Solaris 92
Solaris | |
author | Stanislaw Lem |
pages | ~200 |
publisher | Harcourt Brace (USA) |
rating | 7.5 |
reviewer | Duncan Lawie |
ISBN | 0156837501b |
summary | Deeply thoughtful, vastly different science fiction from beyond the English language. |
The height of Stanislaw Lem's science fiction production was in the 1950s and 1960s though he has continued to produce lucid, powerful work since. Writing in Eastern Europe (in Polish), his influences were vastly different from those of Commonwealth and American authors of the same period. Access to his work in English first came years after it was written, some of them via another language. This has resulted in a delayed effect as his influence on the science fiction of the West fed in over the course of a generation. Despite - or perhaps because of - this, Lem is one of the most important science fiction authors of the twentieth century writing outside the English language and his works, including over a dozen novels and several short story collections, have been published in over 30 languages.
Solaris is one of Lem's early works of mature science fiction, differing significantly in focus from the Russian film based upon it and perhaps totally unrelated to Sun Microsystems' Unix. It tells of an episode in the continuing quest by humanity to understand an alien planet. This planet orbits two stars and yet maintains a regular path. It is a ocean-world and science believes that it is the action of this mass - which is not water -- which controls the planet's motion. The planet, which itself is called Solaris, has been studied by science for generations and a large part of the book is concerned with a form of literature review, telling the history of the highs and lows in that research and relating dozens of theories generated through the decades. The style is such that the book manages to relay all this scientific opinion without indicating any genuine support for any particular theory, though most observers seem to accept, to varying degrees, the idea that the ocean may be "alive."
The narrator, Kelvin, is a Solarist by training and has come from Earth to obtain his own first hand experience of the planet. In this period of declining research, he arrives at the research station to find it in disarray; the station leader dead and the other occupants utterly preoccupied with matters they will not explain and which Kelvin cannot understand. The development of Kelvin's character is central to the book. His history is related in tandem with that of Solarist research as he attempts to come to terms with himself and with events on the station. Kelvin is the rational man of science, attempting to understand the apparently incomprehensible. His story recapitulates the scientific journey to the heart of incomprehension as he attempts to handle the impossibly real experiences the planet seems to be imposing on him. Beyond this bulk of complexity, there is a clear perspective on Kelvin's position in the final pages which shows how far this ghostly story has come, and how far our species has yet to travel.
Given the origin of its author, and the vintage of the novel, it is hardly surprising that Solaris is so far removed from the American tradition of science fiction. The mood of the book is passive and thoughtful, building a paranoiac atmosphere through understatement and calm description. The alien environment of the planet is described in the language of science and yet manages to remain largely incomprehensible. The book appears to avoid any kind of extreme; no event so great as triumph or disaster is ever described as such. This approach can make it difficult to care about the characters but it sustains the quiet, brave despair at the heart of the novel. Perhaps in this it is a reflection of the Eastern European experience of the communist regime of the period? Science has failed to comprehend Solaris so utterly that it seems humanity must be in retreat. Even as the book closes there is no certainty regarding Solaris beyond phenomenology - or has the book displayed something of the spirit of the planet? Solaris is one of the most alien places in science fiction, at least for the Western Anglophone reader, whilst Solaris goes right to the heart of the questions that good science fiction should be exploring.
Purchase this book at ThinkGeek.
The prequel was better (Score:1)
Thanks
Admit it. (Score:4)
Re:Admit it. (Score:2)
Wait A Minute... (Score:1)
Are you sure this wasn't written by Timothy Leary?
Russian?! (Score:2)
> and in Russian nearly 40
What?! Solaris was written 40 years ago (1959-60), but Lem was by no means russian, but polish!
Lem and Mymosh The Self-Begotten (Score:1)
Solaris shows us our own expectations (Score:1)
Re:The prequel was better (Score:1)
uNF! [mrzer0]
Re:Admit it. (Score:2)
Re:Admit it. (Score:2)
The film is interesting too.. (Score:3)
It's worth seeing largely because it's such a startlingly different portrayal of a future in space to those doing the rounds in the West at the time. The space station orbiting Solaris is a comfortable-looking place that's very unfuturistic, and the trip to an alien planet, with the inevitable separation from family and friends, is told from a far more human viewpoint than in most science fiction. It's a movie about people, not about technology.
There are echoes of this technique in later movies. For instance, 2010 [imdb.com] covers Floyd's preparation for the trip to Jupiter, and the impending separation from his family, in great detail, with the actual journey being skipped almost entirely.
It's a strange, starkly beautiful and intriguingly different film. Worth seeing if you get the chance.
