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Search the Sky

Chapter 16: ABOUT THE AUTHORS
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About This Book

The narrative follows a trader named Ross as he moves through a near-future urban landscape dominated by corporate exchanges and spreading dereliction. Observing Ghost Town's encroaching decay, he contends with competing expert explanations that reduce complex decline to psychological, biological, or technological causes while wrestling with a personal career decision. Scenes in trading offices and a crowded skyroom reveal commodified social relations, contractual agreements about family life, and chronic labor shortages, showing how routine commerce both masks and perpetuates wider social deterioration. The work combines speculative worldbuilding with satirical attention to institutional forces, market imperatives, and individual choice amid demographic and moral erosion.

ABOUT THE AUTHORS

The Space Merchants was not only one of the best-reviewed science-fiction novels in 1953, it was one of the most widely reviewed. Favorable notices appeared in journals ranging from Printer’s Ink to science-fiction magazines, from Tide magazine to the great national dailies. That novel firmly established Messrs. Pohl and Kornbluth as a team, although they had collaborated before under pen names and had established reputations singly. Their new novel, Search the Sky, has the same wit, the same passages of genuinely beautiful writing and—what is most important and most characteristic—the same underlying concern for human beings, whether they are on future Madison Avenues or in the outer galaxies.

This is Mr. Kornbluth’s seventh published novel. Two were written in collaboration with Judith Merril under the pen name “Cyril Judd”; one was the notable Takeoff (Doubleday, 1952); one was not science fiction; one was his last collaborative effort with Mr. Pohl; and his most recent was The Syndic (Doubleday, 1953). Mr. Kornbluth, still under thirty, now lives in an upstate New York farmhouse with his wife and child where he devotes himself to writing.

This is Mr. Pohl’s sixth published book. Two of them were reprint collections which he edited and two others were the now-celebrated first and second volumes of Star Science Fiction Stories, collections of new stories published by Ballantine Books. At 34, Mr. Pohl lives in a large old house on the Jersey shore—“five rooms for me, four for my wife and two apiece for the children.” He has three more books forthcoming in 1953: two anthologies and his first solo novel.