A World Out of Time: Difference between revisions
GreenC bot (talk | contribs) |
No edit summary Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit |
||
(47 intermediate revisions by 23 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Short description|1976 novel by Larry Niven}} |
|||
{{For|the album|A World Out of Time (album)}} |
|||
{{Use mdy dates|date=January 2024}} |
|||
{{Infobox book | <!-- See Wikipedia:WikiProject_Novels or Wikipedia:WikiProject_Books --> |
{{Infobox book | <!-- See Wikipedia:WikiProject_Novels or Wikipedia:WikiProject_Books --> |
||
| name = A World Out of Time |
| name = A World Out of Time |
||
Line 6: | Line 9: | ||
| caption = First edition cover |
| caption = First edition cover |
||
| author = [[Larry Niven]] |
| author = [[Larry Niven]] |
||
| cover_artist = |
| cover_artist = [[Rick Sternbach]] |
||
| country = United States |
| country = United States |
||
| language = English |
| language = English |
||
| series = [[The State (Larry Niven)|The State]] |
| series = [[The State (Larry Niven)|The State]] |
||
| genre = |
| genre = Science fiction |
||
| publisher = [[Holt, Rinehart and Winston]] |
| publisher = [[Holt, Rinehart and Winston]] |
||
| release_date = 1976 |
| release_date = 1976 |
||
| media_type = Print ( |
| media_type = Print (Hardcover, Paperback) |
||
| pages = 243 |
| pages = 243 |
||
| isbn = 0-03-017776-6 |
| isbn = 0-03-017776-6 |
||
| oclc = 2202363 |
| oclc = 2202363 |
||
Line 21: | Line 24: | ||
}} |
}} |
||
'''''A World Out of Time''''' is a |
'''''A World Out of Time''''' is a science fiction novel by [[Larry Niven]] published in 1976. It is set outside the [[Known Space]] universe of many of Niven's stories, but is otherwise fairly representative of his 1970s [[hard science fiction]] novels. The main part of the novel was originally serialized in [[Galaxy science fiction|''Galaxy'']] magazine as "Children of the State"; another part was originally published as the short story "Rammer". ''A World Out of Time'' placed fifth in the annual [[Locus Awards|Locus Poll]] in 1977.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.locusmag.com/SFAwards/Db/NomLit97.html |title=Locus Index to SF Awards |access-date=2011-07-29 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110730132329/http://www.locusmag.com/SFAwards/Db/NomLit97.html#3865 |archive-date=2011-07-30 |url-status=dead }}</ref> |
||
== Plot summary == |
== Plot summary == |
||
Jerome Branch Corbell has incurable cancer and is [[Cryopreservation|cryogenically]] frozen in |
Jerome Branch Corbell has incurable cancer and is [[Cryopreservation|cryogenically]] frozen in 1970 in the faint hope of a future cure. He is revived in 2190 by a totalitarian global government called "[[The State (Larry Niven)|The State]]". His personality and memories are extracted (destroying his body in the process) and transferred into the body of a [[mindwipe]]d criminal. After awakening, he is continually evaluated by Peerssa, a "checker", who has to decide whether he is worth keeping. With the threat of his own mindwiping looming, Corbell works hard to pass the various tests. |
||
Peerssa decides that Corbell is a loner and born tourist |
Peerssa decides that Corbell is a loner and born tourist, making him an ideal candidate to pilot a one-man [[Bussard ramjet]], finding and seeding suitable planets as the first step to [[terraforming]] them. Discovering it is a one-way trip and disgusted with the State's treatment of him as an expendable commodity, Corbell hijacks the ship and takes it to the [[Galactic Center|center]] of the [[Milky Way|galaxy]]. (It was at this point that the original short story ended.) |
||
Peerssa |
Peerssa fails to talk him out of it. Peerssa and The State resort to subterfuge; an [[artificial intelligence]] program based on Peerssa's personality is secretly transferred into the ship's computer using the link with Earth. Though the Peerssa AI opposes the detour, it cannot disobey Corbell's direct orders. |
||
After a lengthy journey (including a close approach to the super-massive [[black hole]] at the galactic axis), possible only due to the [[suspended animation]] devices on board, Corbell returns to the solar system. Although only about |
