2001: A Space Odyssey (novel)


























2001: A Space Odyssey

2001 A Space Odyssey-Arthur C. Clarke.jpg
Cover of the first American edition

AuthorArthur C. Clarke
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
SeriesSpace Odyssey
GenreScience Fiction
Publisher
Hutchinson (UK)
New American Library (US)
Publication date
1968
Media typePrint (Hardcover, Paperback)
Pages221 (US)
224 (UK)
ISBN
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0-453-00269-2
Followed by2010: Odyssey Two 

2001: A Space Odyssey is a 1968 science fiction novel by British writer Arthur C. Clarke. It was developed concurrently with Stanley Kubrick's film version and published after the release of the film. Clarke and Kubrick worked on the book together, but eventually only Clarke ended up as the official author. The story is based in part on various short stories by Clarke, including "The Sentinel" (written in 1948 for a BBC competition, but first published in 1951 under the title "Sentinel of Eternity"). By 1992, the novel had sold three million copies worldwide.[1] An elaboration of Clarke and Kubrick's collaborative work on this project was made in The Lost Worlds of 2001.


The first part of the novel, in which aliens influence the primitive ancestors of humans, is similar to the plot of an earlier Clarke story, "Encounter in the Dawn".




Contents





  • 1 Plot summary


  • 2 Themes


  • 3 Characters

    • 3.1 Main Characters


    • 3.2 Minor Characters



  • 4 Sequels


  • 5 Reception


  • 6 Differences from the film


  • 7 Iapetus versus Japetus


  • 8 Release details


  • 9 See also


  • 10 References


  • 11 External links




Plot summary


An ancient and unseen alien race uses a device with the appearance of a large crystalline monolith to investigate worlds across the galaxy and, if possible, to encourage the development of intelligent life. The book shows one such monolith appearing in ancient Africa, 3 million years B.C. (in the movie, 4 million years), where it inspires a starving group of hominids to develop tools. The ape-men use their tools to kill animals and eat meat, ending their starvation. They then use the tools to kill a leopard preying on them; the next day, the main ape character, Moon-Watcher, uses a club to kill the leader of a rival tribe. The book suggests that the monolith was instrumental in awakening intelligence.


In AD 1999, Dr. Heywood Floyd travels to the Moon's Clavius Base, where a scientist explains that they have found a magnetic disturbance, designated Tycho Magnetic Anomaly One (or TMA-1), in the crater Tycho. Excavation has revealed a large black slab, precisely fashioned to a ratio of 1:4:9 (or 12:22:32) and therefore believed the work of intelligence. Visiting TMA-1, Floyd and others arrive just as sunlight falls upon it for the first time since it was uncovered; it emits a piercing radio transmission which the scientists determine is directed at one of the moons of Saturn, Japetus (Iapetus).[2]


A mission, Discovery One, is dispatched to Saturn. En route, Dr. David Bowman and Dr. Frank Poole are the only conscious humans aboard; their three colleagues are in suspended animation, to be awakened near Saturn. The HAL 9000, an artificially intelligent computer, addressed as "Hal", maintains the ship. While Poole is receiving a birthday message from his family on Earth, Hal tells Bowman that the AE-35 communication unit of the ship is going to malfunction. Poole takes one of the extra-vehicular pods and swaps the AE-35 unit; but when Bowman conducts tests on the removed AE-35 unit, he determines that there was never anything wrong with it. Poole and Bowman become suspicious at Hal's refusal to admit that his diagnosis was mistaken; Hal then claims that the replacement AE-35 unit will fail. In communicating with Earth, Poole and Bowman are directed to disconnect Hal for analysis. These instructions are interrupted as the signal is broken, and Hal informs them that the AE-35 unit has malfunctioned.


