
In a cramped study, a weary doctor listens as his old friend, a geologist named Van, lights a cigar and launches into a heated debrief of their recent expedition to the distant world of Capellette. The team—comprising scientists, a surgeon, and a skeptical engineer—has returned with more than mineral samples; they bring back unsettling data about a society divided between a ruling elite and a laboring class. Their conversations drift from the promise of telepathic travel to the moral weight of intervening in another planet’s politics. As old alliances strain, the dialogue reveals how personal convictions can clash with scientific ambition.
The tension sharpens when Billie, the surgeon, argues that the workers of Capellette deserve autonomy, while Van clings to the belief that order can only be maintained by the upper class. Their debate spills into the personal sphere, exposing fractures in marriages and friendships that have long been taken for granted. Listeners are drawn into a cerebral tug‑of‑war where philosophy, love, and the lure of alien knowledge collide.
Language
en
Duration
~3 hours (195K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-05-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1888–1924
A short-lived but imaginative pulp-era writer, he helped shape early science fiction with stories full of strange worlds, bold ideas, and eerie mystery. His best-known work, The Blind Spot, became a lasting cult favorite of fantastic fiction.
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