by bart » Sun 17 Apr 2005, 08:56:08
Hmmm, novels related to peak oil. Probably means sf.
Some great recommendations were given above.
Dr. Bloodmoney is a classic (anything that the Master, PK Dick, wrote is a classic!).
Some oldies:
Wolfbane by Pohl and Kornbluth.
http://www.infinityplus.co.uk/nonfiction/wolfbane.htm
Back in 1959, this famous pair of sf writers imagined an earth with low calories/capita, and pointed out that the quality of life depends on the amount of available energy. $this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ''')...the 1000-1500 calorie range... produces the small arts, the appreciations, the peaceful arrangements of necessities into subtle relationships of traditionally-agreed-upon-virtue. Japan, locked into its Shogunate prison, picked scanty food from mountainsides and beauty out of arrangements of lichen and paper.'
The Space Merchants by Pohl and Kornbluth.
Classic send-up of consumerism and commercialism. Fast-paced and funny.
The Merchant's War by Pohl. A sequel written decades later.
"The Marching Morons" by Kornbluth (short story). Hero wakes up in a world where the IQ has dropped ~40 points.
Last Stand on Zanzibar
The Sheep Look Up
Shockwave Rider
John Brunner's dystopian novels, dealing with over-population, future shock and pollution.
The Dispossessed by Ursula Le Guinn.
An expedition from a planet of communitarian anarchists, living close to nature, visits a nearby planet with a oligarchic, consumerist, corrupt civilization. It's not exactly goodies vs baddies, though.
More recent:
Always Coming Home by Ursula Le Guinn
A sustainable society that looks very much like the California Indian tribes that her father (anthropologist Alfred Kroeber) studied. Set in the Napa Valley of California in an indefinite period in the future.
The Dazzle of the Day by Molly Gloss
http://www.sfsite.com/07a/daz36.htm
Quaker colony leaves a polluted Earth, developing a high-tech eco-commune in the ship that takes them to another solar system. This is not an easy book to get into; it's poetic and literary not pulp adventure. But as a work of fiction, it is extraordinary.
The Ragged World and
Time, Like an Ever-Rolling Stream.
"Alien visitors insist that Earth clean up its polluted and damaged ecosystem.". The second novel is centered on a self-sufficient homestead on the Mississippi river, which is depicted very sympathetically. (The homesteading couple are based on real individuals.)