Helliconia: Helliconia Spring, Helliconia Summer, Helliconia Winter (197 page)

BOOK: Helliconia: Helliconia Spring, Helliconia Summer, Helliconia Winter
3.27Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Figure 6
. Diagram of the Great Wheel within the granite of Mt. Kharnabhar. (Bambeck protection).

After ten years, the Wheel has been tugged by a captive back to the point at which he started his imprisonment. A revolution has been completed. On that final day, one prisoner finds daylight instead of stone for the fourth wall of his cell, and may make his exit to freedom; in the cell leading his, another man will be entering for his first day of the ten-year journey into and through the rock.

This ceaseless revolution has been seen by some to be echoed by the ceaseless orbiting of the Avernus, high above Kharnabhar.

APPENDIX 6
Populations

Helliconia is a sparsely populated world, at least as far as human and phagor densities are concerned. The following table shows how those densities fluctuate between the periods of extreme cold and heat. Phagor populations are more stable than human ones.

The weight of planetary biomass is in direct proportion to the solar energy absorbed by the planetary surface. At the time of apastron, the total mass is almost one third that at periastron.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Thanks for invaluable preliminary discussions go to Professor Tom Shippey (philology), Dr J. M. Roberts (history) and Mr Desmond Morris (anthropology). I also wish to thank Dr B. E. Juel-Jensen (pathology) and Dr Jack Cohen (biology) for factual suggestions. Anything sound philologically is owed to Professor Tom Shippey; his lively enthusiasm has been of great help all along.

The globe of Helliconia itself was designed and built by Dr Peter Cattermole, from its geology to its weather. For the cosmology and astronomy, I am indebted to Dr Iain Nicolson, whose patience over the years is a cause for particular gratitude.

Dr Mick Kelly and Dr Norman Myers both gave up-to-date advice on winters other than natural ones. The structure of the Great Wheel owes much to Dr Joern Bambeck. James Lovelock kindly allowed me to employ his concept of Gaia in this fictional form. Herr Wolfgang Jeschke’s interest in this project from its early days has been vital.

My debt to the writings and friendship of Dr J. T. Fraser and to David Wingrove (for being protean) is apparent.

To my wife, Margaret, loving thanks for letting Helliconia take over for so long, and for working on it with me.

Brian Aldiss
was born in 1925. During the Second World War he served in the Royal Signals in Burma and Sumatra. In 1948 he was demobilised and became an assistant in an Oxford bookshop. His first published SF novel was
Non-Stop
, published in 1958. By 1962 he had already won an award for his series of novellas collectively known as
Hothouse
, and during the 1960s he wrote some of his most famous novels:
Greybeard
(1964),
Report on Probability A
(1968) and
Barefoot in the Head: A European Fantasia
(1969). In addition,
The Saliva Tree
(1965) won the Nebula award for best novella. He continued his prolific output throughout the 1970s but achieved his greatest acclaim in the 1980s for the three massively researched novels
Helliconia Spring
(1982),
Helliconia Summer
(1983) and
Helliconia Winter
(1985), the first of which won the John W. Campbell Memorial Award. He subsequently turned his attention to straight fiction focusing on aspects of his own life (such as
Forgotten Life
(1988)) or autobiography
(Bury My Heart at W.H. Smith’s: A Writing Life
(1990) and
The Twinkling of an Eye or My Life as an Englishman
(1998)) before returning to SF.

Throughout his writing career, Aldiss has been both an anthologist and a critic, involved in both the Penguin Science Fiction and The Year’s Best SF series. Both
Billion Year Spree
(1973) and its expanded follow-up
Trillion Year Spree
(1986) are considered classic surveys of SF. The latter won a Hugo Award in 1987. He has also worked as a reviewer and essayist, writing for the
Times Literary Supplement
, the
Guardian
, and the
Washington Post
. In 2001, his short story
Super-Toys Last All Summer Long
was the basis for the Steven Spielberg film
A.I. Artificial Intelligence
. Aldiss was awarded an OBE for services to literature in 2005. He currently lives in Oxford.

