Walter Tevis - Mockingbird

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Mockingbird: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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The future is a grim place in which the declining human population wanders, drugged and lulled by electronic bliss. It’s a world without art, reading and children, a world where people would rather burn themselves alive than endure. Even Spofforth, the most perfect machine ever created, cannot bear it and seeks only that which he cannot have—to cease to be. But there is hope for the future in the passion and joy that a man and woman discover in love and in books, hope even for Spofforth. A haunting novel, reverberating with anguish but also celebrating love and the magic of a dream.
Mockingbird
Review
From the Inside Flap “A moral tale that has elements of Aldous Huxley’s
,
, and
.”

“Set in a far future in which robots run a world with a small and declining human population, this novel could be considered an unofficial sequel to
, for its central event and symbol is the rediscovery of reading.”

“Because of its affirmation of such persistent human values as curiosity, courage, and compassion, along with its undeniable narrative power,
will become one of those books that coming generations will periodically rediscover with wonder and delight.”

“I’ve read other novels extrapolating the dangers of computerization but Mockingbird stings me, the writer, the hardest. The notion, the possibility, that people might indeed lose the ability, and worse, the desire to read, is made acutely probable.”

bestselling author ANNE MCCAFFREY “Walter Tevis is science fiction’s great neglected master, one of the definitive bridges between sf and literature. For those who know his work only through the movies, the lucid prose and literary vision of
and
will come as a revelation.”
—AL SARRANTONIO, Author of
saga

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Finally he spoke again, softly. “I seen you in the fields the last few days, Bentley. You been looking like a robot.” His voice was sympathetic, soothing.

I made myself speak. “I suppose so,” I said.

We were quiet again. Then he said, “I know how it is, Bentley. You get to thinking about dying. Like they do in the cities, with gas and a lighter. Or here we got the ocean. I seen guys go out all the way. Hell, I used to think about it myself: just swim as far as I can and not look back…”

I looked up at him. “ You felt like that?” I was astonished. “You seem so strong.”

He laughed wryly and I looked up toward his face. “Shit,” he said, “I’m like everybody else. This kind of living ain’t much better than being dead.” He laughed again, shaking his head from side to side. “And it ain’t much better on the outside, to tell the truth. No real work to do, except the same kind of crap you do in here. At the Worker Dormitories they told us, ‘Labor fulfills.’ Horseshit.” He took a joint from his pocket and lit it. “I was stealing credit cards the first blue after I graduated. Been in prison half my life. Wanted to die the first two or three stretches, but I didn’t. Nowadays I got my cats, and I sneak around a little…” Then he interrupted himself. “Hey!” he said. “You want to have Biff?”

I stared at him. “For my own… pet?”

“Sure. Why not? I got four more. Pain in the ass to find food for sometimes, though. But I can teach you how.”

“Thank you,” I said. “I’d like that. I’d like to have a cat.”

“We can go get her now,” he said.

And I found myself leaving my cell easily. As we went out the unlocked door I turned to Belasco and said, “I feel better.”

He slapped me lightly on the back. “What are friends for?” he said.

I stood there a moment, not knowing what to say. And then, almost without thinking of the gesture, I reached out and put my hand on his forearm. And I thought of something. “There’s a building I want to get in. Do you think it might be unlocked?”

He grinned at me. “That’s more like it,” he said. And then, “Let’s go see.”

We left the building. It was simple and there were no guards in sight.

We got into the deserted building with no trouble, but inside it was too dark to see, and we stumbled over boxes in the hallways. Then I heard Belasco say, “Sometimes these old places have a switch on the wall,” and I heard him fumbling, heard him trip and curse, and then there was a click and a big overhead light came on in the hallway. For a moment I was frightened that the guards might see the light, but then I remembered the boarded-up windows and was relieved.

But when I found the library door it was still locked! I was tense enough already, and I could have screamed.

Belasco looked at me. “Is that where you want to go?”

