What’s in store for you today? (Picture: Metro.co.uk)
This Valentine’s Day, Saturn enters Aries, bringing proactiveness, determination and focus to the forefront. Don’t dim your sparkle.
Leo, Sagittarius and Capricorn, you may feel drawn to turning inward today to seek answers. Listen to this instinct, and trust your intuition.
The path is clear today for your to make progress, and aim for brilliant success. You will end the day feeling accomplished, so enjoy the process.
Ahead, you’ll find all the star signs’ horoscopes for today: Saturday February 14, 2026.
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Saturn re-enters your sign, bringing a celestial reality check. Don’t fret – you’re stepping into a new chapter of maturity, responsibility and long-term growth. Think of it as boot camp for your best self. Challenges may pop up, but so will opportunities to prove your strength and leadership. This is your time to build something solid – career, relationship, or a better version of you.
Your inner world becomes the focus as prudent Saturn moves back into Aries. Think of this as a period to declutter – to clear emotional cobwebs, old habits and beliefs that no longer serve you. Saturn’s slow-but-steady vibe helps you work through things privately but powerfully. Boundaries become sacred, rest becomes revolutionary, and solitude can inspire brilliance.
It’s time to assess which friendships fire you up and which ones are fizzling out. Saturn in Aries wants quality over quantity, so focus on connections that support your growth and long-term goals. This is also prime time for stepping into a leadership role in a group, cause or community. Responsibility may find you, but with your charm and clever ideas, you’ll handle it well.
Your career zone gets an upgrade or a challenge. Are you ready to step up, show up and shine professionally? Saturn’s no-nonsense energy nudges you to take long-term goals seriously. You might find yourself in a managerial role or striving for one. Success won’t be instant, but persistence pays off. However, if you are in a job you don’t like, change beckons.
As Saturn returns to fellow fire sign Aries, your inner philosopher awakens. You’re being called to get serious about a vision – studying, teaching, publishing or planning a bold adventure. This isn’t about chasing thrills; it’s about crafting a legacy from your ideals. The road may have hurdles, but each teaches resilience. Long-term commitments to growth will pay off in fulfilling ways.
Ready to be shrewder around shared resources and emotional entanglements and that you usually keep compartmentalised? Saturn in Aries asks you to do the deep work, financially or psychologically. Boundaries become your best friends, and long-term security grows from daily discipline. Think of it as an inner audit, helping you prune what drains you and protect what fuels you.
Cosmic messages for Cosmic messages for Virgo today
Libra
September 24 to October 23
One-on-one relationships enter the spotlight, not just romantic ones. Contracts, commitments and collaborations come with small print and big lessons. Balance diplomacy with firm boundaries and clear expectations. Saturn rewards structure – solid partnerships grow stronger, while those built on attraction alone may show cracks.
Saturn returns to Aries and can sharpen daily routines and disciplined action. This transit brings a no-nonsense vibe to work, wellness and habits. If you’ve been winging it, this nudges you toward structure. Think of it as planetary training for mind, body and schedule. Your natural intensity now needs consistent application.
Take your leisure activities seriously – romance, art, or fun. Saturn in Aries doesn’t dim your flame, it channels it. That brilliant idea? Turn it into a masterpiece. That flirtation? Time to see if it’s real. Children, hobbies and meaningful ventures ask for commitment, not chaos. Free spirit energy now works best with consistency.
With your ruler Saturn back in Aries, it’s time to reengage with the foundations for success and emotional strength. Home, roots, and inner security are in focus. Renovating a house or rebuilding family bonds? Saturn wants commitment, not quitting. This is less about bricks and more about boundaries – setting, keeping and knowing when to soften them.
Prepare to walk your talk. You’re known for innovative ideas, but now you need structure, insight and consistency. Your traditional ruler Saturn’s return to Aries helps turn abstract musings into messages that move people. Sibling relationships or local matters may also need a measured approach. Quiet confidence speaks volumes
Your focus once more turns to values, self-worth and managing your money and energy. Stern Saturn gave you a taste of this last year and now is back for the longer term and helping you build firmer foundations and asking for you to audit what you truly value. If you’ve been giving too much away, it’s time to set gentle but firm limits. Turn dreams into dividends and indulgences into well-earned wins.
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The Netflix star has explained why her TV partner attended the reunion solo
Kimberly Nhundu Under 35s Screen Time reporter
18:14, 02 Apr 2026
An Age of Attraction star has gone public with her new relationship after notably skipping the cast reunion. The Netflix dating programme brought together 40 singles aged between 22 and 60, for a chance at finding love without knowing their partner’s age.