Re:The prequel was better (Score:3)
It does, however make some sense of SUN's naming of their (then) new OS when they switched from a BSD based SUN-OS to a SYSV based Solaris.
For long-time SUN-OS/BSD users it was going to be a new world... somewhat like the old one, but with underlying differences that sometimes made it outright strange to comprehend -- on top of which was grafted the vestiges of the old, reliable world.
`ø,,ø`ø,,ø!
Comment removed (Score:3)
Solaris (Score:2)
Solaris rocked!
It was the coolest place, because they had no clue that a bunch of lambs like us had infiltrated it. Of course, it all goes straight to hell at the end of disc 1, but still, it was pretty cool while it lasted.
It's really one of the best ... (Score:1)
There is a movie based on that book (Score:1)
Lem is one of the greats (Score:1)
Re:Russian?! (Score:1)
Glad to see this book reviewed. (Score:1)
lem rules (Score:3)
I also liked Memoirs Found in a Bathtub a lot, and His Master's Voice. Shit, just check out this author.
The only thing you might not like about Lem is that he deliberately sets you up for a big climax (whether it be action or resolution of a mystery) and then robs you of the reward every single frigging time. One can see the smile on his face, too. He knows he's doing it. If that kind of thing would bother you, stick with Cyberiad and Mortal Engines, because he doesn't pull that shit in his shorter works. Enjoy.
Re:Russian?! (Score:2)
Lem, of course, is Polish, but his works were translated into Russian much earlier than into English.
Kaa
Re:Russian?! (Score:1)
Re:The film is interesting too.. (Score:1)
...which is not exactly surprising from a narrative standpoint, since he spends most of the trip in cryo-sleep. Seems to me that describing this in all it's detailed glory would be rather... boring?
Other than that I agree with you.
The Futurological Congress (Score:1)
Think The Matrix but with more humor and less leather.
Re:Lem is one of the greats (Score:1)
As about Solaris, there was a rumor some time ago that some guys in Hollywood figured out, a remake of the movie would be due.
You can read about this here:
http://www.k26.com/solaris/SOLARIS_INTRO/solari
M.
Eastern European SciFi + geek credo (Score:2)
Re:lem rules (Score:1)
M.
Link to (Score:1)
I think the planet Solaris plays a minor role of the book, the main point being made about the human psychological makeup. The final conclusion (as I read it) is something along the lines of "we cannot possibly hope to understand alien life, as we cannot even understand ourselves".
For the interested, there is a Study Guide for Solaris from Washington State University [wsu.edu], which also links to some information about Lem.
Finally a small off-topic point: my own favourite Lem book is Fiasco (1986). It has a somewhat different flavour from Solaris (more technology and less futile love), but it is still serious in its tone. (unlike the more playful Cyberiad).
Solaris, you out there? (Score:1)
All the same: any book you enjoy is a good book.
Now where did I put my copies of The Joy of Quantam Mechanics and Everything You Wanted To Know About String Theory (But Were Afraid To Ask)?
David
Re:Kandel as Translator (Score:1)
Since I read neither Russian nor Polish, I asked my husband to read the Russian, and a friend to read the Polish, and then the English. It was as good a translation as I thought! Hooray!
Kandel also has published work of his own., including In Between Dragons, a fable of the worlds that books create, and Captain Jack Zodiac, one of the best pastiches of both space opera and post-apocalyptic fiction. Sadly, both are out of print.
If you read Lem in English, you owe much of the texture to Kandel. He edited the recent Nebula Awards Showcase 2000 [barnesandnoble.com] book with Gregory Benford and Michelle Brook. Read as much of Lem as you wish, but remember the translator.
Oh, yeah. That other really good translation. Ann Rice's Interview with a Vampire reads much better in French. If you can snatch up a copy of Entretien avec un Vampire, grab it!
Re:Solaris (Score:2)
The tunnels! The tunnels! (Score:2)
Seriously, the sequence lasted 20 minutes or something, I could imagine the theaters emptying. After that it picked up again. It was as if a crazed nipponese tunnel fetishist had swapped out one of the reels.
Stanislaw Lem and his influence (Score:1)
In the review, the author doesn't mention that much of Lem's work makes a powerful allegorical statement about our technological society, usually criticising it. This explains many strange turns of events and symbols in his work.
Also, another masterful work by Lem is 'Return from the Stars,' where an astronaut returns from a long mission to find the world changed permanently - the will to explore has been bred out of Earth's citizens. I loved that book.
