Misplaced Pages

Ground Zero Man

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
1971 novel by Bob Shaw

Ground Zero Man
Cover of the first edition (publ. by Avon Books)
Art by Vincent Di Fate
AuthorBob Shaw
GenreScience fiction
PublisherAvon Books
Publication date1971

Ground Zero Man is a 1971 science fiction novel by British writer Bob Shaw. It was republished as The Peace Machine in 1985.

Plot summary

The plot follows the main character, Lucas Hutchman, an "undistinguished mathematician", who invents a machine that may detonate virtually instantaneously every nuclear bomb in the world, by inducing a "self-propagating neutron resonance". Overcoming technical and personal difficulties, Hutchman manages to build the device and to warn Earth's governments of its existence, but is tracked down and prevented from using it. At the end, Hutchman realises that rather than to the elimination of nuclear weapons, his invention just led to further investments in them, to create new bombs impervious to neutron resonance.

The ending "shows precisely and prophetically . . . the flaw in plans for 'star wars' energy-beam defences"

Reception

Dave Langford reviewed The Peace Machine for White Dwarf #65, and stated that "responsibility. Its grim conclusion shows precisely and prophetically (1976, remember) the flaw in today's plans for 'star wars' energy-beam defences."

Colin Greenland reviewed The Peace Machine for Imagine magazine, and stated that "includes revisions for a more nuclear conscious audience, but it's still largely quite a traditional thriller, as compulsive and characterful as anything by Shaw."

Reviews

  • Review by Roger Drayne (1971) in Locus, #97 October 1, 1971
  • Review by Peter Nicholls (1972) in Foundation, #2 June 1972
  • Review by Philip Stephensen-Payne (1977) in Paperback Parlour, February 1977
  • Review by Michel Jeury (1978) in Fiction, #293
  • Review by Debbie Notkin (1985) in Locus, #291 April 1985
  • Review by Chris Bailey (1985) in Vector 124/125
  • Review by Chris Morgan (1985) in Fantasy Review, April 1985
  • Review by Nicholas Mahoney (1987) in Paperback Inferno, #66
  • Review by Jack Fennell (unknown) in A Short Guide to Irish Science Fiction

References

  1. David Langford, "Spring Fever" in White Dwarf, issue 65, May 1985; also in Langford, David (2002). The Complete Critical Assembly. Cosmos Books. pp. 91–93. ISBN 1587153300.
  2. Langford, Dave (May 1985). "Critical Mass". White Dwarf. No. 65. Games Workshop. p. 10.
  3. Greenland, Colin (June 1985). "Fantasy Media". Imagine (review) (27). TSR Hobbies (UK), Ltd.: 47.
  4. http://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/title.cgi?5136
Categories: