Contents of Changing Planes with a little description | | | | | | |
Note The author acknowledges the readers' discomfort with air travel after 9 | | | | | | |
11
Sita Dulip's Method How Sita Dulip, sitting between flights in an awful airport, learned to travel to other planes of existence by focusing her mind in a certain way | | | | | | |
The result: a more interesting kind of tourism | | | | | | |
The Porridge on Islac On Islac, people are physically very different from one another: the aftermath of an unfortunate boom and crash in genetic engineering | | | | | | |
Cautionary, humorous, with a touch of poetry (bearwigs are recombinant teddy bears that developed a taste for book glue and paper) | | | | | | |
The Wisdom of the Asonu The Asonu become silent as they mature: their total abstinence from language is unsettling | | | | | | |
Questioning the Hennebet The Hennebet look just like us, but their minds (sort of Taoist) are totally alien | | | | | | |
The traveler tries to but cannot communicate with them; a glimpse of their worldview makes her less sure about her own | | | | | | |
The Angry Veksi A society torn by violence, which, however, has its human rules of conduct(It's about human violence, of course) | | | | | | |
Social Dreaming of the Frin A society in which dreaming is communal, not personal | | | | | | |
Fascinating examination of the idea that some loss of self is necessary for selfhood | | | | | | |
The Royals of Hegn Satire of the Brits and their absurd fascination with royalty | | | | | | |
In Hegn, everyone is royal and comeletely dotty about the very few Commoners (who are really low-class) | | | | | | |
Tales of Blood from Mahigul Histories that are political allegories of man's inhumanity to man | | | | | | |
All about war, tyranny, self-destruction (Male-dominated, of course) | | | | | | |
Wake Island An experiment to make children smarter by having them require less sleep, then no sleep at all, backfires: without sleep, people become mindless animals (Another approach to the loss-of-self idea) | | | | | | |
The Nna Mmoy Language A language so alien and complex, it contains an entire culture (its speakers live primitively) | | | | | | |
The traveler's vain attempts to use a translating machine | | | | | | |
The Building This account of two cultures and of a migration to build a mysterious building, generation after generation, touches on the question, What is art? That is, the transcendental, nonutilitarian strivings of human beings (Influence of Borges here) | | | | | | |
The Gyran Hatred of Wings The blessing and the curse (more curse than blessing) of growing wings and flying | | | | | | |
The Gyr put up with-try to ignore-their affliction, going about their business as lawyers, accountants, etc | | | | | | |
Yet the inspiring image of flight remains | | | | | | |
The Island of the Immortals A horror story, worse than "Wake Island," and probably from Gulliver's Travels: some people, bitten by a fly, cannot die | | | | | | |
Buried alive, after centuries, they turn to diamonds, still alive | | | | | | |
Confusion in Untilde;i A virtual reality satire taken from the pages of Stanislaw Lem: the traveler becomes lost in a VR machine and passes from one ridiculous dream to another | | | | | | |
Great Joy Big business and the travel industry produce a monstrous Disneylike theme park, exploiting the natives | | | | | | |
Humorous (a village full of Santa Clauses that speak with an accent), but also acerbic, being close to home | | | | | | |
The Seasons of the Ansarac A society that alternates between city life and country life, each having its joys and miseries | | | | | | |
Commentary on the mortality of humanity: its sorrow alleviated by a sexual dance | | | | | | |