As Poole is removing the unit he is killed when his pod accelerates into him, crushing him. Bowman, uncertain of Hal's role therein, decides to wake the other three astronauts, and therefore quarrels with Hal, with Hal refusing to obey his orders. Bowman threatens to disconnect him if his orders are not obeyed, and Hal relents. As Bowman begins to awaken his colleagues, he hears Hal open both airlocks into space, releasing the ship's internal atmosphere. From a sealed emergency shelter, Bowman gains a spacesuit and re-enters the ship, where he shuts down Hal's consciousness, leaving intact only his autonomic functions, and manually re-establishes contact with Earth. He then learns that his mission is to explore Iapetus,[2] in the hope of contacting the society that buried the monolith on the Moon. Bowman learns that Hal had begun to feel guilty at keeping the purpose of the mission from him and Poole, against his stated mission of gathering information and reporting it fully; and when threatened with disconnection, he panicked and defended himself out of a belief that his very existence was at stake, having no concept of sleep.


Bowman spends months on the ship alone, slowly approaching Iapetus. During his approach, he gradually notices a small black spot on the surface of Iapetus, and later finds it identical in shape to TMA-1, only much larger. The scientists on Earth name this monolith "TMA-2", which Bowman identifies as a double misnomer because it is not in the Tycho crater and gives off no magnetic anomaly. When Bowman approaches the monolith, it opens and pulls in Bowman's pod. Before he vanishes, Mission Control hears him proclaim: "The thing's hollow — it goes on forever — and — oh my God! — it's full of stars!"[3]


Bowman is transported via the monolith to an unknown star system, through a large interstellar switching station, and sees other species' spaceships going on other routes. Bowman is given a wide variety of sights, from the wreckage of ancient civilizations to what appear to be life-forms, living on the surfaces of a binary star system's planet. He is brought to what appears a pleasant hotel suite, carefully designed to make him feel at ease, and falls asleep, whereupon he becomes an immortal 'Star Child' that can live and travel in space. The Star Child then returns to Earth, where he detonates an orbiting nuclear warhead. This is not discussed again until the sequel to the book, 2010: Odyssey Two.



Themes


Perils of technology

2001: A Space Odyssey explores technological advancement: its promise and its danger. The HAL 9000 computer puts forward the troubles that can crop up when man builds machines, the inner workings of which he does not fully comprehend and therefore cannot fully control.


Perils of nuclear war

The book explores the perils related to the atomic age. In this novel, the Cold War is apparently still on, and at the end of the book one side has nuclear weapons above the earth on an orbital platform. To test its abilities, the Star Child detonates an orbiting warhead at the end of the novel, creating a false dawn below for the people on earth. Roger Ebert notes that Kubrick originally intended for the first spaceship seen in the film to be an orbiting bomb platform, but in the end he decided to leave the ship's meaning more ambiguous. Clarke, however, retained and clearly stated this fact in the novel.[4]


Evolution

The novel takes a panoramic overview of progress, human and otherwise. The story follows the growth of human civilization from primitive man-ape. Distinctively, Space Odyssey is concerned about not only the evolution that has led to the development of humanity, but also the evolution that humanity might undergo in the future. Hence, we follow Bowman as he is turned into a Star Child. The novel acknowledges that evolutionary theory entails that humanity is not the end, but only a step in the process. One way this process might continue, the book imagines, is that humans will learn to move to robot bodies and eventually rid themselves of a physical form altogether.


Space exploration

When 2001: A Space Odyssey was written, mankind had not yet set foot on the moon. The space exploration programs in the United States and the Soviet Union were only in the early stages. Much room was left to imagine the future of the space program. Space Odyssey offers one such vision, offering a glimpse at what space exploration might one day become. Lengthy journeys, such as manned flights to Saturn, and advanced technologies, such as suspended animation, are described in the novel.


Artificial intelligence

The book raises questions about consciousness, sentience, and human interactions with machines. Hal's helpful disposition contrasts with his malevolent behaviour. Through much of the movie he seems to have malfunctioned. At the end of the novel we learn that Hal's odd behaviour stems from an improper conflict in his orders. Having been instructed not to reveal the nature of the mission to his crew, he reasons that their presence is a threat to the mission, which is his prime concern. Hal's reversion to a childlike state as Dave shuts him down mirrors aspects of human death, and his expressed fear of being shut down causes Dave to hesitate.


