Misplaced Pages

Telek

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.
This article is about the short story by Jack Vance. For the singer from Papua New Guinea, see George Telek. For the Romanian village of Teleac, called Telek in Hungarian, see Budureasa. Short story by Jack Vance
"Telek"
Short story by Jack Vance
Genre(s)Science fiction
Publication
Published inAstounding Science Fiction
Publication dateJanuary 1952

Telek is a science fiction novella about telekinesis by American author Jack Vance. It was first published in the January 1952 issue of Astounding Science Fiction.

Plot summary

In the near future, humanity is divided into two groups: normal humans and Teleks. Teleks have the ability to move objects using only the power of their minds. The telekinetic ability is said to be partly hereditary and partly learned. The story takes place sixty years after the Teleks first appeared; most of the four thousand Teleks are second-generation, having acquired the ability shortly after birth. The Teleks live apart from normal humans in Glarietta Pavilion, a floating city. They collect precious metals from the moon and other planets which they use to purchase menial labor and other services from ordinary human beings.

The story opens with an attack on a Telek by an enraged worker, followed by the murder of the Telek. A witness, named Shorn, who is a member of a subversive society, arranges for the body to be disposed of. The murderer is caught and killed, presumably by the Teleks. The remainder of the story follows Shorn as he infiltrates Telek society and persuades a Telek to give him telekinetic powers. In the final scene, Shorn brings 265 normal humans disguised as Teleks to the first annual Telek convention, where he tricks the assembled Teleks into giving the humans telekinetic powers.

Publication history

Since its first publication in the January 1952 issue of Astounding, Telek has been reprinted a number of times, in Eight Fantasms and Magics (1969), Great Short Novels of Science Fiction (1970), When The Five Moons Rise (1992), and The World-Thinker and Other Stories (2005).

References

  1. Bibliography: Telek at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database Archived 2012-07-15 at archive.today
  2. Telek publication history at Author Wars

External links

Works by Jack Vance
Dying Earth
related
Demon Princes
Planet of Adventure
Durdane
Alastor
Lyonesse
Cadwal Chronicles
Ports of Call
Other novels
Big Planet novels
Short fiction
  • "Abercrombie Station"
  • "The Brains of Earth"
  • "Cholwell's Chickens"
  • "Dodkin's Job"
  • The Dragon Masters
  • "Gateway to Strangeness"
  • "The Gift of Gab"
  • The Houses of Iszm
  • The Last Castle
  • "Men of the Twelve Books"
  • The Miracle Workers
  • "Monsters in Orbit"
  • "The Moon Moth"
  • "The New Prime"
  • "Noise"
  • "Rumfuddle"
  • Son of the Tree
  • Telek
  • "Ullward's Retreat"
  • Autobiography
    See also


    Stub icon

    This article about a science fiction short story (or stories) published in the 1950s is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

    Categories: