ROADSIDE PICNIC
'''Roadside Picnic''' (Russian: Пикник на обочине, IPA:) is a science fiction short novel written in 1971 by Arkady and Boris Strugatsky, published in 1972 and since deemed a classic. The film ''Stalker'' directed by Andrei Tarkovsky is loosely based on the novel.
| Contents |
| Plot summary |
| Analogies with the Chernobyl disaster |
| Awards and nominations |
| Adaptations |
| English releases |
| Notes |
| External links |
Plot summary
Aliens have visited the Earth, and departed, leaving behind a number of artifacts of their incomprehensibly advanced technology. The places where such artifacts were left behind are areas of great danger, known as "Zones." The Zones are laid out in a pattern which suggests that they resulted from the impact of an influence from space which struck repeatedly from the same direction, striking different places as the Earth rotated on its axis.
A frontier culture arises along the margins of these Zones, peopled by "stalkers" who risk their lives in illegal expeditions to recover these artifacts, which do not obey known physical laws. The one most sought after, the "golden sphere", is rumored to have the power to fulfill the deepest human wishes.
The name of the novel derives from a metaphor proposed by the character Dr. Valentine Pilman, who compares the visit to a roadside picnic. After the picnickers depart, nervous animals venture forth from the adjacent forest and discover the picnic garbage: spilled motor oil, faded unknown flowers, a box of matches, a clockwork teddy bear, balloons, candy wrappers, etc. He concludes that humankind finds itself in a situation similar to that of the curious forest animals.
Analogies with the Chernobyl disaster
In the former Soviet Union, the area of the Chernobyl disaster has become analogous to the Strugatskys' novel.
Humans are not supposed to live within 30 km (19 miles) of the disaster site, giving rise to a 1,400 square mile region formally referred to as the Zone of alienation, informally known as "The Zone", hence the analogy. The Zone, straddling the Ukraine-Belarus border, contains ghost cities: Prypiat, Chernobyl and many ghost villages. It has unwittingly become a major nature reserve. As in the novel, the Zone attracts some illegal scavenging. Some scientists investigating the area nicknamed themselves "Stalkers".
Awards and nominations
★ 1977 Special jury of "Writers of Sci-Fi literature of the USA" association has awarded brothers Strugatsky with the John W. Campbell Award for the best book of the year, published in English (novel ''Roadside Picnic'').
★ 1978 After the publication of ''Roadside Picnic'' in the USA brothers Strugatsky are accepted as honourable members of "Society of Mark Twain" (USA) with formulation "for the outstanding contribution in world Sci-Fi literature".
★ 1979 On the Scandinavian congress of Sci-Fi literature Strugatsky novel ''Roadside Picnic'' is marked by the premium of Jules Verne "For the best book of the year printed in Sweden".
★ 1981 On the Sixth festival of the French Sci-Fi literature in Metz brothers Strugatsky has been awarded as the authors of the best foreign book of the year.
Adaptations
★ Andrei Tarkovsky's film ''Stalker'' is loosely adapted from the book.
★ In 2003, the Finnish theater company ''Circus Maximus'' produced a stage version of ''Roadside Picnic'', called ''Stalker''. Authorship of the play was credited to the Strugatskys and to M. Viljanen and M. Kanninen.
★ While not a direct adaptation, the video game '' has a very similar background idea and terms from the book such as "Stalker" and "The Zone" as well as a wish granting Monolith similar to the Golden Sphere of the novel, or The Room of the Tarkovsky film, as it is loosely based on the novel.
★ A ''Roadside Picnic'' film based on the novel is now in development by Columbia TriStar, to feature John Travolta, with a 2008 release date.[1]
English releases
# Strugatsky, Arkady and Boris. ''Roadside Picnic / Tale of the Troika (Best of Soviet Science Fiction)'' translated by Antonina W. Bouis. New York: Macmillan Pub Co, 1977, 245 pp. ISBN 0-02-615170-7. LCCN: 77000543.
# Strugatsky, Arkady and Boris. ''Roadside Picnic''. London: Gollancz, April 13, 1978, 150 pp. ISBN 0-575-02445-3.
# Strugatsky, Arkady and Boris. ''Roadside Picnic / Tale of the Troika''. New York: Timescape (Pocket Books), February 1, 1978. ISBN 0-671-81976-3.
# Strugatsky, Arkady and Boris. ''Roadside Picnic''. London: Penguin Books, September 27, 1979, 160 pp. ISBN 0-14-005135-X.
# Strugatsky, Arkady and Boris. ''Roadside Picnic''. New York: Pocket Books (Timescape), September 1, 1982, 156 pp. ISBN 0-671-45842-6.
# Strugatsky, Arkady and Boris. ''Roadside Picnic (SF Collector's Edition)''. London: Gollancz, August 24, 2000, 145 pp. ISBN 0-575-07053-6.
# Strugatsky, Arkady and Boris. ''Roadside Picnic (S.F. Masterworks)''. London: Gollancz, February 8, 2007. ISBN 0-575-07978-9.
Notes
1. Hollywood movie details. http://www.hollywood.com/movies/detail/id/382104. Retrieved August 22, 2007.
External links
★ Read ''Roadside Picnic'' by Arkady and Boris Strugatsky on the RussianSiFiction.com
★ Read ''Roadside Picnic'' by Arkady and Boris Strugatsky on the Perm mirror of Maxim Moshkow Library.
★ Read ''Roadside Picnic'' parallel both in Russian and English.
★ Download ''Roadside Picnic'' in one zip file from the official Strugatskys' page.
★ Download ''Roadside Picnic'' in pdf format from the Cryptomaoist Editions of the Center for Computational Aesthetics.
★ Review of the ''Roadside Picnic'' on the Infinity Plus website.
★ The SF Site Featured Review: ''Roadside Picnic''
★ Stanislaw Lem about the Strugatskys' ''Roadside Picnic''
★ Review of the ''Roadside Picnic'' on SFFWorld.com
★ ''Stalker'' play at Helsinki City theatre in the Circus Maximus page.
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