#simon-the-divergent-star

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Books
fromThe Atlantic
1 day ago

Unconventional Novels About Conventional People

Aging revolutionaries and conformists share parallel narratives of disillusionment and the loss of youthful dreams in recent literature.
Independent films
fromInverse
3 days ago

2026's Most Divisive Star Wars Character Could Address A Horrible Trope

Rotta the Hutt's character explores legacy and identity in Star Wars, showcasing how familial connections shape individual trajectories.
Women in technology
fromDefector
1 week ago

'Imperfect Women' Is The Latest Entry In A Fittingly Flawed Genre | Defector

Imperfect Women critiques societal expectations of women through the lens of flawed characters and their narratives.
LA Kings
fromEsquire
1 week ago

These 'Paradise' Fan Theories Might Explain Alex, Link, and the Finale

Paradise captivates audiences with its blend of emotional storytelling and sci-fi elements, sparking numerous fan theories about character origins and plot twists.
Books
fromAnOther
4 days ago

Djamel White's Novel Is Irish Fiction's Gangland Answer to Heated Rivalry

Djamel White's debut novel, All Them Dogs, blends crime fiction, romance, and tragedy, featuring a complex protagonist navigating the criminal underworld.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

The Writer and the Traitor by Robert Verkaik review divided loyalties

Graham Greene announced that he was resigning from MI6. Kim Philby, his chief in Section V, MI6's counterespionage arm, blinked. Greene had played his part in tending the illusion.
London politics
#science-fiction
fromSlate Magazine
1 week ago
Books

Tech Barons Like Elon Musk Love Sci-Fi. They Also Misunderstand It Completely.

Technology moguls often misinterpret the messages of science fiction, despite their admiration for the genre.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago
Books

The best recent science fiction, fantasy and horror review roundup

Two novels blend science-fiction or supernatural elements with intimate suspense: an alien-linked serial-killer investigation and a Cornish folk horror about ancient sea pacts and sisterhood.
OMG science
fromBig Think
1 week ago

How "Project Hair Mary" turns hardcore science into page-turning drama

Ryland Grace, a science teacher, awakens in space on a mission to save humanity from extinction.
Film
fromVulture
2 weeks ago

Project Hail Mary Needs About 39 Percent Fewer Jokes

Project Hail Mary is an entertaining science-fiction adventure that balances humor with an intriguing apocalyptic story about stopping star-eating organisms threatening Earth.
Books
fromSlate Magazine
1 week ago

Tech Barons Like Elon Musk Love Sci-Fi. They Also Misunderstand It Completely.

Technology moguls often misinterpret the messages of science fiction, despite their admiration for the genre.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
4 days ago

The Sci-Fi Novelist Who Disappeared for Decades

Cameron Reed's science fiction explores cognitive estrangement, revealing alien worlds that reflect and challenge our own societal norms and moral dilemmas.
#project-hail-mary
fromInverse
2 weeks ago
Independent films

'Project Hail Mary' Author Reveals Why That Twist Ending Is So Essential

Independent films
fromVulture
1 week ago

Project Hail Mary Is a Star Wars Movie, Basically

Rocky, an alien in Project Hail Mary, is a compassionate, intelligent being with a unique appearance and a strong bond with Dr. Ryland Grace.
Independent films
fromInverse
2 weeks ago

'Project Hail Mary' Author Reveals Why That Twist Ending Is So Essential

Project Hail Mary succeeds through its relatable protagonist Ryland Grace, whose character arc includes a late-film revelation that recontextualizes his heroism and ends with him teaching science to young Eridians on an alien planet.
Television
fromInverse
3 weeks ago

10 Years Ago, One Conflicted Sci-Fi Reboot Dropped A Wild Finale

The 2009-2011 V reboot served as a transitional bridge between eras of science fiction television, featuring Morena Baccarin's standout performance as the alien leader Anna.
Books
fromInverse
1 week ago

Is That Weird 'Foundation' Game Connected To The Books Or The Show?

