ticknor and Company}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {

The classic American eutopia in which both business and labor were nationalized. Quite a few works have been published responding to or elaborating on Looking Backward. After publishing Looking Backward Bellamy became a social reformer and was involved with two journals, The Nationalist (1889-91) and The New Nation (1891-94), which he edited and published, and wrote many essays defending or elaborating his position; some of these have been collected in his Edward Bellamy Speaks Again! Articles--Public Addresses--Letters. Chicago, IL: The Peerage Press, 1937. 2nd ed. Chicago, IL: The Peerage Press, 1938; and Talks On Nationalism. Chicago, IL: The Peerage Press, 1938. 1897 Bellamy is a sequel to Looking Backward and 1889 Bellamy, \“With Eyes Shut,\” and 1891 and 1895 Bellamy are set in the same eutopia. He also wrote two utopias not directly connected to Looking Backward; see 1886 Bellamy and 1889 Bellamy, \“To Whom This May Come.\”

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Edward Bellamy (1850-98)} } @booklet {9299, title = {{\textquotedblleft}A Lady and the Lords{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Love and Pride on an Iceberg and Other Tales }, year = {1887}, month = {1887}, pages = {96-108}, publisher = {Swan Sonnenschein, Lowrey \& Co.}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Satire on women getting the vote.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[William Ulick O{\textquoteright}Connor] [Cuffe], The Earl of Desart (1845-1937)} } @booklet {7654, title = {"Letters from the Planets"}, howpublished = {Cassell{\textquoteright}s Family Magazine }, volume = {13 }, year = {1887}, note = {

The stories from April and October are rpt. as \“Letters from Mars.\” in Lost Mars: The Golden Age of the Red Planet. Ed. Mike [Michael Raymond Donald]\ Ashley (London: British Library, 2018), 53-72 with an editor\’s not on 51-52. The U. S. ed. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2018 has the subtitle: Stories from the Golden Age of the Red Planet.\ Series continued as \"The Portals of the King of Day. A Journey To the Regions of the Sun.\" 14 (January 1888): 96-98; \"Our Second Voyage to Mars.\" 15 (February 1889): 166-70; \"Letters from the Planets--Canal Life on Mars.\" 16 (February 1890): 285-87; \"A Trip to Jupiter\&$\#$39;s Moonlet.\" 18 (December 1891): 55-56; and \"Corresponding With the Planets.\" 19 (June 1893): 403-05. Entire series rpt. in\ Worlds Apart: An Anthology in Facsimile\ [Cover subtitle\ An Anthology of Interplanetary Fiction]. Ed. George Locke (London: Cornmarket Reprints, 1972), 1-26.

}, month = {January, April, August, October 1887}, pages = {121-23, 311-13, 556-58, 668-69}, abstract = {

The October 1887 story depicts Venus as an Athenian democracy. See also 1874 and 1883 Lach-Szyrma.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Wladjslaw Somerville] [Lach-Szyrma] (1841-1915)} } @booklet {7650, title = {"Locksley Hall Sixty Years After"}, howpublished = {Locksley Hall Sixty Years After Etc. }, year = {1886}, note = {

Rpt. \"Locksley Hall Sixty Years After.\"\ \ Critical ed. in The Poems of Tennyson in three volumes. Second Edition Incorporating the Trinity College Manuscript. Ed. Christopher Ricks (London: Longman 1987), III: 148-59, with an introductory note (148-49) and textual notes as footnotes; and in Tennyson\’s Poetry. 2nd ed. Ed. Robert W. Hill, Jr. (New York: W.W. Norton, 1999), 551-61.\ 

}, month = {1886}, pages = {1-38}, publisher = {Macmillan}, address = {London}, abstract = {

One section of the poem (lines 155-74 in the Ricks edition) has the future of 1842 Tennyson facing overpopulation and the renewal of war.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Alfred Tennyson (1809-92)} } @booklet {7603, title = {Life and Labor in the Spirit World. Being a Description of the Localities, Employments, Surroundings, and Conditions in the Spheres. By Members of the Spirit-Band of Miss M. T. Shelhamer, Medium of the Banner of Light Public Free Circle}, year = {1884}, note = {

There is a later printing, sometimes cataloged as a second edition, with Second Thousand on the title page and the publication date of 1885, but it is otherwise identical.

}, month = {1884}, publisher = {Colby and Rich}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {

Detailed eutopia of the spirit life which is presented as the writings from the spirit world of Ann Frances Kinsey (1856-77). Uses the language of Andrew Jackson Davis; see 1847, 1874 and 1878 Davis. Stresses gender equality, education, peace and beauty.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {[Mary Theresa] [Longley] (1853-1928)} } @booklet {6608, title = {"A Little of the Future of the North of Auckland"}, howpublished = {Prologue Written in 1884}, year = {1884}, month = {[1884]}, pages = {25-32}, publisher = {H. Brett, General Steam Print}, address = {Auckland, New Zealand}, abstract = {

Description of the future of the area North of Auckland as a eutopia based on developing its agricultural potential. See also 1867 Fairburn. There is also a non-utopian The Ships of the Future. Being an Epilogue to The Ships of Tarshish. By \"Mohoao\" [pseud.]. Auckland, New Zealand: Np, [1889] (ATL).

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {[Edwin] [Fairburn] (1827-1911)} } @booklet {7586, title = {"The Last Voyage of Lemuel Gulliver"}, howpublished = {The World }, year = {1883}, month = {December 1883}, pages = {5-41 (entire issue)}, abstract = {

Satire on contemporary England in a journey to the Isle of Moralia.

} } @booklet {8417, title = {"A Little Pilgrim: In the Unseen. (For Easter){\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Macmillan{\textquoteright}s Magazine}, volume = {46.271 }, year = {1882}, note = {

Rpt. with \“The Little Pilgrim Goes Up Higher.\” In\ The Little Pilgrim. Reprinted from Macmillan\’s Magazine. Boston, MA: Roberts Brothers, 1882.

}, month = {May 1882}, pages = {1-19}, abstract = {

Experiences after death in the first level of heaven where those arriving are introduced to their beautiful surroundings.

}, keywords = {Female author, Scottish author}, author = {[Margaret] [Oliphant] (1828-97)} } @booklet {7569, title = {Land Ho!! A Conversation of 1933, on the results of the adoption of the system of "Nationalizing the Land of New Zealand," adopted in 1883}, year = {1881}, month = {1881}, publisher = {F.L. Davis}, address = {Lyttelton, New Zealand}, abstract = {

Eutopia based on Land Nationalization. Very detailed on the working of the system.\ See also his\ Land Ho! A Pamphlet Advocating the Re-purchase and Settlement of the Large Freehold Blocks.\  Christchurch ,\  New Zealand : Simpson \& Williams, 1889 (\ ATL, DU-Ho, VUW).

