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The Future

I honestly can't be sure what my future is going to be, from a personal standpoint. Ideally, I'd really love to be able to have a stable job in my field and enough financial stability to support myself, but thats just wishful thinking. I always feel like no matter how far you plan ahead, things will always change and twist, so the answers you may have to any questions about the future can be different from even year to year. I suppose that thats a good argument for living in the moment, since planning ahead might as well be futile with all the uncontrollable changes in the world and ourselves that can alter anything I might assume about my own future, and with all the wild changes that have happened in the past few years, I honestly don't have an answer for what I think  might happen, only what I hope might happen. I know my own aspirations are pretty basic by default, I just want financial stability and contentment in my career, no matter what it ends up being or where I e

Hitchhikers Guide

I always heard about this specific story from many many people, mostly older, but I never actually got around to reading it, and this time around I'm really glad I did. This story really seemed to find a good balance of being a funny satirical and parodic version of the sci fi genre, but it still definitely resonated with me. This story seemed to go more down to earth to relate to its audience in a slightly comedic and relaxed manner. Instead of focusing more on the grand adventure and big picture and world beyond reach, it definitely seemed to be able to balance the grand scope and the mundane and personal. It doesn't ignore the small problems like other sci fi adventures normally would, but still kind of has that feeling of a greater scope, even with a parodic idea of the universe ending, to assure the audience in playful nihilism that really, nothing actually does matter. The main character is a normal person who is thrust into an adventure and something much larger than him

Bloodchild

1. This text was nothing short of confusing for me. I felt like I opened a book and started reading in the middle of it, with a lot of background information missing. It took a good while into the reading to figure out a base idea of what was happening, but I was still very confused, with different names and words being said that are given no explanation but written as though I should already know them. Some of the concepts seemed very weird and out of nowhere to me, especially the ending where the alien lays an egg in the main character. 2. I don't think I was able to make any connections with this story, it was too confusing for me to get a grasp on the characters and who they were and their relationships to one another. There is a small sense of responsibility and need between the narrator and the alien, the narrator is referred to as the aliens property, and it's somewhat reveled that the aliens need humans in order to reproduce, and that without an alien companion, the h

The Aquatic Uncle

I found that this story gleaned heavily and literally into the concept of generational differences in the passage of time, and the conformity of the majority. In the real world, people have been complaining about the younger generation since there was a younger generation to complain about, and older generations will always seem to cling to the world that existed when they were younger. This idea is represented in a majorly literal way, with generational change represented by literal human evolution. At the current time, a majority of the previously aquatic population has changed to be land dwelling, moving out of the water and to the land, including the protagonist as well, whos aged uncle stubbornly refuses to leave the aquatic lifestyle he has existed in for so long, clinging to what he has always knows despite what the grand majority of society is doing. The uncles whole family, as well as most of the human population ends up abandoning the uncle to go live on land, and he stubborn

Snow Crash

This novel was very interesting for me, and I definitely felt the spirit of the cyberpunk genre in it. The world of the future is both technically advanced and socially and economically crumbled in a way. The story gets its own title from the name of a futuristic addictive drug that can actually travel and effect its users digitally, able to spread through technology itself. The drug is able to target people through technology, essentially making people addicted to technology itself. This could definitely be interpreted as modern days supposed dependency on technology being displayed as a literal addiction. As with most cyberpunk stories, technology plays a large part in the world, as does industry and commercialism, which also seems to have a dangerous amount of influence on the citizens.

Babel-17

Babel-17, like it's wordplay of a title suggests, focuses heavily on the theme of language, and how it exists as such a vital and complicated facet of society, functioning both verbally and nonverbally to communicate the most complex and nuanced of signals and messages with very slight changes, even through body posture or slight tone of voice. As it is fitting of such a theme, the protagonist is a linguist and writer, and the novel begins and kicks off with her attempting to learn and decipher the language known as Babel-17, an intricate and complicated language that requires intense study to try and decode, and which seems to have some sort of real psychological or supernatural effect on the people who do come to understand it. It doesn't take long for the protagonist to decipher the language, and she soon finds herself with superhuman abilities of the mind, beginning with her being able to read the thoughts of others, and even manipulate time. As the novel progresses Its rev

The Martian

This was an exceptionally interesting read for me, which I was very happy with considering I'm not one to lean towards science fiction. The Martian was definitely unique and intriguing with its premise, following an astronaut who is mistakingly left behind on Mars, lost in a storm after his fellow crewmates escape in their ship, assuming him to be dead. The whole novel focuses on how the astronaut, Mark Whatney, will find a way to survive in the remains of his base on Mars with limited resources and no way of contacting Earth or even letting anyone know he is alive. The novel really puts its more wild concepts into the realm of possibility, making it seem like something that could potentially happen in the future, especially with current day space exploration and similar true stories, such as the Apollo 13 mission. The novel really keeps the reader engaged with a ton of interesting problems for the protagonist to solve, without losing them in complex scientific language that would