Which book is this? (Score:1)
I read a review of a book about 5 or so years ago, it was about a book by some guy who may have been a scientist, it was sci-fi, and about people living inside a sun or something... i asked someone recently about this and he lent me Snowcrash, which was ok i guess but i dont think it was that.
Any ideas? It was supposed to have made sense from a scientific point of view, but the author wasnt anyone i`d heard of at the time (ie Asimov, Clarke etc)
a.
Re:The film is interesting too.. (Score:1)
Re:Stanislaw Lem is SF best kept secret (Score:1)
Brilliant (Score:1)
Someone mentioned Arkady and Boris Strugatsky (sp?) - Their novel "Roadside Picnic" has been reprinted (in the UK, at least) in Gollancz's new classic SF range - the return of the yellow jacketed SF books I used to seek out at the library when I were a lad.
Hacker: A criminal who breaks into computer systems
Re:Eastern European SciFi + geek credo (Score:1)
It takes the insight of a genius (and Stanislav Lem was of course one) to see the future. Only now I understand that by the enormous machine that claimed that 2 + 2 was 7, was in fact a Transmeta Crusoe board fixed inside an IBM RS6000 case.
Re:Admit it. (Score:4)
I have largely the same feelings whenever I port software to a Sun system.
- John
Re:More Lem (Score:1)
Fiasco also good. (Score:1)
One thing about Lem I've always liked is that he can write a great Sci-Fi tragedy. I've noticed that the great majority of modern (Western) Sci-Fi is almost always written as heroic opera; even when it centers on an anti-hero, it's a truly heroic anti-hero, inevitably saving the world by the end of the story. Lem is far more unpredictable; he doesn't follow a set formula, and you can't always tell how the story is going to end. One of his tales of Pirx the Pilot (I can't quite remember the name; I think it's "The Albatross") always sticks with me; while the main character is Pirx, his role in the story is little more than as a witness to a spacecraft in the process of a catastrophic failure. Even though nobody wins in the end, the scenes drawn in the story of desperation and selfless sacrifice against a backdrop of hard vacuum are starkly beautiful.
Rather than a fight against evil aliens or mega-corporations, Lem's heroes strive against the very world around themselves. They may succeed or fail at the tasks given them in each story, but their heroism (or lack thereof) is implicit in how they uphold their own ideals in the face of adversity, rather than in what they actually accomplish. Wonderful stuff.
Solaris (Score:1)
The only good thing about going to college was my Sci-Fi East and West course. It examined cultural differences between the east and the west via their science fiction. We had to read Solaris, and I loved it. Lem is a great writer. Anyone going to the University of Pittsburgh is recommended to take that class. We even got to watch The Fly, The Terminator, and Metropolis.
c.
Re:Which book is this? (Score:1)
Cyberiad better than Solaris (IMO) (Score:1)
The stories draw on folklore, philosophy, and mathematical thought in creating a universe that is amusing and humourous, but at the same time profoundly disturbing. One cannot help draw parallels between what's happening in the pages, and current affairs (of the world in general, and the cyber-industry in particular.) These stories seem just as relavant today as they were in 1967, when they were first published. A must read for all cyber-drones
:^>
Re:Stanislaw Lem is SF best kept secret (Score:1)
J. G. Ballard.
Re:Russian?! (Score:1)
Also, "Solaris" was made into a movie. In Russian, IIRC.
Solaris film versions & Lem's better short fiction (Score:1)
Lem's _Return From The Stars_, _Fiasco_, _Cyberiad_, _Prix the Pilot_, and all his other long fiction deserves the mention it gets here. Still, for my money, his short stories are much better. Go read _Imaginary Magnitude_, with its tales of transhuman MI philosophers and their meta-languages. Go read _One Human Minute_, with its precognitive bacteria, X-ray pornography, and the prescient short "Weapon Systems of the 21st Century." All of these far outshine his longer works.
Re:The prequel was better (Score:1)
Fantastic Planet (Score:1)
"I'm on a mission to escape from what my life has been"-failure
http://failure.org
The eye! The eye! (Score:1)
could think was that it was like some kid had
just learned about sepia and other "false-color"
printing, and was running hog-wild: "look what I
can do!" in fifty different color combos)
I imagine they took that tedious section out in later re-releases and video. It was utterly pointless. At least Solaris' tunnel scenes meant something (lo-o-ong drive)
Re:Which book is this? (Score:1)
Re:Fiasco also good. (Score:2)
Stanislaw (Score:1)
Yes, good stuff (Score:1)
It seems like one of Lem's big themes is that human understanding is finite and there are just some things that we (currently) can't grasp. Aliens are well, alien - see "Solaris" and "Eden" for example. And the whole series of computer history "lectures" where man can't comprehend the end product of the evolution he initiated.
