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Time Is the Simplest Thing

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town before returning to normal time. He encounters Riley, an old man nursing a decrepit pickup truck on a journey north. They travel together for a while, discussing the state of the world. Fishhook is operating a commercial monopoly on the science and technology found in the galaxy, disrupting commerce and daily life while people lapse into superstition and hatred of paranormals. Some paranormals are retaliating by using their powers to terrorize people. They meet a group of young levitators who fly around at night. Riley shoots at them with a shotgun, but Blaine tries to make peace using his telepathy. He bonds with one young girl, Anita. He becomes separated from Riley, and enters a trance which results in him returning to visit the alien, who he calls the Pinkness. The Pinkness is far older than the human race, and has been traveling the universe, exchanging minds with beings of all kinds. Blaine settles in to learn from the Pinkness, but is abruptly returned to his body which has been in a coma for days. He is in hospital next to Riley, who is severely injured.
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obsessed with eliminating Fishhook and all paranormal people. Harriet reveals that Riley was transporting a stolen "star machine" for Stone, but intended to give it to Finn for use in his campaign. Stone is killed by an unknown assailant, and the star machine is held by the police. Again Blaine is able to manipulate time, removing the star machine to the future, which is a formless void. Having done this, he is confronted by Kirby Rand, who has been tracking Blaine and the stolen machine. Fishhook is determined to maintain its monopoly at all costs. Finn is playing into their hands by keeping the technology illegal in the US.
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friend who persuades him to go to a high society cocktail party. Realizing that fleeing to the US is the obvious thing to do, he goes along with this, since Fishhook would not risk the scandal of arresting him at the party, and he might find an opportunity to do something his pursuers are not likely to expect. At the party he meets
204:, which is too difficult and dangerous and offers too little benefit, only to discover that there is another way to explore the universe. Some people possess the ability to travel with their minds to other worlds. Helped by new technology, they can explore another planet far across the galaxy while their bodies remain on Earth. 232:
his own mind, Blaine discovers that Finn had been secretly encouraging groups of paranormals to unleash a night of terror on Halloween, in order to turn the rest of the population against them. He leaves to spread a warning among the paranormals, but in the process is trapped in an icy storm and almost freezes to death.
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name of a greater good, but using questionable methods. There is a discussion with a Catholic priest on the nature of superstition, good, and evil. In the end the hero must create a new path for some to follow to escape persecution, while leaving the rest of humanity to deal with the world they have created.
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stimulate the mind to leave the body and explore the universe. They are accompanied by a small machine that can record experiences and gather physical samples. Some explorers have returned with minds affected by what they encountered. Those explorers have disappeared and never been heard from again.
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Shep Blaine is an explorer working for Fishhook, an organization exploiting paranormal powers to explore planets around other stars. Because of anti-paranormal prejudice in the US, Fishhook operates in northern Mexico. Explorers spend time in "star machines", which are boxes shaped and decorated to
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In the United States, he is separated from Harriet by local townspeople who identify him as a witch and intend to hang him. Again, something unexpected happens to the flow of time, placing him a short time in the past, which is a ghostly, decaying shadow of the world. He is able to walk out of the
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Blaine is about to be returned to Fishhook when he uses another part of the alien knowledge to escape. Confronting Finn, he uses his ultimate weapon: he trades minds with Finn. Finn is driven insane by the presence in his own mind of all the things he hates and fears. With Finn's mental state in
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The horrors that Finn experienced, and that drove him to try to eliminate all paranormals, contained a clue to the ability to travel to other stars physically as well as mentally. Blaine uses this to find an Earth-like planet and travel there to escape the storm. He passes this knowledge to the
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The novel includes long passages meditating on power, fear, and prejudice in people. The protagonist finds himself caught between people pursuing commercial power, some exploiting fear and anger for personal reasons, and others attempting to overthrow what they regard as evil institutions in the
