• blackstrat@lemmy.fwgx.uk
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    6 days ago

    Lots of good suggestions so far, Brave New World and Don’t Look Up would be right up there for me. But my #1 is this…

    The Machine Stops (PDF) Written in 1909 so out of copyright, this book is so ahead of its time it makes remarkable reading today. The amount of things predicted that describe the modern day is incredible. It’s also not that long, so well worth a read.

  • JohnyRocket@discuss.tchncs.de
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    7 days ago

    100% no doubt The parable of the sower and subsequent book. I read that book - started reading it - in June this year and read it over about a month. It was very creepy to be reading a sci fy book set in the future that is now my present and while it is not as bad right now as Octavia Butler makes it out to be, we are definitely heading there if drastic action is not taken immediately.

    Edit: the books in order: (Only two, sadly she died while writing the third but still both worth reading, there isn’t a clif hanger at the end) https://www.octaviabutler.com/parableseries

    • grumpasaurusrex@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      Absolutely this! Octavia Butler literally wrote a fascist American president with the slogan “Make America Great Again” in 1993.

  • napfkuchen@feddit.org
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    6 days ago

    Horizon Zero Dawn: Total extinction by the 2060s because some mad, narcissistic Elon Musk guy overestimates himself and fucks it up for the whole world? Doesn’t sound too far-fetched to me right now.

  • invertedspear@lemm.ee
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    7 days ago

    Parable of the Sower

    It was written as near future fiction anyway. In fact the dates mentioned in the book start out in our past. Just the catalyst events haven’t quite happened yet. Add a few years to the dates and I could see us heading towards that kind of societal break down.

    • rothaine@lemm.ee
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      6 days ago

      This book is haunting. It made me seriously consider buying a gun. If I could convince my wife to read it, we’d probably have an armory by now.

  • PSoul•Lemmy@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    I do believe that a lot of aspects of The Ministry for the Future by K.S. Robinson have chances of becoming true.

    The deadly heatwave in south Asia, governments going rogue and playing with geo engineering on their own, climate refugee camps and the general sense of too little too late.

    But the book is fairly optimistic, so hopefully, people of the world getting together and accepting a new paradigm will come to be true.

  • Hemingways_Shotgun@lemmy.ca
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    7 days ago

    I’m going to go obscure here and say that the world of 2077 from the television show Continuum

    It ran for a few seasons; I enjoyed it for the most part. Not the best, not the worst. But definitely in terms of the premise where Corporations have essentially bought out failing governments, leading to an advanced surveillance state, and anti-corporate terrorists, etc… etc…

  • xmunk@sh.itjust.works
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    7 days ago

    Dune.

    Not the cool parts, the Butlerian Jihad.

    I’d have gone with WH40Ks war with the men of iron but there’s absolutely no chance we reach golden age of technology levels before we fuck ourselves.

  • zod000@lemmy.ml
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    7 days ago

    Lots of good responses in this thread so far, but I keep thinking of the newest Gibson trilogy with regards to “the jackpot” where the majority of the population dies from a series of “not quite the big one” pandemics and climate issues and society is taken over by the kleptocracy. I love Gibson’s books, but I wish he would stop accurately predicting our demise.

  • MiDaBa@lemmy.ml
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    7 days ago

    I’ve gotta go with Mad Max here. Between the words oil obsession, rising aggression and dumbing down of society I can’t see it going any other way.

  • kalkulat@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    "Lack of respect, wrong attitude, failure to obey authority. The Farm, immediately. - death sentence in Ellison’s book ‘A Boy and His Dog’

  • rothaine@lemm.ee
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    6 days ago

    Can we choose? I’ll pick the Matrix. Yes we are slaves to the machines, but at least they give us happy dreams