This is what the Future looks like

As you may have heard on the grapevine (for which read me standing on a soapbox yelling), Futures has a new anthology out. And if you haven’t heard that and bought your copy, where have you been??

Anyway, the medium of Twitter would have stopped this post in its tracks long ago for want of character space, which makes it, along with its sibling social media outlets, good for headlines but less good for detail.

As a result I thought it would be worth kicking back a little and talking specifics.

Futures 2 (and the number is a clue, there is a Futures 1 as well) collects together 100 stories from the Futures archive and presents them in a handy eBook format (together with an intro hastily scribbled on the back of a beer mat by yours truly). The stories represent the fairly eclectic style of Futures veering from dark comedy to android despair and taking in xenotransplantation, cerebral modification and artificial intelligence along the way.

The selection was agonized over by myself and co-editor, former Futures editor Henry Gee. Long into the night, we pored over the past few years’ output and were pleased to discover just how hard it was to draw up a short-list of 100 (which bodes well for a Futures 3 …). The cover art (reproduced here again, cos I can’t get enough of it, was done by long-term Futures artist Jacey.

The eBook (did I mention that it’s on sale now, RRP $3.99?) features a wide range of authors from the well known, to the just starting out — which pretty much sums up the philosophy at Futures of publishing stories from all walks of life (more in a forthcoming post if you want to write for Futures, though an e-mail to futures AT nature.com is always a good start).

Anyway, for those of you who would like to know exactly who these 100 authors are, here’s the full list (deep breath):

S. R. Algernon | Madeline Ashby | Neal Asher | Tony Ballantyne | Barrington J. Bayley | Elizabeth Bear | Jacey Bedford | Anatoly Belilovsky | Gregory Benford | David Berreby | Ananyo Bhattacharya | David G. Blake | Polenth Blake | Keith Brooke | Eric Brown | Tobias Buckell | Steve Carper | Sarah K. Castle | Priya Chand | Brenda Cooper | Robert Nathan Correll | Elizabeth Counihan | Kathryn Cramer | T. F. Davenport | Sean Davidson | Robert Dawson | Paul Di Filippo | Joe Dunckley | Peter J. Enyeart | Dan Erlanson | Ronald D. Ferguson | Simon Quellen Field | John Frizell | John Gilbey | David W. Goldman | Dan Gollub | John Grant | Richard P Grant | Preston Grassmann | Lee Hallison | Nye Joell Hardy | Merrie Haskell | Martin Hayes | Jeff Hecht | Tania Hershman | Ken Hinckley | Joses Ho | Taik Hobson | Kerstin Hoppenhaus | Gareth D Jones | Rahul Kanakia | James Patrick Kelly | Swapna Kishore | David Langford | Susan Lanigan | Tanith Lee | Shelly Li | Jessica May Lin | Marissa Lingen | Ken Liu | Clayton Locke | Steve Longworth | Michael W. Lucht | Nick Mamatas | David Marusek | William Meikle | Mark W. Moffett | John Moran | Neale Morison | Anand Odhav Naranbhai | Gareth Owens | Conor Powers-Smith | João Ramalho-Santos | Mike Resnick | Jennifer Rohn | H. E. Roulo | Alex Shvartsman | Amber D. Sistla | Mohamad Atif Slim | Matthew Sanborn Smith | Norman Spinrad | Vaughan Stanger | Philip T. Starks | Ian Stewart | Eric James Stone | Ian Randal Strock | Rachel Swirsky | Grace Tang | Julian Tang | Adrian Tchaikovsky | Igor Teper | Joost Uitdehaag | William T. Vandemark | Scott Virtes | Deborah Walker | Ian Watson | Ian Whates | Sylvia Spruck Wrigley | George Zebrowski | Stephanie Zvan

And we’re live in 3 … 2 … 1 …

Hello? Testing, testing. Is thing on? Ah, there you are. Welcome to Future Conditional, the shiny new blog from Nature Futures.

Hopefully, you might already have noticed a few minor changes here at Nature Futures. First and foremost, we now have a lovely new homepage, where we can showcase our stories a little more attractively than before. Second, and almost as important, the new Futures anthology, Futures 2, has finally been released as an eBook, so you settle back with your favourite e-device and read 100 stunning stories from the Futures archive.

For those of you who are new around here, you may well be asking, this is all well and good, but who is this Nature Futures?

So, a quick potted history. Futures began as a flash of inspiration in the mind of Henry Gee, who by day sifts submissions in palaeontology and archaeology for the science journal Nature. (By night, when not avoiding the dog park, he has a tendency to amass book shelves and make sinister noises with his keyboard.) The idea was that with the end of the millennium fast approaching, it was a good time to take stock of the world and to find out what science-fiction aficionados thought the future might hold. Opening with a fanfare — and a story by Arthur C Clarke — Futures began its first series in the magazine on 4 November 1999.

Its original run was for just over a year, ably fulfilling its remit of seeing the millennium in in style. But something had happened … along the way Futures had begun to amass a group of devoted followers and it wasn’t too long before it was back in the magazine’s pages for a second series, running for two years to 2006. (If you happened to be out when all this was happening, fear not, as you can get 97 of the gems published back then collected together in the Futures 1 eBook.)

Briefly, Futures moved to its sister publication, the monthly journal Nature Physics, but by mid-2007, it was clear that the back page slot in Nature could only sensibly be filled by science-fiction stories and Futures was back, back, back — and we’ve not looked back since (partly because we’re slightly worried that we might be being followed …).

In among all of these events, Futures picked up the Best Science Fiction Publisher award from the European Science Fiction Society in 2005. Then, in 2011, Henry decided to step back from the front line on Futures, and I quickly cast myself as his natural successor, having spent years plotting and brooding (colleagues were often moved to ask why I insisted on having a cat on my lap when in the office, and I’ve lost count of the times I’ve been reprimanded for peals of demonic laughter and muttering in a sinister way). In truth, my subtle ploy of lulling everyone into a false sense of security by doing the production duties on almost every Futures page since 2005 had paid off.

Here in 2014, Future finds itself in an exciting place, with a fun bid to run microFutures, some of the shortest SF stories ever written under our belts, we have also made a welcome return to the pages of Nature Physics, giving us an extra outlet for our submissions. And we have also expanded into the world of social media, so you can keep up to date with all things Future on Facebook and Twitter.

So here we are, the smell of new paint just starting to subside from the new homepage, and a brand new blog from which to explore the world of science fiction. Here I hope not only to expose the convoluted machinations of my inner thoughts (be afraid — they keep me up at night), but also to delve into the various facets of things SF with guest posts from our authors and friends.

The future, as they say, starts here …