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City of Endless Night

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A fascinating and disturbing dystopian vision from a neglected sci-fi master, imagining an all too terrifying alternate ending to World War I and its implications for the human race

The year is 2041. Since the end of WWI, Berlin has been an enormous subterranean city, home to 300 million citizens who have never seen the sun, and presided over by the autocratic Hohenzollern dynasty. Every aspect of life is regimented; from controlled rations that are issued on the basis of work-for-food, to a press that works exclusively under the auspices of the Information Service. Christianity has been abolished and all breeding is carried out on the basis of strict eugenic principles. Lyman De Forrest, an American chemist, discovers a way of neutralizing Berlin's defenses and, assuming the identity of a dead German man, enters the city to discover its hidden truths. The first outsider for decades to enter the forbidden metropolis, he is horrified to find a society where women are kept in isolation for breeding or the pleasuring of high status men. Can De Forrest escape this living tomb? Published shortly after the end of WWI, this tremendous example of early dystopian science fiction is thought to have been the inspiration behind Fritz Lang's Metropolis.

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    • Booklist

      Starred review from December 1, 2014
      Hastings' 1920 dystopian SF novel gets a new edition and the opportunity to reach a new generation of readers. Set in 2041, it tells the story of an American chemical engineer, Lyman de Forrest, who gets trapped in the city of Berlin, which, after more than 150 years of unrelenting war, has become a sort of underground fortress, walled in and cut off from the outside world. Posing as a dead German chemistthe opening of the book, frankly, relies heavily on coincidencethe American interloper infiltrates this strange new society, determined to find a way to escape it. Hastings, who seems to have been a fascinating fellow (writer, urban planner, pioneer in free-range chicken production, inventor of Weeniwinks health snacks), wrote the book just after WWI and posited a second world war that would begin in the 1980s and continue into the 2100s, with Germany's fiercest weapon being the mysterious Ray, which destroys the oxygen-carrying power of living blood. Berlin, hidden away under the earth, is like a different world, highly regimented and class-structured. Hastings had no way of knowing it while he was writing the book, but his fictional Berlin operates quite a bit like the world Hitler envisioned. De Forrest is a prototypical dystopian hero, a stand-in for the reader, a stranger in a seriously strange land. For fans of dystopian fiction, not to mention early-twentieth-century sf, the book should be considered required reading.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2014, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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