I just finished “The Lathe of Heaven” by Ursula Leguin, and it was absolutely uncanny how it described the world today. What books have you read from more than 25 years ago that, when read today, seem to describe our world with unusual precision?

“The Lathe” was written in 1971 and nominally set in 1989. In the initial scene, she describes climate change:

The Greenhouse Effect had been quite gradual, and Haber, born in 1962, could clearly remember the blue skies of his childhood. Nowadays the eternal snows were gone from all the world’s mountains, even Everest, even Erebus, fiery-throated on the waste Antarctic shore.

And then she proceeds to discuss various permutations of war among Israel, the Middle East, China, and Afghanistan. I know these were all hotspots before, but I felt as though I was reading a novel with a contemporary setting!

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    10 months ago

    In non-fiction, I have to say that “The Abolition of Man” must be the most prescient book I’ve read in a long time.

    Lewis puts his finger on the pulse of the exact issue at hand: we’ve taken away the chest (the heart, the soul) in favor of cold sentiment (the head) and base desires (the gut).

    I really wish everyone would read it.