@booklet {11985, title = {"Deep Blue Jump"}, howpublished = {Asimov{\textquoteright}s Science Fiction}, volume = {47.9 \& 10 (612 \& 613) }, year = {2023}, month = {September/October 2023}, pages = {22-41}, abstract = {

The story depicts the exploitation of vulnerable children and adults that, while this is set in what appears to be the near future, the author says is common in most times and places.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {1065-6298 }, author = {Dean Whitlock} } @booklet {12001, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Democracy in America{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {The Massachusetts Review}, volume = {64.1}, year = {2023}, note = {

Rpt. in her The Last Catastrophe (New York: Vintage Books/Penguin Random House, 2023), 143-173.

}, month = {Spring 2023}, pages = {80-100}, abstract = {

The story focuses on \“consignment\” by which poor, young women, and some men, can sell their youthful looks to the rich elderly. Also notes the exploitation of immigrants; \“desperation could be monetized\” (155). In an online interview with Erin McReynolds, the female author discusses utopias at https://americanshortfiction.org/web-exclusive-interview-allegra-hyde/

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-0-593-31526-2 }, doi = {10.1353/mar.2023.0013}, author = {Allegra Hyde} } @booklet {12005, title = {The Deluge}, year = {2022}, month = {2022}, pages = {883 pp.}, publisher = {Simon \& Schuster}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Climate change dystopia that follows quite a few rather different activists from the present into a rapidly worsening future to the 2040s.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-98212-309-3}, author = {Stephen Markley (b. 1983)} } @booklet {11862, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Desert Spiral Initiative{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {No More Fairy Tales: Stories to Save Our Planet}, year = {2022}, month = {2022}, pages = {65-81}, publisher = {Habitat Press}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

The story concerns an Egyptian peasant who develops a new way of planting in the desert and manages to convince his neighbors to collectively try it. For more information, see https://www.greenstones.org.uk/anthology-for-cop27/stories/desert-spiral-intitiative/The last story in the book, Steve Willis, Martin Hastie, and D[enise]. A. Baden, \“Saving the Titanic,\” (304-327), summarizes all the solutions to the current environmental situation presented in the rest of the book.

}, keywords = {Male author, Norwegian author}, isbn = {978-1-7399803-2-0}, author = {Gaukrodger, Howard}, editor = {D[enise] A. Baden and D. A. Baden} } @booklet {11623, title = {"Dispatch"}, howpublished = {Unlimited Futures: Speculative, Visionary Blak and Black Fiction}, year = {2022}, month = {2022}, pages = {139-148}, publisher = {Fremantle Press in association with Djed Press}, address = {North Fremantle, WA, Australia}, abstract = {

Aboriginal Australians had survived the COVID pandemic much better than other Australians because, given systematic neglect by government, Aboriginal communities had evolved effective grassroots services. The story is presented as The Moreton-Robinson Annual Address Barak University BLAKFULLAS Campus in 2029. BLAKFULLAS stands for Blak Lives And Knowledge Fundamental University Living knowledge Living culture And Solidarity). The lecture follows the development of the university and its teaching and development of Aboriginal knowledge in response to the ongoing crises.

}, keywords = {Aboriginal author, Australian author, Female author}, isbn = {978-1-760990701}, author = {Zena Cumptson}, editor = {Rafeif Ismail and Ellen van Neerven (b. 1990)} } @booklet {11461, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Dissent: A Five-Course Meal [With Suggested Pairings]{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Lightspeed}, volume = {no. 140}, year = {2022}, month = {2022}, abstract = {

In the form of a menu with courses and pairings, the stages of dissent against a regime suppressing the LBGTQA+ people are shown, starting with protests.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, url = {https://www.lightspeedmagazine.com/fiction/dissent-a-five-course-meal-with-suggested-pairings/}, author = {Aimee Ogden} } @booklet {11463, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Dogman relates the parable of context{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Nature}, year = {2022}, month = {March 2, 2022}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future dystopian \“Collective.\” Dogman is a robot that was once a man that serves hotdogs.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {nature.com/futures. 1476-4687 (web) 0028-0836 (print) }, url = {https://www.nature.com/nature/articles?type=futures }, author = {[J. Stephen] [Pendergast] (b. 1960)} } @booklet {11864, title = {Doloriad}, year = {2022}, month = {2022}, pages = {240 pp.}, publisher = {MCD x FSG Originals, Farrar, Straus and Giroux}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Odd survivalist dystopia centering initially on a brother and sister and the children they have, most of whom are born without various limbs.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-0374605087 }, author = {Missouri Williams (b. 1992)} } @booklet {11489, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Doomsday Derby{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Solarpunk Magazine}, volume = {no. 1}, year = {2022}, month = {January/February 2022}, pages = {46-48, with a note on the author on 49}, abstract = {

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

}, keywords = {Transgender author, US author}, issn = {2771-2850 }, author = {Micah Epstein} } @booklet {11876, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Down and Out in Exile Park{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Tomorrow{\textquoteright}s Parties: Life in the Anthropocene}, year = {2022}, month = {2022}, pages = {27-44}, publisher = {The MIT Press}, address = {Cambridge, MA}, abstract = {

The story is set on Exile Park, an island off the coast of Nigeria created from plastic and other waste that has become a refuge for dissidents and developed a system of governance and way of life that involves everyone and a parliament that operates like a Quaker meeting. They have redefined crime as Acts of Social Crime and the entire society is based around reducing such acts.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author, Nigerian author}, isbn = {978-0-26254-443-6}, author = {Tade Thompson}, editor = {Jonathan Strahan (b. 1964)} } @booklet {11875, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Drone Pirates of Silicon Valley{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Tomorrow{\textquoteright}s Parties: Life in the Anthropocene}, year = {2022}, month = {2022}, pages = {11-25}, publisher = {The MIT Press}, address = {Cambridge, MA}, abstract = {

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

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-0-26254-443-6}, author = {Meg Elison (b. 1982)}, editor = {Jonathan Strahan (b. 1964)} } @booklet {11322, title = {"Data Migration"}, howpublished = {Strange Horizons}, year = {2021}, month = {July 12, 2021}, abstract = {

Climate-change story as it impacts the life of a child. Land disappears and refugees arrive. What and how much people eat, the clothes they wear, and myriad other things are gradually changing, and the scope of life is diminishing.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Female author}, url = {http://strangehorizons.com/fiction/data-migration/}, author = {Melanie Harding-Shaw} } @booklet {11203, title = {{\textquotedblleft}A Day in the Life of Anmar 20X1{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Strange Horizons}, year = {2021}, note = {

Podcast at http://strangehorizons.com/podcasts/podcast-a-day-in-the-life-on-anmar-20x1/

}, month = {March 29, 2021}, abstract = {

A day in the life of a future President of the Palestinian Authority who has no interest in the lives of the averag.

}, keywords = {Male author, Palestinian author}, url = {http://strangehorizons.com/fiction/a-day-in-the-life-of-anmar-20x1/}, author = {Abdulla Moaswes} } @booklet {11621, title = {Deep Shade}, year = {2021}, month = {2021}, pages = {228 pp.}, publisher = {Montage Press}, address = {San Fransisco, CA}, abstract = {

In near future Florida, the eco-system has collapsed, and the protagonist is fighting a Genetically Modified fiberweed that is taking over.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-940233-92-5 }, author = {[Geoffrey S.] [Bok]} } @booklet {11345, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Deer, Tiger, and Witch{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Multispecies Cities: Solarpunk Urban Futures}, year = {2021}, month = {2021}, pages = {48-63}, publisher = {World Weaver Press}, address = {Albuquerque, NM}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future Vietnam when the agricultural system has been destroyed by pollution.

}, keywords = {Female author, Transgender author, Vietnamese-American author}, isbn = {978-1-734054521}, author = {Kate V. Bui}, editor = {Christoph Rupprecht and Deborah Cleland and Norie Tamura and Rajat Chaudhuri and Sarena Ulibarri} } @booklet {11577, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Difference Between Me and You{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Cosmogramma }, year = {2021}, note = {

U.S. ed. (Brooklyn, NY: Akashic Books, 2021), 249-59.

}, month = {2021}, publisher = {Canongate}, address = {Edinburgh, Scot.}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future London in which a wall is being built to divide the city between the rich, white citizens and everyone else.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, isbn = {978-1-78689-709-1 978-1-61775-978-9}, author = {Courttia Newland (b. 1973)} } @booklet {11612, title = {Dreamland}, year = {2021}, month = {2021}, pages = {467 pp.}, publisher = {Scribner/Simon \& Schuster}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The novel is set in near future dystopian England in which Government policies to advantage the already advantaged are even more clear cut, to the extent of building walls around to exclude the less well off. The novel explores a wide range of issues and problems in contemporary England. The book includes an Author\’s Note (451-457) that discusses some of the issues raised in the novel and \“Sources for Author\’s Note\” (459-463).

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, isbn = {978-1-4711-9381-1 }, author = {Rankin-Gee, Rosa} } @booklet {11378, title = {"Drumming Song"}, howpublished = {Little Blue Marble}, year = {2021}, month = {November 26, 2019}, abstract = {

The story is set on an island in the Indian ocean that has become popular with tourists, with crops grown to feed them and send to the mainland rather than to feed the indigenous inhabitants and damaging the environment. In the story, a little girl talks to the land and seas with her drum and is taught how to begin to reverse the damage.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author, US author}, url = {https://littlebluemarble.ca/2021/11/26/drumming-song/}, author = {Ashley Bao} } @booklet {11395, title = {"Dust"}, howpublished = {Omenana Speculative Fiction Magazine}, volume = {no. 20}, year = {2021}, month = {December 21, 2021}, abstract = {

Climate change story set in a future Ghana when the rains stopped. In the story an old man who stayed in his village is being interviewed by a young man from the city and reminds the young man of how hard life had always been for people in the countryside.

}, keywords = {Ghanaian author, Male author}, url = {https://omenana.com/2021/12/21/dust-by-kwasi-adi-dako/}, author = {Kwasi Adi-Dako} } @booklet {11917, title = {Dark Lullaby}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {350 pp.}, publisher = {Titan Books}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The novel is set in a future undergoing a fertility crisis, and every child born is closely monitored and removed from parents deemed unfit by OSIP (Office of Standards in Parenting) which can issue an ISIP (Insufficient Standard of Parenting) for any infraction. ISIPs accumulate until a child is removed. The novel centers on the struggles of a mother to have a child and then keep it.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, isbn = {9781789094251}, author = {Polly Ho-Yen} } @booklet {10958, title = {Deal with the Devil. A Mercenary Librarians Novel}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {336 pp.}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Postapocalyptic (solar storm that downed satellites and the power grid) dystopia that fragmented the United States. The Mercenary Libraries are information brokers traveling the country. First volume in a series.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-250-25629-4}, author = {[Donna] [Herren] and [Bree] [Bridges]} } @booklet {11180, title = {"Death Aid"}, howpublished = {London Centric: Tales of Future London}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {177-200}, publisher = {NewCon Press}, address = {[Weston], Eng.}, abstract = {

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

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, isbn = {978-1-912950-73-7 }, author = {Joseph Elliott-Coleman}, editor = {Ian [George] Whates (b. 1959)} } @booklet {11204, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Department of Talent Resources. We Can Take Care of Everything: Part I{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Ignorance is Strength: The Dystopia Triptych 1}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {3-24}, publisher = {Broad Reach Publishing + Adamant Press}, address = {New York/London}, abstract = {

The first part of a three-part story developed over three volumes. In this part, a young woman who is struggling to survive financially after a bad accident is approach by a recruiter for a corporation that promises to take care of everything if she signs on. In the second part, \“Keep Your Streak Going! We Can Take Care of Everything: Part II.\” Burn the Ashes: The Dystopia Triptych 2. Ed. John Joseph Adams, Hugh Howey, and Christine Yant New York/London: Broad Reach Publishing + Adamant Press, 2020), 3-16, she has been working for the corporation for six years, health problems solved, living on its campus, which she never leaves, and appears happy while under constant pressure to fulfill set tasks within specified time periods to gain or lose credits, which are needed for everything. She and a man she just met even conceive a child to gain credit. The man is not a hard worker and falls down in the system. The woman does well, but at the end of the story her now-grown daughter chooses to leave the corporation and strike out on her own. In the third part, \“You Have Been Crowdfunded. We Can Take Care of Everything: Part II.\” or Else the Light: The Dystopia Triptych 3. Ed. John Joseph Adams, Hugh Howey, and Christine Yant New York/London: Broad Reach Publishing + Adamant\  Press, 2020), 3-16, she and three friends are looking to retire at\ one of the corporation\’s retirement homes but cannot actually confirm their existence or contact anyone they know who has retired.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = { 979-8677287572 979-8677291012 ‎ 979-8677298424}, author = {Carrie Vaughn (b. 1973)}, editor = {John Joseph Adams (b. 1976) and Hugh [Crocker] Howey (b. 1975) and Christine Yant} } @booklet {10999, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Depth of Simulation{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Biopolis: Tales of Urban Biology}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = { 39-51, with {\textquotedblleft}A Note on the Science{\textquotedblright} by Linus Schumacher on 50 and notes on Inglis and Schumacher on 51}, publisher = {Shoreline of Infinity}, address = {Edinburgh, Scot.}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future in which people can be enhanced in many different ways, not all of them producing positive results.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, Scottish author}, issn = {978-1-8381268-0-3}, author = {Gavin Inglis}, editor = {Larissa Pschetz and Jane McKie and Elise Cachat} } @booklet {10817, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Desert in Me{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Little Blue Marble}, year = {2020}, note = {

Rpt. without the illustration in Little Blue Marble 2020: Greener Futures. Ed. Katrina Archer (Vancouver, BC, Canada: Ganache Media, 2020), 7-19, with a note on the author on 11.

}, month = {April 24, 2020}, pages = {EJournal}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future in which the environment has been severely damaged. At eighteen everyone experiences being an aspect of the natural world through virtual reality, and those who damage the environment are punished in the same way.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-988293-10-3 }, url = {https://littlebluemarble.ca/2020/04/24/the-desert-in-me/}, author = {Priya Chand} } @booklet {11022, title = {A Diary in the Age of Water. A Novel}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {318 pp.}, publisher = {Ianna Publications and Education}, address = {Toronto, ON, Canada}, abstract = {

The novel is in the form of an incomplete diary from 2045 to 2066 describing the depletion of water on Earth, the attempts to control the weather to produce rain, bedeviled by corporal and nationalist disputes, the movement of people, plants, and animals north, and the way Earth revolts. It is framed by, at the beginning, an epilogue from 125 AW (After Water) and a chapter that introduces the blue, four-armed reader of the diary, and, at the end, a chapter of explanation of what happened after the diary ends. See also 2016 Munteanu, The Way of Water/Natura dell\&$\#$39;acqua.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author}, isbn = {9781771337373}, author = {Nina Munteanu (b. 1954)} } @booklet {11835, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Displaced{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {After Australia}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {87-105}, publisher = {Affirm Press/Diversity Arts Australia/Sweatshop Literary Movement}, address = {South Melbourne, VIC, Australia}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future in which Fiji and many other islands and coasts have been flooded. The protagonist is a Fijian who immigrated to Australia and become a citizen, who is hoping that her relatives will be accepted for immigration. It also notes the racism of the immigration process, and the growing racism directed at people of color.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Female author, Fijian author}, isbn = {9781925972818}, author = {Zoya Patel}, editor = {Michael Mohammed Ahmad} } @booklet {11851, title = {Docile [The dust jacket has the subtitle There Is No Consent Under Capitalism]}, year = {2020}, pages = {492 pp.}, publisher = {Tor.com/Tom Doherty Associates}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

In the future the debts of the parents must be paid by the children, and this is done by selling oneself as a Docile through the Office of Debt Resolution. Normally the period as a Docile is undertaken using the drug Dociline. The novel centers on one man who refuses to take Dociline whose contract is bought by a man from the family who created the drug and the program.

}, keywords = {Queer author, Transgender author, US author}, isbn = {9781250216151}, author = {K. M. Szpara} } @booklet {11318, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Don{\textquoteright}t Mind Me{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Entanglements: Tomorrow{\textquoteright}s Lovers, Families and Friends}, year = {2020}, note = {

Rpt. in The Year\’s Best Science Fiction Volume 2. Ed Jonathan Strahan (New York: Saga Press, 2021), 379-400, with a note about the author on 379.

}, month = {2020}, pages = {159-69}, publisher = {The MIT Press}, address = {Cambridge, MA}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future where, using technology, parents can control what their children read, even in school. The \“Minder\” deletes material the parents would not approve, which makes understanding lessons rather difficult.

}, isbn = {978-0-262539258 }, author = {Suzanne Palmer (b. 1968)}, editor = {Sheila Williams} } @booklet {11524, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Double-Cab Club{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Stuff}, year = {2020}, note = {

Rpt. without the illus. in Year\’s Best Aotearoa New Zealand Science Fiction and Fantasy Volume III. Ed. Marie Hodgkinson ([Wellington, New Zealand]: Paper Road Press, 2021), 114-24.

}, month = {March 25, 2020}, abstract = {

The story is set in Aotearoa New Zealand in 2030 as the country cuts its carbon usage in an attempt to reverse climate change. Showers are already limited to three minutes. After secondary school. everyone must spend a period working for the in the Climate Corps. The story is told from the point-of-view of a man who still owns an SUV, although he mostly drives an electric car.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, isbn = {978-1-99-115031-8}, url = {https://www.stuff.co.nz/environment/climate-news/119374933/climate-fiction-the-doublecab-club}, author = {Tim Jones (b. 1959)} } @booklet {11594, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Drones to Plowshares{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Terraform}, year = {2020}, note = {

Rpt. without the illus. in The Year\’s Best Science Fiction Volume 2. Ed Jonathan Strahan (New York: Saga Press, 2021), 51-64, with a note on the author on 51; and without the illus. in Terraform Watch Worlds Burn. Ed. Brian Merchant and Claire L. Evans (New York: MCD X FSG Originals/Farrar, Straus and Giroux/Motherboard/Vice, 2022), 239-253.

}, month = {February 4, 2020}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future in which agriculture and farming in strictly regulated by the Department of Agricultural Enforcement using drones to ensure that the rules are being followed. The point-of-view character is a drone that has been captured by a farming settlement that is breaking all the rules.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-5344-4962-6}, url = {https://www.vice.com/en/article/7kzx7g/drones-to-ploughshares }, author = {Sarah Gailey} } @booklet {10922, title = {{\textquotedblleft}On a Dusty Trail{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {The Dystopian States of America: A Charity Anthology Benefiting the ACLU Foundation}, year = {2020}, month = {2020}, pages = {278-88}, publisher = {Haverill House}, address = {Haverill, MA}, abstract = {

The story is set in an environmentally damaged future experiencing a long, severe drought. It is concerned with what is supposed to be a system to take women to freedom in the north where there is still water, but it is being used for a different purpose.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-949140-19-4}, author = {Cat[herine] Scully}, editor = {Matt Bechtel} } @booklet {10462, title = {"Dead Wings"}, howpublished = {If This Goes On}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {15-27, with an editor{\textquoteright}s note on 27}, publisher = {Parvus Press}, address = {Yaedley, PA}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which bodies are replaceable.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Rachel Chimits}, editor = {Cat[herine Tigerlily] Rambo (b. 1963)} } @booklet {11443, title = {Deaf Republic}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {83 pp}, publisher = {Graywolf Press}, address = {Minneapolis, MN}, abstract = {

The story/parable is told in poems and is set in the current world. In it a soldier breaking up a protest, shoots and kills a deaf boy, and the entire town becomes deaf. The people resist to the further brutality through signing, and throughout the book signs are illustrated. The specific ways of resisting by different people are depicted. Many of the poems were originally published separately, often in different form, in various outlets.

}, keywords = {Deaf author, Male author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-55597-831-0}, author = {Ilya Kaminsky} } @booklet {10174, title = {Dealing in Dreams}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, publisher = {Simon and Schuster BFYR}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult dystopia set after a large earthquake destroyed most cities. The action is set in a city that was founded on feminist, women-only principles that has degenerated into a system of competition among girl gangs.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, Latinx author, US author}, author = {Lilliam Rivera} } @booklet {11255, title = {Dear Machine: A Letter to a Super Aware/Intelligent Machine (SAIM)}, year = {2019}, month = {[2019]}, pages = {123 pp}, abstract = {

The book is, as the subtitle says, in the form of a long letter to a future super aware/intelligent machine in which he tries to explain humanity to the machine and suggest things it should research and ways that it should behave. The author is alternatively frightened and hopeful about the coming impact of such machines on Earth and its inhabitants.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {978-0578405964}, author = {Gary Kieser} } @booklet {10083, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Death of an Air Salesman{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Clarkesworld}, volume = {no. 150}, year = {2019}, month = {March 2019}, pages = {On Line}, abstract = {

The story is set in a dystopian future where the rich get fresh air delivered by drones, the poor mostly breathe the deadly air, and the middle-class buy canisters of fresh air when they can.\ 

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author, Nigerien author}, url = {http://clarkesworldmagazine.com/larson_03_19/ }, author = {Rich[ard William] Larson (b. 1992)} } @booklet {10464, title = {The Deep}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {163 pp}, publisher = {Saga Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The short novel describes the underwater eutopian society that develop when pregnant women were thrown or jumped overboard from slave ships in the middle passage. An \“Afterword\” by Diggs, Hutson, and Snipes (157-63) explains the evolution of the work from its origins in the techno-electro duo Drexciya and their collaborators, followed by the song \“The Deep\” by the band clipping. (Diggs, Hutson, and Snipes), and then the written work.

}, keywords = {African American author, English author, Male author, Transgender author, US author}, author = {Rivers Solomon (b. 1989) and Daveed Diggs (b. 1982) and William Hutson and Jonathan Snipes} } @booklet {10508, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Discobolos{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {If This Goes On}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {with an editor{\textquoteright}s note on 247}, publisher = {Parvus Press}, address = {Yardley, PA}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which one corporation, more powerful than the government, has taken complete control of the food supply and destroys any natural food. Discobolus of Myrton is an early classical Greek sculpture of a discus thrower.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {James [N.] Wood}, editor = {Cat[herine Tigerlily] Rambo (b. 1963)} } @booklet {10408, title = {The Divers{\textquoteright} Game. A Novel}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, publisher = {Ecco/HarperCollins}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a society divided into two class, one of which can kill a member of the other at will.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Jesse Ball (b. 1978)} } @booklet {10540, title = {The Divide}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, publisher = {Drugstore Indian Press/PS Publishing}, address = {Hornsea, Eng.}, abstract = {

Dystopia based on the teachings of The Preacher as found in the Book of Certitude in which men and women from age eighteen live in different parts of the country. Both must be robed and masked when they must meet.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Alan Ayckbourn (b. 1939)} } @booklet {10628, title = {"The Divided"}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {41-50}, publisher = {Mason Jar Press}, address = {Baltimore, MD}, abstract = {

Dystopia focusing on the wall be between Mexico and the U.S.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, Latinx author, US author}, author = {Malka [Ann] Older (b. 1977)} } @booklet {10082, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Divided Island{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Diabolical Plots}, volume = {no. 47A}, year = {2019}, month = {January 2, 2019}, pages = {On Line}, abstract = {

A very brief story about an island in which one part was rational and ordered and the other part was chaotic. Each had a zoo that replicated the other\’s way of life.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, Welsh author}, url = {http://www.diabolicalplots.com/dp-fiction-47a-the-divided-island-by-rhys-hughes/}, author = {Rhys [Henry] Hughes (b. 1966)} } @booklet {10675, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Doing and Undoing of Jacob E. Mwangi{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Asimov{\textquoteright}s Science Fiction }, volume = {43.5 \& 6 (520 \& 521) }, year = {2019}, note = {

Rpt. in The New Voices of Science Fiction. Ed. Hannu Rajaniemi and Jacob Weisman (San Francisco, CA: Tachyon, 2019), 297-310; and in her Jewel Box: Stories (New York Erewhon Books/Kensington Publishing, 2023), 89-103.

}, month = {May-June 2019}, pages = {50-57}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future Kenya where, after a conflict called the Howl, the country came together in what was called the Compassion. Now, some years in the future society has divided into the Doers and the Don\’ts, those who are creative and run everything and those who live off the basic income.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-64566-048-4}, issn = {1065-6298 }, author = {E. Lily Yu} } @booklet {11147, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Dreaming of the Green River{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The Gollancz Book of South Asian Science Fiction}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {107-14}, publisher = {Hachette India}, address = {Gurugram, India}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future in which all \“Objectionable Art\” is removed and replaced with sanitized versions.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, Indian author}, isbn = {978-93-88322-05-8}, author = {Priya Sarukkai Chabria}, editor = {Tarun K. Saint} } @booklet {10706, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Drones Above the Coral Sands{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {McSweeney{\textquoteright}s 58. 2040 A.D. }, volume = {58}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {34-47}, publisher = {McSweeney{\textquoteright}s Quarterly Concern}, address = {San Francisco, CA}, abstract = {

The story is set in Far North Queensland, Australia and is concerned with the death of the coral reefs from the point-of-view of someone who is documenting the continuing destruction of the reef. Collecting such information has been outlawed by the \“eco-fascist\” government that only pretends to be protecting the environment while actually helping the corporations exploiting the country\’s natural resources.

}, keywords = {Aboriginal author, Female author}, author = {Claire G. Coleman (b. 1974)} } @booklet {10860, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Dropped Twenty{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Kasma Magazine }, year = {2019}, month = {January 2019}, pages = {EJournal}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future where jobs are so scarce that people are paid $2000.00 per year of their expected life to be euthanized so that their body parts and fluids can be reclaimed, the money going to their family.

}, keywords = {Male author}, url = {https://www.kasmamagazine.com/the-dropped-twenty.html}, author = {John McLaughlin} } @booklet {10446, title = {"Dumb House"}, howpublished = {New Suns: Original Speculative Fiction by People of Colour}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, pages = {227-52}, publisher = {Solaris}, address = {Oxford, Eng.}, abstract = {

The story is set in a heavily surveilled future largely under corporate control.\ 

}, keywords = {African American author, Female author}, author = {Andrea Hairston (b. 1952)}, editor = {Nisi [Denise Angela] Shawl (b. 1955)} } @booklet {10582, title = {During-the-Event. A Novel}, year = {2019}, month = {2019}, publisher = {University of Alaska Press}, address = {Fairbanks, AK}, abstract = {

The protagonist, During-the-Event or D.E., is a seventeen year old boy who has lived with his grandfather in rural North Dakota. After their town his destroyed and his grandfather has died, he must travel through the dystopia of a collapsed United States.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Roger Wall (b. 1955)} } @booklet {10483, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Dancers in the Dark{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {My Utopia: A Collection of Creative Writing}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {61-64}, publisher = {Cambridge Scholars Publishing}, address = {Newcastle upon Tyne, Eng}, abstract = {

Dystopia on continuing war.\ 

}, keywords = {Austrian author, Male author}, author = {Milton Callow}, editor = {Ruzbeh Babaee} } @booklet {9899, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Dancing East to West{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Te Korero Ahi K{\={a}}: To Speak of the Home Fires Burning}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {209-21}, publisher = {SpecFicNZ: Speculative Fiction New Zealand}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

The story is set in Australia in a future after multiple catastrophes destroy the world\’s technological civilization. The small community that the survivors have created is presented in eutopian terms, and at the end of the story contact is made by people from New Zealand travelling in an airship.\ 

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Australian author, Female author, Male author}, author = {Simon Petrie and Edwina Harvey}, editor = {Grace Bridges and Lee Murray and Aaron Compton} } @booklet {10228, title = {"Dangerous"}, howpublished = {Welcome to Dystopia: Forty-five Visions of What Lies Ahead}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {243-52}, publisher = {O/R Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Satire on bureaucracy in a surveillance dystopia.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Lisa Mason (b. 1953)}, editor = {Gordon Van Gelder (b. 1966)} } @booklet {9598, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Data: They{\textquoteright}ve got your number{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Nature}, volume = {555.7696 }, year = {2018}, month = {March 15, 2018}, pages = {408}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which everyone\’s health is monitored constantly, and if they violate best-practice, they lose insurance.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, Portuguese author}, author = {Ramalho-Santos, Jo{\~a}o} } @booklet {10013, title = {"Day At the Park"}, howpublished = {All We Ever Wanted: Stories of a Better World}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {149-52}, publisher = {A Wave Blue World}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

A brief positive future story in comic form in which a girl and a young girl who is a robot play in the park.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Eliot Rahal}, editor = {Matt Miner and Eric Palicki and Tyler Chin-Tanner} } @booklet {10421, title = {{\textquotedblleft}A Day in the Life of a Socialist Citizen{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The Socialist Manifesto: The Case for a Radical Politics in an Era of Extreme Inequality }, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {5-31, 247-48}, publisher = {Basic Books/Hachette}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Essay in which the author compares of precarious life of an average citizen in contemporary capitalist Edison, New Jersey, with such a life in a \“slightly idealized version of Sweden\” where a eutopian socialist system exists. The title is taken from Michael Walzer\’s \“A Day in the Life of a Socialist Citizen: Two Cheers for Participatory Democracy.\” Dissent (May-June 1968): 243-47, which focuses on the subtitle.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Bhaskar Sunkara (b. 1969)} } @booklet {11420, title = {The Day the Sun Changed Colors}, year = {2018}, month = {[2018]}, pages = {317 pp.}, publisher = {[CreateSpace]}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

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

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {978-1987486179}, author = {Scott Talbot Evans} } @booklet {11230, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Day the White People Walked into the Sea{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {The Johannesburg Review of Books }, volume = {2.2}, year = {2018}, month = {February 2018}, abstract = {

Just what the title says.

}, keywords = {Female author, South African author}, url = {New short fiction: {\textquoteleft}The day the white people walked into the sea{\textquoteright} by Stacy Hardy {\textendash} The Johannesburg Review of Books}, author = {Stacy Hardy} } @booklet {10481, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Derisyone High-City{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {My Utopia: A Collection of Creative Writing}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {69-73}, publisher = {Cambridge Scholars Publishing}, address = {Newcastle upon Tyne, Eng}, abstract = {

The story is set in an authoritarian society in which individuals choose their name at a specific time on a specific day.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, Turkish author}, author = {Ahmet Mesut Ate{\c s}}, editor = {Ruzbeh Babaee} } @booklet {10240, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Designed for Your Safety{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Welcome to Dystopia: Forty-five Visions of What Lies Ahead}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {361-81}, publisher = {O/R Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

In a dystopia riddled with disease, a building controlled by an artificial intelligence locks the workers inside.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Elizabeth Bourne}, editor = {Gordon Van Gelder (b. 1966)} } @booklet {9834, title = {"Dessert Heads"}, howpublished = {Mithila Review: The Journal of International Science Fiction \& Fantasy}, volume = {10}, year = {2018}, month = {September 2018}, abstract = {

The story is set in a climate-change dystopia.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, Trinidadian author}, url = {http://mithilareview.com/shepherd_09_18/}, author = {Rajendra Shepherd} } @booklet {10184, title = {Destiny: Quest for a New World}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, publisher = {Xlibris}, address = {[Bloomington, IN]}, abstract = {

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

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Donald Morgan Edwards} } @booklet {10148, title = {Detonation. A Novel}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {615 pp.}, publisher = {Sagis Press}, address = {[Charlottesville, VA]}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which the U.S. is divided between two countries, one of which accepts and the other rejects Artificial Intelligences, which have become more intelligent and powerful than humans. 2021 Otto, Proliferation. A Novel is set in the same future.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author, Swiss author, US author}, author = {Erik A. Otto} } @booklet {9828, title = {The Devil{\textquoteright}s Highway}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, publisher = {4th Estate}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The novel is divided into three interrelated parts set in the same location. The first is in ancient Britain, the second in the twenty-first century, and the third section is a dystopia set 3000 years in the future. The dystopia is a barbarian, violent world in which children who are entirely on their own struggle to survive.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Gregory Norminton (b. 1976)} } @booklet {10994, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Diggers 2.0{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Futurescapes Volume Two: Blue Sky Cities}, volume = {2}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {89-105 with a note on the author on 88}, publisher = {Utah Valley Office of New Urban Mechanics \& Utah Valley University}, address = {[Orem, UT]}, abstract = {

The story is set in a polluted city in which the rich have clean air, and the poor are left to suffer and die, and the poor, predominantly Hispanic community decide to improve their lot.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {9781790982868}, author = {Kevin Christopher Jesse}, editor = {Luke Peterson and Kenna Blacklock} } @booklet {10092, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Divided Light{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {The Weight of Light: A Collection of Solar Futures}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {EBook}, publisher = {Center for Science and the Imagination Arizona State University}, address = {Tempe, AZ}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future climate-change dystopia in which Phoenix, Arizona, is completely under a covering that collects solar power and outside the city is a settlement where the people have modified themselves and the countryside to live without water.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, url = {https://www.dropbox.com/s/961pb8yve314a8r/Weight_of_Light.epub?dl=0.}, author = {Pressman, Corey S. and Clark A. Miller and Joey Eschrich} } @booklet {10575, title = {Doctor Benjamin Franklin{\textquoteright}s Dream America: A Novel of the Digital Revolution}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, publisher = {Night Shade Books/Skyhorse}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

An alternative history dystopia in which the internet is an integral part of the culture at the time of the American Revolution. The British take control of it, killing everyone who uploads the Articles of Confederation. An off-grid George Washington saves the day, but then disagreements develop over the centralized control of the internet.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Damien Lincoln Ober} } @booklet {9988, title = {"The Doner"}, howpublished = {Broad Knowledge: 35 Women Up To No Good}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, pages = {64-73}, publisher = {Upper Rubber Boots Books}, address = {Nashville, TN}, abstract = {

A zombie story set in a climate-change dystopia in which New York city that is slowly disappearing under the ocean.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Tabitha Sin}, editor = {Joanne Merriam} } @booklet {11184, title = {"Don{\textquoteright}t Be Evil"}, howpublished = {Big Echo: Critical SF}, volume = {no. 7, Part 1}, year = {2018}, month = {January 2018}, abstract = {

Near future dystopia set in a city divided by those in employment and the \“unconnected\” told from the point of view of a woman who had worked her way up to a good job with guilty and feels guilty about her feelings about the unemployed, unwashed, unconnected.\ 

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, url = {Don{\textquoteright}t Be Evil {\textemdash} Big Echo}, author = {Tim Maughan (b. 1973)} } @booklet {10015, title = {The Dreams of the Eternal City}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, publisher = {Troubador/Matador}, address = {Knebworth Beauchamp, Eng}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which, having decided that people were sleeping too much, a strict \“sleep code\” is established and bureaucracies set up to enforce it.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Mark Reece} } @booklet {9854, title = {Dry}, year = {2018}, month = {2018}, publisher = {Simon \& Schuster BYFR}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

A climate change dystopia when the water runs out.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Neal Shusterman (b. 1962) and Jarrod Shusterman} } @booklet {9622, title = {"Dairy"}, howpublished = {Social Alternatives}, volume = {36.1}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {45-46}, abstract = {

Dystopia of women treated in a way similar to cows with artificial insemination and their children taken away at birth.\ 

}, keywords = {Australian author, Female author}, author = {Ashley Sutherland} } @booklet {10559, title = {Dark Intercept}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, publisher = {Tor Teen}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

First volume of a young adult dystopia set on New Earth where people have given up freedom for stability. In the second volume, Dark Mind Rising. New York: Tor Teen, 2018, the system that protected them has failed, and the young female protagonist has opened a detective agency. In the third volume, Dark Star Calling. New York: Tor Teen, 2019, the system is failing altogether and the people look to find another planet and start over. A related novel is A Screaming in the Mind: A Dark Intercept Novel. New York: Tor Teen, 2018.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Julia Keller} } @booklet {11712, title = {Darlingtonia}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {337 pp.}, publisher = {Left Bank Books}, address = {Seattle, WA}, abstract = {

Dylan is a bored graphic artist working for OingoBoingo, a copy that makes electronic psychological memory games. Ricky, her only friend and the only brown person at the company is found murdered. Dylan, who love lifestyle her work her. The novel contrasts the easy life of tech works like Dylan with the poverty of everyone else in the SF Bay area, and she gradually becomes disillusioned as she discovers what OnigoBoingo is actually doing. \“Alba Roja is an anonymous collective of individuals strewn along the West Coat of the United States.\”

}, keywords = {US author}, isbn = {978-0939306138}, author = {Alba Roja [pseud.]} } @booklet {9683, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Day 3658{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Biketopia: Feminist Bicycle Science Fiction in Extreme Futures}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {94-103}, publisher = {Microcosm Publishing}, address = {Portland, OR}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which what appears to be a successful community after most plants and animals have died breed children for meat.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Dylan Siegler}, editor = {Elly Blue} } @booklet {9941, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Day the Earth Turned Day-Glo{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {American Carnage: Tales of Trumpian Dystopia}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {93-108}, publisher = {Psycho Drive-In Press}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which a colony is established on the moon and then simply abandoned leaving the people there to die while pretending that they had been brought back. This is followed by the launch of an immense satellite with moveable panels that can block the sun\’s rays from reaching Earth, or, for an extortionate price, allow the sun\’s rays to reach some part of the Earth.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Rick Shingler}, editor = {James E. Meredith and Paul Brian McCoy} } @booklet {10209, title = {Decelerate Blue}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, publisher = {Roaring Brook Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

A graphic novel dystopia in which everyone believes in speed and efficiency. The novel follows one young girl who doesn\’t fit in and who discovers that there are others who believe that slower is better.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Adam Rapp (b. 1968) and Mike Cavallaro} } @booklet {10601, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Degas{\textquoteright} Ballerinas{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Cli-fi: Canadian Tales of Climate Change}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {90-108}, publisher = {Exile Editions}, address = {Holstein, ON, Canada}, abstract = {

Climate-change dystopia. The story is set in Toronto, which, even though the border with the U.S. is now closed, is flooded with U.S. climate refugees. Nothing grows in the U.S. All birds have died. Malarial mosquitos are common in Canada. People are starving, and corruption is common.\ 

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author}, author = {Leslie Goodreid}, editor = {Bruce Meyer} } @booklet {9641, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Desert, Blooming{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Sunvault: Stories of Solarpunk and Eco-Speculation}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {103-14}, publisher = {Upper Rubber Boot}, address = {Nashville, TN}, abstract = {

Dystopia set on a planet, which may be Earth, that is toxic, with people living in domes. Some are learning to terraform the planet by planting trees and others are searching abandoned cities for any seeds or other things that might help.\ 

}, keywords = {Filipino-American author, Male author}, author = {Lev Mirov}, editor = {Phoebe Wagner and Bront{\"e} Christopher Wieland} } @booklet {9763, title = {"Desperate Resolve"}, howpublished = {More Alternative Truths: Stories From the Resistance}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {332-40}, publisher = {B Cubed Press}, address = {Benton City, WA}, abstract = {

The story is set in West Virginia, which has been destroyed by current policies on the environment.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {John A. Pitts}, editor = {Phyllis Irene Radford (b. 1950) and Rebecca McFarland Kyle and Lou J Berger and Bob Brown} } @booklet {9225, title = {Destination}, howpublished = {Asimov{\textquoteright}s Science Fiction}, volume = {41.1 \& 2 (492 \& 493) }, year = {2017}, month = {January-February 2017}, pages = {114-23}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which the U.S. is divided physically been the powerful and those without power with the latter fighting back by taking control of the web.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {1065-6298 }, author = {Jack [Anthony] Skillingstead (b. 1955)} } @booklet {10733, title = {"A Detour in Space"}, howpublished = {Reconnecting Arts}, year = {2017}, month = {January 5, 2017}, abstract = {

A brief dystopia in which Mars has been settled by countries from the middle east, bring with them all the same issues as on Earth.\ For an interview with the author that discusses the origins of the story, see https://the-levant.com/egyptian-science-fiction-criticises-arabs/

}, keywords = {Egyptian author, Male author, Palestinian author, UK author}, url = {https://reconnectingarts.com/2017/05/01/a-detour-in-space-by-emad-el-din-aysha/}, author = {Emad El-Din Marei Aysha} } @booklet {10747, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Diaspora Electronica{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Migrations: New Short Fiction from Africa}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {55-65}, publisher = {New Internationalist Publications}, address = {Oxford, Eng.}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future in which an Institute for the Future of Humanity is established as a solution to \“exponential population growth\” (59). It uploads people into a computer in exchange for all their worldly goods. The protagonist is a man who wants to be uploaded to join his wife but because has one of the flaws the system cannot handle, he is regularly turned down.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, South African author}, isbn = {9781780264059}, author = {Blaize [M.] Kaye}, editor = {Helen Moffett and Efemia Chela and Bongani Kona} } @booklet {10074, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Disconnected{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Chasing Shadows: Visions of Our Coming Transparent World}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {263-68}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The flawed utopia of the completely connected world and, very briefly, choosing to disconnect.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Ramez Naam}, editor = {[Glen] David Brin (b. 1950) and Stephen W. Potts} } @booklet {10571, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Discrete Charm of the Turing Machine{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Asimov{\textquoteright}s Science Fiction }, volume = {41.11 \& 12 (502 \& 503)}, year = {2017}, month = {November/December 2017}, pages = {16-36}, abstract = {

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

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, issn = {1065-6298 }, author = {Greg[ory Mark] Egan (b. 1961)} } @booklet {9457, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Don{\textquoteright}t Press Charges and I Won{\textquoteright}t Sue{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Boston Review}, year = {2017}, note = {

Rpt. in Transcendent 3: The Year\’s Best Transgender Speculative Fiction. Ed. Bogi Tak{\'a}cs (Amherst, MA: Lethe Press, 2018), 197-213; in\ The Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy\™ 2018. Ed. N[ora] K. Jemisin (Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt/Mariner, 2018), 170-87; in The Best Science Fiction \& Fantasy of the Year: Volume Twelve. Ed. Jonathan Strahan (Oxford, Eng.: Solaris, 2018), 639-657; and in The Year\’s Best Science Fiction and Fantasy: 2018 Edition. Ed. Rich Horton ([New York]: Prime Books, 2018), 141-55.

