Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Hell Is the Absence of God

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Author
  
Ted Chiang

Language
  
English

Published in
  
Starlight #3

Country
  
United States

Genre(s)
  
Science fiction

"Hell Is the Absence of God" is a 2001 novelette by Ted Chiang, first published in Starlight #3, and subsequently reprinted in Year's Best Fantasy 2, and in Fantasy: The Best of 2001, as well as in Chiang's 2002 anthology, Stories of Your Life and Others.

Contents

Plot

The novelette is set in a world where the existence of God, souls, and hell are provable, and where miracles and angelic visitations are commonplace—albeit not necessarily benevolent: for instance, the protagonist's wife is killed by the collateral damage of an angel's presence, having been "hit by flying glass when the angel's billowing curtain of flame shattered the storefront window of the café in which she was eating. She bled to death within minutes." Chiang has explicitly stated that the story is "straight fantasy", because it takes place in a universe "in which the scientific method doesn't work".

Reception

"Hell Is" won the 2002 Hugo Award for Best Novelette, the 2002 Nebula Award for Best Novelette, and the Locus Award for Best Novelette. It was also a finalist for the 2002 Theodore Sturgeon Award, and won the 2004 Seiun Award.

Robert J. Sawyer and David G. Hartwell described Hell Is the Absence of God as the "best single SF story of 2002". Conversely, John C. Wright has described it as "trite antichristian propaganda". Elf Sternberg has compared the novelette to C. S. Lewis's The Great Divorce, saying that although Lewis is a supporter of God, Chiang is "far more ambivalent".

Ken Liu wrote "Single-Bit Error", a short story published in 2009, in response to Hell Is the Absence of God.

References

Hell Is the Absence of God Wikipedia