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In May 2022 [[Blindboy Boatclub]] (via ''The Blindboy Podcast)'' released a scathing monologue critique of the novel in the form of a [[Postcolonial literary criticism|postcolonial literary study.]] Blindboy criticised multiple examples of [[Plot drift]].<ref>{{Citation |title=The strange English dystopian Sci Fi Novel about Ireland |date=2022-05-04 |url=https://open.spotify.com/episode/4L7LwF3yGdUw5oubh40wTN |language=en |access-date=2022-05-07}}</ref>
In May 2022 [[Blindboy Boatclub]] (via ''The Blindboy Podcast)'' released a scathing monologue critique of the novel in the form of a [[Postcolonial literary criticism|postcolonial literary study.]] Blindboy criticised multiple examples of [[Plot drift]].<ref>{{Citation |title=The strange English dystopian Sci Fi Novel about Ireland |date=2022-05-04 |url=https://open.spotify.com/episode/4L7LwF3yGdUw5oubh40wTN |language=en |access-date=2022-05-07}}</ref>

Henry Farrell wrote that Hoyle's book was really about modernity and England's post-war resistance to modernity. Hoyle's "satirical portrait of Ireland told British readers that the world was being transformed around them, and that even their most backwards seeming neighbour would outstrip them if they didn’t embrace modernity." The irony is that according to Farrell, Hoyle's vision from 1959 has come true as Ireland is now a modern and confident country, enjoying equal status with the United Kingdom in a shared political community, in contrast to Pro-Brexit conservatives who work to reverse the last few several decades in the UK.<ref>[https://crookedtimber.org/2019/08/14/ossians-ride/ Crooked Timber. "Ossian’s Ride" by Henry Farrell. August 14, 2019.]</ref>


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 12:28, 17 March 2024

Ossian's Ride
Cover of the first edition (UK)
AuthorFred Hoyle
Cover artistBrian Sanders
LanguageEnglish
GenreScience fiction
PublisherHeinemann
Publication date
1959
Media typePrint (book)

Ossian's Ride is a science fiction novel by British astrophysicist Fred Hoyle, published in 1959.

Plot summary

In the 1970 of this story, Eire has become an authoritarian police state, made somewhat acceptable to the population by the vast wealth flowing from a secret and forbidden science zone occupying a large area of the South-West. Here is based the mysterious 'Industrial Corporation of Éire' which has produced a range of new technologies. Its enigmatic founders are not Irish: they settled there and resist all attempts to find out who they are. A young British scientist agrees to be sent as a spy to find out just what is going on.

Although labelled as Science Fiction by the publisher, the bulk of the novel owes more to the thriller style of the John Buchan tradition, as the Cambridge hero battles across wild Irish landscapes fighting a series of murderous thugs and secret policemen.

The science fiction denouement is confined almost to the last chapter and foreshadows the theme of Hoyle's later A for Andromeda, though in a far more cursory manner. Also of note is the way the young hero seems to come to accept the notion of an authoritarian society ruled by a few self-appointed "supermen".

The link with the legendary Irish hero Ossian is peripheral to the plot and is explained near the end.[1]

Reception

Galaxy reviewer Floyd C. Gale rated the novel with five stars, saying that Hoyle's craftsmanship has "improved tremendously since his first effort" (The Black Cloud 1957); he described the novel as "a science-mystery-spy story that has no apparent forebear in the SF repertory."[2]

In May 2022 Blindboy Boatclub (via The Blindboy Podcast) released a scathing monologue critique of the novel in the form of a postcolonial literary study. Blindboy criticised multiple examples of Plot drift.[3]

References

  1. ^ Ossian's Ride, NEL Four Square Science Fiction edition of 1969
  2. ^ "Galaxy's 5 Star Shelf", Galaxy, February 1960, p.164.
  3. ^ The strange English dystopian Sci Fi Novel about Ireland, 4 May 2022, retrieved 7 May 2022