Eden

by Stanislaw Lem

Other authorsMarc E. Heine (Translator)
Hardcover, 1989

Status

Available

Call number

891.8537

Collection

Publication

Harcourt (1989), Edition: 1st Edition, Review copy with publisher's slip loosely inserted., Hardcover

Description

A six-man crew crash-lands on Eden, fourth planet from another sun. The men find a strange world that grows ever stranger, and everywhere there are images of death. The crew's attempt to communicate with this civilization leads to violence and to a cruel truth-cruel precisely because it is so human. Translated by Marc E. Heine. A Helen and Kurt Wolff Book

User reviews

LibraryThing member clong
Six nameless explorers find themselves marooned on a strange planet where the more they learn, the less anything makes sense. Automated factories produce nothing. Death is everywhere. They race to repair their ship before the increasingly menacing locals take effective action.

If you're looking for
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light diversion and a bit of adolescent escapism, Stanislaw Lem is not for you. If, on the other hand, you are looking for a mesmerizing journey through an alien landscape, with dashes of horror and social commentary, all delivered with a truly poetic sensibility, give this one a try.
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LibraryThing member drydebt
It becomes quite clear toward the end of the novel that the story contained therein is a vehicle for some acute observations about the relativity of ethics, the difficulty of overcoming subjective assumptions about unfamiliar cultures, and information control as a means of societal control. At the
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same time, the author goes to great lengths to provide a detailed visualization of an alien world.

This book is relentlessly serious, as opposed to Lem's drolly humorous satires. Character development is minimal, but the effectively imagined weirdness of the strange world and the struggles of the stranded earthmen to understand its enigmas, even while trying to escape it, make for an interesting read.
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LibraryThing member m_mozeleski
One of my current top picks in sci fi, Eden rocketed to the top of my list about halfway through. This is a story of an accidental landing on a foreign planet by humans, but unlike other sci fi books that tackle the question of "what do we do now?", Lem takes a quite adult and rather logical
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approach to answering this question and follows the adventures of the skeleton crew that is stuck on Eden until their ship is repaired.

Overall it was quite brilliantly done. There are no real twists or "firework" moments. However, Lem manages to build tension despite all of that, and weaves a beautiful tapestry together of what it really means to be unable to comprehend alien society.

The text itself was a bit dry, though it would make for a great book to read aloud to someone else.
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LibraryThing member sarcher
The alienating effect of not giving any character a name is terrific. Not sure I've ever seen that before. No attempt to solve the mystery, just conquistadors in the americas.
LibraryThing member Ma_Washigeri
Started a bit wierdly as I saw it was 'first published in 1990' but the extreme retro feel became more normal once I realised it was written in 1059 and that was the translation date.

Of course it continues very wierdly as this is Stanislaw Lem. He is such a master of 'show not tell'. Six crew
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members known by their occupation - Captain, Engineer, Chemist, Physicist, Cyberneticist, Doctor - except the engineer is sometimes called Henry by the captain - and a very alien planet. There's a lot of detailed description in the first half and I did get a bit impatient but by the second half I found it hard to put down.
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LibraryThing member ben_a
Didn't draw me in.
LibraryThing member nillacat
Crash landing on a planet whose beauty caught their eye, the six-man crew divide their efforts between repairing their ship and exploring the planet. Only one man is given a name; the others are identified only by their profession. Yet they are not mere sketches: each has a personality and a
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realistic variability. They are on the whole heroic, curious and adventurous, and debate whether to remain and explore even as they overcome the severe obstacles to repairing and righting their ship. The technology is an odd mix to contemporary eyes: atomic motors, autonomous robots, but film cameras. Attention to detail: the planet has no ionosphere - radios don't work. The planet is utterly alien: plants but no animals, unfamiliar smells. The initial explorations are as disorienting to us the readers as to the explorers.

* S P O I L E R S *

Contact with an abandoned automated factory; eventually with the population of the planet. An inadvertent killing of a local. Various reactions from regret to fear of retaliation. Observation of incomprehensible social patterns. Formation of theories. Much social, philosophical, and pragmatic debate. Sympathy develops when a native attaches itself to them, in a manner the men interpret as escape from something intolerable: slavery, genocide?

A deus-ex-machina in the form of a local scientist which risks its life to contact them and establish communications; a miracle of desperation, human cybernetic ingenuity and alien determination results in something of an explanation of a society controlled by a secret government which through disinformation and control of communication has convinced its people that it does not even exist, and sets groups against each other keeping the population divided and controlled. Large segments of society are damaged as a result of a failed genetic engineering program some generations earlier that itself has been declared as never having happened.

Our team of explorers wants to help. Intervene, interfere, leave alone and not meddle? Human weapons are superior, something could be done - but how do you help a system you don't understand, when your human sympathies are an inadequate guide? They would have to destroy the system entirely, become tyrants in turn, to try and build something different. And how could human standards be applied to make something better for such a different society? The elect to leave, reluctantly. From orbit they remark again how beautiful this flawed and damaged Eden seems.
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LibraryThing member ragwaine
Kind of funny that I read this only a couple months after reading The Invincible, since they're almost the same book. Humans come to unexplored planet and then wonder what the hell is going on exactly.

I found it interesting that he decided to use the character's titles instead of names, so you had
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"the Captain", "the Doctor" etc... Only once (as far as I remember) did he use a name (one of the guys was named "Henry") and that was only because another character was calling out for him and it would have sounded funny if he was yelling, "Chemist, are you there?" It did help to keep things straight, but removing that extra, "Which one is Henry?" type thing that happens when reading other books with 5 or 6 main characters. Especially since Lem's forte is definitely not characterization.

I'm really hoping the next Lem book I read is totally crazy, because that's what got me reading his stuff in the first place. Though this wasn't bad at all.
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Language

Original publication date

1959

Physical description

8.4 inches

ISBN

0151275807 / 9780151275809
Page: 0.1601 seconds