Our Children's Children

by Clifford D. Simak

Paperback, 1984

Status

Available

Call number

813.54

Publication

Methuen (1984), Paperback, 192 pages

Description

Fleeing a carnivorous race of alien monsters, the entire surviving human population from five hundred years in the future escapes into the present in this thrilling science fiction adventure from one of the Golden Age greats Our human descendants from five centuries in the future are coming to visit--all one billion of them--arriving via tunnels through time. Even though the present is merely a stopover and their ultimate destination is the age of the dinosaurs, their arrival has caused a worldwide uproar. Some folks want them gone and some want to go with them, as governments and powerful corporations alike scheme to get their hands on remarkable, potentially profitable time travel technology. There is a dark and terrifying reason, however, for the visitors' abrupt arrival. Our frightened descendants are seeking sanctuary from carnivorous aliens who have descended upon the future Earth, a threat that could mean the rapid destruction of the entire human race. And the end could come sooner than anyone imagined--for some of the intelligent, rapidly breeding extraterrestrial monsters who have been devouring our children's children may well have followed their prey back to the now.   A speculative fiction master who stands alongside Asimov, Clarke, and Heinlein in the pantheon of Golden Age science fiction gods, multiple Hugo and Nebula Award-winner Clifford D. Simak delivers an alien invasion tale that is at once wildly imaginative, seriously thought-provoking, and just plain fun.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member clong
I haven't read a lot of Simak, but what I have read has been has been pretty consistently thoughtful and humanistic and at times perhaps even poetic. This one offers an interesting premise, but unfortunately Simak doesn't particularly do anything with that premise.

This felt like a book where the
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author invested a lot of energy building a tense scenario and then suddenly decided that he was bored and wanted to wrap it up (and get a paycheck) as quickly as possible. Several aspects of the sudden ending are not even remotely convincing. The characters were barely sketched and the odd little relationship between Steve Wilson and Judy Gray was far from satisfying.
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LibraryThing member abycats
This classic six-fi gallops along thru a pretty straightforward plot till it kinks sideways to a rather tidy conclusion . The language used positively creaks. But it’s a fun read and Simak’s insights into politics and corporate greed still hold true despite its publication date of 1974. Found
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myself smiling at the end. A fun, quick read.
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LibraryThing member ikeman100
I really like the works of Clifford Simak but this short novel is a poor example of what he can do. The story could have been epic if done by another author but it was handled as a quick throw-away by Simak. I still love him as an author but this one is not worth keeping.

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1974
1973

Physical description

192 p.; 17.2 cm

ISBN

0413547701 / 9780413547705

Local notes

Omslag: Chris Moore
Omslaget viser en planet bagved en anden planet
Indskannet omslag - N650U - 150 dpi

Our Childrens Children

Pages

192

Rating

(33 ratings; 3.2)

DDC/MDS

813.54
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