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with the message "Hi pal! I trade with you my mind." Blaine immediately feels the alien mind alongside his own. Returning to his body, he knows he must get away before the recording of his trip is checked. However he is impeded, first by Kirby Rand, Fishhook's head of security, and then by a
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Harriet shows up with Godfrey Stone, one of the travelers who disappeared. He claimed to have seen a world free of evil, and was sent to an isolated institution where he could have lived in comfort. He escaped, as did Lambert Finn, another explorer who found a place of total evil and became
158:, first published in 1961. The story combines paranormal abilities with themes of space and time travel. The underlying theme is intolerance of ordinary people towards those with unusual abilities. 211:
Blaine returns from one expedition having encountered an intelligence that looks like a large pink blob sitting immobile in a room open to the sky. The blob greets him
257: 240:. Returning to Finn he finds that the man has committed suicide. He decides to remain on Earth until all the paranormals have made it to safety. 17: 480: 321: 294: 490: 485: 475: 415: 178: 470: 359: 314: 375: 399: 383: 188: 183: 431: 343: 307: 423: 407: 271: 89: 439: 8: 391: 258:"RYO Review: Time is the Simplest Thing by Clifford D. Simak - Worlds Without End Blog" 331: 201: 155: 130: 51: 351: 151: 79: 288: 217: 163: 299: 464: 447: 367: 137: 37: 237: 61: 200:
The prologue of the novel relates how humanity gives up the dream of
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other paranormals in the hope that they can escape the coming
131: 462: 329: 315: 322: 308: 36: 172:was nominated, under its original title 14: 463: 303: 295:Internet Speculative Fiction Database 24: 25: 502: 282: 481:American science fiction novels 416:Why Call Them Back from Heaven? 179:Analog Science Fiction and Fact 27:1961 novel by Clifford D. Simak 264: 250: 13: 1: 243: 7: 491:Doubleday (publisher) books 486:Novels by Clifford D. Simak 476:1961 science fiction novels 176:(when it was serialized in 31:Time Is the Simplest Thing 10: 507: 384:Time is the Simplest Thing 290:Time Is the Simplest Thing 189:Stranger in a Strange Land 170:Time Is the Simplest Thing 147:Time Is the Simplest Thing 18:Time is the Simplest Thing 338: 184:Hugo Award for Best Novel 154:novel by American writer 129: 121: 113: 105: 95: 85: 75: 67: 57: 47: 35: 195: 424:The Goblin Reservation 408:The Werewolf Principle 293:title listing at the 471:1961 American novels 432:Shakespeare's Planet 376:Ring Around the Sun 186:, which was won by 32: 400:All Flesh is Grass 272:"1962 Hugo Awards" 30: 458: 457: 332:Clifford D. Simak 156:Clifford D. Simak 143: 142: 106:Publication place 58:Cover artist 52:Clifford D. Simak 16:(Redirected from 498: 352:Cosmic Engineers 324: 317: 310: 301: 300: 276: 275: 268: 262: 261: 254: 182:), for the 1962 133: 97:Publication date 40: 33: 29: 21: 506: 505: 501: 500: 499: 497: 496: 495: 461: 460: 459: 454: 334: 328: 285: 280: 279: 274:. 26 July 2007. 270: 269: 265: 256: 255: 251: 246: 198: 152:science fiction 114:Media type 98: 80:Science fiction 43: 28: 23: 22: 15: 12: 11: 5: 504: 494: 493: 488: 483: 478: 473: 456: 455: 453: 452: 444: 436: 428: 420: 412: 404: 396: 388: 380: 372: 364: 360:Time and Again 356: 348: 339: 336: 335: 327: 326: 319: 312: 304: 298: 297: 284: 283:External links 281: 278: 277: 263: 248: 247: 245: 242: 218:Harriet Quimby 213:telepathically 197: 194: 164:Harriet Quimby 141: 140: 135: 127: 126: 123: 119: 118: 115: 111: 110: 107: 103: 102: 99: 96: 93: 92: 87: 83: 82: 77: 73: 72: 69: 65: 64: 59: 55: 54: 49: 45: 44: 41: 26: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 503: 492: 489: 487: 484: 482: 479: 477: 474: 472: 469: 468: 466: 450: 449: 445: 442: 441: 437: 434: 433: 429: 426: 425: 421: 418: 417: 413: 410: 409: 405: 402: 401: 397: 394: 393: 389: 386: 385: 381: 378: 377: 373: 370: 369: 365: 362: 361: 357: 354: 353: 349: 346: 345: 341: 340: 337: 333: 325: 320: 318: 313: 311: 306: 305: 302: 296: 292: 291: 287: 286: 273: 267: 259: 253: 249: 241: 239: 233: 229: 225: 221: 219: 214: 209: 205: 203: 193: 191: 190: 185: 181: 180: 175: 174:The Fisherman 171: 167: 165: 159: 157: 153: 149: 148: 139: 136: 134: 128: 124: 120: 116: 112: 109:United States 108: 104: 100: 94: 91: 88: 84: 81: 78: 74: 70: 66: 63: 60: 56: 53: 50: 46: 42:First edition 39: 34: 19: 448:Project Pope 446: 440:The Visitors 438: 430: 422: 414: 406: 398: 390: 382: 374: 366: 358: 350: 342: 289: 266: 252: 234: 230: 226: 222: 210: 206: 202:space travel 199: 187: 177: 173: 169: 168: 160: 146: 145: 144: 392:Way Station 344:The Creator 238:witch hunts 465:Categories 330:Novels by 244:References 62:Mel Hunter 138:795534323 90:Doubleday 86:Publisher 68:Language 71:English 451:(1981) 443:(1980) 435:(1976) 427:(1968) 419:(1967) 411:(1967) 403:(1965) 395:(1963) 387:(1961) 379:(1953) 371:(1952) 363:(1951) 355:(1950) 347:(1946) 48:Author 150:is a 122:Pages 117:Print 76:Genre 368:City 196:Plot 132:OCLC 101:1961 125:263 467:: 192:. 323:e 316:t 309:v 260:. 20:)

Index

Time is the Simplest Thing

Clifford D. Simak
Mel Hunter
Science fiction
Doubleday
OCLC
795534323
science fiction
Clifford D. Simak
Harriet Quimby
Analog Science Fiction and Fact
Hugo Award for Best Novel
Stranger in a Strange Land
space travel
telepathically
Harriet Quimby
witch hunts
"RYO Review: Time is the Simplest Thing by Clifford D. Simak - Worlds Without End Blog"
"1962 Hugo Awards"
Time Is the Simplest Thing
Internet Speculative Fiction Database
v
t
e
Clifford D. Simak
The Creator
Cosmic Engineers
Time and Again
City

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