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A sci-fi anthology offers widely divergent glimpses of the future

From alienated life in post-Arctic Sweden to the failure to engage with tech’s new intimacies, Helen Marshall explores an excellent and diverse new sci-fi anthology
Time travel is a major theme in a collection of up-and-coming writers 
Gavin Hellier/Alamy Stock Photo

Hannu Rajaniemi and Jacob Weisman (editors)

Tachyon Publications

THERE is nothing like an anthology for taking the pulse of new science fiction. One of the latest and best is The New Voices of Science Fiction, which includes many new writers who have received or been shortlisted for the Nebula or Hugo awards.

Editors Hannu Rajaniemi and Jacob Weisman promise a “tonal freshness”. So while the collection features mostly US authors, it does seem refreshingly diverse, with widely divergent glimpses of the future from the likes of Sam J. Miller, Rebecca Roanhorse, Kelly Robson and E. Lily Yu.

The short story is an ideal form for sci-fi: a premise can be tested, its ramifications developed and radical consequences presented. Such anthologies are important for providing a snapshot of the field and its future trajectory.

So where do the new writers’ concerns cohere? Time travel is a recurrent trope. Alice Sola Kim offers the tale of a scientist who rescues her 9-year-old self from bullying to change the harmful patterns of her older iteration. Likewise, in Amal El-Mohtar’s poignant “Madeleine”, a young woman compares her drug-induced jaunts through time to her mother’s Alzheimer’s.

Many stories are suffused with dystopian threads: fraying social bonds, environmental disruption and widening inequality. All have effects on the most vulnerable. Miller’s “Calved” follows a refugee from drowned Brooklyn living in a near-future, post-Arctic Sweden. A long-haul ice fisherman with few prospects, he struggles to connect with his adaptable son, who sees him as a relic.

“Space exploration is limited to resource extraction, with the greatest changes happening at home”

Bucking the dystopian trend is Yu’s “The Doing and Undoing of Jacob E. Mwangi”. It imagines how a scarcity-riven society might create “a deep immune response in the human psyche” to the onslaught of inequality and rage. A massive redistribution of wealth has strengthened global institutions. But the introduction of Dream Seeds – a universal basic income in Kenya – leads to a divide between Doers and Don’ts, those who choose to make, build or learn and those who want only to be entertained.

The growth of entertainment platforms, whether in virtual reality or on social media, is a distinctive trend. “Openness” by Alexander Weinstein explores relationships that fail to cope with the intimacy offered by new tech. One stand-out story, “Utopia, LOL?” by Jamie Wahls, is stylistically gutsy. Here, humanity’s future after the singularity looks strange, with consciousness shifting easily between trillions of realities, from a knock-off Middle Earth to FloTiSim – a floor-tile simulator.

Not surprisingly, the near-future tales stick closest to extrapolation, with new economies for counterfeit meat in Vina Jie-Min Prasad’s “A Series of Steaks” and unusual cultural encounters in Roanhorse’s “Welcome to Your Authentic Indian ExperienceTM“. These stories attend as much to world-building as to the lived experience of those brutalised by capitalism’s retrenchment.

In this superb collection, the radical freedom of the digital typically contrasts with resource-depleted physical landscapes. Space exploration is limited to resource extraction, with the greatest changes happening at home. Reinventions of the body meet backlashes and resistance as often as love. Ultimately, these new writers have very human stories to tell, necessarily complicated by compromises and failures as much as heroics.

Helen also recommends…

Books

Cynan Jones

Granta Books

Twelve sparely written but moving tales of near-future water shortages and overpopulation.

Sue Burke

Tor Books

A sequel to Burke’s Locus Award-nominated debut Semiosis, this is a riveting exploration of the dangerous misunderstandings that arise when humans encounter radical new forms of sentient life.

Topics: Books / Science fiction