From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Productions of Time
First edition
AuthorJohn Brunner
LanguageEnglish
Genre Science fiction
Publisher Signet Books
Publication date
1967
Media typePrint (book)
Pages139
OCLC 2011327

The Productions of Time is a science fiction novel by English writer John Brunner, first published in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction in 1966. It appeared in book form the following year, published by Signet Books. [1]

Plot summary

The plot follows actor Murray Douglas as he joins a theatre production with a group of other actors. Each of the cast members has had career problems because of drugs, alcohol, or other kinks. The play is an avant-garde one, a form of improv where the actors make up the script during rehearsal, and rehearsals take place in an isolated country house. It emerges that the alleged playwright is feeding each participant's vices, using a futuristic form of sleep learning to overcome their attempts to stay "clean". This is being done to benefit the prurient interests of decadent time travellers.

References

Sources

  • Brunner, John (1970), The Productions of Time. Penguin Books (UK edition)'


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Productions of Time
First edition
AuthorJohn Brunner
LanguageEnglish
Genre Science fiction
Publisher Signet Books
Publication date
1967
Media typePrint (book)
Pages139
OCLC 2011327

The Productions of Time is a science fiction novel by English writer John Brunner, first published in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction in 1966. It appeared in book form the following year, published by Signet Books. [1]

Plot summary

The plot follows actor Murray Douglas as he joins a theatre production with a group of other actors. Each of the cast members has had career problems because of drugs, alcohol, or other kinks. The play is an avant-garde one, a form of improv where the actors make up the script during rehearsal, and rehearsals take place in an isolated country house. It emerges that the alleged playwright is feeding each participant's vices, using a futuristic form of sleep learning to overcome their attempts to stay "clean". This is being done to benefit the prurient interests of decadent time travellers.

References

Sources

  • Brunner, John (1970), The Productions of Time. Penguin Books (UK edition)'



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