The Ugly Little Boy

by Isaac Asimov

Other authorsRobert Silverberg (Author)
Paperback, 1993

Call number

813/.54 20

Publication

Bantam: 1993, c1992

Pages

387

Description

Science fiction story by Isaac Asimov, about a Neanderthal boy whom scientists have transported through time for scientific testing. A conflict arises when a dispassionate nurse suddenly refuses to let the boy be returned to his era.

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1991

Physical description

387 p.; 6.5 inches

ISBN

0553561227 / 9780553561227

User reviews

LibraryThing member mmoj
Isaac Asimov & Robert Silverberg write a wonderful tale of how the bond between a mother and son doesn't have to be by birth alone but by a woman's love and attention to a boy who was frightened and alone. Miss Fellowes is a woman who modern society considered an ugly spinster but a boy from the
Show More
past shows that it's not what is outside but what is in the heart that makes someone beautiful. I loved the development of the relationship between Miss Fellowes and Skyfire Face (The Ugly Little Boy). One question though - does the ending change the future?
Show Less
LibraryThing member HippieLunatic
Everyone knows that love can cross generations, but the story of how love also crosses ages is a wonderful one. I read this as I was in my pregnancy with my second child, and it helped me to understand that I would love my little boy, no matter what.

The strength of this story is not in the science,
Show More
but rather in the emotion.
Show Less
LibraryThing member john257hopper
Good story with a moving if somewhat predictable ending. There was interesting debate between scientific and child rights viewpoints; the chief protagonists on each side of the debate were not portrayed in black and white and each had strengths and weaknesses that were quite well drawn. I must
Show More
admit I found some of the Neanderthal interludes a bit dull, and I didn't find this portrayal of Neanderthal society as convincing or emotionally engaging as Jean Auel's portral in her Earth's Children series. One jarring anachronism also struck me: a Neanderthal described snow as falling for "nearly an hour", which is meaningless in the context of an absence of instruments for measuring time accurately. But a very good read.
Show Less
LibraryThing member BookConcierge
Stasis Technologies Ltd has perfected a way to reach back into time and bring forth objects for scientific study. Their most recent triumph was a baby dinosaur and now they’ve taken a Neanderthal child from the Ice-age to the 21st century. The nurse assigned to care for the child must somehow
Show More
bridge a 40,000-year cultural gap. Initially shocked by the “ugly little boy,” Edith Fellows soon recognizes that he is really a frightened child, and slowly forms a deep emotional bond with Timmie.

Originally written as a short story in 1956, Robert Silverberg teamed with Asimov to expand the work into this novel format (released as The Child of Time). According to Wikipedia, Silverberg added the storyline of the Neanderthal tribe, and the child advocate subplot, both of which definitely do add to the basic plot. This also explains how I was reminded of Jean Auel’s Clan of the Cave Bear when reading about Silver Cloud, Goddess Woman, She Who Knows and the other members of the Neanderthal tribe from which Timmie was taken. (I started out wondering if Auel had borrowed from Asimov, but now think Silverberg wrote these sections after Auel’s publication).

I do wish I had a copy of the original story, however, so that I could see how Asimov wrote the ending. I had pretty much figured this would be what happened, but don’t know if it conforms to the original story or is a result of the added elements. Sort of the same conundrum faced by the characters when bringing the child into the future – are you altering the course of history?

I did like that the characters are portrayed as fully developed – having both good and bad qualities. Miss Fellowes is dedicated and truly devoted to Timmie, but also very judgmental and frequently fails to see clear signals of what is to come. Hoskins is not merely a profit-seeking CEO, but a family man who listens to Miss Fellowes arguments and tries his best to provide the child with a nurturing environment given the constraints of the Stasis bubble. Child advocate Bruce Mannheim is originally painted as a rabid rabble-rousing attention-seeking hysteric adept at media relations but turns out to be genuinely concerned and willing to help.
Show Less
LibraryThing member ameliadefield
Right from the beginning I knew this was going to be a book I was going to read more than once. It takes on intense subjects such as the morality of time travel and the awareness that one is growing old, with a light airy tone, and I dare say beautiful tact. Isaac Asimov and Robert Silverberg have
Show More
done a wonderful job of creating a wonderfully refreshing strong, yet feminine woman. No one is right and no one is wrong, but depending on who the POV character is and how they are feeling, you get to see the good and bad side of everyone. This makes it feel so much more real.

There are few books that end in such a satisfying way that you just have to smile for a few moments after you read it (and it isn't the way you think it will end!!). This will be my new go to book when I am feeling down or sick.
Show Less
Page: 0.1344 seconds