The Paradox Men

by Charles L. Harness

Rings (1)

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Set after the Third Great War, North and South America are united into one country: Imperial America. A slave state run by a small noble elite who flaunt their wealth by using, and abusing, the one commodity that only the rich can have: human labour. But working underground, persecuted by the police, is an organization dedicated to the overthrow of government and the existing way of life and the establishment of freedom.The Society of Thieves was the only organization that flouted authority show more in America Imperial: they robbed the rich to buy freedom for the slaves. They were well equipped and trained for their job and had friends and informers in high places ready to reveal where the wealth of the nobles was hidden. And Alar was the best Thief of them all - for he had senses not found in ordinary men, senses that accurately warned him when danger was near. But Alar had amnesia and did not know his true identity though sometimes he sensed that there was a purpose in his actions that was not entirely his own volition. When Keiris, wife of the Imperial Chancellor saw him, she sensed that he was something special and helped him to elude pursuit even though it put her own life in danger. And in trips to the Moon and even the Sun itself, Alar begins to see what part he is destined to play in the struggle for men's freedom. show less

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4 reviews
A cautionary tale about far-future America. It has some strange scientific ideas, but mainly it is a warning about the corrupting power of dictators and totalitarianism. The protagonist, a Thief, is a Robin-Hood type fighting with his allies against the government, but there's more to it. I thought this was interesting, in a scary way.
Although this is part of the Rings series, like The Ring of Ritornel, this is a stand-alone novel. Rings is not a series in the modern sense; I’d call it a set of 3 books with a common theme - that history is cyclic and unless we learn lessons and change, we are doomed to repeat ourselves. This is neatly encapsulated by the first and last scenes in the novel: the same scenario happens in both, but the outcomes are different.

The book is set on Earth in the next couple of hundred years; the nations of Earth have coalesced into a handful of continental blocs and the threat of nuclear war is ever-present. The story is set in the capital city of the Western Empire (North and South America) which is a fascist tyranny that is now a show more slave-owning society. The government is opposed by a group calling themselves Thieves - they rob the wealthy and use the proceeds to purchase slaves from the charnel houses (where they are sold to for reprocessing once there is no further use for them).

Some 5 years previously, a space-ship crashed into the Ohio River. Oddly familiar, the only living being on board was a curious tarsier-like creature. Next day, an amnesiac was found on the banks of the river clutching the log-book of a spacecraft in the process of being built. Taken in by the Thieves, the man exhibited super-human physiology. Called Alar, the man turns into the lead actor in the struggle to overthrow the government.

Unlike The Ring of Ritornel, the main female character does have agency and the story does feature a person with disabilities (which also includes the main female character towards the end of the story).

Highly recommended.
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This was ok. Written in the 1940s so probably good when it was first published. But SF has developed since then for the better. It is difficult to compare early SF like this to more recent authors such as Dan Simmons, William Gibson or Gene Wolfe.
A great science-fiction story involving a fugitive, solar study, and time travel.
½

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Picture of author.
52+ Works 1,374 Members

Some Editions

Aldiss, Brian W (Introduction)
Asimov, Isaac (Foreword)
Lansky, Irene (Translator)
Schiemann, Klaus D. (Illustrator)
Zebrowski, George (Introduction)

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title*
Der Mann ohne Vergangenheit
Original title
Flight into Yesterday; Space Opera: 1974 (II) (II); Toynbee 22
Alternate titles
The Paradox Men
Original publication date
1953; 1949 shorter version
First words
Masked eyes peered through the semi-darkness of the room.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)All men are brothers.
Publisher's editor*
Alpers, Hans Joachim
Original language*
Englisch
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.

Classifications

Genres
Science Fiction, Fiction and Literature
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PS3558 .A62476 .P3Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-

Statistics

Members
296
Popularity
108,418
Reviews
4
Rating
½ (3.51)
Languages
5 — Dutch, English, German, Italian, Spanish
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
8
ASINs
15