After a lengthy journey (including a close approach to the super-massive [[black hole]] at the galactic axis), possible only due to the [[suspended animation]] devices on board, Corbell returns to the solar system. Although only about 150 years have passed on the ship, three million years have elapsed on Earth due to [[time dilation]]. At first, he is confused and initially believes he might have come to the wrong system because it has changed considerably; the Sun has apparently evolved into a [[red giant]] and what might be Earth is in orbit around a super-hot [[Jupiter]]. Having followed a message clearly from humans (warning not to visit other human-occupied star systems), and being too old to survive going anywhere else, Corbell puts the ship into orbit around what is surely the Earth. |
||
The Earth's climate has changed, |
The Earth's climate has changed, especially its surface temperature; the poles are now [[temperate]], while the former [[temperate zone]]s reach temperatures of over 50 degrees Celsius (120+ degrees Fahrenheit). The Earth's [[axial tilt]] is still 23.5 degrees so the poles experience six years of night and six of day. Almost all remaining life has adapted to live in Antarctica. Elsewhere life is extinct except for some evidence of biological activity in the Himalayan mountains. |
||
When Corbell lands (in a modified biological probe), he is captured by Mirelly-Lyra, |
When Corbell lands (in a modified biological probe), he is captured by Mirelly-Lyra, who is also a returned star ship pilot and refugee from the past—though from Corbell's (and Peerssa's) future. She explains that the human species has fragmented; it is dominated by a race of immortal, permanently pre-adolescent males (the Boys), who are created by advanced medical techniques. Sometime in the past, they had defeated the equally immortal (though now extinct) Girls in the ultimate war of the sexes. The Boys have enslaved the ''dikta'', unmodified humans (though they have evolved somewhat), from whom they take boys to replenish their ranks. |
||
Mirelly-Lyra had initially been a captive toy of the Girls. After their downfall, she obsessively searched in vain for the lost adult-immortality treatment, extending her life as much as possible using her own drugs and a form of [[stasis (fiction)|zero-time stasis]] while waiting for another returning starship and potential help. Because she could not stop the aging process entirely, she is an old crone by the time she finds Corbell. He manages to escape from her, only to be caught by the Boys, who take him to a ''dikta'' settlement. Corbell finds out that the solar system was engineered into its new configuration by the Girls to move the Earth to a habitable distance from the enlarged Sun (caused by war with colonies), and that an orbital error caused Jupiter to overheat and triggered the war that killed the Girls. With Gording, the ''dikta'' leader, Corbell escapes once more. |
|||
Eventually, Corbell discovers the adult-immortality treatment |
Eventually, Corbell discovers the adult-immortality treatment by accident, only realizing it after he himself has been treated. He uses it to enlist Mirelly-Lyra's help, which in turn finally gives him full control of his ship's technology. (The hostile Peerssa has decided that she is the last survivor of the State and will obey only her.) Peerssa has maneuvered the planet [[Uranus]] to pass by the Earth and change its orbit. Corbell has Peerssa adjust the Earth's distance from Jupiter to lower the temperature without destroying the plants and animals that have adapted to the extreme conditions. |
||
As the novel closes, he is plotting to liberate the dikta and enable them to regain control of their own destiny. |
As the novel closes, he is plotting to liberate the ''dikta'' and enable them to regain control of their own destiny. |
||
== Literary significance and reception == |
== Literary significance and reception == |
||
''[[New York Times]]'' reviewer Gerald Jonas wrote that, in a novel filled with wonders, "Niven describes everything in the toneless accents of a tour guide on a fall foliage caravan. . . . after a while, the wonders begin to blur together [and] the reader begins to yearn for less matter and more art."<ref>"Of Things to Come", ''[[The New York Times Book Review]]'', October 17, 1976</ref> Jerry L. Parsons in his review for the ''[[Library Journal]]'' said that ''A World Out of Time'' was reminiscent in parts of ''[[2001: A Space Odyssey (novel)|2001: A Space Odyssey]]'' and ''[[To Your Scattered Bodies Go]]''. He wrote, "a wonderfully escapist adventure, this story has a minimum of character development and description, but a maximum of excitement."<ref name="Parsons">{{cite journal|last=Parsons|first=Jerry L.|date=1976 |
