Abdul Raheem
139 reviews98 followers
WHAT THE f*ck! (but in a good way)
trash
30 reviews27 followers
rip colonials, satyriacs, and snake people. You will be missed
Caro the Helmet Lady
803 reviews419 followers
- Who are we? I want to thank the Author, C. M. Kosem*n, for the cool and crazy stuff he created. And most of all for his optimism! This is a must read if you're into futurism, post humanism, evolutionism and a bit of good old lovecraftianesque terror from stars.
- Colonials!
- What do we sing?
- Always look at the bright side of life!
No, he didn't give me his book, at least not literally. I stumbled upon it on youtube.
First of all it's... short. Like two hours at maximum. But it's two hours packed with so many ideas and visions, that omg, you will need a reread (I did!). Also, your head will explode.
Then it's simply interesting and fun. It has pictures! Which are very important.
Also it's at times disturbing visually and philosophically. Yes, you might get nightmares if you're very sensitive. I guess. I didn't.
But it still is fun. Especially when you get over the humanistic bullsh*t sentiments and instead get into all the animated youtube shorts that little community around this little book of body horror already has created.
This is another bonus of this book - it's amazing how many people found it by accident and since then their interest has built a little subculture around it.
You can find the book on author's website, http://cmkosem*n.com/, it's free and don't thank me later for your nightmares.
I also suggest checking out his other illustrations that you might find on his website.
- 2021-reads art cryptozoology
Yefim
143 reviews17 followers
A remarkable work, telling the dark future of humanity for the next billion years, as civilizations and species rose and fall. In terms of sheer existential horror, it reigns supreme, but there is a peculiar sense of optimism as well. My favorite of the post-human races was probably the ones who were turned into sapient filters by their alien conquerors, lacking all organs but brains and eyes, yet able to fully comprehend the horror of their predicament (makes "I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream" look like a light and uplifting comedy). For 40 million years, they lived thus, until they have evolved sapient modular colonies of specialized beings, each organ alive and sapient, and created a new spacefaring civilization. Only to be driven extinct by hostile Machines, because all things end, and it is not the destination, but the trip that matters.
- books-in-english dark favorites
Stefan Kuimdjiev
5 reviews2 followers
This book is amazing.It`s a mature,dark yet optimistic and fantastical foray into humanity`s future.Although there are a lot of made-up technologies they seem possible.A nice break from the usual human-hate in favor of bats and rodents and the tons of hyper-optimistic predictions of humans turning into ,,grey aliens,, that plague speculative evolution nowadays.
Samah (samahcanread_)
653 reviews82 followers
that was f*cking weird, man. I'm scared of the future on a very good day, and now I am terrified. Telling a fiction post-human story in a non-fiction way is trippy and creppy.
I don't think the book would've registered that much without the eerie and creepy illustrations.
Shena
104 reviews
Picked up the book after watching a Youtube video essay about it, and I wish I'd read the book first because the video was really comprehensive, and there's not much in the book that it didn't already cover. It was my first foray into speculative zoology and brought up a lot of interesting themes I'd never considered before (the strangest one was probably the idea of "tool breeders" who selectively evolve other species as biological tools). I read another review comparing it to the short story I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream by Harlan Ellison, but in my opinion IHNMAIMS was a lot more disturbing because there were actual characters and tension. The illustrations in this book were sometimes spooky, but it's written more in the style of a field guide/history textbook than a narrative, so it didn't elicit any particular emotions in me. I guess IHNMAIMS retains the dubious honor of being the worst thing I've ever read. A few inconsistencies bothered me; most notably, the author claims at the end to be an alien researcher studying humanity after our extinction, but throughout the rest of the book there are references to modern human society (such as subway commuters) that such an individual would have no way of knowing. I know how petty this complaint sounds but the book is only 100 pages and most of it is pictures, so I want the worldbuilding to be airtight. Also maybe it was the pdf format, but I had to reread a lot because I just could not process some of the sentences the first time through. Three stars because the themes and illustrations were great, and I get the feeling that those things mattered more to Ramjet/Kosem*n than the writing itself. As a reader, however, I didn't like the writing style or organization, and I wish the exploration of each future human and galactic event had been given more depth.
