Photo de l'auteur

Fred Hoyle (1915–2001)

Auteur de La nuée de l'apocalypse

93+ oeuvres 5,365 utilisateurs 82 critiques 4 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Crédit image: Photo by Chandra Wickramasinghe

Séries

Œuvres de Fred Hoyle

La nuée de l'apocalypse (1957) 1,189 exemplaires
October the First is Too Late (1966) — Auteur — 495 exemplaires
"A" Comme Andromède (1962) — Auteur — 425 exemplaires
Fifth Planet (1963) — Auteur — 331 exemplaires
Andromède revient. (1964) — Auteur — 228 exemplaires
Ossian's Ride (1959) 204 exemplaires
Rockets in Ursa Major (1955) — Auteur — 203 exemplaires
The Nature of the Universe (1950) — Auteur — 175 exemplaires
Frontiers of Astronomy (1955) 173 exemplaires
Au plus profond de l'espace (1974) — Auteur — 171 exemplaires
Inferno (1973) 166 exemplaires
Element 79 (1967) 166 exemplaires
Seven Steps to the Sun (1970) 120 exemplaires
Astronomy (1962) 120 exemplaires
On Stonehenge (1972) 102 exemplaires
Les Incandescents (1977) 83 exemplaires
Les hommes-molécules (1971) — Auteur — 59 exemplaires
Of Men and Galaxies (1972) 41 exemplaires
Diseases from space (1980) 39 exemplaires
Ten faces of the universe (1977) 37 exemplaires
Galaxies, nuclei, and quasars (1965) 37 exemplaires
Ice (1981) 23 exemplaires
The Westminster Disaster (1978) 23 exemplaires
Comet Halley (1985) 22 exemplaires
Man and Materialism (1956) 21 exemplaires
Highlights in Astronomy (1975) 19 exemplaires
Man in the universe (1964) 15 exemplaires
The Giants of Universal Park (1982) 13 exemplaires
Cosmic Life-Force (1988) 13 exemplaires
Ciencia ficción. Selección 7 (1973) 12 exemplaires
Commonsense in Nuclear Energy (1980) 12 exemplaires
The cosmogony of the solar system (1978) 9 exemplaires
The Frozen Planet of Azuron (1982) — Auteur — 9 exemplaires
The new face of science (1960) 9 exemplaires
The Planet of Death (1982) 9 exemplaires
The Energy Pirate (1982) 9 exemplaires
Encounter with the Future (1965) 8 exemplaires
The Small World of Fred Hoyle (1986) 7 exemplaires
Mathematics of Evolution (1999) 6 exemplaires
Världsalltets byggnad 5 exemplaires
Astronomy Today (1975) 3 exemplaires
Origin of Life (1980) 2 exemplaires
Iniciación a la astronomía (1979) 2 exemplaires
Το μαύρο σύννεφο (1998) 2 exemplaires
Zoomen 1 exemplaire
Matematyka ewolucji (2003) 1 exemplaire
Evolution from Space 1 exemplaire
Devilment 79 1 exemplaire
A Decade of Decision 1 exemplaire
Kara Bulut (2022) 1 exemplaire
The Asymmetry of Time 1 exemplaire
LE FRONTIERE DELL'ASTRONOMIA (1958) 1 exemplaire
L'energia nucleare 1 exemplaire
Universets opbygning 1 exemplaire
Fred Hoyle 1 exemplaire
From grains to bacteria (1984) 1 exemplaire
The Black Cloud (Extract) (1957) 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Chroniques martiennes (1950) — Introduction, quelques éditions16,600 exemplaires
The Oxford Book of Modern Science Writing (2008) — Contributeur — 802 exemplaires
Fancies and Goodnights (1951) — Introduction, quelques éditions754 exemplaires
The expert dreamers (1962) — Contributeur — 77 exemplaires
Best SF: 1967 (1968) — Contributeur — 69 exemplaires
The Best of British SF 2 (1977) — Contributeur — 59 exemplaires
Laughing Space: An Anthology of Science Fiction Humour (1982) — Contributeur — 55 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Membres

Critiques

The story takes place in the near future---the late 1960s. (The book's copyright is 1962.) Aliens from outer space are more interested in their own interests than ours. I read the book soon after it came out. What I liked most about it was that, for the sake of a character I liked, there was a sequel. The ideas are more important than the plot or the characters. BTW, the chapter names all start with the letter A.
 