''[[The New York Times]]'' reviewer Gerald Jonas wrote that, in a novel filled with wonders, "Niven describes everything in the toneless accents of a tour guide on a fall foliage caravan. . . . after a while, the wonders begin to blur together [and] the reader begins to yearn for less matter and more art."<ref>"Of Things to Come", ''[[The New York Times Book Review]]'', October 17, 1976</ref> Jerry L. Parsons in his review for the ''[[Library Journal]]'' said that ''A World Out of Time'' was reminiscent in parts of ''[[2001: A Space Odyssey (novel)|2001: A Space Odyssey]]'' and ''[[To Your Scattered Bodies Go]]''. He wrote, "a wonderfully escapist adventure, this story has a minimum of character development and description, but a maximum of excitement."<ref name="Parsons">{{cite journal|last=Parsons|first=Jerry L.|date=September 1, 1976|title=A World Out of Time (Book)|journal=Library Journal|volume= 101|issue= 15|pages=1800|issn=0363-0277}}</ref> |
||
[[Geoff Ryman]] has described ''A World Out of Time'' as one of Niven's "[[hard science fiction|hardest]]" works, but went on to specify that many of the concepts Niven used as plot points were "disintegrated by later research".<ref>[http://news.ansible.co.uk/a281.html Notes from Novacon 40], transcribed by Nelson Cunnington, from ''[[Ansible (magazine)|Ansible]]'' 281, posted December 2010, retrieved February 28, 2010</ref> |
[[Geoff Ryman]] has described ''A World Out of Time'' as one of Niven's "[[hard science fiction|hardest]]" works, but went on to specify that many of the concepts Niven used as plot points were "disintegrated by later research".<ref>[http://news.ansible.co.uk/a281.html Notes from Novacon 40], transcribed by Nelson Cunnington, from ''[[Ansible (magazine)|Ansible]]'' 281, posted December 2010, retrieved February 28, 2010</ref> |
||
[[Robert Silverberg]] reviewed ''World'' unfavorably, terming it a "rambling, loose-jointed novel that seems to have assembled itself out of the handiest pieces in the heap while its author's attention was elsewhere."<ref>"Books," ''Cosmos'', July 1977, p.35.</ref> [[Richard A. Lupoff]] was similarly critical, saying Niven "starts out like a Saturn V and all too soon fizzles like a Vanguard. . . . this is either a novel that begins well and then goes ''dreadfully'' wrong or a cobbling together of several novelettes the first of which is a beauty and the others of which are stinkers."<ref>"Lupoff's Book Week", ''Algol'' 28, 1977, p.55.</ref> |
[[Robert Silverberg]] reviewed ''World'' unfavorably, terming it a "rambling, loose-jointed novel that seems to have assembled itself out of the handiest pieces in the heap while its author's attention was elsewhere."<ref>"Books," ''Cosmos'', July 1977, p.35.</ref> [[Richard A. Lupoff]] was similarly critical, saying Niven "starts out like a [[Saturn V]] and all too soon fizzles like a [[Vanguard (rocket)|Vanguard]]. . . . this is either a novel that begins well and then goes ''dreadfully'' wrong or a cobbling together of several novelettes the first of which is a beauty and the others of which are stinkers."<ref>"Lupoff's Book Week", ''Algol'' 28, 1977, p.55.</ref> |
||
== Awards and nominations == |
== Awards and nominations == |
||
Line 54: | Line 57: | ||
''A World Out of Time'' was a nominee for the following awards: |
''A World Out of Time'' was a nominee for the following awards: |
||
* 1977 [[Locus Award]] in the Novel category (5th |
* 1977 [[Locus Award]] in the Novel category (5th place)<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.locusmag.com/SFAwards/Db/Locus1977.html#nvls |title=The Locus Index to SF Awards: 1977 Locus Awards |access-date=2008-05-27 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080517071201/http://www.locusmag.com/SFAwards/Db/Locus1977.html |archive-date=May 17, 2008 |url-status=dead }}</ref> |
||
* 1977 [[Ditmar Awards|Ditmar Award]] in the international science fiction category<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.locusmag.com/SFAwards/Db/Ditmar1977.html#intf|title=The Locus Index to SF Awards: 1977 Ditmar Awards| |
* 1977 [[Ditmar Awards|Ditmar Award]] in the international science fiction category<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.locusmag.com/SFAwards/Db/Ditmar1977.html#intf |title=The Locus Index to SF Awards: 1977 Ditmar Awards |access-date=2008-05-27 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080516165912/http://www.locusmag.com/SFAwards/Db/Ditmar1977.html |archive-date=May 16, 2008 |url-status=dead }}</ref> |
||
==Connections to other Niven works== |
==Connections to other Niven works== |
||
