Demain les chiens
A Fiction, Short Stories, Science Fiction book. fellow humans, the need for a certain cult of fellowshipa psychological, almost physiological need for approval of...
Les hommes ont disparu depuis si longtemps de la surface de la Terre que la civilisation canine, qui les a remplacés, peine à se les rappeler. Ont-ils véritablement existé ou ne sont-ils qu'une invention des conteurs, une belle histoire que les chiens se racontent à la veillée pour chasser les ténèbres qui menacent d'engloutir leur propre culture ?Fable moderne, portrait doux-amer d'une humanité à la dérive, Demain les chiens est devenu un...
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- Filetype: PDF
- Pages: 350 pages
- ISBN: 9782290070628 / 2290070629
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More About Demain les chiens
These are the stories that the Dogs tell when the fires burn high and the wind is from the north. Then each family circle gathers at the hearthstone and the pups sit silently and listen and when the story's done they ask many questions:"What is Man?" they'll ask.Or perhaps: "What is a city?"Or: "What is a war? Clifford D. Simak, City // Lets get going, Towser urged.Where do you want to go?Anywhere, said Towser. Just start going and see where we end up. I have a feeling well, a feeling-Yes, I know, said Fowler.For he had the feeling, too. The feeling of high destiny. A certain sense of greatness. A knowledge that somewhere off beyond the horizons lay adventure and things greater than adventure. Clifford D. Simak, City // Your kind of politics is dead. They are dead because any tinhorn with a loud mouth and a brassy front could gain power by appeal to mob psychology. And you havent got mob psychology anymore. You cant have mob psychology when people dont give a damn what happens to a thing thats dead alreadya political system that broke down under its own weight. Clifford D. Simak, City //
City: Pastoral SF classic where Rover takes over Originally posted at Fantasy LiteratureCity is a well-loved classic by Clifford D. Simak published back in 1952 and awarded the International Fantasy Award in 1954. Its actually a collection of linked far-future stories written between 1944 and 1951 about men, mutants, dogs, robots, ants... Of all the great science fiction writers of the 50s, my favorite is Clifford D. Simak. He is also one of the authors that has fared poorly as we begin the 21th century. His novels are not that easy to find in reprints. While Simak could write of space travel and androids as well as the Heinleins and the Asimovs, he was most comfortable... I really wouldn't attempt to read City as speculative fiction, despite the opening stories and the fact that there's space travel and alternate dimensions. After I saw the reactions of group members to it, I thought I wasn't going to get on with it at all -- totally unscientific, only one or two female characters even mentioned, etc.But...