Description
A scientist invents the Karburator, a reactor that can create abundant and practically free energy. However, it also releases the spiritual essence held in all matter, which leads to a devastating global war.
About the Author
Karel Capek (1890-1938) was an acclaimed Czech author of novels, plays, essays, political writings, and short stories. His works include R.U.R., the famous play in which Capek coined the word "robot." Stephen Baxter is the author of several science-fiction works, including the Philip K. Dick Award-winning Vacuum Diagrams, and the coauthor, along with Arthur C. Clarke, of The Light of Other Days.
Reviews
"Capek's skewering of human greed and faith is all the more impressive given that the novel was originally published in 1922."-Pedro Ponce, Review of Contemporary Fiction
"Capek offers the tale of a machine capable of generating limitless energy that also releases the unknown spiritual essence locked within physical matter, with cataclysmic results."-Library Journal
"The Absolute at Large goes beyond the religious fervor of Nazism, foreshadowing the collectivization of Communism and the emergence of a free market too wide for any known West."-Village Voice
"A satirical science fiction classic. . . . Though Capek wrote The Absolute at Large more than 80 years ago, it absolutely retains its wit and relevance today."-Donna McCrohan Rosenthal, News Review
"Capek's dialog is fantastic, his characters richly drawn. But his vision of a world transcendently captivated by an apparent higher calling and then hoodwinked into war for nine years over a source of fuel is so prescient, it makes the novel seem like it was written today."-Cara Hoffman, NPR's All Things Considered
Book Information
ISBN 9780803264595
Author Karel Capek
Format Paperback
Page Count 248
Imprint Bison Books
Publisher University of Nebraska Press
Series Bison Frontiers of Imagination
Weight(grams) 295g