The story does not take place in Niven's [[Known Space]]. It does share the same setting as two of his other novels, ''[[The Integral Trees]]'' (1983) and ''[[The Smoke Ring (novel)|The Smoke Ring]]'' (1987). All three novels feature the totalitarian interplanetary [[The State (Larry Niven)|State]], "corpsicle" personality transfers into mind-wiped criminals without civil rights, police-like enforcers called "checkers," and a computer artificial intelligence personality in charge of a ramship expedition that seeds life in other systems to prepare them for human colonization. |
The story does not take place in Niven's [[Known Space]]. It does share the same setting as two of his other novels, ''[[The Integral Trees]]'' (1983) and ''[[The Smoke Ring (novel)|The Smoke Ring]]'' (1987) as well as the short story "The Kiteman". All three novels feature the totalitarian interplanetary [[The State (Larry Niven)|State]], "corpsicle" personality transfers into mind-wiped criminals without civil rights, police-like enforcers called "checkers," and a computer artificial intelligence personality in charge of a ramship expedition that seeds life in other systems to prepare them for human colonization. |
||
==Literary reference== |
==Literary reference== |
||
The protagonist's name is a play on that of the author [[James Branch Cabell]], whom Niven also mentions in some of his other writing. |
The protagonist's name is a play on that of the author [[James Branch Cabell]], whom Niven also mentions in some of his other writing. |
||
==See also== |
|||
*''[[The Wandering Earth]]'', a Chinese film and novel that also features an interaction between the Earth and Jupiter in an attempt to escape the Sun's death |
|||
==References== |
==References== |
||
Line 68: | Line 74: | ||
== External links == |
== External links == |
||
* {{isfdb title|799}} |
* {{isfdb title|799}} |
||
* [http://www.worldswithoutend.com/novel.asp?ID=803 A World Out of Time] at Worlds Without End |
* [http://www.worldswithoutend.com/novel.asp?ID=803 ''A World Out of Time''] at Worlds Without End |
||
{{Larry Niven}} |
{{Larry Niven}} |
||
Line 74: | Line 80: | ||
{{DEFAULTSORT:World Out of Time, A}} |
{{DEFAULTSORT:World Out of Time, A}} |
||
[[Category:1976 American novels]] |
[[Category:1976 American novels]] |
||
[[Category: |
[[Category:1976 science fiction novels]] |
||
[[Category:American science fiction novels]] |
[[Category:American science fiction novels]] |
||
[[Category:Novels by Larry Niven]] |
[[Category:Novels by Larry Niven]] |
||
[[Category:Dying Earth |
[[Category:Dying Earth (genre)]] |
||
[[Category: |
[[Category:Novels about time travel]] |
||
[[Category: |
[[Category:Novels about impact events]] |
||
[[Category:Novels first published in serial form]] |
[[Category:Novels first published in serial form]] |
||
[[Category:Works originally published in Galaxy Science Fiction]] |
[[Category:Works originally published in Galaxy Science Fiction]] |
||
[[Category:Hard science fiction]] |
[[Category:Hard science fiction]] |
||
[[Category: |
[[Category:Fiction about suspended animation]] |
||
[[Category:Novels set on Uranus]] |
|||
[[Category:Holt, Rinehart and Winston books]] |
Latest revision as of 06:04, 19 September 2024
Author | Larry Niven |
---|---|
Cover artist | Rick Sternbach |
Language | English |
Series | The State |
Genre | Science fiction |
Publisher | Holt, Rinehart and Winston |
Publication date | 1976 |
Publication place | United States |
Media type | Print (Hardcover, Paperback) |
Pages | 243 |
ISBN | 0-03-017776-6 |
OCLC | 2202363 |
Followed by | The Integral Trees |
A World Out of Time is a science fiction novel by Larry Niven published in 1976. It is set outside the Known Space universe of many of Niven's stories, but is otherwise fairly representative of his 1970s hard science fiction novels. The main part of the novel was originally serialized in Galaxy magazine as "Children of the State"; another part was originally published as the short story "Rammer". A World Out of Time placed fifth in the annual Locus Poll in 1977.[1]
Plot summary
[edit]Jerome Branch Corbell has incurable cancer and is cryogenically frozen in 1970 in the faint hope of a future cure. He is revived in 2190 by a totalitarian global government called "The State". His personality and memories are extracted (destroying his body in the process) and transferred into the body of a mindwiped criminal. After awakening, he is continually evaluated by Peerssa, a "checker", who has to decide whether he is worth keeping. With the threat of his own mindwiping looming, Corbell works hard to pass the various tests.
