The urgent need to reorganise life on Earth is clear to almost everyone, how we do it less so. Fortunately science fiction has drawn up some good plans
At an expansive new exhibition in New York, the director’s defining science fiction opus is explored in detail with help from those who made it with him
2001: A Space Odyssey, Childhood’s End, Arthur C. Clarke’s Mysterious World … one hundred years after his birth, the British writer is the undisputed master
The Underground Railroad, a fantastic reimagining of US slavery, takes the UK’s pre-eminent science fiction prize a day after being longlisted for the Man Booker
BookieCookie: ‘Something I enjoyed very much about this book is that it is one of few in which you are as clueless as the characters in the story, as you never know what the author’s imagination will come up with next!’
Author and animator Niel Bushnell talks to site members Charlotte and Eva from the Millennium Riot reading group about being a writer, the power of reading, and Benedict Cumberbatch as a bad guy
The announcement that water has been found on the Red Planet just happens to have emerged at the same time as the Matt Damon film, with Nasa branding all over it, is released. Spooky, or what?
Brief letters New words for those stuck in a viral spiral