(Mass Market Paperback - First Edition)
Michael Flynn has won widespread acclaim for his Firestar series - Harry Turtledove said: "As Robert A. Heinlein did and all too few have done since, Michael Flynn writes about the near future as if he'd been there and was bringing back reports of what he'd seen." But Flynn doesn't need the flash of futurity to write an exciting story, as he demonstrated in this, his first novel.
Set primarily in the present, with tantalizing flashbacks to the 1800s, In the Country of the Blind concerns a small group of American idealists who manage to actually build the Analytical Engine designed by Charles Babbage and use it to develop mathematical models that could chart the likely course of the future. When their calculations predicted a united Germany armed with unimaginably powerful bombs by 1939, the Charles Babbage Society kept it from ever happening. Soon they were working to alter history's course to their own liking in other ways. By the 1990s the Society has become the secret master of the world. But no secret can be kept forever, at least not without drastic measures. When her plans for some historic real estate lead developer and ex-reporter Sarah Beaumont to stumble across the Society's existence, it is just the first step into a baffling and deadly maze of conspiracies.
Originally published in the 1980s as a paperback original, In the Country of the Blind has been revised and updated for this new edition and now includes Flynn's article from Analog, "An Introduction to Cliology," about the ideas underlying the book. We are pleased to bring it to hardcover for the first time for those who have discovered his work in the years since its firstappearance in print.
First published in part as a serial and in part as a paperback original (1990), this novel of big ideas, now revised and updated by Flynn (Firestar; Lodestar; Rogue Star; etc.), explores the consequences of manipulating history. When Sarah Beaumont moves into an old Denver house, she learns that a previous owner, Brady Quinn, was killed in 1892 during a gunfight between two cowboys, seemingly an innocent bystander. Sarah's research into the mysterious Quinn leads her to a building where she finds some strange, abandoned machines, which turn out to be Babbage Analytical Engines (i.e., 19th-century computers). Soon Sarah is on the trail of the Babbage Society, founded before the Civil War, whose members use the science of Cliology to tamper with history. Some of them have formed a splinter group and created Ideons (later called memes) to control an unsuspecting public. With several friends, Sarah continues her research, only to find that they have all become targets of a relentless enemy. Intrigues and double-crosses abound, as various competing factions justify and adjust their practice of Cliology. Plot and character development, as one might expect, matter only insofar as they further the philosophical argument. In a thought-provoking, chart-filled appendix, first published in Analog, Flynn discusses the mathematics and biology of history. Fans of classical SF are in for a treat. Agent, Eleanor Wood. (Aug. 29) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
More Reviews and RecommendationsMichael Flynn is an Analog magazine alumnus whose fiction now appears regularly in all the major SF magazines. His major work of the 1990s was the Firestar series of novels.
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July 29, 2001: In Denver realtor Sarah Beaumont and her architect explore the possibilities of the old vacant house. They quickly find a reference to a late nineteenth century gunfight in which an innocent bystander, Brady Quinn, a former owner of this house, was the only victim. They also find a list of other seemingly unrelated events from the second half of the nineteenth and throughout the twentieth century. Finally, there is the word clilology, but neither knows what it means.
Unable to resist, Sarah begins to investigate the death of Brady. That leads her to Babbage?s analytical machines, 1880s computers. Soon her methodical research brings her to the attention of the Babbage Society, who control the world, but are split over how far to use their powers and what to do with Sarah.
This is a reprint of a late 1980s science fiction tale with a revised afterward, providing stronger insight and support to cliology so that those readers wanting more science and math will have that too. This reviewer, who never heard of cliology before, remains uncertain whether the afterward is satire like that of Professor Putts? R&D articles from the 1970s or the real thing. The story line is intriguing and well written as the Babbage Society forecasts the future and uses any means including assassination to alter the dynamics of their prediction and change what will happen. With the exception of Sarah, the characters represent plot devices to enhance Mr. Flynn?s theories yet they are cleverly interwoven into the tale. Fans of classic style science fiction will want to read IN THE COUNTRY OF THE BLIND.
