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The Ministry for the Future
The Ministry for the Future | Kim Stanley Robinson
Established in 2025, the purpose of the new organisation was simple: To advocate for the world's future generations and to protect all living creatures, present and future. It soon became known as the Ministry for the Future, and this is its story. From legendary science fiction author Kim Stanley Robinson comes a vision of climate change unlike any ever imagined. Told entirely through fictional eye-witness accounts, The Ministry For The Future is a masterpiece of the imagination, the story of how climate change will affect us all over the decades to come. Its setting is not a desolate, post-apocalyptic world, but a future that is almost upon us - and in which we might just overcome the extraordinary challenges we face. It is a novel both immediate and impactful, desperate and hopeful in equal measure, and it is one of the most powerful and original books on climate change ever written. Also by Kim Stanley Robinson: Red Moon New York 2140 2312 Aurora Shaman
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bibliothecarivs
The Ministry for the Future | Kim Stanley Robinson
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Started today

If you follow me, you know that sci-fi is not my usual reading. But climate change is my top issue so my good friend and fellow librarian, Shawn, gave me this for my birthday in 2021. In 2023, he and I met Robinson after a talk at the University of Utah and I was able to get it signed.

#UnitedAgainstBookBans #LetUtahRead

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Aruckdes
Ministry for the Future | Kim Stanley Robinson
Pickpick

What starts as an intense, sobering depiction of a world thrown into chaos by global climate change actually ends with a cautionary but optimistic future of what can be done with some optimism and ingenuity. It‘s a little hand-waving about the politics and mass cultural change needed to get there, but well deserving of a read. And climate change activists need some optimism…

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catsuit_mango
The Ministry for the Future | Kim Stanley Robinson
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First book of 2024... 170p still mostly depressing, i am counting on the author to switch that, at least in the book !

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batsy
The Ministry for the Future | Kim Stanley Robinson
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Pickpick

I thought this was terrific. It is utopian, & firmly in the category of science fiction, because it suggests that there will be a consensus to adopt hard measures to overcome the planetary wreckage brought about by capitalist development. It starts off as a horror story but ends in a manner that's both beautiful & earnest in a way that my fiction reading self wants to believe in, but my cynical side says is impossible to achieve in the real world.

batsy I understand why the cover has a blurb by Jonathan Lethem calling it a "science fiction nonfiction novel" because it is in a sense nonfiction, while also doing some kooky things like allowing stuff like carbon, for instance, to "narrate" brief chapters. I thought the structure inventive, a bit playful, & worked well for what the book is trying to do. 1y
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Leniverse
The Ministry for the Future | Kim Stanley Robinson
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Pickpick

Reading a KSR novel is a bit like reading non-fiction. He writes science heavy Sci-Fi. This horrific yet hopeful near-future vision reads almost like a documentary, following a UN ministry but also giving voice to refugees, aid workers, farmers, glaciologists, environmental terrorist/activist groups, economists etc. It's slow, and there's not much plot beyond "trying to save the planet". It should be compulsory reading for policy makers everywhere

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Leniverse
The Ministry for the Future | Kim Stanley Robinson

Revolutions don't involve guillotines anymore. Alas.
You think revolutions are less visible now?
Exactly. Invisible revolutions, technical revolutions, legal revolutions. Quite possibly one could claim the benefits of a revolution without having to go through one.

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Leniverse
The Ministry for the Future | Kim Stanley Robinson

This was the world's current reigning religion, it had to be admitted: growth. It was a kind of existential assumption, as if civilization were a kind of cancer and them all therefore committed to growth as their particular deadly form of life.

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Messiejessie
The Ministry for the Future | Kim Stanley Robinson
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It felt like it took me a long time to read this. Parts of it flew by and other parts dragged. Thankfully the chapters were short, so when the subject matter was heavier it still seemed achievable.
It is scary, depressing and hopeful all at the same time. This book illustrates that there are things we can do, if only we would do them.

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Messiejessie
The Ministry for the Future | Kim Stanley Robinson
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Twainy
The Ministry for the Future | Kim Stanley Robinson
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🎧 Hard sci-fi about Climate change, a bridge between fiction & fact.

Heat related deaths. Political intrigue. Multiple points of view & narrators.

Liked the multiple narrators but some didn‘t seem to have a good grasp of the material. Still, I enjoyed it with multiple voice actors.