Among the hopeful contestants was Pfeifer Hill, 23, who sparked a connection with Derrick Fleming, 43. Despite their 20-year age gap, the pair formed a strong bond and left the show hand-in-hand. However, fans were left puzzled when Derrick attended the reunion alone, confirming that their relationship had broken down away from the cameras.
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Pfeifer has now revealed exactly why she turned down her invitation to the reunion. Sharing a video on Instagram, she explained: “I never want to speak on a podcast that doesn’t feel like an authentic choice or one that I’m not enthusiastic about,” reports the Mirror.
“I want the first time that I speak out about the show to be on a platform that aligns with me and is one of my choosing. I want to tell my story on my own terms.” Unlike other Netflix dating shows, the Age of Attraction reunion aired on hosts Nick Viall and Natalie Joy’s podcast, The Viall Files.
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Pfeifer has suggested she would have preferred an alternative platform to discuss her experience. The graphic designer added: “This is not shade to the hosts of the podcast, anybody who went on the reunion or anybody who listens.”
She continued: “I made a different choice because for me, that choice for me upholds what I believe in, which is authenticity to myself. Derrick and I ended on good terms, I have no bad blood with anybody in the cast, so I kind of just wanted to leave it that way honestly #protectyourpeace.”
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The reality star went on to disclose that she has found a new partner, who whisked her away on a surprise birthday trip around the time the reunion was being filmed. “I am in a relationship, my partner is my best friend,” she said.
“Even though our relationship is relatively new, it is one of the biggest joys in my whole life. For my birthday, my boyfriend surprised me with tickets to Japan.
“Even if I had wanted to attend [the reunion] in the first place, I would have had to reschedule our trip. I always want my boyfriend to know that our relationship is my priority,” she explained. While Pfeifer didn’t find her perfect match on the dating show, she appears perfectly happy with her new romance.
Fans will be delighted to hear that a fresh batch of singletons will be taking part in the experiment for Age of Attraction Season 2, which will see married couple Nick and Natalie return to the helm as hosts.
A mother and daughter from Bolton have been banned from keeping equines after leaving an emaciated pony for dead on a freezing Bolton field.
The pair also received suspended prison sentences after admitting to neglecting a pony that had to be put down.
Chloe Hudson, 27, and Shantel Tansley, 46, of Ainsworth Lane, were prosecuted by the RSPCA and sentenced at Wigan Magistrates’ Court on March 20.
The offence related to the neglect of a bay pony named Jewell, one of five equines kept by the pair in a field at Higher Pasture Barn on Broadhead Road in Bolton.
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Jewell had to be put down (Image: RSPCA)
A concerned neighbour who kept horses on adjacent land contacted the RSPCA on January 7, 2024, after becoming alarmed by the ponies’ condition.
In a statement, the neighbour described two of the ponies as “skin and bone,” and said Jewell “looked ready to drop.”
The neighbour noticed she was suffering from diarrhoea and was uninterested in eating after she had offered to put hay out for the defendant’s equines during a period of snowfall a week later.
When she was looking after her own horses a couple of days later she saw that Jewell had collapsed in the neighbouring field.
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A vet attended the scene and determined that the only humane option was to put Jewell to sleep.
Jewell at Higher Pasture Barn in Broadhead Road, Bolton, (Image: RSPCA)
“I ran down to the field and saw that the pony was laid on her side and not moving. She was breathing but she didn’t get up. The temperature was around minus six, it was freezing cold,” said the vet, who tried unsuccessfully to contact Hudson.
“The pony had profuse diarrhoea around her back end and on her tail and that had frozen to the ground. I was shocked by her condition.”
RSPCA inspector Jennie Ronksley said none of the equines kept in the field had natural or man-made shelter and the field was open to the elements with witnesses describing 80 mph gusts of gusts.
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The vet, who attended at the field, stated the pony was dying and he put her to sleep. When he rolled her body over the extent of emaciation became clear as her pelvic bone was protruding and femur was visible through wasted thigh muscle.
“It was clear that this pony did not get into this condition overnight and with more timely intervention and treatment (for a possible parasite infection) there would have been a different outcome. Her owners were negligent in failing to move her to a more sheltered and warmer environment and failing to seek veterinary help,” concluded the vet.
In mitigation, the court heard that both defendants were “very regretful” and had now rehomed all the other equines they owned. Hudson was pregnant at the time of the offence and suffered from mental health issues, while Tansley has received treatment for cancer.
