Itemize Books During Time Is the Simplest Thing
| Original Title: | Time Is the Simplest Thing |
| ISBN: | 0413424200 (ISBN13: 9780413424204) |
| Edition Language: | English |
| Literary Awards: | Hugo Award Nominee for Best Novel (1962) |
Clifford D. Simak
Mass Market Paperback | Pages: 191 pages Rating: 3.94 | 1724 Users | 116 Reviews

Present Based On Books Time Is the Simplest Thing
| Title | : | Time Is the Simplest Thing |
| Author | : | Clifford D. Simak |
| Book Format | : | Mass Market Paperback |
| Book Edition | : | Anniversary Edition |
| Pages | : | Pages: 191 pages |
| Published | : | November 1986 by Methuen (first published 1961) |
| Categories | : | Science Fiction. Fiction |
Chronicle Supposing Books Time Is the Simplest Thing
Without setting foot on another planet, people like Shep Blaine were reaching out to the stars with their minds, telepathically contacting strange beings on other worlds. But even Blaine was unprepared for what happened when he communed with the soul of an utterly alien being light years from Earth. After recovering from his experience, he becomes a dangerous man: not only has he gained startling new powers - but he now understands that humankind must share the stars.Hunted through time and space by those who he used to trust, Blaine undergoes a unique odyssey that takes him through a nightmarish version of small-town America as he seeks to find others who share his vision of a humane future. Blaine has mastered death and time. Now he must master the fear and ignorance that threatened to destroy him!
Rating Based On Books Time Is the Simplest Thing
Ratings: 3.94 From 1724 Users | 116 ReviewsAppraise Based On Books Time Is the Simplest Thing
3.5 starsFirst Cliff Simak book I've read and it took some getting through whilst tackling some interesting concepts. It seemed to flip between big ideas and our main character on the run, then back to another massive concept then back to our main character in a truck, then a canoe, then big concept. You get the picture. I was describing it to a friend and they thought the story sounded amazing and I kind of realised that the framework of ideas was really huge but the execution as a story withAlthough the title suggests a time-travel tale, this is actually a story about persecuted paranormals, standing in a tradition with Stapledon's Odd John (1935) at one end and X-Men, The 4400 and Heroes at the other. Simak's 1961 novel has more in common with the former, in that it shares Stapledon's pessimism about the possibility of reconciliation between exceptional and ordinary people.Our hero is the slyly-named telepath Shepherd Blaine. He works for Fishhook, a corporation that employs
Not one of my favorite Simak novels. One of his strong points is his ability to draw beautiful pastoral backdrops to set his stories in. In this novel these landscapes seem tacked on here and there instead of being a flowing backdrop to a deeper story. The novel came across a little preachy to me also and seemed disjointed and didn't flow well. There would be abrupt shifts from a plot element about telepathic searches of distant planets to a preachy talk about intolerance and then splicing in a

A great read from the "classic" sci-fi era!The story opens in a distant future on earth - so distant, in fact, that space travel is only a memory of the past. After countless attempts, man has begrudgingly acknowledged itself defeated by the insurmountable difficulties of travel to the stars. But, in the attempt, mankind has rediscovered and refined a long-lost talent - paranormal kinetics, a form of telepathy by which gifted individuals - called "parries" - can "travel" to the stars and
Space exploration with the mind, good aliens, bad aliens, and a societal backlash against paranormal humans (and subsequent commentary on civil rights) - this once serialized book has all of this and more. It also felt a bit preachy, a bit scattered and lacked a solid conclusion.So how did I really feel? This book was originally serialized, and at times it felt like short stories in that world. Most had their own conclusion; the book as a whole didn't seem to, and the solution chosen by the main
This was also excellent! It was tense & exciting and despite being published decades ago it seemed fresh and interesting. I also liked that it ended in a complex way, not a wrapped-up, kum-ba-yah, happily ever after.
Decades ago, I read this and realized it before I was past the first 30 pages. But I skim read it anyway.It's way before its time. But I find too many "buts" going through my head about impossibility to facts we know now (physical and mental about humans and about space itself)- to enjoy this as it should be taken.The premise of a mind meld is absolutely superlative. That's for sure.


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