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Conference noted::sf

Title:Arcana Caelestia
Notice:Directory listings are in topic 2
Moderator:NETRIX::thomas
Created:Thu Dec 08 1983
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1300
Total number of notes:18728

739.0. ""The Twenty-Second Century" by John Christopher" by RAINBO::TARBET () Tue Jan 31 1989 18:19

    Anybody know the book and author?  Anybody know where I can get another
    copy? (Mine dissolved from re-reading *years* ago)  Did/does he write
    other stuff with the same view of the future? 
    
    						=maggie
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739.1Which view of the future was that ?SA1794::CHARBONNDI'm the NRAWed Feb 01 1989 12:195
    Give us some clues, Maggie - was it fiction or non-fiction, John
    W. Campbell or John Christopher ? (come to think of it, this *is*
    Science *Fiction*) Plot ? Theme ? 
    
    Dana
739.2ASABET::BOYAJIANKlactovedesteen!Wed Feb 01 1989 14:2815
    THE TWENTY-SECOND CENTURY was by John Christopher. It was his
    first book and was a short-story collection. I haven't read it
    myself, so I don't know if it has the same view of the future
    as other books of his.
    
    Christopher's most well-known books are his two juvenile series:
    
    	THE WHITE MOUNTAINS		THE PRINCE IN WAITING
    	THE CITY OF GOLD AND LEAD	BEYOND THE BURNING LANDS
    	THE POOL OF FIRE		THE SWORD OF THE SPIRITS
    
    as well as his novels NO BLADE OF GRASS (aka THE DEATH OF GRASS)
    and THE LONG WINTER (aka THE WORLD IN WINTER).
    
    --- jerry
739.3See Topic 498MTWAIN::KLAESN = R*fgfpneflfifaLWed Feb 01 1989 14:554
    	SF Topic 498 also discusses John Christopher's works.
    
    	Larry
    
739.4One Jerry listed in 498:STRATA::RUDMANP51--Cadillac of the Skies!Wed Feb 01 1989 15:024
    Since 498 is a bit dusty, I'll say here I remember enjoying
    THE POSSESSORS.
                              
    							Don
739.5RAINBO::TARBETThu Feb 02 1989 16:0114
    <--(.1)
    
    He posited a future in which a half-dozen or so vertical conglomerates
    *were* the world's government and life was sort of a posterised version
    of the "Organisation Man" culture:  anyone who wanted more than
    subsistance living signed on with one of the conglomerates and made it
    their life, very feudal.  He had a really likeable (well, to me)
    protagonist named Matthew(?) Larkin.  Not all the stories in the
    collection were about him, but most were and all were good so far as I
    remember.                                          
    
    Anybody know where I can get another copy?
    
    						=maggie