Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Davy (novel)

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Originally published
  
1964

Nominations
  
Hugo Award for Best Novel

3.7/5
Goodreads

Author
  
Edgar Pangborn

Davy (novel) t3gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcSYOTfqTrkiV09g

Genres
  
Fiction, Fantasy, Science Fiction, Speculative fiction

Similar
  
Works by Edgar Pangborn, Davy books, Science Fiction books

Davy is a post-apocalyptic science fiction novel by American writer Edgar Pangborn, nominated for the 1965 Hugo Award. It is set in the Northeastern United States some centuries after an atomic war ended high-technology civilization, with some scenes on an unnamed Atlantic island.

The novel is a bildungsroman, following its title character, Davy (who grew up a ward of the state and thus has no last name) as he grows to manhood in a pseudo-medieval society dominated by a Church that actively suppresses technology, banning "anything that may contain atoms."

Davy begins as an indentured servant in an inn, but escapes, and most of the novel is concerned with his adventures. The book is written as though Davy himself were writing his memoirs, with footnotes by people who knew him.

The novel's post-apocalyptic setting was also used in the novel The Company of Glory (1975) (set several centuries earlier). The fall of old technological culture and the rise of the religion of "Abraham" is narrated in the 1954 story "The Music Master of Babylon", Numerous other short stories are set in that world. including those collected in Still I Persist in Wondering (1978)

Reception

Algis Budrys uneasily gave Davy a mixed review, saying that while he enjoyed the novel and held Pangborn in high esteem, he found that the book "achieves its marvelous effects by talking tough while following faithfully along a line of beloved cliches, . . . cliches of the self-confident Establishment tickling itself." He concluded that although Pangborn "had done a rare and wonderful thing in making his protagonist "a believable, impressive, vivid and memorable character," the novel became innocuous, "totally acceptable entertainment around characters and events which would actually have made the audience run in panic . . . just the perfect cheap thrill."

References

Davy (novel) Wikipedia