Books tagged with: capitalism

  • A Deepness in the SkyVernor Vinge
    A Deepness in the Sky
    by Vernor Vinge
    Science Fiction

    A Deepness in the Sky is the prequel to A Fire Upon the Deep by Vernor Vinge. Long awaited prequel to A Fire Upon the Deep. The stories are taking place in the same universe, but are otherwise not connected. I don't think that it matter what order you read them in – the important thing is that you r...

  • A Disruptive InventionPeter W Shackle
    A Disruptive Invention
    by Peter W Shackle
    Science Fiction

    A Disruptive Invention is a science fiction novel by Peter W Shackle. John Sykes is a young electronics engineer who is always coming up with new inventive methods but the discovery that leads to his greatest invention - as with so many other great inventions, was a complete accident. He has just di...

  • A Good Old Fashioned FutureBruce Sterling
    A Good Old Fashioned Future
    by Bruce Sterling
    Science Fiction

    A Good Old Fashioned Future is a collection of science fiction short stories written by Bruce Sterling. Seven stories and 250 pages by Bruce Sterling. I once started on Heavy Weather, but couldn't get into it, but I can easily say that that wasn't a problem with this one. Maneki Neko Strange little...

  • Fallen DragonPeter F Hamilton
    Fallen Dragon
    by Peter F Hamilton
    Science Fiction

    Fallen Dragon is a science fiction novel by the British author Peter F Hamilton. There is a unrecognised Science Fiction genre, that deals with the transition from a society of limits and into one of plenty (an utopia or nirvana, if you want). Or maybe not the transition itself but the events that l...

  • In a Right StateBen Ellis
    In a Right State
    by Ben Ellis
    Science Fiction

    It's a fact that following the explosion of technology we now give away vast amounts of information freely and often unknowingly. Big companies have got smart at figuring out just how best to get such information. Many sell that data on without compunction. Fast forward to the year 2066 and big corp...

  • Jennifer GovernmentMax Barry
    Jennifer Government
    by Max Barry
    Science Fiction

    Simply put this is a witty outlook on modern life and the consumerists of today. It does bare great similarities with the classic Orwell novel but where that can be quite dark and bleak this novel, although fatalistic somewhat is rather funny. The characters in the novel all having surnames from the...

  • MakersCory Doctorow
    Makers
    by Cory Doctorow
    Science Fiction

    Makers is a near future science fiction novel of economic, social and technological change, written by the very talented author Cory Doctorow. Perry and Lester are inventors, but more than that they make things from Junk, the most environmentally friendly inventors possible. Some of their inventions...

  • NoirK W Jeter
    Noir
    by K W Jeter
    Science Fiction

    Noir is a science fiction novel by K W Jeter. NOIR.....Hohoho! What a way to go! Corpses in this book aren't allowed to die, they go into debt and are kept from the grave to hang out on the dead side of what was L.A. (now the Gloss) to wait for some job so they can be buried. X shaped pupils. One gu...

  • Orsinian TalesUrsula K Le Guin
    Orsinian Tales
    by Ursula K Le Guin
    Science Fiction

    Orsinian Tales is a novel by the award winning author Ursula K Le Guin. This is not only the first non science fiction, but also the first short stories that I've read by Le Guin. Orsinian Tales is eleven stories and 215 pages of stories more alien to me than anything that I've read in a long time (...

  • Power TripJeff Thomason
    Power Trip
    by Jeff Thomason
    Science Fiction

    Power Trip is a novel featuring the Wondering Koala, a mute superhero who always manages to stand up for those who need help. This time we are in "Firebird City", home to 8 million people and one power company. After six months of job hunting following college René thinks he's finally hit the jackpo...

  • The BusinessIain M Banks
    The Business
    by Iain M Banks
    Science Fiction

    The Business is a science fiction novel by the acclaimed British author Iain M Banks. Thinking that it maybe was about time for something not so spectacular, I grabbed this book by Iain Not-M Banks while I was at the bookstore (getting The Naked God). Good thing. Even with it's high finance setting...

  • The Star FractionKen Mcleod
    The Star Fraction
    by Ken Mcleod
    Science Fiction

    The Star Fraction is a science fiction novel by Ken Mcleod. This is the first book by MacLeod that I've read but certainly not the last, not just because I've already bought The Stone Canal and The Cassini Diversion, but because MacLeod is a damn good writer. I mostly picked up these books on the ad...

  • The Year of the FloodMargaret Atwood
    The Year of the Flood
    by Margaret Atwood
    Science Fiction

    The Year of the Flood is the second novel in Margaret Atwood's post-apocalyptic series and follows the viewpoints of Toby and Ren, members of a religious cult. The book tells the story of some of the events leading up to the cataclysm mentioned in the previous novel Oryx and Crake and there is a goo...

  • UbikPhilip K Dick
    Ubik
    by Philip K Dick
    Science Fiction

    Death, the final frontier, the one inescapable and inevitable fact of that we call life, or is it? What if even after you died you could come back for a limited time and in some limited form to once again see your loved ones and experience the linear existence we so often take for granted. In the vi...

  • As Wonderland Goes ByLaszlo Mohacsi
    As Wonderland Goes By
    by Laszlo Mohacsi
    Fantasy

    As Wonders Go By a wildly different book to most I've read. For a start it's narrated in the second person, there aren't many I've read that take this approach. The protagonist is a woman of "loose morals", at large in Europe and looking for "adventure". She finds more adventure even she can handle...