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {[Alexander] [Joyce] (1840/41-1927)} } @booklet {7555, title = {Last Days of the Republic}, year = {1880}, month = {1880}, publisher = {Alta California Publishing Company}, address = {San Francisco, CA}, abstract = {

Yellow war dystopia in which China conquers the United States.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author, US author}, author = {P[ierton] W. Dooner (1844-1907?)} } @booklet {8684, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Last African Explorer{\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 = {59-63}, publisher = {Pub. by the Proprietors at the Fun Office}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Satire on African exploration in which a man walks from London to Central Africa and comes across a eutopia. Government ministers are paid to think; other government officials are paid to propagandize and not think; murderers become army officers with those guilty of violent assaults forming the ranks; thieves are placed in the financial ministry or made tax collectors. Since no debt is recoverable by law, all transactions are in cash.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Eustace Hinton Jones} } @booklet {6597, title = {Life in the Future}, volume = {2nd ed.}, year = {1879}, note = {

There is no record of a first edition.

}, month = {[1879]}, pages = {48 pp.}, publisher = {G. Morrish}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Rapture (see see 1 Corinthians 15:52 and\ 1 Thessalonians 4: 15-17) in which the saved are lifted off earth preliminary to the Second Coming. Shows the punishment of those not raptured and, briefly, the life of those who are.

}, author = {H. R K.} } @booklet {7517, title = {The Last Inca; or, The Story of Tupac Am{\^a}ru}, volume = {3 vols.}, year = {1874}, month = {1874}, publisher = {Tinsley Bros}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The last chapter is an Incan socialist eutopia. Idleness is punished as a crime. All land is divided with a third belonging to the people, a third to the nobility, and a third to the Inca. Mines belong to the state. All men must bear arms and participate in the national games. Compulsory education for boys to 14; no girl is allowed to attend school past 7, but they are taught at home and examined every nine days.

} } @booklet {7460, title = {Ludibria Lunae; or, The Wars of Women and the Gods. An Allegorical Burlesque}, year = {1869}, month = {1869}, publisher = {Smith, Elder and Co}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Epic poem. Satire on women\&$\#$39;s rights following Aristophanes. Presented as beginning in a eutopia which has no rights for women. Women plan to travel to the moon, discover that it is inhabited by the old gods and goddesses, who they challenge. Women are defeated by love and vanity.\ See also 1879 Courthope.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {William John Courthope (1842-1919)} } @booklet {7414, title = {"Labour{\textquoteright}s Utopia"}, howpublished = {Modern Manicheism, Labour{\textquoteright}s Utopia, and Other Poems}, year = {1857}, note = {

Published shortened under the author\&$\#$39;s name in his On Labour; Its Wrongful Claims and Rightful Dues. Its Actual Present and Possible Future (London: Macmillan, 1869), 434-39. 2nd ed. with a few pages of text added (London: Macmillan, 1870), 460-68.

}, month = {1857}, pages = {29-39}, publisher = {John W. Parker and Son}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Poem depicting a eutopia of abundance and leisure in which people work at things they enjoy doing.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[William Thomas] [Thornton] (1813-80)} } @booklet {7403, title = {"Love Among the Ruins"}, howpublished = {Men and Women}, volume = {2 vols.}, year = {1855}, note = {

Rpt. In Men and Women. Ed. Paul Turner (Oxford, Eng.: Oxford University Press, 1972), 5-8, 312; Men and Women and Other Poems. Ed. J.W. Harper (London: J.M. Dent/Totowa, NJ: Rowman and Littlefield, 1975), 1-3, 231; in The Complete Works of Robert Browning With Variant Readings \& Annotations. Ed. Roman A. King, Jr. 5 vols. (Athens, OH: Ohio University Press and Baylor University, Waco, TX, 1981), 5: 163-66, 360; The Poetical Works of Robert Browning. Volume 5 Men and Women. Ed. Ian Jack and Robert Inglesfield (Oxford, Eng.: Clarendon Press, 1995), 3-8; and Robert Browning. Ed. Adam Roberts (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997), 157-59.

}, month = {1855}, pages = {1: 1-6}, publisher = {Chapman and Hall}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Poem set in the ruins of a city in which the rural life and love are the eutopia.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Robert Browning (1812-89)} } @booklet {7404, title = {Lucy Boston; or, Woman{\textquoteright}s Rights and Spiritualism: Illustrating the Follies and Delusions of the Nineteenth Century}, year = {1855}, month = {1855}, publisher = {Alden and Beardsley/J.C. Derby}, address = {Auburn, NY/New York}, abstract = {

Satire on women\&$\#$39;s rights and spiritualism.

}, author = {Fred Folio} } @booklet {7388, title = {Liberia; or Mr. Peyton{\textquoteright}s Experiments}, year = {1853}, note = {

Rpt. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Gregg Press, 1968.

}, month = {1853}, publisher = {Harper \& Brothers}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The novel concerns the activities of a Virginian who wants to improve the lives of slaves. His first two schemes fail, but he discovers the American Colonization Society, which was founded in 1816 to send emancipated slaves to Africa and decides to work with it. The novel continues with the settlement of Liberia, the initial problems there, and its emergence as a eutopia. The book concludes with letters sent from Liberia and documents regarding Liberia and related activities, including excerpts from a Declaration of Independence and Constitution. .

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Mrs. Sarah J[osepha Buell] Hale, ed. [written by] (1788-1879)} } @booklet {7386, title = {Life and Adventures of Capt. Jacob D. Armstrong}, year = {1852}, month = {1852}, publisher = {DeWitt \& Davenport}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Eutopia. A ship wrecks on the island of Nede, which is inhabited by simple people (with no secondary sexual characteristics), who live a happy life of idleness in complete equality. Vegetarian; work to grow food. Perpetual Spring. No snakes. No religion. An elaborate funeral ritual is described. The discovery of iron leads the shipwrecked sailors to introduce the dystopian modern world of work, money, theft, law, government, newspapers, and alcohol.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Nathaniel Cook] [Meeker] [supposed author] (1817-79)} } @booklet {7373, title = {The Last Peer}, volume = {3 vols.}, year = {1851}, month = {1851}, publisher = {Thomas Cautley Newby}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Future dystopia in which machinery releases labor, causing widespread unemployment, social upheaval, and the abolition of the aristocracy and the monarchy.

} } @booklet {7350, title = {"The Life and Adventures of Miss Robinson Crusoe"}, howpublished = {Punch or the London Charivari }, volume = {11.260 - 74 }, year = {1846}, month = {July 4 - October 17, 1846}, pages = {9-10, 13, 29, 33, 49, 53, 66, 75, 85, 101, 121, 135, 153}, abstract = {

Satire on contemporary life in England.

} } @booklet {7332, title = {"Locksley Hall"}, howpublished = {Poems}, volume = {2 vols.}, year = {1842}, note = {

U.S. ed. Boston, MA: William D. Ticknor, 1842), 2: 92-111. Rpt. in The Poems of Tennyson. Ed. Christopher Ricks (London: Longmans, 1969), 2: 688-99. Critical ed. in The Poems of Tennyson in three volumes. Second Edition Incorporating the Trinity College Manuscript. Ed. Christopher Ricks (London: Longman 1987), II: 120-30, with an introductory note (118-20) and textual notes as footnotes.

