Creating an "Antidote" to Our Dystopian Futures

I'm not entirely sure what the uniting theme of Sunday's Festival of Books panel on "Finding Truth in Imagined Places" was; I thought it had something to do with literary writers who incorporated elements of the fantastic into their work, but panelist Gary Amdahl suggested that his stories were much more documentary than imaginative, and if they did seem fantastic, "it's the placebo effect from sitting next to these guys." Then, too, the moderator's questions wandered all over the map, including some blatant fishing for material for the LA Times book blog, Jacket Copy, which chewed up at least five minutes, so that when there was absolutely no time left for questions from the audience at the end, I think some people were a little disappointed.

(Though not as much as the festival attendee I chatted with earlier in the day, who was appalled that the panel on "critic's voices" hadn't included any women—which struck us as odd given that the LA Times Book Review has Susan Salter Reynolds, and local author Carolyn See is a regular contributor to the Washington Post.)

kunstler-groff.jpg

Once we started hearing about the books that brought these authors to the table, though, James Howard Kunstler (left) told the audience how his new novel, World Made By Hand, extrapolated from the themes of his last nonfiction book, The Long Emergency. When he turned the novel in to his editor, Kunstler recalled, "he behaved as if I had handed him a basket of garlic and crosses," and then tried to dissuade him with a lowball offer. (That was before he got a new agent, though.) He conceded that, in writing about a world a few years into the future where the depleted oil supply leads to the collapse of our technological infrastructure, "I was very conscious of The Road being out there... I knew what it was about, and I wanted [my book] to be the antidote to that, to suggest that this isn't the worst thing that could happen."

Kunstler and I chatted earlier, before the panel began, about the trailer he'd made for his novel, and he told me about a second short film he'd produced, again a series of still images but this time with soliloquies and dialogues rather than voiceovers. It's interesting—I'm not entirely convinced that the dramatization through still images works consistently, this actually got me thinking about the possibilities of podcasting audio-only adaptations of novels like serial dramas for the radio. Not that I have any idea how to make such a thing commercially viable just yet, but give me time...


new on mediabistro.com

The Future of Social Media with Chris Anderson

The editor of Wired explains how to create a social network that works.
Watch the video

Email This Post

Fill out the following information and click on the Send button in order to send this post, Creating an "Antidote" to Our Dystopian Futures, to a friend.
Friend's name
Friend's email address
Your name
Your email address
Note to your friend (optional, max 200 Characters)

Read more on GalleyCat >

The First Word On the Book Publishing Industry

GalleyCat in Your Inbox
Our Blog Network

eBookNewser

BayNewser

WebNewser

TVNewser

PRNewser

MediaJobsDaily

FishbowlNY

FishbowlDC

FishbowlLA

MobileContentToday

AgencySpy

UnBeige

GalleyCat

GalleyCat Staff

Editor:

Jason Boog

Correspondent:

Jeff Rivera

Follow GalleyCat

Email GalleyCat

Topics

About the 'Cat

About Us - Modules

Adaptation

Agents

Audiobooks

Authors

Awards

Behind the Deal

Book Fairs

Book Jackets

Book Trailer

Bookselling

Celebrities

Comicbookland

Contests

Deals

eBooks

Editors

Events

Feuds

Food & Drink

GalleyCat Reviews

GC's Hitlist

Jobs

Lecture Circuit

Libraries

Lit Crit

Litterbox

LOLgalleycats

Mailbag

Monday Morning

Music

New & Upcoming

Paper Cuts

Party Hopping

People of Color

Piracy

Poetry

Polls

Publicity

Publishing

Q&A

Readers

Revolving Door

Self Publishing

Sex, Drugs & Rock n Roll

Translated Lit

Trends

Twitter

Undiscovered Writers

Videos

Web & Tech

Weekend Reading

Year in Review


Links

Book Beast@The Daily Beast

Bookseller.com

Books@Wowowow

Buzz, Balls & Hype

Danuta Kean

E-Reads

Eco-Libris

MarianLibrarian

Publishers Marketplace

Publishers Weekly

Publishing Contrarian

Publishing For Profit

Publishing Insider

Publishing News

Publishing Perspectives

The Publishing Spot

Publishing Trends

PubRants

Rick Frishman

Shelf Awareness

TeleRead

Weekly Publishing Moves

The Write Report

...more...

Archives

February 2010

January 2010

December 2009

November 2009

more...


Job Listings

Featured Listings

Sales Support Coordinator
HarperCollins Publishers
New York, NY

Digital & Electronic Content Editor/Test Prep
Barron's Educational Series, Inc.
Hauppauge, NY

Director of Leadership Communications
The Savannah College of Art and Design
Savannah, GA

Administrative-Editorial Coordinator
Harlequin Books
New York, NY

ADVERTISEMENT


mediabistro.com l Member Benefits l Jobs l Freelance Marketplace l Courses l Events l Forums l Content
mediabistro Blogs: Media News l TVNewser l GalleyCat l UnBeige l FishbowlNY l FishbowlLA l FishbowlDC l PRNewser l AgencySpy
MobileContentToday l WebNewser l BayNewser l eBookNewser l MediaJobsDaily l mbToolbox
Site Map l Advertising/Sponsorships l Partners l About Us l Contact Us/Help

WebMediaBrands
mediabistro learnnetwork freelanceconnect SemanticWeb
Jobs | Events | News
Copyright 2010 WebMediaBrands Inc. All rights reserved.
Advertise | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy