From the Archives: Editors’ Choice: A Time of Changes by Robert Silverberg
This week’s Editors’ Choice is Robert Silverberg‘s wonderful A Time of Changes.
In the far future, humanity has spread across the galaxy to worlds that began as colonies, but now feel like home, each with its own long history of a thousand years or more, and each with its own unique culture. One of the strangest of these is Borthan, where the founding settlers established the Covenant, which teaches that the self is to be despised, and forbids anyone to reveal their innermost thoughts or feelings to another. On Borthan, the filthiest obscenities imaginable are the words ‘I’ and ‘me’, and for the heinous crime of ‘self-baring’, apostates have always paid with exile or death.
But after his eyes are opened by a visitor from Earth, Kinnall Darival, prince of Salla, risks everything to teach his people the real meaning of being human, beginning his account with the vilest of heresies:
‘I am Kinnall Darival and I mean to tell you all about myself.’
Winner of the Nebula Award for best novel, A Time of Changes was published during a particularly vibrant period of Silverberg’s career – a point at which he had a serious claim to being the best SF writer in the world.
Hyperbole? Maybe, but just look at this:
1967
Thorns – shortlisted for the 1968 Hugo and Nebula Awards
1968
The Masks of Time – shortlisted for the 1969 Nebula Award
1969
Up The Line – shortlisted for the 1970 Hugo and Nebula Awards
1970
Tower of Glass – shortlisted for the 1971 Hugo and Nebula Awards
1971
A Time of Changes – shortlisted for the 1972 Hugo Award; winner of the 1972 Nebula Award
The World Inside – shortlisted for the 1972 Hugo Award but subsequently withdrawn
1972
The Book of Skulls – shortlisted for the 1973 Hugo and Nebula Awards
Dying Inside – shortlisted for the 1973 Hugo and Nebula Awards
Half a dozen years in which Robert Silverberg‘s novels accrued 7 nominations for each of the two major SF awards – and that’s without taking into account four Hugo nominations (one win) and three Nebula nominations for best novella, and two Hugo nominations and three Nebula nominations (two wins) for best short fiction.
That’s an extraordinary record from an extraordinary writer – and that’s why the extraordinary A Time of Changes is SF Gateway’s Editors’ Choice this week.