this conversation brought The Expanse to mind, with their Belters and Earth-Mars perpetual mistrust
I love The Expanse. Watched it 3 times through already!
Excellent on the tech and general reality of settlement of the solar system - a topic rarely dealt with in SciFi, but much closer at hand than the more popular interstellar adventures.
The idea that Belters will be poor and downtrodden makes great fiction, but is contrary to the basic economics.
For a long time, labour will be in very short supply off Earth, like early America, because of costs of getting people there and because an ever expanding frontier keeps pulling people further out.
Mining asteroids is very skilled and dangerous labour and will command premium wages, just like working on oil rigs does on Earth. In Australia, miners and offshore rig workers earn huge money.
Even if the low G did cause the inability to return to Earth G over generations, these people wouldn't be trapped but would be in huge demand, including for further expansion.
Also of Hamilton (Peter F this time)
Another of my favourites (not just because of the shared surname). I think I've read all his books. I just re-read Misspent Youth before Hive Fest. Was super interesting reading a 25 year old SciFi projection of today. Many things in the book came true or even better - some for me personally :-) -, but others he got completely wrong.
The Expanse really hooks you in, doesn't it? Hamilton, too. I never know what to read from him next. They're great fun (and really strong writing), even if not everything comes true. I think that's part of the fun. I love older books that are set in the 2020s or nearby. Like hearing someone talking about you. I'm realizing now I haven't read Misspent Youth. Too many books, much too little time.
That makes sense. We keep asking where and how people are gonna work when many jobs become obsolete thanks to AI. But we only look to Earth, and that's fair. Fear always makes people short-sighted. I'm glad Belters wouldn't have it so bad, at least at first. I'm glad there might be hope :)
You should definitely read Misspent Youth. Its quite short and I think you'll find it very interesting.