}, month = {1842}, pages = {2: 92-111}, publisher = {Edward Moxon}, address = {London}, abstract = {

One section of the poem (lines 119-30 in the Ricks edition) depicts a future world war followed by a world federation and universal law.\ See also 1886 Tennyson, \“Locksley Hall Sixty Years Later\”.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Alfred Tennyson (1809-92)} } @booklet {7322, title = {"The Last Man"}, howpublished = {The Last Man; A Poem, in Three Cantos}, year = {1839}, month = {1839}, pages = {1-99}, publisher = {Hugh Cunningham}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Long poem detailing the travails, mostly emotional, of the last man.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Edward Wallace} } @booklet {7309, title = {L.... A... T... to his fellow citizens of the United States of America; and Through Their Medium, To All His Other Human Beings on Earth, Not Any Where Else!}, year = {1837}, note = {

Rpt. in\ Magazine of History With Notes and Queries\ (New York), no. 148 (1929): 5-42.

}, month = {1837}, publisher = {H. D. Robinson}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Eutopia. Argues that an intentional community to be called Startspoint should be founded on the Upper Mississippi (called the Missouri in the text), and presents detailed regulations of life in it, including the structure and rules of the community (Magazine of History 23-32), and a description of the daily life (32-37), which is very organized and highly structured. Later communities further West will be established called, in order, Union and Perfection. Earlier the author had published L. A. Tarascon, To His Friends, \&c. \&c. \&c. Louisville, KY: Np, 1836. 14 pp., which suggests the establishment such a community but without any social details. See also his 1836 Republican Education, the 2nd ed. of which is printed in this book.\ 

}, keywords = {French author, Male author, US author}, author = {Louis Anastasius Tarascon (1759-1840)} } @booklet {7300, title = {"Lotos-Eaters"}, howpublished = {Poems}, year = {1833}, note = {

Substantially rev. in his Poems. 2 vols. (London: Edward Moxon, 1842), 1: 175-84. U.S. ed. Boston, MA: William D. Ticknor, 1842), 1: 175-84. Critical ed. in The Poems of Tennyson in three volumes. Second Edition Incorporating the Trinity College Manuscript. Ed. Christopher Ricks (London: Longman 1987), I: 468-77, with an introductory note (467-68) and textual notes as footnotes; and in Tennyson\’s Poetry. 2nd ed. Ed. Robert W. Hill, Jr. (New York: W.W. Norton, 1999), 76-80.

}, month = {1833}, pages = {108-17}, publisher = {Edward Moxon}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Sailors are shipwrecked on an island that is a simple eutopia where all needs are easily met, but the implication is that such a life is ultimately not a good one.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Alfred Tennyson (1809-92)} } @booklet {8666, title = {A Legend of Another World}, year = {1832}, month = {1832}, publisher = {Sampson Low and J. Maynard}, address = {London}, abstract = {

A retelling of the history of Earth set on Venus, much of it in the Biblical version with all of its eutopian and dystopian elements.

} } @booklet {7289, title = {"London in a Thousand Years"}, howpublished = {London in a Thousand Years; With other Poems}, year = {1830}, month = {1830}, pages = {1-88 with "Notes" on 65-88}, publisher = {Colburn and Bentley, 1830}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia. While the poem begins with an almost eutopian description of London, it quickly becomes a description of London\&$\#$39;s disintegration and collapse.

}, keywords = {English author, French author, Irish author, Male author}, author = {Eugenius Roche Esq. (1798-1829)} } @booklet {9734, title = {A Letter from Sydney, the Principal Town of Australasia. Together with the Outline of a System of colonization}, year = {1829}, month = {1829}, pages = {222 pp. plus a foldout map and an {\textquotedblleft}Appendix. Outline of a System of Colonization{\textquotedblright} separately paged as i-xxiv}, publisher = {Joseph Cross/Simpkin and Marshall/Effingham Wilson}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Some damning of the settlement process, particularly convict labor and the quality of some of the other immigrants. Shows the difficulty of working the land. Objections to the provincialism of the politics. But he sees Australia with a positive future, an \“extension of Britain\” that could be settled by young men and women, sent in equal numbers, which would reduce what he saw as the too-rapid growth of the population in Britain. Treated as a eutopia in Matthew Graves and Elizabeth Rechniewski. \“Essays for an Empty Land: Australia as Political Utopia.\” Cultures of the Commonwealth 17 (Winter 2010-2011): 37-51.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Edward Gibbon] [Wakefield] (1796-1862)}, editor = {Robert Gouger Editor} } @booklet {7270, title = {The Last Man}, volume = {3 vols.}, year = {1826}, note = {

Rpt. Ed. Hugh J. Lake. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1965 with an \“Introduction\” by the editor (vii-xxi); 2nd ed. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1995, with an \“Introduction to the Bison Books Edition by Judith Tarr (vii-xi);\ Ed. Morton D. Paley. Oxford, Eng.: Oxford University Press, 1994 with an editor\’s \“Introduction\” (vii-xxviii) and \“Explanatory Notes\” (471-79); Ed. Anne McWhir. Peterborough, ON, Canada: Broadview Literary Texts, 1996 with an editor\’s \“Introduction\” (xiii-xli); and as vol. 4 of\ The Novels and Selected Works of Mary Shelley. Ed. Jane Blumberg with Nora Cook. 8 vols. London: William Pickering, 1996 with an \“Introductory Note\” (xi-xv) and \“Silent Corrections\” (366-67). Muriel Spark\’s,\ Child of Light: A Reassessment of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelly. Hadleigh, Eng.: Tower Bridge Publications, 1951 contains an \“Appendix--The Last Man--An Abridged Version\” (195-230) that summarizes the three volumes.\ Chapters I-V rpt. in Dystopia Utopia Short Stories: An Anthology of New \& Classic Tales (London: Flame Tree Publishing, 2016), 321-71.

}, month = {1826}, publisher = {Henry Colburn}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia of the last man on earth.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {[Mary Wollstonecraft] [Shelley] (1797-1851)} } @booklet {7269, title = {"The Last Man"}, howpublished = {Whims and Oddities, In Prose and Verse; With Forty Original Designs}, year = {1826}, month = {1826}, pages = {23-32}, publisher = {Lupton Relfe}, address = {London}, abstract = {

A last man dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Thomas Hood} } @booklet {7257, title = {"The Last Man"}, howpublished = {The New Monthly Magazine (Philadelphia, PA)}, volume = {8.33 }, year = {1823}, note = {

Rpt. in The Complete Poetical Works of Thomas Campbell, With A Memoir of His Life, and an Essay on his Genius and Writings (New York: D. Appleton, 1856), 86-88; in The Complete Poetical Works of Thomas Campbell. Ed. J. Logie Robertson, M.A. 2nd ed. (London: Henry Frowde Oxford University Press, 1907), 232-34, with a brief note on 234; and in The Complete Poetical Works of Thomas Campbell, With A Memoir of His Life by William Allingham (ix-lxxiv) (London: G. Bell, 1875), 88-90; Rpt. New York: Books for Libraries Press, 1975), 88-90.

