Seeking an anthology book called 'A View From A Distant Shore'
In the 1990s I came across a book by the title
A View From A Distant Shore.
It was a collection of short stories from Eastern Europe I believe. It was an older secondhand paperback. I mostly remember a single story from the anthology. It was about the light just going out of the world. Matches eventually gave less and less light until finally no light at all.
I don't remember the names of any of the authors, the 90s were apparently a tumultuous time for me. I can't find even a reference to it online.
story-identification short-stories anthology-book
New contributor
add a comment |
In the 1990s I came across a book by the title
A View From A Distant Shore.
It was a collection of short stories from Eastern Europe I believe. It was an older secondhand paperback. I mostly remember a single story from the anthology. It was about the light just going out of the world. Matches eventually gave less and less light until finally no light at all.
I don't remember the names of any of the authors, the 90s were apparently a tumultuous time for me. I can't find even a reference to it online.
story-identification short-stories anthology-book
New contributor
Hi. There's still information you can add to help, such as what language the anthology was printed in.
– Spencer
yesterday
View From Another Shore messages the timeframe and structure. isfdb.org/cgi-bin/pl.cgi?53321 No idea if it has your story about light going away.
– FuzzyBoots
yesterday
1
@FuzzyBoots one of the stories in that book, "A Modest Genius", does have a part in it about an invention that causes the whole world to become dark. It's not a major theme of the story though, just one of many wacky incidents.
– Organic Marble
yesterday
@FuzzyBoots - Sounds like you need to post this as an answer.
– Valorum
yesterday
Sure, why not? Now that we know one matches.
– FuzzyBoots
yesterday
add a comment |
In the 1990s I came across a book by the title
A View From A Distant Shore.
It was a collection of short stories from Eastern Europe I believe. It was an older secondhand paperback. I mostly remember a single story from the anthology. It was about the light just going out of the world. Matches eventually gave less and less light until finally no light at all.
I don't remember the names of any of the authors, the 90s were apparently a tumultuous time for me. I can't find even a reference to it online.
story-identification short-stories anthology-book
New contributor
In the 1990s I came across a book by the title
A View From A Distant Shore.
It was a collection of short stories from Eastern Europe I believe. It was an older secondhand paperback. I mostly remember a single story from the anthology. It was about the light just going out of the world. Matches eventually gave less and less light until finally no light at all.
I don't remember the names of any of the authors, the 90s were apparently a tumultuous time for me. I can't find even a reference to it online.
story-identification short-stories anthology-book
story-identification short-stories anthology-book
New contributor
New contributor
edited yesterday
Valorum
397k10228763111
397k10228763111
New contributor
asked yesterday
MargaretMargaret
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512
New contributor
New contributor
Hi. There's still information you can add to help, such as what language the anthology was printed in.
– Spencer
yesterday
View From Another Shore messages the timeframe and structure. isfdb.org/cgi-bin/pl.cgi?53321 No idea if it has your story about light going away.
– FuzzyBoots
yesterday
1
@FuzzyBoots one of the stories in that book, "A Modest Genius", does have a part in it about an invention that causes the whole world to become dark. It's not a major theme of the story though, just one of many wacky incidents.
– Organic Marble
yesterday
@FuzzyBoots - Sounds like you need to post this as an answer.
– Valorum
yesterday
Sure, why not? Now that we know one matches.
– FuzzyBoots
yesterday
add a comment |
Hi. There's still information you can add to help, such as what language the anthology was printed in.
– Spencer
yesterday
View From Another Shore messages the timeframe and structure. isfdb.org/cgi-bin/pl.cgi?53321 No idea if it has your story about light going away.
– FuzzyBoots
yesterday
1
@FuzzyBoots one of the stories in that book, "A Modest Genius", does have a part in it about an invention that causes the whole world to become dark. It's not a major theme of the story though, just one of many wacky incidents.
– Organic Marble
yesterday
@FuzzyBoots - Sounds like you need to post this as an answer.
– Valorum
yesterday
Sure, why not? Now that we know one matches.
– FuzzyBoots
yesterday
Hi. There's still information you can add to help, such as what language the anthology was printed in.
– Spencer
yesterday
Hi. There's still information you can add to help, such as what language the anthology was printed in.
