Noon Universe: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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(Dieselpunk is one word)
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* [[Teleporters and Transporters]] : Called "Zero transport" or "null-T" and used as an actual form of public transport. Apparently available only on Earth.
* [[Teleporters and Transporters]] : Called "Zero transport" or "null-T" and used as an actual form of public transport. Apparently available only on Earth.
* [[The Federation]] : Earth and its global and interstellar organizations. But it's really more of a grand and pretty cynical [[Deconstruction]] of this trope.
* [[The Federation]] : Earth and its global and interstellar organizations. But it's really more of a grand and pretty cynical [[Deconstruction]] of this trope.
* [[We Will Have Perfect Health in the Future]]: In spades—in ''Inhabited Island'', the protagonist is not only considered ridiculously strong by the [[Human Aliens]] inhabitants of a [[Diesel Punk]] planet he is stranded on, but apparently can run for tens of miles without stopping, hold his breath for ten minutes, and ''survive several point-blank bullet shots''. Not to mention that he seems completely impervious to most sorts of radiation, even the nuclear one.
* [[We Will Have Perfect Health in the Future]]: In spades—in ''Inhabited Island'', the protagonist is not only considered ridiculously strong by the [[Human Aliens]] inhabitants of a [[Dieselpunk]] planet he is stranded on, but apparently can run for tens of miles without stopping, hold his breath for ten minutes, and ''survive several point-blank bullet shots''. Not to mention that he seems completely impervious to most sorts of radiation, even the nuclear one.
** This is actually justified in-universe by the procedure of "fukamization" a.k.a. "bioblockade", which is performed upon fetuses shortly before birth to give them extraordinary health. {{spoiler|In ''Time Wanderers'', it is also revealed that bioblockade has a side effect of preventing people from transforming into Homo Ludens.}}
** This is actually justified in-universe by the procedure of "fukamization" a.k.a. "bioblockade", which is performed upon fetuses shortly before birth to give them extraordinary health. {{spoiler|In ''Time Wanderers'', it is also revealed that bioblockade has a side effect of preventing people from transforming into Homo Ludens.}}
* [[What Measure Is a Non-Human?]]
* [[What Measure Is a Non-Human?]]

Revision as of 04:35, 4 March 2017

The Noon Universe is The Verse where many of Strugatsky Brothers' works are set. The name comes from the first novel's title and refers to the "noon" (as in, "the high point") of human civilization in the 22nd century, which the novels describe, and its inevitable dusk. Also, the title was a slight Take That at Daybreak 2250, a post-apocalyptic sci-fi novel by Andre Norton that the brothers read and disliked with a passion.

The setting is a future Utopia that gets gradually deconstructed as the authors become disillusioned with the Soviet Union. Intellectuals suffer from free time and idle hands turn to dangerous experiments, the Precursors may be guiding the course of events on Earth and it's driving the security services justifiably paranoid, attempts to help out primitive alien civilizations end in tragedy, and a general "Golden Age feeling the premonitions of its own decay" atmosphere pervades. The utopia is never truly deconstructed to the point of destruction (though Word of God says only Arkady's Author Existence Failure prevented it).

The Noon Universe starts with a "Society of Plenty" that averts decadence through a well planned education system that respects the role of the Teacher and strives to teach pupils the values of Love of Labor, Camraderie and Goodness. If you ask a Russian intellectual for a vision of Utopia you're likely to get this as an answer.

Thanks to advances in medical science, Noon Universe Earthlings are capable of near super-human feats and can recover from potentially deadly injuries. As they explore the universe, they discover many Earthlike planets inhabited by humanoids re-enacting various periods of Earth history in the most unpleasant ways possible. This allows for some seriously dark and gritty social satire and the posing of interesting questions: just what can a society of Sufficiently Advanced Earthlings do to prevent the Holocaust or the Inquisition from recurring elsewhere without denying free will, and what effect will interacting with violent cultures have on the Earthlings themselves?


Novels set in the Noon Universe


Eleventh novel, The White Queen (as in the chess piece), was planned but never completed due to Arkady Strugatsky's death in 1991.

In addition to the core novels above, following Strugatsky works are considered to be set in the same universe: The Land of Crimson Clouds (never translated from Russian), The Way to Amalthea, Space Apprentice, The Final Circle of Paradise, and several untranslated short stories.


The following tropes are common to many or all entries in the Noon Universe franchise.
For tropes specific to individual installments, visit their respective work pages.