}, month = {January 1823}, pages = {272-73}, abstract = {

Short poem describing the dystopian world as seen by the last man.

}, keywords = {Male author, Scottish author}, author = {Thomas Campbell (1777-1844)} } @booklet {7254, title = {The Loyal Man in the Moon. With Thirteen Cuts}, year = {1820}, month = {1820}, pages = {28 pp.}, publisher = {Ptd. for C. Chapple and J. Johnston}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Satire in verse on the supporters of Queen Caroline (1768-1821).

}, author = {Author of the Constitutional House That Jack Built [pseud.]} } @booklet {7249, title = {"The Lunarian, A Tale, In Five Cantos"}, howpublished = {The M{\'e}lange, Containing The Lunarian, A Tale, In Five Cantos. Wonders, In Two Parts. The Picture Gallery, In Nine Cantos. And Various Other Pieces, In Verse}, year = {1819}, month = {1819}, pages = {1-48}, publisher = {Ptd. by J. Poole}, address = {Taunton, Eng.}, abstract = {

Poem beginning with a visit from a prince of the moon to a wealthy Persian man in hopes of marrying his daughter. Much detail on the lavish wealth of the Persian, but Persia is presented as a absolute and cruel monarchy with women obedient. The eutopia on the moon is a limited monarchy with gender equality. Few clothes. High morality. Authors are fined for wasting their time, and the fines support the poor. The poem is followed by \"Wonders, A Lunarian Poem, In Two Parts\" (49-64), which is an example of a poem for which an author was fined.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {F[rederick] C[orfield]} } @booklet {7242, title = {Laon and Cythna; or, The Revolution of the Golden City: A Vision of the Nineteenth Century. In the Stanza of Spenser}, year = {1817}, note = {

This was the original edition which was withdrawn and slightly revised because the printer objected to the suggestion of incest and the radicalism of parts of the text. It was rpt. as The Revolt of Islam; A Poem in Twelve Cantos. London: Ptd. for C. and J. Ollier, 1817 [Some copies have 1818 as the publication date] and was known under this title for some time, with the original title being restored in late 20th century editions. Rpt. as \“Laon and Cythna or the Revolution of the Golden City [Usually known as \&$\#$39;The Revolt of Islam\&$\#$39; 1817]\”. The Complete Poetical Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley. Volume II 1814-1817. Ed. Neville Rogers. 4 vols. (Oxford, Eng.: Clarendon Press, 1975), 99-270, including \“Laon and Cyntha: Rejected Passages\” (265-270) with \“Note by Mary Shelley On Loan and Cyntha [The Revolt of Islam]\” (270-73) and \“Notes\” (360-95); as \“Laon and Cythna; Or, The Revolution of the Golden City: A Vision of the Nineteenth Century. In the Stanza of Spenser.\” Ed. Jack Donovan. The Poems of Shelley. Volume Two 1817-1819. Ed. Kelvin Everest and Geoffrey Matthews (Hatlow, Essex, Eng.: Pearson Educational, 2000), 10-265, with an [\“Introduction\”] by the editor (10-29), extensive footnotes throughout, and \“Fragments from the L\&C Notebooks.\” Ed. Jack Donovan (261-65); and as \“Laon and Cythna; Or, The Revolution of the Golden City: A Vision of the Nineteenth Century. In the Stanza of Spenser.\” Ed. Michael J. Neth. The Complete Poetry of Percy Bysshe Shelley. Volume Three. Ed. Neil Fraisat and Nora Crook (Baltimore, MD: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2012), 109-320, with \“Commentary\” by Michael J. Neth (550-941), including \“Supplements: Rejected Opening and Ancillary Fragments for Laon and Cyntha\” (908-941) \“Historical Collation\” (993-1061), Mary Shelley\’s \“Note on The Revolt of Islam\” (1073-75), \“The Revision of Laon and Cythna to The Revolt of Islam (1077-88), and \“Shelley\’s List of Errata for Laon and Cythna/The Revolt of Islam (1082). See also The Bodleian Shelley Manuscripts. A Facsimile Edition, with Full Transcripts and Scholarly Apparatus. Ed. Donald H Reiman. Volume XIII Drafts from Laon and Cythna Facsimiles of Bodleian MSS. Shelley ADDS. e\ 14 and ADDS. e. 19. Ed. Tatsuo Tokoo with an Introduction and Notes. New York/London: Garland Publishing, 1992.

}, month = {1817. Some copies have 1818 as the publication date}, publisher = {Ptd. for Sherwood, Neely, \& Jones and C. and J. Ollier}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Poem. Includes a eutopia inspired by the French Revolution and the writings of William Godwin (1756-1836). The eutopia occurs throughout the text and stresses liberty, equality, and the emancipation of women.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822)} } @booklet {7239, title = {Laura{\textquoteright}s Dream; or, The Moonlanders}, year = {1816}, note = {

Rpt. in Science Fiction Studies, no. 101 (34.1) (March 2007): 1-18.

}, month = {1816}, pages = {47 pp.}, publisher = {Ptd. For J. Hatcher}, address = {London}, abstract = {

A poem in two cantos describing the moon where people are born old and grow young. Traditional gender roles. \ The men can fly, the woman can\’t. Notes to the text on 45-47.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, Irish author}, url = {https://historicaltexts.jisc.ac.uk/bl-002087615}, author = {[Melesina (Chenevix) St. George] [Trench] (1768-1832)} } @booklet {7221, title = {Libellus: or, A Brief Sketch of the Kingdom of Gotham. Containing Observations respecting its King, Princes, Nobles, and Inferior Senators: Its Mode of Election; The Duration of Its Parliaments; Its Ministers of State, Judges, and Other Professors of the Law: Customs of the People, Their Dress, and Amusements; Their Agricultural Regulations, Commercial Pursuits, and the Natural Productions of Their Country: Their Well-Managed Police; Their Ecclesiastical Polity, and Their System of Politics. Under the Cover of a little Fiction, a great deal of Truth may often be conveyed}, year = {1798}, note = {

Rpt. in Modern British Utopias 1700-1850. Ed. Gregory Claeys. 8 vols. (London: Pickering \& Chatto, 1997), 4: 441-76.

}, month = {1798}, publisher = {J. Jordan and W. Glendinning}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Eutopia. Society in which everything and everybody works or behaves as they are ideally expected to work or behave, which functions as a satire on contemporary Britain.