}, month = {2017}, pages = {20-42}, abstract = {

Dystopia that tries to eliminate anyone who doesn\’t fit in. The story focuses on the oppression of people who are transgender.\ 

}, keywords = {Transgender author, US author}, isbn = {9781590217061 978-1-328-83456-0 978-1-78108-573-8 978-1-60701-5260}, author = {Charlie Jane Anders (b. 1969)}, editor = {Junot D{\'\i}az} } @booklet {10423, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Don{\textquoteright}t Speak; Don{\textquoteright}t Listen{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Shoreline of Infinity}, volume = {no. 10}, year = {2017}, month = {Winter 2017/18}, pages = {72-85}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future where, to counter verbal abuse, people are fitted with a device that keeps them from insulting another person, which has unexpected consequences.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {2059-2590}, author = {Serena Johe} } @booklet {9739, title = {"Drafting the President"}, howpublished = {More Alternative Truths: Stories From the Resistance}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, pages = {44-53}, publisher = {B Cubed Press}, address = {Benton City, WA}, abstract = {

After the impeachment and arrest of President Trump, the procedure for electing the President of the United States is completely changed. Five candidates are vetted and put through a series of complex tests to ensure their ability to handle the issues, and the most successful becomes the only candidate.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Lou J Berger}, editor = {Phyllis Irene Radford (b. 1950) and Rebecca McFarland Kyle and Lou J Berger and Bob Brown} } @booklet {9766, title = {Dreams Before the Start of Time}, year = {2017}, month = {2017}, publisher = {47th North}, address = {Seattle, WA}, abstract = {

The novel is set in the years from 2034 through 2120 and follows the adjustments made by individuals and families as they adjust to advances in medicine regarding fertility and birth to the point where anyone can have a child through a various\ of different technologies. It won the 2018 Arthur C. Clarke Award for Science Fiction Literature. Female author.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Anne Charnock (b. 1954)} } @booklet {9195, title = {"Darkout"}, howpublished = {Cyber World: Tales of Humanity{\textquoteright}s Tomorrow}, year = {2016}, note = {

Rpt. in\ People of Color Take Over Fantastic Stories of the Imagination Magazine. Ed. Nisi Shawl, no. 239 (June/July 2017): 32-49.

}, month = {2016}, pages = {183-99}, publisher = {Hex Publishers}, address = {Erie, CO}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which everyone can see what anyone else is doing at any time, which was justified as a way of reducing violence, which it did. The story focuses on a man compulsively viewing one woman. At the end of the story, the system goes down.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {E. Lily Yu}, editor = {Jason Heller and Joshua Viola} } @booklet {10106, title = {{\textquotedblleft}On Darwin Tides{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Everything Change: An Anthology of Climate Fiction}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, pages = {EBook}, publisher = {[Arizona State University]}, address = {[Tempe, AZ]}, abstract = {

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

}, keywords = {Australian author, Female author}, url = {https://www.dropbox.com/s/kl2lb81mh2u88rj/Everything\%20Change\%20An\%20Anthology\%20of\%20Climate\%20Fiction.epub?dl=0}, author = {Shauna O{\textquoteright}Meara}, editor = {Manjana Milkoreit and Meredith Martinez and Joey Eschrich} } @booklet {10749, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Day No One Died{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Islamicates Volume 1: Anthology of Science Fiction short stories inspired from Muslim Cultures}, volume = {1}, year = {2016}, month = {2016/1437}, pages = {48-87}, publisher = {Mirza Book Agency}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future where people who left Earth to avoid its conflicts have returned and religion is outlawed because it is believed to have brought about the last nuclear war, and the protagonist is a believer.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, url = {http://www.islamscifi.com/islamicates-volume1/ }, author = {Gwen Bellinger}, editor = {Muhammad Aurangzeb Ahmad} } @booklet {9018, title = {Dayworld: A Hole in Wednesday}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, publisher = {Meteor House }, address = {Np}, abstract = {

A volume in Farmer\’s Dayworld universe (See 1971 and 1985 Farmer) that he had not completed that has been finished by his great nephew based on manuscript and notes. This volume is set before 1985 Farmer and sets the stage for it and the following volumes.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Philip Jos{\'e} Farmer (1918-2009) and Danny Adams} } @booklet {9044, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Delight{\textregistered}{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Black Warrior Review }, volume = {42.2}, year = {2016}, note = {

Rpt. in her Of This New World (Iowa City: University of Iowa Press, 2016), 104-09. The collection won the John Simmons Short Fiction Award.\ 

}, month = {Spring/Summer 2016}, pages = {125-29}, abstract = {

Satire on planned communities. In this one absolutely everything is trademarked and is supposedly the ideal 1950s community. At the end, it seals itself off from the rest of the world.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Allegra Hyde} } @booklet {9008, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Department of Correction: A lesson learned{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Nature}, volume = {535.7611}, year = {2016}, month = {July 14, 2016}, pages = {318}, abstract = {

Future punishment in which the offender must relive the crime from the point-of-view of the offender for as many times as determined by the court.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Ninian Tan} } @booklet {9128, title = {"Depot 256"}, howpublished = {People of Colo(u)r Destroy Science Fiction! }, volume = {Special Issue of Lightspeed, no. 73 }, year = {2016}, month = {June 2016}, pages = {20-25}, abstract = {

Dystopia of extreme poverty.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, Trinidadian author}, author = {Lisa Allen-Agostini}, editor = {Nalo Hopkinson and Kristine Ong Muslim (b. 1980)} } @booklet {8700, title = {The Destructives}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, publisher = {Angry Robot}, address = {Nottingham, Eng.}, abstract = {

Artificial Intelligence has developed and has made humanity passive The novel follows a number of individuals who struggle to learn about the pre-AI past and their own humanity. Connected with 2007 and 2015 De Abaitua and the ending suggests there will be a sequel, but there hasn\&$\#$39;t been.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Matthew De Abaitua (b. 1971)} } @booklet {9362, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Did We Break the End of the World?{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Defying Doomsday}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, pages = {101-38}, publisher = {Twelfth Planet Press}, address = {[Yokine, WA, Austalia]}, abstract = {

Young adult dystopia inhabited only by teenagers in which an electrical pulse has destroyed all equipment that runs on electricity, including the \“foster mothers,\” the robots that have cared for the teenagers. The protagonist is deaf and gay.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Female author}, author = {Tansy Rayner Roberts (b. 1978)}, editor = {Tsana Dolichava and Holly Kench} } @booklet {8798, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Dispatches from the Cradle; The Hermit{\textemdash}Forty-Eight Hours in the Sea of Massachusetts{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Drowned Worlds: Tales from the Anthropocene and Beyond}, year = {2016}, note = {

Rpt. in his The Hidden Girl and Other Stories (New York: Saga Press/Simon \& Schuster, 2020), 254-271.

}, month = {2016}, pages = {37-58}, publisher = {Solaris}, address = {Oxford, Eng.}, abstract = {

Climate change story set when most people live either in space or on submersible rafts on Earth. Mars is being terraformed and plans are underway to try to dry out Earth. Whether this is a good or bad idea is left up the reader.

}, keywords = {Chinese-American author, Male author, US author}, author = {Ken Liu (b. 1976)}, editor = {Jonathan Strahan (b. 1964)} } @booklet {11301, title = {{\textquotedblleft}A Distant Glimpse{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The Future Fire: Social Political \& Speculative Cyber-Fiction}, volume = {no. 37}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, pages = {31-41}, abstract = {

The story is primarily told from the viewpoint of a young girl who is the leader of a group of children living on and making their living from trash dumps by providing useable scrap to men who whip them if they fail to find enough. Her discovery of a telescope, which she keeps, leads her to dream of escape. Given that we know that such conditions exist in many places, it could be read as a straightforwardly realistic story.

}, keywords = {Male author, UK author}, isbn = {978-1999339517}, issn = {1746-1839 }, url = {The Future Fire: 2016.37 fiction distantglimpse}, author = {Kewin, Simon} } @booklet {9285, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Drowned City{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {SciFutures presents The City of the Future}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, pages = {125-38 with a note about the author on 139}, publisher = {SciFutures}, address = {[Burbank, CA]}, abstract = {

Climate-change dystopia in which half of The Netherlands has disappeared and the Dutch are building a New Amsterdam on an island they have built on the Australian coast.\ 

}, keywords = {Dutch author, Female author}, author = {Bo[ukje] Balder}, editor = {Trina Marie Phillips} } @booklet {8858, title = {Dynamo Island: The Cultural History and Geography of a Utopia}, year = {2016}, month = {2016}, publisher = {Zero Books}, address = {Winchester, Eng.}, abstract = {

Ecological eutopia set on an island in the middle of the Atlantic that is roughly the size of England. Human scale; no cars and excellent public transport with much use of bicycles; no extremely large machinery. Zero-growth economy. Stress on energy conservation using water, wind, and tidal power.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Irish author, Male author}, author = {David [Henry Tudor] Scott (b. 1948)} } @booklet {10689, title = {"Daedalus"}, howpublished = {Holdfast Magazine}, volume = {no. 6}, year = {2015}, month = {[2015?]}, pages = {EJournal}, abstract = {

The story is set in a failing city that is gradually taken over by a sentient computer and creates what the population generally perceive as a better life.\ 

}, keywords = {Irish author, Male author}, url = {http://www.holdfastmagazine.com/daedelus-fiction-issue6/4589770052}, author = {Niall Bourke} } @booklet {8225, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Day Without Body Shame{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The Feminist Utopia Project: Fifty-Seven Visions of a Wildly Better Future}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, pages = {320-23}, publisher = {The Feminist Press at the City University of New York}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Brief feminist utopia in which all people are accepted for who they are rather than for how they look.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Erin Matson (b. 1980)}, editor = {Alexandra Brodsky and Rachel Kauder Nalebuff} } @booklet {9261, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Deadmonton{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Pedal Zombies: Thirteen Feminist Bicycle Science Fiction Stories}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, pages = {98-110}, publisher = {Elly Blue Publishing}, address = {Portland, OR}, abstract = {

Post-catastrophe (Zombies) dystopia set in Edmonton, Alberta in which survivors have formed cooperative communities to protect themselves.\ 

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author}, author = {Alexandrea Flynn}, editor = {Elly Blue} } @booklet {8854, title = {Defiance}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, publisher = {Meadimania}, address = {Carmarthan, Wales}, abstract = {

Violent dystopia with deep rich versus poor divisions in which the poor can be sold to the rich so that the rich can switch bodies. The novel follows a young man who is sold but manages to free himself.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Female author, Welsh author}, author = {Sarah Jayne [Blythe] Tanner} } @booklet {8140, title = {Depth}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, publisher = {Regan Arts}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The adventure and mystery novel is set in a climate change dystopia in which the U.S. coastline is at Chicago. The novel is set on the island of New York City.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Lev A. C. Rosen (b. 1981)} } @booklet {8221, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Description of a Video File From the Year 2067 to be Donated to the Municipal Archives from the Youth Voices Speech Competition{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The Feminist Utopia Project: Fifty-Seven Visions of a Wildly Better Future}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, pages = {190-200}, publisher = {The Feminist Press at the City University of New York}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Speech describing the changes in immigration policy from rejection to welcome and the awareness of what even so-called unskilled immigrants contribute.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Dara Lind}, editor = {Alexandra Brodsky and Rachel Kauder Nalebuff} } @booklet {10647, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Desolation Wilderness{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Journeys through Time and Space}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, pages = {40-50}, abstract = {

The story is set on an environmentally damaged, overpopulated Earth where all the trees have been destroyed to get at the last remaining oil and takes place in Death Valley, where all criminals are sent.

}, url = {Journeys_Through_Time_and_Space_Anthology.pdf}, author = {R. A. Bennett}, editor = {Ed Finn and Pascal Zachary} } @booklet {11447, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Devil{\textquoteright}s Village{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Roses for Betty and Other Stories: The Writivism Anthology 2015}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, pages = {22-30}, publisher = {Center for African Cultural Excellence (CACE)}, address = {Kampala, Uganda}, abstract = {

A story that, except for its futuristic trappings, could be contemporary concerns the decision to rescue children supposedly kidnapped and held hostage by Nigerian dissidents in what is labelled a \“Devil\’s Village\”.

}, keywords = {German author, Male author, Nigerian author, Rwandan author}, isbn = {9789970921713}, author = {Dayo Adewunmi Ntwari}, editor = {Emmanuel Sigauke and Lee Sumaya} } @booklet {11296, title = {"Disconnected"}, howpublished = {The Future Fire: Social Political \& Speculative Cyber-Fiction}, volume = {no. 32}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, pages = {19-29}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future in which most people have implanted \“mods\” that allow them to become deeply connected with computers for their work in virtual reality environments and which constantly monitor them both in those environments and at all other times. The story focuses on a woman with mods, her live in one of the few remaining cities, all of which are falling apart, and her interaction with her mother and sister, who could not be modified.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {1746-1839}, url = {The Future Fire: 2015.32 fiction disconnected }, author = {Vanessa Fogg} } @booklet {8203, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Dispatch From the Post-Rape Future: Against Consent, Reciprocity, and Pleasure{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The Feminist Utopia Project: Fifty-Seven Visions of a Wildly Better Future}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, pages = {17-27}, publisher = {The Feminist Press at the City University of New York}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Reflections on the past from someone living in a future where the word \“rape\” no longer exists.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Maya Dusenbery}, editor = {Alexandra Brodsky and Rachel Kauder Nalebuff} } @booklet {8244, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Dispatches from a Body Perfect World{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The Feminist Utopia Project: Fifty-Seven Visions of a Wildly Better Future}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, pages = {28-33}, publisher = {The Feminist Press at the City University of New York}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Brief depiction of a feminist eutopia where all bodies are considered perfect.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Jenny Trout}, editor = {Alexandra Brodsky and Rachel Kauder Nalebuff} } @booklet {9952, title = {Dispute Plan to Prevent Future Luxury Constitution}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, publisher = {e-flux Sternberg Press}, address = {Berlin, Germany}, abstract = {

A combination of theory and fiction that includes both utopian and dystopian elements.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Benjamin H. Bratton (b. 1968)} } @booklet {9520, title = {Don{\textquoteright}t Mess With These Kids!}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, publisher = {Bateman}, address = {Auckland, New Zealand}, abstract = {

Children\’s book in which a class of students and their teacher take the lead in defeating a dystopia that a group are trying to impose on New Zealand.\ 

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {[J.] Doug[las] Wilson} } @booklet {8127, title = {Dove Arising}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, publisher = {Viking}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult authoritarian dystopia on the moon in which a young woman joins the militia to protect her siblings from the government. First volume of the Dove Chronicles. In the second volume,\ Dove Exiled. New York: Viking, 2016, the protagonist is on the Earth she had been taught to fear but where she finds the people welcoming until the moon attacks Earth, and she must find a way to bring the two together. In the third volume,\ Dove Alight. New York: Viking, 2017, the protagonist leads a revolution by people on both the Earth and the moon against the dictatorship.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Karen Bao} } @booklet {8957, title = {"Drones"}, howpublished = {Meeting Infinity}, year = {2015}, note = {

Rpt. in The Best Science Fiction \& Fantasy of the Year. Volume 10. Ed. Jonathan Strahan (Oxford, Eng.: Solaris, 2016), 485-97.

}, month = {2015}, pages = {63-81}, publisher = {Solaris}, address = {Oxford, Eng.}, abstract = {

A poverty-stricken future with major food shortages that require all crops to be heavily protected. Many babies are abandoned to die. Most women marry the powerful with the most powerful having many wives, and the less powerful men remain without sexual partners.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Simon [David] Ings (b. 1965)}, editor = {Jonathan Strahan (b. 1964)} } @booklet {10807, title = {Dub Steps}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, pages = {366 pp}, publisher = {Jacana Media}, address = {Auckland Park, South Africa}, abstract = {

Dystopia set in South Africa after most people disappear. The novel follows the male protagonist, who is first alone, then meets a woman, and then they find some others and they gather in a Johannesburg that is returning to nature. The protagonist, who has a long life reflects on human nature, including his own, deeply flawed character, and he grows throughout the novel.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, South African author}, isbn = {978-1431422203}, author = {Andrew Miller} } @booklet {8964, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Duller{\textquoteright}s Peace{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Asimov{\textquoteright}s Science Fiction}, volume = {39.9 (476) }, year = {2015}, month = {September 2015}, pages = {42-51}, abstract = {

Technology controls everyone in an authoritarian dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {1065-6298 }, author = {Jason Sanford} } @booklet {8106, title = {Dark Days}, year = {2014}, month = {2014}, publisher = {Sky Pony Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Violent, authoritarian young adult dystopia in which the authorities are isolating sectors and killing everyone in the sector. Successful resistance.

}, keywords = {Female author, UK author}, author = {Ormand, Kate} } @booklet {9579, title = {Dark Windows}, year = {2014}, month = {2014}, publisher = {Umuzi}, address = {Cape Town, South Africa}, abstract = {

Dystopia/thriller set in South Africa in which the political leader has been convinced that a New Age mystic can bring about the needed changed through supernatural means.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, South African author}, author = {Louis Greenberg} } @booklet {8821, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Dead Kelly{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Journal of the Plague Year: A Post-Apocalyptic Omnibus}, year = {2014}, month = {2014}, pages = {111-243}, publisher = {Abbadon Books}, address = {Oxford, Eng.}, abstract = {

Part of the Afterblight series set early in the time frame of the series. This story takes place in Australia.

}, author = {C. B. Harvey}, editor = {David Moore} } @booklet {8186, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Degrees of Freedom"}, howpublished = {Hieroglyph: Stories and Visions for a Better Society}, year = {2014}, month = {2014}, pages = {206-42}, publisher = {William Morrow}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The story focuses on the control of or access to new tools for understanding demographics and their use politically. In the story, set in the near future, the Canadian government has restricted access to most tools so as to be able to ensure its reelection, but some indigenous communities gain access to them and force the government to become more open. At the end, there is a suggestion that a freer society will result.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {Karl Schroeder (b. 1962)}, editor = {Ed Finn and Kathryn Cramer} } @booklet {8068, title = {Deliver Me}, year = {2014}, month = {2014}, publisher = {Bloomsbury Spark}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

Young adult authoritarian dystopia in which girls are chosen at sixteen to be bred to produce the next generation.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Kate Jarvik Birch} } @booklet {11828, title = {Disruption}, year = {2014}, month = {2014}, pages = {401}, publisher = {HarperCollins Australia}, address = {Sydney, NSW, Australia}, abstract = {

In the future of this YA dystopia, the smartphone has been replaced by M-Bands, mandatory bracelets controlled by the M-Corp that includes \“microchips for GPS, identification and potential medicinal purposes\” (5). The system is, of course, misused. A prequel is Corruption. Sydney, NSW, Australia: HarperCollins Australia, 2014. 438 pp.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Female author}, isbn = {9780732298104 Corruption 9780732298104 }, author = {Jessica Shirvington (b. 1079)} } @booklet {8156, title = {"The Divided States of America"}, howpublished = {Contemporary Moral and Social Issues: An Introduction through Original Fiction, Discussion, and Readings }, year = {2014}, month = {2014}, pages = {121-28}, publisher = {Wiley Blackwell}, address = {Chichester, Eng./Malden, MA}, abstract = {

The U.S. has divided into four political districts (conservative, liberal, libertarian, and socialist) that are about to become four separate countries, for good or ill. The book is a textbook with the fiction followed by questions about the selection and a number of readings from a variety of thinkers.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Thomas D. Davis (b. 1941)} } @booklet {8999, title = {Divided We Fall}, year = {2014}, month = {2014}, publisher = {Arthur A. Levine Books/Scholastic}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

First volume of a dystopian trilogy in which the state of Idaho tries to separate from the U.S. because the U.S. is not supporting the Constitution. In the second volume, Burning Nation. New York: Arthur A. Levine Books/Scholastic, 2015 the U.S. government invades Idaho, and more states secede and is mostly on the war. In the third volume, The Last Full Measure. New York: Arthur A. Levine Books/Scholastic, 2016 the protagonist of the first two volumes concludes that groups within the now free Idaho are as bad as the U.S. government was and sets off to find a safer and more congenial place.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Trent Reedy} } @booklet {9982, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Dust and Blue Smoke{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {The Colored Lens Speculative Fiction Magazine}, volume = {no. 13}, year = {2014}, note = {

Rpt. in Little Blue Marble 2017: Stories of Our Changing Climate. Ed. Katrina Archer. Np: Ganache Media. EBook.

}, month = {2014}, abstract = {

The story is about the last car in a climate-change dystopia.\ 

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, url = {http://thecoloredlens.com/?page_id=33814$\#$bluesmoke}, author = {Robert Dawson} } @booklet {10196, title = {The Dandelion Insurrection: Love and Revolution}, year = {2013}, month = {2013}, pages = {361 pp}, publisher = {Rising Sun Press Works}, address = {El Prado, NM}, abstract = {

The first volume of an intended trilogy in which a couple work to sow the seeds for a nonviolent revolt against the corporate dominated U. S. government. Followed by The Roots of Resistance. El Prado, NM: Rising Sun Press Works, 2018. 391 pp. in which the revolution appears to have succeeded, but the powerful still resist and a violent fringe group develops that challenges the nonviolent ethos of the revolution. There is also a companion volume, The Dandelion Insurrection Study Guide. EL Prado, NM: Rising Sun Press Works, 2015. 124 pp.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Rivera Sun (b. 1982)} } @booklet {11293, title = {"Dare"}, howpublished = {The Future Fire: Social Political \& Speculative Cyber-Fiction}, volume = {no. 26}, year = {2013}, month = {2013}, pages = {2-13}, abstract = {

The story is told from the point of view of a teenage girl who, under the Bill for the Protection of Young, Girls is living in the Academy of Virtue and Integrity where she is being prepared to be given to a \“good man\”.

}, keywords = {Female author}, issn = {1746-1839}, url = {The Future Fire: 2013.26 fiction dare}, author = {Sophie Clarke} } @booklet {9443, title = {The Death of Immortality}, year = {2013}, month = {2013}, publisher = {Archway Publishing}, address = {Bloomington, IN}, abstract = {

The \“Introduction\” (v-viii) gives an almost entirely positive picture of the eutopia that will result from an immortality achieved through scientific advances. No disease, no crime, hence no prisons, no religion, and no war. \“Unfortunately,\” no family because no children and marriage will fade away. But the novel is about a murder that does occur committed by members of a secret society that believed immortality was the wrong choice for humanity. The novel contradicts the introduction in that there is a detective available, doctors are busy, and there is a priest.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {J. M. Cobb} } @booklet {8943, title = {Defenders of the Flame}, year = {2013}, month = {2013}, publisher = {Ad Stellae}, address = {Eugene, OR}, abstract = {

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

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Sylvia [Louise] Engdahl (b. 1933)} } @booklet {8300, title = {The Detainee: No Escape from the Punishment}, year = {2013}, month = {2013}, publisher = {Jo Fletcher Books}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Violent, authoritarian dystopia and survival.\ A sequel is\ Into the Fire. London: Jo Fletcher Books, 2014, in which the protagonist from\ The Detainee\ escape to the mainland, only to discover that it is as bad.\ Sequels include Into the Fire. London: Jo Fletcher Books, 2014, a typical middle volume in which things get worse; and In Constant Fear. London: Jo Fletcher Books, 2015, in which, after further struggles, the people find peace.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Peter Liney} } @booklet {10457, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Difference of Opinion{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Strange Horizons}, year = {2013}, note = {

http://strangehorizons.com/fiction/difference-of-opinion/ Podcast at http://strangehorizons.com/fiction/difference-of-opinion/Podcast. Rpt. in Heiresses of Russ 2014: The Year\’s Best Lesbian Speculative Fiction. Ed. Melissa Scott and Steve Berman (Maple Shade, NJ: Lethe Press, 2014), 227-42; and in Strange Horizons (September 9, 2017). http://strangehorizons.com/fiction/difference-of-opinion-2/. Podcast http://strangehorizons.com/podcasts/podcast-difference-of-opinion-2/.\ 

}, month = {September 9, 2013}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which those with disabilities are treated as less than human and called \“litches,\” which is derived from leech. Autistic female author.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, url = {http://strangehorizons.com/fiction/difference-of-opinion}, author = {Meda Kahn} } @booklet {8744, title = {The Disappearance of Ember Crow}, year = {2013}, note = {

U.S. ed. Somerville, MA: Candlewick Press, 2016.\ 

}, month = {2013}, publisher = {Walker Books}, address = {Newtown, NSW, Australia}, abstract = {

Sequel to 2013 Kwaymullina. In this volume one of the young people with special talents goes missing. See also 2015\ Kwaymullina.

}, keywords = {Aboriginal author, Australian author, Female author}, author = {Ambelin Kwaymullina (b. 1975)} } @booklet {9314, title = {The Disappearances}, year = {2013}, month = {2013}, publisher = {Hodder \& Stoughton}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Sequel to 2012 Malley. In this volume, two of the protagonists had escaped the city but had to return to face a new threat. See also 2013 Malley, The System.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Gemma Malley} } @booklet {8304, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Discovered Country{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Asimov{\textquoteright}s Science Fiction }, volume = {37.9 (452) }, year = {2013}, note = {

Rpt. in The Year\’s Best Science Fiction. Thirty-First Annual Collection. Ed. Gardner [Raymond] Dozois (New York: St. Martin\’s Griffin, 2014), 1-22 with an editor\’s note on 1; and in Macleod\’s Frost on Glass (Hornsea, Eng.: PS Publishing, 2015), 3-33, with an \“Afterword Silver Machines\” by the author (34-36).

}, month = {September 2013}, pages = {10-28}, abstract = {

The story is set in what appears to be a heaven, called Farside, established specifically for the very rich. Current life, called Lifeside, is depicted in dystopian terms.\ 2013 MacLeod, \“Entangled\” is something of a sequel.

}, keywords = {Male author, Northern Ireland author}, issn = {1065-6298 }, author = {Ian R[oderick] MacLeod (b. 1956)} } @booklet {8919, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Do Shepherds Dream of Electric Sheep{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Looking Landwards: Stories Commemorating the 75th Anniversary of the Institute of Agricultural Engineers}, year = {2013}, month = {2013}, pages = {33-44}, publisher = {NewCon Press in Association with The Institute of Agricultural Engineers}, address = {[Weston, Eng]}, abstract = {

Satire on a future in which most agriculture has been automated.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, Scottish author}, author = {Fleming, Sam}, editor = {Ian [George] Whates (b. 1959)} } @booklet {8464, title = {"Dogsbody"}, howpublished = {Shards \& Ashes}, year = {2013}, month = {2013}, pages = {130-78}, publisher = {Harper}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Corporate dystopia that simply kills thousands of children in order to save the money of feeding them. The ones they allow to live work for the corporate at the lowest level, Dogsbody, at the worst jobs. The work focuses on a few young people fighting back.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {[Roxanne Longstreet] [Conrad] (1962-2020)}, editor = {Melissa Marr and Kelley Armstrong (b. 1948)} } @booklet {11107, title = {Domechild}, year = {2013}, month = {2013}, pages = {382 pp}, publisher = {Penguin Random House India}, address = {New Delhi, India}, abstract = {

The protagonist is a man living in an authoritarian, surveilled dystopia who works in a small cubicle checking up on other people. \“Perfection is vigilance. Nobody is perfect until everybody is perfect. Everybody is guilty until nobody is.\” Any dissent means being taken away by \“lawbots\” to never be seen again. The man loses his way going to home and discovers people living rough outside the controlled area, saves one from the \“lawbots,\” takes her home, and then is blackmailed by an AI, with most of the rest of the novel about him dealing with the resulting problems. The novel ends with the suggestion of a sequel, but none has been published.

}, keywords = {Indian author, Male author}, isbn = {9780143332985}, author = {Shiv Ramdas} } @booklet {8288, title = {Dreamer in the Dry}, year = {2013}, month = {2013}, publisher = {AuthorHouse UK}, address = {Bloomington, IN}, abstract = {

Australia as a dystopia effected by climate change that has brought drought. Australia is divided between the Islamic north, now known as Capricornia, and the United States of Southern Australia, with Tasmania having joined the regional economic powerhouse, New Zealand. Sheep and cattle can only be raised in the Islamic north with the south dependent on kangaroo farming.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Peter Hannaford} } @booklet {8294, title = {"Droplet"}, howpublished = {We See a Different Frontier: A Postcolonial Speculative Fiction Anthology}, year = {2013}, month = {2013}, pages = {77-87}, publisher = {Futurefire.net Publishing}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which the U.S. is poor and ravaged by climate change and has become extremely parochial and has pushed out most non-citizen immigrants and even many immigrants who had become citizens. Those who stay are subject to random violence.

}, keywords = {Transgender author, US author}, author = {Rahul Kanakia (b. 1985)}, editor = {Fabio Fernandes and Djibril al-Ayad} } @booklet {8814, title = {Dark Eden}, year = {2012}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: Broadway Books, 2014.

}, month = {2012}, publisher = {Corvus}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The novel describes the dystopia that resulted from inbreeding after a spacecraft crashed on planet. The novel focuses on a young man who tries to break the pattern and escape the small area in which the people, known as the Family, live.\ \ See also 2015 Beckett.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Chris Beckett (b. 1955)} } @booklet {9547, title = {Darkest Minds}, year = {2012}, month = {2012}, publisher = {Hyperion}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult dystopia focusing on a\ young woman in a world in which most children have been killed by a disease that\ gave her and some others an unusual talent. All the children identified with such talents are incarcerated in a so-called rehabilitation camp. She escapes and becomes a leader of other children who are searching for a safe haven. A film, Darkest Minds, with a screenplay by Bracken and Chad Hodge (b. 1977) and directed by Jennifer Yuh Nelson (b. 1972) was\ released in\ 2018. Sequels include Never Fade. New York: Hyperion, 2013 in which the protagonist from the first volume leaves the other children to search for the answer to the disease; In the Afterlight. New York: Hyperion, 2014 in which the same protagonist works with others to find the solution to the disease and defeat the government; and The Darkest Legacy. New York: Hyperion, 2018, which concludes the series. A collection of related stories focusing on characters other than the main protagonist is Through the Dark. A Dark Minds Collection. New York: Hyperion, 2015. The stories had previously published online in 2013, 2014, and 2015.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Alexandra Bracken (b. 1987)} } @booklet {6546, title = {"The Day The Music Stopped"}, howpublished = {Tesseracts Sixteen: Parnassus Unbound}, year = {2012}, month = {2012}, pages = {132-38}, publisher = {Edge}, address = {Calgary, AL, Canada}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a future that tried to cure mental illness and eliminated all emotion.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {Randy McCharles}, editor = {Mark Leslie} } @booklet {8369, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Deciding for Ourselves{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Paths Toward Utopia: Graphic Explorations of Everyday Anarchism}, year = {2012}, month = {2012}, pages = {74-85}, publisher = {PM Press}, address = {Oakland, CA}, abstract = {

Graphic eutopian story with words by Milstein and illustrations by Ruin. In the story a neighborhood where no one interacts builds a community; it later falls apart, but some people decide to start again.

}, keywords = {Female author, Male author, US author}, isbn = {978-1-60486-502-8}, author = {Milstein, Cindy and Erik Ruin (b. 1978)} } @booklet {9898, title = {"Declaration"}, howpublished = {Rip-off!}, year = {2012}, note = {

The paperback version is entitled Mash Up: Stories Inspired by Famous First Lines. Ed. Gardner [Raymond] Dozois (London: Titan Books, 2016), 371-411. Rpt. in his The Promise of Space and Other Stories ([New York]: Prime Books, 2018), 140-72.\ 

}, month = {2012}, publisher = {Audible Studios}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

The story involves students, who live most of their lives as avatars online are required to participate in a cooperative group project, and they choose the \“Declaration of Independence.\” They decide to try to bring about their own independence, each with a different motive, each hoping for a better life for themselves.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {James Patrick Kelly (b. 1951)} } @booklet {8375, title = {Defiance}, year = {2012}, month = {2012}, publisher = {Balzer + Bray}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult authoritarian dystopia stressing adventure and romance.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {C. J. Redwine} } @booklet {8347, title = {Devil{\textquoteright}s Hit List. Book Three of the Underground}, year = {2012}, month = {2012}, publisher = {Splashdown Books}, address = {Auckland, New Zealand}, abstract = {

Sequel to 2007 and 2010 Creed. In this volume, the government and a large corporation introduce a lethal virtual reality experience in an attempt to reduce the world\’s population. The Christian underground fights back.See also Creed\’s 2010 edited collection of stories set in the Underground world,\ Underground Rising.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Frank Creed (b. 1966)} } @booklet {6563, title = {A Distant Eden}, year = {2012}, month = {2012}, publisher = {[CreateSpace]}, address = {[Scotts Valley, CA]}, abstract = {

Survivalist eutopia after the electrical grid is destroyed. Most people die, but a few, who had prepared in advance, survive and prosper. First volume in a series. The second volume is\ Adrian\’s War. [Scotts Valley, CA: CreateSpace], 2012, in which one of the survivors travels from Texas to Colorado, where, when he arrives, he runs into an armed gang who want to make him a prisoner. The third volume is\ Eden\’s Hammer. Book III of the \“Distant Eden\” Series. [Scotts Valley, CA: CreateSpace], 2013, which deals with a threat to the village. The fourth volume is\ Eden\’s Warriors. [Scotts Valley, CA: CreateSpace], 2013, in which the protagonist leads the fight against a Mexican invasion.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Lloyd [L.] Tackitt} } @booklet {11078, title = {The Dog Stars}, year = {2012}, month = {2012}, pages = {325 pp.}, publisher = {Alfred A. Knopf}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

After the world is largely depopulated by a flu pandemic, the protagonist lives next to a small airfield Colorado with his dog and a heavily armed survivalist who also ended up there. The protagonist rations the small amount of aviation fuel left and regularly survey the area looking for game and the scavengers they have to fight off. Ultimately, he hears an odd signal on his radio and discovers other survivors.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {978-0307959942}, author = {Peter Heller (b. 1959)} } @booklet {9667, title = {Dominion}, year = {2012}, note = {

U. S. ed. New York: Mulholland Books/Little, Brown, 2014.

}, month = {2012}, pages = {U.S. 629 pp.}, publisher = {Mantle}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Alternative history dystopia in which Germany defeated Britain was defeated in World War 2. The novel stressed the ultimately successful resistance. Includes a \“Bibliographical Note\” (605-610) and a \“Historical Note\” (611-28).\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Male author, Scottish author}, author = {C[hristopher] J[ohn] Sansom (b. 1952)} } @booklet {8382, title = {Don{\textquoteright}t Mess with Travis}, year = {2012}, month = {2012}, publisher = {Thomas Dunne Books St. Martin{\textquoteright}s Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The novel depicts the U.S. under a Democratic president (clearly modeled on President Obama) as a tyranny. The governor of Texas leads a movement to allow states to secede.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Bob Smiley} } @booklet {9117, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Dream Eater{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Brave New Love: 15 Dystopian Tales of Desire}, year = {2012}, month = {2012}, pages = {284-314}, publisher = {Robinson/RP Teens}, address = {London/Philadelphia, PA}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a society built around one suffering individual.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Carrie Ryan (b. 1978)}, editor = {Paula Guran} } @booklet {6521, title = {The Drowned Cities}, year = {2012}, month = {2012}, publisher = {Little, Brown}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Post-catastrophe young adult dystopia described as a companion to his 2010 Ship Breaker. In this novel two young people try to escape the poverty and violence of the cities only for one of them to be captured by a group of child soldiers.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Paolo [Tadini] Bacigalupi (b. 1972)} } @booklet {8429, title = {Dark Grid: When the Lights Go Out . . . Permanently}, year = {2011}, month = {2011}, publisher = {[CreateSpace]}, address = {[North Charleston, SC]}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which unusual activity on the sun knocks out Earth\’s entire electrical grid. Similarities to survivalist dystopias in that people form an isolated community to protect themselves.\ Continued in\ Dark Road: Second Book of the DARK GRID Series. [North Charleston, SC: CreateSpace], 2012, which follows a different family from the one in the first volume; and\ Dark Coup. [North Charleston, SC: CreateSpace], 2013, which brings together the people of the first two to fight against a conspiracy to establish a\ dictatorship.\ 

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {David C. Waldron} } @booklet {6464, title = {Dark Parties}, year = {2011}, month = {2011}, publisher = {Indigo}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia in which people are enclosed inside the \"Protectosphere\" where everyone is becoming more alike and are told that nothing survives outside. The novel focuses on the ultimately successful attempt to escape.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author, US author}, author = {Sara Grant} } @booklet {6441, title = {Daybreak Zero}, year = {2011}, month = {2011}, publisher = {Ace Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Sequel to 2010 Barnes. This novel shows the dystopia created by the catastrophe of the previous one.\ See also 2013 Barnes.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {John [Allen] Barnes (b. 1957)} } @booklet {11902, title = {Dead Lands. A Deadlands Novel}, year = {2011}, note = {

Rpt. London: Much-in-Little/Constable \& Robinson, 2013.

}, month = {2011}, publisher = {Penguin Books (South Africa)}, address = {Cape Town, SA: }, abstract = {

First volume of a young adult trilogy in which South Africa has been invaded by zombies and some teenagers, known as the Mall Rats, organize to fight both the zombies and the corrupt government. The second volume is Death of a Saint. A Deadlands Novel. By Lily Herne [pseud.]. Cape Town, SA: Penguin Books (South Africa), 2012. Rpt. London: Corsair/Constable \& Robinson, 2013. The third volume is The Army of the Lost. A Deadlands Novel. By Lily Herne [pseud.]. Cape Town, SA: Penguin Books (South Africa), 2013. Rpt. London: Much-in-Little/Constable \& Robinson, 2014.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author, South African author}, author = {[Sarah] [Lotz] (b. 1971) and [Savannah] [Lotz]} } @booklet {6502, title = {Delirium}, year = {2011}, note = {

UK ed. London: Hodder \& Stoughton, 2011.

}, month = {2011}, publisher = {Harper}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult dystopia in which people are inoculated against love at eighteen. Followed by her\ Pandemonium. New York: HarperCollins, 2012, which follows the main protagonist and is clearly a middle volume; and her\ Requiem. New York: Harper, 2013 where more and more people come to be able to love. The first printing of\ Requiem\ contains a short story, \“Alex,\” about the protagonist separately paged at the end of the novel. Other related stories can be found in her\ Delirium Stories: Hana, Annabel, \& Raven. New York: Harper, 2012. The stories were originally published online in 2011 and 2012.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {[Laura Suzanne] [Schecter] (b. 1982)} } @booklet {6433, title = {The Departure. The Owner}, year = {2011}, month = {2011}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which a group controlling an orbiting space station keeps the station\&$\#$39;s inhabitants enslaved and is coming to control the Earth.\ Sequels include\ Zero Point: An Owner Novel. London: Tor, 2012 and\ Jupiter War: An Owner Novel. London: Tor, 2013, both of which are mostly adventure and war.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Neal [L.] Asher (b. 1961)} } @booklet {6477, title = {The Dewey Decimal System. A Novel}, year = {2011}, month = {2011}, publisher = {Akashic Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The first volume in a post-catastrophe dystopian trilogy set in New York City after a flu epidemic and terrorist attacks. Corruption, violence. In the second volume, The Nervous System. A Novel [The cover has the subtitle A Dewey Decimal Novel]. New York: Akashic Books, 2012, the same protagonist dealing with similar issues in the same future. In the third volume, The Immune System. A Novel [The cover has the subtitle A Dewey Decimal Novel]. New York: Akashic Books, 2015, the same protagonist struggling to deal with the completely corrupt future system.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Nathan Larson (b. 1970)} } @booklet {9442, title = {Differences{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Albedo (Dublin, Ireland)}, volume = {no. 41}, year = {2011}, month = {2011}, pages = {36-37}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which any human difference is unacceptable.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author, Scottish author}, author = {Eric Brown (1960-2023)} } @booklet {6498, title = {Divergent}, year = {2011}, month = {2011}, publisher = {Katherine Tegen Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

First volume of young adult dystopian trilogy presented initially as a flawed utopia. At sixteen each person must choose among the five factions (Candor, Abnegation, Dauntless, Amity, and Erudite) to which they will devote their lives. The novel focuses on a young woman\’s choice and her struggles to fit in. \ A companion volume that tells the story of two characters and is set before the first volume of the trilogy is Four: A Divergent Collection. New York: Katherine Tegen Books, 2014. An additional story is We Can Be Mended. New York: Katherine Tegen Books, 2018 was published as an ebook. The second volume, Insurgent. New York: Katherine Tegen Books, 2012, explores the personal loyalties and conflicts that develop as a result of the choices made in the first volume. In the third volume, Allegiant. New York: Katherine Tegen Books, 2013, the dystopia is defeated, and, after many adventures, the people of the former dystopia and the people from outside it are brought together. A film of Divergent, directed by Neil Burger was released in 2014 with a screenplay with Evan Daugherty and Vanessa Taylor. A film of Insurgent, directed by Robert Schwentke (b. 1968) with a screenplay by Brian Duffield, Akiva Goldsman (b. 1962), and Mark Bomback (b. 1971) was released in 2015. A film of Allegiant, directed by Robert Schwentke (b. 1968) with a screenplay by Noah Oppenheim, Adam Cooper, and Bill Collage was released in 2017.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Veronica [Anne] Roth (b. 1988)} } @booklet {9073, title = {Dreams Unleashed. The Prophecies Book One}, year = {2011}, note = {

2nd ed. as Dreams Unleashed. The Prophecies Book One. A Dystopian Trilogy. Np: Nouveau Publishing, 2012.\ The three volumes were released together on Kindle as The Prophecies Trilogy. Np: 21st Publishing, 2012.