- sci-fi-and-fantasy
Mon
297 reviews208 followers
Yo no creí que en el lado de tik tok donde no se habla de libros iba a encontrar tremenda recomendación. All Tomorrows es la historia de la humanidad colonizando diversos planetas en el espacio y creando alteraciones genéticas en sí misma, hasta que un día, luego de muchos años, se encuentran con otra forma de vida y la alteración genética se convierte en un castigo y no en una ventaja. Las ilustraciones son geniales, todo el libro es genial, no hace falta que hayan personajes principales o una historia personal de uno; el libro relata la historia de la humanidad y lo hace muy bien, se siente como si todo fuera real. Lo recomiendo muchísimo.
Dreamcatcher's Daydream
176 reviews174 followers
Read
May 21, 2024Okay but why do some of them look like sci fi Titans?
- stand-alone-fantasy-and-scifi
Shivankar Jay
13 reviews2 followers
An incredible work of imagination that covers the future of mankind over the next 1 billion years. I had no idea what to expect before reading it. Galactic in scale and grotesque in imagery. Over 110 pages, balanced with narrative and illustrations, the author gives us a glimpse of humans, post-humans and gods. Five stars.
Darren Ryding
Author4 books11 followers
As you probably know, this online book has finally earned a much-deserved widespread following after fifteen years, largely thanks to the hugely popular Youtube summary by Alt Shift X. It is easy to see why people have taken to C. M. Kosem*n's (aka Nemo Ramjet) work with so much enthusiasm. His imagination - expressed through storytelling and illustration - is extraordinary. While there are a few minor errors in the writing itself, the story turns out to be compelling and memorable for some rather unexpected reasons. Much like Olaf Stapledon's Last and First Men or Star Maker, All Tomorrows does not follow the lives of individual characters, but entire species - most of which descended from present-day humanity. This is the sort of story where entire species and civilizations have their own character arcs - they face conflict, endure horrific circ*mstances, survive, adapt, emerge stronger than before, experience a well-earned life of peace and prosperity, face conflict again, are tragically wiped out or (in some cases) emerge victorious. It may as well be a metaphor for the many "varying fortunes" of humanity throughout history, expanded into the future throughout tens of millions of years. Here is my rough summary of Kosem*n's future history. For such a relatively short work, All Tomorrows brims over with so many ideas that one could discuss and write about it endlessly. Koseman has created a new mythology for our troubled and complicated times.
Eva
132 reviews3 followers
With a first phrase like "after millennia of earthbound foreplay" you'd think the book is off to a great start. It should be good, right?
Well, the history part of the book was relatively okay. It came across a bit like someone trying to write something cool and deep while actually just sounding very full of themselves. But at least it was entertaining!
Meanwhile, the long sections of describing a multitude of different grotesque human subspecies like this is some old-timey circus could be done away with. Especially when the author has this strange obsession with skinny hairless human-y creations (wait, they keep the pubes and sometimes even head hair). Like, anyone with more understanding of biology would introduce more variety and stay clear from all these exaggerated genitalia (the bigass vore vagin*s sound great for constant infections).
I like body horror but most of this just ain't it. It's Iike reading about a bunch of sh*tty SCP entries. Only some of the very last alien designs were interesting.
Overall it's all very uninspired and would have benefited from an editor or beta reader.
- fiction prose
Darthy McDarthface
1,009 reviews
Absolutely f*cking bonkers. Dunno really what else to say about it other than it horrified me in a way nothing ever has before. Evolution as punishment? Wild. The art is...disturbing and fascinating. Read it.
Saphire Aqua
42 reviews
You know what? It IS uplifting.
celia
302 reviews59 followers
”To those like the misguided; look at the story of Man, and come to your senses! It is not the destination, but the trip that matters. What you do today influences tomorrow, not the other way around. Love Today, and seize All Tomorrows!” a very exhilarating read, with a very objective approach that ends up making you feel incredibly small and powerless but at the same time optimistic? and curious? because the future is endless and full of possibilities and vampires could genuinely become real at some point.
Ola
246 reviews
the illustrations were so detailed and realistic! i won't be able to sleep tonight
Karam Elkezit
29 reviews4 followers
That's one of the most bizarre books i ever read, but still fascinating enough. It puts simple life as we know it in perspective, and it challenges our vision of the future, what will become of hom*osapiens millions of years ahead, something strange and unexpected and repetitive at the same time, simply put: humans and life itself won't stay human after a billion year, but our humanity may still survive.
