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Childhood Hardcover – November 1, 1991
- Print length188 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherG. P. Putnam's Sons
- Publication dateNovember 1, 1991
- Dimensions5.75 x 1 x 9 inches
- ISBN-100399136479
- ISBN-13978-0399136474
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Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Kirkus Reviews
Product details
- Publisher : G. P. Putnam's Sons; First Edition (November 1, 1991)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 188 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0399136479
- ISBN-13 : 978-0399136474
- Item Weight : 15.2 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.75 x 1 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #4,751,344 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #97,238 in Humor (Books)
- #239,936 in Social Sciences (Books)
- #1,750,597 in Literature & Fiction (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

SIR ARTHUR C. CLARKE (1917-2008) wrote the novel and co-authored the screenplay for 2001: A Space Odyssey. He has been knighted by Queen Elizabeth II, and he is the only science-fiction writer to be nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize. His fiction and nonfiction have sold more than one hundred million copies in print worldwide.
Photo by en:User:Mamyjomarash (Amy Marash) (en:Image:Clarke sm.jpg) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book excellent, enjoyable, and perfectly executed. They describe the story as imaginative, compelling, and thought-provoking. However, some find the plot ridiculous and boring. Opinions are mixed on the readable writing, with some finding it well-written and fluid, while others say there is little hard science.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book excellent, well worth their time, and enjoyable. They also say it's perfectly executed, impressive, imaginative, and well-written. Readers mention the story is meditative, poetic, and bittersweet.
"...The book is immensely readable, and it certainly raises more questions than it answers – and if this was the main goal of Clarke, it definitely..." Read more
"The book is hilarious and brilliant...." Read more
"...the tooth, as are many of the social mores in it, but it's still a superb read...." Read more
"...Childhood's End is still the best book I have ever read." Read more
Customers find the story imaginative and compelling. They say it has nice twists and turns with interesting characters. Readers also mention the book is short and wraps up nicely.
"...Who knows, but the novel remains highly original and extremely readable, touching on themes which Clarke would go on to explore in later novels." Read more
"...How would they really know? This is science fiction at its best, an engaging story which keeps the reader thinking while reading as well as after..." Read more
"...There are, however dozens of other wonderful stories that he weaves throughout the 188 pages. Most of them involve games that he played as a child...." Read more
"...However, these invaders seem somewhat benevolent and bring peace, prosperity, and contentment to the world...." Read more
Customers find the book thought-provoking, intriguing, and engaging. They appreciate the powerful ideas and superb writing. Readers also mention that the story starts with an interesting premise and is spiritually esoteric.
"...It starts off with a startling revelation: Earth is not only being visited by extraterrestrials, called Overlords, but they have come to take over..." Read more
"...The book is immensely readable, and it certainly raises more questions than it answers – and if this was the main goal of Clarke, it definitely..." Read more
"...This is science fiction at its best, an engaging story which keeps the reader thinking while reading as well as after finishing." Read more
"...This work is as insightful and hilarious as any comic fiction about childhood that Mark Twain ever wrote." Read more
Customers say the book holds up well. They also mention it's a solid classic science fiction book and still great after all these years.
"...The truth is I felt this book still held up tremendously and even more important was seeing all the seeds it planted to affect all of the sci-fi..." Read more
"...2. As speculative fiction it holds up wonderfully, and is probably more relevant today than when written...." Read more
"...Childhood's End is not as well known but is a strong book with good science fiction concepts and hints of mysticism, exactly the combination that..." Read more
"...I am reading this again after a 50 year break; it has lost no punch...." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the readable writing. Some mention it's well-written, fluid, and engrossing. However, others say there is very little hard science, an interesting concept that is not fully executed, and the language is getting a bit old.
"...Who knows, but the novel remains highly original and extremely readable, touching on themes which Clarke would go on to explore in later novels." Read more
"...It's a fluid and engrossing read...." Read more
"...Fly into the story here is a clear tip off that the whole chapter is silly fiction. The stories that Junior Barnes initiate are absurd fantasies...." Read more
"...It was an easy read, and hard to put down...." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the character development of the book. Some mention that the characters are good, while others say they're not well-developed.