Author has a positive outlook on global warming. An interesting, thought provoking read. On the cusp of post-apocalyptic as it‘s definitely not utopian.

⭐️⭐️⭐️3/4

Reggie I felt so bad for the guy in the beginning and you see how easy it is to become a terrorist/future activist. I was kinda mad at the author. I didn‘t feel he married the nonfiction with the fiction as well as he could have. 2y
Twainy @Reggie agree … 2y
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Avanders
The Ministry for the Future | Kim Stanley Robinson
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Summertime… and the livin‘ is easy… 🎶🎶

In reality, it‘s been a brutal summer! And I‘ve been in the mother of all reading slumps, despite having really good books on my plate! (Though the audiobooks are admittedly sloooow…) Just waiting for fall 😫

These are, starting at upper left & going clockwise:
#LMPBC #Justbecause #audio #RealLifeBookGroup #audio Waiting impatiently on the tbr pile are #cbbc and #botm books… sooo many books… 😎😎

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underground_bks
The Ministry for the Future | Kim Stanley Robinson
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Pickpick

If we‘re going to have a future on THIS planet with THIS civilization, we need more books like this one. This work of climate fiction is exhaustively well-researched and ranges from horrifying to radically hopeful in its vision of the ways a “Ministry for the Future” within the UN and eco-radicals (to put it generously) could stop this headlong rush into climate catastrophe we‘re currently on. Worth the page count!

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teresareads
The Ministry for the Future | Kim Stanley Robinson
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To be clear, concluding in brief: there is enough for all. So there should be no more people living in poverty. And there should be no more billionaires. Enough should be a human right, a floor below which no one can fall; also a ceiling above which no one cn rise. Enough is as good as a feast - or better.
Arranging this situation is left as an exercise for the reader.

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HillsAndHamletsBookshop
The Ministry for the Future | Kim Stanley Robinson
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This hearty work of hard science fiction has been the antidote to my climate change despair. As a novel it is good. As a thought experiment imagining a near future in which humanity averts complete disaster and begins the transformation into an ecologically humane civilization — it is a masterpiece. If we‘re going to overcome the converging catastrophes of our century we‘ll need powerful and well researched stories like this to help find the way.

SamAnne Oh I need to read this. I work in conservation and it‘s been a rough week. Year? 3y
HillsAndHamletsBookshop I can only imagine! It really is good, and manages to be hopeful without being pollyannish, if that‘s a word, haha. 3y
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Blaire
The Ministry for the Future | Kim Stanley Robinson
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Mehso-so

How I wanted to love this book, but I needed more well-developed characters. The start with the heat wave in India pulled me in but then it lost steam and felt like reading general theories on addressing climate change with interludes of Mary‘s story. Parts of it made me think but the style was not for me.

Reggie When he killed the guy off in Antarctica I laughed because I think he thought Oh the readers will be sad. But we hardly knew the guy. I don‘t think he married the fiction and the nonfiction part of this story all that well. 3y
Blaire @Reggie exactly. The science and engineering and potential answers to climate change were interesting but the story didn‘t work. I was not invested in any of the characters. 3y
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Decalino
The Ministry for the Future | Kim Stanley Robinson
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Mehso-so

This book felt important and contained many interesting ideas, but wow did it feel long. For every thoughtful exploration of a global effort to combat climate change, there was a brief chapter from the perspective of a photon. I finished it, and I'm glad I read it, but it too often felt like work. The opportunity cost of this book was probably 5 or 6 other books. A must read if you are passionate aboute climate change, but don't expect a thriller.

Blaire My feelings exactly. 4y
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Dogearedcopy
The Ministry for the Future | Kim Stanley Robinson
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I adore Kim Stanley Robinson for his intelligent writing and this is no exception. KSR takes the concept of "ideology" as a tool to shape the topic of climate change. The book is speculative fiction: Climate change has now reached the point of climate crisis and we see how idealogical approaches to resolve the issue are working... or not. But man, the audiobook is terrible, like hate-listening, *long* rant terrible.
?for the book; ?for the audio

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susurran
The Ministry for the Future | Kim Stanley Robinson
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Feels appropriate in this moment, as we lose our collective shit over some Redditors shorting a video game box store (FFS), to be reminded that every day we do nothing about climate change we are literally shorting our own future, and the future of our children and theirs. This book is breaking my whole heart and scaring me senseless.