Isaac Asimov's influence on science fiction is profound, with his works inspiring many authors and adaptations, including the recent Foundation series.
Books
fromInverse
1 week ago

Behind 'Project Hail Mary' And The Hard Sci-Fi Renaissance - And What's Next

Andy Weir's evolution as a sci-fi author reflects a blend of realism and personal growth in his characters and storytelling.
Media industry
fromThe Verge
4 weeks ago

The AI Doc is an overwrought hype piece for doomers and accelerationists alike

Focus Features' AI documentary has excellent access to industry leaders but fails to provide meaningful insights or substantive analysis about generative AI's societal impact.
Artificial intelligence
fromHarper's Magazine
3 weeks ago

Agents of Chaos, by Will Stephenson

AI has primarily produced flawed consumer products and hype-driven companies rather than transformative breakthroughs, while young tech workers prioritize avoiding economic displacement over meritocratic achievement.
Books
fromThe Atlantic
2 weeks ago

What Very Different Places Have in Common

Marlon James and Gary Shteyngart reflect on how literary inspiration is shaped by both presence and absence in their respective works.
Film
fromThe Nation
1 month ago

The Cinema of Societal Collapse

Oscar-nominated international films explore survival and resistance under authoritarian regimes, depicting both specific historical tyranny and speculative global oppression.
Independent films
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 weeks ago

Which are more like life, novels or films?

Films display character thoughts primarily through facial expressions and actions, making them more mysterious and potentially more realistic than novels, which explicitly describe inner thoughts.
Philosophy
fromApaonline
1 month ago

Dune's Discomfort with Religion

Villeneuve's Dune films impose a pro-secular worldview that denigrates faith as foolish, reinforcing Orientalist stereotypes by coding Fremen religion as Islamic and portraying believers as irrational victims needing secular liberation.
Books
fromThe New Yorker
2 weeks ago

Briefly Noted Book Reviews

Two literary works explore complex themes through innovative narrative techniques: Morrison's essays examine challenging craft elements in Toni Morrison's writing, while Nganang's memoir uses the scale as a metaphor connecting personal experience to colonial history.
Independent films
fromInverse
4 weeks ago

Could 'The Wild Robot' Be Setting Up A Trilogy?

Dreamworks' The Wild Robot sequel will feature new directors while original director Chris Sanders returns as screenwriter, adapting the second book in Peter Brown's trilogy.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 weeks ago

Daisy Johnson: I wasn't a fan of David Szalay, but Flesh is a masterpiece'

Reading shapes identity across life stages, from childhood memories through formative teenage years to adult perspectives, with specific books creating lasting connections and inspiring creative ambitions.
Television
fromVulture
1 month ago

Dexter Sol Ansell Has His Own Ideas About Egg's Future

A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms presents a lighter, character-focused Targaryen story emphasizing friendship and small-scale adventures over epic violence.
fromDefector
3 weeks ago

Dan Simmons Is Dead So It's Time To Read 'Hyperion' | Defector

This is a shame, because his best work belongs with the greats of fantasy, horror, and sci-fi. Summer of Night is a tighter, more satisfying version of Stephen King's It. Carrion Comfort is a brick-sized epic about psychic vampires that reads as breezily as a trade paperback. The Terror, which inspired the well-regarded show, is for its first three-quarters a brilliant and non-supernatural speculative take on a real doomed Arctic expedition.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 weeks ago

Malorie Blackman on Noughts & Crosses at 25: It's even more relevant today'

I sat down at my computer really angry, she tells me. It was the 1990s, the time of the murder of Stephen Lawrence and the Macpherson report's finding of institutional racism within the Metropolitan police. It was my way of channelling that anger.
Books
fromTechCrunch
2 months ago

Science fiction writers, Comic-Con say goodbye to AI | TechCrunch

Back in December, when SFWA announced that it was updating its rules for the Nebula Awards. Works written entirely by large language models would not be eligible, while authors who used LLMs "at any point during the writing process" had to disclose that use, allowing award voters to make their own decisions about whether that usage would affect their support.
Writing
Relationships
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

