Отпуската ми тече добре, чета на ден по три книги и съм много доволен."Завръщане от звездите" е реално първата книга от Библиотека Галактика. Първите книжки Синият тайфун и Двойната звезда тогава бяха неоткриваеми, тази се появи през 1979 г по книжарниците. Бях на 13 и книгата ме впечатли силно. Тогава бяха една славни години на космическата експанзия.И в разгара на масовата истерия Лем задава въпроса - и за какво е всичко това?Книгата реално е писана преди полета на първия космонавт. Във времена когато всички са вперили поглед към Спутник и чакайки полета на Гагарин.Всъщност темата за безмислието на дългите космически полети Лем развива и в "Магелановият облак".Развитието на съвременната космонавтика до голяма степен показва, че е бил прав - хората нямат работа в космоса!Всичко това може (а и се върщи) по-добре от роботите.Но ние имаме нужда от Космоса! Ако не се опитваме постоянно да надскочим границите си, спираме да се развиваме.Нито полюса ни е трябвал, нито Еверест - трябва ни предизвикателството - какво още можем да направим.Накратко за тия, които не са чели книгата - една експедиция се връща след 127 години във съвсем различен свят на Земята, сред хора, които не могат да разберат защо са направили това.Хората на Земята са вече други, едни укротени... "бетизирани". Няма я агресията, но ги няма и мечтите. "Всъщност ние не се грижим за роботите, а те се грижат за нас".Като четях книгата си дадох сметка, че нещата са се променили много от тогава и в някаква сметка и ние сме "бетизирани". Мечтите са си заминали, а е останало само търсенето на материално благополучие. Което е изродило всичко в най-лошата му форма.С падането на социализЪма не остана и мечта, която да следваме. А едно общество умира без мечти.В книгата Лем (Великият Лем) предрича доста неща от развитието на технологиите, независимо че стъпва на ужасно остаряла техническа база. Описани са електронните книги и четци и то почти във варианта, в който съществуват днес (е не е предвидил Интернет затова се разпространяват не файлове, а кристали). Но останалата структура е същата.Романът завършва с една любовна история. И с една любов - нагоре към Звездите!
picked this up after a friend recommended it for the "silence of space" described in the story as well as the curious world that an astronaut returns to after being in orbit for 10 years and returning to Earth and finding it has aged 127 years into the future.. he's out of touch with this new culture (a culture whose people are free from war, any form of violence, stress, risk taking, competitive sports, accidents, etc..) and his adventures in this world were amusing and interesting and definitely worthy of a film (why hasn't this book been turned into a movie yet? it was written in 1960 and is ripe for a remake!) one of my favorite parts was when he entered into a warehouse of discarded robot parts.. the robots were in one large dump but still able to talk, with feeling and emotion.. but they weren't worth fixing as it is cheaper to build new ones.. so they were headed for the compactor.. i know they're only robots, but you feel what the astronaut felt: overwhelming sadness for their fate..so my friend was right, i did enjoy the futuristic world described in so much detail and the dozens of pages dedicated to recalling what it was like to be in orbit for 10 years exploring unknown "planetoids".. but the story within all that, about the astronaut and his encounters and "relationships" with women.. specifically the one young woman he meets and later somehow convinces to marry him.. well, that part of the story nearly made me want to see how far into space i can throw this book and get rid of it for good! the 1950's machismo the astronaut displayed towards women just dated this story and really showed the era it was written in.. that's unfortunate because i really did, at times, feel lost and immersed in that future world and society.. that is, until the astronaut pretty much rapes the girl he later marries!?!? the dialogue between him and the women was painful to read.. pretty much consisted of "i don't know" or "you don't know?" ugh.. the ending is confusing.. does "home" mean back to the stars or back to Mrs. I Don't Know? well, i don't know.. haha.. that said, if a movie is ever made of this i would definitely be anxious to see it.. given the right director, it would be visually stunning..
Do You like book Return From The Stars (1989)?
This books starts where most sci-fi books finish, a group of astronauts comes back to Earth after a long lasting 127 years cosmic journey. The main theme is that the astronauts are in their early 40s and the Earth they knew is no longer here. People left behind are no longer around and life has literally moved on. There are many themes here and as always with Lem's book every re-read will uncover something knew. The main theme is of belonging. Nobody waited and nobody cares. During the 127 years Earth become a place of peace and utopian community where there can be no aggression towards its cohabitants, it becomes a place of emotional emptiness, a stagnating society of dulness and tedium.This is the background where the main character Hal Bregg (what a great name!) cannot find peace.The book lacks some cohesion, it is a rather episodal in nature. Lem himself on many occasions expressed his dislike for the book calling it sentimental and one-dimensional. I guess it is up to the reader though to find out what they get out of the book they read and there is a lot here. Not as good as Lem's classics from this era but it comes close...
—Pacyfa
The middle of the last century – the time of dystopias, every thoughtful science fiction writer considered it to be his obligation to write one. Return from the Stars is a mutiny against the total conformity and insipid living in the entirely uniform society. “Beneath a dome supported by cracked, crumbling columns stood a woman, as though she had been waiting for me. I saw her face now, the flow of sparks in the diamond disks that hid her ears, the white – in the shadow, silvery – dress. This was not possible. A dream? I was still a few dozen paces from her when she began to sing. Among the unseen trees her voice was weak, childlike almost, I could not make out the words, perhaps there were no words.”Even in the kingdom of the uniformly blind there should be the one bold enough to dare…
—Vit Babenco
I agree with most of the positive comments by other reviewers here. In the hands of the right director, “Return from the Stars” would make an excellent film – more in the tradition of thoughtful, art-house sci-fi like “Gattaca” than as a blockbuster Hollywood movie (although someone like George Clooney would be ideal for the part of Hal – he should have filmed this novel instead of remaking “Solaris”). If you are keen on the Lem of “Futurological Congress” then maybe this book won’t be so much to your taste, as at least one other reviewer has found – but personally, I prefer Lem novels like “Solaris”,“His Master’s Voice” and “Fiasco” and for me, this one bears comparison with all of those books.Hal’s alienation faced with a population which has been “betrizated” (a process which removes aggressive, risk-taking tendencies) reminded me of Aldous Huxley’s “Brave New World”, but with betrization taking the place of eugenics. For a novel written in 1961, a time when space exploration still had a hold over the public imagination, it is eerily prescient – because even without betrization, we seem – like the civilisation depicted in the novel - to have largely lost interest in manned space missions. Instead we have become far more interested in networking amongst ourselves – and in that sense, we are (again, just like the world depicted in the book) a civilisation which is increasingly turned in on itself, rather than outward looking. That may sound like quite a negative characterisation, but one of the things I particularly liked about the novel was its readiness to acknowledge that things aren’t necessarily quite so black and white – that there are aspects of this future world which, although they seem alien and even somewhat repellent to us now, may well be superior to our current civilisation.For a longer review including some thoughts on how this relates to communism and whether it works well at a basic story-telling level (I think it does – it’s much more than just a novel of ideas), see:http://www.paulsamael.com/blog/holida...-
—Paul Samael