Rahul Sharma (Editor)

253 (novel)

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Cover artist
  
Nic Mead

Language
  
English

Media type
  
Print (Paperback)

Author
  
Geoff Ryman

ISBN
  
0-00-655078-9

Awards
  
Philip K. Dick Award

3.6/5
Goodreads

Country
  
United States

Publication date
  
February 1998

Originally published
  
1998

Genre
  
Novel

Publisher
  
HarperCollins

253 (novel) t1gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcSfDLXsgLlXppmYbM

Pages
  
366 pp (first edition, hardcover)

Similar
  
Geoff Ryman books, Philip K Dick Award winners, Fiction books

253, or Tube Theatre, is a novel by American writer Geoff Ryman, originally created as a website in 1996, then published as a paper book titled 253: The Print Remix in 1998. The print version won a Philip K. Dick Award.

Contents

Synopsis

It is about the 253 people on a London Underground train travelling between Embankment station and Elephant & Castle on January 11, 1995. The basic structure of the novel is explained in this quote from the foreword:

There are seven carriages on a Bakerloo Line train, each with 36 seats. A train in which every passenger has a seat will carry 252 people. With the driver, that makes 253.

Each character is introduced in a separate section containing 253 words. The sections give general details and describe the thoughts going through the characters' heads. In the online version, hypertext links lead to other characters who are nearby or who have some connection to the current character; in the print version, the links are partly replaced by a traditional index. The reader can proceed from one character to another using these devices or can read the novel in positional order, e.g. from one train car to the next, but there is no overall chronological order except in the final section.

Interpretations

Ryman states that the meaning of 253 is dramatically changed when read in digital form as opposed to print form. In reading 253 on the internet the links between passengers create and emphasize existing similarities between the passengers. It becomes a text about how intrinsically similar people are. Whereas, in print form 253 is about how different people are. A lack of links between passengers means that the reader must traverse the story linearly, thereby emphasizing the differences between passengers.

Reception

Charles de Lint gave the print edition a mixed review, declaring: "Is it worth reading? Definitely. Is it the fiction of the future? I hope not. As a one-off, it's entertaining, and even thought-provoking, but it took me a long time to read, simply because I kept setting it aside after every half-dozen or so entries to read something with a more coherent narrative. Call me old-fashioned, but I doubt I'd try another."

References

253 (novel) Wikipedia