The Real Reason We're Obsessed With the Series "Tell Me Lies"

Tell Me Lies reveals unresolved attachment wounds through a nostalgic early-2000s college drama, prompting viewers to recognize patterns of desire, denial, and emotional damage.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Jean by Madeleine Dunnigan review sex and teenage secrets

It might sound like a potentially familiar narrative: a queer coming-of-age story, charted across one single heat-crazed summer in the 70s. From its very first paragraphs, however, this debut novel feels different. Madeleine Dunnigan immediately takes us inside the head of her rather scary protagonist, and makes his adventures in teenage lust and self-awareness as involving as they are immediate. The writing is constantly surprising, as unafraid of sensuality as it is of the story's repeated eruptions of brutality.
LGBT
US politics
fromAbove the Law
1 month ago

A Song Of ICE And Firing - Above the Law

ICE tactics resemble historical authoritarian policing; judicial safeguards and constitutional amendments resist authoritarian overreach; DOJ Epstein file releases expose compromising communications among the powerful.
Books
fromBustle
1 month ago

The 10 Best New Books Of March

Spring 2024 brings diverse literary releases across romance, literary fiction, and debuts, featuring works by established authors like Abby Jimenez and Rebecca Serle alongside promising new writers.
fromInverse
2 months ago

The Dream Of Life Without Sleep Is Actually A Dystopian Nightmare

We spend one-third of our lives asleep. This biological fact is something that, with time and technology, is less and less taken for granted. In many science fiction stories, the future of sleep is cozy and idyllic - an elevated state living within dream world. In others, sleep is more of an evolutionary shackle that gets in the way of productivity. The latter focuses on questions that haunt anyone who feels there are not enough hours in the day. What if we didn't have to sleep?
Philosophy
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

To say I was the favourite would imply I was liked': Mark Haddon on a loveless childhood

cardiganed grandmothers eating roadside picnics beside Morris Minors, pale men sunbathing in shoes and socks on stripy deckchairs, Raleigh Choppers and caged budgerigars and faux leather pouffes I feel a wave of what can't properly be called nostalgia, because the last thing I'd want is to return to that age and those places where I was often profoundly unhappy and from which I'd have been desperate to escape if escape had been a possibility.
Writing
Artificial intelligence
fromThe Verge
2 months ago

Millions of books died so Claude could live

Companies raced to adopt large language models, using massive book digitization efforts and aggressive strategies while legal and moral disputes over those methods escalate.
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

The Most Dangerous Books in Society

A study found that reading banned books predicted civic engagement more strongly than personality traits. Reading banned books showed zero correlation with grades, violent crime, or nonviolent crime in adolescents. Reactance theory explains why censorship backfires: Restricted freedoms activate curiosity and thinking.
Books
Television
fromThe Atlantic
2 months ago

What a Reality-TV Novel Understands About Reality

Treating life as a narrative and manipulating that narrative can lead people to sacrifice their humanity for drama.
Film
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

This fun thriller does the impossible: it makes you feel sorry for influencers (yes, really)

A coldly clever thriller where a charismatic killer murders influencers and steals their social media identities, exposing loneliness and performative online lives.
#stranger-things
Television
fromThe New Yorker
1 month ago

"Industry" Is a Study in Wasted Youths

Industry's young protagonists leave the trading floor and pursue new paths that expose how class, ambition, and personal flaws shape their outcomes.
fromInverse
2 months ago

Netflix's Most Infamous Sci-Fi Series Is Coming Back For Another Grim Season

Charlie Brooker's dystopian anthology series Black Mirror has been making us face the dark side of technology for 15 years now. In 2011, that meant live TV ransoms and capitalist reality shows. But last year, in Season 7, we saw memories brought to life, emotions run on subscription models, and the Hollywood remake machine going very literal. In the age of AI popping up everywhere, Black Mirror isn't going to stop reflecting real life any time soon - but what could possibly be next?
Television
#starfleet-academy
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

I'll Be the Monster by Sean Gilbert review are they fantasists or psychopaths?

