60s/70s science fiction novel where a man (after years of trying) finally succeeds to make a coin levitate by sheer concentrationBook where the currency is favoursSearching for 60s-70s Science fiction novel about interstellar agent with artificial handScience-Fiction Novel - Female Mathematician - Late '90s?Identify a YA science fiction novel from the 70sScience fiction novel/novellete I read in late 70s: power struggle in a society of immortalsTrying to find the title of a science fiction novel where the monster is singing killer space fungus60s-70s Dystopian UK novel featured in the old Science Fiction Book ClubI'm trying to identify a short science fiction story from the 60s or 70s. Title and author unknownScience Fiction novel from 40+ years agoScience fiction novel with forced sex change70s/60s Novel work on evolution and advanced intelligence
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60s/70s science fiction novel where a man (after years of trying) finally succeeds to make a coin levitate by sheer concentration
Book where the currency is favoursSearching for 60s-70s Science fiction novel about interstellar agent with artificial handScience-Fiction Novel - Female Mathematician - Late '90s?Identify a YA science fiction novel from the 70sScience fiction novel/novellete I read in late 70s: power struggle in a society of immortalsTrying to find the title of a science fiction novel where the monster is singing killer space fungus60s-70s Dystopian UK novel featured in the old Science Fiction Book ClubI'm trying to identify a short science fiction story from the 60s or 70s. Title and author unknownScience Fiction novel from 40+ years agoScience fiction novel with forced sex change70s/60s Novel work on evolution and advanced intelligence
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I am looking for an old (about sixties or seventies I believe) science fiction novel beginning with a man that after a lot of time trying finally succeeds in levitating a coin or some other small object that starts upwards and disappears through the ceiling.
I read the novel in an italian translation, in a paperback series very well known in the sixties, "Urania".
I believe this was just the beginning of a whole complex plot, and the man unraveled the secret of antigravity, at least I think this was his purpose. Certainly the novel went on with other characters. At the moment this is all I can tell.
story-identification novel
New contributor
add a comment |
I am looking for an old (about sixties or seventies I believe) science fiction novel beginning with a man that after a lot of time trying finally succeeds in levitating a coin or some other small object that starts upwards and disappears through the ceiling.
I read the novel in an italian translation, in a paperback series very well known in the sixties, "Urania".
I believe this was just the beginning of a whole complex plot, and the man unraveled the secret of antigravity, at least I think this was his purpose. Certainly the novel went on with other characters. At the moment this is all I can tell.
story-identification novel
New contributor
Welcome to Science Fiction & Fantasy! This question is very terse and would be greatly improved by going through the checklists here; How to ask a good story-ID question?
– Valorum
5 hours ago
Who is the man? What is his name? Why is he trying to levitate a coin? What it the upshot of him succeeding? Were there any other characters? Was the coin-levitation an integral part of the novel or just a sub-plot? Was he the only person in the world with psychic powers or just a.n.other psychic?
– Valorum
5 hours ago
1
Did you read that in English, was that a translation? Sorry for all the questions - but please edit in any more information you may remember, as it will help other people tracking it down :)
– Jenayah
4 hours ago
add a comment |
I am looking for an old (about sixties or seventies I believe) science fiction novel beginning with a man that after a lot of time trying finally succeeds in levitating a coin or some other small object that starts upwards and disappears through the ceiling.
I read the novel in an italian translation, in a paperback series very well known in the sixties, "Urania".
I believe this was just the beginning of a whole complex plot, and the man unraveled the secret of antigravity, at least I think this was his purpose. Certainly the novel went on with other characters. At the moment this is all I can tell.
story-identification novel
New contributor
I am looking for an old (about sixties or seventies I believe) science fiction novel beginning with a man that after a lot of time trying finally succeeds in levitating a coin or some other small object that starts upwards and disappears through the ceiling.
I read the novel in an italian translation, in a paperback series very well known in the sixties, "Urania".
