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The Black Flame (1936)

by Stanley G. Weinbaum

Other authors: See the other authors section.

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1197242,713 (3.46)2
Toward the end of the Twentieth Century-so say historians of the age of the Second Enlightenment-civilization died in a blaze of atomic and bacterial warfare. Barbarism followed the holocaust, the Dark Centuries during which humanity rested and prepared for a charge to new heights of development. Amid the ruins of one civilization, another and greater slowly grew. Old records were rediscovered, new knowledge was added to that of the Ancients. Then came the discovery of immortality, and Joaquin Smith and his especially beautiful sister, Margaret, began their search for power-and the story of the Black Flame begins. Black Margot, they called her, this most beautiful woman of the Immortals, "a black flame blowing cold across the world." The Black Flame, loved by men, hated by women-vibrantly alive, yet bored with living-restless as though demon-driven-who did not age, who remains untouched by the passing of time. In Margot of Urbs, Stanley G. Weinbaum has created one of the most fascinating characters in science fiction. There are others-good, honest Hull Tarvish of the "mountainies"-old Einar, who rediscovers atomic energy-Tim Connor, who awakens from a thousand year sleep, a victim of enforced electrolepsis, a man from the forgotten past-Evanie Sair, the Sorceress-Joaquin Smith, the Master-Martin Sair, the giver of life-Jan Orm who leads a revolution, and others.Contains "The Black Flame" and "Dawn of Flame".… (more)
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» See also 2 mentions

English (6)  French (1)  All languages (7)
Showing 1-5 of 6 (next | show all)
I love Weinbaum's short fiction, but the two novels I've now read were both disappointing. The first third of this is comically bad golden age dreck; the second two thirds is a bit better, offering a few potentially thought provoking concepts around the nature of dystopia, but in the end doing nothing with them. ( )
  clong | Jul 25, 2024 |
Period piece, dripping with patriarchy, sexism, and eugenics. ( )
  VictoriaGaile | Oct 16, 2021 |
"The mountainies pay taxes to no one."
"And no one builds them roads, nor digs them public wells. Where you pay little you get less, and I will say that the roads within the Empire are better than ours." ( )
  Jon_Hansen | Dec 29, 2020 |
I red this long ago, since it was in my father's collection, so I do not recall it all. I remembered the Black Flame as character who was the daughter of the leader of a revolt of the semihuman creatures of this post-holocaust world, but on rereading a bit of it, I see I was wrong. Black Margot is the the sister of the ruler of this world, and it is another women who is the daughter of the former rebel leader.What I really recall is not the events this story so much as the brief vivid account of the former rebellion. ( )
  antiquary | Feb 28, 2017 |
Nicely done Rip Van Winkle might save the future story, written in a style that says "Wow, if Weinbaum had lived. . . ." Ignore the self-congratulatory introduction by Moskowitz and just start into the story--you'll have a nice read. ( )
  Prop2gether | Mar 3, 2010 |
Showing 1-5 of 6 (next | show all)
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» Add other authors (4 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Stanley G. Weinbaumprimary authorall editionscalculated
Walotsky, RonaldCover Artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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Toward the end of the Twentieth Century-so say historians of the age of the Second Enlightenment-civilization died in a blaze of atomic and bacterial warfare. Barbarism followed the holocaust, the Dark Centuries during which humanity rested and prepared for a charge to new heights of development. Amid the ruins of one civilization, another and greater slowly grew. Old records were rediscovered, new knowledge was added to that of the Ancients. Then came the discovery of immortality, and Joaquin Smith and his especially beautiful sister, Margaret, began their search for power-and the story of the Black Flame begins. Black Margot, they called her, this most beautiful woman of the Immortals, "a black flame blowing cold across the world." The Black Flame, loved by men, hated by women-vibrantly alive, yet bored with living-restless as though demon-driven-who did not age, who remains untouched by the passing of time. In Margot of Urbs, Stanley G. Weinbaum has created one of the most fascinating characters in science fiction. There are others-good, honest Hull Tarvish of the "mountainies"-old Einar, who rediscovers atomic energy-Tim Connor, who awakens from a thousand year sleep, a victim of enforced electrolepsis, a man from the forgotten past-Evanie Sair, the Sorceress-Joaquin Smith, the Master-Martin Sair, the giver of life-Jan Orm who leads a revolution, and others.Contains "The Black Flame" and "Dawn of Flame".

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