
and, ultimately, to the stars themselves. What existed outside the city? Why were men so afraid to explore? Through the ages, there had existed a rare few like Alvin - where had they vanished? And for what purpose was he created? But with every answer, new mysteries emerged, as Alvin's quest took him across the desert to a land far different from the one he knew. no one but Alvin.Īnd do he set out to find the answers to his questions. It mattered little that Man had once possessed the stars and might still be out there building empires. Since its construction over a billion years ago, Earth's oceans had passed away and the great mountains and civilizations crumbled to dust, yet the city remained changeless in all but subtle ways. Yet, though it was full of wonder, it was empty of surprise. Diaspar had been designed to instantly fulfill every human need and desire, and that should have been enough for anyone.

His insatiable curiosity threatened to doom him to a life of frustration, because he always wanted to go outside.īut to cross into the limitless open space beyond the city walls was unthinkable there was nothing there, he'd been told, nothing but endless desert. But when Alvin walked almost fully-grown from the Hall of Creation twenty years ago, he didn't know that he was different from Diaspar's other citizens - that, unlike them, he would never recall memories from countless past lives or be content to stay forever in this tiny, closed world.

For millennia its protective dome shut out the creeping decay and. He was the first new person to be born in the city for at least ten million years. Paperback Condition: New Men had built cities before, but never such a city as Diaspar. The City and the Stars is a complete rewrite of an earlier novella, Against the Fall of Night (1948).