}, month = {2011}, publisher = {Nouveau Publishing}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

Dystopia based on the author\’s interpretation of the recent past (see \“The Author\’s Views\” in the third volume ([281-83]). The dystopia is primarily concerned with the authoritarian nature of government and its attempts to control the population. Over the course of the three volumes people successful fight back against the government and win back their freedom. The other volumes of the trilogy are Guardian of Time. The Prophecies Book Two. A Dystopian Trilogy. Np: Nouveau Publishing, 2012; and Wisdom Keepers. The Prophecies Book Three. A Dystopian Trilogy. Np: Nouveau Publishing, 2012.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Linda Hawley} } @booklet {6436, title = {Drought}, year = {2011}, month = {2011}, publisher = {Egmont USA}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult dystopia about a girl living in a religious enclave in which the people are essentially slaves living a lifestyle of the early nineteenth century. She is essential to the existence of the community, everyone will die if she leaves, and she has the opportunity to escape.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Pam Bachorz (b. 1973)} } @booklet {9270, title = {Dry Souls}, year = {2011}, month = {2011}, publisher = {CBAY Books}, address = {Austin, TX}, abstract = {

Young adult dystopia set in a future where there is an extreme water shortage, and rationing is the basis of political power. The focus of the novel is a girl who discovers that she can produce water from the ground. The Last Tree. Austin, TX: CBAY Books, 2016 is a sequel\ in which the protagonist uses her talent to provide water while being pursued by those who want to control her for their own benefit.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Denise Getson} } @booklet {10840, title = {"Dial Tone"}, howpublished = {Kasma Magazine}, year = {2010}, note = {

Rpt. in her\ Snapshots from a Black Hole \& Other Oddities. Stories by K. C. Ball. Ed. Cat[herine Tigerlily] Rambo (Seattle, WA: Hydra House, 2011), 23-25, with an author\’s note on 210.

}, month = {September 2010}, abstract = {

Post-pandemic \“last man\” story.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {978-0-9848301-0-7 }, url = {https://www.kasmamagazine.com/dial-tone.html}, author = {K. C. Ball [pseud.] (1975-2018)} } @booklet {10638, title = {"Diaspora"}, howpublished = {Crossed Genres}, volume = {no. 24}, year = {2010}, month = {November 2010}, pages = {EJournal}, abstract = {

The story is set as a history lesson in which students learn about how a few people escape from the collapsing Earth and the racial conflicts that took place in the process.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, url = {http://crossedgenres.com/archives/024-charactersofcolor/diaspora-by-paul-lamb/}, author = {Paul Lamb} } @booklet {6306, title = {Directive 51}, year = {2010}, month = {2010}, publisher = {Ace Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a catastrophe that pushes the U.S. back to a primitive time. See also 2011 and 2013 Barnes.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {John [Allen] Barnes (b. 1957)} } @booklet {11285, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Drafting Zo{\"e}{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The Future Fire: Social Political \& Speculative Cyber-Fiction}, volume = {no. 21}, year = {2010}, month = {June 2010}, pages = {28-33}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future, after an unexplained \“Big Melt,\” that extremely intelligent children are drafted at age four to be integrated into the computer system as part of national security. The story is told from the viewpoint of a widowed father whose child is drafted.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {1746-1839}, url = {The Future Fire: 2010.21 fiction zoe }, author = {Kelly Jennings} } @booklet {8437, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Drown or Die{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The Future Fire: Social Political \& Speculative Cyber-Fiction}, volume = {no., 19}, year = {2010}, month = {January 2010}, pages = {2-9}, abstract = {

Having destroyed Earth, three billion humans are sent to various colonies on other planets, leaving another five billion behind on Earth to die. The other planets, some of which are inhabited, are being terraformed, thus destroying well-established ecosystems.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author}, issn = {1746-1839}, author = {Arkenberg, Therese} } @booklet {10164, title = {Duncan the Wonderdog}, year = {2010}, month = {2010}, pages = {392 pp}, publisher = {AdHouse Books}, address = {Richmond, VA}, abstract = {

Graphic novel in which animals can talk, and, as a result of their treatment, start a revolution against humans. Won the Lynd Ward Graphic Novel Prize from the Pennsylvania Center for the Book. Originally said to be the first of nine volumes, with the second scheduled for 2014.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Adam Hines} } @booklet {6274, title = {Daemon. A Novel}, year = {2009}, month = {2009}, publisher = {Dutton}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which the entire world is run by computers that develop a glitch. See also 2010 Suarez.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Daniel Suarez (b. 1964)} } @booklet {6190, title = {"Dark Coffee, Bright Light and the Paradoxes of Omnipotence"}, howpublished = {People of the Book ([In Hebrew]): A Decade of Jewish Science Fiction and Fantasy}, year = {2009}, note = {

Originally published in\ AtomJack Magazine\ (October 2009), an online journal that is no longer available.

}, month = {2009}, pages = {161-69}, publisher = {Prime Books}, address = {[Holicong, PA]}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a future where the Palestinians defeated Israel and now treat Jews the way Israel treat the Palestinians and the way this turns a secular Jew into a suicide bomber.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Ben Burgis}, editor = {Rachel Swirsky (b. 1962) and Sean Wallace} } @booklet {6208, title = {Death Got No Mercy}, year = {2009}, note = {

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

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

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

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Al Ewing (b. 1977)} } @booklet {6258, title = {"Dobchek, Lost in the Funhouse"}, howpublished = {Live Without a Net}, year = {2009}, month = {2009}, pages = {92-103}, publisher = {Roc}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which computers are DNA based and, in each person, because terrorist viruses had completely destroyed the possibility of silicon-based computers and the Web. The result is extreme isolation and terrorist attacks on any gathering of people.

}, keywords = {Female author, Male author, US author}, author = {Mike [Michael Diamond] Resnick (1942-2020) and Kay Kenyon (b. 1956)}, editor = {Lou Anders} } @booklet {6189, title = {Dominion}, year = {2009}, month = {2009}, publisher = {Author}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a future world largely under the control of the U.S., which is led by a capitalist, fundamentalist religious group of men who have abolished all freedoms and placed everyone under constant surveillance. The protagonist is a news reader who knows that he is reading lies. Ends with a nuclear war with China.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {J[effrey] L. Bryan} } @booklet {9484, title = {Dance Dance Revolution}, year = {2008}, note = {

Play first performed in New York City December 3, 2008, directed by Alex Timbers (b. 1978)

}, abstract = {

Dystopia where dance is outlawed. Musical based on Japanese music of the title. See the film and play \“Footloose\” for a treatment of the same subject but limited to a school. See the note in The New York Times (December 24, 2017): Arts \& Leisure, 4.

}, author = {Les Freres Corbusier Dance Company} } @booklet {6036, title = {Dawn Over Doomsday}, year = {2008}, month = {2008}, publisher = {Abaddon Books}, address = {Oxford, Eng.}, abstract = {

A volume in\ The Afterblight Chronicles\ series. Dystopia of cults in conflict with Native Americans trying to reclaim the U.S. For other volumes, see 2006 Spurrier, 2007 Andrews, 2007 Levene, 2008 Kane, 2009 Ewing, 2009 Andrews, 2009 Kane, 2010 Andrews, and 2010 Kane.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Jaspre Bark (b. 1969)} } @booklet {6101, title = {"The Day Out"}, howpublished = {The Garden of Bad Dreams}, year = {2008}, month = {2008}, pages = {62-71}, publisher = {Atlantic Books}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia. The story is particularly concerned with genetic engineering. While the people are healthy and have long lives, they live in a world where food animals have been engineered for less fat and more flavor, the trees are dying, being out in the sun is dangerous, and whole areas have been depopulated by viral infections. Those remaining in such areas could not leave and depended on food drops from China. No medical care for any condition that could conceivably be the fault of the person. All the poets had been shot.

}, keywords = {Male author, South African author, Ukrainian author}, author = {Christopher [David Tully] Hope (b. 1944)} } @booklet {6120, title = {Deadly Verdict}, year = {2008}, month = {2008}, publisher = {Severn House}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Mystery novel set in a future where the jury system has been replaced by professional jurors trained to make decisions objectively. The jurors and their families are being murdered.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Andrew Neiderman (b. 1940)} } @booklet {9440, title = {Dee Dee Does Utopia}, year = {2008}, month = {2008}, publisher = {Marquand Books}, address = {Seattle, WA}, abstract = {

Art book with each page given to a different satirical depiction of a utopia plus two separate pages of comments by others.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Deborah Faye Lawrence (b. 1952)} } @booklet {6079, title = {The Diamond of Darkhold}, year = {2008}, month = {2008}, publisher = {Random House}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Fourth book in the Ember series. See also 2003 and 2004 DuPrau.\ The Prophet of Yonwood. New York: Random House, 2006 is a prequel to the series. In this volume, the protagonists revisit Ember.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Jeanne DuPrau (b. 1944)} } @booklet {6058, title = {Digital Destiny. A Novel}, year = {2008}, month = {2008}, publisher = {iUniverse}, address = {Lincoln, NB}, abstract = {

Dystopia of violent conflict between those favoring and opposing technology in a high-tech future.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Jeromie Carr (b. 1980) and James Dunn} } @booklet {6155, title = {The Digital Plague}, year = {2008}, note = {

U.K. ed. London: Orbit, 2008.

}, month = {2008}, publisher = {Orbit}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a nanotech plague. Sequel to 2007 Somers.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Jeff Somers (b. 1971)} } @booklet {6038, title = {Dreamer}, year = {2008}, month = {2008}, publisher = {Five Star}, address = {Detroit, MI}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia and the resistance movement. Companion to 2005 Bates and is set in roughly the same timeframe. Considerable fantasy.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Paul L. Bates} } @booklet {10352, title = {Dreams of a Lesbian Feminist Utopia{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {Sinister Wisdom}, volume = {no. 72}, year = {2008}, month = {Winter 2007-2008 ({\textcopyright} 2008)}, pages = {26-27}, abstract = {

A brief lesbian eutopia that stresses what the eutopia no longer has with the end of phallocracy.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Tanager [pseud.]} } @booklet {5927, title = {Dance Dance Revolution. Poems}, year = {2007}, note = {

An excerpt was published online as \“6 Poems.\” ActionYes 1.2 (Spring 2006). actionyes.org/issue 1/hong/hong1/htm$\#$. Rpt. in Sense of Wonder: A Century of Science Fiction. Ed. Leigh Ronald Grossman (Rockville, MD: Wildside Press, 2011), 945-47 with an editor\’s note on 945. Other parts were previously published, sometimes in earlier versions, in several publications.

}, month = {2007}, publisher = {W.W. Norton}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Poem sequence set in 2016 in a new town that recreates great cities of the past, where the main character has been exiled as a political dissident.

}, keywords = {Female author, Korean American author}, author = {Cathy Park Hong (b. 1976)} } @booklet {5983, title = {The Dark Net}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, publisher = {[LuLu.com]}, address = {Greenbelt, MD}, abstract = {

Cyberpunk dystopia and catastrophe in the near future with a focus on the underground both in and outside the net. Based on the blognovel The Dark Net www.the-dark-net.blogspot.com.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {James R. Riordon} } @booklet {5916, title = {Darkest Days}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, publisher = {Pan Books}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Collapse of civilization driven by competition among countries for the few remaining natural resources.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Stanley Gallon} } @booklet {5956, title = {The Declaration}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, publisher = {Bloomsbury}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Young adult authoritarian dystopia. First volume in a series. Overpopulation due to longevity drugs leads to a no child requirement except for those willing to die. \"Surplus\" children or those born who shouldn\&$\#$39;t have been are raised as servants with no rights. See also 2008 Malley, 2010 Malley, The Legacy and 2010 Malley, The Returners.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Gemma Malley} } @booklet {5883, title = {"The Depths of Heaven"}, howpublished = {Neo-Opsis Science Fiction Magazine}, volume = {no. 11 }, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, pages = {28-37}, abstract = {

Religious dystopia.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {Mark Anthony Brennan} } @booklet {9169, title = {A Desert Called Peace}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, publisher = {Baen}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The novel, generally classified as military SF, begins with a man\’s family being killed by Safafi from the Caliphate (See 2008 Kratman) and continues throughout the novel and all its sequels to detail his revenge. Sequels include Carnifex. New York: Baen, 2007; The Lotus Eaters. New York: Baen, 2010; The Amazon Legion. New York: Baen, 2011; Come and Take Them. New York: Baen, 2013; and The Rods and the Axe. New York: Baen, 2014.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Tom [Thomas P.] Kratman (b. 1956)} } @booklet {8988, title = {Designing the Future}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, publisher = {The Venus Project}, address = {Venus, FL}, abstract = {

Technological eutopia with designs for many different projects. Law will be necessary, and people will be changed. See also 1995 and 2002 Fresco, 1969 Keyes and 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.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Jacque Fresco (1916-2017)} } @booklet {5874, title = {The Dirt People}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, publisher = {Blue Throat Press}, address = {Asheville, NC}, abstract = {

Corporate and environmental dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Ray Bawarchi} } @booklet {5985, title = {"A Distillation of Grace"}, howpublished = {The Solaris Book of New Science Fiction}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, pages = {145-61}, publisher = {Solaris}, address = {Nottingham, Eng.}, abstract = {

Story about a religion that develops around producing a perfect genetic specimen by only allowing one child per family and controlling the gender so that equal numbers are born. Ultimately, this will reduce the generations to one person.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Adam [Charles] Roberts (b. 1965)}, editor = {George Mann} } @booklet {5873, title = {Divergence}, year = {2007}, note = {

U.K. ed. London: Tor U.K., 2007.

}, month = {2007}, publisher = {Bantam Spectra}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Sequel to 2005 Ballantyne. This novel is concerned with the division between humans and altered humans.

}, keywords = {English author, Irish author, Male author}, author = {Tony [Anthony] Ballantyne (b. 1972)} } @booklet {5901, title = {"Domine"}, howpublished = {Aurealis}, volume = {no. 37}, year = {2007}, note = {

Rpt. in Year\’s Best Australian Science Fiction and Fantasy (Fourth Annual Volume). Ed. Bill Congreve and Michelle Marquardt (Chatswood, NSW, Australia: MirrorDanse Books, 2008), 218-40.

}, month = {March 2007}, pages = {47-63}, abstract = {

The background to the story is a dystopia of extreme rich-poor divisions.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Rjurik Davidson}, editor = {Bill Congreve and Michelle Marquardt} } @booklet {5913, title = {"Double Helix, Downward Gyre"}, howpublished = {Analog Science Fiction and Fact }, volume = {127 1 \& 2 }, year = {2007}, month = {January-February 2007}, pages = {134-47}, abstract = {

The U.S. Genetic Patriotism Act requires forced sterilization of the carriers of a Genetic Component Disease and their children, although there are exceptions for political leaders, televangelists, and large donors to the White House. There is Real Time Conversation Analysis of phone calls looking for the use of words such as embryo, abortion, revolution, and so forth. There is a Genetic Terrorism Act that defines\ conspiracies to propagate defective groups. There is an American Government in Exile in Canada, and New Zealand provides a refuge.

}, keywords = {Male author}, issn = {1059-2113 }, author = {Carl[ton] Frederick} } @booklet {6023, title = {Dr. Id-entity, OR, Farewell to Plaquedemia. A Pulp Science Fiction Novel. Book One of the Scikungfi Trilogy. The First Edition}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, publisher = {Printed by Raw Dog Screaming Press in Maryland, and for Stick Figure Incorporated in Pseudofollicultis City}, address = {Hyattsville, MD}, abstract = {

Dystopian humor and satire with a stress on violence. His Codename Prague. An Unfinished Pulp Science Fiction Novel. Book Two of the Scikungfi Trilogy. The First Edition. Ed. Dr. Master Master Stanley Ashenbach Esquire. Bowie, MD: Printed by Raw Dog Screaming Press in Maryland, and for Stick Figure Incorporated in Pseudofollicultis City, 2011 continues the same themes. The third volume of the trilogy is The Kyoto Man. A Pulp Science Fiction Novel \“Extravagant Fiction Today--Cold Fact Tomorrow\” Book Three of the Scikungfi Trilogy. The First Edition. Ed. Dr. Master Master Stanley Ashenbach Esquire. Bowie, MD: Printed by Raw Dog Screaming Press in Maryland, and for Stick Figure Incorporated in Bliptown, 2012.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {D. Harlan Wilson (b. 1971)}, editor = {Dr. Master Master Stanley Ashenbach, Esquire, ed.} } @booklet {9360, title = {Drosophila}, year = {2007}, month = {2007}, publisher = {PublishAmerica}, address = {Baltimore, MD}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which initially a machine is developed that gives I.Q. within three points. This produces a rigid caste society. Things get worse when someone develops a means of enhancing intelligence.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Nick Sapien} } @booklet {5823, title = {Dark Matter}, year = {2006}, month = {2006}, publisher = {Great Authors Online}, address = {Elsinore, CA}, abstract = {

Dystopia of Christian religious fundamentalism in which a fundamentalist preacher becomes President of the U.S. and sets about to eliminate all opposition. The few survivors mount a fight back and ultimately win.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Greg Reeves} } @booklet {5738, title = {Dark Rain}, year = {2006}, month = {2006}, publisher = {Macmillan New Writing}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Future ecological dystopia . The rich (Domers), the middle (Dry), and the poor (Wets) are divided by their ability to live out of constant rain. The Domers are using the possibility of an alien invasion as a means of maintaining the current hierarchy.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Conor Corderoy (b. 1957)} } @booklet {5744, title = {". . . the darkest evening of the year. . ."}, howpublished = {The Future Is Queer}, year = {2006}, note = {

Rpt. in her in her Ice and Other Stories (Hornsea, Eng: PS Publishing, 2018), 189-209, with a note on the story (304-05).\ 

}, month = {2006}, pages = {90-111}, publisher = {Arsenal Pulp Press}, address = {Vancouver, BC, Canada}, abstract = {

Dystopia with threatened eutopian enclaves. The eutopian elements are composed of those who practice an old religion based in nature; the dystopia is the official oppression of the eutopia.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author}, author = {Candas Jane Dorsey (b. 1952)}, editor = {Richard Labont{\'e} and Lawrence Schimel (b. 1971)} } @booklet {5845, title = {"The Debt of the Innocent"}, howpublished = {Glorifying Terrorism: An Anthology of Original Science Fiction}, year = {2006}, month = {2006}, pages = {177-93}, publisher = {Rackstraw Press}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Ecological dystopia that requires reduced electricity supplies even to hospitals. This results in babies being allowed to die or even being killed to save others.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Rachel Swirsky (b. 1962)}, editor = {Farah Mendlesohn} } @booklet {5781, title = {Demoskratos: New Democracy}, year = {2006}, month = {2006}, publisher = {Washington Educational Organization}, address = {King of Prussia, PA}, abstract = {

An idiosyncratic eutopia focusing on eliminating most of the U.S. political structure and replacing it with a system of referenda. The states will be eliminated and replaced with five districts. The President, Congress, and political parties will be eliminated along with the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund. All overseas U.S. military bases will be closed. There will be a publicly owned independent National News Bureau and all major newspapers will use news from the Bureau for their first three pages and all major broadcasters will give the 6:30-7:00 p.m. slot to the Bureau.

}, author = {K. Yil. Karademir} } @booklet {5785, title = {"Derelict"}, howpublished = {Escape from Earth: New Adventures in Space}, year = {2006}, month = {2006}, pages = {135-86}, publisher = {Science Fiction Book Club}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Eutopia of the habitats built in space which cannot have conflict because they are so fragile. The story is about children pushing the limits of what is possible for them in the strictly regulated lives necessary for the habitats to function safely.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Geoffrey A[lan] Landis (b. 1955)}, editor = {Gardner R[aymond] Dozois (1947-2018) and Jack [Mayo] Dann (b. 1945)} } @booklet {5795, title = {"Die Umkehr"}, howpublished = {Gaylaxicon Sampler 2006}, year = {2006}, month = {2006}, pages = {81-90}, publisher = {Speed-of-C Productions}, address = {Linthicum, MD}, abstract = {

Authoritarian religious dystopia.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Susan R. Matthews (b. 1952)}, editor = {Don Sakers} } @booklet {8948, title = {The Disunited States of America}, year = {2006}, month = {2006}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult dystopia in a series in which travel between parallel timelines, for harvesting resources, has become possible in the late 21st century. This novel is set in a future in which the United States has disintegrated into a number of regions and states, some of which are at war with each other. Other volumes in the series include 2004, 2007, and 2008 Turtledove and two non-utopian volumes, Gunpowder Empire: Crosstime Traffic--Book One. New York: Tor, 2003; and In High Places: Crosstime Traffic--Book Three. New York: Tor, 2006.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Harry [Norman] Turtledove (b. 1949)} } @booklet {5791, title = {"Down in The Corridor"}, howpublished = {Jigsaw Nation: Science Fiction Stories of Secession}, year = {2006}, month = {2006}, pages = {94-106}, publisher = {Spyre}, address = {Radford, VA}, abstract = {

Dystopia in which the Pacific states have seceded from the U.S. as a result of U.S. policies under George W. Bush. The P.S.A. is presented more positively, but the story concerns the continuing struggle between the two countries.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Robert Lopresti}, editor = {Edward J. McFadden III and E[katerina] Sedia (b. 1970)} } @booklet {5626, title = {Daughters of an Emerald Dusk}, year = {2005}, month = {2005}, publisher = {Alyson Books}, address = {Los Angeles, CA}, abstract = {

Sequel to 1984 and 2002 Forrest. In this novel the women from Earth and the new planet get back together on the new planet. But those born on the new planet become more and more adapted to it and separated from their mothers. At the end of this novel, most of the women born on Earth, return to it.\ 

}, keywords = {Canadian author, US author}, author = {Katherine [V.] Forrest (b. 1939)} } @booklet {5662, title = {Death by Chocolate}, year = {2005}, month = {2005}, publisher = {Viking}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopian satire. A religious and political crusade against obesity using the image of Our Lord, Christ the Fit. Those who are f*t get the attention of the Health Police. Set in New York City.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Toby Moore} } @booklet {5634, title = {"Deep Blue Sea"}, howpublished = {Picador New Writing }, volume = {13}, year = {2005}, note = {

Rpt. in his\ I Could Ride All Day in My Cool Blue Train\ (London: Faber \& Faber, 2006), 7-23.

}, month = {2005}, pages = {74-89}, publisher = {Picador in association with the British Council and Arts Council England}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Environmental dystopia.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Peter Hobbs}, editor = {Toby Litt and Ali Smith} } @booklet {5618, title = {Destroying Worlds: Second Episode of Enemies of Society. A Series of Future Thrillers}, year = {2005}, month = {2005}, publisher = {1st Books}, address = {Bloomington, IN}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Second of a six volume series. All volumes are concerned with violent conflict between factions, but in this volume one of the themes is a hierarchical planet with slavery. See also 2002, 2003, 2006, and 2007 (2).

}, keywords = {Male author, UK author}, author = {John David (b. 1955)} } @booklet {5685, title = {The Devil{\textquoteright}s Utopia. A Novel}, year = {2005}, month = {2005}, publisher = {Trident Publishing}, address = {Sandy, OR}, abstract = {

Post-catastrophe dystopia in which young people, as a rite of passage, must search the wasteland for relics and lost technologies. None have ever returned among those who went east, and the novel focuses on a new group who choose to go east. Sequels that are concerned with what they find there include\ Ruins of America. A Novel. Northglenn, CO: Fossil Ridge Books, 2006, which sets the scene of war and mass destruction;\ Iron Messiah. A Novel. Northglenn, CO: Fossil Ridge Books, 2007 about the search for an ultimate weapon;\ Prophet of Sorrow. A Novel. Northglenn, CO: Fossil Ridge Books, 2010 about the problems faced in protecting the homeland; and\ Heroes of the Rising Moon. A Novel. Northglenn, CO: Fossil Ridge Books, 2012 where success is achieved. See also http://www.darkenrealm.com/

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {J[ason] Schimschal} } @booklet {5680, title = {Dexta}, year = {2005}, month = {2005}, publisher = {Bantam Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Volume one of a series in each volume of which the heroine must defeat another dystopia on one of the planets she oversees for the Bureau of Extraterrestrial Affairs and combat the bureaucrats she works for. The other volumes are Glorious Treason. New York: Bantam Books, 2005; The Fifth Quadrant. New York: Bantam Books, 2006; Burdens of Empire. New York: Bantam Books, 2007; and Kiss of the Gods (2008).

}, author = {C. J. Ryan [pseud.].} } @booklet {5589, title = {The Diary of Pelly D}, year = {2005}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: Greenwillow, 2005.

}, month = {2005}, publisher = {Hodder Children{\textquoteright}s Books}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Young adult authoritarian dystopia in the form of a girl\’s diary found by a young man on a work gang salvaging material from ruins. One\’s position in society is supposed to be based on genetic differences. See also 2007 Adlington. Female author.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {L[ucy] J. Adlington (b. 1971)} } @booklet {5590, title = {"A Digital Day"}, howpublished = {Moving Along: Far Ahead. Volume Four of Tackling Tomorrow Today}, year = {2005}, month = {2005}, pages = {19-29}, publisher = {Chelsea House Publishers}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

Technological eutopia.

}, keywords = {Dutch author, Male author, US author}, author = {Jan [Johannes] Amkreutz}, editor = {Arthur B. Shostak} } @booklet {5672, title = {"Disposable Children"}, howpublished = {Lenox Avenue}, volume = {no. 5 }, year = {2005}, month = {March-April 2005}, abstract = {

Just what it says. Purchase a kit at your genetics superstore, give birth in six days, and have the child grow from birth to teen in nineteen weeks, at which point they die.

}, keywords = {Egyptian author, Female author, US author}, url = {http://www.lenoxavemag.com/issue5/issue5disposable.htm}, author = {M[arcia] Lynx Qualey} } @booklet {5698, title = {Divided Kingdom}, year = {2005}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2005.

}, month = {2005}, publisher = {Bloomsbury}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia. The U.K. is divided into four districts reflecting personality types based on the idea of dominant humours.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Rupert [William Farquhar] Thomson (b. 1955)} } @booklet {5661, title = {"Do No Harm"}, howpublished = {On Spec: The Canadian Magazine of the Fantastic }, volume = {17.1 (60) }, year = {2005}, month = {Spring 2005}, pages = {71-78}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Nonconformists are required to use a complex of drugs that make them \"normal\".

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {Brian E. Moore} } @booklet {5622, title = {Doctor Salt}, year = {2005}, month = {2005}, publisher = {Scribner}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia of corporate medicine.

}, keywords = {Irish author, Male author, US author}, author = {Gerard Donovan (b. 1959)} } @booklet {5596, title = {Dr. Warpenstein: The Invisible Foe}, year = {2005}, month = {2005}, publisher = {Xlibris}, address = {[Bloomington, IN]}, abstract = {

Projected dystopia that fails to achieve its ends, which includes control of all humanity.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Beaver, Bennie M} } @booklet {8605, title = {Dreamhunter}, year = {2005}, note = {

U.K. ed. as The Rainbow Opera. London: Faber \& Faber, 2005. U.S. ed. as Dreamhunter. Book One of the Dreamhunter Duet. New York: Frances Foster Books Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2006.

}, month = {2005}, publisher = {Fourth Estate}, address = {Sydney, NSW, Australia}, abstract = {

Young adult fantasy novel with dystopian elements. In a re-imagined New Zealand, Southland was settled in the eighteenth century by people from an island in the Aegean Sea, and some of their descendants can read dreams and then project them to an audience. This talent is used by some in the government to torture prisoners.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Female author}, author = {Elizabeth [Fiona] Knox (b. 1959)} } @booklet {5472, title = {"Deletion"}, howpublished = {Analog Science Fiction and Fact }, volume = {124.1 \& 2 }, year = {2004}, month = {January/February 2004}, pages = {180-99}, abstract = {

Genetic engineering in a world in which genes for emotional connection had been removed and which shows the flawed utopia produced.

}, keywords = {Male author}, issn = {1059-2113 }, author = {Steven Bratman} } @booklet {5563, title = {"Delhi"}, howpublished = {So Long Been Dreaming}, year = {2004}, note = {

Rpt. in People of Colo(u)r Destroy Science Fiction! Ed. Nalo Hopkinson and Kristine Ong Muslin Special Issue of Lightspeed, no. 73 (June 2016): 229-42; and in The Best of World SF: Volume 1. Ed. Lavie Tidhar (London: Ad Astra/Head of Zeus, 2021), 125-47.\ 

}, month = {2004}, pages = {79-94}, publisher = {Arsenal Pulp Press}, address = {Vancouver, BC, Canada}, abstract = {

The story contrasts the dystopian present of India\ with brief flashes of eutopian and dystopian futures.

}, keywords = {Female author, Indian author, US author}, author = {Vandana Singh (b. 1950)}, editor = {[Noelle] Nalo Hopkinson (b. 1960) and Uppinder Mehan} } @booklet {5580, title = {"Devil{\textquoteright}s Star"}, howpublished = {Visions of Liberty}, year = {2004}, note = {

Rpt. in\ Freedom!\ Ed. Martin H[arry] Greenberg and Mark Tier (New York: Baen, 2006), 431-51; and in\ The Human Limit: The Collected Stories of Jack Williamson. Volume 8\ (Royal Oak, MI: Haffner Press, 2011), 369-88.

}, month = {2004}, pages = {177-206}, publisher = {Baen}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Libertarian eutopia with a barter economy, custom, and altruism contrasted with an authoritarian dystopia fearful of all free societies.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Jack [John Stewart] Williamson (1908-2006)}, editor = {Mark Tier and Martin H[arry] Greenberg (1941-2011)} } @booklet {8601, title = {Dogs and Water}, year = {2004}, note = {

Rpt. with a few additional pages Montr{\'e}al, QC, Canada: Drawn \& Quarterly, 2007.

}, month = {2004}, publisher = {Drawn \& Quarterly}, address = {Montr{\'e}al, QC, Canada}, abstract = {

Graphic novel dystopia with no words in which a boy wanders through a largely destroyed landscape.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Anders Nilsen (b. 1973)} } @booklet {11470, title = {Darwin{\textquoteright}s Children}, year = {2003}, month = {2003}, pages = {400 pp.}, publisher = {Del Rey/Ballantine}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Sequel to Darwin\’s Radio. New York: Del Rey/Ballantine, 1999, which concerned the discovery of the DNA that brought about the disease that resulted in the children. The volume includes an \“Afterword\” (419), \“A Short Biological Primer\” (422-23) and a \“Short Glossary of Scientific Terms\” (423-27). The advanced children described in that novel have matured and ae threatened by those who resent their powers. As a result, they are interned in special schools and targeted by bounty hunters as part of a plan to eliminate them. The volume includes \“Caveats\” (375-76), a \“Short Glossary of Scientific Terms\” (377-83), and \“A Brief Reading List\” (385-87).

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {978-0345448361}, author = {Greg[ory Dale] Bear (1951-2022)} } @booklet {5368, title = {Dear Abbey}, year = {2003}, month = {2003}, publisher = {PS Publishing}, address = {Harrogate, Eng.}, abstract = {

Time travel tale which takes two people through many future stops to the end of the human race millions of years in the future. The first stops include environmental catastrophes, while later stops briefly depict eutopias built on the ruins.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Terry [Ballantine] Bisson (1942-2024)} } @booklet {5385, title = {Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom}, year = {2003}, month = {2003}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Humorous eutopia and dystopia where people live in Disney World, which has been maintained as it was but is now part of a world without death or scarcity. But other people take it over and use its displays, enhanced and changed, to control people.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, English author, Male author}, author = {Cory [Efram] Doctorow (b. 1971)} } @booklet {8768, title = {Drop City}, year = {2003}, month = {2003}, publisher = {Viking}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The novel uses the name of an actual intentional community but has little to do with that community. The community the novel presents is dystopian in all the ways that the Sixties communities were assumed to be but rarely were, a depiction disputed by those who lived there.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {T[homas] Coraghessan Boyle (b. 1948)} } @booklet {5343, title = {Dark Ararat}, year = {2002}, month = {2002}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

A continuation of his future history series; see 1998 Stableford, the note there, and 1999, 2000, and 2002 Stableford,\ The Omega Expedition. This volume is about the settlement of a colony planet.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Brian [Michael] Stableford (b. 1948)} } @booklet {5286, title = {Daughters of an Amber Moon}, year = {2002}, month = {2002}, publisher = {Alyson Books}, address = {Los Angeles, CA}, abstract = {

Sequel to 1984 Forrest. This volume concerns the women who chose to stay on Earth and their struggle to survive in the face of the dystopia that is the Earth. At the end of the novel, some of the women from the new planet return to Earth, which is converted from a dystopia to a eutopia. See also 2005 Forrest.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, US author}, author = {Katherine [V.] Forrest (b. 1939)} } @booklet {6884, title = {"Daughters of the Distant Dream"}, howpublished = {Writers of the Future. First Edition. devised by Pipers{\textquoteright} Ash Limited}, year = {2002}, month = {[2002?]}, pages = {26-48}, publisher = {Pipers{\textquoteright} Ash}, address = {Chippenham, Wiltshire, Eng.}, abstract = {

Series of stories about women in the future. \"The Learning Experience\" (31-34) is about a visit to a eutopian (?) world. All subservient positions are filled by robots. All flora and fauna protected (said to be a fad that would last a century or two). High noise level (speech and broadcast) to avoid seeming clandestine. All virtual reality. \"Glance at Eden\" (36-40) includes gender-role reversal in which men do the physical tasks that are considered less important. Another world advanced in bio-technology, genetic engineering. A character from that planet says, \"\&$\#$39;We created everything around here. We also engineered ourselves, rooting out the undesirable characteristics until we achieved total perfection\&$\#$39;\" (38). \"The Vanishing Race\" (42-44) depicts a world where people never go outside; \"no more inter-human contacts\" (43).

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Female author}, url = {www.supamasu.com}, author = {Yvonne Eve Walus} } @booklet {5329, title = {Dawn of the New Man: A Futuristic Novel of Social Change}, year = {2002}, month = {2002}, publisher = {Xlibris}, address = {[Bloomington, IN]}, abstract = {

Sequel to 2001 Prugovecki. This volume continues the story of two countries described in the first volume, the libertarian Terra and the authoritarian FWF (Free World Federation). The citizens of the FWF are enslaved and the protagonist initiates a successful struggle to free them.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {Eduard Prugovecki (1937-2003)} } @booklet {5264, title = {Design Your Own Utopia}, year = {2002}, note = {

The text can also be found at\ http://www.seesharppress.com/utopia.html.

}, month = {2002}, publisher = {See Sharp Press}, address = {Tucson, AZ}, abstract = {

Mostly a lengthy questionnaire intended to assist people thinking about utopia but includes short descriptions of a local eutopia or intentional community and a global eutopia. See also 1988 and 1994 Hubbard; and 2012 Bufe and Hubbard.

}, keywords = {Female author, Male author, US author}, url = {http://www.seesharppress.com/utopia.html}, author = {Chaz [Charles] Bufe and [Elizabeth known as Libby] [Hubbard] (b. 1956)} } @booklet {5258, title = {Destiny Restored}, year = {2002}, month = {2002}, publisher = {Elderberry Press}, address = {Oakland, OR}, abstract = {

A near future dystopia in which the United States is collapsing and terrorism is common with hope for a eutopia held out at the end.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Arthur M. Becker} } @booklet {5271, title = {Discarded Faces}, year = {2002}, month = {2002}, publisher = {King Roy Publishing}, address = {Las Vegas, NV}, abstract = {

Authoritarian religious dystopia on another planet and the revolt against it. Hierarchical social structure with whites at the top. Gays and lesbians eliminated.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Steve Cross} } @booklet {5310, title = {"The Dystopianist, Thinking of His Rival, Is Interrupted by a Knock on the Door"}, howpublished = {The New Wave Fabulists}, volume = {Volume 39 of Conjunctions}, year = {2002}, month = {2002}, pages = {163-71}, publisher = {Bard College}, address = {Annandale-on-Hudson, NY}, abstract = {

Satire on utopias and dystopias.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Jonathan [Allen] Lethem (b. 1964)}, editor = {Peter Straub} } @booklet {5206, title = {Dance of Knives}, year = {2001}, note = {

Rpt. Gibsons Landing, BC, Canada: Drowned City Press, 2010.

}, month = {2001}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Post-ecological disaster dystopia set in Vancouver. Tongs, violence. First volume in a series; see also 2010 McMahon.\ 

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author}, author = {Donna McMahon (b. 1959)} } @booklet {5207, title = {Dark Millennium}, year = {2001}, month = {2001}, publisher = {CeShore}, address = {Pittsburgh, PA}, abstract = {

The novel follows the life of an ambitious white boy who becomes president of the U.S. with plans to conquer the world and eliminate all non-whites. A world government is created with the protagonist as President of Earth for life with a World Senate composed of other white leaders. Later they will be elected with voting limited to Caucasian college graduates. White women college graduates will be able to vote, but their primary role is defined as producing children. All non-whites and all Caucasians with \“defective genes or had IQs below 90\” were sterilized. An exception is made for Asians with an IQ over 140, who are not sterilized but are only allowed to reproduce with whites. These policies produce a eutopia by reducing the world\’s population, cutting crime dramatically, and improving health and intelligence.\ See the author\’s poem, \“Crusade\” at http://www.newnation.org/Archives/NNN-Guest-Column-26.html.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Gerald James McManus} } @booklet {5167, title = {"The Delectation Debates"}, howpublished = {Sextopia}, year = {2001}, month = {2001}, pages = {15-23}, publisher = {Circlet Press}, address = {Cambridge, MA}, abstract = {

A future in which heterosexuals are in a minority and the multi-gendered get additional votes.

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Ren{\'e}e M. Charles}, editor = {Cecilia Tan (b. 1967)} } @booklet {8937, title = {"Dear Nestor: A Letter from 2050{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Whole Earth}, volume = {no. 103}, year = {2000}, note = {

Originally published in Dudley Fishburn, ed. The World in 2001. London: Economist, 2000 [Not found].

}, month = {Winter 2000}, pages = {82-84}, abstract = {

Eutopia in a letter from a twelve year old boy living in Bangladesh, which is part of the South Asian Block of nations, in a high tech future. The U.S. is a member of the North American Trading Block, and power now resides in these blocks rather than in the individual countries; e.g. the U.S. President is largely a ceremonial position. The U.S. is somewhat backward in that\ it still requires human pilots on airplanes. There is a tunnel from Miami to Habana, Cuba. Genes are implanted to keep a child from developing cancer or HIV and to slow the aging process and increase intelligence. Trial marriages are common. People travel to Mars for holidays.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {William Douglass} } @booklet {5066, title = {Dervish is Digital}, year = {2000}, month = {2000}, publisher = {Macmillan}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Cyberpunk dystopia that is something of a sequel to her\ Tea From an Empty Cup\ (1998) in that the central character and some of the setting are the same. The female author was born in the U.S. and lives in England. Other cyberpunk dystopias by the author are 1991 and 1992 Cadigan.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Pat[ricia Oren Kearney] Cadigan (b. 1953)} } @booklet {5220, title = {Dove{\textquoteright}s Song}, year = {2000}, month = {2000}, publisher = {1st Books}, address = {Bloomington, IN}, abstract = {

A Christian, spiritualist eutopia. Other planets are more advanced than Earth, but an alien visits Earth and prods it in the right direction. There is a sequel to the alien\’s visit in her\ Dove\’s Duet. Novel. Bloomington, IN: 1st\ Books, 2001, which is a love story helped along by the return visit of the alien.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Eloise Rodkey Rees} } @booklet {5137, title = {Dream of Venus}, howpublished = {Star Colonies}, year = {2000}, note = {

Rpt. in her\ The Mountain Cage and Other Stories\ (Atlanta, GA: Meisha Merlin, 2002), 325-57 with \"Afterword to \&$\#$39;Dream of Venus\&$\#$39;\" on 358-59.

}, month = {2000}, pages = {263-304}, publisher = {DAW Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The story is set in the same universe as 1986, 1988, and 2001 Sargent, but earlier than those novels, and focuses the development of a representation of Venus and the personalities and politics involved.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Pamela Sargent (b. 1948)}, editor = {Martin H[arry] Greenberg (1941-2011) and John Helfers} } @booklet {5082, title = {Dynamo}, year = {2000}, month = {2000}, publisher = {Regent Press}, address = {Oakland, CA}, abstract = {

The novel begins in a San Francisco dominated by sex and drugs seen through the eyes of a musician/poet struggling to survive playing on the streets and in clubs. The eutopia comes at the end of the novel with the development of a way for everyone to get high without side effects, a complete collective economy, a network of communities, and a new energy system.

}, author = {Hank Deadwood (b. 1959)} } @booklet {4952, title = {The Dark Entity}, year = {1999}, note = {

Rev. without any reference to the earlier version as\ When Darkness Fell. Cook Islands: Jaala, 2005.

}, month = {1999}, publisher = {Certes Press}, address = {Christchurch, New Zealand}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Much of the novel is concerned with one man\&$\#$39;s struggle with evil, but it is set within an authoritarian dystopia called Flatland, which has quite traditional gender roles, with status for men achieved through competitive games. The people are generally uneducated.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author, US author}, author = {J. T. Best (d. 2009)} } @booklet {4967, title = {"Dawnings"}, howpublished = {The Female Odyssey: Visions for the 21st Century}, year = {1999}, month = {1999}, pages = {99-104}, publisher = {The Women{\textquoteright}s Press}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Egalitarian eutopia set in the U.K. in 2010 seen from the perspective of an old woman who had gone through the transition.\ The protagonist describes her flat in a collectively owned and managed building with a large communal space and a computer room. Adjacent buildings have different amenities such as a swimming pool, gym, art studio, music room, or meeting room. Clinic on site as is a nursery and cr{\`e}che. Employment is arranged so that \“no one has to work more than a three-day shift for a wage sufficient for their needs\” (102). Equal pay for all. Cheap public transport.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Zelda Curtis (1923-2012)}, editor = {Charlotte Cole and Helen Windrath} } @booklet {4957, title = {The Deep Field}, year = {1999}, note = {

U.K. ed. London: Review, 1999.

