The Last Starship from Earth
Author | John Boyd |
---|---|
Cover artist | Paul Lehr |
Language | English |
Genre | Science fiction |
Publisher | Weybright & Talley, New York |
Publication date | 1968 |
Publication place | United States |
Media type | Print (Hardcover & Paperback) |
The Last Starship from Earth is a 1968 science fiction novel by John Boyd, and is his best known novel.
Setting
[edit]The novel is set in a dystopian society in the very near future. Although it is not obvious at first, this is also an alternate history story.
In this world, instead of preaching peace and forgiveness and being crucified, Jesus became a revolutionary agitator and assembled an army to overthrow the Roman Empire, establishing a theocracy before being killed by a crossbow, which becomes a religious symbol similar to the cross in our timeline. The regime established by Jesus continues to the present day, having dominated the entire world and mingled with scientific ideas and advanced technology, including a Church led by an AI pope.
Marriage and mating are related to genes, so there is a strong system of castes.
Plot summary
[edit]The central character is Haldane IV, a mathematician who forms a caste-forbidden relationship with Helix, a poetess. He also becomes interested in investigating Fairweather, a famous mathematician who lived shortly before his time, and his son Fairweather II, whom he discovers led a failed rebellion.
Haldane and Helix are discovered and there is a show trial, which results in Haldane being exiled to "Hell" (a planet orbiting a distant star), where he meets Fairweather II and is reunited with Helix. It is revealed that Helix is Fairweather II's daughter; Fairweather II needed a mathematician for his time machine, and Helix was sent to Earth to engineer the exile of a mathematician to pilot an experimental time machine. Fairweather II makes Haldane immortal and sends him on a mission to go back in time and kill Jesus under his new name, "Judas Iscariot".
In an epilogue, Haldane captures Jesus, puts him in the time machine and sends him back. He returns to the present day, which is much more similar to our timeline, and meets a girl who is very similar to Helix.
Trilogy
[edit]The book is supposedly the first in a trilogy.[citation needed] The other books appear to be The Pollinators of Eden, and The Rakehells of Heaven.
Critical response
[edit]Robert A. Heinlein said, "It belongs on the same shelf with 1984 and Brave New World," and the Los Angeles Times noted, "In the literate tradition of Huxley, Orwell, and Bradbury, it is a work of extraordinary impact." Joanna Russ, in her review of the book in 1969, was highly critical and wrote, "I forgive Mr. Boyd the anguish his novel caused me and hope he will eventually forgive me the anguish this review may cause him, but for Berkley there is no forgiveness. Only reform. Don't do it again."[1]
Spider Robinson, however, praised the novel as "delightful, with a rigorously consistent internal logic that doesn't really become apparent until the very last chapter."[2]
References
[edit]- ^ Fox, Margalit (7 May 2011). "Joanna Russ, 74, Dies; Wrote Science Fiction". The New York Times.
- ^ "Galaxy Bookshelf", Galaxy Science Fiction, December 1976, p.128
- Clareson, Thomas D. (1971). SF: the other side of realism: essays on modern fantasy and science fiction. Bowling Green University Popular Press. p. 186.
- Dannenberg, Hilary P. (2008). Coincidence and counterfactuality: plotting time and space in narrative fiction. Frontiers of narrative. U. of Nebraska Press. p. 206. ISBN 978-0-8032-1093-6.