Lem, Stanislaw. The Invincible. London: Sidgwick & Jackson 1973. Print.
The Invincible moved across the outermost quadrant of the Lyre Constellation. the heavy cruiser was propelled through space by photon drive. It was the largest ship at the disposal of the space fleet based in this section of the universe. The ship's complement numbered eighty-three men, presently asleep inside the hibernation tunnel.
Description:
The science fiction part? The plot introduces the mission of a huge space cruiser, "The Invincible,' dispatched to the small planet, Regis III, to investigate a mystery. The mystery? The Invincible's sister ship had landed on Regis III two years earlier, but had abruptly stopped communicating with Earth. Of course, curiosity and concern were raised, so The Invincible was sent to this barren planet to unravel the situation.
The sister ship is quickly located, but all the crew are dead. Bodies are found both inside and outside the rocket. What is strange is they all seem to be without injury. In fact, they seem to have starved to death despite the ship having ample stores of food and water. The captain's log is of no help as his last message ends in gibberish scrawling.
One crewman, however, is found in the hibernation chamber of that doomed ship, but The Invincible's medical staff is unable to revive him. Upon further examination they discover that this crewman somehow has had all his memories erased. Odd, to say the least.
The Invincible leaders realize that they have the same sensors, defenses, and weapons as the sister ship, all of which seem to have proved useless against whatever killed the other crew. But answers must be found, so The Invincible's crew begins a cautious forays away from the safety of their own ship onto the planet, not knowing what awaits them.
What I love about author Lem is the intricate plotting and reasoning behind every step of the adventure. His books are never about good vs. evil, but instead offer questions about the unknown, of different life forms, strange evolutions, and encounters with worlds completely different from Earth. The outcome of these scenarios and the conclusions drawn are always logical, even if challenging, to everything we understand as reality.
Lem is a highly prolific writer of international fame. His book, Solaris, (also made into a movie), is a masterpiece of his alternative world and lifestyle plot that is so surprising and completely unpredictable.
If you enjoy sci-fi, I highly recommend you become familiar with Lem and his challenging worlds. A couple of my favorites are shown below, and his complete list of writings are found here. A great way to challenge your concept of the universe, of life, and of different philosophies.
Happy reading.
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If this book interests you, be sure to check out:
If this book interests you, be sure to check out:
Science Fiction from Stanislaw Lem (Special Post).
Here are a couple of my favorite Lem collections of tongue-in-cheek tales from astronauts of the future. Ijon Tichy, the seen-it-all astronaut (think, Harrison Ford in "Star Wars") and Pirx, a fresh-out-of-cadet-school pilot, travel throughout the universe full of boundless curiosity, daring, resourcefulness, and audacity en route to the most unusual of adventures. Wonderful, challenging, mind-bending, and always ironically humorous. (previously reviewed here)