Introduction
In our anthology, Radioactive Dreams,
eleven science fiction stories written by authors from seven different
countries meet their reader for the first time.
Science fiction
is the literature of warning; it does what no other literary movement
does. It holds up a mirror to us and cautions us not to destroy
ourselves and make the world uninhabitable. In this case, it was almost
impossible for Artificial Intelligence, one of the most
thought-provoking and worrying topics of recent days, not to be caught
on the radar of our writers.
Yasser Abu-Elhassab is one of
Egypt’s most prominent science fiction writers, and in The Absolute
Order Machine, he talks about a computer that intervenes in the
decision-making process and eliminates random subconscious factors. This
machine is advertised as a device that will make life easier and more
meaningful (?), but our protagonist, Solomon, intends to prove
otherwise.
Our Italian author Chiara De Giorgi tells us a story
titled AI Detective Services. In a society where everything is managed
by artificial intelligence and there is not much left for humans to do,
two artificial intelligences named Sherlock and Watson, working in a
detective agency, are assigned to investigate the death of Dr.
Pernicker, who believed that the only way for the human race to survive
is a society free of artificial intelligence.
The increasing
number of environmental disasters and the inability of the world
governments to do anything about it remain the most important problems
of our times. In his story To Sleep and not Dream, Hephaestion
Christopoulos from Greece tells the story of a botanist who visits a
village where environmental disasters are causing some surreal
phenomena. In a swamp reminiscent of the ‘zone’ in Tarkovsky’s
unforgettable sci-fi film Stalker where people who enter it cannot
understand whether what they witness is real or a trick of their minds,
the protagonist communicates with a dead little girl.
Israeli
writer Elana Gomel’s story Reality Rip warns about the problems that
are/will be created by environmental disasters. In her horrifying world,
humanity desperately tries to cope with the inter-dimensional rifts
that open one after another.
In the world created by Dimitra
Nikolaidou, a Greek Cypriot author you may remember from our previous
selection, Omens of Doom, our civilization has already been flooded by
environmental disasters… The story The Scar at the End of the World
takes place two hundred years after the Great Flood that flooded our
world. In this society, where everything left from our civilization is
considered ‘antique’, treasure hunters diving in the Mediterranean look
for a very special statue.
Tuğrul Sultanzade is our Turkish
Cypriot author and in his layered and unique style with plenty of
metaphors, he tells us what happens in a research station located in the
asteroid belt between Jupiter and Mars. Three people fight against an
infectious disease that spreads in space and affects the brain. Tuğrul
planned his dystopian story Reflection as a chapter of the novel he is
writing.
While compiling a science fiction selection, it would be
impossible to leave out space travels. In addition to Reflection, which
takes place on an asteroid, we have also included French writer David
Bry‘s story Even More Than Earth, which takes place on a
‘generation-ship’. The theme of a spaceship carrying the embryos of
Earth’s remnants to another planet is often visited by in science
fiction authors. However, it is very difficult to categorize Bry’s
story, which also touches on hunger, war, refugees, racism (albeit in
the background), and includes AI and three-dimensional projection
technology… Nevertheless, it is possible to consider it a ‘hybrid’ story
between Space Opera and Artificial Intelligence genres.
Cem Can
has about fifty science fiction stories published in Turkey so far. The
Impostor in our selection is again a ‘hybrid’ story with Cyberpunk and
AI genre feeling. Our protagonist, involved in illegal activities, is
commissioned by the ‘company’ to start anew and the hunt begins in the
megalopolis of Istankara… The surprise ending makes this a memorable
story.
It is almost impossible for science fiction literature
that is so concerned with the course of society not to be political. In
Opalescence, Selin Arapkirli from Turkey tells us about a woman who
discovers the secret of invisibility in a society where women are
ignored. It is an extremely dystopian story based on the murders of
women and reactionary movements that are constantly on the agenda in her
country.
Death Doesn’t Change Anything deals with domestic
violence, or so it seems. French writer Julia Richard tells the story of
a woman trapped in an unhappy marriage where she suffers violence from
her husband. Our protagonist Alexa is not who she thinks she is; beware
of the surprise ending…
Finally, Onur Selamet, in his story
Crawling Things, which we can define as Cosmic fiction / Bio-punk, tells
us about mysterious beings who perform strange experiments on humans.
Onur is from Turkey and he is the director of the biggest literature
portal.
We hope you enjoy our selection.
Ünver Alibey
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