The Reconstructions

by John Berry


Formats

Softcover
$14.50
$10.50
E-Book
$4.95
Hardcover
$25.45
$16.50
Softcover
$10.50

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 6/26/2003

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 240
ISBN : 9781410733139
Format : E-Book
Dimensions : E-Book
Page Count : 240
ISBN : 9781410733146
Format : Hardcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 240
ISBN : 9781410733122

About the Book

The Reconstructions can be regarded as a fantasy or a kind of Science Fiction story set in a very distant past, as a fictionalized account of historical events in European history presented as if taking place in an ahistorical oriental setting, or it can be thought of as both a story and a history but one that occurs in a timeless world.

The author of this narrative is part of the fantasy.  He is an aged historian assisted by other scholars of the period.  Their sources are primarily fragments of ancient writings and ballad materials, many discovered in remote parts of India.  These are used to reconstruct the history of a diverse people, remote in time, who occupied a world divided into seven realms ruled by The Great Khan who lives in the Castle at Worldsend.

The story begins when the Khan’s son, Krishna, leaves the castle against his father’s wishes and begins a new life in a world of turmoil and danger.


About the Author

John Berry’s first novel, Krishna Fluting, won the 1959 Macmillan Fiction Award and was followed by a story collection, Flight of the White Crows.  He published numerous stories in literary journals and in anthologies including The Best American Short Stories of 1959 and 1961, The Best From Fantasy and Science Fiction, 1962, Bennett Cerf’s Take Along Treasury, 1963, Short Story International, 1982, and others.

In a series of notes called Beyond the Reef he wrote: “I am looking for a book – always.  I am never discouraged by the fact that it has not been written and never will be – indeed, this knowledge alone makes my search legitimate.  Wisdom is the name of a long book which would have to be dispensed with if it were written.”