Harry Potter was a smash hit about a boy discovering he’s a wizard and going to school in a magical world full of wonder and adventure. Twilight didn’t hit quite that high a note, but the story of a teenage girl who learns her classmate is a vampire and falls in love with him did quite well. The Hunger Games popularized the dystopian genre with a bow wielding teenager stepping up to survive death games, have angsty romances, and fight the power.

As far as I can tell, nothing has quite hit that same kind of high since and it may be awhile until the next truly big wave. But if it were up to you, what would the next big thing be about?

  • BubblesMarg@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    I think some hopeful, entertaining sci fi-, like Star Trek but for kids.

    I teach middle school and a lot of kids are worried about climate change and other disasters facing our world (understandable given the pandemic and our divisive political climate.)

    I think they would enjoy a book that presented an optimistic vision of the future where kids have cool adventures in space.

    • SirHenryofHoover@alien.top
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      1 year ago

      This needs to be higher up. A new smash-hit would need to deal with current day issues a bit more overtly. Give kids a way to understand their world and handle their worries.

      I think the SF genre definitely has room for that. But magic and fantasy like Harry Potter has way more ability to be timeless than science fiction, where current technology catches up faster. (Would anything really change if HP was set in the 1800’s? Not much, right?)

      And I think the publishing industry has changed a lot, so I’m betting the next hit will be a longer series of novellas rather than 700 pages novel length.

    • SimonThalmann@alien.topB
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      1 year ago

      an optimistic vision of the future

      We need more books like this. I don’t remember which character it was – maybe Jack Reacher? – but the author said he created the character because he wanted to make a good guy who you know is always gonna win. We need more stories about winning and positivity without all the death and darkness, though there is a place for that.

    • ShiningTortoise@alien.topB
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      1 year ago

      I was thinking something similar. Dialectical materialism is something that doesn’t really get taught, but totally could open up how kids see and understand the world.

      Like why can’t we switch away from carbon-producing energy when green technology already exists? Because the people with real political power have interests opposed to that. Their interest is maximizing profits, and nothing is better for that than extracting resources. If everyone has their own solar panels, then the market can’t be monopolized by a few actors to control prices and maximize their profits.

      Why is politics divisive? Because the planet-wrecking profit-seeking capitalists want to keep people divided instead of uniting against them. They easily buy influence in media and political parties to make sure the agenda is steered toward other fights.

      So, anyway, an optimistic post-revolution episodic space adventure that works in the history of overcoming capitalism and other contradictions and saving humanity sounds really nice, and that’s basically what Star Trek is.

      I’ve heard One Piece has similar vibes but I haven’t checked that out yet.

      • MllePerso@alien.topB
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        1 year ago

        In theory, a YA book series like that would rock.

        In practice, I don’t see how any current YA author is not going to screw it up by making it one more piece of divisive politics: ie here’s the villain, oh look, they’re exactly like the stereotype the average liberal has of the average conservative! Star Trek was able to tread that line of being political but in a universal way, showing characters deal with serious moral questions but not turning into culture wars IN SPACE. From what I’ve seen of recent YA fic dealing with political issues, I don’t see them producing something as universally inspiring as Star Trek anytime soon. I’d love to be proven wrong on this, though.