I read some of the Strugatskis' stuff a long, long time ago. I don't recall them being such slow going as some of the Lem stuff, but they weren't exactly gripping page turners, either. I think maybe Slavic writers just aren't real beach reading.
BTW, Hollywood is remaking the movie "Solaris", supposedly going back to the book as a source, not the Russian (?) production. I can't see how anyone (Hollywood in particular) could make an interesting adaptation of the book to film.
Lem likes playing with ideas, but about half his stuff wouldn't qualify as a light read. If you couldn't stand "Neuromancer", "A Clockwork Orange", A.E. van Vogt or E.E. Smith, you might find something like "Solaris" pure drudgery.
also check out the Cyberiad (Score:2)
Also highly recommended is The Cyberiad [amazon.com], subtitled Fables for the Cybernetic Age. Hilarious and also often profound, Lem's fables are the perfect bedtime stories for the thinking geek.
miles
Re:Fiasco also good. (Score:1)
Actually, Lem's quick-freeze "vitrifax" machine used to save the guy's life on Triton has a basis in science fact: one of the problems with "cryonic" suspended animation is that when human tissues are cooled below the freezing point of water, the ice crystallizes and cracks. When you thaw the tissue again, it is damaged beyond repair. But when water is cooled extremely rapidly, it can apparently become "vitrified" ice; the liquid form goes over to the solid form without the normal process of crystal formation.
I don't know all the details, but I'm sure Lem was pointing to that technique with his mechanism.
Stanislaw Lem and American SF (Score:2)
I love Lem's work. It derives from such a completely different tradition from Anglo SF and remains so beautifully written. Only Phillip K Dick wrote anything like it in Enlgish. My only criticism is the English translation, which wasn't from the Polish, but translated from the French translation.
I read it in French, and for those capable of doing so, I recommend it over the English version.
One of the things I see in this book is the question of whether we could ever identify a non-human intelligence if we found one. Just how alien is alien? Is Solaris intelligent? It certainly isn't human. This question is never answered, and it remains an open question today. Can we build an artificial intelligence without basically building an artificial human? Is any definition of intelligence possible without making reference to purely human abilities?
You won't find the answers in Lem's work, but you will find the question repeated over and over.
Re:Stanislaw Lem is SF best kept secret (Score:1)
Elgon
Lem described virtual reality in 1964 (Score:1)
schani
Lem is extraordinary writer (Score:1)
Lem and Dick (Score:1)
Directed by Andrey Tarkowski (Score:1)
Re:The Futurological Congress (Score:1)
Really good book, when I'm old and gray I hope to spend hours delving through all the pages of Lem's work.
Foreign books in Slashdot (Score:2)
__
Boring (Score:1)
__
200.1 (Score:2)
200.1 is the reduced-to-one-tenth shorter version. No so boring.
__
Re:Which book is this? (Score:1)
I read a review of a book about 5 or so years ago, it was about a book by some guy who may have been a scientist, it was sci-fi, and about people living inside a sun or something... i asked someone recently about this and he lent me Snowcrash, which was ok i guess but i dont think it was that.
Could it be David Brin's Sundiver? A good read, and the first book of Brin's excellent "Uplift" series (though I've only read the first of the two trilogies).
Re:The film is interesting too.. (Score:1)
If you want to see a movie that's echoes this movie to the point of ripping it off (badly) checkout the schlockfest that is Event Horizon.
*Very* similar in theme, if only it wasn't so stupid and confusing.
--
Re:Stanislaw Lem and American SF (Score:2)
my $0.02; (Score:1)
if you haven't read anything by Lem, you owe it to yourself to run to the nearest library or bookstore and get a copy of one of his books.
if you happen to like Matt Groening's Futurama, then you might want to start with Cyberiad or any of the stories involving Ijon Tichy, particularly Futurological Congress
if you're into "more serious" type of SF; if you like Blade Runner or 2001:A Space Odissey, then go with Solaris
if you are the kind of person who is intrigued by the idea of reviews of nonexistent (not-yet-written? ;-) ) books (i am, for one), go for Imaginary Magnitude or One Human Minute
in any case -- read something, you won't regret it!
Russian language in Poland (Score:1)
The advantage of this was that the Polish people were well equipped to tell the Russians what we thought of them (or rather "their politics" of course as the are Good People), in their own language.
The REAL jabber has the /. user id: 13196
Re:i saw solaris once on PBS (Score:1)
Re:Cyberiad better than Solaris (IMO) (Score:1)
The bitter end (Score:1)
I'll tell you why Lem cuts off the climax the way he does, at least according to my theory...
