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Path: ...!fu-berlin.de!uni-berlin.de!individual.net!not-for-mail From: -dsr- <dsr-usenet@randomstring.org> Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf.written Subject: Re: Why is this in ISFDB? Date: Wed, 23 Oct 2024 08:19:22 -0400 Lines: 13 Message-ID: <slrnvhhqea.gu8.dsr-usenet@randomstring.org> References: <pan$3cb82$f6c544eb$8504d7c6$cc3497b9@cpacker.org> X-Trace: individual.net elQetiARdcyR08clYxhMgw2JSq3MRVLfg8xUgo5BSN3/ogYH7j X-Orig-Path: randomstring.org!not-for-mail Cancel-Lock: sha1:AaeBEKc5KYAkX1/mbUKVqEwlX7k= sha256:ooEj3UNBo3/hJ2zB0B45B7wJu1yctndprF/WRjq7uO0= User-Agent: slrn/1.0.3 (Linux) Bytes: 1338 On 2024-10-23, Charles Packer <mailbox@cpacker.org> wrote: > What qualifies this for the ISFDB? The Great Plan (1913) by Edith > Huntington Mason. Also in the SF Encyclopedia where it is characterized as > "marginally Near Future" (whatever that means) and summarized > as "rich young American woman establishes a utopian enclave on > the banks of the Rhine in Germany, with the intention of upraising > German women to a status equal to men." That sounds like it was set in the near future at the time it was written, which is now in our past, much like all those thrilling tales of the postapocalyptic future of 2000AD. The summary certainly sounds like SF to me. -dsr-