}, month = {1999}, publisher = {Hodder Headline}, address = {Sydney, NSW, Australia}, abstract = {

Dystopia. The Prologue is set far in the future, written by an author who is over 280 years old and describes an old book published in 2031. A nuclear war between India and Pakistan had occurred, and the U.S. had gone through another civil war. The rest of the book starts about 2010 and describes an authoritarian Australia.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {James Bradley (b. 1967)} } @booklet {5044, title = {A Deepness in the Sky}, year = {1999}, month = {1999}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Libertarian science fiction.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Vernor [Steffen] Vinge (b. 1944)} } @booklet {4986, title = {Dementia Island}, year = {1999}, month = {1999}, publisher = {New Orphic Publishers}, address = {Vancouver, BC, Canada}, abstract = {

A dystopia describing an island where those considered undesirable are sent.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {Ernest [Michael] Hekkanen (b. 1947)} } @booklet {5042, title = {Down There In Darkness}, year = {1999}, note = {

Chapter 2 was originally published as \"Worlds.\"\ Eidolon: The Journal of Australian Science Fiction and Fantasy, no. 4\ (1.4) (March 1991): 36-58.

}, month = {1999}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The novel begins in a future dystopia of class-stratification and then shifts a hundred years further into the future where an attempt to create a eutopia is being worked out. There is considerable reflection on the nature of utopianism. Sequel to 1993 Turner and related to 1989 Turner.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {George [Reginald] Turner (1916-97)} } @booklet {8739, title = {Downsiders. A Novel}, year = {1999}, month = {1999}, publisher = {Simon \& Schuster Books for Young Readers}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult novel in which there is an entirely separate society beneath the streets with the focus on a relationship between a girl from above and a boy from below.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Neal Shusterman (b. 1962)} } @booklet {10431, title = {The Dream Archipelago}, year = {1999}, note = {

Includes the first publication of \“The Equatorial Moment\” (1-6); \“The Negation\” (7-48) originally published in Anticipations. Ed. Christopher Priest (New York: Charles Scribner\’s Sons, 1978), 55-86; \“Whores\” (49-) originally published in New Dimensions 8. Ed. Robert Silverberg (New York: Harper \& Row, 1978), 27-40; \“The Cremation\” (71-114) originally in Andromeda 3. Ed. Paul Weston (London: Futura, 1978); \“The Miraculous Cairn\” (115-85) originally published in New Terrors $\#$2. Ed. Ramsey Campbell (London: Pan, 1980), 11-55; and \“The Watched\” (186-264) originally published in The Magazine of Fantasy \& Science Fiction 54.4 (323) (April 1978): 124-60. Book rpt. London: Gollancz, 2009 with \“The Equatorial Moment\” (1-5); \“The Negation\” (6-44); \“Whores\” (45-65); \“The Miraculous Cairn\” (74-140); \“The Cremation\” (141-81); and \“The Watched\” (182-255-) and two additional stories, \“The Trace of Him\” (66-73) originally published in Interzone, no. 214 (February 2008): 36-38; and \“The Discharge\” (256-301) which was originally published in SciFiction www.scifi.com/scifiction/ Posted February 13, 2002. No longer available online, but it was rpt. in Science Fiction: The Best of 2002. Ed. Robert Silverberg and Karen Haber (Np: ibooks, 2003), 156-210.\ 

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

The Dream Archipelago is made of thousands of islands in an ocean belt around the middle of a planet with a large continent to the north, with many countries regularly at war, wars that are fought on the continent to the south, which is sparsely populated. Various islanders tell stories, some eutopian, some dystopian, and some with elements of fantasy about their islands. Two further volumes are set in the Dream Archipelago. The first is The Islanders. London: Victor Gollancz, 2011, which as short descriptions of many islands. An excerpt from \“The Drone\” (150-87) was published as \“Fireflies.\” Celebration: An anthology of short stories commemorating the 50th anniversary of the British Science Fiction Association. Ed. Ian Whates ([England]: New Con Press, 2008), 207-14. \“The Trace of Him\” is rpt. from his 2009 The Dream Archipelago retitled \“The Trace\” (235-43). The second is The Gradual. London: Gollancz, 2016; rpt. London: Titan Books, 2016, in which a composer, who is from a fascist dystopia, twice tours the Dream Archipelago.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Christopher [McKenzie] Priest (1943-2024)} } @booklet {4933, title = {"Dark Water"}, howpublished = {Millennium Nights}, year = {1998}, month = {1998}, pages = {84-137}, publisher = {Campus Press}, address = {Palmerston North, New Zealand}, abstract = {

Science fiction story that begins on the Utopia Habitat, a huge Dyson Sphere that is a technological eutopia. Most of the story is an adventure tale that takes place on a space ship.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {Danel Spragg}, editor = {P[eter] G. R. Hamilton} } @booklet {4917, title = {"The Days of Solomon Gursky"}, howpublished = {Asimov{\textquoteright}s Science Fiction }, volume = {22.6 (270) }, year = {1998}, month = {June 1998}, pages = {88-128}, abstract = {

Sequel to his Necroville (1994) but with eutopian possibilities.

}, keywords = {Male author, Northern Ireland author}, issn = {1065-6298}, author = {Ian [Neil] McDonald (b. 1960)} } @booklet {4935, title = {Distraction}, year = {1998}, month = {1998}, publisher = {Bantam Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Political novel set in a future United States that is disintegrating as a result of various environmental and other problems.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Michael] Bruce Sterling (b. 1954)} } @booklet {4932, title = {"A Dream"}, howpublished = {The Aisling Quarterly (Aran Islands, Ireland)}, volume = {23}, year = {1998}, month = {Bealtaine 1998}, pages = {61-65}, abstract = {

Set on the Aran Islands, which have become dependent on tourists and government handouts. Proposal, originating in a dream showing the life being sucked out of the islands, that they return to the eutopian self-sufficiency (described at the beginning of the story). Specifically, re-establish dairying, fishing, gardening, and other farming and wool-production, work toward energy self-sufficiency through wind power, and get rid of cars.

}, keywords = {Irish author, Male author}, author = {John Seymour} } @booklet {4820, title = {"A Day in 2020"}, howpublished = {The Futurist}, volume = { 31.3}, year = {1997}, month = {May-June 1997}, pages = {Page 4 of a separately paged insert of twelve pages.}, abstract = {

A half page eutopia presenting a summary of a day in the life of a woman in 2020 stressing technology, cohousing, and a fifteen-hour work week.\ 

}, author = {Judith Mandel} } @booklet {4803, title = {The Dazzle of Day}, year = {1997}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Saga Press, 2019 with the story \“Lambing Season\” appended unpaged at the end. It was originally published illus. Lourie Harden.\ Asimov\’s Science Fiction\ 26.7 (318) (July 2002): 83-91; rpt. in\ Invaders: 22 Tales From the Outer Limits of Literature. Ed. Jacob Weisman (San Francisco, CA: Tachyon, 2016), 200-13; and in her\ Unforeseen: Stories\ (New York:\ Saga Press/Simon \& Schuster, 2019), 203-19.\ 

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

Critical eutopia. Troubled Quaker society near the end of a multi-generation space flight trying to decide on settling a rather undesirable planet. Ends with a picture of the society established there after a few generations.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Molly Gloss (b. 1944)} } @booklet {4813, title = {"Demokratus."}, howpublished = {Free Space}, year = {1997}, month = {1997}, pages = {197-220}, publisher = {Tor}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The protagonist is a man who has lived in space, which is a libertarian utopian with \“customs\” rather than laws where the words \“taxer\” and \“government\” are profane (198-199), who, looking for \“freedom from choice,\” decides to \“self-banish\” to a planet where he assumes a government will make choices for him. The first places he lands is Demokratus where everyone is a \“voter\” and everything and voting is mandatory and constant. But, as it turns out, most people simply ignore the results they don\’t agree with.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {0-312-85957-0}, author = {Victor [Paul] Koman (b. 1954)}, editor = {Brad[ford Swain] Linaweaver (1952-2019) and Edward E Kramer} } @booklet {4817, title = {Dra--}, volume = {New American Fiction Series: 39}, year = {1997}, month = {1997}, publisher = {Sun \& Moon Press}, address = {Los Angeles, CA}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Kafkaesque future society. The novel describes a woman caught up in a torturous employment bureaucracy.

}, author = {Stacey Levine} } @booklet {4729, title = {Darkest England}, year = {1996}, month = {1996}, publisher = {Macmillan}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Satire in which a black South African is sent by his tribe to ask the English Queen for the help that had been offered at the time of the Boer War.

}, keywords = {Male author, South African author, UK author}, author = {Christopher [David Tully] Hope (b. 1944)} } @booklet {9491, title = {The Designated Mourner}, year = {1996}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: Farrar, Straus \& Giroux, 1996.

}, month = {1996}, publisher = {Faber and Faber}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia set in the near future with a regime supressing all dissent. Play directed by David Hare (b. 1947) first performed at the Royal National Theatre in London April 18, 1996.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {William Shawn (b. 1943)} } @booklet {9436, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Downtime With the Virtual Dead{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Albedo One (Dublin, Ireland)}, volume = {no. 11}, year = {1996}, month = {1996}, pages = {5-13}, abstract = {

Cyberpunk set in a future dystopian Europe under the rule of a degenerate Islam.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Mike O{\textquoteright}Driscoll} } @booklet {10362, title = {Dream-Weaver}, year = {1996}, month = {1996}, publisher = {Clarion Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult novel set as colonists from Earth prepare to land on a planet inhabited by people with what appears to be little technology. But the people of the planet have mental powers that allow contact to be made with a member of the Earth crew who comes to see the low-tech planet in eutopian terms.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Female author, Irish author}, author = {[Elizabeth Rhoda Wintle] [Holden] (1943-2013)} } @booklet {9435, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Delenda{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Albedo One (Dublin, Ireland}, volume = {no. 9}, year = {1995}, month = {1995}, pages = {17-27}, abstract = {

Last woman story in which sickness was followed by madness and violence with a few immune left. The story focuses on a woman and the man who rescues her from final violence, the problems they have, and the freedom she feels after he is killed by dogs.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, Irish author}, author = {Andrea Thomas} } @booklet {4618, title = {Deucalion}, year = {1995}, note = {

U.K. ed. Edinburgh, Scot.: Flyways, 2002.

}, month = {1995}, publisher = {University of Queensland Press}, address = {St. Lucia, QLD, Australia}, abstract = {

Young adult flawed utopia describing the development of an effective world government on Earth, the colonization of the planet Deucalion, the positive and negative interactions with the indigenous population, and the establishment of a new, separately located society by the indigenous people.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author, Welsh author}, author = {Brian [Paul] Caswell (b. 1954)} } @booklet {4684, title = {The Diamond Age, or, A Young Lady{\textquoteright}s Illustrated Primer}, year = {1995}, month = {1995}, publisher = {Bantam Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Technological Victorian age of the future and some alternatives.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Neal [Town] Stephenson (b. 1959)} } @booklet {4626, title = {Distress. A Novel}, year = {1995}, note = {

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

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

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

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Greg[ory Mark] Egan (b. 1961)} } @booklet {4670, title = {The Doomsday Scenario: A story set in an imaginary Britain of the present in the very near future, whenever that may happen to be}, year = {1995}, month = {1995}, publisher = {Publishing Associates}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Near future dystopia where crime, both violent and nonviolent, is the norm. The middle class is hiring armed security forces and building fences around their suburbs. Police all armed with silenced automatic pistols. One focus of the novel is the controversy surrounding the proposal to re-introduce capital punishment.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Jack Ramsay} } @booklet {4690, title = {A Dream that needs abuildin{\textquoteright}}, year = {1995}, month = {1995}, publisher = {Chayah Press}, address = {Phoenix, AZ}, abstract = {

Architectural eutopia.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Russell Voorhees}, editor = {John Pritchard} } @booklet {4669, title = {Dryland{\textquoteright}s End}, year = {1995}, month = {1995}, publisher = {Richard Kasak}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

A matriarchy with problems set in the far future.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Felice Picano} } @booklet {4571, title = {"Dead Space for the Unexpected"}, howpublished = {Interzone}, volume = {no. 88 }, year = {1994}, note = {

Rpt. in The Year\’s Best Science Fiction Twelfth Annual Collection. Ed. Gardner [Raymond] Dozois (New York: St. Martin\’s Press, 1995), 406-19; and in Brave New Worlds. Ed. John Joseph Adams (San Francisco, CA: Night Shade Books, 2011), 243-56; 2nd ed. as Brave New Worlds: Dystopian Stories. Ed. John Joseph Adams (San Francisco, CA: Night Shade Books, 2012), 243-56.

}, month = {October 1994}, pages = {5-11}, abstract = {

Dystopia of corporate life in the future.\ The author was born in Canada and left at age 11, but he identifies himself as Canadian.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author, UK author, US author}, author = {Geoff[rey Charles] Ryman (b. 1951)} } @booklet {9635, title = {Deadly Care}, year = {1994}, month = {1995}, publisher = {Vantage Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The dystopia created by government involvement in health care in which patients have absolutely no choices.\ 

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author, US author}, author = {Richard W. Fulmer} } @booklet {4583, title = {Deersnake}, year = {1994}, month = {1994}, publisher = {Hodder Headline}, address = {Rydalmere, NSW, Australia}, abstract = {

Young adult dystopia with fantasy elements which may be LSD-induced visions.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Australian author, Female author}, author = {Lucy [Jane] Sussex (b. 1957)} } @booklet {4597, title = {The Disinherited}, year = {1994}, note = {

U.S. ed. as\ The Patchwork People. New York: Houghton Mifflin, 1994.

}, month = {1994}, publisher = {The Bodley Head Children{\textquoteright}s Books}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Begins with a dystopia of poverty and violence with rigid class divisions in Wales. Ends with the beginnings of a rural utopian community. Classified as Young Adult.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author, Irish author}, author = {[Elizabeth Rhoda Wintle] [Holden] (1943-2013)} } @booklet {4509, title = {Dr Orwell and Mr. Blair}, year = {1994}, month = {1994}, publisher = {Weidenfeld \& Nicolson}, address = {London}, abstract = {

A retelling of Orwell\&$\#$39;s Animal Farm.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {David Caute} } @booklet {9309, title = {Dancing on the Volcano}, year = {1993}, month = {1993}, publisher = {Orbit}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Mostly romance and adventure set in an authoritarian matriarchal dystopia from which the protagonists escape. Much fantasy. Continued in her To Bathe in Lightning. London: Orbit, 1995.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, UK author}, author = {Anne Gay} } @booklet {4465, title = {"Darwin{\textquoteright}s Children"}, howpublished = {Analog Science Fiction and Fact }, volume = {113.12}, year = {1993}, month = {October 1993}, pages = {118-61}, abstract = {

Libertarian eutopia.\ Sequels include\ \“Survival of the Fittest.\”\ Analog Science Fiction and Fact\ 114.6 (May 1994): 110-58;\ \“The Missing Link.\”\ Analog Science Fiction and Fact\ 114.12 (October 1994): 90-121; and\ \“Evolution.\”\ Analog Science Fiction and Fact\ 114.14 (December 1994): 12-16, 18-20, 22-24, 26-28, 30-31, 34-36, 38-40, 42-44, 46-67.​

}, keywords = {Male author}, issn = {1059-2113 }, author = {Grey Rollins} } @booklet {4472, title = {Daughter of Elysium}, year = {1993}, month = {1993}, publisher = {William Morrow}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Set in same world as her 1986 Door Into Ocean. In this volume the people of Elysium have\ achieved immortality which brings with it complacency and arrogance and the desire of other peoples to steal their secret.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Joan [Lyn] Slonczewski (b. 1956)} } @booklet {4476, title = {"A Defense of the Social Contracts"}, howpublished = {Science Fiction Age }, volume = {1.6 }, year = {1993}, note = {

Rpt. in\ Nebula Awards 30.\ Ed. Pamela Sargent (San Diego, CA: Harcourt Brace \& Co., 1996), 222-38.

}, month = {September 1993}, pages = {44-49}, abstract = {

Eutopia in which a system of contracts regulates human interaction. The story illustrates that the system has flaws.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Martha [Clare] Soukup (b. 1959)} } @booklet {4447, title = {Democracy (b. 1984)}, year = {1993}, month = {1993}, publisher = {Vantage Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Proposal for the direct election of the U.S. President after candidates have been pre-approved by computers. No direct presentation of the expected eutopia, but discussion throughout the book suggests its outlines.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Robert Leon} } @booklet {4461, title = {Demolition Man: A Novel by Richard Osborne based on a story by Peter M. Lenkov and Robert Reneau and a Screenplay by Daniel Waters, Robert Reneau, and Peter M. Lemkov}, year = {1993}, month = {1993}, publisher = {Signet}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

A behavioral engineering dystopia set in San Angeles in 2032.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Richard Osborne} } @booklet {4485, title = {The Destiny Makers}, year = {1993}, month = {1993}, publisher = {William Morrow}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia of extreme overpopulation, corruption, and a radical gap between the rich and the poor. A plan had been developed to kill much of the world\’s population so that the earth can recover and much of the novel centers on personal and political intrigue. See also 1999 Turner.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {George [Reginald] Turner (1916-97)} } @booklet {9153, title = {Deus X}, year = {1993}, note = {

Rpt. in his Deus X and Other Stories (Waterville, ME: Five Star, 2003), 90-140.\ 

}, month = {1993}, publisher = {Bantam Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The setting of the novel is a future Earth so devastated by the results of current environmental policies that human life on Earth is in danger. The novel focuses on the creation of people within an electronic net and the problems this poses for the Catholic Church and its female pope.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Norman [Richard] Spinrad (b. 1940)} } @booklet {8887, title = {"Distances"}, howpublished = {The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven}, year = {1993}, note = {

Rpt. (New York: Grove Press, 2005), 104-09. Rpt. in Walking the Clouds: An Anthology of Indigenous Science Fiction. Ed. Grace Dillon (Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2012), 143-48 with an editor\’s note on 143-45.

}, month = {1993}, pages = {104-09}, publisher = {Atlantic Monthly Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Apocalyptic story based on the recovery of Native American Indian lands through the intercession of the Indian ancestors. In the book, the story is told by Thomas Builds-the-Fire, an Indian visionary.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, Native American author}, author = {Sherman [Joseph] Alexie [Jr.] (b. 1966)} } @booklet {4424, title = {Doc Forest and the Blue Mountain Ecostery: A Narrative of Creating Ecological Harmony in Daily Life}, year = {1993}, month = {1993}, publisher = {Ecostery House}, address = {Victoria, BC, Canada}, abstract = {

Ecological eutopia based on an intentional community called an Ecostery or \“a place where ecological wisdom and harmony (ecosophy) is learned, practiced and taught\” (xii) that reflects deep ecology, which is based on the ideas of Arne Naess (1912-2009). Ecosophy, coined by Naess, comes from the Greek \“oikos\” or household place and \“sophia\” or wisdom and \“refers to the wisdom to dwell harmoniously\” (23). There are appendices that include the \“Ecostery Foundation of North America (TEFNA): Statement of Philosophy\” (175-86), an \“Ecostery Brief Constitutional Model\” (187-87), and an \“Ecostery Long Constitution \& Bylaws Model\” (188-99) plus a \“Select Ecostery Booklist\” (201-05).\ 

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {Alan R[odney] Drengson (b. 1934)} } @booklet {4432, title = {Dream of Glass}, year = {1993}, month = {1993}, publisher = {Harcourt, Brace \& Co}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Resistance to a fascist dystopia.

}, keywords = {US author}, author = {Jean Mark Gawron (b. 1953)} } @booklet {4466, title = {The Drylands}, year = {1993}, note = {

Rpt. with a brief \"Foreword\" (10-11) by the author in her\ Water Rites\ (Auburn, WA: Fairwood Press, 2007), 73-305.

}, month = {1993}, publisher = {Ballantine Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia as a result of a long drought. Three related stories are \“Water Bringer.\”\ Isaac Asimov\’s Science Fiction Magazine\ 15.3 (168) (March 1991): 16-21, 24-26, 28-30, 32-34, 36-38, 40-42, 44-47; rpt. in her\ Water Rites\ (Auburn, WA: Fairwood Press, 2007), 12-35; \“Celilo.\”\ Isaac Asimov\’s Science Fiction Magazine\ 15.7 (172) (June 1991): 88-109; rpt. in her\ Water Rites\ (Auburn, WA: Fairwood Press, 2007), 36-55; and \“The Bee Man.\”\ Isaac Asimov\’s Science Fiction Magazine\ 15.10 (175) (September 1991): 44-48, 50-52, 54-63; rpt. in her\ Water Rites\ (Auburn, WA: Fairwood Press, 2007), 56-72.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Mary Rosenblum (1952-2018)} } @booklet {4356, title = {Dark Streets}, year = {1992}, month = {1992}, publisher = {S.T.W. Publishing}, address = {Windsor, NSW, Australia}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia in Australia and the resistance to it. New South Wales is an independent country with a \"Gratification District\" served by \"Pleasure Technicians\" controlled by the State Army.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Huw [Thomas] Merlin (b. 1956)} } @booklet {4299, title = {Dead Girls}, year = {1992}, note = {

Rpt. New York: St. Martin\&$\#$39;s, 1995.\ Graphic novel ed. by Calder with Pencils, Colours \& letters by Leonardo M. Girton as The Dead Girls: The Graphic Novel. [UK]: The House of Murky Depths, 2014.\ 

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

Cyberpunk dystopia. Continued in his\ Dead Boys.\  London : HarperCollins, 1994; and\ Dead Things.\  London : HarperCollins, 1996.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Richard Calder (b. 1955)} } @booklet {4357, title = {Deus Ex Machina}, year = {1992}, note = {

Rpt. on disk 1993. 2nd ed. 1994 on disk only.

}, month = {1992}, publisher = {TTTM}, address = {Auckland, New Zealand}, abstract = {

Machine run future. Variety of worlds presented. Some good and some not. See also his related but non-utopian Tu. Auckland, New Zealand: TTTM, 1994; and Nummus. Auckland, New Zealand: TTTM, 1993.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {Ivan Millett (b. 1944)} } @booklet {4324, title = {Dinotopia: A Land Apart from Time}, year = {1992}, note = {

20th Anniversary ed. New York: Calla Editions, 2011.

}, month = {1992}, publisher = {Turner Publishing Co}, address = {Atlanta, GA}, abstract = {

A fantasy in which dinosaurs and humans live together in harmony. Sequels include Gurney, Dinotopia: The World Beneath. Atlanta, GA: Turner Publishing, 1995; Midori Snyder (b. 1954), Dinotopia: Hatchling. New York: Bullseye Books, 1995; Scott Ciencin (b. 1962), Dinotopia. Windchaser. New York: Bullseye Books/Random House, 1995; John Vornholt (b. 1951), Dinotopia. River Quest. New York: Bullseye Books/Random House, 1995; Ciencin, Dinotopia: Lost City. New York: Bullseye Books, 1996; Ciencin, Dinotopia. Thunder Falls New York: Bullseye Books/Random House, 1996; Alan Dean Foster (b. 1946), Dinotopia Lost. Atlanta, GA: Turner Publishing Co., 1996; U.K. ed. London: Severn House, 1998; John Vornholt (b. 1951), Dinotopia. Sabertooth Mountain. New York: Bullseye Books/Random House, 1996; Gene DeWeese, Dinotopia. Firestorm. New York: Random House, 1997; Ciencin, Dinotopia. Sky Dance. Illus. Michael Welpy. New York: Random House, 1999; Peter [Allen] David, Dinotopia. The Maze. New York: Random House, 1999; Foster, Hand of Dinotopia. New York: Harper Collins, 1999; Mark A. Garland, Dinotopia. Rescue Party. New York: Random House, 1999; Gurney, Dinotopia: First Flight. [New York]: HarperCollins, 1999; Ciencin, Dinotopia: Return to Lost City. New York: Random House, 2000; Donald F. Glut, Dinotopia. Chomper. New York: Random House, 2000; Ciencin, Dinotopia. The Explorers. New York: Random House, 2001; Brad Strickland, Dinotopia. Survive! New York: Random House, 2001; Cathy [Catherine] Hapka, Dinotopia: Oasis. New York: Random House, 2002; Vornholt, Dinotopia: Dolphin Watch. New York: Random House, 2002; and Gurney, Dinotopia: Journey to Chandara. Kansas City, MO: Andrews McMeel, 2007. There was a three-part TV miniseries as Code of Dinotopia written by Gurney and Simon Moore on the Disney Channel in 2002. This was followed by a thirteen-part miniseries.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {James Gurney (b. 1958)} } @booklet {4386, title = {"The Don{\textquoteright}ts of Whistling"}, howpublished = {Landfall 184 (New Zealand)}, volume = { 46.4}, year = {1992}, note = {

The Table of Contents adds the subtitle \"(Chapter 1 of The Guide to Whistling, a sequel to\ Black Rainbow). No more appears to have been published.

}, month = {December 1992}, pages = {398-420}, abstract = {

The story is about the relationship of a boy to his mostly absent father and other family members, but the background to the story is the dystopia developed in his 1992 Black Rainbow.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author, Samoan author}, author = {Albert Wendt (b. 1939)} } @booklet {4193, title = {"Dalereuth Guild House"}, howpublished = {Renunciates Of Darkover}, year = {1991}, month = {1991}, pages = {298-317}, publisher = {DAW Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Free Amazon story.

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Priscilla W. Armstrong and Marion Zimmer Bradley (1930-99)} } @booklet {4251, title = {"Danila{\textquoteright}s Song"}, howpublished = {Renunciates Of Darkover}, year = {1991}, month = {1991}, pages = {187-205 with an introductory note on 187}, publisher = {DAW Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Free Amazon story.

}, keywords = {Female author, Russian author, US author}, author = {Vera Nazarian (b. 1966)}, editor = {Marion Zimmer Bradley (1930-99)} } @booklet {4205, title = {Dark Paradise}, year = {1991}, month = {1991}, publisher = {Wolfhound Press}, address = {Dublin, Ireland}, abstract = {

Dystopia. One group has evolved on mental lines, losing their legs, and becoming extremely weak and dependent on technology while being extremely powerful mentally. Another group, expelled by the first, are called bipeds in that they still have legs and live outside the controlled environment. The novel includes descriptions of the evolution of and stages in the lives of the first group. Food is developed to the point that elimination is no longer necessary. Artificial womb allowed early removal of the defective.

}, keywords = {Female author, Irish author}, author = {Catherine Brophy} } @booklet {4246, title = {"The Day of the Sun"}, howpublished = {Aurealis (Melbourne, VIC, Australia)}, volume = { no. 3 }, year = {1991}, month = {1991}, pages = {43-50}, abstract = {

Dystopian fantasy in which extremely poor people working under very harsh conditions to produce paper clothing experience the sun irregularly. On those days they have sex, but they forget everything about those days between them.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Female author}, author = {Maria McKernan} } @booklet {4259, title = {"Dealer"}, howpublished = {Amazing Stories (Lake Geneva, WI)}, volume = {66.5 (562) }, year = {1991}, note = {

Rpt. in Washed by a Wave of Wind: Science fiction from the Corridor. Ed. M. Shayne Bell (Salt Lake City, UT: Signature Books, 1993), 277-92.

}, month = {September 1991}, pages = {31-37}, abstract = {

Future dystopia in which America has rejected everything foreign.

}, keywords = {Female author}, issn = {0002-6891 }, author = {Michaelene Pendleton (1946-2019)} } @booklet {4237, title = {Death of a Sparrow}, year = {1991}, month = {1991}, publisher = {Leafgreen}, address = {Christchurch, New Zealand}, abstract = {

Dystopia set in 2000 in a New Zealand with a corrupt government and society divided between the power brokers and the displaced with Australian and U.S. corporations dominating New Zealand. The novel centers on the construction of an American-built nuclear power plant and a nuclear accident that releases significant radioactivity, which, at the end, is killing people and wildlife. The author writes that she began the novel at the time of the Three Mile Island nuclear accident in 1979.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Female author}, author = {Barbara Ker-Mann (b. 1933)} } @booklet {4227, title = {A Dog{\textquoteright}s Chance}, year = {1991}, month = {1991}, publisher = {The Book Guild}, address = {Lewes, Sussex, Eng.}, abstract = {

Surreal dystopia set in 2002 with lots of sex and violence.

}, keywords = {Male author, Scottish author}, author = {Michael Haughney (b. 1963)} } @booklet {4249, title = {"The Dominant Style"}, howpublished = {Aurealis (Melbourne, VIC, Australia)}, volume = { no. 4}, year = {1991}, note = {

Rpt. in his\ Call to the Edge\ (North Adelaide, SA, Australia: Aphelion, 1992), 225-45.

}, month = {1991}, pages = {66-75}, abstract = {

Flawed utopia. Far future genetically engineered eutopia which has produced an unchanging, inflexible society because everyone\’s position in life, including occupation, is genetically determined. Following the story is a footnote on 245 that concludes \“Imagine a world where industry and population are balanced and sustainable, where war is a hazy memory, and where crime seldom amounts to more than petty theft. If the people were happy, healthy and free, would it matter that they lived under some constraints?\”

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, isbn = {1-875356-06-6}, author = {Sean [Christopher] McMullen (b. 1948)} } @booklet {4270, title = {Downriver (Or, The Vessels of Wrath) A Narrative in Twelve Tales}, year = {1991}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: Random House, 1992.

}, month = {1991}, publisher = {Paladin}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia of the East End of London being destroyed under the policies of Margaret Thatcher (1925-2013. Prime Minister 1979-90).

}, keywords = {Male author, Welsh author}, author = {Iain [MacGregor] Sinclair (b. 1943)} } @booklet {4189, title = {Darcy{\textquoteright}s Utopia}, year = {1990}, note = {

Rpt. London: Flamingo, 1991.

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

The novel includes the description of a utopian vision of a \“the multiracial, unicultural, secular society\” (17).

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, English author, Female author}, author = {Fay Weldon (1931-2023)} } @booklet {4184, title = {Daz 4 Zoe}, year = {1990}, note = {

Rpt. Edinburgh, Scot.: Pearson Education, 2000, with analysis and notes.

}, month = {1990}, publisher = {Hamish Hamilton}, address = {London}, abstract = {

A young adult dystopia in the near future in which society is divided into the affluent and the poor. Two teenagers bridge the gap and leave to find a better life.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Robert [Edward] Swindells (b. 1939)} } @booklet {4144, title = {Dead Morn}, year = {1990}, month = {1990}, publisher = {Tafford Publishing Co}, address = {Houston, TX}, abstract = {

Future repressive dystopia and time travel into the past.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Piers Anthony Dillingham] [Jacob] (b. 1934) and Roberto Fuentes (b. 1934)} } @booklet {11710, title = {Death of a Native Alien}, year = {1990}, month = {1990}, pages = {176 pp.}, publisher = {[Steladon Press]}, address = {[Upper Marlboro, MD]}, abstract = {

Race relations in the United States in the twentieth century, depicted through the experiences of a Zirconian on the planet Terra where the Gringoa are Dominant.

}, keywords = {African American author, Male author}, author = {Stephen W. DeBrew (b. 1956)} } @booklet {4164, title = {"The Death of Hieronymus Bosch"}, howpublished = {Another Chicago Magazine}, volume = {no. 22 }, year = {1990}, note = {

Rpt. in his\ Scherzi, I Believe: Short Fiction\ with collages by Andi Olsen. Wordcraft Speculative Writers Series (La Grande, OR: Wordcraft of Oregon, 1994), 91-97.

}, month = {1990}, pages = {72-82}, abstract = {

Dystopia set in a future U.S. of extreme poverty, violence, and corporate power that uses some of the imagery of Bosch\&$\#$39;s (1450-1516) paintings.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Lance Olsen (b. 1956)} } @booklet {11359, title = {Difference Engine}, year = {1990}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: Bantam Books, 1991. 20th Anniversary ed. New York: Ballantine Books, 2011.

}, month = {1990}, pages = {383 pp.}, publisher = {Victor Gollancz}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Alternative history in which the computer age emerges in Britain in the nineteenth century, and, as a result, the British Empire is even stronger than it was in our history. There was no famine in Ireland and, therefore, no Irish Diaspora and no independent Ireland. The United States has fragmented. The 1993 video game Chaos Engine (United States as Soldiers of Fortune.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author, US author}, isbn = {9780575047624}, author = {William [Ford] Gibson (b. 1948) and [Michael] Bruce Sterling (b. 1954)} } @booklet {4122, title = {Doc and Fluff: The Distopian Tale of a Girl and Her Biker}, year = {1990}, note = {

Rpt. Los Angeles, CA: Alyson Publications, 1996.

}, month = {1990}, publisher = {Alyson Publications}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {

Lesbian dystopia that includes a description of a lesbian intentional community\ that could be considered a eutopia.

}, keywords = {Transgender author, US author}, author = {Pat[rick] Califia[-Rice] (b. 1954)} } @booklet {4138, title = {Double Helix Fall}, year = {1990}, month = {1990}, publisher = {Abacus}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia after a large earthquake in San Francisco and the takeover of the U.S. by an organization that controls everything through computers. Rebels manipulate their own DNA in the struggle against the rulers.

}, keywords = {Male author, UK author}, author = {Neil Ferguson (b. 1947)} } @booklet {4117, title = {"Dr. Pak{\textquoteright}s Preschool"}, howpublished = {The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction }, volume = {79.1 }, year = {1990}, note = {

Rpt. Eugene, OR: Pulphouse Publishing, 1992. Short Story Paperback $\#$45; and in his Otherness (New York: Bantam Books, 1994), 30-65.

}, month = {July 1990}, pages = {6-34}, abstract = {

Dystopia set in Japan and South Korea in which the gender of a child is ensured and then education is provided for the fetus. The story is told by a mother who is unhappy with the process. Surprise ending.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {00024-984X }, author = {[Glen] David Brin (b. 1950)} } @booklet {4031, title = {Dollarville}, year = {1989}, note = {

U.K. ed. London: Jonathan Cape, 1990.\ 

}, month = {1989}, publisher = {Random House}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Satire. One theme is a near future right wing Christian dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, Welsh author}, author = {Pete Davies (b. 1959)} } @booklet {4011, title = {"The Dream"}, howpublished = {A History of the World in 10{\textonehalf} Chapters}, year = {1989}, note = {

U.S. ed. (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1989), 279-307. Rpt. (New York: Vintage Books, 1990), 298-307.

}, month = {1989}, pages = {281-309}, publisher = {Jonathan Cape}, address = {London}, abstract = {

In the story a man wakes up in a new version of Heaven where everyone gets the Heaven they want. The Old Heaven was found to be out of date, and Hell had never existed but been invented as a useful rhetorical device. Now Hell exists only for those who want it to exist and is an obvious fake. Bored after a few centuries of getting just what he wants, the man decides to want to dream that he wakes up alive again and does.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Julian [Patrick] Barnes (b. 1946)} } @booklet {4107, title = {Dydeetown World}, year = {1989}, note = {

Parts were previously published as \"Kids.\"\ New Destinies 7\ (Spring 1989). Ed. Jim Baen (New York: Baen Books, 1989), 229-87; and \"Dydeetown Girl.\"\ Far Frontiers 4\ (Winter 1985). Ed. Jerry Pournelle [Eugene] and Jim Baen (New York: Baen Books, 1985), 9-69.\ 

}, month = {1989}, publisher = {Baen Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Violent dystopia with very strict population control. People are generally illiterate. A volume in a series set in the so-called LaNague Federation; see his Healer (1976). Three non-utopian sequels are \“Wheels Within Wheels.\” Analog Science Fiction--Science Fact 88.1 (September 1971): 8-49; rev. as Wheels Within Wheels: A Novel of the LaNague Federation. New York: Doubleday, 1978; U.K. ed. London: Sidgewick and Jackson, 1980; rev. ed. Akron, OH: infrapress, 2005, with the addition of \“Preface to Wheels Within Wheels (v-vii) and two stories: \“Higher Centers\” (187-99) [rev. from its original publication illus. Vincent Di Fate in Analog Science Fiction/Science Fact 87.2 (April 1971): 149-60]; and \“The Man With the Anteater\” (201-11) [rev. from its original publication illus. Kelly Freas in Analog Science Fiction/Science Fact 87.5 (July 1971): 57-66]; An Enemy of the State [cover adds the subtitle A Novel of the La Nague Federation]. Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1980. Rpt. New York: Berkley, 1984; rev. ed. Akron, OH: infrapress, 2001, with a \“Preface\” (i-iii) and the addition of two stories: \“Ratman\” (281-98) [originally published illus. Vincent Di Fate in Analog Science Fiction/Science Fact 87.6 (August 1971): 149-64]; and \“Lipidleggin\’\” (299-307)[originally published in Asimov\’s Science Fiction Magazine 2.4 (7) (May-June 1978): 137-45]; and The Tery. New York: Baen Books, 1990.\ The Complete LaNague (Kindle, 2013) contains all the material.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {F[rancis] Paul Wilson (b. 1946)} } @booklet {3931, title = {Dance of the Warriors}, year = {1988}, month = {1988}, publisher = {Acolyte Press}, address = {Amsterdam, The Netherlands}, abstract = {

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

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Kevin Esser (b. 1953)} } @booklet {3926, title = {"Death and Morning"}, howpublished = {Machine Sex. . . and Other Stories}, year = {1988}, note = {

Book rpt. as\ Machine Sex and Other Stories\ (London: Women\&$\#$39;s Press, 1990), 17-26.

}, month = {1988}, pages = {21-28}, publisher = {Porc{\'e}pic Books}, address = {Victoria, BC, Canada}, abstract = {

Fantastic dystopia in which a person is re-shaped for the purpose of political assassination.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author}, author = {Candas Jane Dorsey (b. 1952)} } @booklet {3971, title = {Dreams of Flesh \& Sand}, year = {1988}, month = {1988}, publisher = {New American Library}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Mostly a technological adventure story, but as background the world is totally dominated by private corporations. 1989 Quick Dreams of Gods and Men. New York: New American Library, 1989, in which an artificial intelligence is taking over all the corporations and 1990 Quick, Singularities. New York: ROC, 1990, are sequels.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {W[illiam] T[homas] Quick (b. 1946)} } @booklet {3833, title = {Daughters of Khaton}, year = {1987}, note = {

Part originally published as by Merril Harris. \"From Sisterworld.\"\ Sinister Wisdom\ (Charlotte, NC), no. 3 (July 1976): 57-59.

}, month = {1987}, publisher = {Lace Publications}, address = {Denver, CO}, abstract = {

Lesbian feminist eutopia on another planet visited by a spaceship with a mostly male crew and the problems that ensue.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {[Merril] [Harris] (b. 1942)} } @booklet {11608, title = {Dawn: Xenogenesis}, year = {1987}, note = {

Rpt. in her Lilith\’s Brood (New York: Warner Aspect, 2000), 1-248

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

Post-catastrophe novel in which the few remaining humans are rescued by aliens. The alien society is presented as eutopian. The aliens restore earth and slightly redesign humans, who deeply resent it. Humans seem apt to recreate the dystopia that had been our civilization. First volume of a trilogy. Dawn is being adapted for a TV series by Ava DuVerney (b. 1972). The other volumes trace the experiences of the humans who have been altered and their relations with both the Oankali and unaltered humans. See her Adulthood Rites. New York: Warner Books, 1988. Rpt. in her Lilith\’s Brood (New York: Warner Aspect, 2000), 249-517; and Imago. New York: Warner Books, 1989. Rpt. in her Lilith\’s Brood (New York: Warner Aspect, 2000), 519-746.

}, keywords = {African American author, Female author}, author = {Octavia [Estelle] Butler (1947-2006)} } @booklet {3807, title = {Dawn: Xenogenesis}, year = {1987}, note = {

Rpt. in her\ Lilith\&$\#$39;s Brood\ (New York: Warner Aspect, 2000), 1-248.

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

Post-catastrophe novel in which the few remaining humans are rescued by aliens. The alien society is presented as eutopian. The aliens restore earth and slightly redesign humans, who deeply resent it. Humans seem apt to recreate the dystopia that had been our civilization. First volume of a trilogy. Dawn is being adapted for a TV series by Ava DuVerney (b. 1972).\ The other volumes trace the experiences of the humans who have been altered and their relations with both the Oankali and unaltered humans. see her Adulthood Rites. New York: Warner Books. 1988. Rpt. in her Lilith\’s Brood (New York: Warner Aspect, 2000), 249-517; and Imago. New York: Warner Books. 1989. Rpt. in her Lilith\’s Brood (New York: Warner Aspect, 2000), 519-746.\ 

}, keywords = {African American author, Female author}, author = {Octavia [Estelle] Butler (1947-2006)} } @booklet {3843, title = {Death Arms}, year = {1987}, month = {1987}, publisher = {Morrigan Publications}, address = {Bath, Eng.}, abstract = {

Future dystopia of a Los Angeles abandoned to criminals.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {K[evin] W[ayne] Jeter (b. 1950)} } @booklet {3818, title = {A Death of Honor}, year = {1987}, month = {1987}, publisher = {Ballantine Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

A mystery set in an overpopulation dystopia that encourages people to have more children, which are then taken and raised by the state with payment to the parents.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Joe Clifford Faust (b. 1957)} } @booklet {3805, title = {Different Paths"}, howpublished = {Red Sun of Darkover}, year = {1987}, month = {1987}, pages = {187-208}, publisher = {DAW Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Free Amazon story.

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Penny Buchanan}, editor = {Marion Zimmer Bradley (1930-99) and The Friends of Darkover [pseud.]} } @booklet {3855, title = {The Dream Wall}, year = {1987}, month = {1987}, publisher = {Unwin Paperbacks}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Soviet controlled Britain as a dystopia.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author, Scottish author}, author = {Graham Dunston Martin (b. 1932)} } @booklet {3889, title = {Dreams of Leaving}, year = {1987}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: Atheneum, 1988.

