Over at Genreville , Rose Foxmakes a connection I ’ve never seen anyone make before , which straight off feels to have a luck of the true to it . On the one hand , the whole publishing industry has decidedthat it will no longer receive “ portal fantasy , ” like Narnia or Alice in Wonderland — fib where someone goes through a gatewayinto a charming cosmos . On the other deal , science fiction ( and illusion ) deal with the future has a form of weariness to it , and a sense that all the futures are affair we ’ve seen before or geezerhood - erstwhile tropes we ’re revisit , asPaul Kincaid wrote late .
https://gizmodo.com/walk-through-this-portal-with-me-into-another-world-5683053
Could these two things be connect ? At the ascendent of both phenomenon is likely a sense that we no longer need to explore strange new world — we already have sex what we ’ll find , after all . rather of strange time to come and uncanny fantasy worlds , Fox suggest , we ’re instead exploring alternating account — in which the past tense is somehow made new . [ Genreville ]

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