Harriet Klausner
Michael Flynn has won widespread acclaim for his Firestar series - Harry Turtledove said: "As Robert A. Heinlein did and all too few have done since, Michael Flynn writes about the near future as if he'd been there and was bringing back reports of what he'd seen." But Flynn doesn't need the flash of futurity to write an exciting story, as he demonstrated in this, his first novel.
Set primarily in the present, with tantalizing flashbacks to the 1800s, In the Country of the Blind concerns a small group of American idealists who manage to actually build the Analytical Engine designed by Charles Babbage and use it to develop mathematical models that could chart the likely course of the future. When their calculations predicted a united Germany armed with unimaginably powerful bombs by 1939, the Charles Babbage Society kept it from ever happening. Soon they were working to alter history's course to their own liking in other ways. By the 1990s the Society has become the secret master of the world. But no secret can be kept forever, at least not without drastic measures. When her plans for some historic real estate lead developer and ex-reporter Sarah Beaumont to stumble across the Society's existence, it is just the first step into a baffling and deadly maze of conspiracies.
Originally published in the 1980s as a paperback original, In the Country of the Blind has been revised and updated for this new edition and now includes Flynn's article from Analog, "An Introduction to Cliology," about the ideas underlying the book. We are pleased to bring it to hardcover for the first time for those who have discovered his work in the years since its firstappearance in print.
First published in part as a serial and in part as a paperback original (1990), this novel of big ideas, now revised and updated by Flynn (Firestar; Lodestar; Rogue Star; etc.), explores the consequences of manipulating history. When Sarah Beaumont moves into an old Denver house, she learns that a previous owner, Brady Quinn, was killed in 1892 during a gunfight between two cowboys, seemingly an innocent bystander. Sarah's research into the mysterious Quinn leads her to a building where she finds some strange, abandoned machines, which turn out to be Babbage Analytical Engines (i.e., 19th-century computers). Soon Sarah is on the trail of the Babbage Society, founded before the Civil War, whose members use the science of Cliology to tamper with history. Some of them have formed a splinter group and created Ideons (later called memes) to control an unsuspecting public. With several friends, Sarah continues her research, only to find that they have all become targets of a relentless enemy. Intrigues and double-crosses abound, as various competing factions justify and adjust their practice of Cliology. Plot and character development, as one might expect, matter only insofar as they further the philosophical argument. In a thought-provoking, chart-filled appendix, first published in Analog, Flynn discusses the mathematics and biology of history. Fans of classical SF are in for a treat. Agent, Eleanor Wood. (Aug. 29) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
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I
The window was too damned dirty to look through. Sarah Beaumont glanced around the empty room and saw a rag in a corner. It was probably just as filthy as everything else in the old house. There were mouse droppings scattered about, cobwebs, fragments of plaster. In places, the ribs of the walls showed through the broken plaster. With a sigh of disgust, she walked over and picked up the rag and shook it. A spider crawled out, and she watched it go its way.
“How long has this house been vacant?” she asked.
“Five, six years.” That was Dennis French, her architect. He was rapping on the walls, looking for the supporting beams. He paused and studied the door frame; ran his fingers over the miter joints and nodded in approval. “Good, solid work, though. They sure knew how to build back then.”
“The good old days,” said Sarah absently. “When women knew their place.”
Dennis looked at her. “They still do,” he said. “Just more places, is all.”
She laughed. Returning to the window, she ran the rag over it. The grime was stubborn. It had had years in which to settle in. She managed to clear a circle in the middle of the pane and peered out at Emerson Street. “Can we refurbish the place? Bring it up to Code and all. That’s what I need to know. This neighborhood’s going to be the next to boom, and I want to be here first.” She had been late getting in on Larimer and Auraria. She was going to be first here, by God. Let the other developers follow her for a change.
She could look straight across the street at thesecond-floor windows there. Those houses had been built on the same basic plan as this one. Onetime mansions turned rental apartments. A man stood in one of the windows, stripped to the waist, drinking something out of a can. He saw her looking and waved an invitation.
She ignored him and craned her neck to the left, pressing her cheek against the glass. She could just make out the dome of the state capitol, gleaming gold in the afternoon sun. The downtown skyscrapers, though, blocked her view of the mountains. She watched the traffic at the corner, counting cars-per-minute.