As well as the disqualification, Hudson was sentenced to a 20-week prison sentence, which was suspended for 24 months. Tansley received a 16-week prison sentence which was also suspended for 24 months.
In the race to conserve our oceans, Chile has emerged as a frontrunner after its president signed a decree to create one of the world’s largest marine reserves.
Following a campaign led by ecologists and coastal communities, President Gabriel Boric signed off plans to protect 337,000 sq km of ocean around the Juan Fernández archipelago. The region teems with species, including whales, seabirds and the Juan Fernández fur seal (pictured), once thought to be extinct.
Once implemented, the protected area will link up two other marine reserves, covering a combined total of 899,268 sq km, which is roughly the size of Nigeria.
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“For generations, our community has lived in harmony with the sea, relying on it for food, livelihoods, and identity,” said Julio Chamorro Solís, president of the Organización Comunitaria Funcional Mar de Juan Fernández. “By expanding our marine protections, we ensure that future generations will inherit healthy oceans, thriving fisheries, and the cultural traditions that bind us to our home.”
The designation means that Chile will soon have more than 50% of its waters under protection, far exceeding the 30% by 2030 target agreed by 190 nations in 2022.
Reports that the Government is considering restricting Freedom of Information (FOI) requests have sparked concerns about implications for accountability and transparency of local decision-making.
The Financial Times (FT) reported that the Government is considering introducing restrictions on FOI requests by reducing the cost ceiling for processing Freedom of Information requests as the number of annual submissions has increased.
Currently, the cost threshold for complying with a request is set at £450 for public bodies and £600 for central government, but this could be reduced.
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Cllr Michelle Donohue-Moncrieff, an Independent on North Yorkshire Council, said: “Materials obtained through Freedom of Information requests are very important for the public and those who represent them.
“As a councillor, I regularly use websites such as whatdotheyknow.com to see what information has been disclosed by public bodies. This helps me hold the council to account.
“Some public bodies already exploit clauses in the current legislation to avoid being open and transparent.
“The proposed changes to FOI legislation will make public bodies less accountable.”
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The Freedom of Information Act provides public access to information held by public authorities by obliging public authorities to publish certain information about their activities, and by entitling members of the public to request information from public authorities.
More than 10 million people have made an FOI request since the law came into force in 2005, according to Warren Seddon, director of FOI and transparency at the Information Commissioner’s Office.
Responding to the reports, Dawn Alford, Chief Executive of the Society of Editors, said: “The Freedom of Information Act is a vital mechanism for ensuring accountability and transparency in government, and any attempt to restrict the scope of the legislation would be damaging to democracy.
“The Prime Minister has spoken of his desire to restore trust and integrity in UK politics and the importance of openness and transparency. Restricting the scope of freedom of information requests – a vital tool for both the media and the public to hold government to account – would run counter to these objectives. We urge officials to urgently rethink such plans.”
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Labour councillor and former journalist, John Ritchie, said: “ I share the concerns expressed by leaders in the newspaper industry.
“As a member of North Yorkshire Council, I fully appreciate that researching complicated and involved FOI requests can be costly and time consuming for local government employees, but this must be balanced against the damage this proposed reduction in costs would cause, foremost a lack of transparency and openness at a time when politicians of all hues need to rebuild public trust.”
Speaking to the Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS), Alison Hume, the MP for Scarborough and Whitby, said it “would be concerning if people are having to pay more to get less”.
Calls for “clarity” have also been made by the News Media Association (NMA), which represents the UK’s national and regional news businesses, citing the FT’s reporting.
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NMA chief executive Owen Meredith said: “It is not routine or trivial requests that would be excluded.
“It is the most sensitive and significant ones – those involving complex decision-making, high-value contracts, safeguarding, multi-agency correspondence, and procurement.”
In March, the Government announced its Local Media Strategy with up to £12 million in funding to help local news publishers invest in digital technology and support community radio stations.
The strategy states that “there is more that local authorities and other local public services can do in partnership with local media […], including through increased openness in providing local journalists with access to information”.
A social experiment is giving away half a million dollars to fund acts of kindness globally – its already having a positive impact
Most of us, we would like to think, would help out a relative, a friend and perhaps even a stranger in need. Maybe giving directions or lending a few quid. But how many of us would donate one of our organs to someone we will never meet?
