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Brave New Worlds: Dystopian Stories

Edited by John Joseph Adams

Average Score: 68(4)

YOU ARE BEING WATCHED.

Your every movement is being tracked, your every word recorded. Your spouse may be an informer, your children may be listening at your door, your best friend may be a member of the secret police. You are alone among thousands, among great crowds of the brainwashed, the well-behaved, the loyal. Productivity has never been higher, the media blares, and the army is ever triumphant. One wrong move, one slip-up, and you may find yourself disappeared -- swallowed up by a monstrous bureaucracy, vanished into a shadowy labyrinth of interrogation chambers, show trials, and secret prisons from which no one ever escapes. Welcome to the world of the dystopia, a world of government and society gone horribly, nightmarishly wrong.

In his smash-hit anthologies Wastelands and The Living Dead, acclaimed editor John Joseph Adams showed you what happens when society is utterly wiped away. Now he brings you a glimpse into an equally terrifying future -- what happens when civilization invades and dictates every aspect of your life? From 1984 to The Handmaid's Tale, from Children of Men to Bioshock, the dystopian imagination has been a vital and gripping cautionary force. Brave New Worlds collects 33 of the best tales of totalitarian menace by some of today's most visionary writers, including Neil Gaiman, Orson Scott Card, Kim Stanley Robinson, and Ursula K. Le Guin.

When the government wields its power against its own people, every citizen becomes an enemy of the state. Will you fight the system, or be ground to dust beneath the boot of tyranny?

Book Details

Science Fiction
Paperback, 489 Pages
Published by Night Shade Books on January 25, 2011
ISBN-10 1597802212
ISBN-13 978-1597802215

Reviews


Fantasy Literature | Stefan Raets
Review Rating: 95
The stories in this collection are science fiction in the truest sense of the word, starting from an often painful sociological premise and extrapolating it to the most private and emotional aspects of our lives.
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Publishers Weekly
Review Rating: 80
Most of the stories are bleak, many are hopeless, and all serve as powerful warnings of what we may let ourselves become. (Starred Review)
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Boomtron | Sasha Nova
Review Rating: 60
Brave New Worlds is a worthwhile collection and I was happy to add it to my library.
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SF Site | Paul Kincaid
Review Rating: 40
...the challenge and originality of the few gets lost amid the mediocre mass exploring the same theme or using the same devices.
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