Dying of the Light

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Dying of the Light
Recent reissue edition cover
Cover of first edition (Hardcover)
Author(s) George R. R. Martin
Country United States
Language English
Genre(s) Science fiction novel
Publisher Simon & Schuster
Publication date 1977
Media type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages 365 pp
ISBN ISBN 0-671-22861-7 (first edition, hardback)
OCLC Number 3121162
Dewey Decimal 813/.5/4
LC Classification PZ4.M381145 Dy PS3563.A7239

Dying of the Light is author George R. R. Martin's first novel, a work of science fiction published in 1977. Martin's original title for the novel was After the Festival. The title was changed before its first hardcover publication.;[1] it was nominated for both the Hugo Award for Best Novel in 1978,[2] and the British Fantasy Award in 1979.[3]

Contents

Plot summary [edit]

The book takes place on the planet of Worlorn, a world which is dying. It is a rogue planet whose erratic course is taking it irreversibly far from its neighboring stars into a region of cold and dark where no life will survive. Worlorn's 14 cities, built during a brief window when the world passed close enough to a red giant star to permit life to thrive, are dying too. Built to celebrate the diverse cultures of 14 planetary systems they have largely been abandoned allowing their systems and maintenance to fail.

The cast is a group of characters who are also flirting with death. Dirk t'Larien, the protagonist, finds life empty and of little attraction after his girlfriend Gwen Delvano leaves him. Most poignant of all, the Kavalar race, into which she has "married," is dying culturally. Their home planet has survived numerous attacks in a planetary war, and in response they have evolved social institutions and human relationship patterns to cope with the depredation of the war. Yet now that the war is long past, they find themselves trapped between those who would recognise that the old ways need to be reviewed for the current day and those who believe that any dilution of the old ways spells the end of Kavalar culture.

The battles, then, of all these varying actors are played out beneath the dying light falling on Worlorn. At the end many of the characters have died, though the author leaves some endings deliberately ambiguous. Nonetheless, they have all faced their fears of death and of life.

Title [edit]

The title is apparently drawn from Dylan Thomas' poem about death, Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night which contains the lines :

Do not go gentle into that good night.
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.

The book mentions a race of beings called the githyanki, and the name was taken from it for use with a much different race in the Advanced Dungeons & Dragons game. See the Githyanki article for more details on both versions.

The book was also serialized under the title After the Festival in Analog Science Fact/Science Fiction in April through July, 1977. The title refers to the festival of 14 worlds that precedes the story.

References [edit]

  1. ^ Time. 2011-04-20 http://tunedin.blogs.time.com/2011/04/20/grrm-interview-part-4-personal-history/ |url= missing title (help). 
  2. ^ "1978 Award Winners & Nominees". Worlds Without End. Retrieved 2009-07-25. 
  3. ^ "1979 Award Winners & Nominees". Worlds Without End. Retrieved 2009-07-25. 

Translations [edit]

  • Russian: "Умирающий свет" ("Dying Light"); Rusych: 1995, AST: 2001.
  • German: "Die Flamme erlischt" ("The Flame is going out"); Droemer Knaur: 1978
  • French: "L'Agonie de la Lumière" ("The Agony of the Light"); J'ai Lu
  • Polish: "Światło się mroczy" ("The Light is getting darker"); Zysk i S-ka: 2004
  • Spanish: "Muerte de la luz" ("Dying of the Light"); EDHASA: 1979
  • Dutch: "Het tanende licht", rereleased as "Het stervende licht"
  • Italian: "La luce morente"; Fanucci Editore: 1994
  • Portuguese: "A Morte da Luz"; ("The Death of the Light"); Editora LEYA: 2012
  • Traditional Chinese: "光之逝 " ("Fading of the Light"); 蓋亞文化(GAEA): 2010.01

External links [edit]