When she stood away from the window and clapped the dust from her hands, Dennis had already left the room. She could hear him tapping away down the hall.
“How does it look?” she called. She found her clipboard and jotted a few notes.
“Utilities look good,” she heard him answer. “No computer ports, naturally; but we can put those in when we upgrade the rest of the wiring. Sixty-four-kilobyte ISDN channels.”
She followed his voice down the hall and found him in one of the other bedrooms. He was poking at a hole in the wall. “There’s still piping in the walls for the old gas mantles.” He looked at her and shook his head. “This must have been a swank place a hundred years ago, before they messed it up. There’s a servants’ stairwell down the end of the hall.” He pointed vaguely.
“I’ve got a list of previous owners at home,” she told him. “One of the old-time silver barons built the place, but the Panic came along a few years later and he had to sell out.”
“Easy come, easy go.”
“You’re right about the workmanship. If I could find the sonofabitch who painted over the parquet flooring on the main staircase…” She loved good workmanship, and that staircase had been the handiwork of a master joiner.
Dennis nodded. “I know what you mean. When they made this place into a boardinghouse and subdivided the rooms, they paneled right over the original walls. Can you imagine that? You should see the wainscoting! Here.”
He pulled on a section of drywall and it came away. Bits of plaster and gypsum fell to the floor, along with some nails and loose scraps of paper. The original wall behind it was in bad shape. The wainscoting was partially destroyed and there were holes in the plaster, but Sarah could imagine what it must have looked like when it had been new.
The papers on the floor caught her eye. A yellowed newspaper clipping. She picked it up and found a torn sheet of foolscap held to it by a rusty staple.
“What are those?” asked Dennis, brushing his hands and standing up.
“A list of dates. Looks like someone’s crib notes for a history test and…” She read the headline on the clipping. “An 1892 story from the old Denver Express.” She handed the foolscap to Dennis and read through the rest of the news story. “A gunfight,” she told him. “Two cowboys on Larimer Street. Neither one was scratched, but a bystander was killed. An old man named Brady Quinn.”
She frowned. Quinn? She had seen that name recently. But where? It nibbled at the edge of her memory. Well, never mind. It would come back to her eventually.
“Odd sort of crib notes.”
“Hmm?” She glanced at Dennis, who was scowling over the foolscap. “What do you mean?”
“Well, the entries here are in two different handwritings, for one thing. The earlier items are in the old Spencerian style.”
“Someone started the list,” said Sarah. “Then someone else continued it.”
“And this, up at the top. What does it say? Biological? Diological?”
She glanced where he pointed. “Cliological. Cliological something. It’s smudged. I can’t make it out.”
“That’s a big help. What’s ‘cliological’?”
She shrugged. “Beats me. I never heard the word before.”
“And the mixtuer of entries is odd, too. Famous events and obscure events all jumbled together. How does the nomination of Franklin Pierce, or the election of Rutherford Hayes, or Winfield Scott’s military appointments belong on the same list as the election of Abraham Lincoln or his assassination, or the sinking of the Lusitania? Or…Hello!”
“What?” She moved behind him and read over his shoulder. He pointed. “‘Brady Quinn murdered,’” she read.
“Yep, your friend Quinn is right in there with Lincoln and Teddy Roosevelt. And with von Kluck’s Turn, whatever that was. Nineteen-fourteen. Must have been World War One.”
“No kidding. And ‘Frederick W. Taylor, fl. ca. 1900.’ Who was he?”
Dennis shook his head. “There are a half dozen entries here that I never heard of.”
“Well, that’s modern education for you. They don’t teach things anymore that our great-great-grandparents took for granted.” She tapped Dewey’s name on the list with her fingernail. “I think it started with Thomas Dewey’s whole-word method of reading. English isn’t Chinese and you can’t teach it that way. No wonder half the kids in this country grow up functionally illiterate. Some of my own teachers were damn near illiterate themselves.”
“I’ll bet they all had education degrees, though.”
“Which meant they knew all there was to know about teaching, except the subject.”
“When I was in graduate school,” Dennis remembered, “the education prof across the hall from us told me that that wasn’t important.” She looked at him and he shrugged. “True story.”
