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Het Keizerrijk van Isher

Deze serie duikt in de diepten van een uitgestrekt en schijnbaar onoverwinnelijk rijk dat echter een raadselachtige dreiging onder ogen ziet. Het volgt de strijd van een clandestiene organisatie die vecht voor menselijke vrijheid en waardigheid, waarbij geniaal ontworpen wapens met een eigen wil worden ingezet. Het verhaal ontvouwt zich als een aangrijpende saga vol onverwachte wendingen, originele technologische concepten en intriges van kosmische proporties. Het is een avontuur in het hart van de pulp sciencefiction dat tot op de dag van vandaag zijn krachtige impact behoudt.

Ischer
De wapensmeden
M-SF - 56: De arsenalen van Isher

Aanbevolen leesvolgorde

  1. With the publication, in the July 1941 issue of Astounding Science Fiction magazine, of the story Seesaw, van Vogt began unfolding the complex tale of the oppressive Empire of Isher and the mysterious Weapon Shops. This volume, The Weapon Shops of Isher, includes the first three parts of the saga and introduces perhaps the most famous political slogan of science fiction: The Right to Buy Weapons is the Right to Be Free. Born at the height of Nazi conquest, the Isher stories suggested that an oppressive government could never completely subjugate its own citizens if they were well armed. The audience appeal was immediate and has endured long beyond other stories of alien invasion, global conflict and post war nuclear angst.

    M-SF - 56: De arsenalen van Isher1
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  2. De wapensmeden

    • 196bladzijden
    • 7 uur lezen

    Following the success of the stories that formed The Weapon Shops of Isher, van Vogt wrote the novel, The Weapon Makers, in 1943, to enlarge the story of human immortality, the conflict between a controlling government, The House of Isher, the mysterious Weapon Shops and man's place in the universe. The promise of the Weapon Shops' slogan, The Right to Buy Weapons is the Right to Be Free, is described thus: "Many of these weapons still carried the old names. “Guns” they were called, or “revolvers,” or “rifles,” but there the resemblance ended. These “guns” did not shoot bullets, they discharged energy in many forms and quantities. Some of them could kill or destroy at a thousand miles if necessary, and yet they were controlled by the same sensitive elements as the Weapon Shop door. Just as the door refused to open for police officers, Imperial soldiers or people unfriendly to the Shops, so these guns had been set to fire only in self-defense, and against certain animals during open season. They also had other special qualities, particularly as to defense and speed of operation."

    De wapensmeden2
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