Books
I've been running short of books.
_Midnight Alley_, Rachel Caine
Book three about the vampires of Morgantown, Texas. Now we know: these are the only vampires left in the world, and they are all getting sick. Also, nobody blinks at a 16 year old freshman girl switching mid-semester into senior-level courses, including physics. This may be because the author's understanding of physics appears to be at the pop-science level. Oooh, strings. Also also, we are now two for two in bad things happening at big off-campus parties.
_Midnight Alley_, Rachel Caine
Book three about the vampires of Morgantown, Texas. Now we know: these are the only vampires left in the world, and they are all getting sick. Also, nobody blinks at a 16 year old freshman girl switching mid-semester into senior-level courses, including physics. This may be because the author's understanding of physics appears to be at the pop-science level. Oooh, strings. Also also, we are now two for two in bad things happening at big off-campus parties.
Branch Out
Jules Verne is always mentioned for his scientific foresight, but what makes him a great writer is how he always tied the situation back to the human condition. Captain Nemo is the most obvious example.
I don't have any suggestions, but there are many novels from the past two hundred years which dealt with social conditions in the framework of a family or personal narrative. There were a rash of the them in the Dickens period dealing with the problems of the industrial revolution, there were a similar set in the US at the turn of the 20th Century as well. The current movie about oil based upon a novel of Upton Sinclair seems to indicate that some of these themes are still relevant.
I'm sure there are many contemporary examples as well, but I haven't been keeping up, I have enough trouble with the non-fiction BSO's (book shaped objects) that pundits keep publishing that deal with world affairs and economic concerns.
Sometimes a good librarian can make suggestions based upon what you have been reading. It's worth asking for some advice.
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