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Devourer

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"Devourer"
Short story by Liu Cixin
CountryChina
LanguageChinese
Genre(s)Science fiction
Publication
Published inScience Fiction World
Publication typePeriodical
Media typePrint
Publication dateNovember 2002

"Devourer" (Chinese: 人和吞食者; pinyin: rén hé tūnshízhě) is a science-fiction short story by Chinese writer Liu Cixin, first published in Science Fiction World (Chinese: 科幻世界; pinyin: kēhuàn shìjiè) in Chengdu in Sichuan Province in November 2002. The short story was included in the collection The Wandering Earth published by Head of Zeus in October 2017.[1]

Plot

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An alien crystal from Eridanus reaches Earth and warns humanity of the arrival of the "World Destroyer". Shortly afterwards, a spaceship belonging to the World Destroyer reaches Earth as a vanguard, and a several-meter-tall and unusually reptilian-looking alien emerges from it, which humans call "Biter". At a reception with other heads of state, Biter explains that all the raw materials of the planets in the Solar System will be plundered by the World Destroyer when it arrives, and then eats the Greek president. Biter justifies this as a taste test, because people do not have to face extinction, but can be kept for their delicious meat on board of the World Destroyer and can live a luxurious life until they are slaughtered at the age of sixty. The condition for this, however, is that the troublesome moon must be removed from orbit before the World Destroyer arrives, which is to be done by blasting rock with nuclear weapons.

Two hundred years later, the ring-shaped world destroyer is enclosing the Earth, but a secret plan has been devised to blow up the moon to push it onto a collision course with it. The world destroyer is badly damaged by the evasive maneuver and the repairs delay the destruction of the Earth. After the world destroyer leaves, the last humans to have awakened from cryogenic sleep turn to Biter in anger, asking what right his civilization had to devour the Earth. Biter then reveals that it is descended from the dinosaurs. This also shows why their similarities to humans were more strange than their differences. Although a colony of humans now lives on the world destroyer as planned and in such luxury that they look back on their old life as completely primitive, the last humans still want to stay on Earth, die a peaceful death and then serve as food for the ants so that life on Earth can begin anew.

Translations

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"Devourer" was also translated into German (2018), Korean (2019) and Spanish (2019).[1]

Reviews

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Jaymee Goh wrote on Strange Horizons, that the "expository paragraphs [....] are particularly tedious in first contact stories such as 'Mountain,' 'Devourer,' and 'The Micro Era,' where there is barely any human drama and the protagonists are flat." In particular for "Devourer", she remarks that the "ridiculousness can paper over the ethical questions raised" since "the text is asking the reader to identify and recognize the humanity of an alien", who is "a genocidal colonizer" and "a giant thirty-foot-tall dinosaur".[2]

Liz Comesky wrote on International Examiner, that the short story was a "personal favorite."[3]

Gareth D Jones wrote on SF Crowsnest: "There were several concepts here that reminded me of parts of ‘Three-Body’ and I wondered whether this had been a test run for some of those ideas."[4]

References

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  1. ^ a b "Summary Bibliography: Cixin Liu". isfdb.org. Retrieved 2024-09-01.
  2. ^ Goh, Jaymee (2018-06-04). "The Wandering Earth by Cixin Liu". strangehorizons.com. Retrieved 2024-09-01.
  3. ^ Comesky, Liz (2022-08-23). "Cixin Liu's new sci-fi collection spans Earth, space, human nature, the past and the future". iexaminer.org. Retrieved 2024-09-08.
  4. ^ Jones, Gareth D. (2017-06-06). "The Wandering Earth by Cixin Liu (book review)". SFcrowsnest. Retrieved 2024-09-08.

External links