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Word: fictioneers (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...DIFFICULT to say what happened to the science fiction I knew and loved and why it happened. Very few of the top SF writers now concern themselves with galactic empires, and struggles between human life and other life forms, and with the infinite shapes and forms that a human social system may take and what--in the logical extreme--those different social systems can mean to the individuals in them...

Author: By Jerald R. Gerst, | Title: The Best of Sci Fi | 6/10/1969 | See Source »

MAYBE science fiction isn't what it used to be. Or maybe I'm not what I used to be. Or maybe Kurt Vonnegut has spoiled all other science fiction (if that's really what it is he writes) for me. In any case, the "best" of last year's "SF" didn't particularly move...

Author: By Jerald R. Gerst, | Title: The Best of Sci Fi | 6/10/1969 | See Source »

...symbol is a sort of paper-bag human frame crumpling at various points in the story, and the concept is that of an alternative not take, one of our potential selves that begins to die once we have made the relevant decision against it. Nice; but not the science fiction I once knew...

Author: By Jerald R. Gerst, | Title: The Best of Sci Fi | 6/10/1969 | See Source »

...Science fiction writers are now digging farther back into the mind itself. They're trying to decide if human life is relevant to the universe, if so, how and why, and where human consciousness is going from where...

Author: By Jerald R. Gerst, | Title: The Best of Sci Fi | 6/10/1969 | See Source »

...choice of pushing on out toward the stars, much as the "classic" science fiction writers had depicted us. Or we could, as a species of intelligent beings, tool up for--well, something else. Maybe it is, as one of the reviewers of "2001--A Space Odyssey" seems to think, a Teilhard du Chardin-like leap of consciousness, a transfiguration into an all-pervasive incorporeal intelligence. Perhaps it is something not nearly so romantic; maybe just learning to like and respect each other and beginning to live on this planet at peace with ourselves...

Author: By Jerald R. Gerst, | Title: The Best of Sci Fi | 6/10/1969 | See Source »

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