
After Some Tomorrow
This is mid-century SF at its most provocative - a post-apocalyptic vision that interrogates what survival really costs. In a world remade by catastrophe, the old rules of civilization have collapsed, and new ones have taken root. Clans have replaced families. Gender has become function. And the biological imperative drives human connection with an urgency that feels less like romance and more like survival itself. Alan, Micky Grant, and Anna Enesco possess something that makes them valuable to the remnants of government: ESP abilities that border on the preternatural. They can see what comes next. But this gift becomes a burden when their abilities are weaponized, sent on missions that escalate in danger until the question becomes unavoidable - are their lives merely currency spent for the benefit of those who remain? Reynolds was writing science fiction as social anatomy, dissecting how crisis reveals what we truly are beneath the thin skin of civilization. For readers who want their SF to ask uncomfortable questions about power, gender, and what humanity owes to its own survival.






















