Blind Alley

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Blind Alley
Author Isaac Asimov
Country Flag of United States USA
Language English
Series Empire Series
Genre(s) science fiction short story
Released in Astounding Science Fiction
Publisher Street & Smith
Media Type Magazine
Released March 1945
Preceded by Pebble in the Sky
Followed by Prelude to Foundation

Blind Alley is a science fiction short story by Isaac Asimov. It was first published in the March 1945 issue of Astounding Science Fiction, and later included in the collection The Early Asimov (1972).

Although the story postulates a race of intelligent non-humans, it is set in the Foundation universe, during the era of Trantor's Galactic Empire.

Contents

[edit] Plot Summary

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

The few remaining members of an intelligent non-human alien race have been removed from their dying planet and transferred to a human-occupied planet Cepheus-18 (hence their name of Cepheids given to them). The planet is intended to be utilised as a combination zoo, laboratory, and reservation for the creatures, and they are being studied, without too much success, by a scientific group that regards them as little more than experimental animals.

The Civilian Supervisor, a career member of the Imperial administrative service, attempts to improve conditions for the creatures, using his working knowledge of the Imperial bureaucracy. By submitting reports and encouraging others to submit reports, he manages to cause a spaceship to be delivered with the intention of having the Cepheids study it. In fact, as he intended, the Cepheids commandeer the ship and depart the galaxy to find a new world of their own.

[edit] Historical Context

The author utilises a turgid long-winded bureauocratic style of phraseology for the many memoranda that are a part of the story; this was based on that in use by the US Navy, his employers at the time.

The aliens' predicament in a human-dominated galaxy is similar to the eventual fate of humans in the alternative futures of The End of Eternity. It does however have a different ending — the Cepheids are encouraged to steal a spacecraft and head for an independent life in the Magellanic Clouds.

In Foundation and Earth, we are told that no human ship has ever penetrated the Magellanic Clouds, nor the Andromeda Galaxy or other more distant galaxies. It is not known whether Asimov intended to make a link between those novels and this short story.

[edit] The Second Foundation Trilogy

In the 'Second Foundation' trilogy, a series of books authorised by the estate of Asimov, a race of Aliens within the Foundation Universe is mentioned who appear to be in circumstances similar to the Cepheids, although they are not mentioned by name.

[edit] See also

[edit] External link

Preceded by: Included in: Series:
Followed by:
Pebble in the Sky
The Early Asimov
Empire Series
Foundation Series
Prelude to Foundation


The Early Asimov
The Callistan Menace | Ring Around the Sun | The Magnificent Possession | Trends | The Weapon Too Dreadful to Use | Black Friar of the Flame | Half-Breed | The Secret Sense | Homo Sol | Half-Breeds on Venus | The Imaginary | Heredity | History | Christmas on Ganymede | The Little Man on the Subway | The Hazing | Super-Neutron | Not Final | Legal Rites | Time Pussy | Author! Author! | Death Sentence | Blind Alley | No Connection | The Endochronic Properties of Resublimated Thiotimoline | The Red Queen's Race | Mother Earth