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    <![CDATA[Tomorrow Now: Envisioning the Next Fifty Years]]>
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    <![CDATA[&#8220;Nobody knows better than Bruce Sterling how thin the membrane between science fiction and real life has become, a state he correctly depicts as both thrilling and terrifying in this frisky, literate, clear-eyed sketch of the next half-century. Like all of the most interesting futurists, Sterling isn&#8217;t just talking about machines and biochemistry: what he really cares about are the interstices of technology with culture and human history.&#8221;   -Kurt Andersen, author of <strong>Turn of the Century</strong><br/><br/>Visionary author Bruce Sterling views the future like no other writer. In his first nonfiction book since his classic<strong> The Hacker Crackdown,</strong> Sterling describes the world our children might be living in over the next fifty years and what to expect next in culture, geopolitics, and business.<br/><br/><em>Time</em> calls Bruce Sterling &#8220;one of America&#8217;s best-known science fiction writers and perhaps the sharpest observer of our media-choked culture working today in any genre.&#8221; <strong>Tomorrow</strong> <strong>Now</strong> is, as Sterling wryly describes it, &#8220;an ambitious, sprawling effort in thundering futurist punditry, in the pulsing vein of the futurists I&#8217;ve read and admired over the years: H. G. Wells, Arthur C. Clarke, and Alvin Toffler; Lewis Mumford, Reyner Banham, Peter Drucker, and Michael Dertouzos. This book asks the future two questions: What does it mean? and How does it feel? &#8221;<br/><br/>Taking a cue from one of William Shakespeare&#8217;s greatest soliloquies, Sterling devotes one chapter to each of the seven stages of humanity: birth, school, love, war, politics, business, and old age. As our children progress through Sterling&#8217;s Shakespearean life cycle, they will encounter new products; new weapons; new crimes; new moral conundrums, such as cloning and genetic alteration; and new political movements, which will augur the way wars of the future will be fought. <br/><br/>Here are some of the author&#8217;s predictions:<br/><br/>&#8226; Human clone babies will grow into the bitterest and surliest adolescents ever.<br/>&#8226; Microbes will be more important than the family farm.<br/>&#8226; Consumer items will look more and more like cuddly, squeezable pets.<br/>&#8226; Tomorrow&#8217;s kids will learn more from randomly clicking the Internet than they ever will from their textbooks.<br/>&#8226; Enemy governments will be nice to you and will badly want your tourist money, but global outlaws will scheme to kill you, loudly and publicly, on their Jihad TVs.<br/>&#8226; The future of politics is blandness punctuated with insanity.  <br/>The future of activism belongs to a sophisticated, urbane global network that can make money&#8212;the Disney World version of Al Qaeda.<br/><br/><strong>Tomorrow Now</strong> will change the way you think about the future and our place in it.]]>
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        <name><![CDATA[Bruce Sterling]]></name>
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  </authors>  <published>2002</published>
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  <date_added>Wed Jul 02 06:20:15 -0700 2008</date_added>
  <date_updated>Wed Jul 02 06:20:15 -0700 2008</date_updated>
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