The Star Diaries
First edition | |
Author | Stanisław Lem |
---|---|
Original title | Polish: Dzienniki gwiazdowe |
Translator | English: Michael Kandel |
Illustrator | Stanisław Lem |
Cover artist | Marian Stachurski |
Country | Poland |
Language | Polish, English, German, Russian |
Genre | Science fiction |
Publisher | Iskry (1957) |
Publication date | 1957, 1971 |
Published in English | 1976 |
Media type | Print (Paperback) |
Dzienniki gwiazdowe is a 1957 collection of short stories by Polish writer Stanisław Lem, expanded in 1971 around the character of space traveller Ijon Tichy. The collection was published in English in two volumes, The Star Diaries (published New York, 1976) and Memoirs of a Space Traveller (published London, 1982).
Stories
The Star Diaries
Translated by Michael Kandel.
- Introduction and Introduction to the Expanded Edition, in which professor Tarantoga presents the latest information on the documentation of Ijon Tichy's exploits.
- "The Seventh Voyage", in which a spaceship defect forces Tichy through a series of time vortices, creating a multitude of temporal copies of himself.
- "The Eighth Voyage", in which Ijon Tichy represents Earth to petition for its admission to the United Planets.
- "The Eleventh Voyage", in which Ijon Tichy travels in disguise to the planet Circia to attempt to bring an end to hostilities coming from its robot population.
- "The Twelfth Voyage", in which Ijon Tichy employs Prof. Tarantoga's new invention of time acceleration on the planet of Microcephalics.
- "The Thirteenth Voyage", in which Ijon Tichy sets out to meet Master Oh. Instead, he finds two planets (Pinta and Panta) ruled according to the Master's principles. On Pinta, people are trying to become fish using a technique called evolution by persuasion. On Panta, all inhabitants are identical clones and exchange their jobs daily.
- "The Fourteenth Voyage", in which Ijon Tichy goes hunting for Squamp (Polish: kurdel) - an animal whose area is several hectares and is being puzzled by mysterious objects, called scrupts (Polish: sepulki).
- "The Eighteenth Voyage", in which Ijon Tichy helps create the cause of our universe from a single electron.
- "The Twentieth Voyage", in which Ijon Tichy is forced by his future self to lead a programme to ameliorate Earth's and mankind's history.
- "The Twenty-first Voyage", in which Ijon Tichy visits Dykhtonia - a civilisation which achieved total corporeal and mental plasticity after a thousand-year rule by automorphists, the local equivalent of transhumanists.
- "The Twenty-second Voyage", in which Ijon Tichy learns of the troubles of evangelising extraterrestrial civilisations.
- "The Twenty-third Voyage", in which Ijon Tichy visits a tiny planet, whose inhabitants save living space by frequently storing themselves as 'atom dust'.
- "The Twenty-fourth Voyage", in which Ijon Tichy visits a civilisation which has assigned all power to a machine to establish planetary harmony. The machine changed them all into shiny discs to be arranged in pleasant patterns across their planet.
- "The Twenty-fifth Voyage"
- "The Twenty-eighth Voyage"
Memoirs of a space traveler: further reminiscences of Ijon Tichy
Translated by Joel Stern and Maria Swiecicka-Ziemianek
- "The Eighteenth Voyage"
- "The Twenty-fourth Voyage"
- "Further Reminiscences of Ijon Tichy (Parts I-V)"
- "Doctor Diagoras"
- "Let Us Save the Universe (An Open Letter from Ijon Tichy)"
Never translated in English
- "The Twenty-sixth and Last Voyage", a pro-Communist satire on Cold War. In this story, after a confused landing, Ijon finds himself amid an antagonism between two superpowers "Merka" and "Rasha", and recognizes his confusion only standing in front of the House Un-American Activities Committee. The story was never republished after 1957. In the 1971 edition of Dzienniki gwiazdowe, the introduction written by professor Tarantoga explains that, according to the Institute of Tychology, the 26th voyage does not belong to the pen of Ijon Tichy, i.e., it was an apocryphal tale.
- "Ijon Tichy's Last Voyage" (not to be confused with "The Twenty-sixth and Last Voyage"); only published in the German (October 1996) and Polish (May 1999) editions of Playboy.
Adaptations
German-language adaptations of several voyages taken by Ijon Tichy exist. In 2001 and 2002, two independent short films were made, running about 15 minutes each, directed by Dennis Jacobsen, Randa Chahoud, and Oliver Jahn (Jahn also played the main character Ijon Tichy), with Nora Tschirner starring as the female hologram. In 2006, the same team produced a miniseries called Ijon Tichy: Raumpilot for German TV, with 6 episodes of 15 minutes each again, which premiered March 2007 on ZDF. Both short films are available as legal downloads from the official site of production company Bildwerke Berlin. The series is commercially available on DVD.
External links
- Ijon Tichy: Raumpilot (2007) on imdb
- Both Ijon Tichy short films downloadable from production company Bildwerke Berlin (German)
- Official homepage of the TV series (German)