That is exactly what Tom Cledwyn did in 2012. Since then, his life has been shaped by acts of generosity towards strangers, culminating in Drop Dead Generous, a social experiment giving 1,000 people $500 (£378) each to spend on helping others in creative ways. Backed by an anonymous philanthropist, the project is part grant scheme, part provocation: what happens if you trust people to be generous?
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Cledwyn donated his kidney at 25, after reading about Kay Mason, the first person in the UK to give a kidney to a stranger.
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“I read the article and didn’t think about it. It just felt like a very profound opportunity,” he says. After a year of medical and psychological assessments, he went through with it.
“The feeling I had when I woke up from that operation is something I want other people to experience.” Cledwyn is not the zealot you might expect. Thoughtful and measured, he says the act was a privilege.
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“It was an honour to be able to do it. And the same applies to all forms of giving. It doesn’t have to be a kidney. It can be a smile, some time, or being there when someone is struggling,” he says. “The experience of giving is the closest thing I’ve experienced to something that really matters.
“I knew I’d get minimal feedback and would never meet the recipient. That felt important too, doing something without seeing the outcome.”
After donating his kidney aged 25, Tom Cledwyn’s life has been shaped by acts of generosity towards strangers. Pictured here with his wife Claudia. Image: Carys Huws
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After the operation, he set up a blog called The Free Help Guy, trawling Gumtree and offering anonymous help to people who needed it, whether that meant moving house or fixing things around the home. Demand grew quickly, until the money ran out.
A stint at Meta followed, where he rose to become a senior executive, but after seven years he left, pulled back towards the idea that generosity could be scaled.
Together with co-founder John Sweeney, he launched Drop Dead Generous, with a $500,000 (£378,000) fund. At the time of writing, 266 grants have been awarded across 21 countries.
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Applicants are asked two simple questions: who needs help, and what would you do with $500 to “blow their socks off”?
The experience of giving is the closest thing I’ve experienced to something that really matters
“We ask what’s the hook, the originality, the heart. You can’t just give the money away, it has to facilitate an idea. And it can’t be too similar to something we’ve already funded,” says Cledwyn.
The $500 fund is a fixed amount but what it can do varies not just on the project but the location too. “Someone in London gave out 80 flowers and someone in Uganda built a house,” he says.
In Brazil, one grant is helping to start a book club in a prison, where inmates can reduce their sentences by reading and writing about literature. Elsewhere in the country, two young chess players from a favela were able to enter national competitions and secure coaching, going on to win and attract wider support.
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In Uganda, a communal dance floor now sits at the centre of a community, offering young people a space for creativity over conflict. In the UK, one project is giving an as yet undiscovered busker the chance to record a professional demo, while another brought a Shetland pony into a care home, coaxing residents out of their rooms.
Kendall Concini and her young family were one of the recipients who wanted to thank local librarians in her home town of Baltimore, US.
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“We wanted to give back the same happiness they exude when you walk in and the best way I could think of was walking in with a fun surprise to give back,” says Concini. It started as an idea from her four-year-old, to bring librarians breakfast doughnuts but that was just the beginning.
“I wanted them to really feel the love, so we created an entire breakfast arrangement, collected love letters from friends, families and strangers online, and created giveaway gifts for librarians to pass on to patrons, keeping the acts of kindness going.”
You can’t just give the money away, it has to facilitate an idea
Concini’s initial concept has continued and now packages have been delivered to 12 libraries in the area, funded from profits from a children’s book she has written and from public donations.
“Seeing librarians go grab their colleagues with excitement, and hearing ‘I needed a pick me up this morning’, was an amazing feeling. The exact feeling actually that I had intended to give. ‘We care about you. Your community notices you’.”
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For Cledwyn, that ripple effect is the real measure of success.
The philosopher Jacques Derrida argued that a pure gift cannot exist, because even the act of giving carries an expectation of return, whether that is gratitude or simply the feeling it gives the person who gives.
‘At a time when the opposite of generosity often feels normalised, even in how leaders communicate, it feels more important than ever to frame generosity as a superpower, not just a nice thing,’ says Cledwyn. Image: Meera Kumar
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Cledwyn does not dismiss the idea. “There’s always a mixed set of motivations, and that’s fine. The danger is ignoring intrinsic motivation, because that’s what makes you do it again,” he says. “It becomes problematic only if you expect something back, rather than accept it if it comes.
“If I had donated my kidney expecting to feel something in return, that would have felt wrong. But waking up and feeling pride and meaning is something I’m happy to accept.”
