Difference between revisions of "Way Station"

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[[Image:Way Station - Hardcover - USA - 1st Edition.jpg|thumb|256x256px|First edition hardcover.]]
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{{Book
 +
| Title            = Way Station
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| Image           = Way Station - Hardcover - USA - 1st Edition.jpg
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| ImageDescription = Hardcover - USA - 1st edition.
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| Author          = {{BookAuthor|Clifford Simak}}
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| PublishedYear    = 1963
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| PublishedMonth  = ??
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| PublishedDay    = ??
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| Type            = {{BookType|Fiction}}
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| Genre            = {{BookGenre|Science Fiction}}
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| Themes          = {{MediaTheme|Immortality}}, {{MediaTheme|Science Fiction}}
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| AgeGroup        = Adult
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}}
  
 
'''''Way Station''''' is a science fiction novel by [[Clifford Simak]], originally published in 1963, across two issues of Galaxy Magazine under the title '''''Here Gather the Stars'''''. It was later published as a single book. The story is about a man named Enoch Wallace who is being investigated by the US government because he appears to be immortal having lived for over a century, yet still appears to be 30. It turns out that Enoch was contacted by aliens shortly after the US Civil War, and was hired to run a newly built way station on Earth which acts as a resting point for alien travelers on their way across the galaxy. Part of running the way station means trying to understand many different alien cultures to accommodate them, but the more difficult part is not letting other humans know about the way station as they become more curious, and fighting his own loneliness from the isolation.
 
'''''Way Station''''' is a science fiction novel by [[Clifford Simak]], originally published in 1963, across two issues of Galaxy Magazine under the title '''''Here Gather the Stars'''''. It was later published as a single book. The story is about a man named Enoch Wallace who is being investigated by the US government because he appears to be immortal having lived for over a century, yet still appears to be 30. It turns out that Enoch was contacted by aliens shortly after the US Civil War, and was hired to run a newly built way station on Earth which acts as a resting point for alien travelers on their way across the galaxy. Part of running the way station means trying to understand many different alien cultures to accommodate them, but the more difficult part is not letting other humans know about the way station as they become more curious, and fighting his own loneliness from the isolation.
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[[Category: Books]]
 
[[Category: Fiction]]
 
[[Category: Media Theme - Immortality]]
 
[[Category: Media Theme - Science Fiction]]
 
 
[[Category: Trope - Damsel In Distress]]
 
[[Category: Trope - Damsel In Distress]]
 
[[Category: Books With Unknown Bechdel Test Status]]
 
[[Category: Books With Unknown Bechdel Test Status]]

Revision as of 17:56, 2 March 2023

Way Station

Way Station - Hardcover - USA - 1st Edition.jpg

Hardcover - USA - 1st edition.

Author Clifford Simak
Published 1963-??-??
Type Fiction
Genre Science Fiction
Themes Immortality, Science Fiction
Age Group Adult

Way Station is a science fiction novel by Clifford Simak, originally published in 1963, across two issues of Galaxy Magazine under the title Here Gather the Stars. It was later published as a single book. The story is about a man named Enoch Wallace who is being investigated by the US government because he appears to be immortal having lived for over a century, yet still appears to be 30. It turns out that Enoch was contacted by aliens shortly after the US Civil War, and was hired to run a newly built way station on Earth which acts as a resting point for alien travelers on their way across the galaxy. Part of running the way station means trying to understand many different alien cultures to accommodate them, but the more difficult part is not letting other humans know about the way station as they become more curious, and fighting his own loneliness from the isolation.

Personal

Own?No.
Read?Audiobook read by Eric Michael Summerer.
Finished2018-02-25.

I decided to read this book after seeing it on a list of the best 100 science fiction novels.

Review

Overall:

Rating-6.svg

— This section contains spoilers! —

Good

  • While it didn't become a favorite, I found the book enjoyable. The idea was unique, the characters were interesting, and the writing was quite competent.
  • The various aliens and their non-human outlooks are fun to think about.

Bad

  • I had predicted the book's ending about halfway through.
  • I didn't care much for the inclusion of Mary and David. While I like the idea of holographic life becoming sentient over time, they seemed unrelated to the over all plot.

Ugly

  • Nothing.

Link

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