Another book review
Aug. 20th, 2007 01:24 pmWhere's My Jetpack? A guide to the Amazing Science Fiction Future that never arrived.
by Daniel H. Wilson, Bloomsbury, 2007
The subtitle says it all - why don't we have flying cars, transporters, and ray guns? Just as well we don't have flying cars, considering how badly some people drive on a flat road. Topics covered include moving sidewalks (used in airports but not practical for outside), x-ray glasses (a version of this is now used for airport security), and vacations in space (soon, for millionaires). This book even mentions zeppelins! A few items are mentioned to point out that we do have some version, robot pets for example, but they cost big bucks; expense is never a problem mentioned in Buck Rogers movies. A short book, with only a few pages on each concept, and completely non-technical. A must read for SF fans.
My two problems with the book are, well the future doesn’t look like we thought it would, but some of it is better – look at microwave ovens, iPods, GPS systems. And so many of the ideas weren't developed because of economic realities – what does that say about the future we are living in?
by Daniel H. Wilson, Bloomsbury, 2007
The subtitle says it all - why don't we have flying cars, transporters, and ray guns? Just as well we don't have flying cars, considering how badly some people drive on a flat road. Topics covered include moving sidewalks (used in airports but not practical for outside), x-ray glasses (a version of this is now used for airport security), and vacations in space (soon, for millionaires). This book even mentions zeppelins! A few items are mentioned to point out that we do have some version, robot pets for example, but they cost big bucks; expense is never a problem mentioned in Buck Rogers movies. A short book, with only a few pages on each concept, and completely non-technical. A must read for SF fans.
My two problems with the book are, well the future doesn’t look like we thought it would, but some of it is better – look at microwave ovens, iPods, GPS systems. And so many of the ideas weren't developed because of economic realities – what does that say about the future we are living in?