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Other editions of book Letters from Atlantis

  • Letters from Atlantis

    Robert Silverberg, Tom Parker, Blackstone Audio, Inc.

    Audible Audiobook (Blackstone Audio, Inc., Nov. 1, 2000)
    It was a legendary island, a fantastic island. Atlantis. Or as its prince called it, Athilan. Roy had traveled through time with his partner, Lora, to find it - and now he was tantalizingly close to its shore. Time travel allowed Roy's consciousness to enter the mind of the heir to Atlantis' throne, and what he found disturbed him. Strange dreams. Impossibly futuristic inventions and machines. How could such an advanced city exist at this time? The rest of the world was, as Lora witnessed in her travels, a dark, barbaric land still thawing from the ice age. Roy had been preparing for the odd isolation of time travel, but nothing had prepared him for his final arrival on Atlantis - a shimmering city far beyond his imagination! Roy knew this island's fate. According to legend, it would vanish into the sea. Roy also knew he had a limited amount of time to decipher the strange message in the Prince's mind - visions of cataclysmic events, mysterious rites to a faraway star. If Roy was in an Atlantis unlike anything the researchers had predicted, then what were its secrets? And when would it be destroyed?
  • Letters From Atlantis

    Robert Silverberg

    eBook (iBooks, April 19, 2012)
    From School Library JournalGrade 9 Up-- In the future, scientists have developed a type of time travel in which the traveler's consciousness is transferred into the mind of someone actually living in the past--a useful way to observe history first hand. Roy has been sent into the mind of the Prince of Atlantis; Lora has been sent into the mind of a provincial governor existing at the same time. The title refers to Ray's letters to Lora, written after putting the Prince's mind to sleep and using his body. When Roy begins to feel lonely and depressed, he grows careless, and the Prince soon becomes aware of Roy's presence in his mind. Roy, revealing himself fully, breaks all rules of nonintervention and possibly sullies history. The premise is intriguing, and Silverberg's portrayal of Roy is convincing, especially his isolation and need for contact with another human. But Silverberg's vision of Atlantis is nothing new. He falls back on of-aliens-from-another-planet" cliche. He introduces, and then uses this excuse to explain away, without really exploring, topics such as why Atlantis was so technologically advanced, why racial hatred existed between the Atlantans and native earthlings, and why the earthlings kept no remembrance of Atlantis after its destruction. The triteness of these revelations betrays the freshness of the set-up. Readers will be ultimately disappointed because this could have been so much better than it is. --Susan M. Harding, Mesquite Public Library, TXCopyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.From AudioFileThis novella, written as a series of letters from time-traveler Roy Colton in Atlantis to a colleague elsewhere in the ancient world, is not well suited to audio. The first cassette, as Colton enters the mind of an heir to the throne and first surveys the wondrous city, is monotonous. The story picks up later as the prince notices the "demon" time-traveler hiding within his mind, setting up a confrontation and dialogue between them and giving Tom Parker the chance to go beyond the conversational tone of a letter. Parker effectively portrays both Colton and the prince, but the structure of the story gives him too little to do. J.A.S. © AudioFile 2000, Portland, Maine-- Copyright © AudioFile, Portland, Maine
  • Letters from Atlantis

    Robert Silverberg

    Paperback (Questar, June 1, 1992)
    On a mission to observe the fabled city of Atlantis through the mind of its royal heir, Ram, twenty-first-century time traveler Roy Colton soon becomes worried by Ram's dark dreams of the island's future destruction. Reprint.
  • Letters from Atlantis

    Robert Silverberg, Robert Gould

    Hardcover (Atheneum, Nov. 1, 1990)
    Two time travelers journey to 18,862 B.C. Atlantis, and from his secret vantage point in the consciousness of Atlantis' prince, Roy learns about a civilization so advanced it rivals the technology of modern times
  • Letters from Atlantis

    Robert Silverberg, Professor Grover Gardner

    MP3 CD (Blackstone Pub, June 1, 1999)
    Roy had been preparing for the odd isolation of time travel, but nothing had prepared him for his final arrival on Atlantis -- a shimmering city far beyond his imagination. The new technology had allowed Roy's consciousness to enter the mind of the heir to Atlantis' throne, observing history from the perspective of one of its people. And what Roy found disturbed him: strange dreams, impossibly futuristic inventions and machines. In the midst of a dark, barbaric world still thawing from the ice age, how could such an advanced city exist at this time? Roy knew this island's fate. According to legend, it would vanish into the sea. Roy also knew he had a limited amount of time to decipher the strange message in the Prince's mind, visions of cataclysmic events, mysterious rites to a faraway star. If Roy was in an Atlantis unlike anything the researchers had predicted, then what were its secrets? And when would it be destroyed?
  • Letters from Atlantis Lib/E

    Robert Silverberg, Professor Grover Gardner

    Audio CD (Blackstone Pub, Jan. 1, 2000)
    Roy had been preparing for the odd isolation of time travel, but nothing had prepared him for his final arrival on Atlantis -- a shimmering city far beyond his imagination. The new technology had allowed Roy's consciousness to enter the mind of the heir to Atlantis' throne, observing history from the perspective of one of its people. And what Roy found disturbed him: strange dreams, impossibly futuristic inventions and machines. In the midst of a dark, barbaric world still thawing from the ice age, how could such an advanced city exist at this time? Roy knew this island's fate. According to legend, it would vanish into the sea. Roy also knew he had a limited amount of time to decipher the strange message in the Prince's mind, visions of cataclysmic events, mysterious rites to a faraway star. If Roy was in an Atlantis unlike anything the researchers had predicted, then what were its secrets? And when would it be destroyed?
  • Letters from Atlantis

    Robert Silverberg, Professor Grover Gardner

    Audio CD (Blackstone Pub, April 1, 2013)
    Roy had been preparing for the odd isolation of time travel, but nothing had prepared him for his final arrival on Atlantis -- a shimmering city far beyond his imagination. The new technology had allowed Roy's consciousness to enter the mind of the heir to Atlantis' throne, observing history from the perspective of one of its people. And what Roy found disturbed him: strange dreams, impossibly futuristic inventions and machines. In the midst of a dark, barbaric world still thawing from the ice age, how could such an advanced city exist at this time? Roy knew this island's fate. According to legend, it would vanish into the sea. Roy also knew he had a limited amount of time to decipher the strange message in the Prince's mind, visions of cataclysmic events, mysterious rites to a faraway star. If Roy was in an Atlantis unlike anything the researchers had predicted, then what were its secrets? And when would it be destroyed?
  • Letters from Atlantis

    Robert Silverberg, Illus. by Robert Gould

    Hardcover (Atheneum, March 15, 1990)
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