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<div dir="ltr"><div dir="ltr"><div>"2020 was quite the
year for science fiction, but it wasn’t all about escaping to other
worlds. It’s easy to imagine flights of fancy in a spaceship to be a
reprieve to reality, but science fiction and fantasy literature is the
product of people with real concerns about the real world, and
accordingly, <a href="https://www.polygon.com/21515800/new-science-fiction-futures" target="_blank">they write about the challenges that we see in the world around us</a>.
Over the last 12 months, I’ve been thinking about the value of
speculative literature in a time like this. There’s a meme going around
that reading is a collective hallucination that we get by staring at
bits of a dead tree. That’s certainly accurate, but I like to think of
science fiction as a sort of cheat guide or rough map of directions.
<p id="gmail-m_7421420032430057109gmail-0bYnmk">This year’s crop of books are ones that have a thumb on
the pulse of everything that’s been going on around us. But they’re not
screeds lecturing readers about the evils of the world — they’re
thoughtful, interesting stories with characters that you root for,
fighting against huge challenges. They’re fighting against oppression,
wealth inequality, and racism. The characters are all trying to survive,
to build new worlds, or save their friends and family from harm.
Collectively, they’re the stories that show us the way out of a dismal
world and into a slightly better one, one page at a time." </p>
</div><div>I intend to read Vagabonds, Network Effect, and The Ministry For The Future...</div><div><br></div><div><a href="https://www.polygon.com/22220762/best-books-2020-sci-fi-fantasy" target="_blank">https://www.polygon.com/22220762/best-books-2020-sci-fi-fantasy <br></a></div><div><br></div><div>John<br></div></div></div>
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