Glimpse them chatting in a restaurant or posing on Instagram, and you might think they have it all. The pair live in London but often travel, drawing the eyes of other guests, their skin glowing, their limbs artfully at ease. She writes affirmations on hotel stationery; he claims to taste notes of bark and tobacco in his chianti. As Sean Gilbert's dark, observant debut opens in Istanbul, this apparently perfect couple bicker and sweat, for secrets lurk behind their facade and one of them might be murder.
Books
#lord-of-the-flies
Television
fromVulture
1 month ago

The Royal Brat

Daniel Ings transformed early rejection into a versatile career, supplying comic relief and distinct character energy across British TV and film while now playing Lyonel Baratheon.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

The best recent science fiction, fantasy and horror review roundup

Subsequently, runaway children turned the valley into a fortress, surviving on food they could catch or grow, with occasional forays into the towns below. Riley has heard the rumours, but it is only when she sees a green-clad boy or is it a girl? hovering outside her bedroom window offering directions on how to find Nowhere that she realises this might be her chance to escape and save her little brother from their sadistic guardian.
Books
Television
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

A modern masterpiece': writer Jack Thorne's best TV shows from This Is England to Adolescence

Jack Thorne is a prolific British playwright and screenwriter responsible for many acclaimed TV dramas, stage plays, and films, with several major projects forthcoming.
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

Mass surveillance, the metaverse, making America great again': the novelists who predicted our present

An infinite branching conception of time in which every possible path occurs anticipates many-worlds ideas in physics.
#lionel-shriver
Books
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

Crux by Gabriel Tallent review a passionate portrait of teenage climbers

Two seventeen-year-old friends in a California desert find purpose and identity through trad rock climbing amid poverty, family breakdown, and strip-mall nihilism.
Books
fromGameSpot
2 months ago

Silo Series Collector's Edition Books On Sale For Over 60% Off

Deluxe Collector's Editions of Hugh Howey's Wool and Shift are currently discounted by at least 50%, with Wool at $15.19 and Shift at $20.
Books
fromThe Atlantic
1 month ago

How to Portray a Wildly Unequal Society

Fiction can empathetically portray both wealthy elites and domestic servants with equal attention, bridging class divides through precise, uncondescending detail.
Books
fromWIRED
2 months ago

You've Never Heard of China's Greatest Sci-Fi Novel

The Morning Star of Lingao depicts modern Chinese engineers traveling to the late Ming to spark an industrial revolution, symbolizing China's modernization crisis and anxieties.
fromTODAY.com
1 month ago

American Girl's Samantha is All Grown Up In New Novel. Elder Millennials Will Swoon

For those unfamiliar with the beloved heroine, Samantha is one of the first three historical characters introduced by American Girl in 1986. Samantha, Swedish immigrant Kirsten and WWII homefront heroine Molly demonstrated courage, compassion and resilience. Along with an 18-inch doll, each 9-year-old character was featured in a series of easy chapter books; kids could follow each fictional story as well as the historical context surrounding it.
Books
Books
fromHarper's Magazine
1 month ago

Juvenile Impulse, by Becky Zhang

A retrospective narrative examines adolescent identity, desire, power dynamics, and authorial agency at a rigorous, hierarchical all-girls Southern California school.
Books
fromThe Atlantic
2 months ago

Was Infinite Jest Right About Everything?

Infinite Jest is highly readable and prescient about short-form digital entertainment, while Hyperion's ambitious adaptation has faced prolonged delays despite high hopes.
Books
fromSlate Magazine
1 month ago

The Unlikely Hit That's Popularizing a Whole New Type of Novel

Dungeon Crawler Carl is a bestselling LitRPG series blending RPG mechanics with post-apocalyptic adventure, inspiring fervent cosplay fans and a television adaptation.
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