A Canticle for Leibowitz (Paperback)

Author: Walter M. Miller
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Product Summary
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9780553273816
Publisher: Bantam Books
Publish Date: 3/27/2006
Buy.com Sku: 202710362
Item#: RCTCY3
Dimensions (in Inches) 7H x 4.25L x 1.25T
Pages: 320
 
"Brother Francis Gerard of Utah might never have discovered the blessed documents, had it not been for the pilgrim with girded loins who appeared during that young novice's Lenten fast in the desert..." (from the first line)

The winner of the 1961 Hugo Award for Best Novel, Miller's bestselling work is a true landmark of 20th-century literature--a chilling and still-provocative look at a post-apocalyptic future.
 
Annotation:
Six hundred years after a 20th-century holocaust, the Catholic Order of Leibowitz must preserve surviving holy relics as well as their organization--both of which have become synonymous with the survival of humanity. Winner of the 1961 Hugo Award for Best Novel.

 

Author Bio
Walter M. Miller Jr.
Something of a mysterious figure in the science fiction community, Walter Michael Miller, Jr. completed only one novel during his life. But Miller's successful integration of psychological depth and religion in that novel, as well as in his short stories, made him one of the most influential figures in American science fiction. Born in New Smyrna Beach, Miller professed an early interest in writing but ended up studying engineering at the University of Tennessee. He interrupted his studies during World War II and joined the U.S. Air Force as a radio operator and gunner, flying more than 50 missions over Italy and the Balkans. After marrying Anna Becker in 1945--with whom he eventually had four children--and converting to Catholicism in 1947, Miller went back to school at the University of Texas, though he left in 1949 without graduating. His first published science fiction was in 1951, following one non-genre piece the previous year. Over the next six years, he published more than 40 stories, including "The Darfsteller", which was awarded one of the first-ever Hugo Awards for short fiction. During this period, Miller also wrote scripts for the children's television show CAPTAIN VIDEO AND HIS VIDEO RANGERS. Two of his stories from this period, he later realized, formed the basis for a novel and, following some revisions and the addition of another story, he published the work as A CANTICLE FOR LEIBOWITZ in 1960. Winning the Hugo Award for Best Novel, it "stands as one of the very few attempts in US sf to deal with formal religion", according to John Clute in THE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF SCIENCE FICTION. The novel continues to regularly appear among the top ten in polls of the best science fiction novels of all time. After this success, Miller dropped out of sight for 25 years, though several collections of previously published short stories appeared. There were occasional reports of outlines and drafts of another novel, a sequel of sorts to CANTICLE..., but the next published work with his name on it was BEYOND ARMAGEDDON, a 1985 anthology that Miller edited with Martin H. Greenberg. By the mid-1990s, Miller had apparently completed more than 600 pages of a novel called, LEIBOWITZ AND THE WILD HORSE WOMAN. On August 6th 1995, Anna, his wife of more than 50 years, died. Five months later, with his own health failing, Miller died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound. After his death, his estate contacted author Terry Bisson, a friend of Miller's, to complete the long-anticipated novel. According to all involved, the novel was extremely polished and very close to completion, requiring only a conclusion. Published in 1997 as SAINT LEIBOWITZ AND THE WILD HORSE WOMAN, it was widely praised, standing as a fitting legacy for Miller.

 
Awards

Hugo Award (1961)
won, Novel
 

 
 
Read A Chapter
The box was shaped like a satchel and was obviously a carrying case of some kind.  It might have served any number of purposes, but it had been rather badly battered by flying stones.  Gingerly he worked it loose from the rubble and carried it closer to the fire.  The lock seemed to be broken, but the lid had rusted shut.  The box rattled when he shook it.  It was not an obvious place to look for books or papers, but--obviously too--it was designed to be opened and closed, and might contain a scrap or two of information for the Memorabilia.  Nevertheless, remembering the fate of Brother Boedullus and others, he sprinkled it with holy water before attempting to pry it open, and he handled the ancient relic as reverently as was possible while battering at its rusty hinges with a stone.

At last he broke the hinges, and the lid fell free. Small metal tidbits bounced from trays, spilled among the rocks, some of them falling
Click to read more...

  
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