Accoutrements of space travel

The novel is deliberately written so as to give the reader an almost kinesthetic familiarity with the experience of space travel and the technologies encountered. Large sections of the novel are devoted to detailed descriptions of these. The novel discusses orbital mechanics and the manoeuvres associated with space travel with great scientific accuracy. The daily lives of Bowman and Poole on board the Discovery One are discussed in detail and give the impression of a busy yet mundane lifestyle with few surprises until the malfunction of Hal. Dr. Floyd's journey to Space Station One is depicted with awareness of fine points such as the experience of a Space Shuttle launch, the adhesive sauces used to keep food firmly in place on one's plate, and even the zero-gravity toilet.



Characters



Main Characters



  • Moon-Watcher: a man-ape who lived in dry equatorial Africa, circa 3,000,000 B.C. He, his tribe, and his species were faced with extinction, but for the intervention of a monolith which imbued him and his fellows with the beginnings of higher intelligence. Evolution then took its course.


  • Dr. Heywood Floyd: Scientist and senior bureaucrat, who is flown from the earth to the moon on a secret mission concerning the Tycho monolith, a second monolith which has been discovered on the moon, and excavated by Americans. In Floyd's presence, the Tycho monolith, being struck by sunlight for the first time in three million years, sends an extremely powerful signal in the direction of Saturn.


  • David Bowman: First Captain of the Discovery, an American spacecraft which had previously been intended to visit the Jupiter system, but which has recently instead been charged with exploring Saturn. Unbeknownst to Bowman and his deputy Frank Poole, the true objective of the mission is reconnaissance of Saturn space, implicated by the above radio signal direction, where it is thought that further clues to the aliens' intent may be found.


  • Frank Poole: Bowman's deputy. Bowman and Poole routinely toggle shifts in order to maintain a continuous, waking presence on board the Discovery. Poole is attacked and seemingly killed by HAL while performing EVA maintenance.


  • HAL 9000: the Discovery's intelligent, on-board ship's computer, capable of monitoring all ship functions, and holding conversations and maintaining relationships with human beings. HAL malfunctions, killing all crew members with the exception of Bowman; this was a result both of HAL being entrusted with the true objective of the Discovery's mission, and also of being charged with keeping it a secret until the appropriate time. These orders conflict with HAL's basic purpose, which is the accurate and complete communication of information to humans.


Minor Characters


Over the course of the novel, several minor characters either appear very briefly or are named only in passing, including other man-apes, spaceflight staff, lunar station security, and Discovery crew members. Among the novel's minor characters, some of the more consequential are listed below (often having direct film equivalents, or else being recurring characters in the Odyssey novel series).



  • Dr. Dimitri Moisevitch: a good friend of Floyd's (and citizen of the rival U.S.S.R.), who diplomatically presses Floyd about the Americans' "outbreak" cover story (intended to keep outsiders away from the discovery of the Tycho monolith) while both are aboard Space Station One, a stopping-point between the earth and the moon. In the film, Moisevitch's role is carried out by a character of a different name, while the character of Moisevitch as-such makes appearances throughout the rest of the Odyssey series and in the opening scene of the 2010 film. Moisevitch, like Floyd, is written as a cagey and worldly bureaucrat.


  • Ralph Halvorsen: Administrator of the Southern Province and leader of Clavius Base, Halvorsen represents American interests on the moon, and receives Floyd at Clavius to gather information about the Tycho monolith.


  • Whitehead, Kaminski, and Hunter: a trio of astronauts who are put aboard the Discovery in hibernation, in order to conserve resources. In the event of the deaths of Bowman or Poole, the hibernating astronauts are to be revived in the order given. Consequently, upon Poole's presumptive death, Bowman partially revived Whitehead until HAL depressurized the Discovery, killing the three while Bowman escaped to a secure area. In the film, HAL kills the trio by simply shutting off their life support functions while Bowman is on EVA in an effort to recover Poole's body; in the film, the trio are instead styled as Kimball, Kaminsky, and Hunter.


