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The Great Romance, The Great Romance, 0803259964, 0-8032-5996-4, 978-0-8032-5996-6, 9780803259966, The Inhabitant
Edited by Dominic Alessio
, Bison Frontiers of Imaginatio
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The Great Romance
The Inhabitant Edited by Dominic Alessio
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The Great Romance, a two-volume novella published under the pseudonym “The Inhabitant,” was one of the outstanding late nineteenth-century works of utopian science fiction. Volume 1 was a possible model for Edward Bellamy’s phenomenally successful Looking Backward, while volume 2 was assumed lost for over a century until uncovered in the Hocken Library in Dunedin, New Zealand. Together these volumes represent a remarkable piece of science fiction writing as they proffer one of the first serious considerations of the colonization of other planets and the impact of human beings on an alien culture. Here, for the first time, readers encounter descriptions of spacesuits and airlocks, space shuttles and planetary rovers, interplanetary colonization and cross-species miscegenation. Behind these genre-defining elements is the story of John Hope, who, by means of a sleeping elixir, awakes to a utopian community in a distant future—a “kingdom of thought” where the struggle for existence has been eliminated and humanity operates under an unwritten law of civility and harmony, aided by telekinesis that inerrantly reveals all wrong-doers. Since only two of the probably three volumes are extant, the tale ends with a chilling cliffhanger. In his introduction Dominic Alessio discusses the cutting-edge aspects of this work and its significance in both the realm of science fiction and the history and culture of its day.

Dominic Alessio is an associate professor of history and the director of the study abroad program at Richmond, The American International University in London. He is a vice chair of the New Zealand Studies Association.

“It’s not every day you read a lost bit of 19th century science fiction—from New Zealand, no less. The Great Romance appeared in the 1880s in two (or more) installments by a writer known only as “The Inhabitant.” It's the disjointed yet fascinating chronicle of John Hope, a man of the 1950s who is catapulted first into the 22nd century, and then to Venus. The white-knuckle ending is all the more tantalizing because no conclusion to the story has been discovered. It's a cliffhanger for the ages.”—Ed Park, Los Angeles Times (Park also chose this as a favorite SciFi book of 2008) “This may have been the first time that anyone described space suits, air locks or the difficulties of landing on an asteroid or entering a planetary atmosphere. . . . . This reprint will be of considerable interest to specialist scholars of science fiction.”—Publishers Weekly
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