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Hell is the Absence of God [MultiFormat]
eBook by Ted Chiang

  Regular     Club
You Pay:  $1.25     $1.06

eBook Category: Science Fiction/Fantasy Hugo Award Winner, Locus Poll Award Winner, Nebula Award(R) Winner, Sturgeon Award Nominee
eBook Description: In a world much like our own, the existence of Heaven and Hell are objectively proven. Indeed, the souls in Hell can be seen, and angels occasionally come to Earth, typically causing a mixture of miraculous events and capricious disasters. [This work is part of an excellent collection of Ted Chiang's work. Buy the full collection here!]

eBook Publisher: Fictionwise.com, Published: Starlight 3, ed. Patrick Nielsen Hayden, 2001
Fictionwise Release Date: July 2002


1241 Reader Ratings:
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Available eBook Formats [MultiFormat - What's this?]: eReader (PDB) [48 KB] , ePub (EPUB) [47 KB] , Rocket/REB1100 (RB) [32 KB] , Portable Document Format (PDF) [126 KB] , Palm Doc (PDB) [36 KB] , Microsoft Reader (LIT) [78 KB] , Franklin eBookMan (FUB) [103 KB] , hiebook (KML) [102 KB] , Sony Reader (LRF) [63 KB] , iSilo (PDB) [30 KB] , Mobipocket (PRC) [37 KB] , Kindle Compatible (MOBI) [65 KB] , OEBFF Format (IMP) [51 KB]
Words: 10976
Reading time: 31-43 min.
Microsoft Reader (LIT) Format: Printing DISABLED, Read-Aloud ENABLED
Portable Document Format (PDF) Format:  Printing DISABLED, Read-Aloud DISABLED
All Other formats: Printing DISABLED, Read-aloud DISABLED


The GLOBE AND MAIL: CANADA'S NATIONAL NEWSPAPER asked two dozen promiment Canadians to pick their favorite books of 2002. Mine was Ted Chiang's collection STORIES OF YOUR LIFE, which includes the Hugo winning "Hell is the Absence of God." My editor at Tor, David G. Hartwell, says this was the best single SF story of 2002; I can't say I disagree with him. -Robert J. Sawyer, Fictionwise Recommender


This is the story of a man named Neil Fisk, and how he came to love God. The pivotal event in Neil's life was an occurrence both terrible and ordinary: the death of his wife Sarah. Neil was consumed with grief after she died, a grief that was excruciating not only because of its intrinsic magnitude, but because it also renewed and emphasized the previous pains of his life. Her death forced him to reexamine his relationship with God, and in doing so he began a journey that would change him forever.

Neil was born with a congenital abnormality that caused his left thigh to be externally rotated and several inches shorter than his right; the medical term for it was proximal femoral focus deficiency. Most people he met assumed God was responsible for this, but Neil's mother hadn't witnessed any visitations while carrying him; his condition was the result of improper limb development during the sixth week of gestation, nothing more. In fact, as far as Neil's mother was concerned, blame rested with his absent father, whose income might have made corrective surgery a possibility, although she never expressed this sentiment aloud.

As a child Neil had occasionally wondered if he was being punished by God, but most of the time he blamed his classmates in school for his unhappiness. Their nonchalant cruelty, their instinctive ability to locate the weaknesses in a victim's emotional armor, the way their own friendships were reinforced by their sadism: he recognized these as examples of human behavior, not divine. And although his classmates often used God's name in their taunts, Neil knew better than to blame Him for their actions.

But while Neil avoided the pitfall of blaming God, he never made the jump to loving Him; nothing in his upbringing or his personality led him to pray to God for strength or for relief. The assorted trials he faced growing up were accidental or human in origin, and he relied on strictly human resources to counter them. He became an adult who--like so many others--viewed God's actions in the abstract until they impinged upon his own life. Angelic visitations were events that befell other people, reaching him only via reports on the nightly news. His own life was entirely mundane; he worked as a superintendent for an upscale apartment building, collecting rent and performing repairs, and as far as he was concerned, circumstances were fully capable of unfolding, happily or not, without intervention from above.

This remained his experience until the death of his wife.

It was an unexceptional visitation, smaller in magnitude than most but no different in kind, bringing blessings to some and disaster to others. In this instance the angel was Nathanael, making an appearance in a downtown shopping district. Four miracle cures were effected: the elimination of carcinomas in two individuals, the regeneration of the spinal cord in a paraplegic, and the restoration of sight to a recently blinded person. There were also two miracles that were not cures: a delivery van, whose driver had fainted at the sight of the angel, was halted before it could overrun a busy sidewalk; another man was caught in a shaft of Heaven's light when the angel departed, erasing his eyes but ensuring his devotion.

Neil's wife Sarah Fisk had been one of the eight casualties. She was hit by flying glass when the angel's billowing curtain of flame shattered the storefront window of the café in which she was eating. She bled to death within minutes, and the other customers in the café--none of whom suffered even superficial injuries--could do nothing but listen to her cries of pain and fear, and eventually witness her soul's ascension toward Heaven.

Nathanael hadn't delivered any specific message; the angel's parting words, which had boomed out across the entire visitation site, were the typical Behold the power of the Lord. Of the eight casualties that day, three souls were accepted into Heaven and five were not, a closer ratio than the average for deaths by all causes. Sixty-two people received medical treatment for injuries ranging from slight concussions to ruptured eardrums to burns requiring skin grafts. Total property damage was estimated at $8.1 million, all of it excluded by private insurance companies due to the cause. Scores of people became devout worshipers in the wake of the visitation, either out of gratitude or terror.

Alas, Neil Fisk was not one of them.


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