} } @booklet {7192, title = {"Letter XV. For the Lewes Journal. A Midsummer-Night{\textquoteright}s Dream; or, a Trip to the Moon"}, howpublished = {Fugitive Pieces, on Various Subjects}, volume = {2 vols.}, year = {1787}, month = {1787}, pages = {1: 84-91}, publisher = {Ptd. for the Author by W. and A. Lee}, address = {Lewes, Eng.}, abstract = {

The moon is described as having luxuriant parks, with lots of flowers and other natural and artificial beauties. The parks were filled with people \“. . . variously engaged, but to appearances all equally happy.\” Elegantly simple dress. Huge amphitheatre that can hold the entire population of the planet filled for the Autumn Festival to given thanks for the year\’s productions. \“The inhabitants of the Moon, Man, are perfect strangers to all those irregular, turbulent passions, in the gratification, instead of the government of which, you mortals are madly seeking happiness. . .\” (89. Original emphasis). \“. . .\ total absence of all the disorderly affections that torment the HUMAN breast\”\ (89. Original emphasis). \“The Lunarians are wiser, and better, and therefore happier beings than you are\” (90. Original emphasis).\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Richard Michell} } @booklet {7180, title = {"Letter XXIX. A Dream; or the present state of Man compared with one more perfect"}, howpublished = {Laelius and Hortensia; or, Thought on the Nature and Objects of Taste and Genius, in a series of letters to Two Friends}, year = {1782}, note = {

Rpt. (New York: Garland, 1970), 277-88. Rpt. as \“The present State of Man, compared to one more perfect. A Dream. In a letter to Hortensia.\” The Ladies Magazine; and Repository of Entertaining Knowledge 1.5 (October 1792): 218-23 [The cover of the volume has Lady\’s Magazine, but each issue is headed Ladies Magazine]; and as \“The present State of Man, compared to one more perfect. A Dream: From Lelius and Hortensia.\” The Massachusetts Magazine: or, Monthly Museum of Knowledge and Rational Entertainment 7.5 (August 1795): 261-64.

}, month = {1782}, pages = {277-88}, publisher = {Ptd. For J. Balfour; and T. Cadell, London}, address = {Edinburgh, Scot.}, abstract = {

Eutopia set on the moon, which is visited in a dream. The people are ruled by reason and motivated by benevolence. Mostly a comparison with earth\&$\#$39;s weaknesses.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {[John] [Stedman] (d. 1791)} } @booklet {7142, title = {The Life and Adventures of Peter Wilkins A Cornish Man: Relating particularly, His Shipwreck near the South Pole; his wonderful Passage thro{\textquoteright} a subterraneous Cavern into a kind of new World; his there meeting with a Gawry or flying woman, whose life he preserv{\textquoteright}d, and afterwards married her; his extraordinary Conveyance to the Country of Glums and Gawrys, or Men and Women that fly. Likewise a Description of this strange Country, with the Laws, Customs, and Manners of its Inhabitants, and the Author{\textquoteright}s remarkable Transactions among them. Taken from his own Mouth, in his Passage to England from off Cape Horn in America, in the Ship Hector. With an INTRODUCTION, giving an Account of the surprizing Manner of his coming on board that Vessel, and his Death on landing at Plymouth in the Year 1739. Illustrated with several CUTS, clearly and distinctly representing the Structure and Mechanism of the Wings of the Glums and Gawrys, and the Manner in which they use them either to swim or fly}, year = {1751}, note = {

Rpt. Dublin. Ireland: George Faulkner, 1751; in Popular Romances: Consisting of Imaginary Voyages and Travels. Containing Gulliver\’s Travels, Journey to the World Under Ground, The Life and Adventure of Peter Wilkins, The Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, and The History of Automathes. To Which is Prefixed An Introductory Dissertation by Henry Weber, Esq. (Edinburgh, Scot.: Ptd. by James Ballantyne and Co., 1812), 201-348 [Probably the first anthology of utopias]; rpt. with very slight changes in the title and illus. D. H. Friston. London: John Dick, [1861]; with an \“Introduction\” by A. H. B. (vii-xiii). London: J. M. Dent/New York: E. P. Dutton, [1915]; with the same \“Introduction\” (vii-xiii) illus. Edward Bawden. London: J. M. Dent/New York: E. P. Dutton, 1928; Westport, CT: Hyperion Press, 1974; Ed. Christopher Bentley. Oxford, Eng.: Oxford University Press, 1973 with an \“Introduction\” (ix-xviii) and \“Explanatory Notes\” (383-88); rev. ed. ed. Bentley with a new \“Introduction (vii-xxxiii) by James Grantham Turner and \“Explanatory Notes\” (383-88) by Bentley. Oxford, Eng.: Oxford University Press, 1990; New York: Garland, 1974; and in Modern British Utopias 1700-1850. Ed. Gregory Claeys. 8 vols. (London: Pickering \& Chatto, 1997), 2: 143-410, which reprints the first edition.

}, month = {1751}, publisher = {J. Robinson and R. Dodsley}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Imaginary voyage which begins with a Robinsonade in which the man then meets and marries a winged woman. She then takes him to her homeland where the man introduces reforms, with, for example slavery being abolished and democratic procedures introduced.

}, keywords = {English author}, author = {[Robert] [Paltock] (1697-1767)} } @booklet {7121, title = {The Life and Strange Surprizing Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, of York, Mariner: Who lived eight and twenty Years all alone in an un-inhabited Island on the Coast of America, near the Mouth of the Great River of Oroonoque; Having been cast on Shore by Shipwreck, where-in all the Men perished but himself. With An Account of how he was at last strangely deliver{\textquoteright}d by Pyrates. Written by Himself}, year = {1719}, note = {

Rpt. in Popular Romances: Consisting of Imaginary Voyages and Travels. Containing Gulliver\’s Travels, Journey to the World Under Ground, The Life and Adventure of Peter Wilkins, The Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, and The History of Automathes. To Which is Prefixed An Introductory Dissertation by Henry Weber, Esq. (Edinburgh, Scot.: Ptd. by James Ballantyne and Co., 1812), 349-582 [Probably the first anthology of utopias]; rpt. with illustrations by Edward A. Wilson and an \“Introduction\” (iii-xiv) by Ford Madox Ford. New York: Limited Editions Club, 1930; ed. Michael Shinagel. 2nd ed. New York: W.W. Norton, 1994; in The Novels of Daniel Defoe. Volume 1: The Life and Strange Surprizing Adventures of Robinson Crusoe. Ed. W.K. Owens. London: Pickering \& Chatto, 2008, with an \“Introduction\” by Owens (15-51), \“Explanatory Notes\” (287-324) and \“Textual Notes\” (325-28); and a critical edition as The Stoke Newington Edition. Ed. Maximillian E. Novak, Irving N. Rothman, and Manuel Schonhorn (Lewisburg, PA: Bucknell University Press, 2020, with a list of Illustrations that are taken from many different editions (ix-x), an Introduction by the editors (xiii-xlviii), footnotes throughout the text, \“Notifications of Books Printed and Sold\” (253-260), \“Bibliographic Descriptions\” (261-289), \“Variants\” (291-357), \“Works Consulted\” (359-360), a \“Selected Bibliography\” (361-365), and an Index (369-379). An interesting edition for children is Robinson Crusoe In Words of One Syllable. Illus. Philadelphia, PA: Henry Altemus, 1900.