Then Communism came to Poland after WWII, it held a huge promise of equality, prosperity, Utopia made real... Fscking Guess WHAT happened then...
A big gaping hole of a let-down!
Our grandparents (Lem's generation) fought and died, and helped bring in the Communists based on that promise, and got their beloved nation hung out to dry for it.
Lem's style is just a little bit of payback.
Same with Vonnegut, who repeatedly paints the world as mean, insensitive, discompassionate and nonesensical. His influence? Being a 19 year old soldier, fresh from 'the farm', cleaning up charred bodies in the fire-bombed ruins of Dresden.
Lem's experience of the world certainly coloured his work. Since Communism came into Poland, the cynical expectation of a let-down has become part of the culture.
The REAL jabber has the /. user id: 13196
Re:The tunnels! The tunnels! (Score:1)
I saw it with my brother-in-law at a theater that made a big deal about it being "uncut." This is one case where some cutting was desperately needed.
Lem's works are great. Solaris left me with a lingering melancholy. A strange story, both in content and form.
ChuckleBug
From Russia With Love, or Lem isn't the only secre (Score:1)
There was a scientific SF (Azimov, Clark), a militaristic SF (like some of the Heinlein's books); magical SF (Tolkien, Merritt, Le Guin, Moorcock (sp?) and many others); "faschist" SF, where hero saves a virgin from the alien scum
Lem is the master of psychological SF; I can remember Alfred Bester and some of the Henry Kuttner (I like him VERY MUCH, try to find "Fury" and short stories) and Poul Andersson stories out of English-language SF writers.
There were two Russian brothers, Arkady and Boris Strugatzky. Their prose is one of the best examples of the psychological SF; you can find texts of their works in Russian at:
http://www.kulichki.com/moshkow/STRUGACKIE/
Also, English translations of some of their books are available at:
http://www.kulichki.com/moshkow/TRANSLATION/
Long live Internet!
Re:my $0.02; (Score:1)
Anyway, his short stories (I like them the best) are great read for people having urge for some laughs. But still I don't know whether the translations are any good if there are any (I read him in polish).
Other "serious" SF writers? (Score:2)
I kept books by these guys:
Stanislaw Lem
Phillip K Dick
JG Ballard
Karel Capek
And there are a other well-represented authors on the shelf who dabble in sci-fi once in a while: e.g.,
Italo Calvino
Jorge Louis Borges
Haruki Murikami
Looks like my tastes are getting a little pretentious as I get older. Anyone want to point me at other "literary" SF authors?
Hear Ye (Score:2)
Then there's the one full of reviews of non-existent publications by non-existent authors. Brilliant stuff!
Lasting Value (Score:2)
I Disagree About Rucker (Score:2)
Don't even get me started on William Gibson!
Re:The tunnels! The tunnels! (Score:1)
I think Lem invented Virtual Reality first too... (Score:1)
I am Hungarian so I don't know whether Lem's 'Summa Technologie' is available in English or not. My Hungarian translation is based on the 2nd edition from 1966(!) and it deals with the 'future'. It's sub title is 'Science, Civilization, Future'.
It is not sci-fi. It is philosophy, and not a very easy reading.
Chapter VI is about 'Phantomology'. The base question of this chapter: '... how can a reality be created that is indistinguishable from normal reality, but obeys different laws?'
Lem then examines the possibilities and the consequencies of such a reality. How can it affect our life and future.
As computers were not commonplace then, this 'phantomology' is not based on computers.
Nobody seems to know about this so I thought I mention it. I think at least some credit should be given to him!
Re:Which book is this? (Score:1)
This was the simi-prequel for his "Uplift" series.
It involved an expidetion into the sun and the POSSIBLE discovery of plasma based life there.
I tend to think that it probabally was it Baxter book though, because it seemed closer to what you described.
James
looks like Lem isn't as unknown as all that (Score:1)
Re:Solaris available on the net? & copyright issue (Score:2)
Re:Which book is this? (Score:1)
Check out the fortune database (Score:1)
Re:Solaris available on the net? & copyright issue (Score:1)
Solaris vs Dune (Score:1)
The usual cliches... (Score:1)
This is the most common cliche when American reviewers write about East European science fiction. Does every West European sci-fi book tell about capitalism? We had a long thread about Solaris on our mailing list just recently. The biggest debate was about the ending of the Tarkovsky's film when compared to the ending in the book. To begin, surf to the first message [mail-archive.com] on the subject (in the archive of our mailing list Commie).
Plays on the name... (Score:1)