Walking to Babylon (novel): Difference between revisions

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featuring= --- |
featuring= --- |
enemy= [[WiRgo!xu]] and [[!Ci!ci-tel]] |
enemy= [[WiRgo!xu]] and [[!Ci!ci-tel]] |
year= [[Dellah]], [[St. Oscar's University]] [[2594]] <br> [[The People]]’s [[Worldsphere]], [[2594]] <br> [[MD 20879]], [[2594]] <br> [[Earth]], [[Babylon]], [[December]] 12th, [[1901]] <br> [[Earth]], [[Babylon]], [[Early_human_history#6th_century_BC|570 B.C.]] |
year= [[Dellah]], [[St. Oscar's University]] [[2594]] <br> [[The People]]’s [[Worldsphere]], [[2594]] <br> Planet [[MD 20879]], [[2594]] <br> [[Earth]], [[Babylon]], [[12th December]], [[1901]] <br> [[Earth]], [[Babylon]], [[Early_human_history#6th_century_BC|570 B.C.]] |
writer= [[Kate Orman]] |
writer= [[Kate Orman]] |
publisher= [[Virgin Books]] |
publisher= [[Virgin Books]] |
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''''I'm scared of letting all these people down. Like the whole human race. At least if I get blown up as well, they can say I died heroically. Assuming I ever existed at all.''''
''''I'm scared of letting all these people down. Like the whole human race. At least if I get blown up as well, they can say I died heroically. Assuming I ever existed at all.''''


When Bernice Summerfield visits the People -- an incredibly advanced civilisation living in a Dyson Sphere -- she discovers that even in utopia, they still have their problems.
When Bernice Summerfield visits the People -- an incredibly advanced civilisation living in a [[Wikipedia:Dyson Sphere|Dyson Sphere]] -- she discovers that even in utopia, they still have their problems.


An illegal time travel experiment threatens a war which could destroy them all. Rather than risk it, the People and their ultra-powerful computer, God, are prepared to eradicate the source of the problem -- the ancient city of Babylon. But such action would involve the death of a quarter of a million human beings, and do incalculable damage to Earth's history.
An illegal time travel experiment threatens a war which could destroy them all. Rather than risk it, the People and their ultra-powerful computer, God, are prepared to eradicate the source of the problem -- the ancient city of Babylon. But such action would involve the death of a quarter of a million human beings, and do incalculable damage to Earth's history.

Revision as of 05:12, 29 June 2008


Publisher's Summary

'I'm scared of letting all these people down. Like the whole human race. At least if I get blown up as well, they can say I died heroically. Assuming I ever existed at all.'

When Bernice Summerfield visits the People -- an incredibly advanced civilisation living in a Dyson Sphere -- she discovers that even in utopia, they still have their problems.

An illegal time travel experiment threatens a war which could destroy them all. Rather than risk it, the People and their ultra-powerful computer, God, are prepared to eradicate the source of the problem -- the ancient city of Babylon. But such action would involve the death of a quarter of a million human beings, and do incalculable damage to Earth's history.

Babylon -- and the human race -- have one hope. Benny returns to the cradle of civilisation to try and stop the interference. She has just one week to prevent a catastrophe that could mean she will never be born. Her only assistance comes from a Victorian linguist who has stumbled across the experiment himself. But he's no help at all -- even though he has a power neither of them suspects.

Characters

  • Ninan (High Princess)
    • Loved to hear of her guests' travels, but could never leave her temple.
  • WiRgo!xu
    • Is a veteran of the People’s war with ‘them’.
  • !Ci!ci-tel
    • Is a veteran of the People’s war with ‘them’.
    • Aged to death by temporal energy stored in John Lafayette.
  • !qu-!qu-tala
    • The drone accompanying !Ci!ci-tel and WiRgo!xu, the drone is also a veteran of the war.

References

  • Temporal Flexibility is the ability build up in frequent time travelers to not store up potential temporal energy (as a result of some forms of time travel).
  • The Path is an unstable temporal path leading back to ancient Babylon.
  • The People decide to send back a Singularity Bomb to shut down the path, which would also destroy Babylon.
  • Bernice mentions the planet Jalkejai.

Notes

Continuity

External Links