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When it Changed:

Science Into Fiction : an Anthology
Front Cover
Geoff Rymann
2 Reviews
Comma Press, 2009 - Fiction - 276 pages

Collaborating between leading scientists and literary authors, this unique experiment creates a new strain of science fiction by extending the repertoire of the genre beyond the common places of space travel, time travel, and artificial intelligence. Through the use of diverse, credible, and contemporary research areas—from Planck length to plankton and virtual conversations between Wittgenstein and Turing to future civilizations torn asunder by differences over particle physics—these stories reinstate the furnace of scientific endeavor. Comprised of research from practicing scientists at Manchester University and the stories of established authors—including Frank Cottrell Boyce, Geoff Ryman, Patricia Dunscker, and Sara Maitland—this anthology attempts to take science fiction into new, scientifically realistic fields while explaining the theory and technology behind each story.

What people are saying - Write a review

Review: When It Changed: Science into Fiction

User Review  - Jessica - Goodreads

What a fantastic idea: pair a writer and a scientist. The writer shadows the scientist and creates a story based on actual cutting-edge research. Can't wait to read it! Read full review

Review: When It Changed: Science into Fiction

User Review  - Laura - Goodreads

Not bad. wasn't too sure at the beginning, but with all short stories books, there are some part I liked and others that weren't to my taste. Read full review

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About the author (2009)

Geoff Ryman is an author and editor whose work includes Air, Pol Pot’s Beautiful Daughter, and Tesseracts Nine. He is the founder of the Mundane Science Fiction movement and edited the Mundane Special Issue of Interzone magazine in 2008.

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