Twelve Tomorrows

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Twelve Tomorrows. Wade Roush, editor. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2018. Technology Review TRSF series #5.

Reviewed by Dominick Grace, our source here, SFRA Review 50.1 (Winter 2020).[1][2]

Eleven stories and a "retrospective on the life and career of Samuel R. Delany." Grace tells us that "The remit of the series, as explained on the series website is to offer 'original stories that explore the role and potential impact of developing technologies in the near, and not-so-near future.'"[3]

In the anthologized stories "implications of computer technology innovations [...] loom large," and "Several are about AI, or variations thereof," notably Paul "McAuley’s 'Chine Life,' offers a far future in which AI has mostly supplanted humanity and has split into factions, one of which wants humanity eradicated and the other of which ostensibly wants to help, but literally colonizes the bodies of human beings in order to do so."

In "Resolution," Clifford V. Johnson presents a story "told in comic format" where "an alien invasion goes unnoticed because the aliens (who are apparently incorporeal) have passed themselves off as the AI the protagonist thought she had developed." Elizabeth Bear's "Glory, Glory" features a hacked AI that is fooled "into believing there has ben a catastrophe in the outside world, so confines him to his impregnable fortress of a house, until he pays the hacker/extortionists $150,000,000.

RDE, finishing, 22Oct21