- The Black Corridor
Infobox Book |
name = The Black Corridor
title_orig =
translator =
image_caption = Cover of the first edition
author =Michael Moorcock
illustrator =
cover_artist =Leo and Diane Dillon
country =United States
language = English
series =
subject =
genre =Science fiction novel
publisher =Ace Books
release_date = 1969
english_release_date =
media_type = Print (Paperback )
pages = 187 pp
isbn = NA
preceded_by =
followed_by ="The Black Corridor" is a
science fiction novel byMichael Moorcock , published in 1969, first byAce Books in the USA, as part of theirAce Science Fiction Specials series, and later byMayflower Books in the UK.It is essentially a novel about the decay of society and the deep personal and social isolation this has caused, and tells of a man fleeing through interstellar space from Earth, where civilisation is collapsing into anarchy and wars. The author uses techniques ranging from straight narrative to entries in the spaceship's log, dream sequences and sixties-style computer printouts.
Plot summary
Ryan is a tough-minded British businessman appalled by the breakdown of society at the end of the 20th century. He feels that he is one of the few sane men in a world of paranoiacs.
With a small group of family and friends, he has stolen a spaceship and set out for Munich 15040 (
Barnard's Star ), a planet believed to be suitable for colonisation. Now he keeps watch alone, with his 13 companions sealed in cabinets designed to keep them in suspended animation for the many years of the journey. He makes a daily report on each one: it is always 'Condition Steady'.Ryan is tormented by nightmares and memories of the violence on Earth; he starts to fear he is losing his grip on reality. The shipboard computer urges him to take a drug that eliminates all delusions and hallucinations; but he is strangely reluctant to use this drug.
Alternative interpretations of the ending
The book is deliberately ambiguous about certain events, and the ultimate fate of Ryan and his companions. Though Ryan's journey continues at the end of the book, it is a matter for debate as to what exactly has occurred. The ending can be taken a number of ways:
1. The people in the hibernation cabinets are all corpses, mostly killed by Ryan. Soon after takeoff their own paranoia surfaced and quarrels began. Ryan, as the alpha-male, was the last one standing, and continues his futile flight through darkness.
2. There never was a spaceship. Ryan's friends and family, too terrified to leave the apartment have been sucked into Ryan's fantasy of escaping to another world. Eventually, they've turned on one another until ultimately Ryan killed them and stashed their bodies. This is supported by both the first and last chapters as well as subtle pointers throughout.
3. Ryan, alone for so long in space, endures a psychotic episode, yet manages to pull through to a state of relative sanity, and the ship continues on its voyage. This interpretation means that the story can be read as a pared-down study of loneliness and its effects - isolation, lust, guilt, depression, murderous and suicidal thoughts, etc.
Authorship
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