Tschai
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4,8 • 13 beoordelingen
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- € 11,99
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- € 11,99
Beschrijving uitgever
The four Planet of Adventure volumes chronicle Adam Reith's saga on the planet Tschai, under the amber glow of the star Carina 4269. Reith is a Terran first-in scout stranded on a planet which he learns is now occupied, after an ancient struggle which has come to a standstill, by three technically advanced cultures who now guardedly share the surface while the original inhabitants- the mysterious Pnume- dwell in subterranean depths. On Tschai, Reith discovers to his surprise (and disgust) Earth-derived humans whom the three off-world cultures imported long ago, who have undergone physical and perceptual modifications to closely mimic their masters. The enslaved humans retain however that most human of traits- ruthless self-interest.
In The Chasch, Reith encounters a handful of free humans ranging the face of Tschai, and begins his quest to secure a space-worthy craft with which to return to Earth. Resourcefulness is Reith's byword as his odyssey takes him among the domains of aliens, humans, and their various collateral societies.
In the final book of the omnibus, Vance introduces the Pnume, one of his most enigmatic and incomprehensible creations. Forced to live in the depths of Tschai by the long-ago surface struggle between the invading aliens, the Pnume have occupied themselves within an eternal obsession for collecting and preserving Tschai's historical oddities. Reith is horrified to discover that they seek to exhibit him in their Museum of Foreverness.
Jack Vance is at his best as he introduces the cultures and beings who make up the chaotic population of this ancient planet. Reith's path to return to Earth is thorny and fraught with constant threats. His epic tale is a masterpiece of story-telling.
Cover art by David Russell
Klantrecensies
Fifty-five years ago
I read for the very first time the four novels of Jack Vance which is now know as “Tschai”.
I read it novel by novel and I hardly could wait to read the last page of the final novel “The Pnume” of this tetralogy.
The ending, which fizzles out like a candle, though logical, still leaves me feeling unsatisfied.
So ordinary, so common...
Will I feel the same way when I breathe my last?
I hope and expect not; who knows, maybe I'll be enlightened and aware of new interactions... in the unpredictable quantum universe?
Or will there be a deterministic "reality"... or... or... or...
Such an open ending would have done justice to this tetralogy and would have prevented my current feeling of disappointment.
But although the banality of the ending which doesn't do justice to the preceding stories, it hasn't stopped me from rereading "Tschai" four times in my life, with great pleasure... so on to the fifth time (between my 80th and 100th year!) or... or...
Bernard
the founder of "MijnStemTelt-HetBurgerinitiatief.nl"