I believe this was just the beginning of a whole complex plot, and the man unraveled the secret of antigravity, at least I think this was his purpose. Certainly the novel went on with other characters. At the moment this is all I can tell.
story-identification novel
story-identification novel
New contributor
New contributor
edited 4 hours ago
Claudio Pedrazzi
New contributor
asked 5 hours ago
Claudio PedrazziClaudio Pedrazzi
435
435
New contributor
New contributor
Welcome to Science Fiction & Fantasy! This question is very terse and would be greatly improved by going through the checklists here; How to ask a good story-ID question?
– Valorum
5 hours ago
Who is the man? What is his name? Why is he trying to levitate a coin? What it the upshot of him succeeding? Were there any other characters? Was the coin-levitation an integral part of the novel or just a sub-plot? Was he the only person in the world with psychic powers or just a.n.other psychic?
– Valorum
5 hours ago
1
Did you read that in English, was that a translation? Sorry for all the questions - but please edit in any more information you may remember, as it will help other people tracking it down :)
– Jenayah
4 hours ago
add a comment |
Welcome to Science Fiction & Fantasy! This question is very terse and would be greatly improved by going through the checklists here; How to ask a good story-ID question?
– Valorum
5 hours ago
Who is the man? What is his name? Why is he trying to levitate a coin? What it the upshot of him succeeding? Were there any other characters? Was the coin-levitation an integral part of the novel or just a sub-plot? Was he the only person in the world with psychic powers or just a.n.other psychic?
– Valorum
5 hours ago
1
Did you read that in English, was that a translation? Sorry for all the questions - but please edit in any more information you may remember, as it will help other people tracking it down :)
– Jenayah
4 hours ago
Welcome to Science Fiction & Fantasy! This question is very terse and would be greatly improved by going through the checklists here; How to ask a good story-ID question?
– Valorum
5 hours ago
Welcome to Science Fiction & Fantasy! This question is very terse and would be greatly improved by going through the checklists here; How to ask a good story-ID question?
– Valorum
5 hours ago
Who is the man? What is his name? Why is he trying to levitate a coin? What it the upshot of him succeeding? Were there any other characters? Was the coin-levitation an integral part of the novel or just a sub-plot? Was he the only person in the world with psychic powers or just a.n.other psychic?
– Valorum
5 hours ago
Who is the man? What is his name? Why is he trying to levitate a coin? What it the upshot of him succeeding? Were there any other characters? Was the coin-levitation an integral part of the novel or just a sub-plot? Was he the only person in the world with psychic powers or just a.n.other psychic?
– Valorum
5 hours ago
1
1
Did you read that in English, was that a translation? Sorry for all the questions - but please edit in any more information you may remember, as it will help other people tracking it down :)
– Jenayah
4 hours ago
Did you read that in English, was that a translation? Sorry for all the questions - but please edit in any more information you may remember, as it will help other people tracking it down :)
– Jenayah
4 hours ago
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
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oldest
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It's not by concentration, but by attempting to copy this "magic trick" through means psychic, scientific, and frankly mental. When he finally succeeds – in the very first few pages of the novel – this mechanism gets developed further into some sort of anti-gravity drive, and the inhabitants of Earth scatter around the universe. That's where the short introduction ends; the main story picks up several hundreds of years later, when Earth has recovered from this, and starts sending around large military ships to distribute "ambassadors".
This is The Great Explosion by Eric Frank Russell (1962), a novel length version of his earlier story ... And then there were none from 1951. The short story only deals with a single of these encounters; the novel details a few more, and "... And then there were none" is where the enterprise of this particular ship effectively ends, as virtually all military and civilian personnel abandon the ship on an Utopian planet.
A relevant excerpt from the Prologue:
Four hours per day, four days per week, he sat at an office desk. The rest of his time was devoted wholly and with appalling single-mindedness to the task of levitating a penny. Wealth or power or shapely women had no appeal to him. Except when hunting a handkerchief his entire life was dedicated to what he deemed the ultimate triumph, namely, that of being able to exhibit a coin floating in mid-air.
