Title: 2061: Odissey three
Author: Arthur C. Clarke
Original copyright year: 1987
Genre: science fiction
Comments: to my knowledge, this is the only available e-text of this book.
Source: scanned and OCR-read from a paperback edition with Xerox TextBridge Pro 9.0, proofread in MS Word 2000.
Date of e-text: September 5, 1999
Prepared by: Anada Sucka
Anticopyright 1999. All rights reversed.
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TO THE MEMORY OF
JUDY-LYNN DEL REY,
EDITOR EXTRAORDINARY,
WHO BOUGHT THIS BOOK FOR ONE DOLLAR
- BUT NEVER KNEW IF SHE GOT HER MONEY'S WORTH
Author's Note
Just as 2010: Odyssey Two was not a direct sequel to 2001: A Space Odyssey, so this book is not a linear sequel to 2010. They must all be considered as variations on the same theme, involving many of the same characters and situations, but not necessarily happening in the same universe.
Developments since Stanley Kubrick suggested in 1964 (five years before men landed on the Moon!) that we should attempt 'the proverbial good science-fiction movie' make total consistency impossible, as the later stories incorporate discoveries and events that had not even taken place when the earlier books were written. 2010 was made possible by the brilliantly successful 1979 Voyager flybys of Jupiter, and I had not intended to return to that territory until the results of the even more ambitious Galileo Mission were in.
Galileo would have dropped a probe into the Jovian atmosphere, while spending almost two years visiting all the major satellites. It should have been launched from the space shuttle in May 1986, and would have reached its objective by December 1988. So around 1990 I hoped to take advantage of the flood of new information from Jupiter and its moons...
Alas, the Challenger tragedy eliminated that scenario; Galileo - now sitting in its clean room at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory - must now find another launch vehicle. It will be lucky if it arrives at Jupiter merely seven years behind schedule.
I have decided not to wait.
Colombo, Sri Lanka,
April 1987
I
THE MAGIC MOUNTAIN
1
The Frozen Years
'For a man of seventy, you're in extremely good shape,' remarked Dr Glazunov, looking up from the Medcom's final print-out. 'I'd have put you down as not more than sixty-five.'
'Happy to hear it, Oleg. Especially as I'm a hundred and three - as you know perfectly well.'