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They Shall Have Stars av James Blish
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"They Shall Have Stars" is packaged together with "A Life for the Stars" as "Cities in Flight, Vol. 1." The story of the first novel is one of wonderful scope. In trying to beat the Soviet Union, the United States has become like it, with the FBI's nose in everything. The culture seems to have hit a dead end. But certain research programs -- a routine-looking search for antibiotics at a pharmaceutical company and a huge and apparently pointless engineering project on Jupiter -- point the way to a new human future in the stars. The characters aren't fully engaging, but this is a story of plot rather than character, and it reaches a wonderful climax when the participants in the two different projects finally meet and learn the full meaning of what they've been aiming toward.

The second novel, set about 500 years in the future, introduces the actual "cities in flight," but it's less impressive, having too much background exposition and not enough story. It's reminiscent of Heinlein's juveniles but not as good. The future is presented as brutal, but the youthful hero gets through it lightly, achieving astonishing success for his age. Still, the concepts are exciting.
  gmcgath | Aug 16, 2009 |
I wanted to like this book, and I found things to like about it, but ultimately it left me a bit disappointed. I thought Blish's take on politics and science (and how they interact) was thought provoking, I found the direct story telling refreshing, and I liked just about everything about the gravity research on Jupiter storyline. On the other hand, the whole Paige/Anne/anti-death research storyline unconvincing on several levels, and the final climactic scene on and around one of Jupiter’s moons felt rather clunky. ( )
  clong | Jan 24, 2009 |
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Wikipedia in English

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Amazon.com (ISBN 0671720503, Paperback)

Cities in Flight is an omnibus volume of four novels, originally published between 1955 and 1962, two of which are fix-ups of pieces that first appeared in various magazines in the early '50s. Despite having been conceived more than 50 years ago, and produced in episodic fashion, they stand head and shoulders above most SF available today.

In They Shall Have Stars, humankind's will to explore space is renewed with the advent of two discoveries: anti-gravity (the "spindizzy" machines) and the key to almost eternal life (anti-agathic drugs). By A Life for the Stars, centuries have passed and most of the major cities have built spindizzies into their bedrock and left earth, cruising the galaxy looking for work, much like the hobos of the Depression Era. Earthman, Come Home, told from the perspective of John Amalfi, the major of New York, was the first-written of the novels and--although not as tightly woven as the other segments--is still a masterly work. Blish gives the same weight and authority both to the sweeping cultural change wrought and suffered by the cities, and to the emotional growth of a man who is several hundred years old. We stay with Amalfi for the final episode, The Triumph of Time. New York is now planet-bound in the Greater Magellanic Cloud, but when Amalfi learns of the impending destruction of time itself, he is forced into space one more time, to take a last, desperate chance. The novel ends, literally, with a bang.

Despite the occasional, inevitable anachronism, such as vacuum tubes, Cities in Flight stands up remarkably well to modern reading. The novel's political and literary sophistication was unmatched in its time; there is very little to rival it even today. For most readers of a certain age, this was probably the first SF they encountered that was written from a mature standpoint and adult sensibility. The fact that Blish also manages to tell a fabulous, galaxy-spanning adventure tale makes this essential reading. --Luc Duplessis

(hentet fra Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:09 -0400)

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