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The Trigger Hardcover – 1 Nov. 1999
Without war, we’d hardly have any history. Without murder, we’d hardly have any fiction. Then along came the Trigger … the only true promise of peace that technology has ever devised.
From the legendary Arthur C. Clarke, in collaboration with Michael Kube-McDowell of Star Wars fame, comes a chilling day-after-tomorrow thriller of huge vision and startling menace.
Jeffrey Horton of Terabyte Laboratories is the brilliant, driven and idealistic scientist responsible for the discovery of the Trigger. It was an accidental discovery: Horton was hoping to build the analogue of a laser for gravity. Instead, his experimental gravity-boson emitter, when fired up for the first time, triggered all nearby explosive material. In that moment, an end to the power of the gun became feasible. In future, a firearm – or a bomb – could be made powerless to harm the innocent.
Karl Brohier, Horton’s boss and a Nobel Prive winner, has to decide what to do with the Trigger. Patriotism dictates he and Horton hand over the science to the Pentagon. Idealism demands the invention be given to the whole world, regardless of politics. But what haunts Brohier is the fear that with one wrong word to the wrong person, a convoy of black vans filled with Special Operations troops will swoop down on the Terabyte campus and cart away everything, including himself and Horton. So Brohier takes news of the Trigger direct to the White House.
President Mark Breland, former star pitcher for the Philadelphia Phillies, has a record of integrity and liberalism. He would rather be wrong in a hurry than agonize his way to a state of ambivalence, and he promises Horton and Brohier that the Trigger will be made available to the world. The Pentagon regards Breland’s promise as wrong to the point of being treasonous. It involves disarming the military!
In a world where violence has reached epidemic proportions, no one can be trusted. Too many people have a stake in the business of violence to give peace a chance.
- Print length560 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherVoyager
- Publication date1 Nov. 1999
- ISBN-100002247119
- ISBN-13978-0002247115
Product description
Amazon Review
On the surface this is a most unusual book for Arthur C. Clarke. There is none of the interplanetary questing of 2001: A Space Odyssey, or Rendezvous With Rama, and while in the past Clarke's books have been almost totally devoid of violence, here is a direct confrontation with the subject. As such The Trigger reads less like Clarke's previous fiction than a liberal answer to the blockbusting adventure novels of Tom Clancy. Likewise, the flashes of humour, the sharp dialogue and the political intrigue will be more familiar to readers of Michael Kube-McDowell's Alternities and the Trigon Disunity. However, the result of this collaboration is an epic thriller, as well as a surprising change of direction for Arthur C. Clarke, undoubtedly the most famous science fiction writer in the world. --Gary S. Dalkin
Review
‘Arthur Clarke is one of the true geniuses of our time’
Ray Bradbury
‘Arthur C. Clarke is the prophet of the space age’
The Times
‘A one-man literary Big Bang, Clarke has originated his own vast and teeming futurist universe’
Sunday Times
‘Kube-McDowell is reminiscent of Arthur C. Clarke at his best’
Newsday
‘Kube-McDowell is an author to be reckoned with’
Greg Bear
From the Back Cover
WITHOUT WAR, WE'D HARDLY HAVE ANY HISTORY. WITHOUT MURDER WE'D HARDLY HAVE ANY FICTION. THEN ALONG CAME THE TRIGGER . . . THE ONLY TRUE PROMISE OF PEACE THAT TECHNOLOGY HAS EVER DEVISED.
From the legendary Arthur C. Clarke in collaboration with Michael Kube-McDowell of Star Wars fame, comes a chilling day-after-tomorrow thriller of huge vision and startling menace.
Jeffrey Horton of Terabyte Laboratories is the brilliant, driven and idealistic scientist responsible for the discovery of the Trigger. It was an accidental discovery: Horton was hoping to build the analogue of a laser for gravity. Instead, his prototype, when fired up for the first time, triggered all nearby explosive material. In that moment, an end to the power of the gun became feasible. In future, a firearm – or a bomb – could be made powerless to harm the innocent.
Karl Brohier, Horton's boss and a Nobel Prize winner, has to decide what to do with the Trigger. Patriotism dictates he and Horton hand over the science to the Pentagon. Idealism demands the invention be given to the whole world, regardless of politics. But what haunts Brohier is the fear that with one wrong word to the wrong person, a convoy of black vans filled with Special Operations troops will swoop down on the Terabyte campus and cart away everything, including himself and Horton. So Brohier takes news of the Trigger direct to the White House.
President Mark Breland, former star pitcher for the Philadelphia Phillies, has a record of integrity and liberalism. He would rather be wrong in a hurry than agonize his way to a state of ambivalence, and he promises Horton and Brohier that the Trigger will be made available to the world. The Pentagon regards Breland's promise as wrong to the point of being treasonous. It involves disarming the military!
