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Book Details

Destiny Doll

71.4% complete
1971
2023
1 time
28 chapters
Book Cover
Has a genre Has an extract Has a year read Has a rating In my library 
13499
No series
Copyright © 1971, by Clifford D. Simak
No dedication.
The place was white and there was something aloof and puritanical and uncaring about the whiteness, as if the city stood so lofty in its thoughts that the crawling scum of life was as nothing to it.
May contain spoilers
The four of us, abreast, went down the hill to enter into another life.
No comments on file
Synopsis not on file
Extract (may contain spoilers)
In the morning we found Tuck's doll, where it had been dropped beside the trail.  It was in, plain view, not more than six feet off the path.  How we'd missed it before was hard to understand.  I tried to pinpoint the place, wondering if this were in the area where we had hunted for him.  Nut there was no landmark that stood out in my mind.

I had not really had a chance to take a good look at it before.  The only time I had really seen it had been that night when we had been penned inside the red-stone edifice at the outskirts of the city.  Now I did have a chance to look at it, to absorb the full impact of the sorrow that lay on that rudely carven face.  Either, I thought, the one who carved it had been a primitive who, by sheer chance, had fashioned the sorrow in it, or a skilled craftsman who with a few simple strokes, evoked the hopelessness and anguish of an intellectual being facing the riddle of the universe and overwhelmed by it.

The face was not entirely humanoid, but human enough so that one could equate it with humanity - a human face twisted out of shape by some great truth that it had learned - surely no truth that it had sought, but rather one that had been thrust upon it.

Having picked it up, I tried to throw it away, but could not throw it away.  It had put roots into me and would not let me go.  It haunted me and would not forego its haunting.  I stood with one hand clutching it and tried to toss it to one side, but my fingers would not loosen their grip nor my arm make a throwing motion.

That had been the way it had been with Tuck, I thought, except that Tuck had been a willing captive of it, finding in it some attraction and significance that I did not find.  Perhaps because it said to him a thing he found inside himself.  Because, perhaps, he saw within it a condition from which he was seeking to escape.  A madonna, Sara had said, and it could have been, but I saw no madonna in it.

So I went marching down the trail, like Tuck, hanging onto that damn thing, raging at myself - not so much for being unable to let go of it, as for the fact that it made me, after a fashion, a blood brother of the vanished Tuck.  Sore at I should be even in the slightest way like him, for if ever had been a man I had despised it had been Tuck.

We moved across the great blue plateau and behind us the purple mountains lost detail and resolved into a purple cloud.  I wondered if Knight's fascination with blueness, as revealed in those first few paragraphs of his manuscript, might not be an echo of this blue land which he had crossed to reach the mountains and the valley, leaving Roscoe at the gate, with Roscoe later blundering down the trail to finally reach the city where, in his stupidity, he'd become a captive of the gnome.

 

Added: 17-Jan-2023
Last Updated: 23-Jan-2024

Publications

 01-Nov-1975
Berkley Medallion Books
Mass Market Paperback
In my libraryI read this editionOrder from amazon.comHas a cover imageBook Edition Cover
Date Issued:
Cir 01-Nov-1975
Format:
Mass Market Paperback
Cover Price:
$1.25
Pages*:
223
Catalog ID:
Z2996
Read:
Once
Reading(s):
1)   26 Nov 2023 - 9 Dec 2023
Internal ID:
13011
ISBN:
0-425-02996-4
ISBN-13:
978-0-425-02996-1
Printing:
3
Country:
United States
Language:
English
Credits:
Richard Powers  - Cover Artist
THE PLANET BECKONED
THEM FROM SPACE -

and closed round them like a Venus Fly Trap!

Assailed by strange perils and even stranger temptations, the little group stumbled towards its destiny - Mike Ross, the pilot, Sara Foster, the big game hunter, blind George Smith, and the odious Friar Tuck.

Before them was a legend made flesh, around them were creatures of myth and mystery, close behind them stalked Nemesis.  The doll, the little wooden painted doll, was to be their salvation.  Or their damnation, for each might choose, and find, his own Nirvana.
Cover:
Book CoverBook Back CoverBook Spine
Notes and Comments:
Berkley Medallion Edition, November, 1965
Third Printing

Related

Author(s)

Clifford D Simak  
Birth: 03 Aug 1904 Millville, Wisconsin, USA
Death: 24 Apr 1988 Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA

Notes:
From "About the Author" in The Fellowship of the Talisman

Clifford D. Simak is a newspaperman, only recently retired.  Over the years he has written more than 25 books and has some 200 short stories to his credit.  In 1977 he received the Nebula Grand Master award of the Science Fiction Writers of America and has won several other awards for his writing.  He was born and raised in southwestern Wisconsin, a land of wooded hills and deep ravines, and often uses this locale for his stories.  A number of critics have cited him as the pastoralist of science fiction.

Perhaps the best known of his work is City, which has become a science-fiction classic.

He and his wife Kay have been happily married for almost 50 years. They have two children - a daughter, Shelley Ellen, a magazine editor, and Richard Scott, a chemical engineer.

Awards

No awards found
*
  • I try to maintain page numbers for audiobooks even though obviously there aren't any. I do this to keep track of pages read and I try to use the Kindle version page numbers for this.
  • Synopses marked with an asterisk (*) were generated by an AI. There aren't a lot since this is an iffy way to do it - AI seems to make stuff up.
  • When specific publication dates are unknown (ie prefixed with a "Cir"), I try to get the publication date that is closest to the specific printing that I can.
  • When listing chapters, I only list chapters relevant to the story. I will usually leave off Author Notes, Indices, Acknowledgements, etc unless they are relevant to the story or the book is non-fiction.
  • Page numbers on this site are for the end of the main story. I normally do not include appendices, extra material, and other miscellaneous stuff at the end of the book in the page count.






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