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Science Fiction fans - please bring your expertise over here!

55 replies

NomDeOrdinateur · 28/02/2013 00:28

Hi all, I've recently got interested in how SF engages with right-to-life issues and I'm trying to put together a reading list for myself. I'd be very grateful for any recommendations you could add to my existing list, particularly focusing on euthanasia, infanticide, fertility control, suicide, assisted suicide, and aging populations (due to infertility/medical breakthroughs).

So far I have:

  • The Logan Trilogy by William F Nolan (and the film and TV series);
  • Brave New World by Aldous Huxley;
  • Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro;
  • The Giver by Lois Lowry;
  • The Machine Stops by EM Forster;
  • Kirinyaga by Mike Resnick;
  • The Sleeper Awakes by HG Wells;
  • Case of Conscience by James Bish;
  • The Fixed Period by Anthony Trollope;
  • Make Room! Make Room! by Harry Harrison (and Soylent Green);
  • The Children of Men by PD James;
  • The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Atwood.

Any ideas about useful SF textbooks/histories or books about euthanasia, assisted suicide, population control, overpopulation etc would also be much appreciated.

Thanks in advance to anybody who's kind enough to make further suggestions!

PS - I'm not a slacking journalist, I'm a regular MNer and have just changed my name in case anybody from my university recognises me based on my research interests.

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NomDeOrdinateur · 28/02/2013 00:29

Oh, and film reccs would also be gratefully received!

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highlandcoo · 28/02/2013 09:04

I don't know much about science fiction, but just a suggestion - have you ever used librarything? It's a site for sharing your favourite books and looking for new stuff to read.

You have to invest a bit of time at the start by assembling a list of your favourite books (you could just put in the ones on your list) then it matches you with others who have a similar library and you can see what similar books they're reading.

Also, users "tag" books with labels describing the content, eg "Victorian", "WW2", "slavery" or in your case "euthanasia" or whatever, so you can link to other books with similar content.

I find it a brilliant resource .. have a look Smile

MakingAnotherList · 28/02/2013 09:10

The film 'The Island' is similar to the book Never Let Me Go.

MakingAnotherList · 28/02/2013 09:14

lifeissues.net/writers/kol/kol_18sciencefiction.html

Bearcrumble · 28/02/2013 09:24

Would Intrusion by Ken Mcleod be of use? The state makes all pregnant women take a pill to fix any genetic defects in the foetus. More eugenics than population control but might be of interest.

Snorbs · 28/02/2013 09:40

Larry Niven incorporated a lot of these topics into his short stories and novels. Eg, advances in organ storage and transplant technology leading to higher demand for transplant organs to extend life, leading in turn to a) popular pressure for capital punishment for trivial law-breaking to keep the organ banks stocked, and b) black-market transplants. Niven's short stories The Jigsaw Man and Death By Ecstasy are examples of these.

Population pressure due to medical advances massively extending human longevity also leads to restrictions on who is allowed to have children. I can't remember the details but it was something like you had to have at least some kind of skill or talent to be allowed to have kids and, if you didn't qualify for that, there was also a regular lottery you could win to get the right to have a child. Ringworld has a sub-plot about one of the more peculiar effects of these birth-right lotteries.

MaterFacit · 28/02/2013 10:16

Unwind by Neal Shusterman
Meat by Joseph D'Lacey

Sherri Tepper - Beauty and also possibly Grass by her as well, but it has been a long time since I read them.

What about Stand on Zanzibar by John Brunner?

MaterFacit · 28/02/2013 10:18

Where late the sweet birds sand by Kate Wilhelm

MaterFacit · 28/02/2013 10:18

*sang

MaterFacit · 28/02/2013 10:31

The Gate to Women's Country by Tepper
The Female Man by Russ

Sorry for the disjointed posts, I keep closing the thread and then remembering new ones. This was something I was interested in too about five years ago so just trying to remember what I read.

NomDeOrdinateur · 28/02/2013 10:39

Thank you very much everybody, these recommendations are so helpful - I'm going to read every single book/story! I've always been put off researching SF before because I get intimidated by how much knowledge the hard-core fans have, so I can't tell you how much I appreciate being steered in the right direction by people who know more than I do.

PS - Highlandcoo, librarything looks amazing, I'm going to make an account right now Grin!

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DuchessofMalfi · 28/02/2013 11:03

Check out Goodreads too Nom. We have a smallish, but growing in popularity, discussion group on there and welcome everyone to it. You're more than welcome (and everyone else) to come and discuss science fiction on there too :) Link here, if you're interested The Book Vipers.

NomDeOrdinateur · 28/02/2013 11:07

Oh thank you, DuchessofMalfi - I'd love to join! I shall have a look when I get home this evening Smile.

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slug · 28/02/2013 11:10

Consider Her Ways a novella by John Windham

HagofBeare · 28/02/2013 11:22

Phillip k dick, The Pre-Persons. Not exactly subtle, but interesting.

NomDeOrdinateur · 28/02/2013 11:28

Thank you, Slug and HagofBeare - I really like both of those authors, and yet didn't know they'd written about these issues!

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CoteDAzur · 28/02/2013 16:48

Time Enough For Love - Robert Heinlein (where people have very long natural lives and an undisputed right to end it whenever they like by flipping a switch)

The Island (film) is much better than Never Let Me Go.

NomDeOrdinateur · 28/02/2013 18:58

Thank you, CoteDAzur - I can't believe I forgot all about Heinlein! Blush I'm really looking forward to watching The Island now, as I was fairly satisfied with the adaptation of Never Let Me Go...

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FryingNemo · 28/02/2013 19:05

Oryx and Crake by Margaret Attwood. Sort of?

FryingNemo · 28/02/2013 19:07

Also a few Star Trek Voyager episodes and original Star Trek too dealt with overpopulation, euthanasia and volunteering for suicide. Maybe too low brow?

NomDeOrdinateur · 28/02/2013 19:12

Not too lowbrow at all, FryingNemo - thanks for the tip! I actually noticed a library book the other day about the ethics of Star Trek, I should pop back in and borrow it...

I'll put Oryx and Crake on my to-read list, too - I wrote about it (along with The Year of the Flood) back when I was still an undergrad and remember both novels very positively, but embarrassingly I can't recall the actual story at all now! Blush

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FryingNemo · 28/02/2013 19:37

Also Iain Banks' the Culture (various books).

ThreeBeeOneGee · 28/02/2013 19:41

The Testament of Jessie Lamb

HumphreyCobbler · 28/02/2013 19:45

Why Call Them Back From Heaven? Clifford D Simak

This is a very interesting book - although looking at ways to prolong life indefinitely is the main theme of the book, the discussion seems relevant to your list.

ThreeBeeOneGee · 28/02/2013 19:45

There's also a YA novel called 'Wither' by Lauren deStefano that touches on some of these themes.

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