In a world where violence has reached epidemic proportions, no one can be trusted. Do too many people have a stake in the business of violence for peace to have a chance?
“Arthur C. Clarke is one of the truly prophetic figures of the space age . . . the colossus of science fiction”
New Yorker
“Arthur C. Clarke is awesomely informed about physics and astronomy, and blessed with one of the most astounding imaginations ever encountered in print”
New York Times
“Arthur C. Clarke is one of the true geniuses of our time”
Ray Bradbury
“No one does it better than Arthur Clarke”
Times Literary Supplement
“Kube-McDowell is reminiscent of Arthur C. Clarke at his best”
NEWSDAY
“Kube-McDowell is an author to be reckoned with”
GREG BEAR
About the Author
Arthur C. Clarke has written over sixty books, among them the science fiction classics Childhood’s End, The City and the Stars and Rendezvous with Rama (which was unique in winning all three major science fiction trophies, the Hugo, Nebula and John W. Campbell Memorial Awards. He has for many years made his home in Sri Lanka. He was awarded the CBE in 1989 and was knighted in 1998.
Michael Kube-McDowell was born in 1954 and grew up in southern New Jersey. His novels include the Trigon Disunity future history and the Star Wars trilogy The Black Fleet Crisis. His novel The Quiet Pools was nominated for the Hugo Award.
Product details
- Publisher : Voyager; First Edition (1 Nov. 1999)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 560 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0002247119
- ISBN-13 : 978-0002247115
- Customer reviews:
About the authors

SIR ARTHUR C. CLARKE (1917-2008) wrote the novel and co-authored the screenplay for 2001: A Space Odyssey. He has been knighted by Queen Elizabeth II, and he is the only science-fiction writer to be nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize. His fiction and nonfiction have sold more than one hundred million copies in print worldwide.
Photo by en:User:Mamyjomarash (Amy Marash) (en:Image:Clarke sm.jpg) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons.

A child of the Space age, I started writing stories in the fourth grade. I kept writing as I followed the missions of Gemini and Apollo, through high school, and into my first career as a science teacher. My first professional publication was in the granddaddy of all science fiction magazines, AMAZING STORIES, in 1979. Other stories followed in ANALOG, ISAAC ASIMOV’S SF MAGAZINE, FANTASY & SCIENCE FICTION, TWILIGHT ZONE, and various anthologies.
I’m captivated by the question of the human prospect—why we want what we want, why we do what we do, and what sort of futures those qualities will allow. I’m a meliorist, but a skeptical one. That is, I believe it’s possible for the human condition to change for the better—but there’s no guarantee that it will. The tension between what calls us forward and what holds us back is something I explore in several stories—most especially in my Hugo Award-nominated novel THE QUIET POOLS.
So far, there are six other solo novels the reader can sample: the trilogy EMPRISE, ENIGMA, and EMPERY; and the stand-alones ALTERNITIES, EXILE, and VECTORS. These are my most personal works, the tales that I had to tell--the ideas which had me scribbling notes in the dark in the middle of the night, and dictating to my wife or son in the car (driving is always good thinking time).
I’ve also been privileged to collaborate with three of the science fiction world’s legendary creators—with Sir Arthur C. Clarke on our novel THE TRIGGER, in Isaac Asimov’s robot universe with ROBOT CITY: ODYSSEY, and in George Lucas’s original Expanded Universe via the BLACK FLEET CRISIS trilogy. Each of these shared visions offered unique pleasures and challenges.
After VECTORS, I took an extended break from writing to focus on health and family issues. But there are new projects in the works, and I’m looking forward to sharing them with you.
When I’m not writing, you might find me noodling on my guitar or the piano, enjoying a movie with my wife, roaming the grounds at an air show, or having a cookout with friends. And I read, of course—most often military history, popular science, mysteries, and even some science fiction (but only when I’m not writing it myself!).
Customer reviews
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonTop reviews from United Kingdom
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- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 17 September 2021One of my favourite of Clarke's works, it makes a fascinating discussion on the not just the science but the political and social implications of a discovery. Highly recommended.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 17 August 2022This uses a scientific discovery to examine American political and social structures particularly with respect to gun control.
It is prescient in depicting the forces that led to Trump's election and the raid on Capitol Hill.
It might be considered Social Science Fiction.
A note on Joseph Horton's review - John Lott's books are misleading pro-gun propaganda and scientifically/psychologically there is no such thing as Human Nature.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 18 May 2015Excellent service! I read this some years ago and remembered it during a conversation with a friend.
It is a brilliant alternative answer (fiction) to some of today's problems around the world.
