I have.
Certain current science concepts and themes are cropping up in best selling science fiction.
One theme sparked by current science discoveries is the search for new habitable planets. Thanks to the Kepler mission, scientists are now sorting through hundreds of possible candidates for a new Earth.
http://www.cnn.com/2013/04/18/us/planet-discovery/index.html
Interestingly, our scientists are sending robots first to investigate other worlds…just like the alien robot that crashed onto my world of Alysia.
Hmmm. Maybe it came from Earth?
Because that’s what we’re doing now on Mars.
Nanobots is also a current theme. I sent a link two blogs ago on remote control miniature robots. One of my favorite scenes in my forthcoming novel Touching Crystal (out in November 2013) concerns saving two hostages using remote controlled flying nanobots.
Lots of fun.
Scott Westerfeld has a great scene in his Risen Empire that also does this, only he sends in a horde of nanobots and you don’t get to sit in the “cockpit” with Richard Steele like my readers do in Touching Crystal.
Several recent novels by well known prolific writers touch on the theme of robots that are self-replicating and can reconfigure themselves into whole new forms as their environment changes.
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2013/10/07/m_block_self_assembling_cube_robots_mit/
Self replicating nanobots are the source of possible world disaster in Larry Niven and Matthew Harrington’s new novel The Goliath Stone.
The Briareus mission took nano machinery out to divert an Earth crossing asteroid and bring it back to be mined, but things go wrong and nanobots go wild, creating a whole new entity that threatens Earth.
Dr. Toby Glyer, is the genius behind the nanotechnology and uses it to effect miracle cures on Earth…long life, disease free humans with strong libidos. Now he must find his partner, William Connor, and stop the incoming danger.
While the concepts and technology of this novel were intriguing, the dialog and action bogged me down.
A lot of sitting around and guessing what game the elusive William Connor played.
Well known and prolific writer Ben Bova just came out with his newest in a series called New Earth. He uses both the theme of discovering habitable planets and medical nanotechnology that enables health and long life.
Of course, everything gets carried much farther than current technology.
Science fiction writers do that….Until eventually, it becomes reality.
Like Niven, he ascribes a dangerous element into his nanobots, but does not ban them from Earth like Bova does.
Maybe he should have.
In both, the current themes and science are interesting, but the writing could have been better and more engaging.
In Bova’s New Earth, a long term exploration ship is sent to an exciting new world that appears habitable for humans. While the eighty year trip to New Earth takes place, the passengers are put in a cryogenic sleep, unaware of a global warming crisis on Earth.
Here is another current theme much discussed nowadays…global warming.
In the story, global warming has caused Earth’s cities to be inundated and weather to shift. Economies are on the brink of disaster.
A global weather shift is also a theme I use in my forthcoming novel, Touching Crystal, but that event is caused by a destructive comet.
Several popular movies, Deep Impact and Armageddon in 1998 portrayed how we might respond to an advancing asteroid or meteorite. Recent asteroid activity and the crash of a meteorite in Russia has reignited this theme. (See Feb. 2013 blog)
In the novel New Earth, the political leaders choose to abandon the expedition in order to attend to their own world crisis.
The expedition lands and discovers highly advanced friendly aliens that carry human DNA. The natives claim to have been born on the planet, which turns out to have a hollow metal shell. They deny having interstellar travel capability, but insist that they are human. Everyday technology is highly advanced, yet no cars, or manufacturing are visible. Nothing adds up.
The Earthlings are suspicious and the exploration team divides into several factions. The main character falls in love with one of the human appearing natives and trusts their leader’s offer of friendship. Other factions in the landing team mistrust the natives. They continually warn that the natives have ulterior and dangerous motives. The story sets up a nice conflict among the two groups as to who can be trusted and what motives drive both humans and aliens.
While parts of the story bog down a bit, Bova throws in a surprising twist towards the end, which keeps the reader flipping the page.
For me, what carried the story were the interesting dynamics of psychology: from the world leader abandoning the expedition for his own local concerns to the whole exploration of the human psyche and how various individuals reacted to first contact.
Humans can be a bit paranoid when confronted by new and unknown things…and aliens, well, who knows whether they can be helpful friends or world destroying enemies?