james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2025-04-17 10:20 pm

For Book Club

Aside from The Cold Solution, which stories could be said to be replies to The Cold Equations?
adrian_turtle: (Default)

[personal profile] adrian_turtle 2025-04-18 02:32 am (UTC)(link)
The Ones Who Walk Away From Omelas

[personal profile] agharta75 2025-04-18 01:18 pm (UTC)(link)
Not until we get "Why Don't We Just Toss The Girl Out The Airlock?"
philrm: (Default)

[personal profile] philrm 2025-04-18 03:22 am (UTC)(link)
That was brilliant, especially the comment section.
patrick_morris_miller: Me, filking in front of mundanes (Default)

[personal profile] patrick_morris_miller 2025-04-18 03:14 am (UTC)(link)

Sorta:

"We got outflanked by the Independent squad, and we're never gonna make it back to our platoon. We need to resort to cannibalism."

"That was fast. Don't we have rations or anything?"

jazzfish: a whole bunch of the aliens from Toy Story (Aliens)

[personal profile] jazzfish 2025-04-18 12:03 pm (UTC)(link)
In Retrospect, I Guess We Might Have Resorted To Cannibalism A Bit Early: "I have no idea how long we'd been marooned when we started edging toward Jerry. Twenty, thirty minutes, time has little meaning when you’re in a situation like that."

(Anonymous) 2025-04-18 07:44 am (UTC)(link)
What with subscription walls I'm failing to find any details on this, but The Cool Equations by Deborah Wessell is said to be written in response to The Cold Equations.

(Anonymous) 2025-04-18 12:27 pm (UTC)(link)
James Patrick Kelly's Think Like A Dinosaur has been described as a response to The Cold Equations. I didn't find the review I read convincing on this point.

"Think Like a Dinosaur"

[personal profile] raja99 2025-04-18 01:00 pm (UTC)(link)
Perhaps "Think Like a Dinosaur" by James Patrick Kelly? It won the 1996 Hugo Award for Best Novelette.
patrick_morris_miller: Me, filking in front of mundanes (Default)

Re: "Think Like a Dinosaur"

[personal profile] patrick_morris_miller 2025-04-18 01:52 pm (UTC)(link)

How so?

jwgh: (Default)

[personal profile] jwgh 2025-04-18 02:46 pm (UTC)(link)
That's one of the things going on in Shaenon K. Garrity's 'You Came To The Tower'. https://future-sf.com/fiction/you-came-to-the-tower/
jbwoodford: (Default)

[personal profile] jbwoodford 2025-04-21 02:36 pm (UTC)(link)
Thanks for sharing that--I hadn't seen it before. Naming the astronauts "Don" and "Stuart" was...subtle. At least for younger readers.

It would be an ultra-short story.

[personal profile] connactic 2025-04-18 07:34 pm (UTC)(link)
"I caught this teenage girl stowaway in the routine pre-flight check I always run before I hit the launch button on my space rocket, because I am not a lazy idiot and my supervisors aren't either."
patrick_morris_miller: Me, filking in front of mundanes (Default)

Re: It would be an ultra-short story.

[personal profile] patrick_morris_miller 2025-04-18 07:51 pm (UTC)(link)

"Hey Fred, the scales in your landing gear says your ship is about fifty kilos over. Better hold off launch until we figure it out."

ffutures: (Default)

[personal profile] ffutures 2025-04-18 10:41 pm (UTC)(link)
John Wyndham's short story Survival (1958) - warning SPOILERS, also, I may be remembering the plot slightly wrong since it's a very long time since I last read it: A spaceship whose passengers include a pregnant woman is stuck in orbit around Mars after the engines explode. Tensions soon escalate into violence since there is not nearly enough food or air to keep them alive for the time needed for a rescue mission to arrive, and the woman is theoretically the most expendable person aboard. Becoming aware of it, she uses her feminine wiles to take control of the situation and systematically eliminate the problem (by playing the men aboard against each other) to save herself and the newly-born baby. Her first words, brandishing a kitchen knife as the first rescuers board, are "Look, baby, food..."

Edited 2025-04-18 22:43 (UTC)

(Anonymous) 2025-04-18 11:11 pm (UTC)(link)
Arthur C. Clarke's Breaking Strain is similar, but without the horror element.

I have wondered whether The Cold Equations was an influence on Geta (Courtship Rite).
patrick_morris_miller: Me, filking in front of mundanes (Default)

[personal profile] patrick_morris_miller 2025-04-19 02:00 am (UTC)(link)

Getans would never throw perfectly good meat out an airlock.

dragoness_e: Living Dead Girl (Living Dead Girl)

[personal profile] dragoness_e 2025-04-19 01:48 am (UTC)(link)
So the dude that reviews The Cold Solution seems to whine that "solution" stories all miss the point of the original story, which he feels is a "trolley problem" story, and the whole point is the terrible dilemma. Unfortunately for him, the story "The Cold Equations" is not a thought experiment, it is an attempt to tell a story. Thought experiments are allowed to be stupid and make no sense--they are intended to challenge you to think. Stories that are stupid and make no sense just annoy readers, they don't challenge them--except maybe to write fanfiction fixing the stupid. "The Cold Equations" has too many plotholes and idiotic circumstances to sit well with readers who know anything about the real world.
patrick_morris_miller: Me, filking in front of mundanes (Default)

[personal profile] patrick_morris_miller 2025-04-19 02:02 am (UTC)(link)

Would that TCE had been a story, rather than an exercise in petty sadism on Campbell's part.

dragoness_e: Living Dead Girl (Living Dead Girl)

[personal profile] dragoness_e 2025-04-19 03:23 pm (UTC)(link)
Indeed. I hear he made Godwin change the ending to the bad one, because, I don't know, he wanted to posture about hard men making hard decisions or something. I much prefer Julius Caesar's attitude in Gallic Wars, or Captain Bligh's after the mutiny: Both of them had a reputation for ruthlessness, and yet none of their people were expendable, they tried to get them ALL home/win the war with a minimum of casualties.
Edited 2025-04-19 15:26 (UTC)

(Anonymous) 2025-04-19 11:59 pm (UTC)(link)
This series (of questionable quality) from Quentyn Quinn, Space Ranger:

https://web.archive.org/web/20190529124350/http://www.rhjunior.com/quentyn-quinn-space-ranger-0119/
elysdir: Line art of Jed's face (Default)

[personal profile] elysdir 2025-04-20 07:36 am (UTC)(link)
Wow—I just read this one for the first time. I was following along and nodding at the usual arguments against the Cold Equations scenario, but I was not expecting the ultimate villain to turn out to be…

(spoiler space)


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Government safety regulations getting in the way of private enterprise!
bolindbergh: (3)

[personal profile] bolindbergh 2025-04-20 01:48 pm (UTC)(link)
Somebody seems blissfully unaware of concepts like "lobbying" and "regulatory capture".

(Anonymous) 2025-04-21 12:28 am (UTC)(link)
It honestly starts pretty fun - I like how they just keep pulling people in, even if none of the arguments are original - but then it really goes off the rails.

V

(Anonymous) 2025-04-20 12:35 am (UTC)(link)
Except for "Why Don't We Just Kill the Kid In the Omelas Hole" ?
elysdir: Line art of Jed's face (Default)

[personal profile] elysdir 2025-04-20 07:11 am (UTC)(link)
I haven’t yet decided whether I want to do an ongoing collection of Cold Equations responses (like my Omelas-responses page).

But here’s a partial list of Cold Equations responses that I put together in 2021; it includes both nonfiction (including your critique from 2019) and fiction.