I said, “Yes.” Without even asking me what I wanted to get in the room for, he began to examine the lock. It was of a kind I had never seen before, and didn’t even appear to be electronic.

Belasco whistled quietly. “Wow!” he said. “This bastard is old .” He began feeling in his pockets until he found his prison-issued lighter. Then he put it on the floor and stamped on it two or three times with his heel, until it was broken. He reached down, picked up the mess of wires and glass and plastic, and, after studying it a moment, pulled out a piece of stiff wire about as long as my thumb. I watched him silently, having no idea what he was doing this for.

He bent to the lock on the door carefully, placed the end of his wire into a slot in it, and began probing around. Every now and then a little clicking sound came from inside the lock somewhere. He cursed a couple of times, quietly, and continued. And then, just as I was about to ask him what he was trying to do, there was a softer sound inside the lock and Belasco grinned, took the doorknob in his hand, and opened the door!

It was dark inside, but Belasco found a switch on the wall again and two somewhat dim overhead lights came on.

I looked around me eagerly, hoping to find the walls lined with books. But they were empty. I stared for a long time, feeling almost sick. There were ancient wooden tables and chairs, and a few small boxes along one wall, but there were no shelves and the pockmarked walls were empty even of pictures.

“What’s the problem?” Belasco said.

I looked at him. “I was hoping to find… books.”

“Books?” He apparently didn’t know the word. But he said, “What’s in those boxes over there?”

I nodded, without much hope, and went over to look at the boxes by the wall. The first two I opened were filled with rusty spoons—so badly rusted that they were all frozen together in a reddish mass. But the third box was filled with books! I began taking them out eagerly. There were twelve of them. And at the bottom of the box was a pile of sheets of blank paper that was hardly yellow at all.

Excitedly I began to read the titles. The biggest was called North Carolina Revised Statutes: 1992 . Another was called Woodworking for Fun and Profit and a third, also very thick, was called Gone With the Wind . It felt wonderful just to hold them and think of all the writing inside.

Belasco had been watching me with mild curiosity. Finally he spoke. “Are those things books?” he said.

“Yes.”

He picked one up from the box and ran his finger through the dust on the cover. “Never heard of such a thing,” he said.

I looked at him. “Let’s get the cat and get these back to my cell.”

“Sure,” he said. “I’ll help you.”

We got Biff and carried the books back without any trouble at all.

It is very late now and Belasco has gone back to his cell. I will stop writing now and look through my books. I have them hidden between my water bed and the wall, near where Biff is sleeping.

DAY ONE HUNDRED THIRTY-NINE

I am very tired because I read almost all night last night and had to work all day today. But what excitement I have found! My tired mind was busy all day, with all of the new things I had to think about.

I think I will make a list of my new books:

• North Carolina Revised Statutes: 1992

• Woodworking for Fun and Profit

• Gone With the Wind

• Holy Bible

• Audel’s Robot Maintenance and Repair Guide

• A Dictionary of the English Language

• The Causes of Population Decline

• Europe in the 18th and 19th Centuries

• A Backpacker’s Guide to the Carolina Coast

• A Short History of the United States

• Cooking Shore Dinners: Let’s Have a Party!

• The Art of the Dance

I have been reading the history books, going from one to the other and to the dictionary to find the meaning of new words. The dictionary is a pleasure to use, now that I know the alphabet.

There is much in the history books that I do not understand, and it is hard for me to accept the idea that there have been so many people in the world. In the history that is about Europe there are pictures of Paris and Berlin and London, and the size of the buildings and the number of people are staggering.

Sometimes Biff jumps up into my lap while I am reading and goes to sleep there. I like that.

DAY ONE HUNDRED FORTY-NINE

For ten days now I have spent every moment that I can in reading. No one has bothered me; the guards either do not care or, more likely, their programming does not take into account the phenomenon. I even take a book to social time with me and no one seems to notice that I am reading it during the films.

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