Pages Tagged βEcologyβ
Reviews
- Changing Planes
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Ursula K. Le Guin
Lighter than most Le Guin Iβve read, Changing Planes is a Gulliverβs Travels for the present era, the social satire made possible through interdimensional travel. - Fuzzy Nation
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John Scalzi
Not sure itβs better, but it is more enjoyable than the original, with better characterization and less deus-ex-machina. Same overall story of colonization, corporate greed, enviromnental exploitation and who counts as people, but different enough to enjoy both. - Fuzzy Sapiens
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H. Beam Piper
Continuing the Mad Men approach to ecological space colonization, this sequel explores the growing pains of a company town becoming a democracy, a corporation losing its monopoly, and two species of people figuring out how to live together. - Interference
β β β β β Sue Burke
An intriguing followup to Semiosis that weaves several drastically different sentient species (both plant and animal) into a story about factions, community, freedom, communication and war. - Invasive
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Chuck Wendig
Swarms of killer ants genetically altered to target humans are as much nightmare fuel as you would expect. - The Kaiju Preservation Society
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John Scalzi
Escaping the pandemic by learning to survive on a world with gigantic monsters. - The Lathe of Heaven
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Ursula K. Le Guin
A surreal tale of dreams changing reality, global stakes anchored by the three people involved. Be careful what you wish for. - Little Fuzzy
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H. Beam Piper
An enjoyable tale of first contact, colonialism, environmental stewardship, corporate greed vs. ethics, and most importantly, who counts as βpeopleβ on an alien world that turns out not to be uninhabited after all. - Paradises Lost
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Ursula K. Le Guin
An intricate novella about the middle generations of a multi-generational spaceship, and the religion theyβve developed that believes nothing outside the ship is real, and both Earth and their destination are myths. - Semiosis
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A fascinating take on space colonization, intelligence, and language, following multiple generations of humans on a world dominated by sapient plants. - Usurpation
β β β β β Sue Burke
A different sort of book than Semiosis and Interference, taking place entirely on Earth long after the second Pax expedition returns. Can the bamboo keep humansβ chaotic conflicts in check? Where do the robots fit in? With so many forms of intelligence, who counts as a person, anyway? - Vaster Than Empires And More Slow
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Ursula K. Le Guin
An intriguing story of a dysfunctional crew dealing with each other and a planet that, at first glance, appears to have no sentient life, only plants. - The Word for World is Forest
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Ursula K. Le Guin
Infuriating to readβ¦and thatβs the point. A story of colonial exploitation, asymmetric warfare, dehumanization and environmental destruction.
Blog Posts
- Plane Hopping and Foxtrot
When wild jackrabbits roamed the fields of LAX. (Los Angeles Times)* From time to time passengers in giant air liners are amused when giant jacks race the plane on take-off. Until now, none of the rabbits has left the ground. Iβm reminded of all the rabbits we used to see near UCI in the 90s, [β¦]
- Links: Science as a Subway, App Pricing, Terraforming IRL
Some interesting stuff Iβve found this week.