Saturn Over the Water

by J. B. Priestley

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Tim Bedford, a young English painter, has made a promise to his dying cousin to find her husband, a scientist who vanished while working on a top-secret project in South America. The only clue is a scrap of paper with a scribbled list of words and a curious symbol resembling a figure 8 over a wavy line. As he follows the trail from Cambridge to New York to the sultry streets of Lima, the remote Peruvian desert, and the volcanic coast of southern Chile, Bedford finds himself facing danger at show more every turn. The action and suspense build towards a thrilling climax in the mountains of Australia, where Bedford will uncover the truth behind a sinister conspiracy that threatens the entire world . . . but can it be stopped, or is it already too late? 

One of the most popular and critically successful of J.B. Priestley's later novels, Saturn Over the Water (1961) is a fast-paced and clever mix of adventure, mystery, and science fiction that remains, as David Collard writes in the new introduction to this edition, 'an entertaining and marvellously eccentric jeu d'esprit.'

. Literature. Fiction.
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235+ Works 6,956 Members
English novelist, playwright, and critic J. B. Priestley was born in Bradford in Yorkshire, the setting for many of his stories, and was educated at Cambridge University. Although he first established a reputation with critical writings such as The English Comic Characters (1925), The English Novel (1927), and English Humor (1928), it is for his show more novels and plays that he is best known. Priestley was, like John Galsworthy and Somerset Maugham, a novelist only partially committed to his playwriting. Yet he became the dominant literary figure in the London West End during the 1930s, as he attempted to make realistically rendered domestic conversation the vehicle for a mature study of personality and emotion. Philosophical theories about time, Socialist dogmatism (often erupting into sermons), and a taste for dramatic expressionism may be said to have finally deflected him from his goal. Priestley's experimental bent nevertheless yielded, among his more than 25 plays, a number of striking theatrical situations---the soliloquies of Ever since Paradise, the reviewed life in Johnson over Jordan (1939), the replay of an ill-fated conversational turn in Dangerous Corner (his most successful play, 1934), and the supernatural visitation in An Inspector Calls (his acknowledged masterpiece, 1946). (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Common Knowledge

Original publication date
1961
People/Characters
Tim Bedford; Rosalia Arnaldos
Important places
Uramba, Peru; Osparas, Emerald Lake, Chile; Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia; London, England, UK
First words
Well, here it is, the whole thing, about ninety thousand words, I imagine.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)By the way - my name's Mitchell

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction, Fantasy
DDC/MDS
823.912Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction1900-1901-19991901-1945
LCC
PR6031 .R6Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish Literature1900-1960
BISAC

Statistics

Members
84
Popularity
380,481
Rating
½ (3.73)
Languages
5 — Danish, Dutch, English, German, Italian
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
7
ASINs
8