}, month = {1987}, publisher = {Macmillan}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Authoritarian, isolated small town as a dystopia.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Rupert [William Farquhar] Thomson (b. 1955)} } @booklet {10077, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Day of No-Judgement{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction}, volume = {70.4 (419)}, year = {1986}, month = {April 1986}, pages = {109-36}, abstract = {

The first of three dystopian stories in which an unexplained \“effect\” unravels reality. Seen through the eyes of a professor who appears to be immune to whatever is causing the problem who is trying to understand the changes in things and people, including one of his female students who seems to both hate and love him, and with whom he falls in love. See 1987 and 1988 Wagar for the other stories.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {00024-984X }, author = {W[alter] Warren Wagar (1932-2004)} } @booklet {3767, title = {Deathwish World}, year = {1986}, month = {1986}, publisher = {Baen Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia. Story of the ultimate gamble where one becomes the target for hired killers in exchange for great wealth for life, albeit usually a short one. One who survives and, as a result, is targeted by the government, plots, successfully to overthrow it.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Mack [Dallas McCord] Reynolds (1917-83) and Dean Ing (1931-2020)} } @booklet {3777, title = {A Door Into Ocean}, year = {1986}, note = {

Collector\&$\#$39;s Edition illus. Michael Mariano and with an \"Introduction\" by Pamela Sargent (v-ix). Norwalk, CT: The Easton Press, 1992.

}, month = {1986}, publisher = {Arbor House}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Complex feminist and ecological eutopia on an ocean planet with no men that practices cooperation and nonviolence in conflict with a male dominated, authoritarian society that wants to take the knowledge that the women have by force and control the planet. Her eutopian Daughter of Elysium (1993) is also part of her Elysium Cycle as are her non-utopia \“The Children Star.\” Illus. Darryl Elliott in Analog 118. 4 \– 7/8 (April \– July/August 1998): 10-16, 18-59; 10-54; 58-97; 180-218, 220-222; rpt. without the illus. New York: Tor, 1998; and Brain Plague. New York: Tor, 2000.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Joan [Lyn] Slonczewski (b. 1956)} } @booklet {3729, title = {Double Nocturne}, year = {1986}, note = {

Rpt. New York: DAW, 1986

}, month = {1986}, publisher = {Bluejay}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Background of an authoritarian dystopia in which women suppress men.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Cynthia [Lindgren] Felice (b. 1942)} } @booklet {3770, title = {"Down and Out in the Year 2000"}, howpublished = {Isaac Asimov{\textquoteright}s Science Fiction Magazine}, volume = {10.4 }, year = {1986}, note = {

Rpt. in The Year\’s Best Science Fiction: Fourth Annual Collection. Ed. Gardner [Raymond] Dozois (New York: St. Martin\’s Press, 1987), 530-43 with an editor\’s note on 529; in Robinson\’s Remaking History (New York: Tor, 1991), 198-215; and in Cyberpunk: Stories of Hardware, Software, Wetware, Revolution and Evolution. Ed. Victoria Blake (Portland, OR: Underhand Press, 2013), 089-106.

}, month = {April 1986}, pages = {66-81}, abstract = {

Dystopia of being poor in a future failing United States.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Kim Stanley Robinson (b. 1952)} } @booklet {3740, title = {The Dream Catcher}, year = {1986}, month = {1986}, publisher = {Methuen}, address = {Toronto, ON, Canada}, abstract = {

Sequel to 1984 Hughes. Continuing struggle for freedom from a girl\&$\#$39;s perspective. Young adult.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author}, author = {Monica [Mary] Hughes (1925-2003)} } @booklet {3762, title = {Dreams of an Unseen Planet}, year = {1986}, month = {1986}, publisher = {Arbor House}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The novel is about the interactions between humans and planet Gaea, which is alive. The novel deals in particular with the responses of women. Canadian female author.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author}, author = {Teresa [Irene] Plowright (b. 1952)} } @booklet {3663, title = {Dad{\textquoteright}s Nuke}, year = {1985}, note = {

U.K. ed. London: Victor Gollancz. Rpt. London: Grafton, 1988.

}, month = {1985}, publisher = {Donald I. Fine}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Future armed U.S. suburbia.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Marc Laidlaw (b. 1960)} } @booklet {3687, title = {The Darkling Wind}, year = {1985}, note = {

Rpt. as\ The Darkling Wind: Chronicles of the High Inquest. New York: Bantam Books, 1985.

}, month = {1985}, publisher = {Tiger Eyes Press}, address = {Lemoyne, PA}, abstract = {

Last volume of a series. This volume sees the defeat of the dystopia. See also 1982, 1983, and 1984 Sucharitkul.

}, keywords = {Male author, Thai author, US author}, author = {Somtow [Papinian] Sucharitkul (b. 1952)} } @booklet {3599, title = {Dayworld}, year = {1985}, month = {1985}, publisher = {G. P. Putnam{\textquoteright}s Sons}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

First volume of series set in the conditions of 1971 Farmer, \“Sliced Crosswise Only-on-Tuesday World\” in which individuals only live one day a week. This novel focuses on those who are capable of defeating the system and living seven different lives in a week. In\ Dayworld Rebel.\  New York : Ace/Putnam, 1987 the protagonist of the first volume flees across the country with others who can live seven days a week. And in\ Dayworld Breakup. New York: Tor, 1990 it is revealed that the population has fallen and that the only reason for keeping people in suspended animation is so that those in power can stay in power.\ See also 2016 Farmer and Adams.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Philip Jos{\'e} Farmer (1918-2009)} } @booklet {3637, title = {Diasporah}, year = {1985}, month = {1985}, publisher = {Baen}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Future dystopia of an Arab-Israeli conflict in space.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {W[illiam] R[olla] Yates (b. 1950)} } @booklet {3611, title = {"A Different Kind of Courage"}, howpublished = {Free Amazons of Darkover: An Anthology}, year = {1985}, month = {1985}, pages = {172-89 with an introductory note on 171}, publisher = {DAW Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

A Free Amazon story about a healer.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Mercedes Lackey (b. 1950)}, editor = {Marion Zimmer Bradley (1930-99) and The Friends of Darkover [pseud.]} } @booklet {3619, title = {Dinner at Deviant{\textquoteright}s Palace}, year = {1985}, note = {

U.K. ed. London: Chatto \& Windus, 1986.

}, month = {1985}, publisher = {Ace Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia a generation after a nuclear war focusing on a religious cult.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Tim[othy Thomas] Powers (b. 1952)} } @booklet {3689, title = {"Dogfight"}, howpublished = {Omni}, volume = { 7.10}, year = {1985}, note = {

Rpt. in\ The Year\&$\#$39;s Best Science Fiction: Third Annual Collection.\ Ed. Gardner [Raymond] Dozois (New York: Bluejay Books, 1986), 51-68 with an editor\&$\#$39;s note on 50; and in William [Ford] Gibson,\ Burning Chrome\ (London: Victor Gollancz, 1986), 150-75. Rpt. (London: Grafton, 1988), 167-94. U.S. ed. (New York: Arbor House, 1987), 150-75; in\ The Sixth Omni Book of Science Fiction. Ed. Ellen [Sue] Datlow (New York: Zebra Books, 1989), 85-115; and in\ The Ultimate Cyberpunk. Ed. Pat Cadigan (New York: ibooks, 2002), 249-75.

}, month = {July 1985}, pages = {44-45, 95, 86-101, 105-06}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Society divided into the employed and unemployed. Drugs. Cyber-based control of individuals.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author, US author}, author = {Michael [J{\"u}rgen] Swanwick (b. 1950) and William [Ford] Gibson (b. 1948)} } @booklet {3602, title = {Dream Games}, year = {1985}, note = {

The section entitled \"Dreams Unwind\" (119-87) was originally published in Omni 7.8 (May 1985): 62-64, 66, 98, 100, 102, 105-06, 108, 112.

}, month = {1985}, publisher = {Ace Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Future pleasure oriented dystopia controlled by computers and a rebellion that overthrows the system.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Karl Hansen (b. 1950)} } @booklet {3650, title = {Duende Meadow}, year = {1985}, month = {1985}, publisher = {Bantam Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

After centuries underground following a war, some humans emerge to find that the Soviet Union had conquered the United States but that a spiritual awakening was occurring that might lead to a better society.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Paul [Harlin] Cook (b. 1950)} } @booklet {3507, title = {Daughters of a Coral Dawn}, year = {1984}, note = {

U.K. ed. London: Women\&$\#$39;s Press, 1993.\ 10th anniversary ed. [Tallahassee, FL]: Naiad Press, 1994.\ 

}, month = {1984}, publisher = {Naiad Press}, address = {[Tallahassee, FL]}, abstract = {

Lesbian eutopia on another planet, called Maternas, with a women-only society. See also 2002 and 2005 Forrest.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author, US author}, author = {Katherine [V.] Forrest (b. 1939)} } @booklet {3542, title = {The Dawnwatchers}, year = {1984}, note = {

2nd ed. Greenwich, CT: Triune Books, 1999. 342 pp.\ 

}, month = {1984}, pages = {365 pp.}, publisher = {Triune Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

A behaviorist, secular humanist dystopia rules in 2004, but the Dawnwatchers, a group of spiritually aware individuals, is beginning to provide an alternative. The author was influenced by Rudolf Steiner (1861-1925), the Austrian founder of Anthroposophy.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, isbn = {9780961360207 9780961360207 }, author = {Hiram Anthony Bingham (1935-2008)} } @booklet {3573, title = {Deep Breathing}, year = {1984}, month = {1984}, publisher = {New Women{\textquoteright}s Press}, address = {Auckland, New Zealand}, abstract = {

A novel set after a nuclear catastrophe that includes a number of eutopias. Survivors in Antarctica have created a society centered on survival, including eugenic controls. A woman from that society visits New Zealand and finds a number of surviving groups. Rainy Springs tribe, a community based loosely on the commune combined with traditional Maori practices, includes sexual freedom and the recognition that some of the mutations are positive. The Roadwomen travel around the country dealing in herbs and healing and include no males over puberty. Redemption is a Christian community dominated by one preacher. The Healing Centre at Rotorua is a community built around healing. Taramatatuhi is a Maori settlement practicing the old ways. She also encounters other individuals, groups, and settlements with both negative and positive experiences.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Female author}, author = {Lora Mountjoy (b. 1942)} } @booklet {3558, title = {"The Descent Into Silence"}, year = {1984}, month = {1984}, publisher = {G. R. Gilbert Papers}, address = {Macmillan Brown Library, University of Canterbury}, abstract = {

Dystopian novel set after a nuclear war. Set in the 1940s with New Zealand collapsing, reverting to savagery. Initially the government establishes an Office of Public Co-ordination (OPC) with powers equivalent to the government to ensure the continued functioning of New Zealand, but it fails and moves to a military base where military dictatorship is established in the surrounding area. The protagonist leaves the military area and ends up joining a group of religious tribes which is also presented in dystopian terms. The manuscript is accompanied by correspondence with Wren Green, the project leader and principal\ author of the New Zealand Planning Council report \"New Zealand After Nuclear War\". Green agreed to read the novel and reported back to Gilbert in 1987 that it was an accurate reflection of the issues New Zealanders would face. See the note at 1952 Gilbert.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {G[arvin] R[obert] Gilbert (b. 1917)} } @booklet {3562, title = {Devil on my Back}, year = {1984}, month = {1984}, publisher = {Julia MacRae Books}, address = {London}, abstract = {

A young adult post-catastrophe computer dystopia. The story focuses on the rigid class divisions that developed, based on the ability to interface with the computer and the struggle of some people to free themselves from the computer. See also 1986 Hughes.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author}, author = {Monica [Mary] Hughes (1925-2003)} } @booklet {3553, title = {Doomsday Plus Twelve}, year = {1984}, month = {1984}, publisher = {Charles Scribner{\textquoteright}s Sons}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult post-catastrophe novel in which teenagers living where a simple, peaceful life has been created cooperate to defeat a new group of militarists.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {James D[ouglas] Forman (b. 1932)} } @booklet {3512, title = {Dr. Adder}, year = {1984}, month = {1984}, publisher = {Bluejay Books}, address = {[New York]}, abstract = {

Dystopia of violence.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {K[evin] W[ayne] Jeter (b. 1950)} } @booklet {11117, title = {"Dear God"}, howpublished = {Aurora Speculative Feminism}, volume = {no. 23 (8.3) }, year = {1983}, month = {Winter 1983-84}, pages = {17-19}, abstract = {

Satire on and critique of religious homeschooling.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {0275-3715 }, url = {23-Vol-8-No-3.pdf (sf3.org) }, author = {Gayle N. Netzer} } @booklet {3479, title = {"The Diary of Ian Frank: A Ghost Story for Refuge Children"}, howpublished = {The Anglo Guide to Survival in Qu{\'e}bec}, year = {1983}, month = {1983}, pages = {77-82}, publisher = {Eden Press}, address = {Montr{\'e}al, QC, Canada}, abstract = {

Satire. An Anglo is arrested by the Language Police and re-educated. Most Anglos have tried to flee Qu{\'e}bec but have not been accepted elsewhere. Toronto is inaccessible. Anglo boat people sail permanently on Lake Champlain, having been turned back from the U.S.

}, keywords = {Canadian author}, author = {Jon Kalina (b. 1948)}, editor = {Josh Freed and Jon Kalina (b. 1948)} } @booklet {3448, title = {Doctor Wooreddy{\textquoteright}s Prescription for Enduring the End of the World}, year = {1983}, note = {

Rpt. with the author given as Mudrooroo. Melbourne, VIC, Australia: Hyland House, 1987.\ 

}, month = {1983}, publisher = {Hyland House}, address = {Melbourne, VIC, Australia}, abstract = {

Australian treatment of the Aborigines described as a dystopia. Includes the description of a racist commune designed to civilize the Aborigines.

}, keywords = {Australian author}, author = {Colin Johnson (b. 1938)} } @booklet {3487, title = {Duluth}, year = {1983}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Penguin Books, 1998.

}, month = {1983}, publisher = {Random House}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Humorous, rather surrealistic dystopia, which ends with an insect writing a new story of Duluth. None of the stories have any relation to the real Duluth, Minnesota, which is described on the back endpaper. Vidal\&$\#$39;s Duluth is a corrupt city with a deep division between the rich and the poor, which includes a large Spanish-speaking barrio.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Gore Vidal (1925-2012)} } @booklet {3401, title = {"Dogsworld"}, howpublished = {Pig Iron (Youngstown, OH)}, volume = {no. 10}, year = {1982}, month = {1982}, pages = {6-18}, abstract = {

The story is told from the point of a dog, with much of it satire aimed at human behavior. But then aliens arrive and ask it about humans, and, in response, they apparently improve the behavior of some of the people and provide a massive infusion of material goods, which initially produces a eutopia but then corrupts them.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Felix C[harles] Gotschalk [Jr.] (1929-2002)} } @booklet {3372, title = {Dreamrider}, year = {1982}, month = {1982}, publisher = {Ace Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Eutopia and dystopia. The dystopia is a future authoritarian United States in which those found violating any of the many rules have their minds wiped. The eutopia is a fantasy world where humans and animals like otters have a complex society in which some of the inhabitants find people on various timelines capable of using their mental powers for good. The novel includes quite a bit on life in both the eutopia and the dystopia.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Sandra [Louise] Miesel (b. 1941)} } @booklet {3358, title = {Dreams in a Wasteland}, year = {1982}, month = {1982}, publisher = {Dorrance \& Co}, address = {Ardmore, PA}, abstract = {

Future feudal world ruled by a man using science from the past.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Franklin Camuti} } @booklet {3378, title = {Duncan{\textquoteright}s Colony}, year = {1982}, month = {1982}, publisher = {Swallow Press/Ohio University Press}, address = {Athens, OH}, abstract = {

Dystopian future set in a small intentional community where four people come together in hopes of surviving an expected nuclear war.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Natalie L[evin] M[aines] Petesch (b.1924)} } @booklet {3322, title = {Daughters of Copper Woman}, year = {1981}, month = {1981}, publisher = {Press Gang Publisher}, address = {Vancouver, BC, Canada}, abstract = {

North American Indian matriarchal society presented as a eutopia.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author}, author = {[Barbara] Anne Cameron (b. 1938)} } @booklet {3297, title = {"The Devil We Know"}, howpublished = {Woman Space: Future and Fantasy Stories and Art by Women}, year = {1981}, month = {1981}, pages = {59-73}, publisher = {New Victoria Publishers}, address = {Lebanon, NH}, abstract = {

Flawed utopia. A women\&$\#$39;s society that struggles to sustain itself while rejecting the technology that would allow them to produce more. The story is driven by the arrival of a man farming with technology near them and the tensions this produces.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author}, author = {Eileen [Shirley Monk] Kernaghan (b. 1939)} } @booklet {10384, title = {The Doors of the Universe}, year = {1981}, note = {

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

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

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

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Sylvia [Louise] Engdahl (b. 1933)} } @booklet {3340, title = {A Dream of Kinship}, year = {1981}, note = {

U. S. New York Pocket Books, 1981.

}, month = {1981}, publisher = {Victor Gollancz}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Middle volume of a trilogy called The White Bird of Kinship. See also 1978 and 1982 Murry. In this volume, the secular power tries to destroy the religious heresy known as Kinship, but a new age is developing.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[John Middleton] [Murry] [Jr.] (1926-2002)} } @booklet {3180, title = {Daymare}, year = {1980}, month = {1980}, publisher = {Macmillan}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Britain collapses and produces a dystopia, which the novel shows in its effect on a village.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Sir] [Thomas Willes] [Chitty] [3rd Baronet] (1926-2014)} } @booklet {3252, title = {Delos}, year = {1980}, month = {1980}, publisher = {Andr{\'e} Deutsch}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Young adult novel about the attempt to establish a society on a planet after years traveling in space. Success is achieved after many problems and a good society is created.

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Veronica Robinson} } @booklet {3202, title = {The Demeter Flower}, year = {1980}, month = {1980}, publisher = {St. Martin{\textquoteright}s Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Feminist eutopia in which a successful women-only community has to face a generational conflict and a visit of a couple from a patriarchal community.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Rochelle Singer (b. 1939)} } @booklet {3239, title = {"Demeter{\textquoteright}s Palace"}, howpublished = {WARP: The Magazine of the [New Zealand] National Association for Science Fiction}, volume = {no. 19 }, year = {1980}, month = {November 1980}, pages = {11-12}, abstract = {

An authoritarian dystopia in which business has taken over government. There is a rigid separation of the rich and the poor and between men and women.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Female author}, author = {Debi [Deborah L. Hodgeson] Kean} } @booklet {3263, title = {"Docket, 2028: Supreme Council on Psycho-Ethics"}, howpublished = {Journal of Clinical Child Psychology }, volume = {9.2 }, year = {1980}, month = {Summer 1980}, pages = {117-18}, abstract = {

Briefly presents a series of cases to come before the Council on Psycho-Ethics that give a picture of the world in 2028, whether it is eutopian or dystopian is up to the reader. The cases include such issues as psychotropic drugs that are required to prevent mental illness, required licenses for parenthood (contraceptives are in the water supply), rights for clones, applications for euthanasia (117), surrogacy (117-18), and the sale of body parts (118).\ \ Half the world\’s population had requested exemption from the military on moral grounds (118).\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Gertrude J. Rubin Williams (1927-86)} } @booklet {3177, title = {The Dreamers}, year = {1980}, note = {

Rpt. as\ The Mind Master. New York: Timescape, 1981.

}, month = {1980}, publisher = {Simon \& Schuster}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Flawed utopia which leaves people no challenges.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {James E[dwin] Gunn (1923-2020)} } @booklet {3229, title = {Dustland}, year = {1980}, month = {1980}, publisher = {Greenwillow Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The second volume of the Justice Cycle. The first volume, Justice and Her Brothers. New York: Greenwillow Books, 1978, is not utopian but introduces the characters, who have exceptional powers. In this volume, they travel to a barren future characterized by the title. See also 1981 Hamilton.

}, keywords = {African American author, Female author}, author = {Virginia [Esther] Hamilton (1934-2002)} } @booklet {3161, title = {Dark Wing}, year = {1979}, month = {1979}, publisher = {Atheneum}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Young adult dystopia in which medical care is illegal and the ill are put to death. Corporate power.

}, keywords = {Female author, Male author, US author}, author = {Carl West and Katherine [Anne] MacLean (1925-2019)} } @booklet {3068, title = {Darkness and Saint Louis Bearheart}, year = {1978}, note = {

Rpt. as Bearheart: The Heirship Chronicles. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1990. An excerpt was published in Walking the Clouds: An Anthology of Indigenous Science Fiction. Ed. Grace Dillon (Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2012), 116-20 with an editor\’s note on 116-17, 247.\ 

}, month = {1978}, publisher = {The Truck Press}, address = {St. Paul, MN}, abstract = {

Future U.S. with a collapsed economy and the rebirth of a Native American Indian culture. See also 1991 and 2016 Vizenor.

}, keywords = {Male author, Native American author}, author = {Gerald [Robert] Vizenor (b. 1934)} } @booklet {3067, title = {Darkness and Scattered Light: Four Talks on the Future}, year = {1978}, note = {

Parts of the first two chapters were originally published as \"Beyond Civilization: Auguries of Planetization.\"\ Quest/77\ 1.2 (May/June 1977):69-72, 74, 92-93; and \"Auguries of Planetization: Braving a New World.\"\ Quest/77\ 1.3 (July/August 1977): 55-60, 94-95.\ 

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

Future speculation by the founder of the Lindisfarne Community, in Southampton, NY, which was established in 1973. Although much of the text uses the language of the New Age and is vague about the eutopia to be produced, he suggests what he calls \"The Metaindustrial Village\" that will involve both agricultural and industrial work and be connected to the world through computer technology.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {William Irwin Thompson (b. 1938)} } @booklet {2996, title = {Death in Florence}, year = {1978}, note = {

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

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

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

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {George Alec Effinger (1947-2002)} } @booklet {3063, title = {"The Differences Are Cause For Joy. View from the Year Twenty-two Hundred. Essay in Feminist Theory"}, howpublished = {Mythologies}, volume = {no. 14}, year = {1978}, month = {June 1978}, pages = {22-26}, abstract = {

Non-fiction feminist eutopia with gender equality, a population in balance, no more violence or war, a balanced ecology, agism and racism gone, and there is no religion.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Jessica Amanda Salmonson (b. 1950)} } @booklet {3065, title = {Diggers: The Story of a Commune}, year = {1978}, month = {1978}, publisher = {Blackie}, address = {Glasgow, Scot.}, abstract = {

Play about 1652 Winstanley and the Diggers.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {David Starsmeare} } @booklet {3042, title = {Dolphins and Killerwhales}, year = {1978}, month = {1978}, publisher = {Mother Sea Publications}, address = {Wellington, New Zealand}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia and the struggle against it. Sequel to 1976 and 1977 Fisher.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {Bert Fisher (b. 1934)} } @booklet {6862, title = {Don{\textquoteright}t Pay Taxes}, year = {1978}, note = {

2nd ed. Auckland, New Zealand: Social Analysis Ltd., 1979.

}, month = {[1978]}, publisher = {Social Analysis Ltd}, address = {Auckland, New Zealand}, abstract = {

Non-fiction eutopia describing the Suburban Work Alternative, a work-based community which is suburban with separate housing. Cottage industries. The author expects about 10\% of the population to live in them. The title suggests one thing that everyone can do to help bring about change. The second edition is roughly twice as long with Part Two \"Economic Restructuring\" (88-136) added, which, except for a few lines reiterating what was said in the first part, is a critique of current government policy.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {Wayne Innes (b. 1943)} } @booklet {2973, title = {"The Dark Tower"}, howpublished = {The Dark Tower and Other Stories}, year = {1977}, month = {1977}, pages = {15-91}, publisher = {Collins}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia of an evil society. Posthumously published incomplete story in which Ransom of the space trilogy appears. See 1938, 1943, and 1945 Lewis.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Male author, Northern Ireland author}, author = {C[live] S[taples] Lewis (1898-1963)}, editor = {Walter Hooper} } @booklet {2936, title = {"Design for the City of Women"}, howpublished = {Heresies}, volume = {no. 3 }, year = {1977}, month = {Fall 1977}, pages = {97-99}, abstract = {

Short sketch of a primitive lesbian eutopia with the rituals connected to their bodies and life stages.

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Lapidus, Jacqueline} } @booklet {2966, title = {The Double E}, year = {1977}, month = {1977}, publisher = {Anchor Books}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Eutopia intended to revisited some of the issues raised in 1947 Goodman and Goodman. Double E refers to environment and economy. Includes both consideration of varied plans for ideal cities and proposals for ideal built environments. Some of the material is based on 1973 Goodman.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Percival Goodman (1904-89)} } @booklet {2942, title = {A Dream of Wessex}, year = {1977}, note = {

U.S. ed. as\ The Perfect Lover.\ New York: Charles Scribner\&$\#$39;s Sons, 1977.

}, month = {1977}, publisher = {Faber and Faber}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The novel presents a future (2135-37) after a series of earthquakes has destroyed much of Britain, and it is a Soviet state, generally presented neutrally. Wessex is an island off the coast that is a holiday resort where many of the rules of the mainland do not apply and, as a result, it attracts many tourists from the Islamic North America. The focus of the novel is on two individuals projected to the future Wessex from the mid-1980s who choose to stay there.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Christopher [McKenzie] Priest (1943-2024)} } @booklet {2937, title = {Drinking Sapphire Wine}, year = {1977}, note = {

Rpt. in her\ Biting the Sun\ (New York: Bantam Books, 1999), 169-370.

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

A group leave the domed cities described in 1976 Lee and establish a community in the desert. Initially attacked by the cities, they are eventually left alone and begin the process of living a life without robots, body and sex changes, and with the possibility of permanent death.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Tanith Lee (1947-2015)} } @booklet {2972, title = {Dwarf{\textquoteright}s Legacy}, year = {1977}, month = {1977}, publisher = {Ashley Books}, address = {Port Washington, NY}, abstract = {

Post-catastrophe dystopia bent on forgetting the past.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Tolly [Apostolos P.] Kizilos} } @booklet {2875, title = {Day After Tomorrow}, year = {1976}, note = {

A shorter version was published earlier as \"Status Quo.\"\ Analog Science Fact--Fiction 67.6\ (August 1961): 4-64.

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

Conformist corporate dystopia and the revolt against it, which fails.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Mack [Dallas McCord] Reynolds (1917-83)} } @booklet {2851, title = {"The Day of the Big Test"}, howpublished = {Future Power: A Science Fiction Anthology}, year = {1976}, month = {1976}, pages = {98-117 with an editors{\textquoteright} note 97-98}, publisher = {Random House}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Testing of children in their seventh year determines family status, income, leisure, etc. Presented generally positively.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Felix C[harles] Gotschalk [Jr.] (1929-2002)}, editor = {Jack [Mayo] Dann (b. 1945) and Gardner R[aymond] Dozois (1947-2018)} } @booklet {2896, title = {"Decibels."}, howpublished = {Prompt Three: Five short modern plays}, year = {1976}, month = {1976}, pages = {47-63}, publisher = {Hutchinson of London}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Overpopulation dystopia where noise is a constant. To have a child, someone must die with voluntary euthanasia encouraged, and there are regulations on how much space a person can occupy.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {John [Barry] Hale (b. 1926)}, editor = {Alan Durband} } @booklet {2845, title = {Deus Irae}, year = {1976}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Dell, 1980; New York: DAW Books, 1983; and New York: Vintage Books, 2003.

}, month = {1976}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Post-catastrophe religious dystopia. Deus Irae is God of Wrath and is the head of a religion sponsored by the Atomic Energy Commission.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Philip K[indred] Dick (1928-82) and Roger [Joseph] Zelazny (1937-95)} } @booklet {2863, title = {"The Diary of the Rose"}, howpublished = {Future Power: A Science Fiction Anthology}, year = {1976}, note = {

Rpt. in her\ The Compass Rose: Short Stories\ (New York: Harper \& Row, 1982), 99-124; and in her\ The Real and the Unreal. Selected Stories of Ursula K. Le Guin.\ Volume One Where on Earth\ (Easthampton, MA: Small Beer Press, 2012), 83-106; and in the one volume edition The Real and the Unreal: The Selected Short Stories of Ursula K. Le Guin (New York: Saga Press, 2016), 99-125.

}, month = {1976}, pages = {4-31 with an editors{\textquoteright} note (2-3)}, publisher = {Random House}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia in which psychiatry is used as a political tool with electroshock for dissent. The story focuses on a young psychiatrist and her growing awareness of the way the system works.\ Liberalism is considered a political psychosis needing to be treated by electroshock. Intellectualism produces negative thinking that leads to psychosis.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Ursula K[roeber] Le Guin (1929-2018)}, editor = {Jack [Mayo] Dann (b. 1945) and Gardner R[aymond] Dozois (1947-2018)} } @booklet {2892, title = {Divers of Arakam}, year = {1976}, month = {1976}, publisher = {[Bert Fisher]}, address = {[Wellington, New Zealand]}, abstract = {

Dystopia of an imaginary country that is obviously New Zealand with an authoritarian government. See also 1977 and 1978 Fisher.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {Bert Fisher (b. 1934)} } @booklet {2862, title = {Don{\textquoteright}t Bite the Sun}, year = {1976}, note = {

Rpt. Mercer Island, WA: Starmont House, 1987; and in her\ Biting the Sun\ (New York: Bantam Books, 1999), 1-167.

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

A novel about being a teenager in a future world designed to be eutopian with robots doing the work in domed cities and where you can die and be brought back and change your body type and your sex at will. The teenagers see the eutopia as deeply flawed. See also 1977 Lee.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Tanith Lee (1947-2015)} } @booklet {2847, title = {Double Time}, year = {1976}, month = {1976}, publisher = {Robert Hale}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Overpopulation and conflict over agricultural property.

}, keywords = {Male author, Scottish author}, author = {Michael [Aiken] Elder (1931-2004)} } @booklet {2764, title = {"The Day They Cut Off the Power"}, howpublished = {New Writings in SF}, volume = { (27)}, year = {1975}, month = {1975}, pages = {41-51}, publisher = {Sidgwick \& Jackson}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Students of every college of the United States of Europe plan a revolt, but all the colleges are closed and turned over to the local governments to use as housing. All education will be by television. Extreme pollution. Neo-Luddites destroying cars and planes.

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Vera Johnson}, editor = {[Henry] Kenneth Bulmer (1921-2005)} } @booklet {2811, title = {"A Death in Coventry"}, howpublished = {Dystopian Visions}, year = {1975}, month = {1975}, pages = {76-95}, publisher = {Prentice-Hall}, address = {Englewood Cliffs, NJ}, abstract = {

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

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Joseph [Lee] Green (b. 1931)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007)} } @booklet {2809, title = {Dhalgren}, year = {1975}, note = {

Rev. Hanover, NH: Wesleyan University Press, 1996.

}, month = {1975}, publisher = {Bantam Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Complex dystopia set in a city called Bellona in what appears to be a post-catastrophe America where reality is constantly shifting. Much violence, including sexual violence. Includes a commune in a park.

}, keywords = {African American author, Male author}, author = {Samuel R[ay] Delany (b. 1942)} } @booklet {2743, title = {Doomsday Clock}, year = {1975}, month = {1975}, publisher = {Naylor Co}, address = {San Antonio, TX}, abstract = {

A novel about the build-up to nuclear war and the aftermath of the war. A small group of survivors is shown in an almost eutopian underground shelter. Conflicts develop among them, and they work to return to the surface.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Elizabeth S. Benoist (1901-99)} } @booklet {2779, title = {"Drumble"}, howpublished = {The New Improved Sun: An Anthology of Utopian S-F}, year = {1975}, month = {1975}, pages = {98-107 with an editor{\textquoteright}s note on 98}, publisher = {Harper \& Row}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Flawed utopia in which an English village is encapsulated and kept forever unchanged as a tourist attraction. Everyone inside, who live forever, is provided with all material needs.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Charles Dodd] [Naylor] (1941-2005)}, editor = {Thomas M[ichael] Disch (1940-2008)} } @booklet {2751, title = {"The Dybbuk Dolls"}, howpublished = {New Dimensions Number 5}, year = {1975}, note = {

Rpt. in\ Light Years and Dark; Science Fiction and Fantasy Of and For Our Time. Ed. Michael Bishop (New York: Berkley Books, 1984), 78-92.

}, month = {1975}, pages = {119-36}, publisher = {Harper \& Row}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia of poverty and anti-Semitism. Most groups live in high-rise ghettos. The dybbuk dolls are alien artifacts that reinforce a person\&$\#$39;s worst characteristics.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Jack [Mayo] Dann (b. 1945)}, editor = {Robert Silverberg (b. 1935)} } @booklet {2690, title = {"The Day Before the Revolution"}, howpublished = {Galaxy Science Fiction}, volume = { 35.8 }, year = {1974}, note = {

Rpt. in her The Wind\’s Twelve Quarters: Short Stories (New York: Harper \& Row, 1975), 232-46; in Nebula Award Stories Ten. Ed. James Gunn (New York: Harper \& Row, 1975), 129-45; in More Women of Wonder: Science Fiction Novelettes By Women About Women. Ed. Pamela Sargent (New York: Vintage, 1976), 279-301; in The Best of the Nebulas (New York: Tor/Tom Doherty Associates, 1989), 391-401, with an \“Author\’s Foreword\” on 390; in Women of Wonder: The Classic Years. Science Fiction by Women from the 1940s to the 1970s. Ed. Pamela Sargent (San Diego, CA: Harcourt Brace, 1995), 344-57; in The Utopia Reader. Ed. Gregory Claeys and Lyman Tower Sargent (New York: New York University Press, 1999), 407-22; 2nd ed. (New York: New York University Press, 2017), 483-96; 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), 975-89 with a \“Note on the Text\” (1084); and in The Future is Female! More Classic Science Fiction by Women Volume 2: The 1970s. Ed. Lisa Yaszek (New York: Library of America, 2023), 218-237, with a biographical note on 454-456 and notes on the text on 485-486.\ 

}, month = {August 1974)}, pages = {17-30}, abstract = {

The story of Odo, theorist of the revolution in 1974 Le Guin, The Dispossessed, as an old woman just before the revolution. The Galaxy version is dedicated \“in memoriam Paul Goodman 1911-1972\”. Although the story takes place before the novel, it was written after it. See the note on the story in The Wind\’s Twelve Quarters, where she also says, \“This story is about one of the ones who walked away from Omelas\” [1973 Le Guin] (232).

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {0016-4003 }, author = {Ursula K[roeber] Le Guin (1929-2018)} } @booklet {2702, title = {Depression or Bust}, year = {1974}, month = {1974}, publisher = {Ace Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Satire on economic cycles. One man decides he can\&$\#$39;t afford the new freezer he bought and sends it back; the seller of the freezer cancels the new car he had ordered; the car dealer cancels the house he was to have built; and so forth. The economic downswing becomes a full-blown depression until the government gives money to the first man to start buying and the cycle is reversed.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Mack [Dallas McCord] Reynolds (1917-83)} } @booklet {2691, title = {The Dispossessed: An Ambiguous Utopia}, year = {1974}, note = {

Rpt. without the subtitle New York: Avon, 1975; and with the subtitle as the Collector\&$\#$39;s Edition. Norwalk, CT: The Easton Press, 1986 illus. Pat Morrissey and with an \"Introduction\" (unpaged) by Frederik [George] Pohl, [Jr.]; New York: Harper, 1991. U.K. ed. without the subtitle and with a brief introduction, \"Welcome (back) to Anarres\" by Richard Morgan (ix-xii). London: Gollancz, 2006; and, with the subtitle, 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), 613-919 with a \“Note on the Text\” (1083), and \“Notes\” (1091-92).\ \ An extract was published as \“News from Anarres.\” Social Revolution: Paper of the Social Revolution Group (Aberdeen, Scot.), no. 4 ([1977]): 12.\ 

}, month = {1974}, publisher = {Harper \& Row}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Detailed anarchist eutopia with problems.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Ursula K[roeber] Le Guin (1929-2018)} } @booklet {2653, title = {The Death of China, Europe and . . . (The World Ecological Catastrophe). A Very Amusing Satire. A Scientific Tragi-Comedy in 3 Acts}, year = {1973}, month = {1973}, publisher = {Author}, address = {Oporto, Portugal}, abstract = {

The first act is set in Rome in 1990, the second on the moon, and the third on a eutopian island called the Model Country off Sardinia.

}, keywords = {Male author, Portuguese author}, author = {Apollo Silva (b. 1920)} } @booklet {2593, title = {"Desirable Lakeside Residence"}, howpublished = {Saving Worlds: A Collection of Original Science Fiction Stories}, year = {1973}, note = {

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

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

Ecological dystopia.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Andr{\'e} Norton (1912-2005)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007) and Virginia Kidd (1921-2003)} } @booklet {2638, title = {"The Disneyland Man"}, howpublished = {Edge }, volume = {[1].5/6 }, year = {1973}, month = {Autumn 1973}, pages = {42-44}, abstract = {

Dystopia--poverty, conflict. Unfit humans used for food.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Gustav Hasford (1947-93)} } @booklet {2616, title = {"Don{\textquoteright}t Hold Your Breath"}, howpublished = {Saving Worlds: A Collection of Original Science Fiction Stories}, year = {1973}, note = {

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

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

Ecological dystopia.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author, US author}, author = {A[lfred] E[lton] van Vogt (1912-2000)}, editor = {Roger [Paul] Elwood (1943-2007) and Virginia Kidd (1921-2003)} } @booklet {2613, title = {The Doomsday Gene}, year = {1973}, month = {1973}, publisher = {Weybright \& Talley}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

A gene for short, intense life to help control population growth creates a dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Boyd Bradfield] [Upchurch] (1919-2013)} } @booklet {2403, title = {"Daughter"}, howpublished = {The Many Worlds of Science Fiction}, year = {1971}, month = {1971}, pages = {128-52}, publisher = {E.P. Dutton}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Coming of age story with a background of a society that carefully chooses the occupations of its citizens based on their aptitudes.

}, keywords = {Female author, Irish author, US author}, author = {Anne [Inez] McCaffrey (1926-2011)}, editor = {Ben[jamin William] Bova (1932-2020)} } @booklet {2419, title = {"The Discontent Contingency"}, howpublished = {New Writings in S-F }, volume = {19}, year = {1971}, month = {1971}, pages = {77-116}, publisher = {Dennis Dobson}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Benevolent dictatorship which uses a happiness generator to control the people. This results in there being no creativity.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Rex Thomas] [Vinson] (1935-2000)}, editor = {[Edward] John Carnell (1912-72)} } @booklet {2310, title = {Dance the Eagle to Sleep}, year = {1970}, note = {

Rpt. Greenwich, CT: Fawcett, 1971; and Oakland, CA: PM Press, 2012, with an \"Introduction to the New Edition\" by the author (vii-ix).

}, month = {1970}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Dystopia which has a required \"19th Year of Service\" seen through the eyes of various young people who are suppressed by their parents, their schools, and the social order in which they live. This part of the novel reads like a realistic novel which then shifts to the youth rebellion and the rest of the novel focuses on the rebellion, the people involved in it, their relations and conflicts, and the organizations they establish including urban and rural communities. See also 1972, 1976, 1980, and 1991 Piercy.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Marge Piercy (b. 1936)} } @booklet {10441, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Dear Aunt Annie{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Fantastic}, volume = {19-4}, year = {1970}, note = {

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

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

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

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Gordon [Stewart] Eklund (b. 1945)} } @booklet {2344, title = {The Dialectic of Sex: The Case for Feminist Revolution}, year = {1970}, note = {

U.K. ed. London: Jonathan Cape, 1971. Rev. ed. New York: Bantam Books, 1971.

}, month = {1970}, publisher = {William Morrow}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

One of the more radical feminist texts of the time, which ends with a chapter entitled \"The Ultimate Revolution: Demands and Speculations\" (183-224) [called \"Conclusion: The Ultimate Revolution\" (232-74) in the U.K. ed.]; and, in the rev. ed. a section called \"Alternatives\" (226-42) outlining a future feminist eutopia. The book ends with a chart outlining the history of the position of women from the beginnings into a far future \"cosmic consciousness\".

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Female author, US author}, author = {Shulamith Firestone (1945-2012)} } @booklet {2353, title = {"The Doomsday Show. A Cabaret"}, howpublished = {New English Dramatists}, volume = {14}, year = {1970}, month = {1970}, pages = {233-52}, publisher = {Penguin}, address = {Harmondsworth, Eng.}, abstract = {

Brief dystopian play set in an authoritarian society that evolved in caves among the few survivors of a nuclear war.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {George Macbeth and J. S. Bingham} } @booklet {2341, title = {Dragon Feast}, year = {1970}, month = {1970}, publisher = {Belmont Books}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

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

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {John Elliott} } @booklet {2253, title = {"Dancing Gerontius"}, howpublished = {Vision of Tomorrow (Sydney, NSW, Australia) }, volume = {1.2 }, year = {1969}, note = {

Rpt. in\ The Second Pacific Book of Australian SF. Ed. John [Martin] Baxter (Sydney, NSW, Australia: Pacific Books, 1972), 118-133; and in\ The Best Australian Science Fiction Writing: A Fifty Year Collection. Ed. Rob Gerrand (Melbourne, VIC, Australia: Black Inc., 2004), 178-191.\ 

}, month = {December 1969}, pages = {48-54}, abstract = {

The story is set in an old age home, one of many Clinics throughout the country in which people are kept weak except for Year Day, the one day a year where they are revived by drugs and mechanical and physical therapy and made up and dressed in colorful clothes so that they can participate in a Carnival-like today with lots of drink, food, and sex. Most of them die and will shortly be replaced by a new group. The few who survive will spend the next year cared for in the Clinic until the next Year Day until they finally die at one.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Lee [John] Harding (1937-2023)} } @booklet {2225, title = {The Day of the Drones}, year = {1969}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Bantam Books, 1970.

