The Infinite Cage

by Keith Laumer

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When he awakens in a skid row alley, Adam knows nothing. Not who he is, nor where he's from. Money is a mystery. So are women. All he begins his new life with is a will to survive. But he learns fast: first, how to get away; then how not to have to. In the beginning Adam wants to be friends with us. Before he's through he just might run the human race off its feet...

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4 reviews
La novela comienza con un misterioso hombre sin nombre encerrado en una celda. El prisionero escapa y actúa de manera nada natural, todo le parece extraño, hasta su cuerpo. Pronto sabremos que es capaz de leer las mentes para extraer conocimientos, incluso a distancia, algo que le resultará muy útil en el futuro.

‘La jaula infinita’ (The Infinite Cage, 1972), de Keith Laumer, tiene un muy buen primer tercio, y un buen tercer tercio. En la parte central me sobran páginas, la trama se hace repetitiva. Aun así, me parece una entretenida novela, más fantástica que de ciencia ficción.
Laumer starts out with a real Sturgeon formula as outlined in books like More Than Human and in some measure The Dreaming Jewels- the special person or persons have to go through the trials and tribulations arranged all too willingly by a cast of gritty manevolent characters in order to reach their final moment of self realization. He uncharacteristically does not use a first person narrative to tell the tale of his downtrodden bum idiot Adam, who speaks in the tongues of many people, and is bounced from one cruel turn to another. Finally he settles down with a con artist bent on using his telepathic gift, to become rich and in the process Adam begins to learn who and what he really is.The story covers his growing from one level of show more conciousness to the next. But this book is not merely a superman book, this is an epistemological allegory. The Infinite Cage of the title is conciousness itself, the true shape of our limitation, the trap we twist and turn in all our lives to escape though we don't realize it. This is a novel of great insight, sorrow and humor. Laumer is a psychologist of surprising acuity. This story is certainly on level with the kind of thing Sturgeon writes and it might even surpass. Last year I had been startled at how well done Dinosaur Beach was; I thought I knew what this guy was about and that story was far better than I anticpated. This one knocks it out of the park. I certainly didn't expect a book of this depth. I would not be surprised if this turned out be his best book when I'm finished with reading everything he's done. It'll be hard to top. show less
Cuando despertó, desnudo y golpeado, en un calabozo de la comisaría de policía de Jasperton, Adam Nova no sabía absolutamente nada de sí mismo, de dónde había venido ni de lo que le rodeaba. No era más que un cascarón vacío: incapaz de hablar, de moverse incluso, sin el menor contacto con la realidad. Pero estaba en el mundo, y tenía que adaptarse a él. Experimentando. Así inició su duro y penoso aprendizaje, tropezando constantemente, sufriendo graves reveses, pero avanzando con tesón en el difícil camino de la vida.
Afortunadamente, tenía las voces para ayudarle a llenar sus inmensas lagunas. Y, dentro de él, unos poderes que desconocía, pero que estaban allí, y que iría descubriendo lentamente. Hasta llegar, show more finalmente, cuando todo parecía hundido a su alrededor, a la revelación de su fantástica naturalez. show less

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267+ Works 17,375 Members
Keith Laumer was born John Keith Laumer in Syracuse, New York on June 9, 1925. Before becoming a full-time writer, he was an officer in the U.S. Air Force and a U.S. diplomat. He is best known for the Bolo stories and Retief series. His other works include The Other Side of Time, A Trace of Memory, Dinosaur Beach, and A Plague of Demons. He show more suffered a stroke in 1971, which negatively affected the quality of his work and his career declined. He was also a model airplane enthusiast, and published two dozen designs between 1956 and 1962 in the magazines Air Trails, Model Airplane News, Flying Models, and Aero Modeler. In 1960, he published How to Design and Build Flying Models. He died on January 23, 1993 at the age of 67. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Some Editions

Goodfellow, Peter (Cover artist)
Kidd, Tom (Cover artist)
Straßl, Lore (Translator)

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title*
Intelligenz aus dem Nichts
Original title
The Infinite Cage
Original publication date
1972
Original language*
Englisch
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Science Fiction
DDC/MDS
813Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English
LCC
PZ4 .L375Language and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction in English
BISAC

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193
Popularity
168,807
Reviews
4
Rating
(3.21)
Languages
5 — Dutch, English, French, German, Spanish
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
8
ASINs
8