Series: Book 4 in the Space Odyssey series
Rating: Not rated
Tags: Science Fiction, Lang:en
Summary
Then it came close enough for visual inspection. "Goliath here", Chandler radioed Earthwards, his voice
tinged with pride as well as solemnity. "We're bringing
aboard a 1000-year-old astronaut. And I can guess who it
is." Thus after drifting to an icy death in
2001: A Space Odyssey, the body of astronaut Frank
Poole is recovered in the outer reaches of the Solar System.
Preserved at near absolute zero, it is a simple task for
medical science a millennium hence to restore Poole to life -
though strangely for a novel which pits religion against
science, the metaphysical implications of technological
resurrection are unexamined - and the first half is devoted
to Poole's integration into the society of the future. If anything he adjusts with far too little grief or
culture shock: apart from mourning his dog, and learning how
the new technology works, he faces no major difficulties.
Still, the world of the future is drawn with broad,
imaginative strokes and apart from a persistent continuity
error which makes Poole 6 years old in 2001, this is
fascinating stuff. The plot kicks into gear with the revelation that the
famous black monoliths may ultimately not have humanity's
interests at heart, leading to a perfunctorily presented
struggle for survival. Clarke himself notes that the ending
is functionally identical to that of
Independence Day, though novel and film were created
simultaneously.