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The Dark Design: The Third Book of the Riverworld Series (Riverworld, 2) Paperback – June 8, 2010
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Philip Jose Farmer
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Philip Jose Farmer
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Book 3 of 5: Riverworld
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Print length464 pages
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LanguageEnglish
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Publication dateJune 8, 2010
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Dimensions5.5 x 1.03 x 8.5 inches
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ISBN-10076532654X
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ISBN-13978-0765326546
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Editorial Reviews
Review
“Farmer's blend of intellectual daring and pulp fiction prose found a worldwide audience. Sprawling, episodic works gave him room to explore the nuances of a provocative premise while indulging his taste for lurid, violent action.” ―The New York Times
“The greatest science fiction writer ever.” ―Leslie A. Fiedler, author of Love and Death in the American Novel
“An excellent science fiction writer, far more skillful than I am.” ―Isaac Asimov
From the Back Cover
Years have passed on Riverworld. Entire nations have risen, and savage wars have been fought--all since the dead of Earth found themselves resurrected in their magnificent new homeworld. Yet the truth about the Ethicals, the powerful engineers of this mysterious "afterlife," remains unknown. But a curious cross-section of humanity is determined to change that situation . . . at any cost.
Intrepid explorer Sir Richard Francis Burton leads the most remarkable voyage of discovery he has ever undertaken. Hot on his heels are Samuel Clemens, King John of England, and Cyrano de Bergerac. Spurred by the promise of ultimate answers, they chart a course across the vast polar sea--and toward the awesome tower that looms above it. But getting there will be more than half the battle. For death on Riverworld has become chillingly final . . .
Intrepid explorer Sir Richard Francis Burton leads the most remarkable voyage of discovery he has ever undertaken. Hot on his heels are Samuel Clemens, King John of England, and Cyrano de Bergerac. Spurred by the promise of ultimate answers, they chart a course across the vast polar sea--and toward the awesome tower that looms above it. But getting there will be more than half the battle. For death on Riverworld has become chillingly final . . .
About the Author
Hugo award-winning author Philip José Farmer (1918-2009) was one of the great science fiction writers of the 20th Century, and the Riverworld books are generally considered his masterpiece. He lived in Peoria, Illinois.
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Product details
- Publisher : Tor Books; First edition (June 8, 2010)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 464 pages
- ISBN-10 : 076532654X
- ISBN-13 : 978-0765326546
- Item Weight : 1.2 pounds
- Dimensions : 5.5 x 1.03 x 8.5 inches
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Best Sellers Rank:
#778,206 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #15,579 in Science Fiction Adventures
- #18,526 in Contemporary Literature & Fiction
- #88,151 in American Literature (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
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4.3 out of 5 stars
4.3 out of 5
139 global ratings
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Reviewed in the United States on October 14, 2016
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The suspense continues to build as characters from the first two books continue to try to become capable enough to reach the end/beginning of the great river and discover why Riverworld was created, Through three books now, the only things that date the material are the slight racism of depicting Black Power and the condescending view of Women's Lib, both huge topics in america at the time the books were written, Otherwise, Farmer has built a fully fleshed out, rational world which is the primary goal of every science fiction writer. The world is believable and the mystery is compelling. I first read the series in college (almost forty years ago!) at a time when I was also absorbing every Vonnegut novel I could find. Of course, now I have the time to reread it at a more leisurely pace rather than rush through it. It's a brilliant concept that allows the author to bring any great figure in human history into the story with sometimes funny results. I certainly find it worth reading again and I may reread Larry Niven's Ringworld next.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 29, 2018
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the first and second books would rate 4 stars but this book is more like the history of many people even though they don't always play a part in the story. this book has little to do with the river world and is mostly people talking and takes forever to get any where. its a far stretch to think with the little resources available they could build a 30 person helicopter and carry it under the ship, also build sonar, radar and believe it or not a laser, he just takes it to far with what can be done. the ending is terrible and no questions answered. stop after the second book and be happy
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Reviewed in the United States on May 21, 2012
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Philip José Farmer originally intended his "Riverworld" series to be a trilogy, but if it had been published as such it would have been a very unbalanced one, with the third volume more than twice as long as the other two put together. Farmer therefore divided his final instalment into two to form the books we now know as "The Dark Design" and "The Magic Labyrinth", and eventually decided to add a fifth volume, "The Gods of Riverworld", to form a pentalogy.
