Past Master (novel)

Past Master

Cover of first edition paperback
Author R. A. Lafferty
Illustrator Leo and Diane Dillon
Country United States
Language English
Genre Variously described as science fiction, or dramatic fantasy
Publisher Ace Books
Publication date
1968
Media type Print (Hardcover & Paperback)
Pages 191 pp (first edition, paperback)
ISBN 020-08054-060
OCLC 8713622

Past Master is a novel by science fiction writer R. A. Lafferty. It was first published in 1968, and was nominated for the 1968 Nebula award (Rite of Passage won) and the 1969 Hugo award (Stand on Zanzibar won).[1] It is generally categorized as part of the New Wave of science fiction.

Plot introduction

Past Master is set in the year 2535 on the world of Astrobe, a utopian Earth colony that is hailed as Golden Astrobe, "mankind's third chance" after the decline of both the Old World and New World on Earth. Despite idealistic intentions, it is suffering moral and social decline that may be terminal for both Astrobe and the human race.

In an attempt to save their dying civilization, its leaders use time travel to fetch Sir Thomas More (chosen for his fine legal and moral sense) from shortly before his death in the year 1535 to be the president of Astrobe. More struggles with whether to approve of the Astrobian society, noting its possible connections to his own novel Utopia. His judgements soon lead him into conflict both with destructive cosmic forces on Astrobe and with its leaders who thought him a mere figurehead who could be manipulated.

Reception

R. D. Mullen commented that "The prose style is Besterian and page by page a joy to read, but the narrative technique is Vanvogtian not only in being pyrotechnic but also in being indifferent to causal consistency, and this is perhaps not the best technique for the theme.[2] Judith Merril praised Past Master as "a complex, subtle, colorful, and highly sophisticated book", saying that "Lafferty magics me with humor, anger, and love, and with unpredictable corner-of-the-eye perspectives and perceptions, but above all, I suspect, with his word-music."[3] P. Schuyler Miller declared the novel showed Lafferty "writing like the heir to 'Cordwainer Smith', yet always completely himself -- more macabre, more cryptic, with more of the humor of the incongruous [that] Samuel R. Delany calls 'ultraviolet' on the cover."[4] Alexei Panshin found Past Master "an eccentric, idiosyncratic minor masterpiece", saying "it has all of Lafferty's usual color and pyramiding of manic invention" as well as offering "easily the most real immediate problem of spiritual agony yet seen in science fiction".[5]

Release details

References

  1. "Hugo & Nebula Awards"; "2002 Cordwainer Smith Rediscovery Award"
  2. "Reviews: November 1975", Science Fiction Studies, November 1975
  3. "Books", F&SF, May 1968, pp.49-50
  4. "The Reference Library", Analog, November 1968, p. 163
  5. "The Future in Books", Amazing Stories, January 1969, p.144

External links