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SailorJohn
The Ministry for the Future | Kim Stanley Robinson
Pickpick

If you want a peek into the future as to what climate changes might do to us as a world this is an excellent story

Reggie I liked his ideas in here. I liked the way he showed how one might become an eco terrorist(and let‘s be honest those people are on what is looking to be the right side they might as well be called a future activist) with one of his main characters surviving the heatwave. There was a lot to discuss in here. I just didn‘t care for the way he wrote it. It felt like a fiction book that really wanted to be a nonfiction book. 4y
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Dogearedcopy
The Ministry for the Future | Kim Stanley Robinson
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I finally opened up the copy of ‘Ministry of the Future‘ that I pre-ordered in 2019 and got day-of-release... and found I had been sent a signed first edition!

Since my life is full of spilt tea and unruly dogs, I‘m gonna put this one up in my KSR shrine and listen to the audiobook edition instead.

Linsy Amazing!!! Happy surprises are the best 4y
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susurran
The Ministry for the Future | Kim Stanley Robinson
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Fire. #Bourbon. Book.

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Lorax14838
The Ministry for the Future | Kim Stanley Robinson
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Pickpick

I love KSR‘s writing. His books always make me want to be better, try harder and learn more....

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Reggie
The Ministry for the Future | Kim Stanley Robinson
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As much as I complained about this book allow me to elaborate on some of the plot points. India suffers a heat wave that kills 20 million people. Nobody in the world cares because they‘re poor and brown. An ecoterrorist or futureactivist depending how you look at it called Children of Kali arises and starts doing things such as causing a crash day with drones, downing 67 planes containing mostly businesspeople who profit off the earth‘s demise👇🏼

Reggie among other things. I hate how this book is written but I can‘t stop thinking about it. 4y
MayJasper It ensnared you. How fascinating. 4y
AmyG I live near Aspen and saw this report yesterday. Crazy. About 20 years ago eco-terrorists started a fire here on ski mountain. Is endangering more people the way to get your point across? This book sounds like it would freak me out...all the destruction we are doing to our planet. (edited) 4y
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Reggie @MayJasper @AmyG ultimately, it was hopeful. But yes, there‘s a period of 20 years that gets rough. 4y
Suet624 I always wonder where we are in that 20 year cycle. 4y
Reggie @Suet624 I don‘t think we‘ve even begun. 4y
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Lorax14838
The Ministry for the Future | Kim Stanley Robinson
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Looking forward to starting this book today. Kim Stanley Robinson is easily one of my favorite writers. His climate writing fills me with both a sense of urgency and hope.

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Reggie
The Ministry for the Future | Kim Stanley Robinson
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Pickpick

Pick a lane, Robinson. Either you want to be nonfiction. Or you want to be exciting cli-fi that exhibits those ideas but don‘t try to do both in alternating chapters that feel like they undercut each other and make me question why I‘m still reading this or hate myself because I read all 566 pages. But this is a pick for the hope you give me and that the ideas were interesting. Just a big no to your format.

RamsFan1963 His habit of info-dumping is why I've bailed on every book I've tried to read by him. 4y
Reggie @RamsFan1963 in between the narrative I felt like I took a Banking and Finance for Proactive Climate Change Solutions seminar. It. Was. A. Lot. And as educational as it and as much potential it had I don‘t think I‘ll be picking up another of his either. World War Z does what he was trying to do a million times better. 4y
ValerieAndBooks The End of October comes to mind as doing a good job of sharing non-fic info (on epidemics) in a fiction book. I know you read that one, too. 4y
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Reggie @ValerieAndBooks Yes and all his info came from his characters! Lawrence Wright and Max Brooks are the 2 authors I think could have really helped KSR out. I read this because I read an article saying if they could pick one book on climate change all governments should read this would be it. 4y
Cathythoughts Great review! Here‘s to books with hope & interesting ideas 👍🏻❤️... ( and loved “ pick a lane , Robinson “ ... gave me a big smiley feeling 😁❤️ 4y
Reggie @Cathythoughts after 2020 we need the hope! Thanks, Cathy!❤️ 4y
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Reggie
The Ministry for the Future | Kim Stanley Robinson
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I hate this book because all throughout he‘s sneaking in info dump nonfiction into the weakest of fictional characters. I‘ve wanted to bail but nuggets like here are thought provoking. This unnamed woman who we only hear from in this one chapter is from the late 2030s early 2040s.