When man tackles the first really long journey - across twenty-six trillion miles of uncharted space - to the nearest star, it will take him two hundred years to complete the flight. Not until the sixth generation nears maturity will the starship reach its destination. Around this fascinating theme, Milton Lesser has woven a tale of the first starship's final days of flight. He pictures the ship as a hollowed-out asteroid composed of four concentric circles - a world in which civilization has deteriorated and superstition ...
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When man tackles the first really long journey - across twenty-six trillion miles of uncharted space - to the nearest star, it will take him two hundred years to complete the flight. Not until the sixth generation nears maturity will the starship reach its destination. Around this fascinating theme, Milton Lesser has woven a tale of the first starship's final days of flight. He pictures the ship as a hollowed-out asteroid composed of four concentric circles - a world in which civilization has deteriorated and superstition risen to a high pitch, making those within unaware of the fact that they are traveling through space or that their journey is destined to end. All Mikal knew when he embarked on the "Journey of the Four Circles" was that every eighteen-year-old from Astrosphere, the outermost circle, must visit each of the other circles if he hoped to become an Enginer. But before he completed his trip, he unearthed startling truths that threw the four circles into a state of chaos. Gradually Mikal discovered that unless the people of the four circles took immediate action the ship was doomed to crash. Mikal's desperate efforts to unite the four circles in order to save their world is a story of rising tension and clashing interests. Not only is this a tale of man's triumph over the barriers of space, but a fabulously exciting epic of civilization's victory over superstition and complacency. With subtle satire the author has written one of the most realistic and unforgettable stories ever to appear in the science fiction field.
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Seller's Description:
Good. No Jacket. pp. 212. High school library copy with library binding. Stamp on title page and bottom pages, pocket removed. Tape residue, inside covers, 3 stars front inside. Text very good.
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Seller's Description:
Fair. No Jacket. Library binding with dust jacket artwork on spine and front boards. Very well read, text good to very good. With stamps and pocket. Boards show wear, corner's bumped.
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Seller's Description:
Very Good-in Good+ dust jacket. Hardcover. 8vo. The John C. Winston Company, Philadelphia PA. 1953. Ix, 212 pgs. Decorated endpapers. First Edition/First Printing. Paul Calle designed DJ has shelf-wear present (spine nds lightly chipped, spine lightly faded and sunned) Bound in blue cloth boards with yellow titles present to the spine. Boards have shelf-wear present to the extremities. No ownership marks present. Text is clean and free of marks. Binding tight and solid. When man tackles the first really long journey-across twenty-six trillion miles of uncharted space-to the nearest star, it will take him two hundred years to complete the flight. Not until the sixth generation nears maturity will the starship reach its destination. Around this fascinating theme, Milton Lesser has woven a tale of the first starship's final days of flight. He pictures the ship as a hollowed-out asteroid composed of four concentric circles-a world in which civilization has deteriorated and superstition risen to a high pitch, making those within unaware of the fact that they are traveling through space or that their journey is destined to end. EB; 9.1 X 6.6 X 1.1 inches.
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Seller's Description:
Very Good in Very Good jacket. First edition. Very good in an about Very good dustwrapper. Book is rubbed at spine ends and corners, also spine edges, fade marks on front cover at upper side edge and upper corner, cover and foredges lightly soiled. Dustwrapper is rubbed and chipped at spine ends and all edges, cut-out at upper portion of front fold to correspond with fade marks, price clipped, lightly soiled. Jacket Design by Paul Calle, and Endpaper Design by Alex Schomburg.