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Last And First Men (S.F. Masterworks)
 
 

Last And First Men (S.F. Masterworks) (Paperback)

by Olaf Stapledon (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars See all reviews (18 customer reviews)
RRP: £7.99
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Product details

  • Paperback: 307 pages
  • Publisher: Gollancz; New Ed edition (10 Jun 1999)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 185798806X
  • ISBN-13: 978-1857988062
  • Product Dimensions: 19.6 x 12.4 x 2.6 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars See all reviews (18 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 5,273 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review
Olaf Stapledon's first novel Last and First Men, published in 1930, has sometimes been called science fiction's Bible--a sweeping, exhilarating history of humanity's future. Its awesome timescale, stretching across five billion years, was an inspiration to the young Arthur C. Clarke, who later wrote: "No book before or since ever had such an impact on my imagination." However, Last and First Men should come with a health warning: The early chapters, dealing with near-future politics from the viewpoint of 1930, are mired in dodgy short-term speculation and have dated badly. Soon Stapledon rings down the curtain on us "First Men" as an uncontrolled nuclear reaction sweeps the world and boils the oceans--and now his imagination takes flight. The Second Men are plagued with invasions of cloud-like Martians; the bat-eared, six-fingered Third Men deliberately create the Fourth Men who are essentially huge, immobile brains ... and so on through ever-vaster gulfs of time. Individuals, nations, civilizations, even species are evocatively shown as mayflies flickering in and out of existence in an immense, chilly cosmos that goes uncaringly on forever. Yet it's not a gloomy work: even as the dying Sun promises to become their funeral pyre, the Last Men affirm that "It is very good to have been man." Another classic choice from Millennium SF Masterworks. --David Langford

Product Description
One of the most extraordinary, imaginative and ambitious novels of the century: a history of the evolution of humankind over the next 2 billion years. Among all science fiction writers Olaf Stapledon stands alone for the sheer scope and ambition of his work. First published in 1930, Last and First Men is full of pioneering speculations about evolution, terraforming, genetic engineering and many other subjects.

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Customer Reviews

18 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (18 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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28 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A First Man writes....., 4 Jul 2002
By DAVID BRYSON (Glossop Derbyshire England) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)      
After 20 years of reading about Last and First Men (they had not even heard of it in Hay-on-Wye)I have found it at last. If your idea of a novel is a book about people's relationships, it may not be for you. That particular element of novels bores me to death and this is more my idea of a compelling read. The history of mankind from 1930 to a few billion years hence is pre-written by a philosopher and fantasist possessed of a great and unquiet mind, inhuman but not inhumane as someone has well put it. On no account skip the opening chapters, whatever anyone tells you. The fact that S got the world's history 1930-2002 completely wrong is not the point -- the rest of it will almost certainly prove to be all wrong too, if we think like that. What these first chapters do is to get us into the author's weird exalted and passionless mindset. He is not so much on another planet as in an alternative universe. It is entirely to the book's advantage that he has no grasp of realpolitik and even that he has no detectable sense of humour -- when I was beginning to feel the latter as a lack I came to the only bit where he ascribes humour to any of his characters, a race of monkeys depicted in general unsympathetically and not least for their possession of this deplorable characteristic. That put me in my place I can tell you. From start to finish I got no sense of either pity or cruelty as he chronicles the the periodic near-annihilations that overtake the various successive human races, and while his account of the systematic extermination of the intelligent life on Venus filled me with a wrenching sense of tragedy that I did not feel for any of the mankinds the author himself seemed as unmoved as ever. If Wuthering Heights was written by an eagle, who or what wrote Last and First Men? Of other human proclivities I can report that sex is methodically accorded its place in a thorough and businesslike manner reminiscent of Peter Simple's great sexologist Profesor Heinz Kiosk (assisted by Dr Melisande Fischbein). Of anything I would recognise as love or affection or friendship I can find not a trace.

-- 'here he has not gone so far as to trouble the eternal gods or the stars that blight our human lot.' That comes in Star Maker. Here the 18th and last men are trapped in our solar system when final doom reaches out from the stars. Next -- Star Maker, which makes this book seem parochial.

