The Futurist
by James Othmer
Famed pundit J.P. Yates the futurist is a cynical purveyor of trends and predictions to the corporations and the state, and a man who experiences an epiphany after emptying his hotel room mini bar: he’s a fake. After years of peddling insights to any group with enough cash he once spoke on successive days to a leading pesticide manufacturer and the Organic Farmers of America, receiving standing ovations from both he stuns the Futureworld conference in South Africa by committing career suicide, deriding the futility of himself and his peers, and declaring himself “founding father of the Coalition of the Clueless.” Unfortunately this sincere attempt to self-destruct leads to his career taking off: he’s more in demand than ever as a fearless truth-sayer, and is soon recruited by a shady organisation to travel the world asking why everyone hates the U.S. he ends up in Bas’ar, a war-torn fictional country in the Middle East not a million miles away from Iraq, where press-releases can’t cover up the savage anarchy…
With amusing swipes at the likes of (real-life) futurist Faith Popcorn, New York Times columnist Tom Friedman and billionaires Ted Turner and Bill Gates, this clever tale is never short of laughs, but it is also a deeply serious satire on the post-9/11 arrogance of the American government, and an investigation of the consequences of that arrogance across the world.
ISBN: 1-84688-026-2, Paperback, £10.99, 296 pp.
Publication Date: March 2007
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