Poul Anderson, Harvest Of Stars (London, 1994), 1.
Kyra Davis is in Erie-Ontario Integrate, a form of urbanization common to Anderson's Technic History:
scores of tricycles, including hers, weave between hundreds of pedestrians beneath a monorail and overhead flitters;
she wears a hapi coat;
pedestrians include a manual worker brotherhood member and green-clad Renewal believers;
she approaches the Blue Theta building which has azure and white walls, piers, arches, roofs, towers and a central spire crowned by the Greek letter;
within, there are mosaic pavements, fountains, genetically engineered gardens, a holo of a low-weight ballet, ten stories of arcades and a transparent roof showing sun, clouds and the Moon where, Kyra knows, Lunarians live;
outside is low-tech Low World whereas inside is high-tech High World.
As always in the opening pages of a futuristic sf novel, we are being introduced to a society which the author has had to conceptualize in detail before typing the first word of the text.
Kaor, Paul!
ReplyDeleteYour concluding comment here made me wonder HOW Anderson wrote his stories? Did he begin by writing plot outlines and lists of possible characters? I had in mind the DETAILED and lengthy outlines Dave Drake prefers to write before he starts writing the story himself (or sending the outline to a co-author, such as S.M. Stirling).
Sean