}, month = {1719}, publisher = {Ptd. for W. Taylor}, address = {London}, abstract = {

This work gave rise to a whole sub-genre of works dealing with a castaway on an isolated island, the most famous of which is The Swiss Family Robinson (1812-1827) by Johann [Rudolf] Wyss (1781-1830) that appeared in hundreds of versions. Possible to treat it and the sub-genre as eutopias of solitude. See also 1719 Defoe. The Farther Adventures of Robinson Crusoe which is much more clearly a utopia in that more people are involved. A third volume was published, Serious Reflections During the Life and Surprising Adventures of Robinson Crusoe: With His Vision of the Angelick World. Written by himself. London: Printed for W. Taylor, 1720. Rpt. without the \“Vision of the Angelick World.\” In Modern British Utopias 1700-1850. Ed. Gregory Claeys. (London: Pickering \& Chatto, 1997), 1: 113-226, 266; and with the \“Vision of the Angelick World\” as Serious Reflections During the Life and Surprising Adventures of Robinson Crusoe: With His Vision of the Angelick World. Ed. George A. Aitkin. Illus. J.B. Yeats. London: J.M. Dent, 1895; rpt. New York: AMS Press, 1974; in The Novels of Daniel Defoe. Volume 3: Serious Reflections During the Life and Surprising Adventures of Robinson Crusoe (1720). Ed. G.A. Starr. London: Pickering \& Chatto, 2008, with an \“Introduction\” by Starr (1-47); and a critical edition as The Stoke Newington Edition. Ed. Maximillian E. Novak, Irving N. Rothman, and Manuel Schonhorn (Lewisburg, PA: Bucknell University Press, 2022, with a list of Illustrations (xi), an Introduction by the editors (xv-xxxvi), footnotes throughout the text, \“Notifications of Books Printed and Sold\” (335-336), \“Bibliographic Descriptions\” (337-349), a \“List of Editorial Emendations\” (351-353), a \“Selected Bibliography\” (355-358), and an Index (361-394). It is not a utopia, but Defoe says it lays out the moral basis of the first two volumes.\ A related work is J[ohn] M[axwell] Coetzee (b. 1940), Foe. London: Secker \& Warburg, 1986.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Daniel] [Defoe] (1660-1731)} } @booklet {7116, title = {A Long Ramble, or Several Years Travels, In the Much Talk{\textquoteright}d of, But never before Discover{\textquoteright}d, Wandering Island of O-Brazil. Containing a full Description of that Whimsical Country; it{\textquoteright}s Extravagant Product; an almost incredible, but true{\textquoteright} Account of the High Manners, Low Customs, No Religion, and Little Government of many of the Inhabitants; an Abridgment of their unaccountable History, and a thousand other Rarities, not to be parallel{\textquoteright}d elsewhere}, year = {1712}, month = {1712}, pages = {40 pp.}, publisher = {Np}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Satire on travel literature and the discovery of places like Utopia and New Atlantis. Pretends to describe the place, but the author lacks the knowledge to do so. Says the people are prideful and vain and pretend to be free but enslaved to their passions and to anyone who grabs power.\ Lots of writing without prior thought.

} } @booklet {6681, title = {"The Law Book"}, howpublished = {The Law Book of the Crowley Iron Works}, volume = {Publications of the Surtees Society, 167}, year = {1700}, note = {

The original manuscript in 307 folios, which is incomplete, is in the British Library Add. Ms. 34,555.

}, month = {[18th Century]/1957}, publisher = {Surtees Society}, address = {London}, abstract = {

A very odd book that presents one hundred and thirteen \"laws\" for the operation of the author\&$\#$39;s iron works. It is borderline as a utopia\ but is included because it details all the daily activities of the workers in a large factory including \"welfare services\" and \"poor relief\".\ \ See the discussion in J.C. Davis,\ Utopia and the Ideal Society: A Study of English Utopian Writing 1516-1700\ (Cambridge, Eng.: Cambridge University Press, 1981), 351-55.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Sir Ambrose Crowley (1658-1713)}, editor = {M. W. Flinn} } @booklet {7079, title = {A Letter Touching a Colledge of Maids, or, a Virgin-Society. By B.C. Appended to St. Cyprian Bishop and Martyr, Anno 250. Of Discipline, Prayer, Patience. St. Basil the Great, Of Solitude}, year = {1675}, month = {1675}, publisher = {Ptd. for Sam[uel] Keble}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Proposal for a community of young women being educated. Most will leave for marriage. The inspiration was probably Anna Maria Schurman (1607-78), The Learned Maid or Whether a Maid May Be a Scholar? A Logick Exercise. [Trans. Clement Barksdale]. [London: Ptd. by John Redmayne, 1659]. Rpt. London: Virago Modern Classic, 1986.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {C[lement] B[arksdale] (1609-87)} } @booklet {7055, title = {["Letters from Utopia"]}, howpublished = {Mercurius Politicus, Comprising The sum of forein Intelligence, with the Affairs now on foot in the three Nations of England, Scotland, \& Ireland:}, volume = {Nos. 352 - 356}, year = {1657}, note = {

Rpt. in The English Revolution IV. Newsbooks Volume 15. Mecurius Politicus 1657\ (London: Cornmarket Press, 1971), 39-40; 53-55; 69-71; 85-88; 101-02; and Making the News: An Anthology of the Newsbooks of Revolutionary England 1641-1660. Ed. Joad Raymond (New York: St. Martin\’s Press, 1993), 369-79.

}, month = {March 5-12 - April 2-9 1657}, pages = {7641-44; 7657-59; 7673-75; 7689-92; 7705-06.}, abstract = {

Broad ranging satire on British customs and particularly on Thomas More and James Harrington. The last letter is from Oceana.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Marchamont] [Nedham] (1620-1678)} } @booklet {7048, title = {The Law of Freedom in a Platform: Or, True Magistracy Restored. Humbly presented to Oliver Cromwel, General of the Common-wealths Army in England, Scotland, and Ireland. And to all Englishmen my brethren whether in Church-fellowship, or not in Church-fellowship, both sorts walking as they conceive according to the Order of The Gospel: and from them to all the Nations in the World. Wherin is Declared, What is Kingly Government, and what is Common-wealths Government}, year = {1652}, note = {

Rpt. as by Jerrard Winstanley, The Law of Freedom in a Platform. Sutro Branch California State Library. Occasional Papers. English Reprint Series No. 3. Sutro: California State Library, 1939; as by Gerrard Winstanley, \“The Law of Freedom in a Platform: Or, True Magistracy Restored.\” The Works of Gerrard Winstanley with an Appendix of Documents Related to the Digger Movement. Ed. George H. Sabine (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1941), 499-600 (Rpt. New York: Russell \& Russell, 1965), 499-600); under the full title in The Law of Freedom and Other Writings. Ed. Christopher Hill (Cambridge, Eng.: Cambridge University Press, 1983), 273-389; and in The Complete Works of Gerrard Winstanley. Ed. Thomas N. Corns, Ann Hughes, and David Loewenstein. 2 vols. (Oxford, Eng.: Oxford University Press, 2009), 2: 278-404.