"...I saw no story here, just featureless, forgettable characters, and no continuity...." Read more
"...Cosby is one of the most brilliant comedians in American history...." Read more
"...These new creatures have no personality and just seem to do randomly destructive things...." Read more
"...I had some difficulty smoothly keeping track of the characters which was further hampered by the very small breaks in the Kindle format that..." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the pacing of the book. Some mention it's moving, riveting, and engaging the whole way through, while others say it plods and doesn't engage them in the way they had hoped it would.
"...I saw no story here, just featureless, forgettable characters, and no continuity...." Read more
"...one of those stories that grabs you from the beginning and keeps you turning pages...." Read more
"...like, a huge part of the first third of the book, really does nothing for the story. The characters only seem mildly perturbed...." Read more
"...of a few days at work and it was hard to put down, I felt very engaged in the story...." Read more
Customers find the plot ridiculous, plodding, and boring. They also say the ending feels tacked-on and depressing to read. Readers also mention the dialogue is good but spotty at times. Overall, they describe the book as a little dollhouse book.
"...The book is good, but I feel the ending is weak – I understand it went through a number of edits before it was finally published...." Read more
"...suppose I'm pretty near the only Sci-Fi fan who finds this author somewhat boring...." Read more
"...prose is readable, and while the dialogue is good, it is a little spotty to follow at times..." Read more
"...a book on how to write a novel, I first must say that Childhood's End is marvelously plotted...." Read more
Reviews with images
A Childhood Favorite Lost and Found: “Childhood’s End” by Arthur C. Clarke
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I read Arthur C. Clarke's Childhood's End many years ago. I also read it to my son when he was eight. So why did I come back to a book that was originally published in 1953, read it yet again, and feel it necessary to write a review?
What got me thinking about Childhood's End again is the emergence of the Internet as force for change within the Global Community. Also, my limited experience teaching university students impressed upon me the impact that the Internet is having on the minds of our young people.
As a novelist myself and an author of a book on how to write a novel, I first must say that Childhood's End is marvelously plotted. It starts off with a startling revelation: Earth is not only being visited by extraterrestrials, called Overlords, but they have come to take over the world, prevent our annihilation, and impose restrictions on human activities that will insure not only our survival but also that we prosper. This then locks the conflict (first plot point) between humans and ET, and as with so much of Clarke's fiction, the conflict is at a relatively low level. ET, or the Overlords in this case, is here to help.
When one group, the Freedom League, wishes to oppose the Overlords more forcefully, they are soon subdued, non-violently. The one thing the Overlords will not do is show themselves. Humans make an attempt at seeing one of them, but don't get away with it. As a result, the Overlords agree to let them see them, but not for another fifty years, two generations. This then is the second plot point, which occurs 20% of the way through the story, a little short of where you'd expect it.
As time drags on, humanity loses its edge. We are no longer as creative as we once were, and culturally we have stagnated. Utopia is never all it's cracked up to be. And the time finally comes when the Overlords reveal their physical selves, and a strange sight they are, and yet immediately recognizable. They are the very image of Satan, red skin, horns, and pointed tail, leathery wings. No wonder they'd been so secretive. However, since they had shown their goodwill through the years, little was made of their "coincidental" resemblance to an ancient symbol of evil. This revelation comes at the 1/3 point and a little beyond what we'd think of as the second plot point and well short of 1/2 point that we'd think of as the third plot point.
At the mid-point of the novel, we get a true reversal. At a party, guests play a game similar to a Ouija Board. One of the participants asks, "Which star is the Overlords' home?" And the answer they get back is "NGS 549672." Only one of the guests realizes that this is a database entry for a star forty lightyears away in the constellation Carina. This person then starts making plans to stowaway on the next Overlord spaceship to their home. The Overlords have subdued the humans up until this point, but now one of them is on the hunt to find out more than the Overlords wish them to know. This is plot point three.