“That’s the way folks are. ‘If’n I don’t know about it, it ain’t important.’ Ask any engineer about writing sonnets, or ask any poet about stress and shear.”
Dennis chuckled and pointed to the list. “Or ask any architect about factor analysis. There’s a note at the bottom, where it’s torn. ‘Try orthogonal factor analysis…’”
“Orthogonal factor analysis? It’s a statistical method they use to define socioeconomic groups. Each group is defined by a cluster of mutually correlated traits. I think they use it in physical anthropology, too.”
Dennis raised one eyebrow and looked at her. “How’d you get to be so smart?”
She stopped and looked at him. “Because I wouldn’t let them cheat me!” she snapped. “I’ve had to fight for everything I’ve ever had. Because of my sex. Because of my color. I wouldn’t accept a second-rate education!”
The architect held his hands up. “I didn’t mean to sound patronizing,” he said. “Christ, you know me, Sarah. I had…Well, not the same problems, obviously; but at prep school, they didn’t expect the idle rich to want to tackle anything ‘hard.’”
“Yeah, I know,” she answered. “It ain’t yo’ fault yo’ was bo’n white ’n’ rich.”
“Hey, I said I was sorry. It’s just that you seem to know more things about more things than anybody else I’ve ever met.”
“Jack-of-all-trades, master of none,” she grunted. “You’re right. I’m sorry I took it the wrong way, but I decided a long time ago I would never apologize for knowing something.” She turned away from him. “I guess I just have a bump for curiosity.”
But it hadn’t always been that way, she remembered as they climbed down the stairs to the entry hall. Once, she had been as content as her playmates to coast through school, and life. Putting in the time, because the Law and her parents said she had to. “It was in the fifth grade, I suppose.” She ran a finger along the dirty drywall. “Our class took a field trip to the Museum of Science and Industry. That was…oh, more years ago than I care to remember.” Oh Lord, the South Side of Chicago. She could see herself careening wideeyed from exhibit to exhibit, a little girl in cornrows who could barely read. There had been an exhibit of calculating machines, ranging from the old key-set mechanisms all they way up to the latest in mini-desktops. There had been a walk-through model of a human heart. There had been a rock that had been brought back from another world!
“It was like being doused with ice water,” she told him. That trip had awakened her with a shock; and even now, through the telescope of years, she could feel the shiver of excitement she had felt then. “There was an enormous and fascinating world out there, and my teachers were not telling me about it! So…” She shrugged self-consciously. “…I explored it on my own. I cut classes, snuck off to the public library; later, to the University of Chicago library.” She’d had to con her way in there: no one would believe a little black girl had come there to read.
And she had devoured everything. African music, physics, law, medicine, Chinese history, statistics, German philosophy, computers. Everything. Some of her friends who knew what she was doing had asked her what she would ever use it for. She had treated the question with the same scorn she felt for the apathy behind it.
Use it? She wasn’t looking for training; she was looking for an education.
She had passed all her school classes, of course. She made certain she took all the tests. Most of her teachers, she was convinced, had deeply resented her success, because she had achieved it in spite of them. But there had been some…Ah, those had been teachers!
“Habits are hard to break, I suppose,” Dennis’ voice broke into her memories.
“Hmm? What do you mean?” They had reached the ground floor and paused at the base of the stairs.
“How many seminars and classes have you taken in the few years we’ve known each other?”
“Realty law. Wilderness survival. A dozen programming classes. I think the hacking was the most fun. I don’t know. I’ve lost count.”
“See what I mean?” he said. “I admire you. You haven’t stopped stretching yourself. Sometimes I wish I had your curiosity about things. I must have a score of books at home that I’ve always meant to read. I bought them all with good intentions; but, I never seem to find the time for them. My journals and technical reading take up all my spare time.”
“You can always make the time. It’s a matter of setting your priorities.”
Dennis ran his hand across his shirt pocket. “Yes. I suppose curiosity is like everything else. It comes with practice. Each entry on that list was marked with a one, two, or three. Maybe those are three ‘orthogonal factors.’” He folded the list and tucked it in his shirt pocket. “Well, maybe I’ll check some of this out. Find out what it means.”
Excerpted from In the Country of the Blind by Flynn, Michael Copyright © 2003 by Flynn, Michael. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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