RE: https://hachyderm.io/@mekkaokereke/116290338892571761

🤦🏿‍♂️Actually, nevermind.

Why is everything like this?

The author supposedly went on an anti-woke, right-wing podcast to promote the movie while trashing other books and movies that do have a "woke" message or that have inclusive representation? But... why?

Why was that necessary?

I'm not saying don't watch the movie or read the book. Do whatever makes you happy.

I'm also not interested in debating how much inclusion is in his stories, whether he realizes it or not.

And I'm not interested in comparing even bigger, "super woke" sci-fi franchises like Star Trek or Star Wars.

I'm just saying that I personally watched the last one (The Martian), and I watched this one (Project Hail Mary), but you can guess if I'm watching the next one.

So many choices in entertainment.

The actions that attract the MAGA customer base will probably alienate me, and vice versa. That's OK!

Whether or not I watch his next movie doesn't really matter that much to him. He's not going to go broke and that's okay. Good actually!

But it's so hard to be an author, let alone a woman author, in sci-fi, who tells stories with good representation? Those authors don't need to be punched down on.

🤔Now I need to buy two IMAX tickets worth of sci-fi books written by authors that aren't anti-woke, just to put my part of the universe back in balance.

🤔Actually to properly balance things out, I have to keep reading new sci-fi books until I find one that I can recommend to thousands of people.

@mekkaokereke A Memory Called Empire is an award winning reflection on colonialism and cultural identity, besides being a well written and entertaining sci-fi mystery. The second book in the duology is equally good.

@Fourth_Dogma @mekkaokereke

Agree with this. A Memory Called Empire by Arkady Martine is brilliant.

Check out Martine's CV as well. Fascinating personal history.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arkady_Martine

Arkady Martine - Wikipedia

@mekkaokereke can I piggyback on the great recommendations that have been rolling in on this thread? I'm looking for kid-friendly science fiction (say, for ages 6-10).

I absolutely adored the Tom Swift III series around first and second grade, but the portrayal of the sole female character (Anita Thorwald, the "volatile redhead," who was actually one of my favorite characters) turns my stomach now. (You can find a PDF here: https://ms.z-library.sk/book/yqvB1m0Vj1/terror-on-the-moons-of-jupiter-tom-swift-third-series-book-2.html?dsource=recommend and search for "redhead" to get an idea.)

@mekkaokereke
but these books really captured my imagination, and I'd love to have something similar on a shelf at home. I'd go as far as to say that they were similar to "The Expanse" (hard-but-not-that-hard gallivanting about space that tries to stay scientifically grounded, introduction of a hyperdrive in book 4 so that you can visit a different alien setting in each novel). But they explained how most of the tech and inventions worked in ways that drove the plot in a kid-accessible way.