(https://www.simpleliberty.org/research/the_great_explosion-00.htm)
New contributor
Nice catch! Good answer, and almost definitely correct. If you want to make this even better, you can quote the first couple paragraphs of the Prologue: web.archive.org/web/20050428191203/http://tmh.floonet.net/books/…
– DavidW
4 hours ago
@DavidW: it's one of my favourite novelettes:)
even though it's (even) older than I am. I came across another reference, hope you don't mind. Although I am unsure what (c) rules apply here.
– The Know
4 hours ago
Any attributed source is fine; I simply pointed to the first I found. Quoting a paragraph or two for non-commercial purposes is a valid Fair Dealing/Fair Use exception to copyright in every English-speaking jurisdiction I'm aware of.
– DavidW
4 hours ago
1
Yeah!!!! Thanks a lot!! it is. I This forum is wonderful!
– Claudio Pedrazzi
4 hours ago
add a comment |
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It's not by concentration, but by attempting to copy this "magic trick" through means psychic, scientific, and frankly mental. When he finally succeeds – in the very first few pages of the novel – this mechanism gets developed further into some sort of anti-gravity drive, and the inhabitants of Earth scatter around the universe. That's where the short introduction ends; the main story picks up several hundreds of years later, when Earth has recovered from this, and starts sending around large military ships to distribute "ambassadors".
This is The Great Explosion by Eric Frank Russell (1962), a novel length version of his earlier story ... And then there were none from 1951. The short story only deals with a single of these encounters; the novel details a few more, and "... And then there were none" is where the enterprise of this particular ship effectively ends, as virtually all military and civilian personnel abandon the ship on an Utopian planet.
A relevant excerpt from the Prologue:
Four hours per day, four days per week, he sat at an office desk. The rest of his time was devoted wholly and with appalling single-mindedness to the task of levitating a penny. Wealth or power or shapely women had no appeal to him. Except when hunting a handkerchief his entire life was dedicated to what he deemed the ultimate triumph, namely, that of being able to exhibit a coin floating in mid-air.
(https://www.simpleliberty.org/research/the_great_explosion-00.htm)
New contributor
Nice catch! Good answer, and almost definitely correct. If you want to make this even better, you can quote the first couple paragraphs of the Prologue: web.archive.org/web/20050428191203/http://tmh.floonet.net/books/…
– DavidW
4 hours ago
@DavidW: it's one of my favourite novelettes:)
even though it's (even) older than I am. I came across another reference, hope you don't mind. Although I am unsure what (c) rules apply here.
– The Know
4 hours ago
Any attributed source is fine; I simply pointed to the first I found. Quoting a paragraph or two for non-commercial purposes is a valid Fair Dealing/Fair Use exception to copyright in every English-speaking jurisdiction I'm aware of.
– DavidW
4 hours ago
1
Yeah!!!! Thanks a lot!! it is. I This forum is wonderful!
– Claudio Pedrazzi
4 hours ago
add a comment |
It's not by concentration, but by attempting to copy this "magic trick" through means psychic, scientific, and frankly mental. When he finally succeeds – in the very first few pages of the novel – this mechanism gets developed further into some sort of anti-gravity drive, and the inhabitants of Earth scatter around the universe. That's where the short introduction ends; the main story picks up several hundreds of years later, when Earth has recovered from this, and starts sending around large military ships to distribute "ambassadors".
This is The Great Explosion by Eric Frank Russell (1962), a novel length version of his earlier story ... And then there were none from 1951. The short story only deals with a single of these encounters; the novel details a few more, and "... And then there were none" is where the enterprise of this particular ship effectively ends, as virtually all military and civilian personnel abandon the ship on an Utopian planet.
