
Part 1
In a future where crime has been replaced by the regulation of emotion, every citizen carries an emotiograph that constantly reports their inner state to the omniscient Eye. When a deviation is detected, the accused is summoned to a stark, high‑tech courtroom where thoughts are projected onto a screen and examined without witnesses. The story opens with the infamous trial of John Hastings, a man charged with harboring a forbidden hatred that could have cost his wife her life.
You step into the role of the unexpected thirteenth juror, joining a panel of seasoned officials—psychosurgeons, interstellar officials, and mechanics—each of whom has once crossed paths with Hastings. As the trial unfolds, you watch the defendant’s emotions laid bare, the Questioner’s disembodied voice probing every nuance, and the crowd’s uneasy murmurs ripple through the amphitheater. The narrative captures the tension of a society that has outlawed the very feelings that once defined humanity, inviting listeners to ponder how justice might function when the mind itself becomes the courtroom.
Language
en
Duration
~30 minutes (29K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
United States: Standard Magazines, Inc.,1955.
Credits
Greg Weeks, Mary Meehan and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net.
Release date
2022-10-23
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
A little-known mid-century science fiction writer, active in the early 1950s, left behind a small body of imaginative work that still feels curious and offbeat today. Best known for stories like Sibling and The 13th Juror, this author wrote the kind of speculative fiction that pulp magazines loved: brisk, strange, and idea-driven.
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