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Authors: John Brunner

BOOK: Stand on Zanzibar
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The book bristles with weird typographical innovations, which Brunner hammered out on carbon-paper with his trusty Smith-Corona. (This beloved machine becomes a character in the novel, on its last page.) He even indulges his fondness for nutty limericks and doggerel poetry. Brunner quite enjoyed writing verse—in his alter-ego as a left-wing peace campaigner, he once wrote the marching anthem for the Committee for Nuclear Disarmament.

The novel also features some erudite dirty jokes, which Brunner clearly enjoyed sneaking past his blinkered publishers.

The book found particular success among later science fiction novelists. Ever keen to sniff out any trace of British counterculture, American and Canadian cyberpunks were all over this text. They could never mimic its unique form, but they appropriated almost all its constituent elements. The squalid and violent urban streetscapes, the extensive interest in sabotage methods and exotic weaponry, the sneering “yonderboy” youth gangs, the genetic engineering, the neural reprogramming …

That keen attention to the details of odd clothing and odder furniture, the semi-random globetrotting, the ear-grating futurist argot … those were among the many legacies of a thorny, challenging work that swiftly became a genre legend as the sci-fi novelist’s sci-fi novel.

Finally, though, the aspect that makes this book last is the author’s own bravery. It is Brunner’s quixotic determination that most impresses us, as he tackles an entire seething planet and every kitchen sink in it, with nothing more than a sci-fi writer’s jackdaw erudition.

Brunner is afraid of that world of his own invention. Because he is rational and quite well informed, so he has some good reasons for fear. He’s living in the lurid heat of the nuclear arms race—human extinction is a button-push away. The turbulent furies of 1967 and 1968 are howling on his television: the race riots, the arson, the draft resistance, the political assassinations. He’s too old and wise to join the street rebels, but not so old that he doesn’t feel the heat there.

He can’t conquer the world with his Smith-Corona—but John Brunner is, triumphantly, conquering his own reticence. He is defeating his inner censor. He has become authentic.

His characters speak for him, strangely and guardedly. The world’s wisest man is an alcoholic derelict, a blustering hipster buffoon. The world’s wisest machine has no soul, yet it speaks with the golden voice of a suicidal opera star.

Every figure who approaches the dark, central truth of this book—that we are doomed, we are hopeless, because we don’t deserve survival—shies away from that revelation. They know about it, yet they dare to hope against it. They always leave the author some plausible deniability for his own creeping despair, but the darkest truth of all is that John Brunner, the wild inventor of this racked dystopia, is a kind-hearted man. He’s a sentimental idealist who loves humanity and wants everybody to thrive. He has to choke that admission out of himself, but he truly loves all of them, with a big, rambling, Dickensian kind of humane pity and affection. He loves the monsters because all human beings are monsters.

This is a great science fiction novel that only a great science fiction writer could create. It’s not a “great novel,” but no merely “great novelist” could ever mimic a fantastic creation of this kind. It’s the unique product of a daring and prolonged smash-and-grab raid of the imagination, a planet-sized jackdaw-nest made of straw, barbed-wire, and emeralds. It’s a true monument to genre sensibility, and although John Brunner died in 1995—at a science fiction convention, as one might guess—time cannot much harm this book of his. It was very strange when he wrote it, and time only makes it feel stranger.

Walter Benjamin once described the Angel of History as an entity blown backward into futurity by an endless storm. As a good Hegelian, Walter Benjamin thought that a proper history should concern itself with the Angel. That’s what this old-fashioned, very futuristic, alarmingly timeless book is entirely not-about. It’s not of our own time and space, and it has no Angel. It’s not about the History, and it’s not about the Future. It’s about the happening world—about how worlds happen to people. It’s about the endless storm.

