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Worlds Without End Blog

Science Fiction for Young Adults: A Recommended List by David Brin Posted at 8:25 PM by Dave Post

Dave Post

Science Fiction for Young Adults: A Recommended List by David BrinAs part of our YA Genre Fiction Month on WWEnd we’ve added a new list of books for your reading pleasure:

Science Fiction for Young Adults: A Recommended List by David Brin

Why post a YA list by David Brin? Well, he’s David Brin for crying out loud – which is reason enough for me. And it’s a really good list. But mainly it because Mr. Brin has been actively working to spread the gospel of SF/F to younger fans for many years. I’ll let him explain:

For two decades I’ve been involved in projects to help engage young readers with science fiction, from the AboutSF and Reading for the Future programs to my own WoW Prize and helping establish the Andre Nortion Nebula Award for Young Adult SF. After years replying to personal queries I finally compiled my own recommended reading lists for Young Adults as well as elementary and middle school kids. I hope they prove useful. Good sci fi correlates with vigor, creativity and success, not only for young readers, but for any civilization!

Bravo, Mr. Brin. Be sure to visit the author’s blog, Contrary Brin, to read the original post of the list which contains short intros and commentary for each of the books.

So what do you think of this list? Anything you would want to add or take out? How many of these have you read? Check your reading stats to see. I’ve only read 16 out of 89 but I’ve got a half dozen more on my reading list.

Kiln People Posted at 2:39 PM by Dave Post

Dave Post

Kiln PeopleLet me start by saying I really like David Brin.  I’ve read many of his books and have always enjoyed them.  Earth was great and I loved The Uplift Saga in particular but as much as I like his other work, I just could not get into Kiln People.  There is nothing particularly bad about the writing – some of the characters are interesting, and the story is a serviceable who-dunnit murder mystery – but the world of Kiln People is just a bit silly.

In this future, everyone has an in-home kiln that they use to make life-size robotic clay duplicates of themselves called "dittos".  You get up in the morning, lie down on the machine next to a blank that looks just like you and imprint your consciousness on the blank.  You send the new you out to mow the grass or to the office to work in your place or on a climbing expedition in the Andes.  Whatever you don’t want to do yourself, in person, your dit will handle for you.

There are different types of dittos for different tasks and each has a specific color.  You make a green dit to do mundane chores, they’re cheap to produce but not very bright.  For work you’d make an expensive gray as they’re more suited for complex thinking.  White ones will have sex for you if you can’t be bothered to show up in person or if you don’t want to risk STD’s.  If you’re a waiter you can make a yellow or two or three and off to work they go to do three times the work for you.  The catch is that at the end of the day your dittos "die" so they have to be home before they expire so they can download the day’s memories back into your brain and be recycled into a new dit for the next day. You get the benefit of the experience from a safe remove via the downloaded memories and emotions… orgasms and all.

The technology is common as any household appliance so there are millions of clones out and about on their owner’s behalf.  So many in fact that they outnumber real people on the street.  The real people are busy gardening or reading at the beach or enjoying other recreational pursuits.

When I read, I form a mental image of the world I’m reading about.  With Kiln People, it was a cartoon world over-run by Gummy Bear people.  It was too hard to take seriously and I ended up baling after 140 pages.  I only stuck with it that long because I like Brin’s other stuff.  Plus, I just read Dune, glorious book that it is, and I thought it was the comparison that was killing Kiln People for me.  Turns out it was the gummies.  For a book that garnered so many award nominations and an 8.5 rating, I was really disappointed.