Signalé
raizel | 6 autres critiques | Aug 24, 2023 |
Excellent book, full of ideas and lively pace.
Like Arthur C. Clarke at his best.
 
Signalé
CraigGoodwin | 26 autres critiques | May 12, 2023 |
I picked up a copy of Rockets in Ursa Major at my favorite antiquarian book store pretty much on a lark. The cover was cool (see inset) and the back-cover blurb was interesting:

It is the early twenty-first century. Man is seeking signs of life elsewhere in the universe, but all exploratory ships have been lost without a trace--except for DSP 15. Thirty years after leaving Earth, and given up for lost, DSP 15 suddenly appears on radar screens at the space station at Mildenhall, England.

Her crew has been frozen to prevent aging, and as the ship settles into a landing, Dr. Richard Warboys eagerly waits with other scientists for word of what DSP 15 has found. But there is no crew, only a message scratched into a metal surface, signed by the captain:

"If this ship returns to Earth, then mankind is in deadly peril--God help you--."

Unfortunately, that was pretty much the most exciting part of the book. We learn all of this in the first 30-45 pages or so, then it sets into a typical 1960's alien invasion story.

In the denouement, the good guys win with the help of friendly aliens, but (of course) there is a promise of a bad alien return.

There wasn't much to the story, and little character development either. Fred Hoyle was not a world builder. He was, however, one of the most outspoken midcentury astrophysicists, so there is little wonder why our protagonist is a young professor/researcher/scientist at Cambridge. In a similar parallel to Hoyle's own life, the "key invention" which enables detection of in invading alien fleet was related to radar, which Hoyle worked on for the Admiralty during World War II. Scientific jargon is embedded throughout -- perhaps too much for a work of fast fiction -- but I didn't find it detracting from the story. (However, I'm probably biased because I'm an astrodynamicist by trade, and anything about orbits, trajectories, and space combat is like candy to me....)

Interesting facts:
  • This was Fred Hoyle's eighth work of fiction. His best known is 1959's The Black Cloud, which is worth checking out if you can find a copy.
  • He co-wrote this book with his son Geoffrey. This was the second of 12 works the father-son team wrote together.
  • The book was adapted from a play which was first performed at the Mermaid Theatre on Easter, 1962.
  • Fred Hoyle coined the term "Big Bang Theory" in an interview on BBC Radio.

If you like simple alien invasion stories and don't mind scientific dialogue, then you will find this book worth a read.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
howermj | 1 autre critique | Mar 20, 2023 |
Fina lepo zasluzena jedinica.
Skolski primer kako ne treba pisati naucnu fantastiku.
 
Signalé
srdjashin | 1 autre critique | Nov 14, 2022 |

Listes

Prix et récompenses

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi

Auteurs associés

Martin Aitchison Illustrator
Adrian Chesterman Cover artist
David Pelham Cover artist
Dick Bruna Cover designer
Patrick Woodroffe Cover artist
Richard M. Powers Cover artist
John Griffiths Cover artist
Desmond Skirrow Cover designer
Luba Litwak Cover artist
Paul Lehr Cover Artist
John Howard Introduction
Bob Eggleton Cover artist
Terry James Cover artist
Robert Picht Translator
Scott Prentice Cover artist
Gene Szafran Cover artist
Ewing Galloway Cover artist
Gustav Keim Translator
Jorge Fonseca Translator
Angela Hynd Cover artist
Lima de Freitas Cover artist
Faber Heeresma Translator
Richard Powers Cover artist
Marion Crezée Cover artist
Kalevi Nyytäjä Translator
Irving Freeman Cover artist
Lester Kant Translator
Péter Kuczka Translator
Charles Moll Cover artist
Veikko Rekunen Translator
Peter Tybus Cover artist
Jacques Perrin Translator
Dean Ellis Cover artist
Maud Perrin Translator
Muriel Nasser Cover artist
Ian Robertson Cover artist
Don Brautigam Cover artist

Statistiques

Œuvres
93
Aussi par
9
Membres
5,365
Popularité
#4,643
Évaluation
4.0
Critiques
82
ISBN
252
Langues
15
Favoris
4

Tableaux et graphiques