Afbeelding van de auteur.

Walter M. Miller, Jr. (1923–1996)

Auteur van Een loflied voor Leibowitz

65+ Werken 13,777 Leden 339 Besprekingen Favoriet van 19 leden

Over de Auteur

Miller's participation in the bombing of Casino, Italy, during World War II apparently had a lasting impact on the writer, for his only novel, A Canticle for Leibowitz (1960), is rife with images of massive destruction caused by war. Miller began writing short stories in 1950 while recovering from toon meer an automobile accident, and most of his writing was done between 1950 and 1960. Often regarded as one of the best science fiction novels ever written, A Canticle for Leibowitz is a complex, beautifully written book that traces human history from a twentieth-century nuclear war forward to another war in a.d. 3781. It stands as one of the best examples of the fear that millions of people have of the power of nuclear weapons and the aftermath of nuclear holocaust. Richly symbolic and multilayered, the novel lends itself to critical commentary more than do most popular works of literature. Critic John B. Ower remarks that, perhaps because of his conversion to Catholicism, "Miller's religious belief is complex and comprehensive enough to contain within itself the dark misgivings, the ironies, and the ambiguities of our deeply disturbed century." (Bowker Author Biography) toon minder

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Werken van Walter M. Miller, Jr.

Een loflied voor Leibowitz (1955) 11,796 exemplaren
The Best of Walter M. Miller, Jr. (1980) 382 exemplaren
Beyond Armageddon (1985) — Redacteur — 194 exemplaren
The view from the stars (1965) 167 exemplaren
Conditionally Human (1979) 128 exemplaren
The Darfsteller and Other Stories (1980) 55 exemplaren
Death of a Spaceman (1954) 20 exemplaren
The Darfsteller [novella] (1955) 18 exemplaren
The lineman [short story] (1957) 8 exemplaren
Crucifixus Etiam (1953) 7 exemplaren
Check And Checkmate (2010) 7 exemplaren
The Hoofer (2010) 7 exemplaren
It Takes A Thief (1952) 5 exemplaren
Dark Benediction [short story] (1951) 5 exemplaren
The Ties That Bind (2010) 5 exemplaren
Dumb Waiter [short story] (1952) 5 exemplaren
A Canticle For Leibowitz {story} (1955) — Auteur — 5 exemplaren
Way of a Rebel (2015) 3 exemplaren
The Big Hunger (1952) 3 exemplaren
The Will (1953) 3 exemplaren
MillemondiEstate 1995 3 exemplaren
Blood Bank (1952) 3 exemplaren
I, Dreamer [short story] (1953) 2 exemplaren
The Last Canticle {novella} (1957) 2 exemplaren
God Is Thus {story} — Auteur — 1 exemplaar
Check and Checkmate 1 exemplaar
The Song Of Marya 1 exemplaar
The Yokel 1 exemplaar
Bitter Victory 1 exemplaar
Let My People Go 1 exemplaar

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The Road to Science Fiction #4: From Here To Forever (1982) — Auteur — 129 exemplaren
Spectrum 5 (1952) — Medewerker — 125 exemplaren
The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: 5th Series (1956) — Medewerker — 121 exemplaren
The Worlds of Science Fiction (1963) — Medewerker — 113 exemplaren
SF: The Best of the Best (1967) — Auteur, sommige edities108 exemplaren
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Earth in Transit (1976) — Medewerker — 16 exemplaren
The New Awareness: Religion Through Science Fiction (1975) — Medewerker — 16 exemplaren
The Best Science Fiction Stories: 1954 (1954) — Medewerker — 11 exemplaren
Year's Best Science Fiction Novels: 1953 (1953) — Medewerker — 11 exemplaren
Die besten Science Fiction Geschichten (1962) — Auteur, sommige edities11 exemplaren
Astounding Science Fiction 1952 04 (1952) — Medewerker — 11 exemplaren
Masters' Choice 2 (1969) — Medewerker — 11 exemplaren
Østenfor sol : 38 fantastiske fortellinger fra hele verden (1969) — Medewerker — 11 exemplaren
Astounding Science Fiction 1951 05 (1951) — Medewerker — 9 exemplaren
Ikarus 2002 (2002) — Medewerker — 8 exemplaren
Science Fiction Stories 12 (1980) — Medewerker — 7 exemplaren
Ikarus 2001. Best of Science Fiction. (2001) — Medewerker — 7 exemplaren
Amazing Stories Vol. 27, No. 6 [August-September 1953] (1953) — Medewerker — 7 exemplaren
Science Fiction Stories 5 (1970) — Medewerker — 5 exemplaren

Tagged

Algemene kennis

Leden

Discussies

Second Round: A Canticle For Leibowitz (Miller) in Consensus Press (november 2022)
Leibowitz: what's the appeal? in Consensus Press (oktober 2022)
A Canticle for Leibowitz (Book 10) discussion in Group Reads - Sci-Fi (februari 2014)

Besprekingen

Having read his excellent short story collection, I had high hopes for his seminal post-apocalyptic novel. Unfortunately, this has been inconsistently enjoyable and is another example of trying to gel too many things - in this case philosophy, christian mythology, satire and post-apocalyptic dystopia - into one book and not landing with any of them except the setting.