  • The Real-Town MurdersAdam Roberts
    The Real-Town Murders
    by Adam Roberts
    Science Fiction

    One of the (many) things I like about Adam Robert's stories is that they are always full of big ideas and The Real-Town Murders is no exception. This time the author has written a future-noir crime story which revolves around the "locked room mystery". A popular subgenre in it's own right, "locked r...

  • AustralPaul McAuley
    Austral
    by Paul McAuley
    Science Fiction

    Paul McAuley is a vastly under-appreciated author. His books are inspiring, hypnotic and inventive. Austral is all of these and more, a book set in a plausible, climate-changed future where the planet has a new continent with a partial thawing of the Antarctic. There are still vast vistas of ice but...

  • One WayS J Morden
    One Way
    by S J Morden
    Science Fiction

    People have been imagining life on Mars for hundreds of years but it seems to becoming an increasingly popular destination at the moment. We've got a growing number of films, games, VR "experiences" and of course books. NASA has it's own "Journey to Mars" program of sending humans there in the 2030'...

  • Before MarsEmma Newman
    Before Mars
    by Emma Newman
    Science Fiction

    Before Mars is the third book set within the authors Planetfall Universe. As the name suggests it's actually set before the events of Planetfall and After Atlas. After months of travel, Anna Kubrin finally arrives on the Red Planet to begin her job as geologist and in-residence artist. She already m...

  • By the pricking of her thumbAdam Roberts
    Science Fiction

    By the pricking of her thumb follows on from The Real Time Murders published last year, but can be read as a stand-alone novel. Set in a future where almost everyone spends all their time in a virtual world, private investigator Alma is caught up in another impossible murder. She has been asked to i...

  • Blackfish CitySam Miller
    Blackfish City
    by Sam Miller
    Science Fiction

    One of the many hats I wear is that of a professional software engineer. As a junior professional software engineer, I experienced acute imposter syndrome. It didn’t help that I was surrounded by people who had been engineering software for years, even decades, longer than I had. I resolved my pligh...

  • Blood of an exileBrian Naslund
    Blood of an exile
    by Brian Naslund
    Fantasy

    Once a noble lord, after a failure on the field of battle, Silas Bershad "The Flawless" was stripped of all titles and forced into the life of a dragonslayer, moving from one perilous hunt to the next. Stalking dragons and collecting their valuable oil, his only escape seems to be death. But death h...

  • 84KClaire North
    84K
    by Claire North
    Science Fiction

    Despite repeated and continued efforts by the UK government (amongst others) of turning it into a reality, I still enjoy the odd dystopian fiction. More and more often though it does feel like things that will be rather than things that may . 84K is a good example. Set in a future where the inevitab...

  • Alpha OmegaNicholas Bowling
    Alpha Omega
    by Nicholas Bowling
    Science Fiction

    If you read enough Near Future fiction you will start to see a trend. The future is not orange at all but bleak and a little depressing. It could be giant robots, aliens or the undead. There always seems to be something around the corner that is more dystopian  than utopian. I can take all the UFOs...

  • InscapeLouise Carey
    Inscape
    by Louise Carey
    Science Fiction

    A lot of the political hustle and bustle in today’s world has its  roots  in how far you think capitalism should go. Some countries are all for state control, others are far more lais s ez faire .  Do  private companies  already  have  too much power  pull ing  the strings behind  our  elected repre...

  • Aliens: InfiltratorWeston Ochse
    Aliens: Infiltrator
    by Weston Ochse
    Science Fiction

    The Alien franchise can be seen as one of two things: an awesome series of Space based horror and action stories, or a textbook example of Corporate Malfeasance. The Aliens may be the most reoccurring characters, but the second is not Ripley, it is Weyland Industries. This corporation pops up in var...

  • VagabonderR T Coleman
    Vagabonder
    by R T Coleman
    Science Fiction

    Science Fiction is one of the best genres because you can explore subjects via a prism of the future. Writing a book about how we treat others does not have to be told via a historic story, or the present, you can look far to the future and draw parallels between that world and ours. What would happ...

  • Starter VillainJohn Scalzi
    Starter Villain
    by John Scalzi
    Science Fiction

    Inheritance should never be something that you look forward to, but when you receive some, it can make a huge change to your life. I may be enough to pay a deposit on a house or pay for a child to go to university. It can also be a real pain in the bureaucracy. Think of the taxes that need paying, t...

  • UltimartCarl Wilhoyte
    Ultimart
    by Carl Wilhoyte
    Science Fiction

    There was a time in my life that I would sit down and read some Dystopian Fiction and not consider at all that it would happen in my lifetime, but all I need to do is some doomscrolling on my social medias to think that elements of Carl Wilhoyte’s Ultimart may not be long in our future. This is a bo...

  • The Fractal EpisodesAllen Stroud
    The Fractal Episodes
    by Allen Stroud
    Science Fiction

    What differentiates a short story series from episodes? Allen Stroud’s The Fractal Series comes in a collection or can be read separately. There are twelve individual stories, that sounds like a short story collection, but there is a difference as they all take place within the Fearless universe tha...