The Black Corridor - Michael Moorcock - 1969 BCE Ace Books Hardback - Leo and Diane Dillon Cover

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Cover art: Leo and Diane Dillon

Blurb: “The spaceship Hope Dempsey held thirteen men and women, refugees fleeing an Earth doomed by atomic destruction.

While twelve slept in suspended anima-tion, the thirteenth, Ryan, ran the ship alone. For three years he had been responsible for the lives of the only humans left in the universe.

Ryan's job was to see that they reached a distant sun where unmanned probes had detected two Earth-like planets. As he checked the life-support systems and read the ship's computer printouts, his thoughts and dreams often turned to the Earth he hadn't seen for three years, since their take-off in 2002.

It was still hard to believe that society had collapsed so quickly. A massive wave of nationalism had swept across the globe leaving thousands of tiny states and kingdoms in its wake. Nothing could have stopped the coming holocaust.

But Ryan had been determined to survive, and with the ruthless ferocity 

of a wolf he had fought, bribed and murdered his way to the Siberian Plains with his small group. There man's only project for reaching the stars had rested on its launching pad for two years. Seizing the ship, Ryan and his people had barely escaped into the cold sanctuary of space.

The ship had performed magnifi-cently, but, almost three light years from Earth, the awful loneliness of Ryan's task began to catch up with him ...and he was haunted by strangely in-definable fears. Slowly a crisis was developing on board ship, and Ryan realized that even this last remnant of human life was threatened with extinc-tion, in the lonely dark corridor between stars.

Michael Moorcock, while still in his twenties, has built a creditable list of achievements. He won a Nebula Award in 1969 for his short novel Behold the Man, has written many popular science fiction and fantasy novels, and for the past six years has been editor of the unorthodox British SF magazine New Worlds.

He lives in London with his wife Hilary and their two daughters, Katie and Sophie.“