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Books with title The Songs of Distant Earth

  • The Songs of Distant Earth

    Arthur C. Clarke

    eBook (RosettaBooks, Nov. 30, 2012)
    Earth refugees threaten a peaceful space settlement in this influential novel from the Golden Age science fiction author of 2001: A Space Odyssey. More than two thousand years in the future, a small human colony thrives on the ocean paradise of Thalassa—sent there centuries ago to continue the human race before Earth’s destruction. Thalassa’s resources are vast—and the human colony has lived a bucolic life there. But their existence is threatened when the spaceship Magellan arrives on their world—carrying one million refugees from Earth, fleeing the dying planet. Reputed to be Arthur C. Clarke’s favorite novel, The Songs of Distant Earth addresses several fascinating scientific questions unresolved in their time—including the question of why so few neutrinos from the sun have been measured on Earth. In addition, Clarke presents an inventive depiction of the use of vacuum energy to power spacecraft—and the technical logistics of space travel near the speed of light. “Clarke’s simple, musical style never falters in this sobering yet far from bleak commentary on humanity’s longing for the stars. Highly recommended.” —Library Journal
  • The Songs of Distant Earth

    Arthur C. Clarke

    Mass Market Paperback (Del Rey, April 12, 1987)
    From the New York Times bestselling author of the Space Odyssey series comes a dazzling adventure of exploration and paradise lost. Just a few islands in a planetwide ocean, Thalassa was a veritable paradise—home to one of the small colonies founded centuries before by robot Mother Ships when the Sun had gone nova and mankind had fled Earth. Mesmerized by the beauty of Thalassa and overwhelmed by its vast resources, the colonists lived an idyllic existence, unaware of the monumental evolutionary event slowly taking place between their seas. . . . Then the Magellan arrived in orbit carrying one million refugees from the last, mad days on Earth. And suddenly uncertainty and change had come to the placid paradise that was Thalassa.
  • The Songs of Distant Earth

    Arthur C. Clarke

    Hardcover (Ballantine Del Rey, March 12, 1986)
    When the Magellan, the last refugee ship to have left Earth before its destruction, arrives at Thalassa, the people of Thalassa fear that the ship's millions of refugees will want to settle on their small world
  • The Songs of Distant Earth

    Arthur C. Clarke

    Paperback (Harpercollins Pub Ltd, Oct. 31, 1998)
    From the world's most famous science fiction writer, a poignant and vivid story of doomsday and beyond. The countdown to doomsday began with the discovery in 1956 of the neutrino, a particle with no mass and no charge. By the year 2001, the significance of this phantom particle was understood: it was a harbinger. A cosmic event was imminent, and would be close enough to touch. Soon the Sun would go nova; the demolition of Earth was assured. And so it happened in the year 3620. Over the centuries of knowing the end was at hand, humanity pulled together to launch probes into space. Primitive ships, at first, carrying embryos to distant systems, relying on machines to incubate and rear the first people of a virgin land beneath an alien sun. On Thalassa, after a journey of 200 years, a colony blossomed, only to fall silent again. On Earth the Lords of the Last Days lived with no need to care for the future of the world; it was the wildest of times, and the saddest. Last to leave was the Magellan carrying a million homeless; when cataclysm struck, its voyagers witnessed through telescopes the death of Earth and all its wonders, saw the Atlantic boil dry, the pyramids disintegrate, the land of Antarctica briefly bare of ice before fire consumed everything. Then the million slept. Five hundred years later, the Magellan must make planetfall to repair its quantum drive. Its sleepers awake to find themselves visitors to Thalassa, where a cvilization has, in fact, survived. A clash of cultures unlike any before brings danger, despair, and some very tough decisions for two different peoples far from Earth -- and its distant songs.
  • The Songs of Distant Earth

    Arthur C. Clarke

    Hardcover (Del Rey, April 12, 1986)
    None
  • The Songs of Distant Earth

    Arthur C. Clarke

    Hardcover (HarperCollins Publishers Ltd, March 15, 1986)
    The view of humanity as a space-faring species and never losing its home base.
  • The Songs of Distant Earth

    Arthur C. Clarke

    Hardcover (Del Rey Books, Jan. 1, 1987)
    None
  • The Songs of Distant Earth

    Arthur C. Clarke

    Mass Market Paperback (Del Rey, Oct. 12, 1986)
    Thalassa was a paradise above the earth. Its beauty and vast resources seduce its inhabitants into a feeling of perfection. But then the Magellan arrives, carrying with it one million refugees from the last mad days of earth. Paradise looks indeed lost....
  • Song of the Earth

    Sandy Barton, Janell York, Leading Edge Academy East Mesa Young Illustrators Club

    Paperback (Independently published, April 25, 2019)
    Stop! Be still! Take it all in! Song of the Earth celebrates the beauty and richness of the world we live in, the simple things, the natural wonders all around us. With rhythmic, descriptive text and deliciously refreshing illustrations, this book offers the reader a calm, reflective moment to appreciate the gifts of nature. Water color pieces created by young students are an inspiration to aspiring young illustrators.
  • The Songs of Distant Earth

    Arthur C. Clarke

    Paperback (Harpercollins Pub Ltd, July 31, 2001)
    None
  • The Songs of the Distant Earth

    Arthur C. Clarke

    Hardcover (Random House Value Publishing, June 22, 1993)
    None
  • Songs of Distant Earth

    Arthur C. Clarke

    Audio Cassette (Random House Audio, May 12, 1987)
    Thalassa was a paradise above the earth. Its beauty and vast resources seduce its inhabitants into a feeling of perfection. But then the Magellan arrives, carrying with it one million refugees from the last mad days of earth. Paradise looks indeed lost....From the Paperback edition.