"The Waveries"
Short story by Fredric Brown
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Genre(s)Science fiction
Publication
Published inAstounding
Publication typePeriodical
Media typePrint (Newspaper, Magazine, Hardback & Paperback)
Publication dateJanuary 1945[1]

"The Waveries" is a science fiction short story by the American writer Fredric Brown, published in the January 1945 issue of Astounding Science Fiction. It was described by Philip K. Dick as "[maybe] the most significant—startlingly so—story sci-fi has yet produced".[2]

Plot

The story begins two years in the future, in 1947. An incredibly powerful Morse code signal begins disrupting radio broadcasts; identified as a landmark 1901 Marconi test, it is shortly followed by snippets of other early radio transmissions, all extremely powerful, blanketing the entire frequency spectrum, and repeating in loops ranging from one-half to thirty seconds. After a period of initial confusion, the transmissions are triangulated and found to be arriving from the direction of the constellation Leo, but after a few days they become non-directional; a prominent scientist deduces that the mysterious radio sources have arrived on Earth.

A scientific consensus slowly emerges that the transmission are an exotic form of life in the form of self-replicating electromagnetic wavelengths, with each snippet of broadcast representing a discrete entity - a "wavery" or "invader," colloquially shortened to "vader." Scientists cannot guess whether these entities are sentient, and caution that - even if they were - humans would probably never be able to communicate with them, as they are different in kind from humans as humans are from insects. They do however predict that - as the vaders appear to metabolize electromagnetic radiation - radio will never be available again. Society begins to adjust to its absence, but after a few weeks it is noticed that lightning no longer accompanies thunderstorms, and shortly thereafter all electrical devices start faltering. It becomes apparent that the vaders consume not only electromagnetic emissions, but all forms of electricity. As internal-combustion engines stop functioning, the government declares a state of emergency and launches a crash program to manufacture steam engines and breed horses.

The story skips forward a few years: there have been no major societal disruptions, but the US has reverted to a Victorian technological level, with the return of steamships, horses and buggies, and no rapid communications or mass entertainment. Brown presents this as a nostalgic and idyllic development: large cities are gradually emptying out, and the civic lives of small towns are reinvigorated by small newspapers, amateur theatricals, community orchestras, and a general slowing of the pace of life.

References

  1. "Publication: Astounding Science-Fiction, January 1945".
  2. "The Waveries synopsis". Jennre. July 2, 2012.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.