}, month = {1969}, publisher = {W.W. Norton}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

In a future post-catastrophe Africa,\ Blacks rule and believe that their civilization is the only one left. Whites are drones. An expedition led by a young African woman is allowed to search for others and finds both that others do exist and that there are the remains of Western civilization, both of which are likely effect to African civilization.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {A[lice] M[artha] Lightner (1904-1988)} } @booklet {2219, title = {The Day of the Women}, year = {1969}, note = {

Rpt. London: New English Library, 1970.

}, month = {1969}, publisher = {Leslie Frewin}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia in which women dominate.

}, keywords = {Female author, UK author}, author = {[June] Pamela Kettle (b. 1934)} } @booklet {2250, title = {The Days After}, year = {1969}, publisher = {Vantage Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Post-catastrophe authoritarian dystopia.\ 

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {T[homas] E[dwin] Dorman (b. 1914)} } @booklet {2257, title = {Drag Hunt}, year = {1969}, month = {1969}, publisher = {Michael Joseph}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Mixed future. General tolerance and economic prosperity, but there is a human hunt replacing fox hunting. Violence is encouraged in political protests. Young Purity Party.

}, keywords = {Male author, UK author}, author = {James Broom Lynne} } @booklet {2154, title = {The Day of the Coastwatch}, year = {1968}, month = {1968}, publisher = {Harrap}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia of the New Socialist State. Leaving is illegal, thus the coastwatch.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Philip McCutchan (1920-96)} } @booklet {2170, title = {Day of the Republic}, year = {1968}, month = {1968}, publisher = {Peter Davies}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia depicting Australia on the day it became a republic under what is essentially a fascist dictatorship. The novel is presented from the point of view of those preparing the last issue of the last independent newspaper as all opposition is being suppressed. Ends with nuclear war.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Geoff[rey] Taylor (b. 1920)} } @booklet {2140, title = {"Dead to the World"}, howpublished = {New Writings in S-F }, volume = {11}, year = {1968}, note = {

Rpt. in\ New Writings in S-F 8. Ed. [Edward] John Carnell (New York: Bantam Books, 1971), 125-42; and in his\ North by 2000: A Collection of Canadian Science Fiction\ (Toronto, ON, Canada: Peter Martin Associates, 1975), 3-15.

}, month = {1968}, pages = {141-56}, publisher = {Dennis Dobson}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopian satire. Computer and robot controlled world and the effect on a man whose identity card is accidentally marked deceased.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {H[enry] A. Hargreaves (b. 1928)}, editor = {[Edward] John Carnell (1912-72)} } @booklet {2162, title = {"The Divided House"}, howpublished = {New Writings in S-F }, volume = {13}, year = {1968}, month = {1968}, pages = {11-57}, publisher = {Dennis Dobson}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia. A world of dreamers versus doers. The doers are in power and logic controls. The dreamers are serfs.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[John Thomas] [Phillifent] (1916-76)}, editor = {[Edward] John Carnell (1912-72)} } @booklet {2184, title = {Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep}, year = {1968}, note = {

Rpt. in Four Novels of the 1960s. [Ed. Jonathan [Allen] Lethem] (New York: Library of America, 2007), 431-608. \“Notes\” 828-29. Rpt. as Blade Runner (Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep). New York: Ballantine Books, 1982. During his lifetime Dick refused to allow the title change. Graphic Novel version as Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? 6 vols. Art Tony Parker, Colors Blond, Letters Richard Starkings of Comicraft, Cover Bill Sienkiewicz, Ed. Ian Brill [vol. 1 only] and Bryce Carlson, Design Stephanie Gonzaga. Los Angeles, CA: Boom Studios, 2009-11.

}, month = {1968}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City}, abstract = {

Post-catastrophe dystopia.\  Basis of the 1982 film Blade Runner directed by Ridley Scott (b. 1937) with a screenplay by Hampton Fancher (b. 1938) and David Peoples (b. 1940). The screenplay by Fancher was published Hollywood: Script City, 1981. Unrelated to 1974 Nourse. See 1995 Jeter.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Philip K[indred] Dick (1928-82)} } @booklet {2145, title = {The Dome}, year = {1968}, month = {1968}, publisher = {Faber \& Faber}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a machine that can project feelings into the brain.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {[Thomas Frederick] Gonnar Jones} } @booklet {2126, title = {The Doomsday Men}, year = {1968}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Curtis Books/Modern Literary Editions, nd. U.K. ed. London: Robert Hale, 1968. Shorter version in\ If\ 15.11 (November 1965): 102-59

}, month = {1968}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Dystopia in a future U.S. where fear of nuclear war has led to the collapse of most cities and people live spread across the landscape served by machines. One city remains as a center of pleasure, but seemingly mindless violence erupts.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Henry] Kenneth Bulmer (1921-2005)} } @booklet {2074, title = {"The Day Before Forever"}, howpublished = {The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction }, volume = {33.1 }, year = {1967}, note = {

Rpt. in his\ The Day Before Forever and Thunderhead\ (Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1968), 7-112; and in his\ Future Imperfect. Ed. Eric Flint (New York: Baen, 2003), 283-370.

}, month = {July 1967}, pages = {4-58}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia focusing on transplants.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {00024-984X }, author = {[John] Keith Laumer (1925-93)} } @booklet {2095, title = {Death Is a Dream}, year = {1967}, month = {1967}, publisher = {Rupert Hart-Davis}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia. A future world with the knowledge of previous reincarnations. Extreme laissez-faire capitalism. Selfishness.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {E[dwin] C[harles] Tubb (1919-2010)} } @booklet {2017, title = {"Danger: Religion!"}, howpublished = {The Saliva Tree and Other Strange Growths}, year = {1966}, note = {

Rpt. (London: Sphere, 1968), 89-131; and in Mervyn Peake, J[ames] G[raham] Ballard and Brian W[ilson] Aldiss. Inner Landscape (London: Allison \& Busby, 1969), 101-51. Earlier version as \“Matrix.\” Science Fantasy 19.55 ([October] 1962): 2-39.\ 

}, month = {1966}, pages = {83-121}, publisher = {Faber \& Faber}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Parallel history presenting a religious dystopia.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Brian W[ilson] Aldiss (1925-2017)} } @booklet {9653, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Day of Absence: A Satirical Fantasy{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Happy Ending and Day of Absence. Two Plays }, year = {1966}, month = {1966}, pages = {27-58}, publisher = {Dramatists Play Service}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The play takes place in one typical dystopian small Southern town in which all the Negroes disappear for one day and shows how completely the whites are dependent on them.\ The play was first performed November 15, 1965, at the St. Mark\’s Playhouse, New York.

}, keywords = {African American author, Male author}, author = {Douglas Turner Ward (b. 1939)} } @booklet {9409, title = {The Devil and Democracy{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction }, volume = {31.5 (186) }, year = {1966}, month = {November 1955}, pages = {115-28}, abstract = {

Satire on the unionization of Hell.\ 

}, keywords = {Irish author, Male author}, author = {Brian [Brendon Talbot] Cleeve (1921-2003)} } @booklet {1960, title = {Davy}, year = {1964}, note = {

UK ed. London: Dennis Dobson, 1966. Expanded from \"The Golden Horn.\"\ The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction 22.2\ (129) (February 1962): 98-129; and \"A War of No Consequence.\" 22.3 (130) (March 1962): 51-73.

}, month = {1964}, publisher = {St. Martin{\textquoteright}s Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Future barbarianism but with elements of a dystopia dominated by religion.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Edgar Pangborn (1909-76)} } @booklet {1970, title = {The Day the Machines Stopped}, year = {1964}, month = {1964}, publisher = {Monarch Books}, address = {Derby, CT}, abstract = {

All electrical power disrupted. This produces authoritarian dystopias plus an attempt to rebuild civilization.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Harry C.] [Crosby] [Jr.] (1925-2009)} } @booklet {1953, title = {Deathworld 2}, year = {1964}, note = {

Rpt. in\ The Deathworld Trilogy\ (Garden City, NY: Nelson Doubleday, 1974), 149-283. UK ed. as\ The Ethical Engineer. London: Victor Gollancz, 1964. Originally published in a shorter version as \"The Ethical Engineer.\"\ Analog Science Fiction Science Fact\ 71.5 - 6 (July - August 1963): 17-40; 53-80. Other volumes of the trilogy are\ Deathworld. New York: Bantam Books, 1960; originally published in\ Astounding Science Fiction\ 64.5 - 65.1 (January - March 1960): 10-56, 104-41; 62-82, 129-54 [the journal became\ Astounding/Analog Science Fact \& Fiction\ with the February 1960 issue]; and\ Deathworld 3. New York: Dell, 1968. U.K. ed. London: Faber and Faber, 1969; originally published as \"The Horse Barbarians.\"\ Analog Science Fiction--Science Fact\ 80.6 - 81.2 (February - April 1968): 6-69; 86-137; 100-42. There are five additional\ Deathworld\ volumes that were written for the Russian market.

}, month = {1964}, publisher = {Bantam}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia of violence.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Harry [Max] Harrison (1925-2012)} } @booklet {6992, title = {"The Dark Mind"}, howpublished = {New Worlds Science Fiction}, volume = { 46.136 - 38}, year = {1963}, note = {

Repub. London: Transworld, 1965. U.S. ed. as Transfinite Man. New York: Berkley, 1964.

}, month = {November 1963 - January 1964}, pages = {5-51, 72-122, 73-120.}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia of corporate control and corrupt government as the background.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Derek Ivor] Colin Kapp (1928-2007)} } @booklet {1930, title = {The Day Natal Took Off. A Satire}, year = {1963}, note = {

Rpt. London: Pall Mall Press, 1963.

}, month = {1963}, publisher = {Insight Publications}, address = {Cape Town, South Africa}, abstract = {

Satire on contemporary South African politics and race relations.

}, keywords = {Male author, South African author}, author = {Anthony [Ronald St. Martin] Delius (1916-89)} } @booklet {1916, title = {"Day of Truce"}, howpublished = {Galaxy Magazine }, volume = {21.3 }, year = {1963}, note = {

Rpt. in\ Nightmare Age. Ed. Frederik [George] Pohl, [Jr.] (New York: Ballantine Books, 1979), 111-34;\ and in Grotto of the Dancing Bear and Other Stories. The Complete Short Fiction of Clifford D. Simak, Volume Four. New York: Open Road Integrated Media, 2016.\ 

}, month = {February 1963}, pages = {145-65}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Suburbs have become a war of strongholds versus the punks.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {0016-4003 }, author = {Clifford D[onald] Simak (1904-88)} } @booklet {1898, title = {The Dreaming Earth}, year = {1963}, note = {

U.K. ed. as\ The Dreaming Earth. Science Fiction. London: Sidgwick \& Jackson, 1972.

Originally serialized as \“Put Down the Earth.\” New Worlds Science Fiction, nos. 107 -109 (June - August 1961): 4-47,\ 81-122, 77-127.

}, month = {1963}, publisher = {Pyramid}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Overpopulation dystopia and the problems that arise from a drug induced euphoria that leads people to completely drop out. But the dropouts are actually dropping in to new, empty worlds presented as simple eutopias.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {John [Kilian Houston] Brunner (1934-95)} } @booklet {10960, title = {"The Deer Park"}, howpublished = {The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction}, volume = {22.1 (128) }, year = {1962}, note = {

Rpt. in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction (UK) 3.6 (May 1962): 38-;\ and in Rediscovery: Science Fiction by Women (1958-1963). Ed. A. J. Howells, Janice Marcus, and Erica Frank (Visa, CA: Journey Press, 2019), 142-54, with an introduction by Claire Weaver on 142-43.\ 

}, month = {January 1962}, pages = {45-54}, abstract = {

The story is set in a future that would now be characterized as with people living in Virtual Reality. In the story, told from the point of view of the man, the protagonist lives the world he created with a woman he created. He is challenged by a woman from outside his reality who completely rejects his sense of reality.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, isbn = {9781951320003}, issn = {00024-984X }, author = {[Mary Russell] [Standard] (b. 1926)} } @booklet {9536, title = {A Different Drummer}, year = {1962}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Anchor Books, 1989 with a \“Foreword\” by David Bradley (xi-xxxii); and London: riverrun, 2018, with a \“Foreword: \‘The Lost Giant of American Literature\’\” by Kathryn Schulz (ix-xxxiv), which was originally published in The New Yorker\ 93.36 (January 29, 2018): 26-31 (https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/01/29/the-lost-giant-of-american-literature); and \“A Biography of William Melvin Kelley\” by Jessica Kelley (his daughter) (295-302).

}, month = {1962}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

The novel begins in the South that is a dystopia for all African Americans. One man revolts, salts his fields, kills his livestock, burns his house down, and leaves. All the other African Americans in the town follow his example.\ 

}, keywords = {African American author, Male author}, author = {William Melvin Kelley (1937-2017)} } @booklet {9041, title = {The Drowned World}, year = {1962}, note = {

U.S. ed. rpt. in The Drowned World and The Wind from Nowhere. Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1965. U.K. ed. rpt. London: J. M. Dent \& Sons, 1983; and, with minor changes. London: The Folio Society, 2013, with an Introduction by Will Self (xi-xviii) and Illus. By James Boswell. Expanded from \“The Drowned World.\” Science Fiction Adventures 4.24 (January 1962).

}, month = {1962}, publisher = {Berkley Medallion}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

A Ballardian version of a climate change/global warming dystopia set in 2145 in a tropical, abandoned, and flooded London.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {J[ames] G[raham] Ballard (1930-2009)} } @booklet {1791, title = {"A Day in the Suburbs"}, howpublished = {The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction}, volume = { 19.3 (112) }, year = {1960}, month = {September 1960}, pages = {19-25}, abstract = {

Dystopia of future violence with war among the women living in different styles of housing in the suburbs, with a truce at night so that the men know nothing about the violence.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {00024-984X }, author = {Evelyn E. Smith (1927-2000)} } @booklet {1801, title = {"Drunkard{\textquoteright}s Walk"}, howpublished = {Galaxy Magazine}, volume = { 18.5 - 6 }, year = {1960}, note = {

Repub. New York: Ballantine Books. U.K. ed. London: Victor Gollancz, 1961. Rpt. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1966.

}, month = {June - August 1960}, pages = {8-56, 132-93}, abstract = {

The background to the story includes a dystopian overpopulated, poor society contrasted with the privileged few who pass extremely stringent tests to enter the relative prosperity of university.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {0016-4003 }, author = {Frederik [George] Pohl [Jr.] (1919-2013)} } @booklet {1757, title = {"Day at the Beach"}, howpublished = {The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction}, volume = { 17.2 (99)}, year = {1959}, note = {

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

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

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

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {00024-984X }, author = {[Agnes] Carol[lyn] [Fries] Emshwiller (1921-2019)} } @booklet {1750, title = {"Dodkin{\textquoteright}s Job"}, howpublished = {Astounding Science Fiction}, volume = { 64.2}, year = {1959}, note = {

Rpt. his\ Future Tense\ (New York: Ballantine Books, 1984), 7-46; book rpt. as\ Dust of Far Suns\ (New York: DAW Books, 1981), 37-77. Story rev. in\ The Moon Moth and Other Stories. Vol. 17 of\ The Complete Works of Jack Vance\ (Oakland, CA: Vance Integral Editions, 2002), 153-201.

}, month = {October 1959}, pages = {51-83}, abstract = {

Conformist dystopia with computers ruling and one man discovering how to undermine the system.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Jack [John Holbrook] Vance (1916-2013)} } @booklet {9820, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Debt of Lassor{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Nebula Science Fiction}, volume = {no. 33}, year = {1958}, note = {

Rpt. in\ The Best Australian Science Fiction Writing: A Fifty Year Collection. Ed. Rob Gerrand (Melbourne, VIC, Australia: Black Inc., 2004), 23-37; and in Dwellers in Silence: Stories and Plays by Norma Hemming. Ed. Toby Burrows (Nedlands, WA, Australia: Hilliard Press, 2010), 64-84.\ 

}, month = {December 1958}, pages = {39-54}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a future Earth where the people have accepted being completely oppressed. The story is about the colonizers struggling to get the people to recover their humanity.\ 

}, keywords = {Australian author, English author, Female author}, author = {N[orma] K[athleen] Hemming (1928-60)} } @booklet {1721, title = {"A Dream of John Ball"}, howpublished = {Poetry Harbinger: Introducing A.R.D. Fairburn (6 foot 3) and Denis Glover (11 stone 7)}, year = {1958}, month = {1958}, pages = {17-18}, publisher = {Pilgrim Press}, address = {Auckland, New Zealand}, abstract = {

Satire but depicting a populist eutopia. John Ball (ca. 1338-81) was a priest who was involved in the in the Peasant\&$\#$39;s Revolt of 1381.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {A[rthur] R[ex] D[ugard] Fairburn (1904-1957) and Denis [James Matthews] Glover (1912-80)}, editor = {Dorothy Cannibal Editor} } @booklet {1691, title = {Democracy at Ease: A New Zealand Profile}, year = {1957}, month = {1957}, publisher = {Pall Mall Press}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Non-fiction but presents New Zealand throughout as a realized eutopia. Largely glittering generalities but includes some minimal recognition that not everything has worked as designed. Written from the point of view of an outsider. There is an obviously faked picture of the author with \"Maori friends\".

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {David Goldblatt} } @booklet {1672, title = {"Dio"}, howpublished = {Infinity Science Fiction}, volume = { 2.5 }, year = {1957}, note = {

Rpt. in\ The Arbor House Treasury of Great Science Fiction Short Novels. Comp. Robert Silverberg and Martin H. Greenberg (New York: Arbor House, 1980), 548-81.

}, month = {September 1957}, pages = {34-70}, abstract = {

Flawed utopia in which immortality is achieved by indefinitely prolonging physical adolescence. Two classes develop, known as the players, who consume and enjoy, and the students, who are said to \"remember\" and do whatever planning is needed. The two classes normally have little to do with each other, but the novel is concerned with the relationship of a couple from the two classes, when the man is going through the lost experience of dying.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Damon [Francis] Knight (1922-2002)} } @booklet {1679, title = {Doomsday Morning}, year = {1957}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Popular Library, 1987; and London: Gollancz, 2019.

}, month = {1957}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

An authoritarian dystopia with the United States ruled by Comus or Communications U.S. in which \ controls the media, education, and public relations. The novel focuses on the successful revolt against Comus and ends with the collapse of Comus.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {C[atherine] L[ucille] Moore (1911-87)} } @booklet {1655, title = {The Death of Grass}, year = {1956}, note = {

Rpt. as The Death of Grass. A Novel. Penguin, 2009 with an \“Introduction\” by Robert Macfarlane (v-xii). U.S. edition as No Blade of Grass. A Novel. New York: Simon \& Schuster, 1957. Rpt. without the subtitle. New York: Avon, 1967. A film was made under the U.S. title and directed by Cornel Wilde (Cornelius Louis Wilde 1912-89) (1970) with a screenplay by Sean Forestal and Wilde writing as Jefferson Pascal. PSt

}, month = {1956}, publisher = {Michael Joseph}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Post-catastrophe dystopia. Violence, breakdown of communities, and the struggle to survive.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Sam] [Youd] (1922-2012)} } @booklet {1626, title = {"The Door Into Summer"}, howpublished = {The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction (New York)}, volume = { 11.4 - 6 (65-67)}, year = {1956}, note = {

Repub. Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1957. Rpt. as vol. 5\ The Virginia Edition\ of his works. Decatur, GA: Meisha Merlin, 2006 and separately Houston, TX: The Virginia Edition, 2008.

}, month = {October - December 1956}, pages = {3-55, 3-66, 35-72}, abstract = {

The novel is set in 1970 and 2000 and is primarily science fiction with a man who is frozen in 1970, wakes in 2000, time travels back to 1970, and returns to 2000 having resolved his 1970s problems in ways that will make his life in 2000 better. 2000 is generally presented positively and 1970 negatively but both have problems.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {00024-984X }, author = {Robert A[nson] Heinlein (1907-88)} } @booklet {1617, title = {Doubting Thomas}, year = {1956}, month = {1956}, publisher = {Rinehart}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Authoritarian bureaucratic dystopia that is effectively defeated by a clown who becomes so popular that the bureaucracy is forced to support him.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Winston Brebner (1924-2004)} } @booklet {1631, title = {"The Drivers"}, howpublished = {Worlds of If Science Fiction}, volume = { 6.2 }, year = {1956}, note = {

Rpt. in Hallucination Orbit: Psychology in Science Fiction. Ed. Isaac Asimov, Charles G. Waugh, and Martin H. Greenberg (New York: Farrar Strauss Giroux, 1983), 235-53; and in his The 7 Shapes of Solomon Bean and 14 Other Marvelous Stories of Science Fiction and Fantasy (Los Gatos, CA: Polaris Press, 1983), 27-42.

}, month = {February 1956}, pages = {70-81}, abstract = {

Dystopia with population and aggression control through killing on highways.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Edward William Ludwig (1920-90)} } @booklet {6848, title = {Deep Freeze}, year = {1955}, month = {[1955]}, publisher = {Hamilton}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Only women and children are left on the planet, and a feminist eutopia is established. Conflict develops as the boys grow up.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author, Scottish author}, author = {[John Frederick] Burke (1922-2011)} } @booklet {1610, title = {Deep in the Sky. A Science Fiction Novel}, year = {1955}, month = {1955}, publisher = {Exposition Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Eutopia called Salomnia, with some problems, on a planet called Canta. Everyone must consult with the Board of Adaptation about appropriate work. All medical care free. No alcohol. No tipping. Technologically advanced. Another country on the planet is called Seva is in conflict with Salomnia.

}, keywords = {Danish author, Female author, US author}, author = {Helga Nielsen} } @booklet {1502, title = {Down to Earth}, year = {1954}, publisher = {Heinemann}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Last volume of a trilogy. See 1950 and 1952 Capon. This volume focuses on the struggle to return to Earth and attempts by people on Earth to exploit the planet. The author wrote another utopian novel; see 1956 Capon.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Harry] Paul Capon (1911/12-69)} } @booklet {1545, title = {"DP"}, howpublished = {If: Worlds of Science Fiction }, volume = {4.1}, year = {1954}, month = {September 1954}, pages = {90-94, 96-102}, abstract = {

Dystopia. Flaws of government-provided perfection.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Arthur Dekker Savage} } @booklet {1452, title = {Dark Boundaries}, year = {1953}, month = {1953}, publisher = {Curtis Warren}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a world divided into Normals and Intelligentsia.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[William Henry Fleming] [Bird] (1896-1971)} } @booklet {8906, title = {"The Defenders"}, howpublished = {Galaxy Science Fiction }, volume = {5.4}, year = {1953}, note = {

Rpt. without the illus. in Sense of Wonder: A Century of Science Fiction. Ed. Leigh Ronald Grossman (Rockville, MD: Wildside Press, 2011), 367-72 with an editor\’s note on 367.

}, month = {January 1953}, pages = {4-28}, abstract = {

In a war between the U.S. and the Soviet Union, both sides retreat underground and allow their androids with artificial intelligence to conduct the war while working to send them more and more devastating weapons. An apparent anomaly leads to the discovery that the androids had been destroying the weapons and that there was no war and no devastation. In the end, the two sides agree to cooperate and hold out hope for a eutopian future.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {0016-4003 }, author = {Philip K[indred] Dick (1928-82)} } @booklet {1495, title = {Drovers Road}, year = {1953}, note = {

Rpt. in\ The Drovers Road Collection\ (Bathgate, ND: Bethlehem Books/San Francisco, CA: Ignatius Press, 2002), 1-59 with a \"Glossary\" (417-18).

}, month = {1953}, publisher = {J.M. Dent \& Sons}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Young adult novel presenting a back country New Zealand farm as a eutopia. Sequels include Cape Lost with three different descriptions of the publisher. London: J.M. Dent \& Sons, 1963; Auckland, New Zealand: Paul\&$\#$39;s Book Arcade, 1963; and Auckland, New Zealand: Paul\&$\#$39;s Book Arcade/London: J.M. Dent \& Sons, 1963; rpt. in The Drovers Road Collection (161-280); and The Golden Country. London: J.M. Dent \& Sons, 1965; and Hamilton, New Zealand: Janet and Blackwood Paul, 1965; rpt. in The Drovers Road Collection (283-416).

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Female author}, author = {Joyce [Tarleton] West (1908-85)} } @booklet {1410, title = {"Dead End"}, howpublished = {Galaxy Science Fiction (New York)}, volume = {3.4 }, year = {1952}, note = {

Rpt. in\ Science-Fiction Thinking Machines: Robots, Androids, Computers. Ed. Groff Conklin (New York: The Vanguard Press, 1954), 260-70.

}, month = {January 1952}, pages = {67-79}, abstract = {

Flawed utopia that is only fit for androids or what is here called pseudo-life and the last human leaves.

}, keywords = {Male author}, issn = {0016-4003 }, author = {Wallace MacFarlane} } @booklet {1444, title = {The Death of Metal}, year = {1952}, month = {1952}, publisher = {Geoffrey Cumberlege, Oxford University Press}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The disappearance of all metal brings, after a period of disruption and difficulty, a return to a simpler and better life.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[William] Donald Suddaby (1900-64)} } @booklet {1423, title = {"Defender of the Faith"}, howpublished = {Science Fiction Quarterly }, volume = {2.1 }, year = {1952}, note = {

Rpt. in Science Fiction Quarterly (British Edition), no 4 (November 1952): 59-67. C,

}, month = {November 1952}, pages = {59-67}, abstract = {

War between the sexes.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Alfred[o] [Jos{\'e} Ara{\~n}a-Marini y] Coppel [Jr.] (1921-2004)} } @booklet {1421, title = {"The Demolished Man"}, howpublished = {Galaxy Science Fiction (New York)}, volume = {3.4 - 6 }, year = {1952}, note = {

Repub. Chicago, IL: Shasta, 1953. Rpt. New York: New American Library, 1954, which is rpt. New York: Garland, 1975. U.K. ed. London: Sidgwick \& Jackson, 1953.

}, month = {January - March 1952}, pages = {4-66; 101-49, 152-58; 101-49, 58}, publisher = {Shasta}, address = {Chicago, IL}, abstract = {

Police procedural set in a future society where telepathy is recognized, and telepaths are ranked according to ability with the most powerful telepaths holding the most important positions.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {0016-4003 }, author = {Alfred Bester (1913-87)} } @booklet {1401, title = {The Devil{\textquoteright}s Advocate}, year = {1952}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Macfadden-Bartell, 1964; and New York: Pyramid, 1971.

}, month = {1952}, publisher = {Crown}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia. The U.S. becomes weak through the adoption of the welfare policies of the New Deal and is ripe for takeover by a dictatorial system known as The Democracy. Constant wars. Extreme poverty. Surveillance. There is a underground movement known as the Minute Men, led from within The Democracy, that ultimately overthrows it.

}, keywords = {Female author, UK author, US author}, author = {[Janet Miriam] Taylor [Holland] Caldwell (1900-85)} } @booklet {1436, title = {"Dumb Waiter"}, howpublished = {Astounding Science Fiction }, volume = {49. 2 }, year = {1952}, note = {

Rpt. in\ Science-Fiction Thinking Machines: Robots, Androids, Computers. Ed. Groff Conklin (New York: The Vanguard Press, 1954), 323-58.

}, month = {April 1952}, pages = {7-40}, abstract = {

Authoritarian dystopia in which an automated war continues long after the bombs are gone, and a computer-controlled city still enforces laws long out of date.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Walter M[ichael] Miller Jr. (1923-96)} } @booklet {1392, title = {"Dark Interlude"}, howpublished = {Galaxy Science Fiction (New York)}, volume = { 1.4 }, year = {1951}, note = {

Rpt. in\ From These Ashes: The Complete Short SF of Fredric Brown. Ed. Ben Yalow (Framingham, MA: The NESFA Press, 2000), 423-28.

}, month = {January 1951}, pages = {66-73}, abstract = {

Brief description of a future eutopia where everyone is a student because all the issues of production and distribution have\ been solved. All races in the future have blended into one, and a man from the future who said he is one-fourth black is killed because he married a white woman.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Mack [Dallas McCord] Reynolds (1917-83) and Fredric [William] Brown (1906-72)} } @booklet {1385, title = {The Disappearance}, year = {1951}, note = {

UK ed. London: Victor Gollancz, 1951. Rpt. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2004 with an \"Introduction\" by Robert Silverberg (v-xi).

}, month = {1951}, publisher = {Rinehart}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Satire. With no real explanation, the sexes disappear from each other producing two single sex societies. Both societies have problems, and the sexes reappear to each other at the end.\ Compare to James Patrick Kelly, \“Men Are Trouble\” (2004) and \“The Last Judgment\” (2012).

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Philip [Gordon] Wylie (1902-71)} } @booklet {1359, title = {". . . Divided We Fall"}, howpublished = {Amazing Stories (Chicago, IL)}, volume = {24.12 }, year = {1950}, month = {December 1950}, pages = {96-147}, abstract = {

Dystopia of conflict among different types of humanity.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, issn = {0002-6891 }, author = {Raymond F[isher] Jones (1915-94)} } @booklet {1357, title = {"Divine Right"}, howpublished = {The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction (New York)}, volume = {1.3 }, year = {1950}, month = {Summer 1950}, pages = {64-105}, abstract = {

The story shows the beginning of a dystopia with a bad king after a series of good ones and the revolt against him that leads to the possibility of a democracy.

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Betsy [Elizabeth M.] Curtis (1918-2002)} } @booklet {1295, title = {Domesday Village}, year = {1948}, month = {1948}, publisher = {The Falcon Press}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Agrarian eutopia existing outside a deeply flawed socialist utopia that is inefficient and bureaucratic, and while it is supposed to be based on merit, it is actually an aristocracy based on heredity. The eutopia is a small town that had been missed in the reorganization and had succeeded very well using traditional methods.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Ian [Goodhope] Colvin (1912-75)} } @booklet {1272, title = {Doppelgangers: An Episode of the Fourth, The Psychological, Revolution 1997}, year = {1947}, month = {1947}, publisher = {Vanguard Press}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Dystopia. A eutopia supposed to be brought about by new advances in psychology turns sour and becomes an authoritarian dystopia based on the same discoveries. The novel focuses on the struggle for control between two dystopias, one on the surface of the planet that used the \“bread and circuses\” approach to control, and the other underground that used fear as the means of control. In the novel, the underground dystopia tries to overthrow the one on the surface, using, in what may be the first use of the phrase, psychological warfare.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, UK author, US author}, author = {H[enry] F[itzgerald] Heard (1889-1971)} } @booklet {1290, title = {The Dry Deluge}, year = {1947}, month = {1947}, publisher = {Hogarth Press}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Mostly disaster but includes some dystopia.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Kathleen [Cecilia] Nott (1905-99)} } @booklet {1265, title = {Death into Life}, year = {1946}, note = {

Rpt. in his\ Worlds of Wonder: Three Tales of Fantasy\ (Los Angeles, CA: Fantasy Publishing Co., 1949), 91-251.

}, month = {1946}, publisher = {Methuen}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Similar to other works by Stapledon in that it projects humanity into both the relatively near and very far future, to a time beyond humanity. This relatively short (159 pp) version follows \"the spirit of man\" from death during World War II to a period in which humans inhabit eight planets to the development of a \"cosmic consciousness\" into which humanity is absorbed. On the copyright page there is an author\&$\#$39;s note saying, \"This fantasy is not a novel.\"\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[William] Olaf Stapledon (1886-1950)} } @booklet {1247, title = {"Destiny Times Three"}, howpublished = {Astounding Science Fiction (New York)}, volume = {35.1 -2 }, year = {1945}, note = {

Rpt. in Five Science Fiction Novels. Comp. Martin Greenberg (New York: Gnome Press, 1952), 110-203);\ as Galaxy Novel 28. New York: Galaxy Publishing Corp., 1952; and in Binary Star $\#$ 1 (New York: Dell, 1978), 7-150. The most recent reprint has an \"Afterword\" by Norman Spinrad (150-55).

}, month = {March - April 1945}, pages = {6-55; 140-72, 174-77}, abstract = {

The future earth is split into three. One is a flawed utopia, which is supposed to be peaceful and joyful, but is stagnant; one is an authoritarian dystopia; and one is a destroyed landscape ruled by intelligent cats.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Fritz [Reuter] Leiber [Jr.] (1910-92)} } @booklet {6829, title = {The Devil{\textquoteright}s Altar Boy}, year = {1945}, month = {[1945]}, publisher = {Capitol Hill Press}, address = {Washington, DC}, abstract = {

Dystopian allegory in which Germany and Japan won World War II and produced a second Dark Ages.

}, author = {Erdahl, Silvert} } @booklet {1221, title = {Days after Tomorrow: A Voice from 2000 A.D}, year = {1944}, month = {1944}, publisher = {Robertson \& Mullens}, address = {Melbourne, VIC, Australia}, abstract = {

Eutopia. World federation with a powerful world Parliament. Religious. Stresses science and education.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {Frank R[obinson] Kerr (b. 1889)} } @booklet {1175, title = {Darkness and the Light}, year = {1942}, note = {

Rpt. Westport, CT: Hyperion Press, 1974. Excerpts rpt. in\ An Olaf Stapledon Reader.\ Ed. Robert Crossley (Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 1997), 28-42.

}, month = {1942}, publisher = {Methuen}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Eutopia and dystopia presented as two alternative future histories. The dystopia is extrapolated from the situation as it existed in 1942. In the eutopia that situation is overcome and for a time a eutopia based on villages develops. Following that, the human race goes through periods of decline and advance until a new and higher human type develops.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[William] Olaf Stapledon (1886-1950)} } @booklet {1176, title = {Drives Toward War}, year = {1942}, month = {1942}, publisher = {D. Appleton-Century Co}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Essay but includes a short conclusion called a utopia (100-12) describing the society necessary, from the point of view of a psychologist, for avoiding war. This society must not frustrate basic biological needs, encourage identification with \"acceptable authority figures,\" and create a \"supranational state\" to which people will feel more loyalty than to their nation-state (102).

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Edward Chace Tolman (1856-1959)} } @booklet {9151, title = {Darkness at Noon}, year = {1940}, note = {

Rpt. London: The Folio Society, 1980 with an \“Introduction\” (7-15) by Vladimir Bukovsky. U.S. ed. New York: Macmillan, 1941.\ Because the original manuscript was assumed to have been lost, all publications of the novel, including German ones, were based on this translation, but it was discovered in 2015, and a new translation by Philip Boehm based on that manuscript has been published. London: Vintage Classics, 2019. U.S. ed. New York: Scribner, 2019.\ 

}, month = {1940}, publisher = {Jonathan Cape}, address = {London}, abstract = {

A famous work describing the Show Trials in the U.S.S.R. under Joseph Stalin (1879-1953) that has been called a dystopia and has been very influential on dystopian literature.\ 

}, keywords = {Austrian author, English author, Hungarian author, Male author}, author = {Arthur Koestler (1905-83)} } @booklet {1135, title = {The Disappearance of General Jason}, year = {1940}, note = {

Rpt. London: Tom Stacey Reprints, 1973.

}, month = {1940}, publisher = {John Murray}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Lost race eutopia that rejects modern technology.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Percival Christopher Wren (1885-1941)} } @booklet {6806, title = {The Death Guard}, year = {1939}, note = {

Rpt. London: Roc, 1992.

}, month = {[1939]}, publisher = {Hutchinson}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Creation of artificial life leads to a dystopia.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Philip George Chadwick (1893-1955)} } @booklet {1083, title = {"Dream Places"}, howpublished = {The New Zealand Railways Magazine }, volume = {12.12}, year = {1938}, month = {March 1, 1938}, pages = {20-21}, abstract = {

Two brief eutopian visions. The first is a South Seas Island paradise, which is rejected as unrealistic in that there will be mosquitoes and sharks. The second is heaven after death.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Male author}, author = {Pat[rick Anthony] Lawlor} } @booklet {1055, title = {"The Dream"}, howpublished = {Tomorrow (Christchurch, New Zealand) }, volume = {3.20 }, year = {1937}, month = {August 4, 1937}, pages = {620-22}, abstract = {

Brief socialist eutopia.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author}, author = {Pickles, L.} } @booklet {991, title = {Depression Island}, year = {1935}, note = {

The book originated as a few pages in his The Way Out: What Lies Ahead for America (New York: Farrar \& Rinehart, 1933), 25-31.

}, publisher = {Author}, address = {Pasadena, CA}, abstract = {

The first part of the book is a satire on capitalism in which three men shipwrecked on an island recreate class. The second part of the book is a satire on gender relations.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Upton [Beall] Sinclair (1878-1968)} } @booklet {6796, title = {The Dissolution of Governments by Greed, Crime and Wars}, year = {1935}, month = {[1935]}, pages = {27 pp.}, publisher = {np}, address = {Np}, abstract = {

The pamphlet has two sections, \"The United States, Land of Individual Initiative in Industry, Crime, and Graft\" (5-9) and \"A Government of the People, By the People, and For the People\" (11-27). The first shows what is wrong in the U.S., and the second presents the eutopia, which is an adaptation of the Industrial Army from 1888 Bellamy, through the 1965 inaugural address of the U.S. President. There is an organization chart of \"The Edward Bellamy System of Industrial Government\" on 27.

}, author = {L. P. Lidback} } @booklet {968, title = {Doctor Crosby{\textquoteright}s Strange Experience or a New World By 1944}, year = {1935}, note = {

Some copies have Kansas City crossed out and replaced with Chicago, IL, and the press moved to Chicago at this time.

}, month = {1935}, pages = {96 pp.}, publisher = {The Peerage Press}, address = {Kansas City, MO}, abstract = {

Detailed socialist eutopia based on the ideas of Edward Bellamy and set in Kansas City and its environs. Private property only in personal effects. All work for the government, guaranteed lifetime income. No money. Education to 25; work 26 years; retire at 50 or, by choice, continue to work. Hours of work determined by demand and difficulty. Considerable concern with farming, which is scientifically based and uses technology extensively.\ See also [1941?] Parker.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Joseph W[illiam] Parker} } @booklet {922, title = {Doctor Arnoldi}, year = {1934}, month = {1934}, publisher = {Julian Messner}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Overpopulation dystopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Tiffany [Ellsworth] Thayer (1902-59)} } @booklet {880, title = {Death Rocks the Cradle. A Strange Tale}, year = {1933}, month = {1933}, publisher = {Collins}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Flawed utopia. An over-concern with health leads to an authoritarian dystopia. Those who get sick are permanently removed to a penal settlement, where all their descendants must remain. The penal settlement is itself a flawed utopia. There is no work required because technology does most of it. No buying and selling. No money. One meal per day has to be eaten communally in one of the many restaurants. A\ electrical fence surrounds each city. Children are named by the state, taken from their parents at birth, and raised in cr{\`e}ches without contact with their parents. Compulsory regular medical examinations. Lots of hospitals in penal settlements; none outside.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Stephen] [Southwold] (1887-1964)} } @booklet {861, title = {"Dewey Outlines Utopian Schools"}, howpublished = {New York Times }, year = {1933}, note = {

Rpt. in his The Later Works, 1925-1953. Volume 9: 1933-1934. Ed. Jo Ann Boydston, Anne Sharpe, and Patricia Baysinger (Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois University Press, 1986), 136-40.

}, month = {April 23, 1933}, pages = {Sec. 4: 7, cols. 3-5}, abstract = {

Education in Utopia. No schools as such. Children are brought together with adults and older children in groups no larger than 200. Substantial gardens and open space available. Workshops available. The purpose is to identify and nurture the abilities of the children. Rejects competition in education.\ For a sentence-by-sentence exposition, see William H. Schubert, Love, Justice, and Education: John Dewey and the Utopians. Charlotte, NC: IAP Information Age Publishing, 2009.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {John Dewey (1859-1952)} } @booklet {786, title = {"A Dream or a Vision?"}, howpublished = {Month (UK)}, volume = { 158 }, year = {1931}, month = {August 1931}, pages = {110-16}, abstract = {

Eutopia. The Catholic Agricultural Organization, a cooperative system run by the dominant church, saves English agriculture\ and restores balance to the economy. Set in 1981.

}, author = {J. H. Beck} } @booklet {777, title = {Drink Up, Gentlemen}, year = {1930}, month = {1930}, publisher = {Chapman \& Hall}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Satire describing a near future mildly repressive and puritanical dystopia.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {J[ohn Cameron Audrieu] B[ingham Michael] Morton (1893-1979)} } @booklet {9266, title = {Dawn}, year = {1929}, note = {

U.K. ed. London: George G. Harrap \& Co., 1930. Rpt. as Dawn: A Novel of Global Warming. Rockville, Maryland: Wildside Press/The Borgo Press, 2009; and as Deluge; a Romance, and Dawn. New York: Arno Press, 1975, which reprints the New York Cosmopolitan Press editions\ separately paged.\ 

}, month = {1929}, publisher = {Cosmopolitan Book Co.}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Sequel to 1927 Wright, Deluge, that details the experiences of a number of people following the events of the Deluge as they try to first simply survive and then build the beginnings of decent life, which is where the novel ends.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {S[ydney] Fowler Wright (1874-1965)} } @booklet {747, title = {The Dawn of a New Civilization}, year = {1929}, month = {1929}, publisher = {Cecil Palmer}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Eutopia. Follows the life and wanderings of an architect, very like those of the author, searching for beauty and meaning. Ends with the design of a city and new buildings that combine the attributes of Eastern and western culture.\ 

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {[William] Hardy Wilson (1881-1955)} } @booklet {722, title = {The Decadence: An Excerpt from "A History of the Triumph and Decay of England," dateable 1949. With a Preface by A Conservative}, year = {1929}, month = {1929}, publisher = {Watts \& Co}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Great Britain is in terminal decline because it has not adopted free trade, and the book combines a future history showing that decline with arguments for free trade and against its oponents.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {L. Macaulay} } @booklet {697, title = {Dark Princess. A Romance}, year = {1928}, note = {

Rpt. Millwood, NY: Kraus Thompson, 1974, with an \“Introduction\” by Herbert Aptheker (5-29); Jackson: Banner Books University Press of Mississippi, 1995; and as a volume in\ The Oxford W. E. B. Du Bois. New York: Oxford University Press, 2007 with an \"Introduction\" by Homi K. Bhabha (xxv-xxxi).

