2312 kim stanley robinson review6/11/2023 ![]() Now, another fifty years on, those techniques have been used once again. Brunner’s bravura deployment of a range of techniques openly taken from Dos Passos was tacit recognition that the British New Wave, of which this was a leading example, was a belated incorporation of modernism into science fiction. Thirty year later, John Brunner incorporated those same techniques in a vivid picture of a world bursting with overpopulation, Stand On Zanzibar. The trilogy was immediately recognised as one of the defining works of American Modernism, combining stream of consciousness, newspaper headlines, dramatic shifts in focus and other devices to form a kaleidoscopic portrait of the age. trilogy by John Dos Passos, was published. In 1936, The Big Money, the final volume in the U.S.A. It was first published in Bull Spec 8/9, Spring 2013. This is the review of 2312 that accompanied the interview I reprinted here. ![]() ![]() ![]() Since I reprinted an old review of a Kim Stanley Robinson book yesterday, I thought I’d reprint a more recent review today. ![]()
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