A relevant excerpt from the Prologue:
Four hours per day, four days per week, he sat at an office desk. The rest of his time was devoted wholly and with appalling single-mindedness to the task of levitating a penny. Wealth or power or shapely women had no appeal to him. Except when hunting a handkerchief his entire life was dedicated to what he deemed the ultimate triumph, namely, that of being able to exhibit a coin floating in mid-air.
(https://www.simpleliberty.org/research/the_great_explosion-00.htm)
New contributor
Nice catch! Good answer, and almost definitely correct. If you want to make this even better, you can quote the first couple paragraphs of the Prologue: web.archive.org/web/20050428191203/http://tmh.floonet.net/books/…
– DavidW
4 hours ago
@DavidW: it's one of my favourite novelettes:)
even though it's (even) older than I am. I came across another reference, hope you don't mind. Although I am unsure what (c) rules apply here.
– The Know
4 hours ago
Any attributed source is fine; I simply pointed to the first I found. Quoting a paragraph or two for non-commercial purposes is a valid Fair Dealing/Fair Use exception to copyright in every English-speaking jurisdiction I'm aware of.
– DavidW
4 hours ago
1
Yeah!!!! Thanks a lot!! it is. I This forum is wonderful!
– Claudio Pedrazzi
4 hours ago
add a comment |
It's not by concentration, but by attempting to copy this "magic trick" through means psychic, scientific, and frankly mental. When he finally succeeds – in the very first few pages of the novel – this mechanism gets developed further into some sort of anti-gravity drive, and the inhabitants of Earth scatter around the universe. That's where the short introduction ends; the main story picks up several hundreds of years later, when Earth has recovered from this, and starts sending around large military ships to distribute "ambassadors".
This is The Great Explosion by Eric Frank Russell (1962), a novel length version of his earlier story ... And then there were none from 1951. The short story only deals with a single of these encounters; the novel details a few more, and "... And then there were none" is where the enterprise of this particular ship effectively ends, as virtually all military and civilian personnel abandon the ship on an Utopian planet.
A relevant excerpt from the Prologue:
Four hours per day, four days per week, he sat at an office desk. The rest of his time was devoted wholly and with appalling single-mindedness to the task of levitating a penny. Wealth or power or shapely women had no appeal to him. Except when hunting a handkerchief his entire life was dedicated to what he deemed the ultimate triumph, namely, that of being able to exhibit a coin floating in mid-air.
(https://www.simpleliberty.org/research/the_great_explosion-00.htm)
New contributor
It's not by concentration, but by attempting to copy this "magic trick" through means psychic, scientific, and frankly mental. When he finally succeeds – in the very first few pages of the novel – this mechanism gets developed further into some sort of anti-gravity drive, and the inhabitants of Earth scatter around the universe. That's where the short introduction ends; the main story picks up several hundreds of years later, when Earth has recovered from this, and starts sending around large military ships to distribute "ambassadors".
This is The Great Explosion by Eric Frank Russell (1962), a novel length version of his earlier story ... And then there were none from 1951. The short story only deals with a single of these encounters; the novel details a few more, and "... And then there were none" is where the enterprise of this particular ship effectively ends, as virtually all military and civilian personnel abandon the ship on an Utopian planet.
A relevant excerpt from the Prologue:
Four hours per day, four days per week, he sat at an office desk. The rest of his time was devoted wholly and with appalling single-mindedness to the task of levitating a penny. Wealth or power or shapely women had no appeal to him. Except when hunting a handkerchief his entire life was dedicated to what he deemed the ultimate triumph, namely, that of being able to exhibit a coin floating in mid-air.
(https://www.simpleliberty.org/research/the_great_explosion-00.htm)
New contributor
edited 4 hours ago
New contributor
answered 4 hours ago
The KnowThe Know
1062
1062
New contributor
New contributor
Nice catch! Good answer, and almost definitely correct. If you want to make this even better, you can quote the first couple paragraphs of the Prologue: web.archive.org/web/20050428191203/http://tmh.floonet.net/books/…
– DavidW
4 hours ago
@DavidW: it's one of my favourite novelettes:)
even though it's (even) older than I am. I came across another reference, hope you don't mind. Although I am unsure what (c) rules apply here.
