Science Fiction Trivia
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- Commander McLane
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Good to know that I gave some people something to do over the weekend!
@ DH: It's not Heinlein or Herbert.
@ EV: It's not Solaris.
Another hint: There is another story-in-the-story, but as a kind of holodeck projection instead of a book. It is about two Spanish conquistadores and their quest for a hidden gold treasure. They fail to get it. Which leads my to another way to sum up the theme: Both the main story of the novel and all small stories-within-the-story are about the hunt for something (gold, a strange artefact, contact to an extra-terrestrial intelligence), and how forcing the success of the mission (inevitably?) leads to disastrous results, even the complete destruction of the thing that was hunted in the first place. Hence the titel of the whole novel.
Perhaps that gives you something more to chew on? And it still isn't googable.
However, if you want to use this last resort, you can highlight my final hint below:
<fun with Google>
The whole chain of events begins in Birnam Wood. (No, it's not Shakespeare.)
</fun with Google>
@ DH: It's not Heinlein or Herbert.
@ EV: It's not Solaris.
Another hint: There is another story-in-the-story, but as a kind of holodeck projection instead of a book. It is about two Spanish conquistadores and their quest for a hidden gold treasure. They fail to get it. Which leads my to another way to sum up the theme: Both the main story of the novel and all small stories-within-the-story are about the hunt for something (gold, a strange artefact, contact to an extra-terrestrial intelligence), and how forcing the success of the mission (inevitably?) leads to disastrous results, even the complete destruction of the thing that was hunted in the first place. Hence the titel of the whole novel.
Perhaps that gives you something more to chew on? And it still isn't googable.
However, if you want to use this last resort, you can highlight my final hint below:
<fun with Google>
The whole chain of events begins in Birnam Wood. (No, it's not Shakespeare.)
</fun with Google>
- Disembodied
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OK, I've got it, I think – although I had to resort to Google and your final clue: is it Fiasco by Stanislaw Lem?
- Commander McLane
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Yes, right about the novel and its author.
But that wasn't the actual question.
But that wasn't the actual question.
Commander McLane wrote:I am looking for a book-in-a-book. During a journey to a distant star one of the protagonists reads a couple of pages from a (ficticious, I think) old SF-novel, and we get to read it with him. The novel tells the tale of an explorer who enters the vast kingdom of the termites somewhere in central Africa. It is a huge area behind the rainforest, covered by thousands and thousands of termite mounds. Nothing except billions over billions of termites can live there. After days of struggle and fight with the aggrevated termites, killing millions of them, he finally reaches the centre of their kingdom, one oddly shaped and coloured mound. He manages to blast through the strange material and finds what the termites are protecting so fiercly.
Three questions:
1) What does he find?
2) His find has a strange power, as he painfully finds out when he takes it with him to Europe. Which?
3) What has happened to his find when we leave the story and return to its reader in the starship?
- Disembodied
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Tsk. Let's see ...
1. "... a perfect sphere, of a heavy substance that was transparent, like glass, but having a much higher index of refraction."
2. It attracts insects of all kinds.
3. It's disappeared from inside a locked safe.
Now I have to find a copy of the book, of course, and read all of it ...
1. "... a perfect sphere, of a heavy substance that was transparent, like glass, but having a much higher index of refraction."
2. It attracts insects of all kinds.
3. It's disappeared from inside a locked safe.
Now I have to find a copy of the book, of course, and read all of it ...
- Commander McLane
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I can highly advise that. But OTOH, as you already seem to have come across the downloadable PDF version, you could as well start with reading that one.Disembodied wrote:Tsk. Let's see ...
1. "... a perfect sphere, of a heavy substance that was transparent, like glass, but having a much higher index of refraction."
2. It attracts insects of all kinds.
3. It's disappeared from inside a locked safe.
Now I have to find a copy of the book, of course, and read all of it ...
Oh: and correct on all three questions. By the way: Since I first read Fiasco I found this little short story even more intriguing than the "big" story. Perhaps an early sign of an affinity to Africa? Don't know.
And now for something completely different: A LARCH. (Or a least a new challenge by the brain in a jar.)
- Disembodied
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You walk off the set, through the double doors, down the hall, take the double doors on your right, up the stairs one floor, and it's down the hall on your leftDisembodied wrote:Anyway, here's my question: how, exactly, do you get from the TARDIS control room to the wardrobes?
Commander Monty, a Python Class Cruiser driver
Iron assed bulk haulers for the win!
Of the two trumbles which escaped today from Lave station, only 473 have been located....
Iron assed bulk haulers for the win!
Of the two trumbles which escaped today from Lave station, only 473 have been located....
- DaddyHoggy
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Hmmmm, this has a strangely familar quality about it - I only recall the wardrobes featuring once - I think it might have been Colin Baker's Doctor - didn't he wrap Tom Baker's long scarf around his neck at one point...Disembodied wrote:I don't mind reading short stories on a screen but I draw the line at reading a whole novel. I'd prefer to find a physical copy anyhow!
Anyway, here's my question: how, exactly, do you get from the TARDIS control room to the wardrobes?
Good question!
Oolite Life is now revealed hereSelezen wrote:Apparently I was having a DaddyHoggy moment.
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- Disembodied
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I suppose this is true, and what with the space-Titanic smashing into the hull and all the rest of the general wear and tear, those directions could be redundant now ... so I'll rephrase the question:
How, using the most up-to-date information available, do you get from the TARDIS control room to the wardrobes?
And Steven "Nightmare Fuel" Moffat ... should be good. A whole new generation of psychologically damaged children, courtesy of the BBC ...
- Disembodied
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