The writing is a dull, meandering mess of often garbled passages (sometimes deliberately in a poor contribution to his attempt to satirise) that rarely contribute to progressing any sense of story or idealism. Sometimes it's clear what Miller is trying to convey with his thoughts and ideas, but usually it ends up a mess.

The characters are fun characactures and Brother Francis' story is the stand out and has the feel of classic parable, with moments of light comedy. But after the tale moves forward in time, there's not much to enjoy. The second act plods along laboriously, with at least some fun connections to what came before and interesting thoughts about the cyclical nature of society, history and technology. A few parallels to history did at least add small value in being thought provoking, but weren't enough to sustain a story over the course of an entire novel. I had hoped it was just the middle Act which bogged things down, but it actually proceeded to get worse and ever more pointless in the final third.

A nice idea which failed to satisfactorly develop and succeeded only in the author showing off his latin and ability to meaninglessly philosophise, with only some interesting thoughts on cyclical history to save it.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
KevDS | 308 andere besprekingen | May 24, 2024 |
Having just come from back from a trip from Cyprus which saw me admiring old and venerable iconostasis, listen to the eerie chants of mass goers behind closed church doors and getting glimpses of the devout kissing pictures of saints, a reread of A Canticle Of Leibowitz was just was the doctor ordered, so to speak.
This book gives me the goosebumps still and because of my recent experiences in and around Byzantine churches, the (re)reading experience was amplified.
The setting is post-deluge - civilization had been utterly destroyed in a nuclear holocaust- and it is a sort of Christian order, the order of the St. Leibowitz that becomes the caretaker and perhaps more importantly the interpreter of past knowledge. The parallels between the Christian church after the destruction of the Roman Empire are striking, by the way.
“From the monster Fallout - deliver us.”
“From the spirit of fornication - deliver us.”
“From the Strontium, the Casium, the Cobalt- deliver us
It all kicks into gear when brother Francis finds among other items, a shopping list and a drawing of a circuit plan in an old fallout shelter which become objects of religious veneration.
It is then when taken out of context, we realize how easily the banal, the trivial is recognized as the ultimately profound, the lifeless becomes alive and ignorance becomes king. We, through the endless arrogance of contemporary societies are not aware that each and everyone of us, just as brother Francis and the whole church of St. Leibowitz, are forever dwelling inside universal concentric circles of dramatic irony. In that sense, ignorance permeates all there is and can’t be abdicated.
Walter Miller’s tale is a forever masterpiece, a classic of speculative fiction. Ah, what arrogance to suppose, to claim that anything can be forever-lasting .
Yet, Miller’s work ticks all the boxes. It is masterly eloquent, at times lusciously, then disturbingly ironic.
“What did the world weigh? It weighs but is not weighed. Sometimes it’s scales are crooked. It weighs life and labor in the balance against silver and gold. That will never balance. But fast and ruthless it keeps on that way. It spills a lot of life that way and sometimes a little gold. And blindfolded a king comes riding across the desert with a set of crooked scales, a pair of loaded dice and upon the flag is emblazoned vexileragis.”
The plot moves on like a steam engine, undisturbed and not caring for a reader’s preference. Driven by the stark reality of circumstance, it takes no prisoners. Simply wonderfully profound. Ah, I’m getting carried away.
A spiritu fornicationis, Domine, libera nos (in religious context fornication is often used as idolatry) Deliver me from the sin of idolatry.
Deo gratias.
… (meer)
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nitrolpost | 308 andere besprekingen | Mar 19, 2024 |
I read 3 of the 14 short stories:

1. You Triflin' Skunk!
2. The Will
3. Dark Benediction

Dark Benediction was the only one I liked. I'm generally not a fan of short stories.
 
Gemarkeerd
MXMLLN | 3 andere besprekingen | Jan 12, 2024 |
Not a thriller, but an emotional pressure cooker. This story takes place in the interim between the beginning and end of "A Canticle for Leibowitz"; it seems to describe the difficulties of recovering the lost civilization. While there's a lot of pessimism in this book, Miller does give us a relatively believable structure for the various attempts at a new civilization. Sadly, he doesn't give us much hope for any quick revival. What made the story tolerable for me, and kept me reading, was the in-depth exploration of the mental and emotional states of most of the characters--most of it pretty dark, but sadly realistic.… (meer)
½
 
Gemarkeerd
majackson | 9 andere besprekingen | Nov 29, 2023 |

Lijsten

1950s (1)
1960s (1)

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Statistieken

Werken
65
Ook door
55
Leden
13,777
Populariteit
#1,680
Waardering
3.9
Besprekingen
339
ISBNs
150
Talen
16
Favoriet
19

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