 

CONTENTS

Title Page

Dedication

Foreword

context (0)
THE INNIS MODE

context (1)
SCANALYZE MY NAME

the happening world (1)
READ THE DIRECTIONS

tracking with closeups (1)
MR. PRESIDENT

context (2)
EDITORIAL SLOT

continuity (1)
THE GUILT-EDGED SECURITY

tracking with closeups (2)
YONDERBOY

context (3)
YOU HAVE TO PUSH HIM OVER

continuity (2)
THE DEAD HAND OF THE PAST

the happening world (2)
THE SOFT CELL

context (4)
THE SUBJECT MATTER

tracking with closeups (3)
NO YOU DON’T!

continuity (3)
AFTER ONE DECADE

the happening world (3)
DOMESTICA

tracking with closeups (4)
MASKER AID

continuity (4)
ROOMIE NATION

context (5)
THE GRAND MANOR

tracking with closeups (5)
SCENESHIFTER

context (6)
ONE COMES OUT WHERE …

continuity (5)
HEAR HEAR

the happening world (4)
SPOKEN LIKE A MAN

tracking with closeups (6)
WHICH SIDE AM I ON?

context (7)
BULL FIGHT

continuity (6)
AUCTION BLOCK FOR ME

the happening world (5)
CITIZEN BACILLUS

tracking with closeups (7)
THE TOO MUCH STRAIN

context (8)
ISOLATION

continuity (7)
ARMS AND IDLENESS

the happening world (6)
STREET SEEN

tracking with closeups (8)
ILL WIND

continuity (8)
THE CAMEL’S BACK

context (9)
GUNCRIT

tracking with closeups (9)
POPPYSEED

context (10)
THE BABY AND THE BATHWATER

continuity (9)
DIVIDED AGAINST ITSELF

the happening world (7)
THE STATE OF THE ART

tracking with closeups (10)
SMOTHERLOVE

continuity (10)
DUE PROCESS

context (11)
COME OUTSIDE AND SAY THAT

tracking with closeups (11)
THE SEALED TRAIN

continuity (11)
THE SOUND OF FALLING ROCK

context (12)
THE SOCIOLOGICAL COUNTERPART OF CHEYNE-STOKES RESPIRATION

continuity (12)
IT’S SUPPOSED TO BE AUTOMATIC BUT ACTUALLY YOU HAVE TO PRESS THIS BUTTON

tracking with closeups (12)
IF YOU CAN’T BEAT THEM BEAUT THEM

the happening world (8)
BE KIND TO YOUR FORFEITED FRIENDS

context (13)
THE OLD NEWSPAPER

continuity (13)
MULTIPLY BY A MILLION

tracking with closeups (13)
THE GOOSEBERRY BUSH

continuity (14)
THE RIGHT MAN FOR THE JOB

tracking with closeups (14)
LIGHT THE TOUCHPAPER AND RETIRE

continuity (15)
DO NOT PASS GO, DO NOT COLLECT

context (14)
STORM CENTRE

the happening world (9)
SHAMBLES

context (15)
BRED AND BORN

continuity (16)
THE REVISED VERSION

tracking with closeups (15)
OUR PARENTS’ FEET WERE BLACK

context (16)
MR. & MRS. EVERYWHERE: CALYPSO

continuity (17)
TIMESCALES

the happening world (10)
SOUR GRAPES

tracking with closeups (16)
THE MESSENGER OF THE GOSPEL OF UNIVERSAL LOVE

continuity (18)
THE WALLS OF TROY

tracking with closeups (17)
BRIGHTER THAN A THOUSAND MEN

continuity (19)
SEMPER ALIQUID NOVI

context (17)
FEELING THE OVERDRAFT

continuity (20)
THE SHADOW OF GRANDFATHER LOA

tracking with closeups (18)
IN MY YOUNG DAYS

continuity (21)
MORE HASTE

context (18)
ZOCK

continuity (22)
THE PRICE OF ADMISSION

tracking with closeups (19)
SMALL WANTS AND THOSE EASILY SATISFIED

continuity (23)
HE STUCK IN HIS THUMB

the happening world (11)
HOW TO

