Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Hidden World (novel)

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Cover artist
  
Ric Binkley

Genre
  
Science-fiction novel

Pages
  
224 (Hardback edition)

Author
  
Stanton A. Coblentz

OCLC
  
2854677

Language
  
English

Media type
  
Print

Originally published
  
1957

Country
  
United States of America

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Similar
  
Next Door to the Sun, Lord of Tranerica, The Decline of Man, The Sunken World, Literary Revolution - The

Hidden World is a satiric science-fiction novel by Stanton A. Coblentz. It was originally published as a magazine serial in Wonder Stories (Mar, Apr, May 1935) as In Caverns Below. It was first published in book form in 1957 by Avalon Books.

Contents

The underlying premise

Underlying the Basin and Range province of North America, giant caverns, some many miles in diameter, form a network that is occupied by people who have evolved the adaptations (such as pale skin) for living underground. Completely isolated from the upper world, the people have created a civilization that is technologically more advanced than that of 1935 America.

Plot

While exploring an abandoned silver mine in Nevada, Philip Clay and Frank Comstock are separated from their team and trapped by a cave-in triggered by a series of earthquakes. As they try to find a way out of the trap they come to a corridor with smooth walls and floor. They eventually see light, follow it, and come to a place overlooking a vast cavern, filled with yellow-green light, where a mighty battle plays out before them.

Spotted by the combatants and fired upon, the two men run for their lives and get separated from each other in the confusion. Frank is captured by a group of men with chalk-white faces and taken to a large underground city. The chalk-faces attempt to put Frank to death as a spy, but his notebook blocks the death ray. One chalk-face notices the book, examines it, and takes Frank into his custody.

The chalk-face is Professor Tan Torm, who wants to study Frank and his obviously primitive culture. He gives the task of teaching Frank the local language to his daughter Loa, who falls in love with Frank. The standard of beauty in this underground realm is fat and wrinkled, so Frank employs various pretenses of decorum to keep a good distance from Loa. Once he learns the language he goes to work for the Ventilation Company, the corporation that supplies the underground realm of Wu with fresh air from the surface.

Frank discovers that the vast caverns comprising the realms of Wu and Zu span hundreds of miles, primarily under Nevada, Utah, and Arizona. Those realms have been at war with each other more or less continuously for thousands of years. War both keeps the population down (in both senses of the word) and provides big profits for large corporations. Frank works his way up the social scale and also discovers a hidden way to turn off Wu’s air supply. Using the latter, he deposes the dictator and takes his place.

Frank’s efforts to reform the society of Wu meet so much resistance and resentment that he is compelled to renew the war with Zu, whose own dictator has just been deposed. The new dictator of Zu turns out to be Philip Clay in disguise. The two men meet in secret and then, pursued by their erstwhile minions, they flee to a ventilation shaft where Frank has stashed climbing equipment. They return to the upper world and stagger into a mining camp in California, where they are finally rescued.

Publication history

  • 1935, USA, Continental Publications (Wonder Stories), Pub dates Mar 1935, Apr 1935, May 1935, Pulp Mag (128 pp), as In Caverns Below
  • 1950, USA, Best Books, Inc. (Fantastic Story Quarterly, Fall 1950), Pub date Oct 1950, Pulp Mag (164 pp), as In Caverns Below
  • 1957, USA, Avalon Books, Hardback (224 pp), as Hidden World
  • 1964, USA, Airmont Books (Airmont Science Fiction #6), Pub date Jun 1964, Paperback (127 pp), as Hidden World
  • 1975, USA, Garland Publishing, ISBN 0-8240-1405-7, Hardback (224 pp), as In Caverns Below
  • 1976, USA, Airmont Books (Airmont Science Fiction #6), Pub date Jan 1976, Paperback (127 pp), as Hidden World
  • Reviews

    The book was reviewed by

  • Anthony Boucher at The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction (Nov 1957)
  • S. E. Cotts at Fantastic (Dec 1957)
  • Theodore Sturgeon at Venture Science Fiction Magazine (Jan 1958)
  • P. Schuyler Miller at Astounding Science Fiction (Apr 1958)
  • Floyd C. Gale at Galaxy Science Fiction (May 1958)
  • Barnaby Rapoport at The Science Fiction Review Monthly (Jan 1976)
  • Tom Reamy at Delap's F & SF Review (Jun 1976)
  • Listings

    The book is listed at

  • The Library of Congress as http://lccn.loc.gov/57012666
  • WorldCat as OCLC 2854677
  • References

    Hidden World (novel) Wikipedia