Peerssa decides that Corbell is a loner and born tourist, making him an ideal candidate to pilot a one-man Bussard ramjet, finding and seeding suitable planets as the first step to terraforming them. Discovering it is a one-way trip and disgusted with the State's treatment of him as an expendable commodity, Corbell hijacks the ship and takes it to the center of the galaxy. (It was at this point that the original short story ended.)
Peerssa fails to talk him out of it. Peerssa and The State resort to subterfuge; an artificial intelligence program based on Peerssa's personality is secretly transferred into the ship's computer using the link with Earth. Though the Peerssa AI opposes the detour, it cannot disobey Corbell's direct orders.
After a lengthy journey (including a close approach to the super-massive black hole at the galactic axis), possible only due to the suspended animation devices on board, Corbell returns to the solar system. Although only about 150 years have passed on the ship, three million years have elapsed on Earth due to time dilation. At first, he is confused and initially believes he might have come to the wrong system because it has changed considerably; the Sun has apparently evolved into a red giant and what might be Earth is in orbit around a super-hot Jupiter. Having followed a message clearly from humans (warning not to visit other human-occupied star systems), and being too old to survive going anywhere else, Corbell puts the ship into orbit around what is surely the Earth.
The Earth's climate has changed, especially its surface temperature; the poles are now temperate, while the former temperate zones reach temperatures of over 50 degrees Celsius (120+ degrees Fahrenheit). The Earth's axial tilt is still 23.5 degrees so the poles experience six years of night and six of day. Almost all remaining life has adapted to live in Antarctica. Elsewhere life is extinct except for some evidence of biological activity in the Himalayan mountains.
When Corbell lands (in a modified biological probe), he is captured by Mirelly-Lyra, who is also a returned star ship pilot and refugee from the past—though from Corbell's (and Peerssa's) future. She explains that the human species has fragmented; it is dominated by a race of immortal, permanently pre-adolescent males (the Boys), who are created by advanced medical techniques. Sometime in the past, they had defeated the equally immortal (though now extinct) Girls in the ultimate war of the sexes. The Boys have enslaved the dikta, unmodified humans (though they have evolved somewhat), from whom they take boys to replenish their ranks.
Mirelly-Lyra had initially been a captive toy of the Girls. After their downfall, she obsessively searched in vain for the lost adult-immortality treatment, extending her life as much as possible using her own drugs and a form of zero-time stasis while waiting for another returning starship and potential help. Because she could not stop the aging process entirely, she is an old crone by the time she finds Corbell. He manages to escape from her, only to be caught by the Boys, who take him to a dikta settlement. Corbell finds out that the solar system was engineered into its new configuration by the Girls to move the Earth to a habitable distance from the enlarged Sun (caused by war with colonies), and that an orbital error caused Jupiter to overheat and triggered the war that killed the Girls. With Gording, the dikta leader, Corbell escapes once more.
