內容簡介
內容簡介 In a thrilling follow-up to Tasting Light, ten best-selling and award-winning masters of the form use the possible—and the premise of hope—to explore how science and technology can reshape our world and defy assumptions.At once a collection of hard science fiction for curious middle-graders and an antidote to despair in the face of dystopian uncertainty, these ten horizon-bending stories may seem unreal, but all follow the rules of physics and biology as we understand them today. These tales of space junk, multiverse navigation, an asteroid named Doomsday, and bees and marmots in space pulse with honesty and optimism. Whether home is a planet, a moon, a space station, or a fleet starship, relatable protagonists of different genders, classes, nationalities, ethnicities, and orientations face challenges—some harrowing, some hilarious—true to their moment in time and space. Brisk plots, resonant themes, and scientific rigor define these forward-facing stories by leading middle-grade authors. Taken together, the tales champion youth agency through characters who approach science in adventurous ways, underscoring that we are all, indeed, made of the same luminous stuff.
作者介紹
作者介紹 William Alexander is a New York Times best-selling author of unrealisms for middle-grade readers and a contributor to Tasting Light: Ten Science Fiction Stories to Rewire Your Perceptions. His novel Goblin Secrets received the National Book Award, and his novel Ambassador won the Eleanor Cameron Award for excellence in juvenile science fiction and was a finalist for the International Latino Book Award. He served for three years as the faculty chair of the Vermont College of Fine Arts program in Writing for Children and Young Adults. He lives in Vermont. Wade Roush is a technology journalist and audio producer who focuses on how science and technology are changing our lives and what we can do as individuals to steer that process. He is the host of the podcast Soonish and the editor of the hard sci-fi anthology Twelve Tomorrows, published by MIT Press, and a co-editor with A. R. Capetta of Tasting Light: Ten Science Fiction Stories to Rewire Your Perceptions. He holds a PhD from MIT in the history of technology and lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico.