Author Archives: Zoe Uhr '24

Terror (1989)

This book caught my attention because of the title. The spine of the book was sticking out and it read “Terror” in a really small font and I thought, “wow thats really bad graphic design” so I picked it up. 

Little did I know, this book was based in my obscure hometown, Hilo, and the details of my town in this book were so accurate, down to Hawaiian culture and myths. 

I tried researching whether the author, Frederick Pohl, had lived in Hawai’i for any amount of time but I couldn’t find anything. There was just a mention of him going on a cruise through the islands once. 

But for some reason, he mentions Hawai’i occasionally in his other works and knows a strange amount about the geology and history of the islands, probably from the extensive research he had done for this book.

The premise of the book is strange. It centers around two terrorist groups; one is a group of locals/Hawaiians that are anti-colonial and want white people and their impact off of the islands. The other group is the US government which is conspiring to insert a nuclear bomb into a dormant volcano near the islands in order to create an explosion as large as the one that killed the dinosaurs, in order to create a cloud of dust that would lower the grain productivity of the Soviet Union. It’s pretty absurd and I would love to know how it ends, but I am a bit past halfway done and this post is already overdue. 

I am kind of confused as to whether this is definitively SF but if it is then it may be colonization, apocalyptic, and hard SF due to the chapters of pure scientific explanations. 

I don’t recommend it but it isn’t necessarily bad or too offensive, more funny. 

I like that there is so much research into Hilo and volcanoes, and I don’t really like how there was a solid paragraph justifying why the main character (white mainlander) couldn’t tell apart “orientals” which were so abundant here haha.

Pohl, Frederick. “Terror” (1986). New York: The Berkley Publishing Group, 1989. 

Solar punk: a radically optimistic view of the future

The relationship between humans and the land has changed so much, from the relationship we have cultivated over tens of thousands of years, to after settlers started colonizing the land, to now with industry and a system of capital leading to a disregard of the planet. 

Many young people have lost hope for the future of humans and of the planet. Science fiction is a window into our interpretations imaginations of the future, but much of science fiction is pessimistic and doesn’t often imagine a sound and ideal future. 

Radical hope is needed to create the change we need for the future. Solar punk brings back indigenous ways of living in balance with the land, while also acknowledging that technology is here to stay and can be used for good. 

Linked are some depictions of a solar punk imagined world. 

Discovering the Rainbow: Solarpunk embodies an optimism towards the future that our society needs | The Milwaukee Independent

Why “Solarpunk” Gives Me Hope for a More Sustainable Future - YES! Magazine

While researching more about solar punk, I came across a Chobani yogurt ad that beautifully depicted an optimistic solar punk future, a future where people living in harmony with the land while also striking a balance between us and nature. 

This was particularly interesting because I have dislike for any corporation that could be greenwashing and trying to appeal to an audience that cares about the Earth just to make more money. Despite my qualms, this ad, without the company references, was beautiful done and represents solar punk pretty accurately. 

The future that I want the children of the future to have, is one like solar punk, where balance is stuck. I will try to fight back against the pressing feelings of helplessness, and turn that frustration into doing what I can, as soon as I can, for the future. To be a good ancestor…