– The Know
4 hours ago
Any attributed source is fine; I simply pointed to the first I found. Quoting a paragraph or two for non-commercial purposes is a valid Fair Dealing/Fair Use exception to copyright in every English-speaking jurisdiction I'm aware of.
– DavidW
4 hours ago
1
Yeah!!!! Thanks a lot!! it is. I This forum is wonderful!
– Claudio Pedrazzi
4 hours ago
add a comment |
Nice catch! Good answer, and almost definitely correct. If you want to make this even better, you can quote the first couple paragraphs of the Prologue: web.archive.org/web/20050428191203/http://tmh.floonet.net/books/…
– DavidW
4 hours ago
@DavidW: it's one of my favourite novelettes:)
even though it's (even) older than I am. I came across another reference, hope you don't mind. Although I am unsure what (c) rules apply here.
– The Know
4 hours ago
Any attributed source is fine; I simply pointed to the first I found. Quoting a paragraph or two for non-commercial purposes is a valid Fair Dealing/Fair Use exception to copyright in every English-speaking jurisdiction I'm aware of.
– DavidW
4 hours ago
1
Yeah!!!! Thanks a lot!! it is. I This forum is wonderful!
– Claudio Pedrazzi
4 hours ago
Nice catch! Good answer, and almost definitely correct. If you want to make this even better, you can quote the first couple paragraphs of the Prologue: web.archive.org/web/20050428191203/http://tmh.floonet.net/books/…
– DavidW
4 hours ago
Nice catch! Good answer, and almost definitely correct. If you want to make this even better, you can quote the first couple paragraphs of the Prologue: web.archive.org/web/20050428191203/http://tmh.floonet.net/books/…
– DavidW
4 hours ago
@DavidW: it's one of my favourite novelettes
:)
even though it's (even) older than I am. I came across another reference, hope you don't mind. Although I am unsure what (c) rules apply here.– The Know
4 hours ago
@DavidW: it's one of my favourite novelettes
:)
even though it's (even) older than I am. I came across another reference, hope you don't mind. Although I am unsure what (c) rules apply here.– The Know
4 hours ago
Any attributed source is fine; I simply pointed to the first I found. Quoting a paragraph or two for non-commercial purposes is a valid Fair Dealing/Fair Use exception to copyright in every English-speaking jurisdiction I'm aware of.
– DavidW
4 hours ago
Any attributed source is fine; I simply pointed to the first I found. Quoting a paragraph or two for non-commercial purposes is a valid Fair Dealing/Fair Use exception to copyright in every English-speaking jurisdiction I'm aware of.
– DavidW
4 hours ago
1
1
Yeah!!!! Thanks a lot!! it is. I This forum is wonderful!
– Claudio Pedrazzi
4 hours ago
Yeah!!!! Thanks a lot!! it is. I This forum is wonderful!
– Claudio Pedrazzi
4 hours ago
add a comment |
Claudio Pedrazzi is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Claudio Pedrazzi is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Claudio Pedrazzi is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Claudio Pedrazzi is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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Welcome to Science Fiction & Fantasy! This question is very terse and would be greatly improved by going through the checklists here; How to ask a good story-ID question?
– Valorum
5 hours ago
Who is the man? What is his name? Why is he trying to levitate a coin? What it the upshot of him succeeding? Were there any other characters? Was the coin-levitation an integral part of the novel or just a sub-plot? Was he the only person in the world with psychic powers or just a.n.other psychic?
– Valorum
5 hours ago
1
Did you read that in English, was that a translation? Sorry for all the questions - but please edit in any more information you may remember, as it will help other people tracking it down :)
– Jenayah
4 hours ago