Welcome to the David Brin site, where I've posted a sample of The Transparent Society and numerous nonfiction articles (about the future, the art of fiction and myriad other topics).I've also posted samples of my Hugo and Nebula award-winning novels and short stories, including the popular Uplift series.I've included pages describing games, music, films and other media inspired by my work.Purchase an autographed, limited edition of my books and receive advance notice about my speaking and public appearance schedule.Find out more about my favorite writers, musicians, scientists and thinkers.Learn firsthand why futurists are in such demand these days!
SCIENCE FICTION: Explore an array of possible tomorrows in best-selling adventures and plausible futures. Free chapter samples and story downloads. NEW RELEASES: View a description of my newest books. UPLIFT NOVELS: View a description of the books in the Uplift series. SECOND FOUNDATION: View a description of the books in Isaac Asimov's Second Foundation series. OTHER SF: View a description of my other science fiction novels. GRAPHIC NOVELS: View a description of my graphic novels. OUT OF TIME: View a description of the Out of Time series for adolescent readers. STORY COLLECTIONS: View my short story/novella collections. NOVELLAS/SHORT STORIES: Read my online novellas, novellettes and short stories. NONFICTION: It's a busy, dangerous and fascinating world. Explore some serious - and lighthearted - possibilities here. ABOUT FICTION: Some insights into the creative process and the author's most difficult job -- avoiding cliches. A DANGEROUS WORLD: Tomorrow seems filled with hazards & possibilities. I suggest we'll better deal with it if we all know what's going on. ABOUT THE FUTURE: What about the era just beyond tomorrow? Hi-tech wonders? Extended lifespans? Artificial intelligence and genetic engineering? Come take a futurist's guided tour. SOCIETY/COMMUNICATION: What common elements made science, markets, democracy and justice so successful? BOOKS & POPULAR CULTURE: Book reviews, plus other articles about the popular arts. OPINION ARTICLES: Rants, politics, opinions, a controversial and provocative 'questionnaire'... plus some unconventional suggestions. PHILANTHROPY: We all do what we can to help make a better world. Some ideas offered here are on the grand scale... others put my money where my mouth is. REAL SCIENCE: And yes, I still do some research. Scholarly papers on evolution, communication, astronomy and exobiology... whether or not humanity is likely to be alone in the cosmos.... PUBLIC SPEAKING/CONSULTING: It's a new millenium and futurists appear to be in demand these days. Can any of us really guess what's coming? EVENTS/APPEARANCES: Find out where David Brin will appear to speak or sign books. PREDICTING THE FUTURE: Why has the future become so easy to predict? MOVIES/OPTIONS: There's more to adventure than literature. GAMES: OTHER MEDIA: Games, music, simulations, inventions and razzle-dazzle. RECOMMENDATIONS: Recommended books, music, etc... plus special offers and occasional requests for help! FREEBIES & OFFERS: Special offers and freebies! MY BLOG: Visit my new blog on Blogspot. FAN SITES: Some excellent (or just fun) 'David Brin Sites' set up by devoted (or critical!) fans. PHOTOS/ARTWORK: View photographs and artwork. MY BIOGRAPHY: Details, details, (yawn) details.... GUESTBOOK: Sign up here to join the David Brin e-list, to be sent occasional (rare) notices and circulars. EMAIL ME: Visitors are welcome to send comments, letters and suggestions directly to me, though any message sent to this address may take a week or two to answer... HOME: Return to my home page.

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Paying Forward: A New Approach to Philanthropy

I find that I've been wearing another new hat lately -- resulting in half a dozen speaking invitations this year alone -- regarding the field of philanthropy. We all do what we can to help make a better world. Some ideas offered here are on the grand scale... others put my money where my mouth is. Here are some of my recently published (and net accessible) articles, interviews, and essays about philanthropy.


LESSONS FROM KATRINA: I am known for offering quirky and interesting... if sometimes weird... perspectives on our world. In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, I've posted an essay about how disasters are worsened when professionals and citizens interfere with each other. Another essay discusses Proxy Activism, a convenient way modern folks can hire others to save the world for them. Finally, there's a notion (cribbed from my novel Earth) about how it might be time to let the Mississippi take its natural path to the sea. (Note: all of these have been discussed on my blog.)

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USE SCIENCE FICTION TO TEACH: If you are a student or teacher, you may be interested in some of the stories that I've posted for free online that may serve educational purposes. Some of these stories have been used to illustrate or express ideas that are discussed in modern classes, ranging from physics to history. To find out more, click to a page of information about stories that teach.

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THE EYE OF THE NEEDLE FOUNFATION: Widespread interest has been generated by my concept for EON: the Eye of the Needle Foundation -- an entirely new kind of charitable institution, one that offers hope of dramatically enlarging the pot of modern generosity by offering the super-wealthy (and many of the rest of us, too) some unique incentives. Something for the man or woman who has everything.

Over fifteen trillion dollars may transfer between generations during the next decade or two, in the United States alone. If even ten percent of this transfer went to interesting projects, many wonders might be achieved that neither governments nor private capital would even imagine -- all spurred by the imagination -- or "whims" -- of the super-wealthy. This notion has roused considerable interest in the philanthropy community, at presentations in Washington DC, Seattle, Santa Fe and Monterrey. With only a small initial seed, something like EON might leverage added billions for fascinating and ultimately helpful projects, by persuading some of today's super rich to buy a little history.

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WEBS OF WONDER: With the aim of helping kids develop a love for reading and the future, I have begun offering Cash Prizes for Web Sites that help Teachers and Kids! In conjunction with Analog Magazine, I am proud to help launch the Webs of Wonder (WOW) Contest, offering a $1,000 prize for quality web sites that vividly link good Science Fiction stories or novels to school curricula used by teachers, struggling out there to teach a new generation.

To learn more about this exciting contest, go to the Analog Magazine site.

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Readers for the Future

READING FOR THE FUTURE: For another way to help kids, please look into Reading for the Future, an international advocacy campaign geared to help get children and secondary school students reading high-quality science fiction. But the best way to get good science fiction into the hands of kids is to give it to them yourself! And share your excitement with the literature that seriously ponders change in the human condition.

Here's a helpful hint: teen readers seem to love the Out of Time series!

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SF COLLECTIONS IN ACADEMIA: Slowly, some sites in academia are becoming reputable centers for scholarship of and about science fiction. The Eaton Collection, at the University of California, Riverside, has long been such a center of excellence. So has the English Department at the University of Kansas, led by the eminent author and professor, James Gunn. Lately the Merrill Collection at the University of Toronto has joined the ranks of august SF-adept institutions and strong efforts have taken place at Temple University. At the University of Liverpool, Andy Sawyer has made tremendous efforts for the Science Fiction Foundation.

I have made all of these sites places where I regularly donate and deposit copies of my works -- including all foreign editions -- as a small way to help these institutions create useful collections. Now comes word that another of my longtime depositories -- Georgia Tech -- has their SF collection website up and running. I urge my fellow authors -- and anyone interested in helping the field get the respect it deserves -- to help these worthy efforts any way they can.

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For some other excellent academic SF links, see the list Georgia Tech put up at their site.

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