![]() Equally compelling, however – and even more instructive – is the process by which Brunner constructed this society of his future and our present.īorn in 1934 in the Thames riverside hamlet of Preston Crowmarsh, Oxfordshire, John Kilian Houston Brunner was just six years old when he discovered science fiction. In his 1968 novel Stand on Zanzibar, for instance, he peers ahead to imagine life in 2010, correctly forecasting wearable technology, Viagra, video calls, same-sex marriage, the legalisation of cannabis, and the proliferation of mass shootings. Primo Levi: A clear-eyed view of evil and pain And in the case of John Brunner, a sci-fi author who grew up in an era when the word ‘wireless’ still meant radio – the specificity of his imaginings retains its power to startle. They can sit down at their desk and correctly envisage, for instance, how generations to come will be travelling, relaxing, communicating. But sometimes, in striving to achieve any or all of the above, a novelist will use the future as their backdrop and just occasionally, they’ll predict what’s to come with uncanny accuracy. We look to fiction for eternal truths about our world and timeless insights into the human condition – either that or giddy escapism. ![]()
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