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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Read this book. Then take 2 aspirin and have a lie down, 27 Nov 2001
By A Customer
This book does nothing less than plot the next two thousand million years of human history. We see the extinction of our own species, and the rise and fall of seventeen others. Civilizations rise and fall, planets are laid waste, humanity repeatedly ascends to transcendance, only to fall to animality for millions of years at a time before the next species comes into its own. The exegesis (there is no other word) ends in a tragedy as the final species of Man (a five-eyed, genetically engineered giant, living on Neptune) gets a glimmer of the Meaning Of It All before a cruel and merciless annihilation. If that was not astounding enough, this whole thing was written in 1930 by a philosopher who hadn't heard of SF. Stapledon is now revered as the SF writer's SF writer. This will clearly not be for everyone. The unimaginative drones of Eng Lit will dismiss it as silliness, but don't be deterred. The prose is difficult but starkly beautiful without being remotely sentimental -- in tone, it is reminiscent of the more serious parts of H. G. Wells. The atmosphere, which H. P. Lovecraft identifies as a crucial ingredient of genre fiction, has a touch of Poe, as well as the cosmic dream sequence in horror classic House on the Borderland by Hope Hodgson. Where it is dispassionate and philosophical, it reminds you of the terrifying metaphysical conundrums of Borges. Yet Stapledon is very much his own voice: icily cool and clear, almost (dare one say it) inhuman, though not inhumane. But what sets this book apart from every other book except one is the majestic scale of the work. The book that trumps this is Stapledon's own Star Maker, in which the entire history of Last and First Men is compressed into two paragraphs. Nurse, pass the aspirins.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Crushing, Surprising & Deeply Moving., 22 April 2006
By M. Hutchinson "A Small Speck" (Earth) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
It is hard to fully express the effect this book has had on me. I was lent it by my grandfather, who read it close to 60 years ago and insists that it still haunts him.

I can see why. Stapledon's writing, though rather stale and flat to begin with, belies a stunning imagination that not only beggers belief with its soaring vastness; but really blows a hole out the back of "accepted" morality, social values and most over, polical values.

Stapledon makes modern governments' 10-year line-of-sight feel both criminal and also charmingly, but laughably, childish.

I'm no political scientist (far from it...), but I found my atitudes towards my country, my planet and my fellow man re-evaluted through reading this work.

Highly recommended.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Difficult but a classic
To be honest this tale whilst considered a modern classic is very difficult to get into. Perhaps it's due to the times in which it was written (1930. Read more
Published 18 days ago by Gareth Wilson

5.0 out of 5 stars A moving and visionary work
The term 'novel' is something of a misnomer as far as this work is concerned and most definitely misleading, as the few disappointed reviews testify. Read more
Published 3 months ago by J. A. Peacock

2.0 out of 5 stars Know what you're letting yourself in for before reading this.
This novel chronicles the entire history of Mankind up until a time in the far, far future when the last race of man dies on Neptune after the sun goes nova. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Blackhorse47

4.0 out of 5 stars IF:
If you have the breadth of imagination and can cope with historical and scientific inaccuracies coupled with a dry writing style and lack of characterisation in the book, this is... Read more
Published 10 months ago by H. Syddall

5.0 out of 5 stars Sombre vision from a master of perspective
Ever wondered where our species is heading? Onwards and upwards towards a glorious future? Or hurtling down into an abyss of our own short-sighted making? Read more
Published on 18 Jun 2007 by John Hepburn

4.0 out of 5 stars A Concept Piece
To use music terminology, this book is a concept album.

Stapledon tries to write a history book set far into the future, but uses the same dry writing style as was... Read more
Published on 9 Jun 2006 by A. Johnston

2.0 out of 5 stars Sorry but...
...I have to disagree with all the other reviewers.
I have been steadily reading the SF masterworks series, being a big fan of science fiction, and this was the first one I... Read more
Published on 1 Mar 2004 by R. W. Jackson

4.0 out of 5 stars Another Stapledon masterpiece!
This book has a unique perspective on time, dealing as it does with the two thousand million year history of the various human species as they all try to answer the question... Read more
Published on 16 Dec 2001

5.0 out of 5 stars A classic work of genius; deserves a universe of stars!
Read this, then read "Starmaker", then - well, you can pretty much give up reading after that! It doesn't get any better.
Published on 5 Aug 2001 by Jason Mills

4.0 out of 5 stars cool and dispassionate descent to madness
I recommend this book. The reader should be warned it is hard going and probably unlike any book you will ever read again. It is very strange.
Published on 22 Jun 2001

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