– Spencer
yesterday
View From Another Shore messages the timeframe and structure. isfdb.org/cgi-bin/pl.cgi?53321 No idea if it has your story about light going away.
– FuzzyBoots
yesterday
View From Another Shore messages the timeframe and structure. isfdb.org/cgi-bin/pl.cgi?53321 No idea if it has your story about light going away.
– FuzzyBoots
yesterday
1
1
@FuzzyBoots one of the stories in that book, "A Modest Genius", does have a part in it about an invention that causes the whole world to become dark. It's not a major theme of the story though, just one of many wacky incidents.
– Organic Marble
yesterday
@FuzzyBoots one of the stories in that book, "A Modest Genius", does have a part in it about an invention that causes the whole world to become dark. It's not a major theme of the story though, just one of many wacky incidents.
– Organic Marble
yesterday
@FuzzyBoots - Sounds like you need to post this as an answer.
– Valorum
yesterday
@FuzzyBoots - Sounds like you need to post this as an answer.
– Valorum
yesterday
Sure, why not? Now that we know one matches.
– FuzzyBoots
yesterday
Sure, why not? Now that we know one matches.
– FuzzyBoots
yesterday
add a comment |
1 Answer
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Franz Rottensteiner's View From Another Shore contains a story entitled "A Modest Genius" by Vadim Shefner , which does cause the whole world to grow dark. It is a collection of short stories which was published in 1973, which matches your timeframe.
Here's the opening to that story:
Sergei Kladesev was born on Vasilyevski Island, Leningrad. He was a strange boy. While other children were making sand pies and building castles, he was drawing sections of odd-looking machines on the sand. In the second grade he built a portable machine, powered by a pocket flashlight battery, which told each pupil how many good marks he would receive during the coming week. Grown-ups considered the machine uneducational and took it away from him.
I found that title by searching ISFDB titles for "view from a", and then grabbing the one that had "Shore" in it. Organic Marble provided that one of the stories had a light-dimming mechanism.
Liussa went to the window and looked out. "Sergei, what's going on?"
she asked in astonishment. "It looks as though an eclipse is
beginning. The whole island is in dusk and it's getting dark in the
distance too."
"It's now dark over the whole earth and even on Mars and Venus. The
machine uses a great deal of energy."
--from "A Modest Genius" by Vadim Shefner
If this is the correct answer, you can accept it by clicking on the checkmark by the voting buttons.
– FuzzyBoots
yesterday
add a comment |
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Franz Rottensteiner's View From Another Shore contains a story entitled "A Modest Genius" by Vadim Shefner , which does cause the whole world to grow dark. It is a collection of short stories which was published in 1973, which matches your timeframe.
Here's the opening to that story:
Sergei Kladesev was born on Vasilyevski Island, Leningrad. He was a strange boy. While other children were making sand pies and building castles, he was drawing sections of odd-looking machines on the sand. In the second grade he built a portable machine, powered by a pocket flashlight battery, which told each pupil how many good marks he would receive during the coming week. Grown-ups considered the machine uneducational and took it away from him.
I found that title by searching ISFDB titles for "view from a", and then grabbing the one that had "Shore" in it. Organic Marble provided that one of the stories had a light-dimming mechanism.
Liussa went to the window and looked out. "Sergei, what's going on?"
she asked in astonishment. "It looks as though an eclipse is
beginning. The whole island is in dusk and it's getting dark in the
distance too."
"It's now dark over the whole earth and even on Mars and Venus. The
machine uses a great deal of energy."
--from "A Modest Genius" by Vadim Shefner
If this is the correct answer, you can accept it by clicking on the checkmark by the voting buttons.
– FuzzyBoots
yesterday
add a comment |
Franz Rottensteiner's View From Another Shore contains a story entitled "A Modest Genius" by Vadim Shefner , which does cause the whole world to grow dark. It is a collection of short stories which was published in 1973, which matches your timeframe.
Here's the opening to that story:
Sergei Kladesev was born on Vasilyevski Island, Leningrad. He was a strange boy. While other children were making sand pies and building castles, he was drawing sections of odd-looking machines on the sand. In the second grade he built a portable machine, powered by a pocket flashlight battery, which told each pupil how many good marks he would receive during the coming week. Grown-ups considered the machine uneducational and took it away from him.
