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The Songs of Distant Earth

Arthur C. Clarke

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English
Voyager
16 December 1987
From the world’s most famous science fiction writer, a poignant and vivid story of doomsday and beyond.

The countdown to doomsday began with the discovery in 1956 of the neutrino, a particle with no mass and no charge. By the year 2001, the significance of this phantom particle was understood: it was a harbinger. A cosmic event was imminent, and would be close enough to touch. Soon the Sun would go nova; the demolition of Earth was assured. And so it happened in the year 3620.

Over the centuries of knowing the end was at hand, humanity pulled together to launch probes into space. Primitive ships, at first, carrying embryos to distant systems, relying on machines to incubate and rear the first people of a virgin land beneath an alien sun. On Thalassa, after a journey of 200 years, a colony blossomed, only to fall silent again.

On Earth the Lords of the Last Days lived with no need to care for the future of the world; it was the wildest of times, and the saddest. Last to leave was the Magellan carrying a million homeless; when cataclysm struck, its voyagers witnessed through telescopes the death of Earth and all its wonders, saw the Atlantic boil dry, the pyramids disintegrate, the land of Antarctica briefly bare of ice before fire consumed everything. Then the million slept.

Five hundred years later, the Magellan must make planetfall to repair its quantum drive. Its sleepers awake to find themselves visitors to Thalassa, where a cvilization has, in fact, survived. A clash of cultures unlike any before brings danger, despair, and some very tough decisions for two different peoples far from Earth – and its distant songs.

By:  
Imprint:   Voyager
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Edition:   New edition
Dimensions:   Height: 178mm,  Width: 111mm,  Spine: 14mm
Weight:   138g
ISBN:   9780586066232
ISBN 10:   0586066233
Pages:   240
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Born in Somerset in 1917, Arthur C. Clarke has written over fifty books, among which are the science fiction classics 2001, A Space Odyssey, Childhood's End, The City and the Stars and Rendezvous With Rama. He has won all the most prestigious science fiction trophies, and shared an Oscar nomination with Stanley Kubrick for the screenplay of the film of 2001. He lives in Sri Lanka.

Reviews for The Songs of Distant Earth

A short story that first appeared in 1958, expanded and polished to a high gloss. A handful of islands in a planetary ocean, Thalassa is a colony derived from a robot seedship sent from Earth centuries ago, just before the sun went nova. With few environmental challenges, the Thalassans have developed a peaceful but stagnant culture. Then a ship arrives from Earth: the huge Magellan, powered by quantum drive (it derives energy from the quantum fluctuations of space itself); traveling at the speed of light, Magellan left Earth just before the final nova bearing a million colonists preserved in cold-sleep. Magellan has stopped off at Thalassa on its way to the distant planet Sagan Two in order to renew its shield. (Moving at the speed of light, the ship could be destroyed by the strike of a mere grain of dust, so it carries ahead of it a cone-shaped shield of ice to absorb such impacts.) The story of the interaction between the Thalassans and the crew of Magellan is often an absorbing one, set forth in a supple and pleasingly surefooted narrative, peopled with characters who are well developed but so-so nice even when they're angry. What the book glaringly lacks, like 2010: Odyssey Two (1982), is conflict and drama; Clarke's efforts in that direction - a potential mutiny aboard Magellan, the hitherto undiscovered presense of maybe-intelligent scorps (sea scorpions) in Thalassa's oceans - fall flat. Still, there's much to admire here - not least Clarke's dream of civilization without fossilized hatreds and violence - and his vast audience won't be disappointed. (Kirkus Reviews)


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