Just before the three-quarters point, one of the earthlings stows away on the Overlords' spaceship and leaves earth with them. His journey there and back will take eighty years, Earth time, but just a few months in relativistic time above the rocket traveling at close to the speed of light. Just a little later, at the three-quarters point in the novel, a strange event occurs. An Overlord saves one of the human children. For some reason the Overlords believe he is special. And then children all over the world start having strange dreams and developing telekinetic powers. This is what the Overlords have waited for all this time.
At the end of the novel, we learn that what the story has been about all along is the children. The human race is entering a new phase, one that will only manifest in our children. They are becoming something other than human beings and metamorphosing into something that transcends human existence. It's as if the worm finally becames a butterfly. And we learn that those who have been known as the Overlords are actually only caretakers of the human race while it undergoes the transformation into something spiritually superior to human beings. The children no longer relate to their parents, and the parents have no knowledge of their children. It's a clean break.
As it turns out, the Overlords are a tragic species. They cannot and never will make the transformation to this higher plane. And they take their orders from yet a higher power, the power that then comes for the children of mankind. The Overlords are a dead-end species from another world and can only witness the process, foster it, but never undergo it themselves.
The denouement comes with the man who had hitched a ride on the Overlords spaceship and gone to their home planet. He returns after eighty years, having seen the home of the Overloads and what a magnificent species they are. But he is the only human being left on earth, and he witnesses the end of the human race.
One other interesting facet of Clarke's novel is that, since the story is spread over 150 years or so, he uses a series of third-person limited narrations. He skips from character to character as his story dictates. He even uses a couple of the Overlords as point-of-view characters. This he does with skill, so it never seems artificial or lacking knowledge of craft. Always professionally executed.
Perhaps you can now see why I was so interested in taking another look at this story. Our children of today are growing up in the presence of the Internet, something no science fiction writer saw coming. And yet, it seems to me that Arthur C. Clarke did, in a sense, see it coming in this story. Our texting, blogging, FaceBooking neophytes to the human race are a strange species with unusual powers developed by virtue of the Internet. They are leaving us behind, and heaven knows what they'll become in the future. It does appear that they are making a clean break from what the human race has been. Let's just hope that they can store away a little of our humanity for future reference.
Overall, the book does “hang together” and its strengths are in its original ideas, however it is not without its challenges. The book is immensely readable, and it certainly raises more questions than it answers – and if this was the main goal of Clarke, it definitely succeeds. However, there are plot holes left, right and centre. It’s never really explained what hold the Overmind has on the Overlords, or why when the children evolve they should want to join with the Overmind, destroy the Earth and in the process kill the the last survivor in the process. It’s also never explained why the remaining humans can’t have more children. And whilst it is interesting to have the Overlords appear in the form of Satan with this supposedly explaining why Satan was present in much of early Christian mythology – it conveniently skips the other elements such as Jesus. The book is good, but I feel the ending is weak – I understand it went through a number of edits before it was finally published. Did the evolved children have to destroy the Earth and it would have been more interesting to have the last human left their alive alone? Who knows, but the novel remains highly original and extremely readable, touching on themes which Clarke would go on to explore in later novels.
Top reviews from other countries
Clarke's novel is a contemplation on the purpose of human existence and of our place in the universe. Personally, I prefer Clarke's 2001: A Space Odyssey; however, this novel shows Clarke weighing the themes that he will explore again in 2001, so I was able to appreciate it. Clarke's writing is engaging, as always, and the novel itself is easy to read (I finished it in less than a week on my commutes to and from work).
My partner and I read this book one after another, creating our own miniature book club, in which we avidly discussed the political, social, and philosophical ramifications of Clarke's world (I may have been the more enthusiastic one of the two of us, although that was probably because I read the book a few weeks after my partner did, and so it was more fresh to me).
The only downside to this book, for me, was the physical appearance of the Overlords (for, indeed, you do find out what they look like). It was very different to what I expected. Perhaps, this is a good thing. However, as a reader in 2020, I was imagining something not unlike the aliens in the Amy Adams hit, Arrival, and so was quite shocked when Clarke revealed the Overlords in all their physical glory. Make of that what you will.
All in all, while this wasn't my favourite Clarke novel, it is a fantastic and engaging read that will have you asking big questions throughout.





