- Orrol L. Harper. Bird's-Eye View of the World in the Year 2000, A (1924-10). A fanciful and optimistic vision of life in the Twenty-first Century.
- Elham Afnan. Good of the World and the Happiness of the Nations, The: A Study of Modern Utopian and Dystopian Literature (1989). The Bahá'í Writings, with their new understanding of human destiny, can bridge the gap between utopian visions of progress from 19th-century literature and dystopian visions of 20th-century fiction, disillusioned by war and social and economic disasters.
- Dana Paxson. Half Million Years, A (2021). Exploring the 500,000-year Bahá’í cycle asserted by Shoghi Effendi, in two versions: academic-style essay form, and story-narrative form.
- John S. Hatcher. Spiritual Nature of Reality, The: Has the Future Already Been Written? (2000). Meditations on "Who is Writing the Future": why is spiritual development a social as well as personal matter; what is epistemological methodology for this development; how is it distinct from materialism; and how does it relate to the Covenants?
- Stanwood Cobb. Unity of Nations, The (1938). A look six decades into the future (from 1938) to envision the Lesser Peace.
- Bahá'í International Community. Who is Writing the Future?: Reflections on the Twentieth Century (1999-02). A statement on the current state of human society and its evolution, by the BIC's Office of Public Information.
- Jack McLean. "Who is Writing the Future? Reflections on the Twentieth Century": Thoughts on the Statement Prepared by the Bahá'í International Community's Office of Public Information (2001). Reflections on the structure and themes of this document.
- Iain S. Palin. Who is Writing the Future? Reflections on the Twentieth Century, by Bahá'í International Community: Review (1999-10).
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