}, month = {1928}, publisher = {Harcourt, Brace and Co.}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

The novel begins with an excellent African-American medical student being denied the right to continue because, as a black, he is not permitted to do the required section on obstetrics. He flees the country and meets other colored people who hope to create a united body to work for their betterment. For personal reasons, he rejects their overtures and returns to the U.S., where he becomes an up-and-coming politician married to a wealthy, well-connected woman. After numerous setbacks, he reconnects with the other colored peoples who have a plan for a better future that will be developed over the coming fifteen years. There is, though, a disagreement, which, not resolved with in novel, between those who believe in violence as a means and those who reject it.\ 

}, keywords = {African American author, Male author}, author = {W[illiam] E[dward] Burghardt Du Bois (1868-1963)} } @booklet {9265, title = {Deluge}, year = {1927}, note = {

Rpt. Ed. Michael Stableford. Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 2003 with the editor\’s \“Introduction\” (xi-lviii, 307-318), notes on the text (318-22), and a \“Bibliography\” (323-29). U.S. ed. New York: Cosmopolitan Press, 1928. Serialized in the Sunday Express (June - July 1931). Rpt. as Deluge: A Novel of Global Warming. Rockville, Maryland: Wildside Press/The Borgo Press, 2010; and as Deluge; a Romance, and Dawn. New York: Arno Press, 1975, which reprints the New York Cosmopolitan Press editions separately paged.\ 

}, month = {1927}, publisher = {Fowler Wright}, address = {London}, abstract = {

For an unexplained reason, the oceans of the world flood all low-lying land and destroys contemporary civilization. The survivors discover that their reliance of technology and industry has deprived them of the skills need to survive. Those who do survive struggle to create a better life based on community and traditional skills and practices.\ 1929 Wright is a sequel.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {S[ydney] Fowler Wright (1874-1965)} } @booklet {658, title = {The Devil{\textquoteright}s Henchman}, year = {1926}, month = {1926}, publisher = {Methuen}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Lost race novel that depicts a conflict between good and evil through eutopian and dystopian groups in the mountains of Afghanistan. Both groups originated in ancient Egypt as followers of Set (evil) and Isis (good). The followers of Isis have established a eutopia; the followers of Set have enslaved the area they control and are planning to take over the world.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {John Oldrey} } @booklet {659, title = {"The Dream City"}, howpublished = {Humbert Wolfe}, year = {1926}, note = {

Rpt. in\ The Argosy (UK) 5.36\ (May 1929): viii. Set to music by Gustav Holst (1874-1934); see\ Twelve Humbert Wolfe Songs\ (Great Yarmouth, Norfolk, Eng.: Galliard Ltd., 1970), 31-35.

}, month = {1926}, pages = {16}, publisher = {Ernest Benn}, address = {London}, abstract = {

A short poem describing an idyllic city based on London.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Humbert Wolfe (1885-1940)} } @booklet {650, title = {Dymer}, year = {1926}, note = {

U.S. ed. New York: E.P. Dutton, 1926. Rpt. London: J.M. Dent/New York: Macmillan, 1950. Later reprints under the author\&$\#$39;s name.

}, month = {1926}, publisher = {John Dent}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Book length poem in which the hero is born in a dystopian city, where religion is prohibited, marriage partners are chosen by the state, and all aspects of daily life are regulated by the state. Dymer is the rebel who is, although conditioned by the state, inspired by a spring day to leave the city.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author, Northern Ireland author}, author = {[Clive] [Staples] [Lewis] (1898-1963)} } @booklet {635, title = {"Doctor Hackensaw{\textquoteright}s Secrets. No. 35 [bis]. A Journey to the Year 3000"}, howpublished = {Science and Invention (New York)}, volume = {12.9}, year = {1925}, month = {January 1925}, pages = {886-87, 922, 924, 926, 928}, abstract = {

Technological eutopia. Humor.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Ernest] Clement Fezandi{\'e} (1865-1959)} } @booklet {589, title = {The Day of Judgment and the Celestial Missionaries of Life}, year = {1923}, month = {1923}, pages = {72 pp.}, publisher = {Author}, address = {[Cleveland, OH]}, abstract = {

Socialist eutopia introduced to Earth by visitors from space. People from Earth then carry the message to other planets.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Louis Pauer} } @booklet {596, title = {"Doctor Hackensaw{\textquoteright}s Secrets. No. 23. What Hackensaw Found on the Moon"}, howpublished = {Science and Invention (New York)}, volume = { 11.7}, year = {1923}, month = {November 1923}, pages = {644-45, 710-13}, abstract = {

Advanced beings on the moon who change shapes and sexes at will. Humor.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Ernest] Clement Fezandi{\'e} (1865-1959)} } @booklet {6983, title = {"The Dream"}, howpublished = {Nash{\textquoteright}s and Pall Mall Magazine}, volume = {72-73}, year = {1923}, note = {

Repub. London: Jonathan Cape, 1924. Rpt. London: The Hogarth Press, 1987, with an \"Introduction\" by Brian Aldiss [3-7]. US ed. New York: Macmillan, 1924. Rpt. in The Works of H.G. Wells Atlantic Edition. Volume XXVIII Men Like Gods and The Dream (New York: Charles Scribner\&$\#$39;s Sons, 1927), 329-654. Except for later critical editions, The Atlantic Edition is generally considered the best text of Wells\&$\#$39;s works.

}, month = {November 1923 - May 1924}, pages = {See Full Text}, abstract = {

The present seen as a dystopia from the perspective of a eutopia 2000 years in the future. Although there is little of the eutopia, it is presented as having overcome the economic and social problems of Wells\&$\#$39;s time and is reminiscent of his 1923 Men Like Gods. The dystopia reads like one of Wells\&$\#$39;s novels describing the problems of the poor prior to World War I. One emphasis is on the ignorance of sexual relations in the past contrasted to the free and open sexual relations of the future.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {H[erbert] G[eorge] Wells (1866-1946)} } @booklet {570, title = {Dalleszona and the Seventh Treasure}, year = {1922}, month = {1922}, publisher = {The Roxburgh Pub. Co.}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {

Eutopia. Pure democracy. Compulsory education. Each person receives a living wage but must work for it.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Allen Kendrick Wright (1861-1948)} } @booklet {572, title = {"Doctor Hackensaw{\textquoteright}s Secrets. No. 11. Journey to the Year 2025"}, howpublished = {Science and Invention (New York)}, volume = {10.8}, year = {1922}, month = {December 1922}, pages = {750, 822-25}, abstract = {

Technological eutopia. Humor.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Ernest] Clement Fezandi{\'e} (1865-1959)} } @booklet {550, title = {The Day of Faith}, year = {1921}, month = {1921}, publisher = {Little, Brown}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {

Anti-utopian novel. A eutopia where everyone is honest, and there are no police or jails proves weak and collapses.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Arthur Somers Roche (1883-1935)} } @booklet {554, title = {"The Devolutionist"}, howpublished = {Argosy-All Story Weekly (New York) }, volume = {135.5 }, year = {1921}, note = {

Rpt. in his The Devolutionist and The Emancipatrix (New York: Ace Books, [1965]), 5-95.

}, month = {July 23, 1921}, pages = {626-71}, abstract = {

Earth scientists visit other planets using a form of telepathy and an argument emerges on the advantages of power in the hands of an elite or in the hands of the people. A loose sequel is \“The Emancipatrix.\”\ Argosy-All Story Weekly\ 136.5 (September 3, 1921): 631-80; rpt. in his\ The Devolutionist and The Emancipatrix\ (New York: Ace Books, [1965]), 96-191 in which the same argument takes place on another planet.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Homer Eon Flint (born Flindt, 1892-1924)} } @booklet {535, title = {Darkwater: Voices from within the Veil}, year = {1920}, note = {

\“The Comet\” (253-73) is rpt. in Dark Matter: A Century of Speculative Fiction from the African Diaspora. Ed. Sheree R. Thomas (New York: Warner Books, 2000), 5-18; in Grave Predictions: Tales of Mankind\’s Post-Apocalyptic, Dystopian and Disastrous Destiny. Ed. Drew [Andrew] Ford (Mineola, NY: Dover, 2016), 10-24; in Black Sci-Fi Short Stories: An Anthology of New \& Classic Stories (London: Flame Tree Publishing, 2021), 24-31; and in Voices from the Radium Age. Ed Joshua Glenn (Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2022), 141-180.

}, month = {1920}, publisher = {Harcourt, Brace and Howe}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

cken Books, 1969; and as a volume in The Oxford W. E. B. Du Bois. New York: Oxford University Press, 2007, with an \“Introduction\” by Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham (xxv-xxxix). U.K. ed. London: Constable, 1920. Du Bois called it the second of his volume of essays between The Souls of Black Folk (1903) and Dusk of Dawn (1940). PSt

Eutopia. A collection of essays, poems, and short stories that culminates in a eutopia in the story \“The Comet\” (253-73), which is rpt. in Dark Matter: A Century of Speculative Fiction from the African Diaspora. Ed. Sheree R. Thomas (New York: Warner Books, 2000), 5-18; in Grave Predictions: Tales of Mankind\’s Post-Apocalyptic, Dystopian and Disastrous Destiny. Ed. Drew [Andrew] Ford (Mineola, NY: Dover, 2016), 10-24; in Black Sci-Fi Short Stories: An Anthology of New \& Classic Stories (London: Flame Tree Publishing, 2021), 24-31; and in Voices from the Radium Age. Ed Joshua Glenn (Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2022), 141-180; and the poem \“A Hymn to the Peoples\” (275-76) in both of which the importance of racial differences disappears.

}, keywords = {African American author, Male author}, author = {W[illiam] E[dward] Burghardt Du Bois (1868-1963)}, editor = {W. E. B. Du Bois} } @booklet {537, title = {Dead Men{\textquoteright}s Shoes or The One Hundred Per Cent Inheritance Tax}, year = {1920}, month = {1920}, publisher = {Dent Publishing Co}, address = {San Francisco, CA}, abstract = {

Collection of stories/essays reflecting various reforms. \"Dead Men\&$\#$39;s Shoes or The One Hundred Per Cent Inheritance Tax. The Pro and Con Of It\" (11-104) is concerned with the way that inheritance continues the power and influence of \"dead men\". \"Putting a Meter on Your Windpipe\" (105-12) and \"Old Man Noah\&$\#$39;s Shoes\" (113-26) are attacks on monopolies. The first concerns the control of breathable air; in the second Noah claims ownership of the world after the flood. \"Happy Days in the Moon\" (127-42) and \"Old Satan Turns a Trick\" (143-61) describe capitalist dystopias. \"Democracy Come True\" (162-245) is a cooperative eutopia set in Chicago in 2000.

}, keywords = {Male author, Scottish author, US author}, author = {[John W.] [Hultberg] (1872-1951)} } @booklet {532, title = {Democracy--False or True? A Prologue and Dream}, year = {1920}, month = {1920}, publisher = {Cecil Palmer}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Detailed eutopia entitled \"A Dream of England\" (72-172). Democratic socialism. Decentralization (home rule for each county). Science. There are still classes, and there is continuing stress on the working class needing the right leaders and avoiding agitators.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Sir William Blake Richmond (1842-1921)} } @booklet {541, title = {Dennison Grant: A Novel of To-day}, year = {1920}, month = {1920}, publisher = {The Musson Book Co}, address = {Toronto, ON, Canada}, abstract = {

Mostly family history and romance, but it includes a land settlement scheme that will bring about a better society.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, Male author}, author = {Robert [James Campbell] Stead (1880-1959)} } @booklet {533, title = {Doomed. A Startling Message to the People of Our Day, interwoven in an Antediluvian Romance of Two Old Worlds and Two Young Lovers, by Queen Metel and Prince Loab of Atlo, Re-incarnated in its Editors, Marian and Franklin Mayoe. By the Atlon Calendar, the Year 14,909; by Our Calendar the Year 1920}, year = {1920}, month = {1920}, publisher = {Frank Rosewater, Publisher}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Atlism, in which everyone must spend their entire income to promote production, brings eutopia.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Frank] [Rosewater] (1856-1934)} } @booklet {534, title = {The Dream City}, year = {1920}, month = {1920}, publisher = {Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent and Company}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Christian socialist eutopia initially established as an intentional community, but it grew in numbers and prestige until it was possible to form a national government.

}, author = {Unitas [pseud.]} } @booklet {502, title = {"The Dark Cottage"}, howpublished = {Pears{\textquoteright}s Christmas Annual (London)}, year = {1919}, note = {

Rpt. in her\ The Romance of His Life and Other Romances\ (London: John Murray, 1921), 55-82. U.S. ed. (New York: Dodd, Mead, 1921), 55-82.

}, month = {1919}, pages = {8-11}, abstract = {

Eutopia in which a man who had been a relatively enlightened industrialist wakes up fifty years after being injured in World War I and is led to see how unenlightened he had actually been. Examples given are that he introduced electricity to his own estate but not, although easily able to do so, to his works, built houses for his workers but in an extremely unhealthy, swampy area because it was convenient to his factories, which were polluting the atmosphere, opposed women\&$\#$39;s suffrage, and generally opposed any legislation that would have improved the education, health, or working conditions of the lower classes. The eutopia, though, is still class based and the upper classes still have servants.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Mary Cholmondeley (1859-1925)} } @booklet {10335, title = {Democracy Made Safe}, year = {1918}, note = {

Rpt. Boston, MA: The Four Seas Co., 1920

}, month = {1918}, pages = {xii + 110 pp. }, publisher = {LeRoy Phillips}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {

Eutopia will be brought about by abolishing money and capitalism.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Paul Harris Drake (b. 1889)} } @booklet {6978, title = {"The Dawn of White Australasia (Being the Remarkable Adventures of Peter Ecoores Van Bu)"}, howpublished = {Daily Telegraph (Sydney, NSW, Australia)}, volume = { no. 11726 - 11751 }, year = {1916}, note = {

Rpt. as Adventures in Southern Seas, a Tale of the Sixteenth Century. Sydney, NSW, Australia: The Australasian Pub. Co., 1920. U.K. ed. London: Harrap, 1920.

}, month = {December 9, 1916 - January 8, 1917}, pages = {19, 3, 9, 5, 3, 3, 19, 3, 3, 15, 9, 3, 19, 3, 3, 2, 7, 3, 12, 2, 2, 11, 7, 3, 7, 3, 13, 7}, abstract = {

Includes a section (172-83 in the book) on two islands, one of men and one of women. Both islands follow the rules set down by the \"wise ones\" (men) who live of a mountain on the female island, sleep naked on the ground, and eat no meat, fish, or live vegetables. The men spend three months each year with the women on the women\&$\#$39;s island and the men provide their wives with all the necessities of life. Unmarried women did all the work on the women\&$\#$39;s island.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {George Forbes} } @booklet {439, title = {A Drop in Infinity}, year = {1915}, month = {1915}, publisher = {John Lane The Bodley Head/John Lane Co./Bell \& Cockburn}, address = {London/New York/Toronto, ON, Canada}, abstract = {

Colonization of a new world with the novel all on the early stages of development, but it ends with something like a eutopia of a simple, fairly primitive life.

}, keywords = {Male author, Scottish author}, author = {Gerald Grogan (1884-1918)} } @booklet {8877, title = {Darkness and Dawn}, year = {1914}, note = {

Rpt. Westport, CT: Hyperion Press, 1974 with unpaged \“The Fantastic in Fiction\” by the author, originally published as \“Facts About Fantasy.\” The Story World (July 1923). Originally serialized as \“Darkness and Dawn.\” The Cavalier 10. 4 (January 1912): 621-34; The Cavalier and the Scrap Book 11.1 - 3 (January 6 - 20, 1912): 169-85, 321-39, 521-33; \“Beyond the Great Oblivion.\” The Cavalier 24.1 - 25.2 (January 4 - February 8, 1913): 1-34, 215-32, 434-52, 645-65; 115-34, 272-92; and \“The Afterglow.\” Cavalier 29.4 - 30.3 (June 14 - July 5, 1913): 577-607; 71-100, 250-78, 495-519. All three were rpt. in Famous Fantastic Mysteries 2.3 (August 1940: 6-78; 3.2 (June 1941): 6-105; 3.5 (December 1941): 6-94.

}, month = {1914}, publisher = {Small, Maynard}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {

Much of the novel is a post-catastrophe dystopia with a young couple apparently alone struggling to survive, then in conflict with other survivors, but the novel ends depicting the beginnings of a new egalitarian, peaceful eutopian society.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {George Allan England (1877-1936)} } @booklet {426, title = {The Dawn of Hope}, year = {1914}, month = {1914}, publisher = {The Worker Print}, address = {Wellington, New Zealand}, abstract = {

Mostly concerned with the problems of workers in contemporary New Zealand but includes a dream of Joshua Narrowgrove, a minister who has supported the wealthy and opposed socialism. The vision includes a brief description of a socialist eutopia. A sequel,\ Parson Narrowgroove, Socialist, was announced but apparently not published.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author}, author = {Jas [James] Aggers} } @booklet {9277, title = {The Day That Changed the World}, year = {1912}, month = {[1912]}, publisher = {Hodder and Stoughton}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Through what may or may not be a miracle, people change their behavior so they behave as good Christians should, which at least begins the process toward eutopia.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Edward Harold] [Begbie] (1871-1929)} } @booklet {386, title = {A Derelict Empire}, year = {1912}, month = {1912}, publisher = {William Blackwood and Sons}, address = {Edinburgh, Scot.}, abstract = {

An anti-socialist dystopia is the cause of the neglect of empire through abolishing the House of Lords, giving women the vote, giving Ireland Home Rule, and establishing a pension system, among other things.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {[Henry Crossley] [Irwin]} } @booklet {391, title = {The Downfall of Grabbum: An Ulster Fable}, year = {1912}, month = {1912}, publisher = {R. Carswell \& Son}, address = {Belfast, Northern Ireland}, abstract = {

Some satire, but the novel ends with a eutopia of peace and harmony brought about by forensic phrenology\ or reading the bumps on the heads of individuals.

}, keywords = {Female author, Irish author}, author = {[Adela Elizabeth] [Orpen] (1855-1928)} } @booklet {392, title = {Dr. Blair: or, Irish Protestants under Home Rule}, year = {1912}, month = {1912}, publisher = {Ptd. by R. Carswell}, address = {Belfast, Northern Ireland}, abstract = {

Set in 2010 and depicts the crisis of religion due to falling attendance. The Roman Catholic Church conspires to get control of Ireland and is expelled. Spiritualism. Revival of religion followed by a eutopia of non-denominationalism, prosperity, and technological advances.

}, keywords = {Irish author, Male author}, author = {Rev. P. P. O{\textquoteright}Sullivan (1874-1918)} } @booklet {6713, title = {The Dawn of All}, year = {1911}, note = {

US ed. St. Louis, MO: B. Herder, 1911.

}, month = {[1911]}, publisher = {Hutchinson}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Eutopia of the Roman Catholic Church completely dominant in sixty years. Democracy and equality eliminated. Socialism illegal. Monarchy re-established. Heretics are handed over to the state and executed.\ See 1907 Benson for an alternative dystopian future.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Robert Hugh Benson (1871-1914)} } @booklet {352, title = {The Day After To-morrow}, year = {1911}, month = {1911}, publisher = {F.V. White \& Co., Ltd}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Romance but with a vaguely utopian background. America is a monarchy. Part is located in Australia.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Female author}, author = {[Minnie Warren] [Jones] (b. 1968)} } @booklet {313, title = {The Divine Seal}, year = {1909}, month = {1909}, publisher = {C.M. Clark}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {

Mostly a lost race adventure set in a future after 2100. Includes, at the beginning, a brief picture of the eutopian future stressing both technology and politics. Atlantis has been discovered, Atlantean records show a rich continent near the North Pole, and an expedition is mounted to find it. Alaska is now warm. The American Republic includes most of North America and has four capitals, including Yu-kon-il-i-a in Alaska. No one can vote who cannot pass a test on the principles of republican government. No one can be elected to office without a certificate of good character. The expedition includes \"several professors from Indian and negro colleges\" (4). Women hold office. Technologically advanced. The expedition quickly discovers people of the lost country, some of whom are highly civilized and one of whom is evil. The novel then becomes a typical lost race adventure.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Emma Louise Orcutt} } @booklet {311, title = {"The Dream of Debs: A Story of Industrial Revolt"}, howpublished = {The International Socialist Review (Chicago, IL)}, volume = {9.7 - 8}, year = {1909}, note = {

Rpt. Chicago: Charles H. Kerr \& Co., 1914; in his The Strength of the Strong (New York: Macmillan, 1914), 134-76; in The International Socialist Review 17.7 (January 1917): 389-95, 432-34; in The Bodley Head Jack London. Ed. Arthur Calder Marshall. 3 vols. (London: The Bodley Head, 1963-65), 1: 225-46; in The Science Fiction of Jack London: An Anthology. Ed. Richard Gid Powers (Boston, MA: Gregg Press, 1975), separately paged;\ and in The Complete Short Stories of Jack London. Ed. Earle Labor, Robert C. Leitz, III, and I. Milo Shepard. 3 vols. (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1993), 2: 1261-78.

}, month = {January - February 1909}, pages = {481-89, 561-70}, abstract = {

A successful general strike will bring about a better world.\ See also 1907 London, 1908 London \“A Curious Fragment\”, and 1908\ London, \"Goliah\".

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Jack [John Griffith] London (1876-1916)} } @booklet {217, title = {The Demetrian}, year = {1907}, note = {

UK ed. entitled\ The Woman Who Vowed. London: T. Fisher Unwin, 1908.

}, month = {1907}, pages = {315 pp.}, publisher = {Brentano{\textquoteright}s}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Romance and adventure set in a collectivist eutopia with problems in 2004. All land owned by the state. No city versus country division; people changed residences from time to time and do physical as well as mental labor. Classical Greek culture plus Christianity. Political parties organized around principles with the main parties being the conservatives who support the current system and the radicals who want to reestablish private property. Eugenics. The novel focuses on the love between a man and a woman who had been \“selected\” to marry someone chosen by the Cult of Demeter, the consequences of which brought about violence and almost a revolution. The author also wrote Twentieth Century Socialism: What It Is Not, What It Is, and How It May Come. Ed. Florence Kelly. New York: Longman, Green, 1910. In the section \“What Socialism Is\” (202-411) describes in detail the utopia that socialism could become including a lengthy discussion of the Farm Colonies (263-277) that play an important role in Demetrian. The author was a lawyer who spent most of his life in Europe and was, at his death, Lecturer on Municipal Government at Columbia University. Shortly before his death, he was planning to join Upton Sinclair\’s (1878-1968) Helicon Hall community in New Jersey. The Penn State copy includes a photocopy of an excerpt from the chapter on Kelly in James Gilbert, \“Edmond Kelly and the Socialism of Order.\” Designing the Industrial State: The Intellectual Pursuit of Collectivism in American, 1880-1940 (Chicago, IL: Quadrangle Books, 1972), 125-158, 301-303.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Edmond] [Kelly] (1851-1909)} } @booklet {229, title = {The Dust which is God; An Undimensional Adventure}, year = {1907}, month = {1907}, publisher = {Samurai Press}, address = {[Norwich, Eng.]}, abstract = {

Eutopia of evolution and religion. A man is shown the First, Second, and Third Worlds, which are stages of human evolution, with the First World the beginning of consciousness, the Second World the contemporary world, and the Third World the eutopia to which evolution is tending. In the Third World friction has been overcome and humanity has evolved wings.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Ralph [Sidney Albert] Straus (1892-1950)} } @booklet {211, title = {Decimon H{\^u}ydas: A Romance of Mars. A Story of actual experiences in Ento (Mars) many centuries ago given to the Psychic Sara Weiss and by her transcribed under the editorial direction of Spirit Carl De L{\textquoteright}Ester}, year = {1906}, month = {1906}, publisher = {Austin Publishing Co}, address = {Rochester, NY}, abstract = {

Story of life on Mars related to 1903 Weiss.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Sara Weiss (d. 1904)} } @booklet {193, title = {The Discriminators}, year = {1906}, month = {1906}, pages = {73 pp.}, publisher = {R.A. Thompson \& Co}, address = {Melbourne, VIC, Australia}, abstract = {

Reform tract in the form of a novel, much of which concerns wreck of a Welsh ship on the Australian coast and a young woman held captive by Aborigines. This takes up the first half of the novel; the second half is largely speeches. Imperial cooperation. Industrial homes for the unemployed. Preferential trade, which refers to protecting workers and industries from cheap foreign labor and limiting imports. Penal reform. Dedicated to Right Hon. Richard J. Seddon, P.C. LL.D., Prime Minister of New Zealand.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {[J. Hugh] [Davies] (Probable author)} } @booklet {184, title = {The Decline and Fall of the British Empire. A brief account of those cases which resulted in the destruction of our late Ally, together with a comparison between the British and Roman Empires. Appointed for use in the National Schools of Japan--Tokio, 2005--}, year = {1905}, month = {1905}, publisher = {Alden \& Co., Ltd., Bocardo Press/Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent \& Co, Ltd.}, address = {Oxford, Eng./London}, abstract = {

The British Empire fell in 1995 and the colonies are now all colonies of other empires. Brought about by British leaders becoming talkers rather than actors, the shift from country to city, the rejection of sea power, \"the growth of refinement and luxury\", the decline in taste in literature and drama, the decline in physical health, \"the decline of intellectual and religious life\", high taxes and exorbitant municipal spending, and the inability to defend themselves or the empire. Compared throughout to the decline and fall of Rome as described by Edward Gibbon in The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (1776-88).

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Elliott E.] [Mills] (1881-1956)} } @booklet {6695, title = {A Dream of Paradise}, year = {1904}, month = {[1904]}, pages = {8 pp.}, publisher = {James Curtis}, address = {Ballarat, VIC, Australia}, abstract = {

Poem of Heaven as a eutopia.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {William Little (1839-1916)} } @booklet {144, title = {The Dwellers in Vale Sunrise. How They Got Together and Lived Happy Ever After. A Sequel to "The Natural Man"; Being an Account of the Tribes of Him}, year = {1904}, note = {

Part was published anonymously as Two Letters Telling How They Lived in Vale Sunrise. Where a Colony of Comrades of the Co-operative Fellowship Being Free Socialists Dwell Most Happily. Westwood, MA: The Ariel Press, [1904].\ 

}, month = {1904}, publisher = {The Ariel Press}, address = {Westwood, MA}, abstract = {

Eutopia of the simple life in community. See 1902 Lloyd The Natural Man for a novel about one man living in tune with nature who inspires the establishment of a community.\ See also 1900 Lloyd \"The Story of Zendos.\"\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {J[ohn] W[illia]m Lloyd (1857-1940)} } @booklet {107, title = {D{\textquoteright}Mars Affinity: Romance of Love{\textquoteright}s Final Test in Time and Tide}, year = {1903}, month = {1903}, publisher = {J.S. Ogilvie Publishing Co}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Mostly romance and spiritualism but includes a cooperative eutopia.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {J[ames] M[oses] Bloomer (1844?-1923)} } @booklet {98, title = {The Day of Prosperity; A Vision of the Century to Come}, year = {1902}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Arno Press and\ The New York Times, 1971. UK ed. London: T. Fisher Unwin, 1903. Rpt. London: Greening, 1903.

}, month = {1902}, publisher = {G.W. Dillingham}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Christian socialist eutopia. Generally, gender equality. Men and women elected by the same sex for most public offices. Something close to unisex dress (no fashion). Everyone lives in hotels, which are managed by women.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Paul Devinne} } @booklet {103, title = {"Dorlan{\textquoteright}s Plan. (Sequel to {\textquoteright}Unfettered{\textquoteright}.) A Dissertation on the Race Problem"}, howpublished = {Unfettered. A Novel}, year = {1902}, note = {

Rpt. New York: AMS Press, 1971.\ 

}, month = {1902}, pages = {217-76}, publisher = {Orion Publishing Co.}, address = {Nashville, TN}, abstract = {

Eutopia. Dorlan Warthall is an extremely wealthy African American who intends to use his wealth to help African Americans and the eutopia is presented as a fictionalized proposal for solving racial problems in the United States, which will be achieved by establishing an organization that will encourage and develop education, ownership of land, political rights, and better housing, among other things. Unfettered provides the background that makes the proposal possible. See also 1899 Griggs. Griggs wrote other works, both fiction and nonfiction, discussing the plight of African Americans. His fiction includes Overshadowed. A Novel. Nashville, TN: The Orion Pub. Co., 1901. Rpt. New York: AMS Press, 1973 which documents the mistreatment of Negroes by Anglo-Saxons in the U. S., The Hindered Hand: or, The Reign of the Repressionist. Nashville, TN: The Orion Pub. Co., 1905. The 3rd ed. rev. Illus. Robert E. Bell. Nashville, TN: The Orion Pub. Co., 1905; rpt. New York: AMS Press, 1969 which includes a positive description of the colonization of Africa by freed slaves; and Pointing the Way. Nashville, TN: The Orion Publishing Co., 1908. The novel includes a depiction of the treatment of Negroes, the beginnings of a movement joining both blacks and whites, and the argument before the U.S. Supreme Court for the enfranchisement of blacks. The nonfiction includes The One Great Question: A Study of Southern Conditions at Close Range. Philadelphia, PA/Nashville, TN: The Orion Publishing Co., 1907 (58 pp.); Wisdom\’s Call. Nashville, TN: The Orion Publishing Co., 1911; How to Rise. Memphis, TN: National Public Welfare League, [1915] (72 pp.); Light on Racial Issues. Memphis, TN: National Public Welfare League, [1921] (62 pp.); According to Law. Memphis, TN: National Public Welfare League, 1916; The Reconstruction of a Race. Memphis, TN: National Public Welfare League, 1917 (62 pp.); Life\’s Demands or According to Law. Memphis, TN: National Public Welfare League, [1916] (122 pp.); rev. Memphis, TN: National Public Welfare League, 1917 (170 pp.); The Guide to Racial Greatness or the Science of Collective Efficiency. Memphis, TN: National Public Welfare League, 1923; Kingdom Builders\’ Manual. Companion Book to Guide to Racial Greatness. Memphis, TN: National Public Welfare League, 1924.

}, keywords = {African American author, Male author}, author = {Sutton E[lbert] Griggs (1872-1933)} } @booklet {106, title = {A Dream of Freedom: Romance of South America}, year = {1902}, month = {1902}, publisher = {F.V. White \& Co}, address = {London}, abstract = {

A novel describing the intentional community of New Sparta (160-318) in Paraguay, which is obviously based on William Lane (1861-1917) and the New Australia experiment. The settlers are described as Practical Communists following the ideals of William Morris (1834-96), which does not fit the actual New Australia.\ See 1888 and 1892 Lane for his utopias.\ See also 1893, 1895 and 1905 Nisbet.\ 

}, keywords = {Australian author, English author, Male author, Scottish author}, author = {[James] Hume Nisbet (1848-1921)} } @booklet {92, title = {"A Dream of the Twenty-First Century"}, howpublished = {Arena (Boston, MA)}, volume = {28.5 }, year = {1902}, note = {

Rpt. in Daring To Dream: Utopian Stories by United States Women, 1836-1919. Ed. Carol Farley Kessler (London: Pandora Press, 1984), 207-11 with an editor\’s note on 205-06; and in Daring To Dream: Utopian Stories By United States Women Before 1950. Ed. Carol Farley Kessler. 2nd ed. (Syracuse, New York: Syracuse University Press, 1995), 126-30.\ 

}, month = {November 1902}, pages = {511-16}, abstract = {

Eutopia. Government ownership of basic resources and utilities brought about by women\&$\#$39;s votes. Compulsory education through twenty-two. Initiative and referendum. Everyone works an average five hour day. No trusts. Civil service. Rational religion based on the moral teachings of Jesus. Marriage universal and two children is the norm. See the author\’s\ The New Womankind. New York: Broadway Publishers, 1904.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Winnifred Harper Cooley (1874-1967)} } @booklet {6687, title = {"The Donoghues of Dunno Weir"}, howpublished = {Utopian Studies}, volume = {12.2}, year = {1901}, note = {

University College, London Galton Papers 138/5

}, month = {[1901?]/2001}, pages = {210-33}, abstract = {

Eugenic eutopia.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Francis Galton (1822-1911)} } @booklet {56, title = {"A Dream and a Prophecy"}, howpublished = {So Here Then Are the Preachments Entitled the City of Tagaste, and A Dream and A Prophecy}, volume = {940 copy ed.}, year = {1900}, note = {

A 50 copy ed. on Imperial Japan Vellum was illus Etla Hubbs (East Aurora, NY: The Roycrofters at the Roycroft Shop, 1900), 13-21. Rpt. (East Aurora, NY: Roycrofters, 1909), 13-21.

}, month = {1900}, pages = {13-21}, publisher = {The Roycrofters at the Roycroft Shop}, address = {East Aurora, NY}, abstract = {

Follows from the dystopia of his 1900 \"A City of Tagaste\" and suggests the eutopia that can be created by returning to the countryside and the craft tradition.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Elbert] [Hubbard] (1856-1915)}, editor = {Harriet Robarge} } @booklet {33, title = {The Dream of a Warringtonian}, year = {1900}, month = {1900}, publisher = {Sunrise Publishing Company}, address = {Warrington, Eng.}, abstract = {

Warrington described as a future eutopia. Clean and improved both architecturally and morally. Much control by local government. See also 1892 Hythloday Junior.\ Bennett also wrote a utopia advocating a world federation; see 1892 Bennett.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Arthur Bennett (1862-1931)} } @booklet {18, title = {Depopulation: A Romance of the Unlikely}, year = {1899}, note = {

Rpt. in\ Late Victorian Utopias: A Prospectus. Ed. Gregory Claeys. 6 vols. (London: Pickering \& Chatto, 2009), 6: 123-99. Editor\&$\#$39;s notes, 121, 202-03.

}, month = {1899}, publisher = {George Allen}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Mostly an economic novel depicting trusts controlling the economy followed by the trusts being taken over by government, and a eutopia is foreshadowed but not presented in detail. The tool used by the working class, which led to the capitulation of the trusts, was to refuse to have children to provide future workers.

}, keywords = {Male author, UK author}, author = {Henry Wright (1852-ca. 1940)} } @booklet {8042, title = {Doctor Jones{\textquoteright} Picnic}, year = {1898}, month = {1898}, publisher = {Whitaker \& Ray Co.}, address = {San Francisco, CA}, abstract = {

The novel is primarily concerned with a voyage to the North Pole in an aluminum balloon, but there are discussions of the improvements in society and in medicine in particular.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {S[amuel] E. Chapman M.D. (1847-1930)} } @booklet {8001, title = {The Dawn of Civilisation; or, England in the Nineteenth Century}, year = {1897}, note = {

The cover says that the chapter on marriage had been issued as an official publication of the Legitimation League.\ 

}, month = {1897}, publisher = {Watts \& Co}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Future eutopia where all arbitrary laws and taxes have been abolished.\ See also his non-utopian\ Freedom--Our Birthright: A Protest Against Taxes. Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Eng.: Ptd. by Lambert \& Co., 1887.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {J[ames] C[armichael] Spence} } @booklet {8012, title = {The Day of Resis}, year = {1897}, month = {1897}, publisher = {G.W. Dillingham}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Lost Egyptian race eutopia in Africa. All the people are tall, well-formed, and appear to be no older than middle aged. This is made possible by controlling what people eat and limiting work hours. Everyone above twenty-five is a teacher and everyone learns a wide variety of trades. All goods are free for the asking. At eighteen couples are assigned marriage partners after a detailed mental and physical examination. Animals larger and better formed than usual. Lots of gold, onyx, and jewels. On the Day of Resis, the only national holiday, all who have reached the age of sixty-five are put to death. Much of the novel is a standard lost race novel with adventure and the escape of the outsiders.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Lillian Frances Mentor} } @booklet {7969, title = {Daybreak: A Romance of an Old World}, year = {1896}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Arno Press and\ The New York Times,\ 1971. 2nd ed. New York: George H. Richmond, 1896.

}, month = {1896}, publisher = {George H. Richmond}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Christian, egalitarian, anarchist, suburban eutopia set on Mars, which had gone through a history directly parallel to that of Earth. Garden-like cities. Science. No private property. Gender equality. Christ had revealed himself on Mars, and the Martians took him seriously. Much adventure. Improved nature and\ even horses are born tame.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {James Cowan (1870-1943)} } @booklet {7941, title = {"The Discovery of Altruria. Narrative of Sir Robert Horton"}, howpublished = {The Cosmopolitan: A Monthly Illustrated Magazine }, volume = {20.1}, year = {1895}, month = {November 1895}, pages = {85-93}, abstract = {

Isolated eutopia established in 1641 in central Africa and called Virland. This story serves as the introduction to 1895-1896 Walker, which elaborates on the eutopia. Here there is mention of a rich country with many villages and two cities, advanced technology, and moral leaders.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[John Brisben?] [Walker] (1847-1931)} } @booklet {7965, title = {A Dream of the Future; or Home Rule for Ladies. A Comic Opera in One Act and Four Scenes}, year = {1895}, month = {1895}, publisher = {Green \& Sons}, address = {Blackburn, Eng.}, abstract = {

Gender-role reversal satire.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {J. R[edfearn] Williamson and Fred Walters} } @booklet {7892, title = {Dashed Against the Rocks: A Romance of the Coming Age}, year = {1894}, month = {1894}, publisher = {Colby \& Rich}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {

Spiritualism including a briefly described eutopia on Mars. The chief representatives of the twelve districts of Mars are twelve married couples who legislated with no strife. Martians cooperate for the good of all. Mars is scientifically advanced, and it is also religious in that they have knowledge of God.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {William [Wilberforce] J[uvenal] Colville (1862-1917)} } @booklet {7923, title = {"The Devil{\textquoteright}s Pronoun"}, howpublished = {The Devil{\textquoteright}s Pronoun and Other Phantasies}, year = {1894}, month = {1894}, pages = {1-19.}, publisher = {Reeves \& Turner}, address = {London}, abstract = {

An egalitarian eutopia with people living a simple life where the language has no possessive pronoun. Satan introduces possessive pronouns\ and destroys the eutopia.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Frances Forbes Robertson (1866-1956)} } @booklet {7873, title = {The Daughters of Cain in the Land of Nod: A Satirical Romance}, year = {1893}, month = {1893}, publisher = {Donohue, Henneberry \& Co}, address = {Chicago, IL}, abstract = {

A lost race gender-role reversal novel that is more complicated than most. Anti-religious and feminist.

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {Mrs. A. M. Freeman} } @booklet {9779, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Doom of London{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The Idler: An Illustrated Monthly}, volume = {2}, year = {1892}, note = {

Rpt. in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction 7.1 (38) (July 1954): 25-34 with an editor\’s note on 34; and in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction (Australian ed.) 6 ([February 1956]): 23-33.\ 

}, month = {November 1892}, pages = {397-409}, abstract = {

The dystopia created in London when the combination of fog and smoke cut off oxygen at ground level and millions die, with the suggestion that the reduction in population plus advanced technology have produced a better life fifty years later.

}, keywords = {Canadian author, English author, Male author, US author}, author = {Robert Barr (1850-1912)} } @booklet {7838, title = {The Doom of the County Council of London}, year = {1892}, month = {1892}, pages = {38 pp.}, publisher = {W.H. Allen and Co}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia. The London County Council uses the people of London to dominate the House of Commons. The House of Lords stands out against the LCC and the LCC is finally defeated.

} } @booklet {7841, title = {The Dream Child}, year = {1892}, month = {1892}, publisher = {Arena Publishing Co}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {

Heaven as eutopia.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Florence [Chance] Huntley} } @booklet {7811, title = {The Dream of an Englishman}, year = {1892}, note = {

Rpt. Warrington, England: \"Sunrise\" Pub. Co., 1893.

}, month = {1892}, publisher = {Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent and Company}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Eutopia. World federation developed from Britain. Three stages--United Kingdom and Ireland form a federation; the empire is added; and then the entire world joins. Based on self-interest.\ . See also his letter to the editor, \“Federation Made Easy.\” Imperial Federation 8 (1893): 320-21. Bennett also wrote a utopia set in his hometown in the future; see 1900 Bennett.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Arthur Bennett (1862-1931)} } @booklet {8454, title = {Dreams of the Dead}, year = {1892}, month = {1892}, publisher = {Lee \& Shepard}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {

Complex spiritualist novel that includes both heaven and hell as eutopian and dystopia. Strongly influenced by Emanuel Swedenborg (1668-1772). Includes criticisms of Theosophy and Christian Science.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Edward Stanton Huntington (1841-95)} } @booklet {8441, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Danger of Anarchy in the Twentieth Century{\textquotedblright} }, howpublished = {The Open Court }, volume = {4.140}, year = {1890}, month = {May 1, 1890}, pages = {2245}, abstract = {

A report from the future of 1888 Bellamy\’s Looking Backward, in which the asylums are full of thousands of cases of \“atavism\” or people who believe that the supposed utopia is deeply flawed. Congress has not met for thirty years and, at that point, voted to not meet for fifty years.

} } @booklet {7746, title = {The Decline and Fall of the British Empire; or, the Witches Cavern}, year = {1890}, note = {

Rpt. in\ Late Victorian Utopias: A Prospectus. Ed. Gregory Claeys. 6 vols. (London: Pickering \& Chatto, 2009), 3: 59-217. Editor\&$\#$39;s notes, 57-58, 392-95. U.S. eds. as\ The Decline and Fall of the British Empire. By An English Premier [pseud.].\ Minerva Series. No. 36. November, 1890. New York: Minerva, 1890; and\ The Witch\&$\#$39;s Cavern, A Realistic and Thrilling Picture of London Society. By One Who Knows [pseud.]. New York: Minerva, 1890.

