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The songs of distant earth

Part of the Voyager Classics S. series
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The countdown to doomsday began with the discovery in 1956 of the neutrino, a particle with no mass and no charge.

By the year 2001, the significance of this phantom particle was understood: it was a harbinger.

A cosmic event was imminent, and would be close enough to touch.

Soon the Sun would go nova; the demolition of Earth was assured. And so it happened in the year 3620. Over the centuries of knowing the end was at hand, humanity pulled together to launch probes into space.

Primitive ships, at first, carrying embryos to distant systems, relying on machines to incubate and rear the first people of a virgin land beneath an alien sun.

On Earth the Lords of the Last Days lived with no need to care for the future of the world; it was the wildest of times, and the saddest.

Last to leave was the Magellan carrying a million homeless; when cataclysm struck, its voyagers witnessed through telescopes the death of Earth and all its wonders, saw the Atlantic boil dry, the pyramids disintegrate, the land of Antarctica briefly bare of ice before fire consumed everything.

Then the million slept. Five hundred years later, the Magellan must make planetfall to repair its quantum drive. Its sleepers awake to find themselves visitors to Thalassa, where a cvilization has, in fact, survived.

A clash of cultures unlike any before brings danger, despair, and some very tough decisions for two different peoples far from Earth - and its distant songs.

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Product Details
Voyager
0007115865 / 9780007115860
Paperback
823.914
20/08/2001
United Kingdom
English
Science fiction
xiv, 238p.
20 cm
general Learn More
Reprint. Originally published: London: Grafton, 1986.