The real 2020 as a 1980s science fiction story?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion explores how a science fiction writer from the 1980s might have depicted the real world of 2020, focusing on technology and significant events. Participants suggest various authors, including William Gibson, Richard Matheson, and Isaac Asimov, who could have crafted compelling narratives within these constraints. The importance of character development and drama is emphasized, alongside the potential market success of such stories. Ideas for framing a modern tale about an 80s author include themes of dreams, reincarnation, or time travel. Overall, the conversation highlights the intriguing intersection of past speculative fiction and contemporary realities.
The Bill
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What could a good science fiction writer of the 1980s have made with details consistent with the real world of 2020? So, fictional cahracters, but with technology and broad events the same as what's happened this year?

Which author would you think would have made the most entertaining stories with these sorts of... limitations? The closest examples of something close I can think of are from the 1990s, not the 80s. William Gibson's Bridge trilogy publication history starts in 1993 with Virtual Light. It's definitely different than what reality gave us, but the scope is similar enough. Would a similar novel or series of novels have done well enough in the 80s for an author to survive on?

Obviuously writing good characters and drama is the most important part. But given that, how well might such creations have fared in the marketplace?

If one were writing a story today about such an author in the 1980s, what would be a good way to frame it? The fictional author gets the ideas in dreams? They are or think they are reincarnated into their past? Some flavor of time travel? In such a story, in what ways might one set up good drama? Some idea of the types of scenarios I outlined above would probably be good to nail down as part of the setting.
 
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I guess if any author got it exactly right, we'd think he/she was either a time traveler, a mystic or worse a cabal who had the wherewithal to make it happen.

Your question is somewhat vague as any sci-fi author have the possibility of describing today's events. Orson Scott Card and his Ender Games could well have imagined such a future although I think his writing went much farther into the future with Ender.

Another author like Richard Matheson, writer of I Am Legend would also qualify. Legend has a plague that strikes much of humanity. He wrote A Stir of Echoes which predicts the rise of robotics as we see it today at Boston Dynamics.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Matheson

Asimov also could have predicted current events in one form or another as reflected in his Robot stories. He was a Prof of Biochemistry and great sci-fi writer with an incredible imagination. His merging of all his trilogies into a great sequence of many books was just astounding.
 
The Bill said:
What could a good science fiction writer of the 1980s have made with details consistent with the real world of 2020? So, fictional cahracters, but with technology and broad events the same as what's happened this year?

Which author would you think would have made the most entertaining stories with these sorts of... limitations? The closest examples of something close I can think of are from the 1990s, not the 80s. William Gibson's Bridge trilogy publication history starts in 1993 with Virtual Light. It's definitely different than what reality gave us, but the scope is similar enough. Would a similar novel or series of novels have done well enough in the 80s for an author to survive on?

Obviuously writing good characters and drama is the most important part. But given that, how well might such creations have fared in the marketplace?

If one were writing a story today about such an author in the 1980s, what would be a good way to frame it? The fictional author gets the ideas in dreams? They are or think they are reincarnated into their past? Some flavor of time travel? In such a story, in what ways might one set up good drama? Some idea of the types of scenarios I outlined above would probably be good to nail down as part of the setting.

My story is actually like yours, but is opposite. An alien civilization called the Wastelanders have to deal with a virus in 1952-1954, and they have mid-1970s equivalent level technology. Biodiesel trains that crank up the heat at night to 60°C (to destroy virus on surfaces) before taking passengers, cars with cruise control and CB radio technology + ordering groceries via teleshopping on a TV connected to a phone line. Also, no internet or WWW existed back then.

So, for your 1980s vision of our 2020s pandemic plot, you might want to implement an advanced version of 1980s technology in the 2020s. Have electric cars powered by nickel cadmium batteries (similar to Tesla, but not lithium), teleshopping via a game console connected to the phone lines (basically Amazon), portable computers that are powered by a Ni-Cd battery and can be used with a stylus (an iPad basically) and masks that are made from activated carbon with a built in cellular telephone in the mouthpiece connected to a transmitter in a backpack for calling people.

Star Trek TNG from 1987 had PADDS that could be used as an iPad. So, authors and television producers from the 1980s kinda knew what the future would have. Back to the Future had a device that could change trash into fuel, similar to a biomatter processor that exists nowadays, albeit without nuclear fusion.
 
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