Way Station
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Narrado por:
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Eric Michael Summerer
More than a hundred years before, an alien named Ulysses had recruited Enoch as the keeper of Earth's only galactic transfer station. Now, as Enoch studies the progress of Earth and tends the tanks where the aliens appear, the charts he made indicate his world is doomed to destruction. His alien friends can only offer help that seems worse than the dreaded disaster. Then he discovers the horror that lies across the galaxy.
BONUS AUDIO: Way Station includes an exclusive introduction by Hugo and Nebula Award-winning author Mike Resnick.
©1963 Clifford D. Simak (P)2008 Audible, Inc.Los oyentes también disfrutaron:
Reseñas de la Crítica
- Hugo Award, Best Novel, 1964
- All-Time Best Science Fiction Novels (Locus Magazine)
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I wanted this to be great.
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I had a few problems with the way the main character was set up. Despite his extraordinary origin and his more than a century in the service of Galactic Central operating the transit station on Earth, Enoch is not a fascinatingly complex character. He is content to do what he needs to do to carry out his job, learning everything he can learn about in the process, and living essentially as a hermit otherwise. I thought he sort of came off as a stand in for the author, mostly free of faults or internal turmoil. The one bad thing he does in the story is a simple bit of carelessness in planning a funeral plot, nothing worse than that, and the author has to work hard to portray this as a serious faux pas when it comes to presenting ourselves to the judgement of the Galaxy. He is always decent, courageous under stress, and inclined to ruminate over things rather than acting impetuously. Besides visits from his alien friend Ulysses on occasion, he has what amoutns to a set of imaginary friends he talks to in the evenings, and a close relation with the mail carrier he is dependent upon to provide most of his daily needs. More tenuous is a romantic attraction he has to the mysterious deaf neighbor girl Lucy who seems to symbolize the best qualities of humanity, meekness, gentleness, and a sort of mystical intuition with other living creatures. For the majority of the book, Lucy displays no agency, until a moment at the climax where she seems to seize the alien plot Macguffin, an act that essentially catapults her to cosmic significance.
The last ten or twenty percent of the novel is rather different from what went on beforehand. For me, it makes it hard for me to rate it as a four-star book. It becomes more of an action adventure story. At one point, Enoch struggles hand-to-hand with an evil nameless alien criminal, a literal rat-fink, who just happens to choose Enoch's station with essentially no forethought or planning until Enoch acts to save the day. The novel had been shaping up to be a sort of a political intrigue organized by alien factions out to consign the Earth to her own misery (because of Enoch's carelessness), but now a new opportunity to obtain some fantastic alien wisdom presents itself just at a time when we are on the brink of nuclear annihilation. I lived through the 1960s myself, and can understand this desire for a way out of our predicament, but still this felt a little too pat for me.
A ray of hope during the Cold War
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What made the experience of listening to Way Station the most enjoyable?
This was a gentle story about a man who met an alien and became an innkeeper for those space travelers that needed a spot to stay during their travels. It was different than most science fiction stories and I liked it's message.What other book might you compare Way Station to and why?
If you think of 2001 a Space Odyssey this book would be a precursor. I would compare him to the obelisk of the aliens in 2001.Which scene was your favorite?
When the deaf mute girl handles the artifacts and charms the aliens.Did you have an extreme reaction to this book? Did it make you laugh or cry?
I didn't laugh or cry but I smiled a lot. That is why I call this a "gentle" book.Civil War Soldier meets aliens and lives forever!
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A Hugo Award Winning Classic
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Philosophizing classic.
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