Difference between revisions of "Axolotl"
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After a particularly traumatic birth-like experience in space, the protagonist metamorphoses "into a super-human creature able to live in space without technology: the next step of human evolution." Summarized and discussed by E. Vonarburg, whom we quote here, "Birth and Rebirth in Space," q.v. under Literary Criticism; cf. ''2001'' as film and the A. C. Clarke novel. | After a particularly traumatic birth-like experience in space, the protagonist metamorphoses "into a super-human creature able to live in space without technology: the next step of human evolution." Summarized and discussed by E. Vonarburg, whom we quote here, "Birth and Rebirth in Space," q.v. under Literary Criticism; cf. ''2001'' as film and the A. C. Clarke novel. | ||
− | [[Category: Fiction] | + | [[Category: Fiction]][[Category: Authors]] |
Latest revision as of 16:43, 22 September 2014
Abernathy, Richard. "Axolotl." F&SF Jan. 1954. Rpt. Best Short Stories and Novels, 1955. T. E. Dikty, ed. New York: Frederick Fell, 1955. Rpt. as "Deep Space." Five Tales from Tomorrow. T. E. Dikty, ed. New York: Fawcett, 1957.
After a particularly traumatic birth-like experience in space, the protagonist metamorphoses "into a super-human creature able to live in space without technology: the next step of human evolution." Summarized and discussed by E. Vonarburg, whom we quote here, "Birth and Rebirth in Space," q.v. under Literary Criticism; cf. 2001 as film and the A. C. Clarke novel.