Login
Register
Home || Search || About us || Blog || Contact us || Other book sites

Name: Beaker's Dozen

Author: Nancy Kress
Year: 1998
Rank:

Rating:

Original Rating:

Popularity: 1.2
Genres/categories: Science fiction, Short Stories

Purchase/research links:
"The twenty-first century, it's often remarked, will transform our knowledge of biology, in the same way that the twentieth century transformed physics. With knowledge of course, comes application. And with the application of all we are learning about genetic engineering come social and ethical questions, some of them knotty.

This is where science fiction enters, stage left. Scientific laboratories are where the new technologies are rehearsed. Science fiction rehearses the implications of those technologies. What might we eventually do with out new-found power? Should we do it? Who should do it? Who will be affected? How? Is that a good thing or not? For whom?

Of the thirteen stories in this book, eight of them are concerned with what might come out of the beakers and test tubes and gene sequencers of microbiology. Not everything in these stories will come to pass. Possibly nothing in them will; fiction is not prediction. But I hope the stories at least raise questions about the world rushing in onus at the speed--not of light--but of thought."

-- Nancy Kress from her introduction

Similar books:

Fountain of Age
by Nancy Kress

Wool
by Hugh Howey

Exhalation
by Ted Chiang

Her Smoke Rose Up Forever
by James Tiptree Jr.

Nine Tomorrows
by Isaac Asimov

Cryptic
by Jack McDevitt

The Fog Horn
by Ray Bradbury

The Big Book of Science Fiction
by Jeff VanderMeer

The Best Short Stories
by J. G. Ballard

In the Hall of the Martian Kings
by John Varley

Zima Blue and Other Stories
by Alastair Reynolds

The Jaguar Hunter
by Lucius Shepard

The Third Level
by Jack Finney

Under Old Earth
by Cordwainer Smith

Robot Uprisings
by Daniel H. Wilson

The Barbie Murders and Other Stories
by John Varley

The Draco Tavern
by Larry Niven

Virtual Unrealities
by Alfred Bester

Expanded Universe
by Robert A. Heinlein

First Contacts
by Murray Leinster