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Type of bind: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 823.912
EAN num: 9780743234900
ISBN number: 0743234901
Label: Scribner
Manufacturer: Scribner
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 160
Printing Date: March 04, 2003
Publishing house: Scribner
Sale Popularity Level: 6887
Studio: Scribner
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The very first book in C. S. Lewis's acclaimed Space Trilogy, which continues with Perelandra and That Hideous Strength, Out of the Silent Planet begins the adventures of the remarkable Dr. Ransom. Here, that estimable man is abducted by a megalomaniacal physicist and his accomplice and taken via spaceship to the blue planet of Malacandra. The two men are in need of a human sacrifice, and Dr. Ransom would seem to fit the bill. Once on the planet, however, Ransom eludes his captors, risking his life and his chances of returning to Earth, becoming a stranger in a land that is enchanting in its difference from Earth and instructive in its similarity. First published in 1943, Out of the Silent Planet remains a mysterious and suspenseful tour de force.
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Rated by buyers
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This is a must read for any Lewis fan and really for anybody. It is excellent and very though provoking.
Rated by buyers
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I originally read this book back in high school where my naive self was only familiar with Narnia and those wiley devils of the Screwtape Letters. I knew the man could do a twist of fantasy, but Lewis surprised me with this beginning book that could only be called a religious science fiction experience. Two scientists differing in their view on faith are transported to another, close planet to discover it was never how Earth imagined it. Lewis writes much more adult than he did with Narnia and is able to scrape real characters out of everyone. His gift for creating brand new worlds is retained and I was enchanted by the spiritual and secular aspects he put into what could also be simply a great adventure story.
Rated by buyers
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Elwin Ransom, an Oxford don and an ardent philologist, is enjoying a solitary cross country ramble on his vacation when he encounters Professor Devine, a long-time acquaintance from his student days at Oxford, and Weston, a somewhat distracted and grumpy, reclusive individual. Weston is, in fact, a physicist who has secretly built a space craft in which he and Devine plan to return to Mars (Malacandra, in the native Martian populace's language) with nefarious ideas of plunder and planetary domination. As part of their plan, they drug and kidnap Ransom to take him along as a sacrificial peace offering to the native population.
On the face of it, a beautifully written Out of the Silent Planet has a simple classic sci-fi plot and can certainly be enjoyed at this level. But virtually every reader will recognize that Lewis' work probes far more deeply than that. His strongly held Christian beliefs, never far from that surface plot, are apparent in his criticism of human prejudice and greed. It is also clear that he holds extremely strong views against notions of eugenics and the then universally held belief in the natural supremacy of western white civilization as compared, for example, to aboriginal populations elsewhere in the world. Even though his allegorical tale goes so far as to include a version of angels and an archangel, the story never becomes preachy, odious or whiny.
Astute long-time readers of science fiction are always on the alert for errors of scientific fact. So Lewis may be mildly criticized for making a fundamental error in how gravity would work aboard a space craft but this certainly detracts in no way from the quality of his story. To the contrary, I thought he earned top marks and high praise for crafting, for example, a startlingly accurate description of the appearance of the sky in the transition zone from atmosphere to space at extremely high altitudes (at a time, of course, when space travel was at best a twinkle in scientists' eyes). I also noted a single quite astonishing comment that seemed to predict Einstein's work on cosmology, travel at light speed and relativity ... "But if the movement were faster still ... in the end, the moving thing would be in all places at once." His brief exposition on linguistics and the possibility of a universal syntactical structure of languages was also fascinating without being distracting or pedantic.
For fans of soft sci-fi, Out of the Silent Planet will provide a smorgasbord of delights - alien characters and personalities, philosophy, ethics, survival in a potentially hostile environment and descriptions of alien flora and fauna that are near poetic in their beauty and majesty. I'm looking forward to reading the subsequent novels in his masterwork trilogy, "Voyage to Venus" and "That Hideous Strength".
Highly recommended.
Paul Weiss
Rated by buyers
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This is one of my favorite C.S. Lewis books, I've read it twice and I still love it,to label it as mere scifi is an insult, it is a terrific book with a unique storyline that explores the nature of humanity and our role in universe. Wonderfully written, just great!
Rated by buyers
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Although I somewhat knew the basic plot of the book before I read it I still found it a pleasant read. Lewis tells a pretty good sci-fi story of a kidnapped man named Ransom finding his way around Malacandra (Mars). The wonder and awe expressed by Ransom in the book is almost worth the read in and of itself. The 'joyful cosmology' of seeing space as the ancients did, calling them the 'heavens' is shown to be superior to the modern notion that space is just cold dead hostile nothingness. This is contrasted with the 'joyless cosmology' of Weston who accepts some half-baked social darwinist philosophy. The aliens were also quite interesting, although I think that Lewis could have done more with the sorns. The hross were cool though.
This was a good start to the trilogy.
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