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The Syndic

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Cover artist
  
Paul Galdone

Language
  
English

Pages
  
223

Author
  
Cyril M. Kornbluth

Genre
  
Science Fiction

3.4/5
Goodreads

Country
  
United States

Publication date
  
October 1953

Originally published
  
October 1953

Page count
  
223

Publisher
  
Doubleday

The Syndic t3gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcTJqujutPnjre1YRt

Media type
  
Print (hardback & paperback)

Awards
  
Prometheus Hall of Fame Award

Similar
  
Cyril M Kornbluth books, Prometheus Hall of Fame Award winners, Science Fiction books

1v1s on the syndic sever


The Syndic is a 1953 science fiction novel by Cyril M. Kornbluth.

Contents

Prince calonna the syndic of rome 1914 1920


Plot summary

The prologue introduces the setting, a future North America divided between rival criminal gangs the Syndic on the East Coast and the Mob in Chicago, who have driven the federal government into exile in Iceland, Ireland and other North Atlantic islands. Life has more or less returned to normal in Syndic territory – as long as protection money is paid on time. The rest of the world has collapsed into either peasant life or tribalism.

Attitudes to sex are generally tolerant, with free sex outside of marriage and both polygamy and polyandry accepted. (But male homosexuality is not, and lesbianism is never mentioned.)

The protagonist, Charles Orsino is a low-ranking member of the Syndic who collects protection money in New York. After a failed assassination attempt he is invited to a meeting of the leaders of the Syndic, who suspect that the exiled government were responsible. To discover the truth, Charles volunteers to go undercover to infiltrate the government, with a false personality created by hypnosis to fool lie detectors. He is taken to the main navel base on the shores of Ireland. He also visits Ireland outside of government territory: it is tribal and governed by sorceresses who have genuine powers of telepathy. It is mentioned in passing that England is also tribal and much weaker.

While escaping home, he also visits Mob territory and finds it much worse organised. He proposes that the Syndic becomes more like a regular government to protect itself. But his mentor rejects this, and the book ends on that note.

Reception and influences

The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction noted that the novel had wrongly been seen as "deficient" in comparison with Kornbluth's collaborative work, concluding that aspects of the Syndic government structure were "effective and even prophetic."

The novel's exploration of anarcho-capitalism proved popular with libertarians. The novel had an influence on Samuel Edward Konkin III, who considered it an under appreciated classic. It was also inducted into the Prometheus Award Hall of Fame in 1986.

References

The Syndic Wikipedia


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