The ending is even better!
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 22 March 2000This is a good book, but concentrates too much on the issue of Americans rights to bear arms. This is a continuing theme throughout the novel; rather than showing the impact that a device which can 'trigger' explosive materiel would have on the whole world. It gets bogged down too much in moral implications at times, and most of the narrative is told through conversation, some of it too long-winded. Characters are, at times, woefully undeveloped and several plot threads are left dangling at the close, in favour of a snappy ending. BUT! For all that, the authors do a very good job of portraying our society, and our love for violence and guns. It makes you think a lot about our culture and where it is going, and that is no bad thing.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 13 January 2005Imagine all bullets and bombs could be made harmless by 'The Trigger'.
Imagine the gun lobby in America's reaction.
Imagine the politicians' response.
Imagine you invented this - what would you do with it??
Keep it for yourself? Share it with your own government? Share it with the world?
Some hokey science in this novel but suspend disbelief and get involved in the ramifications.
See how it all gets out of hand very quickly.
It's scary how believable it all is.
An excellent, thought provoking and exciting novel.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 19 October 2001First things first : The book deals with the human interaction with a major technological shift. This could be summed up as "THE Farewell to Arms". And the personal and social aspects of such a change are dealt with, in a great fashion. You won't regret buying this book - in fact, you'll wish there were a sequel.
Trigger also provokes many thoughts in the light of the latest terrorist attacks. The Trigger or the Silencer could not have stopped the September 11 attacks, because the only weapons used were knives. Also, biological warfare would be immune to the Trigger.
The book deals with the human soul with respect to its hunger for power and control, and its capacity to destroy. It would have been great to live in a world with The Trigger or the Silencer...
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 23 November 2000Browsing through the shelves of the science-fiction section of a bookshop, I came across an Arthur C Clarke collaboration with Michael Kube McDowell. Having been addicted to the Rama series (a collaboration of Clarke an Gentry Lee) and having read McDowells Star Wars trilogy "The Black Fleet Crisis" which was excellent I decided to buy it.
On reading the first chapter, I realised at once that I had bought a very good book. The Trigger not only is a brilliant thriller in every sense of the word, but is an investigation into the social impact of explosive weaponry and the effects of what would happen if the world was suddenly without them. Would peace then ensue or would humans just find new ways of inflicating pain and fear into each other.
Any fan of Clarke or McDowell should buy this book, and those who havent read books by these two fantastic authors should read the trigger.
Buy Buy Buy and Enjoy this wonderful book.
- Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 14 September 2000Clarke and Kube-McDowell have come up with an excellent novel and a gripping thriller. A group of scientists discovers a way to destroy explosives and weapons, and then tries to stop the military from taking it away from them, and the gun lobby from destroying or banning it. As a standoff between the gun lobby and the disarmers develops, the tension mounts. Meanwhile development of the trigger continues, in an attempt to make it smaller, lighter and more selective, with devastaing results. Well written, pacy and compelling.
Top reviews from other countries
Steve GrantReviewed in the United States on 21 December 20235.0 out of 5 stars Ethics-challenging; contemporary; real-feeling
Near (or not at all!?) future SF at its finest. Imagines one major technology innovation and extrapolate the changes that might cause... and they are not what you—or the characters—at first predict. Major themes of gun ownership, pacifism, and human nature challenge our ethics and don’ leave you with a pat answer. Well written, well-plotted, good characterization, great use of detail... and a page-turner to boot.
Anita FleggReviewed in Canada on 2 September 20235.0 out of 5 stars fantastic book
This is the best kind of “what-if” story — science fiction, politics, ideology, and regular human behaviour. Extremely well done.
Marco MazzottiReviewed in France on 7 November 20145.0 out of 5 stars Triggering the gray cells!
Excellent story, well written and addressing a very real conundrum for humanity. I read it in one try: could not stop to reach the end.
KatReviewed in the United States on 15 March 20244.0 out of 5 stars interesting premise
I like the idea of it and the different complications and problems involved
in such a device, but it dragged on too long at times. It was ok.
-
Thierry LandrieuReviewed in France on 12 July 20163.0 out of 5 stars Beaucoup de blablabla
J'ai laissé trois étoiles parce que j'avais beaucoup aimé la première partie de l'histoire ( la traduction est en deux tomes ) il y a dix ans . En le reprenant, soit le livre a beaucoup vieilli, soit c'est moi . Il y a très peu d'action et beaucoup de prêchiprêcha, on en a parfois marre parce qu'en fait le débat sur les armes aux usa n'est pas mal representé mais le debat autour de la " decouverte " pêche, la theorie cosmos/information tient pas la route, les personnages sont un peu gentillets .
Enfin ça peut se lire .