Book Description
A former astronaut turned private detective is dispatched to Naples to discover the pattern in a mysterious series of deaths and disappearances occurring at a seaside spa. A Helen and Kurt Wolff Book
Language Notes
Text: English, Polish (translation)
Chain of Chance ANNOTATION
An intricate, tightly plotted mystery with a sci-fi twist by "a science fiction writer worthy of a Nobel prize."--New York Times
FROM THE PUBLISHER
"The fact that I was using a dead man's shirts and luggage didn't faze me in the slightest, and if it was a little hard going at first, then it was only because these things belonged to a stranger, not because their owner was dead."
Written in the style of a detective novel, The Chain of Chance is classic Lem: a combination of action, hard science, and philosophical investigation. An ex-astronaut is hired to look into the death of a wealthy businessman, one of several men to meet a gruesome end after visiting Naples. The authorities suspect a pattern, but neither detectives nor a sophisticated computer enlisted for the investigation can crack the case.
On a trial leading from Naples to Rome to Paris, the ex-astronaut barely escapes numerous seemingly random threats on his life. Having set himself up as a potential victim, he realizes that he may now be the target of a deadly conspiracyand that the conspiracy is not the work of a criminal mind but a manifestation of the laws of nature. The population has numerically exceeded its critical mass; certain patterns have begun to emerge from the chaotic workings of society. As the ex-astronaut unravels the puzzle, he begins to see that some of those patterns can be fatal.
A singular mystery novel, The Chain of Chance proposes an original scientific hypothesis in the form of a story layered with menace and driven at breakneck speed. It is among Lem's most accessible and popular books.
About the Author:BR>Stanislaw Lem is an internationally renowned author of more than twenty works of science fiction, including One Human Minute, More Tales of Pirx the Pilot, and Solaris. His books A Perfect Vacuum andHis Master's Voice were published by Northwestern University Press in 1999. He was born in Lvov, Poland, and lives in Krakow.
Louis Iribarne is a widely published translator. His work includes books by Czeslaw Milosz and Stanislaw Ignacy Witkiewicz, as well as Lem's Tales of Pirx the Pilot and More Tales of Pirx the Pilot.