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Upcoming book reading/signing - science fiction and religion — Brooklynian

Upcoming book reading/signing - science fiction and religion

pinkbeams
edited November -1 in Park Slope
On March 28th at Unnamable Books in Park Slope, local author Gabriel Mckee will be reading selections from his recently-published book on religious themes in science fiction books, film, and TV, entitled "The Gospel According to Science Fiction: From the Twilight Zone to the Final Frontier." Reviews of the book have been very favorable, including a starred review in Publishers Weekly (see below). The event will be free. The location is:

Unnamable Books
456 Bergen St. (between Flatbush and 5th)
Park Slope, Brooklyn
Subway: 2, 3 to Bergen St.; B, Q to Atlantic; D, M, N, R to Pacific.

March 28th, 8 PM
Contact number: (718)789-1534
Website for bookstore: www.unnameablebooks.net
Website for book: www.sfgospel.com

From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. Aliens, spaceships and giant robots may not seem to have much in common with matters spiritual, but in the mind of Harvard-trained writer and blogger McKee, they hold important theological insights. McKee's knowledge of science fiction is impressive. He quotes esoteric short stories from the 1930s alongside contemporary sci-fi and fantasy films, showing an encyclopedic command of the genre. It serves him well as he combs the genre for examples of religious themes such as sin, faith, religious experience, the apocalypse and the afterlife. The author all too briefly touches upon the issue of science and faith, but this can be forgiven in a book primarily about science fiction. "The main goal of SF [science fiction]," writes McKee, "... is to show us how we can face the future and overcome the new challenges that our changing world may develop." By utilizing a solid theological background and culling the world of science fiction literature and films for help, McKee illustrates that organized religion should have a similar goal: "It must be willing to face whatever changes may come and adapt itself to the spiritual questions of the future." This fascinating hybrid of theology and sci-fi is creative, lucid and contains impressive scholarship.
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