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Wonder Cabinet

Science Fiction: Thinking the Unthinkable

Wonder Cabinet

Wonder Cabinet Productions

Society & Culture, Wonder, Philosophy, Ttbook, Knowledge, Interview

4.81K Ratings

🗓️ 23 November 2014

⏱️ 51 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Reality is catching up to science fiction.  But there are still new science-fiction writers who are thinking the unthinkable and daring to go beyond the limits of our imaginations. The Book of Strange New Things - Michel Faber; Stories of Your Life and Others - Ted Chiang; Questionable Practices - Eileen Gunn; BookMark: Edmund White; On Our Minds: Kurt Godel.

Transcript

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0:00.0

It's to the best of our knowledge. I'm Anne Strange Amps.

0:07.0

Today, science fiction, thinking the unthinkable.

0:12.0

What is it that people like so much about science fiction?

0:17.0

I think science fiction readers enjoy the experience of being thrown into an environment that they don't quite understand.

0:24.6

Science fiction used to appeal to a select audience, readers who liked the weirdness, the science, the speculative nature of it all,

0:32.5

and who maybe didn't care quite so much about literary style.

0:36.5

But some of the best new science fiction is coming

0:39.2

from writers with serious literary chops. For example, Michelle Faber's acclaimed novel, The Crimson

0:45.9

Petal and the White, was set in Victorian London. Well, now he's turned from the past to the future.

0:52.1

His new novel, called The Book of Strange New Things,

0:56.2

is the story of a Christian minister who travels the cosmos as a missionary, bringing the

1:01.3

Bible and the Word of God to aliens on another planet. But in the meantime, his wife is stuck

1:06.9

back on Earth, where things are going downhill fast. Faber told Steve Paulson, he wrote the novel

1:13.4

against a backdrop of personal tragedy. Michelle, you say that when you write a novel, you like to

1:19.8

get out of your comfort zone. So for your new novel, the book of strange new things, you didn't

1:24.3

plan anything out. Don't novelists normally have an outline for how their

1:28.7

story will unfold? I think different novelists work in different ways, and I'm sure that the

1:33.6

journey into the dark that I took is a journey that many other novelists have taken. It's just not

1:37.9

a way that I had written novels before. What happened then when I had written several chapters in this manner was that my wife, Eva, got diagnosed with an incurable cancer, multiple myeloma, cancer of the bone marrow.

1:53.9

And that is a universally fatal cancer.

1:57.5

And we knew that she did not have long to live. She did actually live six years,

2:04.0

which was not bad, given that a lot of people die within three months, but it was a very

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