The timing feels pointed. In a climate where division often dominates, generosity can feel either naive or performative. “At a time when the opposite of generosity often feels normalised, even in how leaders communicate, it feels more important than ever to frame generosity as a superpower, not just a nice thing,” says Cledwyn.
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The project is now experimenting with handing decision-making to earlier recipients, allowing them to fund others in their own communities. If it works, generosity stops being a centralised act and becomes something more distributed, less controlled.
For now, the invitation is simple. “Hop on the website and submit an idea,” he says. “Think imaginatively.”
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On the hunt for the best pizza oven to give to a foodie, or to get ahead for this summer’s al fresco dining? These days you can take your pick from hundreds of wood-fired, gas-fired and even electric pizza ovens. Wood-fired ovens deliver the classic smoky flavour preferred by traditionalists. Gas ovens are smaller, easier to use and offer better temperature control. Electric pizza ovens can cook more evenly.
Ooni leads the way, but Sage, Gozney and La Hacienda are also strong brands. At the top end sits Stefano Ferrara, whose domed, hand-bricked ovens appear in pizzerias worldwide, with prices starting at £6,000. For home cooks, you can achieve near-authentic results with a £300 model from Ninja.
We’ve tested all of these, among others, and you can read our reviews below, followed by answers to some frequently asked questions. But if you’re in a rush, here’s a quick look at our top five:
The best pizza ovens: At a glance
How to choose the best pizza oven
Matt Williams, Co-Founder of the The Oxford Charcoal Company, says the two things to factor is are size and fuel-type. Barbecue-top and portable pizza ovens which can run on gas or electricity are the best option for most homes, because they can be stored away more easily. If you want the best results, however, you do need a wood-fired oven.
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“Being able to recreate that incredible wood-fired flavour and texture in your own garden is the ideal,” Williams says and for that, you’d probably need a wood-fired oven hot enough to cook a pizza in 60 seconds – which Italians will tell you is the best cooking time for a standout crust.”
Small wood-fired ovens are available, such as the Roccbox (reviewed below), but most are fairly large. All of the ovens in our guide will enable you to create a freshly-made pizza far superior to anything you’ll buy in a supermarket.
Greenwood was arrested on January 31, 2022, on suspicion of rape and assault. He was further arrested on February 1, 2022, on suspicion of sexual assault and making threats to kill. He was charged that October with one count of attempted rape, one count of controlling and coercive behaviour and one count of assault occasioning actual bodily harm. Greenwood denied the charges.
Sheraz Rasul is counting the cost of the damage that he discovered on Tuesday March 24, after going to his vehicle that he parks in a designated resident’s spot on Bolton Gate Retail Park.
Mr Rasul, 49, who lives in the area, initially thought it had been done by youths, until he watched CCTV footage which apparently showed someone acting suspiciously around the vehicle.
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“It wasn’t until a neighbour shared CCTV footage with me that I realised it was something quite concerning,” Mr Rasul told The Bolton News.
In the footage, a figure walking along the quiet road at 4.45am.
They appear to be examining Mr Rasul’s car as they pass by.
They continue past the vehicle and disappear from view behind a black van parked next to it.
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After a few moments, the figure reappears, walking back in the opposite direction near to Mr Rasul’s car and eventually walking off in the direction they came from.
Mr Rasul said: “It’s not a very nice thing to come back to, especially as other people might have children or elders they care for.
“This person needs to be caught.”
He added that cars have been damaged recently in the area and is warning others to be cautious.
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According to Mr Rasul, at least three other cars have been keyed in the area over the last few months.
A spokesperson for Greater Manchester Police confirmed to The Bolton News that they have received a report and enquiries are ongoing.
They said no further information is available at this time.
Anyone with information on the incident is asked to contact Greater Manchester Police, quoting crime reference number 06KK/0007209/26.
Speculative and futuristic visions of environmental calamity are being imagined globally through environmental fiction. Eco-dystopian novels can help people process their fears or mourn the loss of a more stable climate.
My forthcoming book, Nature’s Return, shows that while anti-environmentalism is gaining traction in the west, the diversity and urgency of environmental visions from across Africa and Asia are coming into view.
Here are my favourite examples from China and Taiwan, Nigeria and India.
China and Taiwan
“You are bugs” is the sobering message of the aliens in Liu Cixin’s bestselling trilogy, Remembrance of Earth’s Past. Series two of Netflix’s adaptation, titled after the first volume, The Three Body Problem, is scheduled for release in late 2026. Liu’s vision of environmental retribution is anchored in a visceral portrait of Mao’s so-called “war against nature”, which reshaped the environment through things like mass irrigation and deforestation to boost economic production.