}, month = {1652}, publisher = {Ptd. for the author}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Eutopia including detailed economic, legal, political, and social reform.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Gerrard Winstanley (1609-76)} } @booklet {7046, title = {The Lady-Errant. A Tragi-Comedy}, year = {1651}, note = {

The publication information is from the separate title page for the play in his Comedies Tragi-Comedies, With other Poems. London: Ptd. for Humphrey Moseley, 1651, which, although it probably had been staged between 1634 and 1637, was the play\’s first publication. Rpt. in The Plays and Poems Of William Cartwright. Ed. G. Blakemore Evans (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1951), 89-161 with the editor\’s \“Introduction\” (81-88) and \“Textual Notes\” to the play (575-87).

}, month = {1651}, publisher = {Ptd. for Humphrey Moseley}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Brief satirical description of an intended women\&$\#$39;s Parliament in Cyprus when most of the men are absent fighting in a war.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {William Cartwright (1611-43)} } @booklet {7045, title = {The Little Horns Doom \& Downfall: Or A Scripture-Prophesie of King James, and King Charles, and of this present Parliament, unfolded. Wherein it appeares, that the late Tragedies that have bin acted upon the Scene of these three Nations: and particularly, the late Kings doom and death, was so long ago, as by Daniel pred-eclared. And What the issue of all will be, is also discovered; which followes in the Second Part.}, year = {1651}, month = {1651}, publisher = {Ptd. for the Author}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Fifth Monarchist eutopia. Description in some detail of life as it will be lived during the millennium. The Little Horn is Charles I (1600-49).\ See also 1653 Cary.\ Fifth Monarchists\ believed, based on Daniel 2:44, that after the first four stages of history, the Babylonian, Persian, Greek, and Roman, there would be a thousand year reign of the \“son of man\” followed by the physical return of Christ.\ Female author.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {M[ary] Cary (fl. 1636-53)} } @booklet {7044, title = {The Legend of Captaine Iones. Relating His adventure to Sea: His first landing and combate with a mighty Bear. His furious battell with his sixe and thirty men against the Army of eleven Kings, with their overthrow and deaths. His relieving of Kemper Castle. His strange and admirable Sea-fight with sixe huge Gallies of Spain, and nine thousand Souldiers. His taking prisoner, and hard usage. Lastly His setting at liberty by the King{\textquoteright}s command, and return for England.}, year = {1648}, note = {

Rpt. with minor changes in spelling London: Ptd. for Richard Marriot, 1656; and London: Ptd. for Humphrey Moseley, 1659.\ 

}, month = {1648}, publisher = {Ptd. by M.F. for Richard Marriot}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Classic extraordinary voyage with visits to many imaginary countries including, in the second part, paradise. The protagonist also travels to No-land

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {[David] [Lloyd]} } @booklet {7041, title = {The Ladies, A Second Time, Assembled in Parliament. A Continuation of the Parliament of Ladies. Their Votes, Orders, and Declarations. Die Martis August 2, 1647. Ordered by the Ladies assembled in Parliament, that their Votes, Orders, and Declarations, be forthwith Printed and Published. T. Temple. Cler. Mrs Martha Peele Messenger}, year = {1647}, month = {1647}, pages = {12 pp.}, publisher = {Np}, address = {[London]}, abstract = {

Satire on contemporary issues, with a focus on religion. One of five related pamphlets by Neville, four in 1647 and one in 1750. This one is a sequel to his 1647 The Parliament of Ladies. Or, Divers remarkable passages of Ladies in Spring-Garden; in Parliament Assembled.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Henry] [Neville] (1620-94)} } @booklet {6910, title = {The Lunarian [Seleno-Graphia--crossed out and re-entered in pencil] Or News from the World in the Moon to the Lunaticks of this World. Wherein are accurately described their Citties, Towns, Countries, \& Provinces, with ye Seas, Sinuyes, Lakes, Rivers, Ports, Forts \& Castles thereunto belonging: with the manner \& means of Travelling [sayling--crossed out] thither through the vast Ocean of Air[e--crossed out], \& ye ready Roade to the Citty of Cynthea-polis, the Metropolis of that World: as also the shape, conditions \& qualities of ye Inhabitants, with the Manners, Lawes, Religion, Liberties, Properties, Priviledges, [Plottes--crossed out], \& Policy of the People now in possession thereof. First discovered by Cornelius van Drebble of Alcmar in Holland, but since more perfectly described [pierced into--crossed out] by ye famous Tudeskin Vertuoso, Lucas Lunarismus of Lunenberge [pseud.], \& originally written by the same hand in the Lunick Language: and now transposed out of the Bobelonick meeter into plain English [Coffee Dialect \& exposed to ye luminaried of all illuminated Lunaticks by a lover of Light \& so forth By the way of Romance--crossed out] Adapted to the humours of our Times qua ad Fabulas Convertuntus.}, year = {1600}, month = {[17th c]}, pages = {MS. 194 pp.}, abstract = {

The first part is a general satire on human foibles, particularly in England. The second part focuses on religion. Travel is by balloon.

}, keywords = {English author} } @booklet {9818, title = {A letter sent by I.B. Gentleman vnto his very frende Maystet [sic] R.C. Esquire: vvherin is conteined a large discourse of the peopling \& inhabiting the cuntrie called the Ardes, and other adiacent in the north of Ireland, and taken in hand by Sir Thomas Smith one of the Queenes Maiesties priuie Counsel, and Thomas Smith Esquire, his sonne}, year = {1572}, month = {1572}, publisher = {Ptd. by Henry Binneman for Anthonhson [i.e. Anthony Kitson]}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The work uses the word \“eutopia\” in discussing a plan for the colonization of the Ards Peninsula of Ireland and designed to recruit appropriate colonizers. Published at the end of the book is The offer and order giuen for the by Sir Thomas Smythe Knighte and Thomas Smythe his sonne, unto suche as be willing to accompanie the sayd Thomas Smythe the sonne, in his voyage for the inhabiting some partes of the north of Irelande. London; Ptd. by Henry Binneman for Anthonhson, nd. 8 pp. Treated as a utopia in Sarah Hogan, Other Englands: Utopia, Capital, and Empire in an Age of Transition. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2018.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Thomas Smith (1513-77)} } @booklet {6895, title = {Libellus vere aureus nec minus salutaris quam festivus de optimo reip[ublicae] statu, deq[ue] noua Insula Vtopia}, year = {1516}, note = {