context (19)
A FREE RENDERING OF TWO NATIONAL ANTHEMS

continuity (24)
THIS SCENE NOT SHIFTED

context (20)
THE PROS AND CONS OF A LUNATIC SOCIETY

continuity (25)
DADDY OF THEM ALL

context (21)
LETTER

continuity (26)
HERE COMES A CHOPPER

the happening world (12)
THE GENERAL FEELING

continuity (27)
MANSCAPE

tracking with closeups (20)
THE OLD LADY UNDER THE JUGGERNAUT

continuity (28)
FROM HERE ON DOWN IT’S UPHILL ALL THE WAY

context (22)
MOTHER AND BABY DOING WELL?

tracking with closeups (21)
THE DRY CHILD

continuity (29)
I BEG TO REPORT

context (23)
TO BE AVOIDED

continuity (30)
TURN HER ON AND LET HER ROLL

the happening world (13)
RÉSUMÉ

tracking with closeups (22)
THE CLIMAX OF MORE THAN A LIFETIME OF ACHIEVEMENT

continuity (31)
GROUNDWORK

tracking with closeups (23)
BEGI AND THE ORACLE

continuity (32)
FIRST WITH THE NEWS

the happening world (14)
RECRUITING POSTERS

continuity (33)
GOT IT AND GONE

context (24)
ONE OF MANY ESSENTIALLY IDENTICAL PRINTOUTS FROM SHALMANESER

continuity (34)
THERE LIVES MORE FAITH IN HONEST DOUBT

tracking with closeups (24)
NO REASON, PURPOSE OR JUSTIFICATION

continuity (35)
TO AWAIT COLLECTION

tracking with closeups (25)
THE MAN WITHOUT CONVICTIONS

context (25)
A FAVOURITE STORY OF CHAD MULLIGAN’S

continuity (36)
MAKESHIFT

tracking with closeups (26)
ALL IN DUE TIME

continuity (37)
STORAGE

tracking with closeups (27)
RECIPE FOR A MUCKER

context (26)
TO MYSELF ON THE OCCASION OF MY TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY

continuity (38)
NOT FOR SALE BUT CAN BE HAD ON APPLICATION

the happening world (15)
EQUAL AND OPPOSITE

tracking with closeups (28)
THE SLOW WAY TO DIE

continuity (39)
BETTER TO BE A VOLCANO

tracking with closeups (29)
WHILE THE BALANCE OF HIS MIND WAS DISTURBED

continuity (40)
OF THE GREATEST SIGNIFICANCE

tracking with closeups (30)
DÉFENSE D’ENTRER

context (27)
STUDY GROUP REPORTS

continuity (41)
SEWN ON WITH NEEDLE AND THREAD

tracking with closeups (31)
UNTO US A CHILD

continuity (42)
AND SAY WHICH SEED WILL GROW

the happening world (16)
OBITUARY

tracking with closeups (32)
THE COOL AND DETACHED VIEW

context (28)
A MESSAGE FROM OUR SPONSORS

About the Author

Also by John Brunner

Praise for
Stand on Zanzibar

 

CONTENTS FROM PRINT EDITION

Title Page

Dedication

Foreword

context

          (0)         
THE INNIS MODE

          (1)         
SCANALYZE MY NAME

          (2)         
EDITORIAL SLOT

          (3)         
YOU HAVE TO PUSH HIM OVER

          (4)         
THE SUBJECT MATTER

          (5)         
THE GRAND MANOR

          (6)         
ONE COMES OUT WHERE …

          (7)         
BULL FIGHT

          (8)         
ISOLATION

          (9)         
GUNCRIT

          (10)       
THE BABY AND THE BATHWATER

          (11)       
COME OUTSIDE AND SAY THAT

          (12)       
THE SOCIOLOGICAL COUNTERPART OF CHEYNE-STOKES RESPIRATION

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