 
A Case of Conscience
James Blish
A Fall of Moondust
Arthur C. Clarke
A Maze of Death
Philip K. Dick
Arslan
M. J. Engh
A Scanner Darkly
Philip K. Dick
Babel-17
Samuel R. Delaney
Behold the Man
Michael Moorcock
Blood Music
Greg Bear
Bring the Jubilee
Ward Moore
Cat’s Cradle
Kurt Vonnegut
Childhood’s End
Arthur C. Clarke
Cities in Flight
James Blish
Dancers at the End of Time
Michael Moorcock
Dark Benediction
Walter M. Miller
Dhalgren
Samuel R. Delany
Do Androids Dream of Electric
Sheep?
Philip K. Dick
Downward to Earth
Robert Silverberg
Dr Bloodmoney
Philip K. Dick
Dune
Frank Herbert
Dying Inside
Robert Silverberg
Earth Abides
George R. Stewart
Emphyrio
Jack Vance
Eon
Greg Bear
Flow, My Tears, the Policeman Said
Philip K. Dick
Flowers for Algernon
Daniel Keyes
Gateway
Frederik Pohl
Grass
Sheri S. Tepper
Helliconia
Brian Aldiss
I am Legend
Richard Matheson
Inverted World
Christopher Priest
Jem
Frederik Pohl
Last and First Men
Olaf Stapledon
Life During Wartime
Lucius Shepard
Lord of Light
Roger Zelazny
Man Plus
Frederik Pohl
Mission of Gravity
Hal Clement
Mockingbird
Walter Tevis
More than Human
Theodore Sturgeon
Non-Stop
Brian Aldiss
Nova
Samuel R. Delany
Now Wait for Last Year
Philip K. Dick
Pavane
Keith Roberts
Rendezvous with Rama
Arthur C. Clarke
Ringworld
Larry Niven
Roadside Picnic
Boris Strugatsky,
Arkady Strugatsky
Stand On Zanzibar
John Brunner
Star Maker
Olaf Stapledon
Tau Zero
Poul Anderson
The Body Snatchers
Jack Finney
The Book of Skulls
Robert Silverberg
The Centauri Device
M. John Harrison
The Child Garden
Geoff Ryman
The City and the Stars
Arthur C. Clarke
The Complete Roderick
John Sladek
The Demolished Man
Alfred Bester
The Dispossessed
Ursula Le Guin
The Drowned World
1
J. G. Ballard
The Female Man
Joanna Russ
The Fifth Head of Cerberus
Gene Wolfe
The First Men in the Moon
H .G. Wells
The Food of the Gods
H. G. Wells
The Forever War
Joe Haldeman
The Fountains of Paradise
Arthur C. Clarke
The Invisible Man
H. G. Wells
The Island of Doctor Moreau
H. G. Wells
The Lathe of Heaven
Ursula le Guin
The Man in the High Castle
Philip K. Dick
The Martian Time-Slip
Philip K. Dick
The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress
Robert A. Heinlein
The Penultimate Truth
Philip K. Dick
The Rediscovery of Man
Cordwainer Smith
The Shrinking Man
Richard Matheson
The Simulacra
Philip K. Dick
The Sirens of Titan
Kurt Vonnegut
The Space Merchants
Frederik Pohl
and C. M. Kornbluth
The Stars My Destination
Alfred Bester
The Three Stigmata of Palmer
Eldritch
Philip K. Dick
The Time Machine
H. G. Wells
The Time Machine/the War of the
Worlds
H. G. Wells
Time out of Joint
Philip K. Dick
Timescape
Greg Benford
Ubik
Philip K. Dick
BOOK: Helliconia: Helliconia Spring, Helliconia Summer, Helliconia Winter
3.27Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Groom in Training by Gail Gaymer Martin
Paranormals (Book 1) by Andrews, Christopher
Beautiful Failure by Mariah Cole
The Princess and the Porn Star by Lauren Gallagher
A Fae in Fort Worth by Amy Armstrong
Born of Defiance by Sherrilyn Kenyon
The Alex Crow by Andrew Smith