Front cover: `The handful of survivors could be saved- but only by aliens who were a mortal threat to the rest of humanity!' Rear cover: `Somehow they had to find a way... Doc Radford, the Exec, Wallis, and the First Officer Dickson, together with two badly injured and hysterical nurses. They were stuck. In the pitch dark, bleak cold of a hull equipped with oxygen tanks and stored food. And nothing else. Under several fathoms of water. Somehow they had to find a way to stay sane long enough to make a new home. And billions of miles out in space there were aliens- water breathers whose own world was gone forever in gusts of titanic heat. They too had to find a way- a way to survive for generations, long enough to find a new home... Aliens and human alike had the same problem. This is how they met.' The five humans are struck by torpedoes in 1938 and their ship is partially submerged. They must eek out a living with very limited resources including generators, oxygen tanks, beans, and canned food. Even surviving for one year on these materials would have been beyond belief but White pens the story through numerous generations, which falls into the realm of oh-come-on! By grudgingly putting believability aside, the story can read pretty well. In parallel to this is the more believable alien exodus. These hydro-origin beings are on a course to a star many years away so they must put themselves into a cryo-sleep to wait out the trip. One flaw: it doesn't seem to work right in space and successive periods of sleep render the awoken less and less intelligent. Solution: an impromptu generation ship to guide the fleet to the star. Reading the paralleling stories is gripping, something which cannot be said for White's Lifeboat novel which features human passengers fleeing from a destroyed space liner. Putting believability aside and reading about the similar plights between the alien planet-escaping exodus and the human struggle to survive though dim in prospect. It was all a great read until, `This is how they met.' It was pretty much downhill in the last 15% of the book when earth's military becomes involved and distracts the continuity of the parallel stories. The concept of the analogous stories is the key feature (again, putting aside the oh-come-on feeling). White is also tongue in cheek about the characters attitude towards the possibility of having to stay in the sunken ship for generations and the pair-bonding they will have to do. Unlike many authors of the same era, White skirts the issue with conversation-studded `umms' and `ers' and `wells' without losing traction from the plot flow.
Great old book!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 16 years ago
This book was one my brother had that I read many years ago. I found my old copy and it was pretty shot. Glad to have found and good copy and throughly enjoyed reading it again. It is an incredible story.
One of my all time favourite sf classics
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
I am writing this review from memory of one of my favourite sf titles, so apologies for any errors. This story follows two separate yet similar threads. Firstly, a world war 2 cargo ship sinks to bottom of ocean and its 5 remaining inhabitants miraculously manage to find a way to survive in their very limited ecosystem. (OK, this does require some suspension of disbelief but it's amazing what you can do with a few bean plants, a dynamo for light, and a very large stock of canned food!) As two of the inhabitants are female nature follows its course and we end up following the lives of generations to whom the surface above has become a myth.Meanwhile, an exodus of spaceships fleeing a dying planet faces its own problems. The crew was to spend most of the centuries long journey in cryosleep, with periodic awakenings to check controls etc. Unfortunately the freezing process is discovered to cause brain damage if repeated too often, so the only solution is for a small number of crew to remain permanently awake, over many generations.As with his Sector General novels, some of the main protagonists are the ships' doctors, and the interactions within the two communities are sympathetically and engagingly plotted. I'm not going to say any more about the plot, as it's fairly easy to guess where the aliens will end up! As a stand alone book, I prefer this to the Sector General series, and I am very glad it has received a well-deserved reprint. (Now I don't have to try to steal my parents' copy!)
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