Eventually, Corbell discovers the adult-immortality treatment by accident, only realizing it after he himself has been treated. He uses it to enlist Mirelly-Lyra's help, which in turn finally gives him full control of his ship's technology. (The hostile Peerssa has decided that she is the last survivor of the State and will obey only her.) Peerssa has maneuvered the planet Uranus to pass by the Earth and change its orbit. Corbell has Peerssa adjust the Earth's distance from Jupiter to lower the temperature without destroying the plants and animals that have adapted to the extreme conditions.
As the novel closes, he is plotting to liberate the dikta and enable them to regain control of their own destiny.
Literary significance and reception
[edit]The New York Times reviewer Gerald Jonas wrote that, in a novel filled with wonders, "Niven describes everything in the toneless accents of a tour guide on a fall foliage caravan. . . . after a while, the wonders begin to blur together [and] the reader begins to yearn for less matter and more art."[2] Jerry L. Parsons in his review for the Library Journal said that A World Out of Time was reminiscent in parts of 2001: A Space Odyssey and To Your Scattered Bodies Go. He wrote, "a wonderfully escapist adventure, this story has a minimum of character development and description, but a maximum of excitement."[3]
Geoff Ryman has described A World Out of Time as one of Niven's "hardest" works, but went on to specify that many of the concepts Niven used as plot points were "disintegrated by later research".[4]
Robert Silverberg reviewed World unfavorably, terming it a "rambling, loose-jointed novel that seems to have assembled itself out of the handiest pieces in the heap while its author's attention was elsewhere."[5] Richard A. Lupoff was similarly critical, saying Niven "starts out like a Saturn V and all too soon fizzles like a Vanguard. . . . this is either a novel that begins well and then goes dreadfully wrong or a cobbling together of several novelettes the first of which is a beauty and the others of which are stinkers."[6]
Awards and nominations
[edit]A World Out of Time was a nominee for the following awards:
- 1977 Locus Award in the Novel category (5th place)[7]
- 1977 Ditmar Award in the international science fiction category[8]
Connections to other Niven works
[edit]The story does not take place in Niven's Known Space. It does share the same setting as two of his other novels, The Integral Trees (1983) and The Smoke Ring (1987) as well as the short story "The Kiteman". All three novels feature the totalitarian interplanetary State, "corpsicle" personality transfers into mind-wiped criminals without civil rights, police-like enforcers called "checkers," and a computer artificial intelligence personality in charge of a ramship expedition that seeds life in other systems to prepare them for human colonization.
Literary reference
[edit]The protagonist's name is a play on that of the author James Branch Cabell, whom Niven also mentions in some of his other writing.
See also
[edit]- The Wandering Earth, a Chinese film and novel that also features an interaction between the Earth and Jupiter in an attempt to escape the Sun's death
References
[edit]- ^ "Locus Index to SF Awards". Archived from the original on July 30, 2011. Retrieved July 29, 2011.
- ^ "Of Things to Come", The New York Times Book Review, October 17, 1976
- ^ Parsons, Jerry L. (September 1, 1976). "A World Out of Time (Book)". Library Journal. 101 (15): 1800. ISSN 0363-0277.
- ^ Notes from Novacon 40, transcribed by Nelson Cunnington, from Ansible 281, posted December 2010, retrieved February 28, 2010
- ^ "Books," Cosmos, July 1977, p.35.
- ^ "Lupoff's Book Week", Algol 28, 1977, p.55.
- ^ "The Locus Index to SF Awards: 1977 Locus Awards". Archived from the original on May 17, 2008. Retrieved May 27, 2008.
- ^ "The Locus Index to SF Awards: 1977 Ditmar Awards". Archived from the original on May 16, 2008. Retrieved May 27, 2008.
External links
[edit]- A World Out of Time title listing at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- A World Out of Time at Worlds Without End
- 1976 American novels
- 1976 science fiction novels
- American science fiction novels
- Novels by Larry Niven
- Dying Earth (genre)
- Novels about time travel
- Novels about impact events
- Novels first published in serial form
- Works originally published in Galaxy Science Fiction
- Hard science fiction
- Fiction about suspended animation
- Novels set on Uranus
- Holt, Rinehart and Winston books