Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Collision Course (Bayley novel)

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Language
  
English

Pages
  
175

Originally published
  
February 1973

Page count
  
175

Publisher
  
DAW Books

3.7/5
Goodreads

Country
  
United Kingdom

Publication date
  
February 1973

ISBN
  
978-0-87997-043-7

Author
  
Barrington J. Bayley

Genre
  
Science Fiction

Cover artist
  
Christopher F. Foss

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Media type
  
Print (Hardcover, Paperback)

Similar
  
Barrington J Bayley books, Science Fiction books

Collision Course (a.k.a. Collision with Chronos) is the fourth novel by the science fiction author Barrington J. Bayley. The novel was inspired by the multiple time dimensions proposed by J. W. Dunne. The plot centers on the collision of two alternate "presents", with disastrous implications for reality.

Literary significance and reception

Rhys Hughes, in his review of Bayley's work, ranked the novel as Bayley's third-best but still the most original time paradox story in modern SF, noting that, for the first time, Bayley's novels had reached the high standards of his short stories.

John Clute described Collision Course, along with Empire of Two Worlds and Annihilation Factor, as "variously successful" but held that The Fall of Chronopolis was Bayley's most fully realised time travel story.

Reviewing the novel in Vector, Brian Stableford criticised Bayley's tendency to arbitrarily switch between viewpoints but concluded that "[y]ou will find it a rewarding experience."

In 1990, Collision Course won the Japanese Seiun Award for best translated novel.

References

Collision Course (Bayley novel) Wikipedia