The first English translation was published as\ A Fruteful and Pleasaunt Worke of the Beste State of a Publyque weale, and of the newe yle called Vtopia. Trans. Ralphe Robynson. London: Ptd. by Abraham Vele, 1551. For early editions and translations, see R.W. Gibson, comp.\ St. Thomas More: A Preliminary Bibliography of His Works and Moreana to the Year 1750\ (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1961), 3-57; and Constance Smith,\ An Updating of R.W. Gibson\’s St. Thomas More: A Preliminary Bibliography. Sixteenth Century Bibliography, No. 20 (St. Louis, MO: Center for Reformation Research, 1981), 20-29. For a consideration of some translations, see Elizabeth McCutcheon, \“Ten English Translations/Editions of Thomas More\’s Utopia.\”\ Utopian Studies\ 3.2 (1992): 102-20. Important recent eds. are\ Utopia. Vol. 4 of\ The Complete Works of St. Thomas More.\ Ed. Edward Surtz, S.J. and J.H. Hexter. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1965 [The trans. is based on the 1923 trans. by G.C. Richards] with an Introduction\” by the editors (xv-cxciv), \“Commentary\” (255-70, 585), \“More\’s Visit to Antwerp in 1515\” by Hexter (571-76), \“Vocabulary and Diction in Utopia\” by Surtz (577-82), and an Index (587-629);\ Utopia: Latin Text and English Translation. Ed. George M. Logan, Robert M. Adams, and Clarence M. Miller. Cambridge, Eng.: Cambridge University Press, 1995;\ Utopia. Ed. and trans. David Wootton. Indianapolis, IN: Hackett Publishing Co., 1999 with an \“Introduction\” by Wootton (1-37); \“Utopia\” in\ Thomas More Utopia Francis Bacon New Atlantis Henry Neville The Isle of Pines\ [On Cover:\ Three Early Modern Utopias: Utopia New Atlantis The Isles of Pines]. Ed. Susan Bruce (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999), 1-148 with and \“Introduction\” to all three texts (ix-lxi) and \“Explanatory Notes\” to\ Utopia\ (213-31);\ Utopia. Trans. Paul Turner. Rev. ed. Harmondsworth, Eng.: Penguin Books, 2003 with an \“Introduction\” by Turner (xi-xxviii), \“Appendix: More\’s Attitude to Communism\” (114-17), \“Glossary\” (118-20), and \“Notes\” (121-35);\ Utopia A Revised Translation, Backgrounds, Criticism. 3rd\ ed. Ed. and with a rev. trans. by George M. Logan. New York: W.W. Norton, 2011;\ Utopia. Trans. Clarence H. Miller. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2011, with an \“Introduction\” by Miller (vii-xxiiii), \“A Chronology of More\’s Life\” (xxv-xxxviii), \“Notes\” (141-162), \“Suggestions for Further Reading\” (163-165); and an Index (167-173); 2nd ed. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2014,\ with the same \“Introduction\” by Miller (vii-xxiii), \“A Chronology of More\’s Life\” (xxv-xxxviii), an \“Afterword\” by Jerry Harp (141-60), \“Notes\” (161-187), \“Suggestions for Further Reading\” Updated by Jerry Harp (189-194), and an Index (195-201);\ Utopia. Trans. and ed. by Dominic Baker-Smith. London: Penguin Books, 2012 with an \“Introduction\” by the editor (xi-xxxix), \“Appendix 1 \‘Between friends all is common\’ (123-25), \“Appendix 2 An Account of the Ta{\'\i}no People\” (127-29), \“Glossary of Names: (131-32), and \“Notes\” (132-46); as\ Open/Utopia. Ed. Stephen Duncome. Brooklyn, NY: Autonomedia, 2012, with an editor\’s \“Preface Intellectual Commons\” (v-vii), \“Introduction\” (ix-lxv), a \“Cast of Contributors\” (23-34), \“Sources\’ (235-40), footnotes throughout the text, and the translation is \“assembled from translations and editions of More\’s Utopia that are in the public domain (v);\ Utopia. Ed. George M. Logan and trans. Robert M. Adams. 3rd\ ed. Cambridge Eng.: Cambridge University Press, 2016, with \“Ancillary materials from the first four editions: (114-35), introductory material by the editor (vii-xli), and an \“index\” (136-41);\ as Utopia The Island of Nowhere. Trans. Roger Clarke. Richmond, Eng.: Alma Classics, 2017, with \“A Pen Portrait of Thomas More by His Friend Desiderius Erasmus\” (vii-xvii), \“Correspondence Relevant to Utopia and Other Contributions from More\’s Contemporaries\” (133-92), \“Index\ of Contemporary Europeans Mentioned in Utopia and Related Documents\” (193-205), \“Index of Utopian and Other Exotic Names\” (206-208), \“Notes\” (209-44), and \“Extra Material on Thomas More\’s Utopia (245-65); based on the March 1518 edition with the two books using Clarence\ H. Miller\’s New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2001 translation and the all other material using the translations in the 1965 Collected Works.\ In The Essential Works of Thomas More. Ed. Gerard B. Wegemer and Stephen W. Smith (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2020), 143-215, with an introduction on 141-42; and, also using the March 1518 edition, Utopia \& Selected Epigrams. Utopia. Trans. Gerald Malsbary. Epigrams. Trans. Bradley Ritter, Carl Young, and Erik. Ellis. Ed. Gerard B. Wegemer Stephen W. Smith (Dallas, TX: CTMS Publisher at the University of Dallas, 2020, with \“Notes and Commentary\” on 115-62. https://thomasmorestudies.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/Utopia-Selected-Epigram-Notes-11-23-2020-compressed.pdf. An edition using a 1901 translation by Gilbert Burnet (London: Verso, 2016), includes an \“Introduction\” by China Mi{\'e}ville (1-27), part of which, \“The Limits of Utopia\” (11-27) was originally published in Salvage $\#$1: Amid This Story Rubbish (2015) and essays by Ursula K. Le Guin (161-216), parts of which were originally published \ as \“A Non-Euclidian View of California as a Cold Place To Be (1982).\” The Yale Review\ 72 (Winter 1983): 161-80,\ Rpt. with (1983) at the end of the title\ in her Dancing at the Edge of the World: Thoughts on Words, Women, Places (New York: Grove Press, 1989), 80-100; and \“The Operating Instructions.\” The Wave in the Mind: Talks and Essays on the Writer, the Reader, and the Imagination (Boston, MA: Shambhala, 2004), 206-10.\ [Book Two] rpt. with no indication of the translation used in Dystopia Utopia Short Stories: An Anthology of New \& Classic Tales (London: Flame Tree Publishing, 2016), 231-91.\ 

}, month = {[1516]}, publisher = {Arte Theodorice Martini}, address = {[Louvain, Belgium]}, abstract = {

The classic work presenting a better society on an isolated island and commenting on the current situation in England.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Thomas More (1478-1535)} }