I won't set out the basic concept behind the Riverworld books; anyone reading a review of the third volume in the series is probably familiar with it already. Whereas the two previous volumes concentrated upon a single protagonist, Sir Richard Francis Burton in "To Your Scattered Bodies Go" and Sam Clemens alias Mark Twain in "The Fabulous Riverboat", "The Dark Design" weaves together three plotlines. One involves Farmer's alter ego Peter Jairus Frigate and his adventures on the river with the writer Jack London and the silent film star Tom Mix, both of whom are for some reason travelling under false identities.
The other two plotlines involve attempts by separate parties to reach the headwaters of the river near Riverworld's North Pole; they believe that it is there, and particularly inside a mysterious tower, that they may find the solution to the riddle of why Riverworld has been created. (It appears that those responsible are a group known as the "Ethicals", but exactly who these people are, and what their motives are, remains obscure both to the inhabitants of Riverworld and to the reader). One of these groups is led by Burton, the other by Milton Firebrass who has succeeded Clemens as president of Parolando and has ordered the construction of an airship, which he believes will be able to reach the Pole more quickly than a boat.
Whereas apart from Frigate most of the main characters in the earlier instalments were real historical individuals, in "The Dark Design" there is more emphasis on purely fictional characters. Firebrass is one of these; another is the Australian airship pilot Jill Gulbirra. The book was published in 1977 and Farmer lived long enough to see that his predictions of how technology might develop in the late twentieth century were not always accurate. He foresaw, for example, a major revival of the airship in the 1980s and we learn that Fairbrass, during his terrestrial existence in the 1990s, was an American astronaut involved in manned space flights to Mars and Jupiter.
Jill seems to have been created to answer criticisms that in the earlier volumes the female characters were too weak, but here Farmer seems to have gone to the opposite extreme, making Jill so strident and aggressive that she comes across like a caricature of a seventies feminist.
The title is derived from "The Kasidah of Haji Abdu El-Yezdi", a poem by Burton which contains the following lines, quoted at the beginning of the book:-
"And still the Weaver plies his loom, whose warp and woof is wretched Man
Weaving th' unpattern'd dark design, so dark we doubt it owns a plan".
The significance of these lines is twofold. The words "dark design" can be taken as referring to the unfathomable plans of the Ethicals in creating Riverworld. Burton's "Kasidah", however, has been seen as reflecting his interest in Sufism, a mystical form of Islam, an interest which Farmer may have shared. Certainly, some passages in "The Dark Design" have a markedly mystical tone, and two characters, Frigate's Arab companion Nur ed Din and a Japanese airship pilot who calls himself Piscator (Latin for "fisherman"), are both practising Sufis.
I must admit that I did not enjoy this book as much as its two predecessors. While the basic Riverworld concept is still an entertaining one, the structure of "The Dark Design", jumping from one plot-line to another without warning is an over-complicated and confusing one, especially as the timescale is not always made clear. At around twice the length of either "To Your Scattered Bodies Go" or "The Fabulous Riverboat", the novel is overlong and at times Farmer's prose becomes ponderous and heavy-going. That quote from Burton is perhaps, unfortunately, appropriate in a way the author did not intend. "The Dark Design" can seem unpatterned and I found myself doubting whether it owned a plan.
I won't set out the basic concept behind the Riverworld books; anyone reading a review of the third volume in the series is probably familiar with it already. Whereas the two previous volumes concentrated upon a single protagonist, Sir Richard Francis Burton in "To Your Scattered Bodies Go" and Sam Clemens alias Mark Twain in "The Fabulous Riverboat", "The Dark Design" weaves together three plotlines. One involves Farmer's alter ego Peter Jairus Frigate and his adventures on the river with the writer Jack London and the silent film star Tom Mix, both of whom are for some reason travelling under false identities.
The other two plotlines involve attempts by separate parties to reach the headwaters of the river near Riverworld's North Pole; they believe that it is there, and particularly inside a mysterious tower, that they may find the solution to the riddle of why Riverworld has been created. (It appears that those responsible are a group known as the "Ethicals", but exactly who these people are, and what their motives are, remains obscure both to the inhabitants of Riverworld and to the reader). One of these groups is led by Burton, the other by Milton Firebrass who has succeeded Clemens as president of Parolando and has ordered the construction of an airship, which he believes will be able to reach the Pole more quickly than a boat.
Whereas apart from Frigate most of the main characters in the earlier instalments were real historical individuals, in "The Dark Design" there is more emphasis on purely fictional characters. Firebrass is one of these; another is the Australian airship pilot Jill Gulbirra. The book was published in 1977 and Farmer lived long enough to see that his predictions of how technology might develop in the late twentieth century were not always accurate. He foresaw, for example, a major revival of the airship in the 1980s and we learn that Fairbrass, during his terrestrial existence in the 1990s, was an American astronaut involved in manned space flights to Mars and Jupiter.
