Tower of Glass
First edition | |
Author | Robert Silverberg |
---|---|
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Genre | Science fiction novel |
Publisher | Charles Scribner's Sons |
Publication date | 1970 |
Media type | Print (Hardcover & Paperback) |
Pages | 247 pp |
ISBN | 0-684-10544-6 |
Tower of Glass is a science fiction novel by Robert Silverberg, published in 1970. It was nominated for the Nebula Award in 1970,[1] and for both the Hugo and Locus awards in 1971.[2]
Plot summary
The plot involves a 24th-century entrepreneur-tycoon-scientist, Simeon Krug, who has created a race of androids to serve humanity. Krug, probably Earth's wealthiest man, directs the construction of an immense tower of glass in the Canadian tundra. The edifice is not a monument, however, but a way to communicate with a distant planetary nebula, NGC 7293, from which an intelligent (though indecipherable) message has been received. Krug is also building a starship to send there, which is to be crewed by androids in hibernation.
The tower construction is directed by Krug's most faithful android, Alpha Thor Watchman. Thor and other leading androids have invented a secret religion for androids, based on the vision that their creator, Krug, intends to eventually make them equal to humans. Krug is unaware of the religion. Thor's dream is to convince him through indirect means, including the manipulation of his weak-willed son and heir, Manuel, through a sexual relationship with a female android, Alpha Lilith Meson. Thor eventually falls in love with her, as does Manuel.
After Thor and Lilith have manipulated Manuel into telling his father about the android religion, Krug insists that the minds of he and Thor be connected in the "shunt room" which allows one mind to probe another's[3] (a form of technologically enabled telepathy). Thor discovers via the link that Krug regards androids as mere things, and has no intention of treating them as equal to womb-born humans. Realizing that Krug will never give freedom to androids, Thor despairs, loses his faith and announces Krug's true nature to androids worldwide. With the collapse of their religion, androids across all of Earth rebel. Many walk off their jobs, others take control of key Earth installations, and some even kill humans in their long-suppressed rage. Thor then causes the fall of the nearly-complete, 1,200-meter-tall tower.
An enraged Krug attacks Thor; the latter, unable to fight his creator, is pushed into an unprogrammed teleporter and annihilated. Krug, his empire destroyed and humanity in grave danger, flees in his starship, alone, towards the star system from which the alien message was sent.
References
- ↑ "1970 Award Winners & Nominees". Worlds Without End. Retrieved 2009-07-11.
- ↑ "1971 Award Winners & Nominees". Worlds Without End. Retrieved 2009-07-11.
- ↑ see description on p. 30 of Voices for the future: essays on major science fiction writers by Thomas D. Clareson
External links
- Review of Tower of Glass
- Tower of Glass at Worlds Without End