READ AN EXCERPT

Cover by
Jean-Félix Lyon

The Year 5865
by Hippolyte Mettais
adapted by
Brian Stableford


It was a time of gods, demigods and genies. It was China before Sione-Fine, Egypt before Mehmet Ali; it was New Cosaquia before Nhoel I. Happy times! Our poetry lives on it, our most graceful literature stems from it. It was the time of legends, of heroic songs, when men were giants, ogres and slayers of armies. It was the time of our Sheikh Mansour the Invincible, who destroyed a whole army with a single sweep of his scimitar. That is ancient history.


US$29.95/GBP 19.99

5x8 tpb, 396 pages
ISBN-13: 978-1-61227-100-2

The Year 5865 was published in 1865. It is a remarkable novel, consisting of a first-person narrative related by a character living 4000 years hence, after various disasters have obliterated almost all the documents relating to the world with which we are familiar. In consequence, the narrator's knowledge of the reader's world is severely limited and densely clouded by myth.

Hippolyte Mettais' innovative literary method in attempting to interpolate didactic material into a melodrama provides an anticipatory echo of a future subgenre of popular fiction: the "lost race" story. But unlike H. Rider Haggard's She (1887), Abraham Merritt's Dwellers in the Mirage (1932) and other classics, here, it is not present-day explorers who find relics of an ancient civilization but futuristic explorers who find echoes of ours.

A remarkable pioneer of futuristic fantasy,
The Year 5865 is a uniquely intriguing classic of the genre, log ripe for rediscovery.

Brian M. Stableford has been a professional writer since 1965. He has published more than 60 science fiction and fantasy novels, as well as several authoritative non-fiction books. He is also translating the works of Paul Féval and other French writers of the fantastique for Black Coat Press which also published his most two recent fantasy novels: The New Faust at the Tragicomique, The Wayward Muse and The Stones of Camelot.


Contents:
L'An 5865 ou Paris dans 4000 Ans [The Year 5865 or Paris In 4000 Years] (Libr. Centrale, 1865)
Introduction and Notes by Brian Stableford.