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The trilogy is a leading example of a wide-ranging ecological turn in Chinese culture and Chinese science fiction. As the cultural critics Yue Zhou and Xi Liu explain, the story routinely takes aim at “rampant pollution, water shortage, natural resources depletion, overpopulation and electronic waste”.
Cara Healy, a professor of Chinese Studies at Wabash College in Indiana, US, argues that “for centuries, Chinese intellectuals wrote about the past as a way to critique the present”, but today it is the future that is employed and deployed “to comment on our contemporary world”.
In Waste Tide by Chen Qiufan, readers are told that science fiction is “the greatest realism at the present time”. Set in a gang ridden island covered in tech trash, and populated by desperate migrants and mutant humans, Waste Tide is a bleak parable of China’s abundance of garbage: “This island has no hope. The air, the water, the soil and the people have been immersed in trash for too long.”
The themes of tech waste and contamination have a particular resonance in modern China, but are understandable to readers everywhere. This explains the lively translation market for comparable Taiwanese titles, such as Chi Ta-wei’s The Membranes and Wu Ming-yi’s The Man with the Compound Eyes.
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Nigeria
Climate catastrophe frames the drama and ethical vision of Lost Ark Dreaming, by Nigerian author Suyi Davies Okungbowa. Lagos has been drowned, and people are crowded inside the Pinnacle, a vast, partially submerged, high rise in which the wealthy and powerful live on the upper levels, trying to keep the poor and the rising waters at bay. In Nigeria as in China, the eco-dystopian imagination is animated by images of injustice and cruelty, often in ways that refract colonial history. Other Nigerian-American examples include Nnedi Okorafor’s Noor and Tochi Onyebuchi’s War Girls.
India
Indian contributors to the genre include Lavanya Lakshminarayan’s Analog/Virtual and Varun Thomas Mathew’s The Black Dwarves of the Good Little Bay. The latter is set in the year 2041 in a post-Mumbai in which the population has also crowded into a towering redoubt, though this one is called the Bombadrome and is surrounded by a barren wasteland.
The mistrust of technologically driven change is a distinctive feature of Indian science fiction, but the new wave of eco-dystopias is part of a global conversation. They are diverse but united in their effort to make use of the future to register loss, yearning and possibility.
Malformed landscapes, biodiversity loss and tides of industrial debris are encountered throughout the genre, though climate change looms large in many examples from south Asia and Africa.
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The Egyptian science fiction author Emad El-Din Aysha once speculated that dystopia was a distinctly western genre because those with “real-life anxieties around every corner” have no need to invent them. But it appears that real-life anxieties are not a brake but an engine for the imagination. Today’s dystopian imagination is ecological and urgent and asks us to travel far into the future and into every part of the world.
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The name’s Seamaster, Omega Seamaster. Yes, long the choice of the world’s most famous fictional spy, albeit issued by Q Branch with some unusual extras built in, the Seamaster is as classic a dive watch as they come. And they come in many different styles, but for the sake of keeping the Bond theme going, here I’ve selected the model endorsed by 007 in his latest outing, No Time To Die, in which – no spoilers intended (come on, it’s been out since 2021) – Bond brushed-off the title and actually did find the time.
What we have here is a triumph of titanium-on-titanium action, with a Grade 2 titanium case and titanium mesh bracelet married to a unidirectional ‘brown tropical’ aluminium bezel and dial, making the 007 Edition look nothing less than eye-pleasingly immaculate.
Powered by the brand’s self-winding Co-Axial Master Chronometer 8806, this is a precision instrument for those who like to keep their timing tight, helped on by the silicon balance spring giving the watch resistance to troublesome magnetic fields.
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Measuring 42mm in size, the 007 is a dive master, tackling 300m of the deep without issue, and featuring a screw-down crown and helium escape valve which, to simplify things massively, stop the watch suffering the clockwork version of the bends.
A power reserve of 55-hours keeps things ticking over nicely whether you’re taking it easy in St Tropez ahead of assignment, or shackled to a table in the hollowed-out volcano lair of yet another nefarious villain hell-bent on world domination, and the domed, scratch-resistant sapphire crystal glass will ensure the watch stays in good condition regardless how rough the scuffle was with the hired henchmen, ready to return to Q in one-piece, for once.
A classic wristwatch beautifully re-invented for Bond, this is a watch that gives you, ahem, All the Time in the World.
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