- sci-fi
kara
483 reviews35 followers
If we’re being 100% honest I have no idea what I just read, but I liked it? Soooo four stars lol
Oh and listen to the audiobook
Jack Stonecipher
64 reviews
Read
April 17, 2024Unlike anything else!!!! Jaw dropping! Scary and sad but hopeful in the end
aro
203 reviews2 followers
what you do today influences tomorrow came for the f*cked up meat creatures, stayed for the surprisingly restoring of faith in humanity and anti-violence/pro-love message. i have no clue how i feel about this. lowkey loved it, lowkey hated it.
Yared
105 reviews9 followers
It's difficult to say whether or not this is the most ableist book I've ever read. Incredible how quick the book is to laud eugenics by detailing how the only way to save humanity from itself is to create a perfect race of Star Men. After the Qu leave, the way the book details the diminished lives of the remade humans is clearly written by an abled person; the section on the Mantelopes is particularly noteworthy, for it details a species that has human intellect but everyone is a grasslands forager and unable to be anything more than that because of a lack of appendages that allow for tool manipulation. The section pays particular attention to how much their "disability" prevents them from using their intellect to change the world around them and how being "crippled" dooms their race. This book likes to throw around the words "cripple" and "degenerate" more than any work I've seen that isn't a school shooter's manifesto. Look, I get that it's speculative fiction, but coming from a real world where disabled people are capable of amazing things, let alone leading normal lives, this book is exceptionally lacking in the realm of imagination that exists outside of the futures dreamed up by phrenologists.
Nanu
326 reviews42 followers
This is horrifyingly fascinating. I am going to be haunted by these ideas for a while and I will need a few rereads to process it. How did I not know this book existed? Amazing.
- 007-sci-fi 009-post-apocaliptic 016-horror
nath
49 reviews2 followers
i can tell the author have an obsession with dinosaurs encyclopaedia
Raed
310 reviews119 followers
Bizarre book !
[Name Redacted]
840 reviews495 followers
"Ultimately, however, what happened to Humanity does not matter. Like every other story, it was a temporary one; indeed long but ultimately ephemeral. It did not have a coherent ending, but then again it did not need to... Even now, it is sickeningly easy for beings to get lost in false grand narratives, living out completely driven lives in pursuit of non-existent codes, ideals, climaxes and golden ages. In blindly thinking that their stories serve absolute ends, such creatures almost always end up harming themselves, if not those around them."
- bedroom-floor-2022 futurity philosophy
Kevin
43 reviews7 followers
Read
July 19, 2022I watched its video adaptation on YouTube and found it really engaging. The narration is done aptly and I enjoyed it.
Would recommend to anyone with suitable taste. Well written story with unexpected ending. Gave me chills and goosebumps!
Worthy of a good number of ★s
- audiobooks no-rating short-stories
Bryan L
729 reviews117 followers
Vi un Tiktok. Me causó curiosidad y lo leí. Una visión de un futuro oscuro que le espera a la humanidad y su evolución tanto propia como forzada por otra raza alienígena. Ficción especulativa podría ser este género con horror . Es más una especie de enciclopedia con historia que literatura como tal. Igual fue una propuesta interesante de leer.
zoe k
62 reviews2 followers
Vibes, but I don’t like how western it feels. I feel like the author would blame global warming on “humans” instead of colonialism and capitalism. Still really creative with fun pictures.
- horror
slumpeer
45 reviews
I listened to this book while trying to fall asleep and I couldn’t sleep because I was scared aliens would come and turn me into a flesh wall
Ed Erwin
1,046 reviews121 followers
A collection of drawings, accompanied by short texts, exploring possible future evolution of humans in far, far distant future. I've recently heard the term "Speculative Evolution" referring to this sort of story. An early example is the Morlocks and Eloi of HG Wells. In this case, the artwork and the concepts for the possible life-forms is far more interesting than the story that ties them together. Some people have been inspired by this book to create their own speculative evolution projects, and have videos on the social media. BTW: Nemo Ramjet is a pseudonym for Turkish artist and author C.M. Kosem*n.
- sf