A time of changes.

183 pages

English language

Published June 15, 1971 by N. Doubleday.

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3 stars (3 reviews)

In the far future, Earth is a worn-out backwater and humanity is spread across the galaxy on worlds that began as colonies, but now feel like home, each with its own long history of a thousand years or more, and each with its own unique culture. One of the strangest is on Borthan, where the founding settlers established the Covenant, which teaches that the self is to be despised, and forbids anyone to reveal his innermost thoughts or feelings to another. On Borthan, the filthiest obscenities imaginable are the words “I” and “me.” For the heinous crime of “self-baring,” apostates have always paid with exile or death, but after his eyes are opened by a visitor from Earth, Kinnall Darival, prince of Salla, risks everything to teach his people the real meaning of being human.

12 editions

reviewed A time of changes by Robert Silverberg (Panther science fiction)

Review of 'A time of changes' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

Objectively this appears to be a good story. The concept of a society that denies the self is interesting and well executed. I just never warmed to the narrator Kindall and had a hard time not being bored by the story. Maybe because there were no surprises, the plot was laid out from the beginning and too much revealed in the foreshadowing.

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rated it

4 stars