}, month = {1890}, publisher = {Trischler \& Co.}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Socialism and a lack of both religion and authority cause the collapse of Britain. Britain failed to educate its people so that democracy could function correctly. Climatic changes brought about by the movement of the Gulf Stream away from Britain and the resulting colder weather led to mass immigration and the collapse of commerce. The class structure in Britain divides people. The protagonist visits Britain in 2990 and the Britain of the nineteenth century in a dream. Australia in 2989 is prosperous and healthy with religion and authority as seen in a tour of Australia taken in what is called an electric car but runs on a schedule and has a guard. The poor in Australia are given assistance as a right.\ 

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, Australian author, Male author}, author = {H[enry] C[rocker] M[arrriott] W[atson] (1835-1901)} } @booklet {8693, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Doll{\textquoteright}s House--T{\textquoteright}other Side{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Women{\textquoteright}s Penny Paper }, volume = {2.73 - 74}, year = {1890}, month = {March 15 - 22, 1890}, pages = {244, 256}, abstract = {

Women take over from men with positive results, but, ultimately, they begin to feel sorry for the men in their inferior roles.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {[Ellen Battelle] [Dietrick] (1847-95)} } @booklet {9400, title = {"Dorothy{\textquoteright}s Experience"}, howpublished = {Christian Union}, volume = {42.1 - 8 }, year = {1890}, note = {

Rpt. Boston, MA: Lee and Shepard Publishers, 1890

}, month = {July 3 - August 21, 1890}, pages = {10-11, 41-43, 74-75, 105-07, 137-40, 169-70, 201-03, 235-36}, publisher = {Lee and Shepard Publishers}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {

Social Gospel novel that includes a woman establishing a place for homeless young women to live.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Adeline Trafton (1842?-1920?)} } @booklet {7743, title = {"Dr. Leetes Letter to Julian West"}, howpublished = {The Nationalist }, volume = {3.2 }, year = {1890}, month = {September 1890}, pages = {81-86}, abstract = {

Pro-1888 Bellamy eutopia. Julian West, the protagonist in Looking Backward, has become an unthinking and uninformed critic of the future Boston and starts a newspaper modeled on papers of the late nineteenth century to express his views. The letter explains why the newspaper failed so completely.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Solomon Schindler (1842-1915)} } @booklet {7734, title = {A Dream of a Modest Prophet}, year = {1890}, month = {1890}, publisher = {J.B. Lippincott}, address = {Philadelphia, PA}, abstract = {

Eutopia set on Mars which is like Earth with a parallel history but more three thousand years more advanced. Religion is a way of life. World language.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {M[ortimer] D[ormer] Leggett (1821-96)} } @booklet {7703, title = {The Discovered Country}, year = {1889}, note = {

Rpt. under the author\&$\#$39;s name Boston, MA: Colby \& Rich, 1892.

}, month = {1889}, publisher = {Ernst von Himmel Publishing Company}, address = {Boston, MA}, abstract = {

Heaven as eutopia. Birds, animals, and plants are immortal. Everyone looks young. People find their true soul mates in heaven. Jupiter is inhabited and is the better society Earth will one day become.\ No need for government or buying and selling.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Carlyle] [Petersilea] (1844-1903)} } @booklet {7675, title = {The Dawn of the Twentieth Century. 1st January 1901}, year = {1888}, month = {1888}, publisher = {Field \& Tuer/Simpkin, Marshall}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Monarchist eutopia. The book consists of a newspaper article and a series of reports from British government officials describing the state of the world at the beginning of 1901. Queen Victoria has stepped down and is now the Queen Dowager. Britain and the Empire are in excellent condition. Europe is cooperating. The British colonies have, at their request, become more closely integrated within the British system. India is now the Confederation of the Indian Empire and includes Siam (now Thailand) and the entire Malay Peninsula while remaining part of the British Empire. Includes plans to send the English poor to the colonies.

} } @booklet {7651, title = {"A Divided Republic: An Allegory of the Future"}, howpublished = {The Phrenological Journal (New York) }, volume = {ns 33 (os 84).2 - 3 }, year = {1887}, note = {

Rpt. in her\ A Daring Experiment and Other Stories\ (New York: Lovell, Coryell \& Co., 1892), 346-60; in\ Daring To Dream: Utopian Stories By United States Women Before 1950. Ed. Carol Farley Kessler. 2nd ed. (Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 1995), 95-103 with an editor\&$\#$39;s note on 94-95; and in The Feminine Future: Early Science Fiction by Women Writers. Ed. Mike [Michael Raymond Donald]\ Ashley (Mineola, NY: Dover Publications, 2015), 93-102 with an editor\’s not on 93.\ 

}, month = {February - March 1887}, pages = {76-78, 139-142}, abstract = {

All women leave the United States to set up an independent republic. Events in the U.S. and in the women\&$\#$39;s territory are presented. Reconciliation between men and women when men capitulate and promise to reform.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Lillie Devereux [Umstead] Blake (1833-1913)} } @booklet {7659, title = {A Dream of the Days to Be}, year = {1887}, month = {1887}, pages = {23 pp.}, publisher = {F.H. Plummer}, address = {Oxford, Eng.}, abstract = {

Eutopia of the simple life. Everyone works. Craft guilds. Stress on education. Collective evening meal.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {[John Mark S.] [Hunter]} } @booklet {6948, title = {"A Dream of John Ball"}, howpublished = {The Commonweal }, volume = {2 - 3.44 - 54}, year = {1886}, note = {

First published in book form as\ A Dream of John Ball and A King\’s Lesson (Reprinted from the \‘Commonweal\’). London: Reeves and Turner, 1888. Rpt. in\ The Collected Works of William Morris With Introductions By His Daughter May Morris. Volume XVI New From Nowhere A Dream of John Ball A King\’s Lesson. 24 vols. (London: Longmans Green and Co., 1912), 16: 213-88. L, L(NL)

}, month = {November 13, 1886 - January 22, 1887}, pages = {257-58, 266-67, 274-75, 282-83, 290-91, 298-99, 307; 3, 13, 20-21, 28-29}, abstract = {

John Ball (ca. 1338-81) was a priest who was involved in the in the Peasant\&$\#$39;s Revolt of 1381, and his dream is of the success of the revolt.\ See 1958 Fairburn for another eutopia focusing on Ball. See also 1884, 1887, 1889, and 1890 Morris.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {William Morris (1834-1896)} } @booklet {7600, title = {Darkness and Dawn; The Peaceful Birth of a New Age}, year = {1884}, month = {1884}, publisher = {Kegan Paul, Trench and Company}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Eutopia. Christian cooperative commonwealth. All work but there is no night work, no child labor, and factories are concerned with the health of their workers. Homes provided for everyone. No class system.

} } @booklet {7614, title = {Detroit of the Future}, howpublished = {Poetical Drifts of Thought or, Problems of Progress. Treating Upon the Mistakes of the Church--The Mistakes of the Atheist Infidel and Materialist--God Not the Maker of the Universe--Progress the Evidence of a Merciful, But Not All Powerful, God. Reconciliation of Science and Christianity. The Formation of a Solar System--Evolution--Human Progress--Possibilities of the Future--Including Spicy Explanatory Matter in Prose. Embellished with Nearly 200 Illustrations. Together With a Number of Fine Poems On Popular Subjects Including Sketches of the City of the Straits--Past, Present and Future}, year = {1884}, month = {1884}, pages = {311-17}, publisher = {Lyman E. Stowe, Publisher}, address = {Detroit, MI}, abstract = {

Poem describing a eutopian Detroit of the future. There is an article on the book, Harry Massie, \“Prophetic book envisions Detroit as Utopia in 2100.\”\ Ann Arbor News\ (October 8, 1989): A9.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Lyman E. Stowe} } @booklet {7587, title = {The Diothas; or, A Far Look Ahead}, year = {1883}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Arno Press and\ The New York Times, 1971. [2nd ed.]. entitled\ Looking Forward; or, The Diothas. New York: [cover says London]: G.P. Putnam\&$\#$39;s Sons, 1890; and entitled\ A Far Look Ahead; or The Diothas. New York: G.P. Putnam\&$\#$39;s Sons, 1890. Both by Ismar Thiusen [pseud.].

}, month = {1883}, publisher = {G. P. Putnam{\textquoteright}s Sons}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Eutopia. The \"Preface to the Second Edition\" says it is a forecast. A pre-1888 Bellamy book set in the 96th century with a great emphasis on custom. Unlike Bellamy this eutopia includes a violent revolution in its past. Stress on morality. Religion rationalized, and the Roman Catholic Church has disappeared.

}, keywords = {Male author, Scottish author, US author}, author = {[John] [Macnie] (1836-1909)} } @booklet {7584, title = {The Dominion in 1983}, year = {1883}, month = {1883}, pages = {33 pp.}, publisher = {Toker and Company}, address = {Peterborough, ON, Canada}, abstract = {

Canada as a eutopia in 1983. Fifteen provinces with a population of 93 million. No taxes. Only fifteen, unpaid Members of Parliament. Private charity. Technically advanced. The North has been settled by Caucasians. The U.S. has been defeated.

}, keywords = {Canadian author}, author = {Ralph Centennius [pseud.]} } @booklet {7591, title = {The Drolleries of a Happy Island, or, Merry Utopia}, year = {1883}, note = {

Rpt. beginning with a new page number and the title \"Merry Utopia or The Drolleries of a Happy Island.\" [Table of Contents reads \"The Drolleries of a Happy Island\"]. In\ A Desperate Adventure and Other Stories. By Max Adeler [pseud.]. (London: Ward, Lock, [1886]), 1-176.

}, month = {1883}, publisher = {Ward, Lock}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Arcadia. Eutopia of simplicity that is disturbed by outside influences.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {[Charles Heber] [Clark] (1847-1915)} } @booklet {7579, title = {The Dawn of the Twentieth Century. A Novel, Social and Political}, volume = {3 vols.}, year = {1882}, month = {1882}, publisher = {Remington and Co}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Conservative eutopia with Ireland better off from having better English proprietors.

} } @booklet {7570, title = {The Decline and Fall of the British Empire. Being a History of England Between the Years 1840-1981. Written for the Use of Junior Classes in Schools by Lang-Tung, Professor of History of the Imperial University of Pekin and Tutor to Their Imperial Highnesses the Princes Sing and Hang. Translated into the English Language by YEA, Pekin, 2381 A.D.}, year = {1881}, month = {1881}, publisher = {F.V. White}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Satire--a degenerated England is now barbarian. Attacks on Ireland, women\&$\#$39;s rights, a republicanism.

}, author = {Lang-Tung [pseud.]} } @booklet {7561, title = {Decline and Fall of the American Republic. Confessions of a Repentant Politician. A Story of Fifty Years Hence. Time, A.D. 1930}, year = {1880}, month = {1880}, publisher = {Toledo Blade}, address = {Toledo, OH}, abstract = {

Political tract in favor of the Republican Party set in a dystopia created by Democratic policies.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {John McElroy (1846-1929)} } @booklet {6599, title = {The Doom of the Great City; Being The Narrative of a Survivor, Written A.D. 1942}, year = {1880}, note = {

Rpt. in British Future Fiction. Ed. I.F. Clarke. 8 vols. (London: Pickering \& Chatto, 2001), 8: 17-68, with a note by the editor (1-16).

}, month = {[1880]}, pages = {52 pp.}, publisher = {Newman \& Co}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Catastrophe due to the dystopia that is contemporary London. Brief New Zealand eutopia of 1942 at the beginning.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author, English author, Male author}, author = {William Delisle Hay (b. 1853)} } @booklet {7547, title = {Democracy By Telephone or Parliament a Year Hence}, year = {1878}, month = {1878}, publisher = {George Taylor}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Satire. Experiment in having people directly in touch with Parliament is tried and fails.

} } @booklet {7541, title = {Diagram of Coming Events, and the Millennium}, year = {1877}, month = {1877}, publisher = {Ptd. by John Henry Field}, address = {Auckland, New Zealand}, abstract = {

Pages 25-28 are a description of the millennium using Biblical texts.

}, keywords = {Aotearoa New Zealand author}, author = {F. M E.} } @booklet {7518, title = {The Diakka, and Their Earthly Victims; Being an Explanation of Much That Is False and Repulsive in Spiritualism}, year = {1874}, month = {1874}, publisher = {A.J. Davis \& Co.}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Diakka is \"a Garden of Eden . . . where the morally deficient and the affectionally unclean enter upon a strange probationary life\" (7).\ See also 1847 and 1878 Davis;\ \“Traveling and Society in the Summer Land.\” In his\ A Stellar Key to the Summer Land\ (Boston, MA: William White \& Co./New York: Banner of Light Branch Office, 1867), 163-83; his \“Social Centers in the Summer-Land,\” \“Winter-Land and Summer-Land\” and \“Language and Life in the Summer-Land.\” In his\ Morning Lectures. Twenty Discourse, Delivered before the Friends of\ Progress in the City of New York, in the Winter and Spring of 1863\ (New York: C.M. Plumb, 1865), 266-87 and 349-404.\ Earth is the Winter Land; and his\ The Grand Harmonia\ [Each volume has a different subtitle]. 5 vols. Boston, MA: Bela Marsh, 1852-56; and 5 vols. New York: A.J. Davis, 1864-80. There were at least five editions.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Andrew Jackson Davis (1826-1910)} } @booklet {7520, title = {"A Dream within a Dream"}, howpublished = {Independent (New York)}, volume = {26 }, year = {1874}, note = {

All but a small part of the text rpt. in Daring To Dream: Utopian Stories by United States Women, 1836-1919. Ed. Carol Farley Kessler (London: Pandora Press, 1984), 107-11 with an editor\’s note on 104-06. Complete text rpt. in Daring To Dream: Utopian Stories By United States Women Before 1950. Ed. Carol Farley Kessler. 2nd ed. (Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 1995), 63-67 with an editor\’s note on 61-63.

}, month = {February 19, 1874}, pages = {1}, abstract = {

A dream of an egalitarian marriage ceremony.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Elizabeth Stuart Phelps (1844-1911)} } @booklet {7485, title = {"Dream of a Free-Trade Paradise. A Laissez Faire Tale"}, howpublished = {Dream of a Free Trade Paradise, and Other Sketches}, year = {1872}, note = {

Rpt. in American Utopias: Selected Short Fiction. Ed. Arthur O. Lewis, Jr. New York: Arno Press and The New York Times, 1971. All items separately paged.

}, month = {1872}, pages = {11-20}, publisher = {Pub. for the Industrial League by Henry Carey Baird, Industrial Publisher}, address = {Philadelphia, PA}, abstract = {

Satire on free trade set in the country of Laissez Faire where the rule is to do what is easiest. Thus, no children, no buildings, few crops, little production. The rest of the book is made up of short essays and stories that make the same point without using the utopian form.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Cyrus Elder} } @booklet {7472, title = {The Democratic Charter of the Future; or, Outlines of Progressive Reforms, in Government, Social Economy, Labour-Arrangement, Education, Law, Police, Military, Poor-Relief, Etc.}, year = {1870}, note = {

Rpt. as an Appendix to his Social Architecture; or, Reasons and Means for the Demolition and Reconstruction of the Social Edifice. By An Exile from France [pseud.] (London: Samuel Tinsley, 1976), 423-39.

}, month = {1870}, publisher = {E. Truelove}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Non-fiction eutopia. Twenty page pamphlet giving a series of detailed proposals for the stages from the current situation to what he calls the \"Communistic State\". Includes all of the areas included in the title.\ See also 1876 Petzler, which reprints this text and 1890 Petzler. See also his Die sociale Baukunst; oder Gr{\"u}nde und Mittel f{\"u}r den Umsturz und Wiederaufbau der gesellschaftlichen Verh{\"a}ltnisse, besonders wie solche sich in neuester Zeit in England, dem grossen Musterstaat der modernen Civilisation, ausgebildet haben. 2 vols. Hottingen-Z{\"u}rich, Switzerland: Verlag der Schweizerischen Volksbuchhandlung, 1879, 1880; and his Grosse Jubil{\"a}umsfeier und imposanter Triumphzug in Erinnerung des hundertj{\"a}hrigen Bestehens der social-demokratischen Staatsseinrichtung in Britannien. N{\"u}rnberg, Germany: Selbstverlag des Berfassers, 1897 (L).\ 

}, keywords = {English author, German author, Male author}, author = {[John Aloys] [Petzler] (1814?-1898)} } @booklet {6942, title = {The Dream of Ubertus}, year = {1870}, month = {[187?]}, pages = {35 pp.}, publisher = {J. Walch \& Sons}, address = {Hobart Town and Launceston, TAS, Australia}, abstract = {

Allegory on British-French relations using imaginary countries.\ See also 1896 Ferrar.

}, keywords = {Australian author, Male author}, author = {[William Moore] [Ferrar]} } @booklet {7445, title = {De Histori ov Magnus Maha{\textquoteright}rba and the Blak Dragun}, year = {1866}, note = {

In standard English as The History of Magnus Maharba and the Black Dragon. By Kristofur Kadmus [pseud.]. From the Original Manuscripts. New-York: Ptd. for the Proprietor, 1867.

}, month = {1866}, publisher = {Printed for de Filolojikal Gem{\'a}na}, address = {N{\^u}-York}, abstract = {

Fantasy history of the development of the U.S. with the U.S. presented in eutopian terms.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {[Nathan] [Brown] (1807-86)} } @booklet {7439, title = {The Dragon of the Enchanted Valley: A Plain Sandwich of Facts in Odd Fancies for the Young of America. In Two Parts, with an Appendix. Part I. The Dragon in the Valley. Part II. The Conflict}, year = {1865}, month = {1865}, publisher = {Franklin Printing Office}, address = {Jacksonville, IL}, abstract = {

Temperance fiction that includes in the second part the establishment of communities of the Brothers of Sobriety that lead the fight against alcohol and are shown as examples of the eutopia temperance will bring.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Rev. O.C Dickerson} } @booklet {7421, title = {A Dream of The Day that must come}, year = {1859}, month = {1859}, publisher = {Wertheim, Macintosh, and Hunt}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The Last Judgement of a near future irreligious and decadent dystopia.

}, keywords = {Female author}, author = {[Mrs.] [Anne Judith] [Penny] (1825?-93)} } @booklet {7417, title = {The Day After To-Morrow; or, Fata Morgana: Containing the Opinions of Mr. Serjeant Mallet, M.P. for Boldborough, on the Future State of the British Nation and of the Human Race}, year = {1858}, month = {1858}, publisher = {G. Routledge and Co}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Similar to 1877 Mallock with a semi-fictional discussion during a country house vacation of the near future better world possible through modest reforms.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {William De Tyne, ed. [written by] [pseud?]} } @booklet {7402, title = {["Description of a Community Plan"]}, howpublished = {Robert Owen{\textquoteright}s Address, Delivered At the Meeting in St. Martin{\textquoteright}s Hall, Lonc [sic.] Acre, London, On the 1st. of January, 1855}, year = {1855}, month = {1855}, pages = {26-29}, publisher = {Effingham Wilson, J. Clayton and Son, Holyoake}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Educational eutopia based on the ideas of Robert Owen.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Thomas Atkins} } @booklet {7358, title = {A Dream of Reform}, year = {1848}, note = {

Rpt. in Modern British Utopias 1700-1850. Ed. Gregory Claeys. 8 vols. (London: Pickering \& Chatto, 1997), 8: 389-490.

}, month = {1848}, publisher = {John Chapman}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Eutopia. A dream of a reformed society is described; the country is called Philotopia. Many of the reforms of the time, like the eight-hour workday, greatly improved hygiene, significant sanitary reform, a limit on wealth, and the elimination of monopolies, have been adopted. The basis of the changed society is education. Gender-roles and the class system have changed little, but the lower classes are better educated and better paid.

}, keywords = {Male author, UK author}, author = {Henry J[ohn] Forrest (1823-1899)} } @booklet {7348, title = {Dolores: A Novel of South America}, volume = {4 parts}, year = {1846}, note = {

Part I was published as New York: Author/Montevideo, Uruguay: Libreria Hernandez. Parts II - IV were published as Dolores: A Novel. New York: Marrener, Lockwood, [1846]. All parts say, \“Complete in One Volume\”.

}, month = {1846}, publisher = {Author/Libreria Hernandez/Marrener, Lockwood}, address = {New York/Montevideo, Uruguay/New York}, abstract = {

An eclectic novel giving the author\&$\#$39;s viewpoint on a wide range of subjects and including the outlines of an egalitarian eutopia.

}, keywords = {German author, Male author}, author = {[Paul] Harro-Harring (1798-1870)} } @booklet {7333, title = {Dialogue on Etzler{\textquoteright}s Paradise Between Messrs. Clear, Flat, Dunce, and Grudge. By The Author of "Paradise within Reach of All Men, without Labour, by Powers of Nature and Machinery".-- Mechanical System, To Perform the Labours of Man and Beast by Inanimate Powers."--and the Invention of the Naval Automaton, Etc., Etc.}, year = {1843}, note = {

Rpt. in The Collected Works of John Adolphus Etzler. Delmar, NY: Scholars\’ Facsimiles \& Reprints, 1977. Items separately paged.

}, month = {1843}, pages = {23 pp.}, publisher = {James B. O{\textquoteright}Brien}, address = {London}, abstract = {

One of Etzler\&$\#$39;s pictures of eutopia through technology. Clear defends Etzler from attacks by the others.\ \ On the technology, see also his The New World or Mechanical System, To Perform the Labours of Man and Beast by Inanimate Powers, That Cost Nothing, for Producing and Preparing the Substance of Life. With Plates. Philadelphia, PA: C.F. Stollmeyer, 1841. Rpt. in The Collected Works of John Adophus Etzler. Delmar, NY: Scholars\’ Facsimiles \& Reprints, 1977; and Description of the Naval Automation, Invented by J.A. Etzler and Patented in American and Europe. Philadelphia, PA: Ptd. by Gihon and Fairchild, [1841/42?]. Rpt. in The Collected Works of John Adophus Etzler. Delmar, NY: Scholars\’ Facsimiles \& Reprints, 1977. See also 1833\ and 1844 (2) Etzler.

}, keywords = {German author, Male author, US author}, author = {[John Adolphus] [Etzler] (1791?-1846?)} } @booklet {7329, title = {A Development of the Principles and Plans on which to Establish Self-Supporting Home Colonies; as a Most Secure and Profitable Investment for Capital, and an Effectual Means Permanently to Remove the Causes of Ignorance, Poverty, and Crime. And Most Materially to Benefit All Classes of Society by Giving a Right Attention to the Now Greatly Misdirected Powers of the Human Faculties and of Physical and Moral Science}, year = {1841}, note = {

2nd ed. London: Home Colonization Society, 1841; rpt. in Selected Works of Robert Owen. Ed. Gregory Claeys. 4 vols. (London: William Pickering, 1993), 2: 337-407.

}, month = {1841}, publisher = {Home Colonization Society}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Detailed description of the transition to the Owenite eutopia through the establishment of communities designed to become self-supporting. Each community planned for 2000 to 2500 permanent residents on 2000 to 3000 acres. Includes descriptions of the buildings and gardens and the \"General Rules and Regulations\" for the community (396-401 in Claeys).\ See also 1813, 1830, 1839, 1843, 1844, 1846, and 1855 (2).\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, Scottish author, Welsh author}, author = {Robert Owen (1771-1858)} } @booklet {8667, title = {The Doctor \&c.}, volume = {New ed.}, year = {1834}, month = {1834-47/1848}, publisher = {Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Chapter CCXLI describes the doctor\’s utopia, called Columbia, which is a monarchy with an aristocracy and a Parliament elected by universal (male) suffrage.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Robert Southey (1774-1843)}, editor = {John Wood Warter} } @booklet {7293, title = {"Decline and Fall of the British Empire"}, howpublished = {Scenes of Life and Shades of Character}, volume = {2 vols.}, year = {1831}, month = {1831}, pages = {2: 79-102}, publisher = {Henry Colburn and Richard Bentley}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Britain became dependent on foreigners, lost its colonies, and is defeated in a war. All this is caused by the philosophers.

}, author = {An Australian Statesman, in the Year 2377 [pseud.]}, editor = {Alaric A. Watts} } @booklet {7286, title = {Description of an Architectural Model from a Design by Stedman Whitwell, Esq. for a Community Upon a Principle of United Interests as Advocated by Robert Owen, Esq.}, year = {1830}, note = {

Rpt. in Cooperative Communities: Plans and Descriptions. Eleven Pamphlets 1825-1847. New York: Arno Press, 1972. Items separately paged.

}, month = {1830}, publisher = {Hurst Chance \& Co. and Effingham Wilson}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Description of a proposed community based on the ideas of Robert Owen (1771-1858) with some supporting essays.\ A large picture was drawn of the proposed community and may be seen at The Goldsmith\’s Library, London University.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Thomas] Stedman Whitwell (1784-1840)} } @booklet {7288, title = {"A Dialogue for the Year 2130, Extracted from the Album of a Modern Sibyl"}, howpublished = {The Keepsake for MDCCCXXX}, year = {1830}, month = {1830}, pages = {249-64}, publisher = {Pub. For the Proprietor, by Hurst, Chance, and Co.}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Satire on technology and colonialism. A future Britain with deep class divisions. Overeducated poor. Written as a play.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Thomas Henry] [Lister] (1800-42)}, editor = {Frederic Mansel Reynolds} } @booklet {8664, title = {{\textquotedblleft}The Deserted City{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {The Deserted City; Eva, A Tale in Two Cantos; and Other Poems }, year = {1824}, month = {1824}, pages = {1-86}, publisher = {Ptd. for Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, Brown \& Green}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Dystopia of a city that has been largely abandoned through defeat brought on by greed and a lack of national feeling.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {Joseph Bounden} } @booklet {6581, title = {"Darkness"}, howpublished = {Lord Byron: The Complete Political Works}, volume = {7. vols.}, year = {1816}, note = {

Rpt. in A Year Without Winter. Illus. Ed. Dehlia Hannah, ed. with Brenda Cooper, Joey Eschrich, and Cynthia Selin, Fiction eds. (New York: Columbia Books on Architecture and the City, 2018), 25-27.\ 

}, month = {[1816 written in]/1980}, pages = {4: 40-43}, publisher = {Clarendon Press}, address = {Oxford, Eng.}, abstract = {

End of world dystopia.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {George Gordon Byron [Lord Byron] (1788-1824)}, editor = {Jerome J. McGann} } @booklet {7224, title = {A Description of Jerusalem: Its Houses and Streets, Squares, Colleges, Markets, and Cathedrals, The Royal and Private Palaces, with The Garden of Eden In the Centre, As laid down in the last chapters of Ezekiel, Also The First Chapter of Genesis Verified, as Strictly Divine and True and The Solar System, With All Its Plurality of Inhabited Worlds, and Millions of Suns, As Positively Proved To Be Delusive and False. By Mr. Brothers, Who Will Be Revealed To the Hebrews As Their King and Restorer}, year = {1801}, month = {1801}, publisher = {Ptd. for George Riebau}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Restored Jerusalem as eutopia. See also 1830 Brothers, his A Revealed Knowledge of the Prophecies \& Times. Book the First. Wrote under the direction of the Lord God, and Published by his Sacred Command: It Being the First Sign of Warning for the Benefit of all Nations. Containing, with other Great and Remarkable Things, Not Revealed by any other Person on Earth, the Restoration of the Hebrews to Jerusalem, by the Year of 1798: Under their Revealed Prince and Prophet. London: Np, 1794. The second part has the separate title page A Revealed Knowledge of the Prophecies \& Times particularly of the present time, the present war, and the prophecy now fulfilling. The Year of the World 5913. Book the Second. Containing, with other Great and Remarkable Things, Not Revealed by any other Person on Earth, the sudden and perpetual fall of the Turkish, German, and Russian Empires, Wrote under the direction of the Lord God, and Published by his Sacred Command: It Being the Second Sign of Warning for the Benefit of all Nations. By the Man that will be revealed to the Hebrews as their Prince and Prophet. London: Np, 1794; and A Letter from Mr. Brothers to Miss Cott, the recorded daughter of David, and future queen of the Hebrews. With an Address to the Members of His Brintannic Majesty\’s Council and through them to all governments and people on Earth. London: G. Riebau/Edinburgh, Scot.: Rpt by J. Robertson, 1798.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {Mr. [Richard] Brothers (1757-1824) and Mr. Brothers} } @booklet {7213, title = {Description of Spensonia}, year = {1795}, note = {

Rpt. in Trial of Thomas Spence in 1801 Together With His Description of Spensonia, Constitution of Spensonia, End of Oppression, Recantation of the End of Oppression, Newcastle on Tyne Lecture Delivered in 1775. Also a Brief Life of Spence and a Description of His Political Token Dies by Arthur W. Waters (Leamington Spa, Eng.: Privately Ptd., 1917), 82-91; and in The Political Works of Thomas Spence. Ed. H.T. Dickinson (Newcastle upon Tyne, Eng.: Avero (Eighteenth Century) Publications Ltd., 1982), 25-33. First published in somewhat different form in Spence\’s journal Pig\’s Meat; or Lessons for the Swinish Multitude as \“The Marine Republic\” 2.6 (1794): 68-72; and \“A Further Account of Spensonia\” 2.18-19 (1794): 205-18. These versions rpt. in Pig\’s Meat: The Selected Writings of Thomas Spence, Radical and Pioneer Land Reformer. Ed. G.I. Gallop (Nottingham, Eng.: Spokesman, 1982), 76-90.

}, month = {1795}, publisher = {Hive of Liberty}, address = {London}, abstract = {

A version of Spence\&$\#$39;s cooperative commonwealth.\ See also 1782, 1798, and 1801 Spence.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Thomas] [Spence] (1750-1814)} } @booklet {7197, title = {"The Dreamer No. VI"}, howpublished = {The Massachusetts Magazine or Monthly Museum (Boston, MA)}, volume = {1.6}, year = {1789}, month = {June 1789}, pages = {370-73}, abstract = {

Tells of a visit to the \“Massachusetts Publick Female Academy\” and hearing a speech by the \“Preceptress General.\” She states that apparent differences in intellect between men and women are not based on inherent differences but on the fact that men are educated, and women are not. In doing so, she refers specifically to women from \“a lower sphere\” who are kept from learning the skills needed to efficiently run a home, raise children, and support herself and them if necessary. The visitor notes that the library contains only useful books and not \“a singly Novel or Romance\” (370)

}, author = {Sophronia [pseud.]} } @booklet {7167, title = {The Deserted Village, A Poem}, year = {1770}, note = {

There were five further editions in 1770, a 7th ed. in 1772 and an 8th ed. in 1774. Rpt. in Collected Works of Oliver Goldsmith. Volume IV The Vicar of Wakefield Poems The Mystery Revealed. Ed. Arthur Friedman (Oxford, Eng.: The Clarendon Press, 1966), 283-304 with extensive footnotes and an \“Introduction\” (271-81).

}, month = {1770}, publisher = {W. Griffin}, address = {London}, abstract = {

The poem begins with a description of a village called Auburn as a eutopia, but the wealthy landowner pushes the people off the land creating the deserted village.

}, keywords = {Irish author, Male author}, author = {Oliver Goldsmith (1728-74)} } @booklet {7157, title = {A Description of Millenium Hall, And the Country Adjacent: Together with the Character of the Inhabitants, And such Historical Anecdotes and Reflections, As May excite in the Reader proper Sentiments of Humanity, and lead the Mind to the Love of Virtue}, year = {1762}, note = {

Rpt. as A Description of Millenium Hall. An 18th Century Novel. Ed. Walter M. Crittenden with a \“Preface\” (5-22) by the editor. New York: Bookman Associates, 1955; ed. Jane Spencer with an \“Introduction\” (v-xvi) by the editor. London: Virago, 1986; ed. Gary Kelly. Peterborough, ON, Canada: Broadview Press, 1995; and the 1778 4th ed. in Modern British Utopias 1700-1850. Ed. Gregory Claeys. 8 vols. (London: Pickering \& Chatto, 1997), 3: 183-327.

}, month = {1762}, publisher = {Ptd. for J. Newbery}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Describes a country estate of celibate women who help support the people of the area by providing work for everyone, a start in life for young married couples, and orphans and children from large families for older women to raise. There is also an enclosure for deformed people who would otherwise have to show themselves in sideshows. Much of the novel is taken up with the stories of the women, and these provide a critique of contemporary society.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {[Mrs.] [Sarah (Robinson)] [Scott] (1723-95)} } @booklet {10781, title = {A Discourse on the Christian Union: The Substance of Which Was Delivered Before the Reverend Convention of the Congregational Clergy in the Colony of Rhode Island; Assembled at Bristol. April 23, 1760}, year = {1761}, note = {

Rpt. Brookfield, MA: np, 1799. 164 pp.\ 

}, month = {1761}, pages = {139 pp.}, publisher = {Printed and sold by Edes and Gill}, address = {Boston, N.E.}, abstract = {

Projects New England into the next century. Most of the book is concerned with what Christians agreed upon and where they disagree. From page 145 (1799 ed.) a lot of space is devoted to the increase in population of each of the four sects he finds worthy of attention, Episcopalians, Friends (Quakers), Baptists, and Congregationalists, with the last showing the greatest increase in population and in the number of churches. His concern is that without unity among Christians, or at least Protestants, the coming generations will become indifferent or tempted by other churches. Therefore, he gives suggestions for those who in the future will found new communities. He stresses the need for such new communities to establish churches and bring in ministers. At page 154 (1799 ed.) he projects one hundred years into the future, when he foresees the plain churches of his day replaced \“with temples whose colonades [as spelled] are deckt with guilt busts of angels winged. . . .\” Seven million Congregationalists at that time.\ 

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Ezra Stiles A.M. (1727-95)} } @booklet {7147, title = {The Dreamer}, year = {1754}, month = {1754}, publisher = {Ptd. for W. Owen}, address = {London}, abstract = {

A series of dreams, largely satirical but with the description of an Athenian-style republic and a variety of specific reforms such as suggestions for a healthy life.

}, keywords = {English author}, author = {[William] [King] (1685-1763)} } @booklet {7123, title = {"A Description of New Athens in Terra Australis incognita." By One who resided many years on the Spot. [Signed] Maurice Williams. [The title page gives the title as "The Fortunate Shipwreck, or a Description of New Athens, being an Account of the Laws, Manners, Religion, and Customs of that Country; by Morris Williams, Gent. [pseud.] who resided there above Twenty Years"}, howpublished = {Miscellanea Aurea: or the Golden Medley}, year = {1720}, note = {

Rpt. in Utopias of the British Enlightenment. Ed. Gregory Claeys (Cambridge, Eng.: Cambridge University Press, 1994), 27-53.

}, month = {1720}, pages = {80-118}, publisher = {Ptd. for A. Bettesworth and J. Pemberton}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Eutopia. No secrecy. Christianity, art, music, compulsory education. Everyone walks rather than riding. No lawyers. A charity system is run on a ward basis by the church.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {[Thomas] [Killigrew] (1657-1719)}, editor = {Maurice Williams} } @booklet {7084, title = {A Discovery of Fonseca In a Voyage to Surranam. The Island so long sought for in the Western Ocean. Inhabited by Women with the Account of their Habits, Customs and Religion. And the Exact Longitude and Latitude of the Place Taken from the Mouth of a Person cast away on the Place in an Hurricane with the Account of their being Cast away}, year = {1682}, note = {

Rpt. in Restoration and Augustan British Utopias. Ed. Gregory Claeys (Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 2000), 131-36.

}, month = {1682}, publisher = {Np}, address = {Dublin, Ireland}, abstract = {

An island of women of Welsh origin. No men allowed on the island except for specified visits. Male children must leave at an early age. Male visitors must leave at the end of the month.

}, keywords = {Male author}, author = {J[ohn] S[hirley] (fl. 1680-1702)} } @booklet {7065, title = {The Description of a New World, Called the Blazing World}, howpublished = {Part IV of her Observations Upon Experimental Philosophy}, year = {1666}, note = {

First separate publication London: Ptd. By A. Maxwell, 1668. Rpt. in The Description of a New World Called The Blazing World and Other Writings. Ed. Kate Lilley (London: William Pickering, 1992), 119-225 with notes 227-230; Ed. Sara H. Mendelson. Peterborough, ON, Canada: Broadview Press, 2016 with footnotes by the editor, an Introduction by the editor (9-49), a chronology (51-52), and a note on the text (53); in Restoration and Augustan British Utopias. Ed. Gregory Claeys (Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 2000), 53-114; in Paper Bodies: A Margaret Cavendish Reader. Ed. Sylvia Bowerbank and Sara Mendelson (Peterborough, ON, Canada: Broadview Press, 2000), 151-251; and in Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle, Political Writings. Ed. Susan James (Cambridge, Eng.: Cambridge University Press, 2003), 1-109. See also The Description of a New World Called The Blazing World By the Thrice Noble, Illustrious, and Excellent Princesse, the Duchess of Newcastle, Margaret Cavendish. An Illuminated Edition. Illus. in color by Rebekka Dunlap. Np: Beehive Books, 2020, with \“Any Mortal Creator. A Foreword\” by Brooke Bolander (i-iv), \“A Blazing Life. The Invention of Margaret Cavendish\” by James Fitzmaurice (101-111), and \“A Note on the Text Used Here and on the Early Publishing History of A Blazing World\” (112).

}, month = {1666}, pages = {Separately paged.}, publisher = {Ptd. By J. Maxwell}, address = {London}, abstract = {

World attached to Earth at the Pole. Various animals (bears, foxes, geese, etc.) with human characteristics. The eutopia is a small part of an allegory. Monarchy, religion, few laws. Peaceable world because it has only one religion, one language, and one government.\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {[Margaret] [Cavendish] Duchess of Newcastle (1623?-74)} } @booklet {7037, title = {A Description of the famous Kingdome of Macaria; shewing its excellent Government: Wherein The Inhabitants live in great Prosperity, Health, and Happinesse; the King obeyed, the Nobles honoured; and all good men respected, Vice punished, and Vertue rewarded. An Example to other Nations: In a Dialogue between a Schollar and a Traveller}, year = {1641}, note = {

Rpt. with minor changes in spelling and punctuation in The Harleian Miscellany: A Collection of Scarce, Curious, and Entertaining Pamphlets and Tracts, As Well in Manuscript as in Print. Found in the Late Earl of Oxford\’s Library, Interspersed with Historical, Political, and Critical Notes. With a Table of Contents, and an Alphabetical Index 10 vols. (London: Ptd. For T. Osborne, 1744), 1: 564-69. Collection rpt. with the subtitle A Collection of Scarce, Curious, and Entertaining Pamphlets and Tracts, As Well in Manuscript as in Print. Selected from the Library of Edward Harley, Second Earl of Oxford, Interspersed with Historical, Political, and Critical Annotations, By William Oldys, and Some Additional Notes by Thomas Park (London: Ptd. for White and Cochrane, and John Murray, 1808-13), 1: 580-85; as A Facsimile Edition of Samuel Hartlib\’s 1641 Pamphlet A Description of the Famous Kingdome of Macaria. Ed. Richard H. Dillon. Sausalito, CA: {\'E}lan Under the direction of Wallace Kibbee Corte Madera, CA, 1961, with an unpaged four page \“Introduction\” by Dillon; in Samuel Hartlib and the Advancement of Learning. Ed. Charles Webster (Cambridge, Eng.: Cambridge University Press, 1970), 79-89; and in Charles Webster, Utopian Planning and the Puritan Revolution: Gabriel Plattes, Samuel Hartlib and \“Macaria\”. Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine Research Publications II (Oxford, Eng.: Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine, 1979), 65-73 with annotations (74-89).

}, month = {1641}, publisher = {Ptd. for Francis Constable}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Eutopia. A short dialogue covering economic organization, religion, and some governmental organization. Monarchy with power in a grand or general council or parliament and five under-councils. Government revenues are mostly derived from the king\&$\#$39;s lands. Practical orientation. Includes a College of Experience similar to Bacon\&$\#$39;s Salomon\&$\#$39;s House in his New Atlantis (1627). Macaria means \"blessed\" or \"happy\". More used it for a country near Utopia.

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {[Gabriel] [Plattes] (d. 1644)} } @booklet {7026, title = {"A Description of Cooke-ham"}, howpublished = {Salve Deus Rex Judaeorum}, year = {1611}, note = {

Rpt. as The Poems of Aemilia Lanyer. Salve Deus Rex Judaeorum. Ed. Susanne Woods (New York: Oxford University Press, 1993), 130-38.

}, month = {1611}, pages = {The 1611 ed. does not have page numbers; the seven page poem is the last in the book.}, publisher = {Valentine Simmes}, address = {London}, abstract = {

An English country house as a eutopia with much of the emphasis on the grounds surrounding the house.

}, keywords = {English author, Female author}, author = {Aemilia [Bassano] Lanyer (1569-1645)} } @booklet {7018, title = {A Dialogue both pleasante and pietifull, wherein is a godly regimente against the fever Pestilence with a consolacion and comfort against death}, volume = {Newlie. corr.}, year = {1573}, note = {

Rpt. as Dialogue Against the Fever Pestilence. From the edition of 1578, collated with the earlier editions of 1564 and 1573. Ed. Mark W. Bullen and A.H. Bullen. London: Published for the Early English Text Society by N. Tr{\"u}bner, 1888. Early English Text Society. Extra Series, Vol. 52. Rpt. London: Published for the Early English Text Society by Humphrey Milford, Oxford University Press, 1931.

}, month = {1573}, publisher = {Iohn Kingston}, address = {London}, abstract = {

Includes a brief eutopia (105-11 of the 1888 Early English Text Society edition) describing a reformed Protestant society in Taerg Natrib (Great Britain) and its capitol city Nodnol (London) or Ecnatneper (Repentance).\ 

}, keywords = {English author, Male author}, author = {William Bullein (1500-76)} }