I found that title by searching ISFDB titles for "view from a", and then grabbing the one that had "Shore" in it. Organic Marble provided that one of the stories had a light-dimming mechanism.
Liussa went to the window and looked out. "Sergei, what's going on?"
she asked in astonishment. "It looks as though an eclipse is
beginning. The whole island is in dusk and it's getting dark in the
distance too."
"It's now dark over the whole earth and even on Mars and Venus. The
machine uses a great deal of energy."
--from "A Modest Genius" by Vadim Shefner
If this is the correct answer, you can accept it by clicking on the checkmark by the voting buttons.
– FuzzyBoots
yesterday
add a comment |
Franz Rottensteiner's View From Another Shore contains a story entitled "A Modest Genius" by Vadim Shefner , which does cause the whole world to grow dark. It is a collection of short stories which was published in 1973, which matches your timeframe.
Here's the opening to that story:
Sergei Kladesev was born on Vasilyevski Island, Leningrad. He was a strange boy. While other children were making sand pies and building castles, he was drawing sections of odd-looking machines on the sand. In the second grade he built a portable machine, powered by a pocket flashlight battery, which told each pupil how many good marks he would receive during the coming week. Grown-ups considered the machine uneducational and took it away from him.
I found that title by searching ISFDB titles for "view from a", and then grabbing the one that had "Shore" in it. Organic Marble provided that one of the stories had a light-dimming mechanism.
Liussa went to the window and looked out. "Sergei, what's going on?"
she asked in astonishment. "It looks as though an eclipse is
beginning. The whole island is in dusk and it's getting dark in the
distance too."
"It's now dark over the whole earth and even on Mars and Venus. The
machine uses a great deal of energy."
--from "A Modest Genius" by Vadim Shefner
Franz Rottensteiner's View From Another Shore contains a story entitled "A Modest Genius" by Vadim Shefner , which does cause the whole world to grow dark. It is a collection of short stories which was published in 1973, which matches your timeframe.
Here's the opening to that story:
Sergei Kladesev was born on Vasilyevski Island, Leningrad. He was a strange boy. While other children were making sand pies and building castles, he was drawing sections of odd-looking machines on the sand. In the second grade he built a portable machine, powered by a pocket flashlight battery, which told each pupil how many good marks he would receive during the coming week. Grown-ups considered the machine uneducational and took it away from him.
I found that title by searching ISFDB titles for "view from a", and then grabbing the one that had "Shore" in it. Organic Marble provided that one of the stories had a light-dimming mechanism.
Liussa went to the window and looked out. "Sergei, what's going on?"
she asked in astonishment. "It looks as though an eclipse is
beginning. The whole island is in dusk and it's getting dark in the
distance too."
"It's now dark over the whole earth and even on Mars and Venus. The
machine uses a great deal of energy."
--from "A Modest Genius" by Vadim Shefner
edited yesterday
Organic Marble
24.1k485125
24.1k485125
answered yesterday
FuzzyBootsFuzzyBoots
88.7k11273426
88.7k11273426
If this is the correct answer, you can accept it by clicking on the checkmark by the voting buttons.
– FuzzyBoots
yesterday
add a comment |
If this is the correct answer, you can accept it by clicking on the checkmark by the voting buttons.
– FuzzyBoots
yesterday
If this is the correct answer, you can accept it by clicking on the checkmark by the voting buttons.
– FuzzyBoots
yesterday
If this is the correct answer, you can accept it by clicking on the checkmark by the voting buttons.
– FuzzyBoots
yesterday
add a comment |
Margaret is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Margaret is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Margaret is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Margaret is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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Hi. There's still information you can add to help, such as what language the anthology was printed in.
– Spencer
yesterday
View From Another Shore messages the timeframe and structure. isfdb.org/cgi-bin/pl.cgi?53321 No idea if it has your story about light going away.
– FuzzyBoots
yesterday
1
@FuzzyBoots one of the stories in that book, "A Modest Genius", does have a part in it about an invention that causes the whole world to become dark. It's not a major theme of the story though, just one of many wacky incidents.
– Organic Marble
yesterday
@FuzzyBoots - Sounds like you need to post this as an answer.
– Valorum
yesterday
Sure, why not? Now that we know one matches.
– FuzzyBoots
yesterday