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Hawksbill Station

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

In the mid-21st century, time travel is used to send political prisoners to Hawksbill Station, a prison camp in the late Cambrian Era. When the latest arrival suspiciously deflects questions about his... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

A classic novel still very much worth reading

I find it fascinating that so many SF novels that are considered classics are out of print. This one currently is not available (though used copies are always available in large quantities), but it has been printed and reprinted so often in the past that I'm sure it is just a matter of time before a new edition appears. Certainly it has more relevance at the present than at times in the past, when we have seen our political leaders more willing than ever to squelch political dissent and label those not agreeing with administration policy as unpatriotic and even un-American (ignoring Teddy Roosevelt's insistence that dissenting from public policies that one disagrees with is the essence of patriotism). I am currently in the middle of a reading project in which I'm working my way through a number of dystopian novels. These present a number of ways in which society could go wrong, whether through ecological disaster (as in the novels of Kim Stanley Robinson) or economic and societal collapse (Octavia Butler's Earthseed novels), or political repression, as in George Orwell's 1984 or in this novel. What is remarkable about the best of these novels are the ways they highlight real possibilities within our own society. The most encouraging thing about America -- at least to date -- has been that we have remained remarkably tolerant of dissent. Even in the fifties and during the Bush years it has been possible to dissent with prevailing political policies. I see this -- though perhaps I'm being an optimist -- as the furthest swing toward intolerance of which we seem to be capable. But there have been times when we've branded as un-American those who don't agree with majority or dominant opinion (they are not the same thing). I found the structure of this novel to be fascinating. The plot is simple: a totalitarian rightist regime is so intolerant of political dissent that it sends all major political prisoners back in time a billion years, well before the evolution of the dinosaurs. The principles of travel backwards in time were developed by a mathematician named Hawksbill (something that I found interesting, since even our greatest physicists are always great at math), hence the name of the station to which political dissidents are sent. The novel is told in both present narrative time and in flashbacks. What is interesting about this is that usually in novels the flashback is to an earlier date. Here the flashbacks are to the distant future, while the "present" exists in the late Cambrian period. I found both central narratives to be very interesting and a lot of fun. The very end I found somewhat contrived, as if merely a way to wrap things up, rather than an end toward which the two narratives were leading. Still, this was one of those occasions when a classic SF novel fully lived up to its reputation. Hopefully it will be back in print sometime soon.

Political Sci-Fi

This book is about political prisoners who are exiled back in time a billion years to the cambrian period in a place called Hawksbill Station. There is nothing but solid rock, no plants or animals on land, only in the sea. The story alternates between the cambrian and the present. Most of the men at Hawksbill are losing their minds because of the deprevation. I found those chapters interesting. The chapters from the present time focused on what landed the main character in Hawksbill. They aren't all that interesting, unless you like reading ca. 1960's political subversion. The writing is great, typical Silverberg, and a well told story. But I didn't like it enough to give it 5 stars.

Paleozoic gulag

Political prisoners are sentenced to exile one billion years in the past, before the appearance of the first land-dwelling lifeforms. The story alternates between the exiles in the past, ageing and battling mental illness brought on by their isolation, and the activities that resulted in their sentences. The primary character, Jim Barrett, struggles to maintain his deteriorating community while investigating the puzzle of a new prisoner who is unlike any of the others. The end is a bit unsatisfying--merely a conversation that wraps up the various plot points. Published in 1967, this novel nevertheless includes some startling predictions of later political developments, including an inconclusive presedential election that had very unfortunate results!

More straightforward but still good

Out of all the Silverberg books (or the classic ones at least) this has to be the most direct and least complex out of all of them. The plot is fairly simple, a rigid Earth government sentenced all its dissidents to a station billions of years in the past and with the way technolongy is, they can only move time in one direction, that being back. So they're all stuck there. The leader of the camp, Barrett, isn't the first one there but has been there the longest but recently was crippled, making him doubt his continued usefulness. The character of Barrett is fleshed out remarkably well, showing both how such a man became a political activist and how he holds up against the pressure of being stranded forever. Silverberg also showz us everyone else in the camp, and shows how they didn't take the pressure so well. If Silverberg had just stuck with the stories on Hawksbill Station then the book would be little more than highly entertaining genre SF but because of his deep delving into the characters he manages to make several pointed political comments in general that aren't the least bit dated, which is the point. Definitely lacks some of the intensity of his later works, as well as some emotional involvement but still stands head and shoulders above a lot of what is out there today.

Ashes to ashes

One of the more "conventional" science fiction novels that came out of Silverberg's most fruitful period, Hawksbill Station is still pretty much a classic, mostly for his vivid imagination and deep streak of humanity that colors all of his best work. In this novel, a brutal yet humane US government has taken any dissidents they find too dangerous to be left around and sent them back to Hawksbill Station, a billion years in the past, and unable to get back to the future because time travel apparently works only one way. The prisoners are led by Barrett, who has been there the longest (though he's not the first, the others have all since died from old age) and he presides over a lot of men who are without hope, without women (that seems to bother them a lot) and for the most part going absolutely crazy trying to deal with the fact that everything they have ever known is forever lost to them, friends, family, everything. To add to this, Barrett has recently had his foot crushed in a rockslide and this once proud strong man is forced to hobble around like the weakest cripple. Into all of this comes a new stranger, one who seems to hide a secret that could change them all. Meaty stuff and Silverberg tells it with such ease that the plot seems effortless and ends after the perfect length of time, nothing feels rushed or slowed and the pace never slackens. Along the way Silverberg fills in the life of Barrett with numerous flashbacks and the cutting between his past life and his current life create a great if artificial kind of suspense even if you do know what's going to happen, it still makes your heart quiver. And through these, as with all Silverberg's best work, we learn about what makes Barrett the man tick, what made him join the revolutionaries, what made him think he could change the world and how it helps him cope a billion years before everything. Unfortunately totally out of print these days, it's a book well worth trying to find in a used book store, along with all of his books from this period, not a sequel in the lot and they're all finely honed exmainations of science fiction. If any of this plot sounds familar to you it's probably because they've all become staples of science fiction plots, imitated by hundred of writers in an attempt to better the master, while some are inspired to seek out new pathways to explore. And that's probably the best praise a writer can get.
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