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.
1 comment:
Kaor, Paul!
Your 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
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