I read this many years ago, and Brin is easily my favorite author. I have read almost everything he has published. Earth is great for the PO crowd, mainly because many of the issues he wrote about in 1987 have really started to come to pass. If anyone likes well written Sci-Fi, that's not in the year 2183, this is a must read. From his site:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')n Earth (NOMINEE: 1991 Hugo award for best novel [runner-up]), it's fifty years from tomorrow. A microscopic black hole has accidentally fallen into the Earth's core and the entire planet is in danger of being destroyed within two years. A team of scientists frantically searches for a way to prevent the ultimate disaster. But while they look for an answer, others argue that the only way to save the Earth is to let its human inhabitants become extinct: to let the million-year evolutionary clock rewind and start over.
It's been more than a decade since Earth was first published. Since then, some things have eerily come true. The prediction getting the most attention was my portrayal of a vivid, dynamic world wide web -- though under a different name. (Note how the web-address system I use differs from the URL codes that developed a few years later.) Some people credit me with foreseeing the 'web page' and self-forming internet communities, but I think the ideas were already latent -- almost obvious -- when I started writing the book in 1987.
The same holds true for 'wearable' computing... the ability to walk about in wireless contact with a seamless Net, looking up information, even through your VR sunglasses. Some say this first appeared in Earth, but I know several people who spoke of similar possibilities even earlier.
As for Global Warming, a looming refugee crisis, the need for young people to demand a place amid an aging population, the desperate struggle to preserve species and all the rest... even the notion of a micro-black hole as an ultimate "environmental threat"... none of these originated with me. I will, however, take credit for the "Helvetian War" -- a metaphor standing in for the inevitable day when the world's people will get fed up with the wretched and universally vile effects of banking secrecy. Events of late 2001 seem to have made this looming crisis all the more likely, and sooner than even I expected.
As writers go, I suppose I'm known as an optimist. So it seems only natural that this novel projects a future, (now less than forty years from now), where there's been just a little more wisdom than folly... perhaps a bit more hope than despair.
In fact, this is just about the most encouraging tomorrow I can imagine right now. What a sobering thought.




