Stand on Zanzibar (81 page)

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Authors: John Brunner

BOOK: Stand on Zanzibar
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Quicksand
(1967)

Bedlam Planet
(1968)

Father of Lies
(1968)

Double, Double
(1969)

Timescoop
(1969)

The Jagged Orbit
(1969)

The Wrong End of Time
(1971)

The Dramaturges of Yan
(1972)

The Sheep Look Up
(1972)

The Stone That Never Came Down
(1973)

Web of Everywhere
(1974)

Total Eclipse
(1974)

The Shockwave Rider
(1975)

The Infinitive of Go
(1980)

Players at the Game of People
(1980)

The Crucible of Time
(1983)

The Tides of Time
(1984)

The Shift Key
(1987)

Children of the Thunder
(1989)

AS KEITH WOODCOTT

I Speak for Earth
(1961)

Ladder in the Sky
(1962)

The Psionic Menace
(1963)

The Martian Sphinx
(1965)

SHORT STORIES

No Future in It
(1962)

Now Then
(1965)

No Other Gods But Me
(1966)

Out of My Mind
(1968)

Not Before Time
(1968)

The Traveler in Black
(1971)

From This Day Forward
(1972)

Time-Jump
(1973)

The Book of John Brunner
(1976)

Foreign Constellations
(1980)

The Best of John Brunner
(1988)

Praise for
Stand on Zanzibar

“Brunner was an angry man, angry at injustice and cupidity and cynicism—and this desperate novel, along with its companion,
The Sheep Look Up,
was meant to be a wake-up call to a world slumbering in the opium dream of consumerism; in the hazy certainty that we humans were in charge of nature.

“Science fiction is not about predicting the future; it’s about elucidating the present and the past. Brunner’s 1968 nightmare is crystallizing around us, in ways he could not have foreseen then.

“If the right people had read this book, and acted in accordance with its precepts and spirit, our world would not be in such precarious shape today. Maybe it’s time for a new generation to read it.”

—Joe Haldeman

“An enormously ambitious novel … still one of the mightiest chunks of ‘future reality’ that any SF writer has given us to chew over.”

—Science Fiction: The 100 Best Novels

“The resulting vision has a cumulative, sometimes overpowering effect.”

—The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction

“An interesting experiment, because it marks a stage along the road midway between pulp and social commentary.”

—Brian Aldiss and David Wingrove,
Trillion Year Spree

“A well-conceived book—a satisfyingly complete vision.”

—Mike Harrison,
New Worlds

“The first true science fiction novel.”

—Judith Merril,
The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction

“Takes your breath away. It is beyond detailed quibble.”

—Algis Budrys,
Galaxy


Stand on Zanzibar
is a brilliant and dangerous book.”

—Norman Spinrad,
Amazing Stories

1
Preamble to doctorate thesis submitted by Mrs. Kitty Gbe of Port Mey, Beninia: Univ. of Ghana, Legon, Accra, 1989 (xii + 91 pp., 3 illus., map).

2
Op. cit.
p. 4.

3
Ibid.
p. 18.

4
From “Tales of Our African Brethren: Folklore of Beninia and the Gold Coast” by The Rev. Jerome Coulter, DD: London 1911 (vi + 347 pp., col. frontis., 112 line drgs. in text).

5
From “Begi, an African ‘Jack the Giant Killer’” by Roger F. Woodsman in
Anthropological Communications
, vol. XII, no. 3.

6
Gbe,
op. cit.
p. 80.

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