Jill seems to have been created to answer criticisms that in the earlier volumes the female characters were too weak, but here Farmer seems to have gone to the opposite extreme, making Jill so strident and aggressive that she comes across like a caricature of a seventies feminist.
The title is derived from "The Kasidah of Haji Abdu El-Yezdi", a poem by Burton which contains the following lines, quoted at the beginning of the book:-
"And still the Weaver plies his loom, whose warp and woof is wretched Man
Weaving th' unpattern'd dark design, so dark we doubt it owns a plan".
The significance of these lines is twofold. The words "dark design" can be taken as referring to the unfathomable plans of the Ethicals in creating Riverworld. Burton's "Kasidah", however, has been seen as reflecting his interest in Sufism, a mystical form of Islam, an interest which Farmer may have shared. Certainly, some passages in "The Dark Design" have a markedly mystical tone, and two characters, Frigate's Arab companion Nur ed Din and a Japanese airship pilot who calls himself Piscator (Latin for "fisherman"), are both practising Sufis.
I must admit that I did not enjoy this book as much as its two predecessors. While the basic Riverworld concept is still an entertaining one, the structure of "The Dark Design", jumping from one plot-line to another without warning is an over-complicated and confusing one, especially as the timescale is not always made clear. At around twice the length of either "To Your Scattered Bodies Go" or "The Fabulous Riverboat", the novel is overlong and at times Farmer's prose becomes ponderous and heavy-going. That quote from Burton is perhaps, unfortunately, appropriate in a way the author did not intend. "The Dark Design" can seem unpatterned and I found myself doubting whether it owned a plan.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 7, 2017
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Not sure if JPF thought this to be an important work or a contractual obligation, but this one (and I assume the next) could have used some editing. Lots of meandering off topic and attempts at deep meaningful musings and flourishes that catch you in an eddy while the story stalls, only to be picked up and rushed through rapids again to the next slow-flowing section. Ok, maybe this was intentional, but it was very distracting to the underlying plot lines and even left a plot line about agents identified totally dropped mid book. Will think long and hard before I pick up the fourth book, but may do so just to finally get to the ending of this saga. Then again..l
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Reviewed in the United States on January 18, 2017
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Did not like it. I hate leaving a series unfinished, but I am not investing my time in the fourth book. At times it seemed like the book was more a collection of short stories thrown together to create a full length novel. The most frustrating part among many frustrating parts was how with some characters the author translated metric to standard, while with others, he didn't bother us with that.
I get that this book was writtne at a time when the metric system was just a rumor in this country, but lets have some continuity.
I get that this book was writtne at a time when the metric system was just a rumor in this country, but lets have some continuity.
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Reviewed in the United States on October 5, 2010
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The "
Riverworld: Including To Your Scattered Bodies Go & The Fabulous Riverboat
" series has fascinated me ever since the first book was published while I was in high school. I have read them all, more than once. "
The Dark Design (Riverworld Saga)
" does not reach the literary heights of the first book, but then, follow up books seldom do. As in any long-running, multi-book series by a modern author, the prose in this one needs a good copy editor. There are a number of useless scenes and meaningless dialogues. Still, for someone who loves River World and wants to spend as much time as possible exploring it's landscape, The Dark Design will provide the exhausting immersion they are looking for. The Dark Design is well worth reading, but only a true fan will have the patience for it.
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Top reviews from other countries
265bhp
4.0 out of 5 stars
Continuing the story
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 14, 2014Verified Purchase
You feel you're going to get some really revelatory answers but they're just not that amazing. I still enjoyed this book, and continued to buy the next in the series but I was starting to tire. I feel you have to approach these books in the context of the world/time they were written. Today we are bombarded with ideas and TV programmes/films. Perhaps we expect more as a result. This is good but maybe not so cutting edge?
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Anon
5.0 out of 5 stars
So delighted to be able to read these again
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on October 6, 2014Verified Purchase
So delighted to be able to read these again. Characters from history in an out of this world setting, simply perfect. Richard Burton (the Victorian explorer and translator of 1001 nights, Samuel Clemens aka mark twain, Hermann Goring an airship, a river steamer and a world that is a single river
who is he
5.0 out of 5 stars
Five Stars
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 16, 2016Verified Purchase
Great value and excellent service. Very satisfied
Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars
his beast read
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on December 10, 2017Verified Purchase
My Grandson is really chuffed
CAJ
5.0 out of 5 stars
Brilliant reading
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on May 11, 2014Verified Purchase
Bought this for a birthday present for a relative who is reading the series - loves it. Item arrived very quickly. Thank you.
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