  • Dr. Chandra: briefly cited by HAL during his de-activation as being his first instructor, who taught him to sing "Daisy". In the film, this initial instructor is instead named as "Mr. Langley"; however the character of Dr. Chandra features throughout the rest of the Odyssey franchise, especially in the 2010 book and film.


  • Anna, Betty, Clara: the namesakes of the Discovery's three EVA pods. In other films and novels of the franchise, these pods are given different naming conventions. Betty is the pod which, under HAL's control, causes Poole's presumptive death.


Sequels


A sequel to the book, entitled 2010: Odyssey Two, was published in 1982 and adapted as a motion picture in 1984. Clarke went on to write two more sequel novels: 2061: Odyssey Three (1987) and 3001: The Final Odyssey (1997). To date,[update] the last two novels have yet to be adapted as films.



Reception


James Blish commented that while Clarke's narrative provided essential elements of the story that Kubrick ignored or glossed over, "The novel has very little of the poetry of the picture" and "lacks most of the picture's strengths", but that "it has to be read before one can understand the picture".[5]


Eliot Fremont-Smith reviewed the book positively in the New York Times, stating that it was "a fantasy by a master who is as deft at generating accelerating, almost painful suspense as he is knowledgeable and accurate (and fascinating) about the technical and human details of space flight and exploration".[6]



Differences from the film


Although the novel and film were developed simultaneously, the novel follows early drafts of the film, from which the final version of the film deviated.[7] These changes were often for practical reasons relating to what could be filmed economically, and a few were due to differences of opinion between Kubrick and Clarke. The most notable differences are a change in the destination planet from Saturn to Jupiter, and the nature of the sequence of events leading to HAL's demise. Stylistic differences may be more important than content differences. Of lesser importance are the appearance of the monolith, the age of HAL, and the novel giving names to various spacecraft, prehistoric apes, and HAL's inventor.


Stylistically, the novel generally fleshes out and makes concrete many events left somewhat enigmatic in the film, as has been noted by many observers. Vincent LeBrutto has noted that the novel has "strong narrative structure" which fleshes out the story, while the film is a mainly visual experience where much remains "symbolic".[8] Randy Rasmussen has noted that the personality of Heywood Floyd is different; in Clarke's novel, he finds space travel thrilling, acting almost as a "spokesman for Clarke", whereas in the film, he experiences space travel as "routine" and "tedious".[9]


In the film, Discovery's mission is to Jupiter, not Saturn. Kubrick used Jupiter because he and special effects supervisor Douglas Trumbull could not decide on what they considered to be a convincing model of Saturn's rings for the film.[10] Clarke went on to replace Saturn with Jupiter in the novel's sequel 2010: Odyssey Two. Trumbull later developed a more convincing image of Saturn for his own directorial debut Silent Running.


The general sequence of the showdown with HAL is different in the film from in the book. HAL's initial assertion that the AE-35 unit will fail comes in the film after an extended conversation with David Bowman about the odd and "melodramatic" "mysteries" and "secrecy" surrounding the mission, motivated officially because HAL is required to draw up and send to Earth a crew psychology report.[11] In the novel it is during the birthday message to Frank Poole.


In the film, Bowman and Poole decide on their own to disconnect HAL in context of a plan to restore the allegedly failing antenna unit. If it does not fail, HAL will be shown to be malfunctioning. HAL discovers the plan by reading their lips through the EVA pod window. In Clarke's novel, ground control orders Bowman and Poole to disconnect HAL, should he prove to be malfunctioning a second time by predicting that the second unit is going to go bad.[12]


However, in Clarke's novel, after Poole's death, Bowman tries waking up the other crew members, whereupon HAL opens both the internal and external airlock doors, suffocating these three and almost killing Bowman. The film has Bowman, after Poole's murder, go out to rescue him. HAL denies him reentry and kills the hibernating crew members by turning off their life-support. In the sequel 2010: Odyssey Two, however, the recounting of the Discovery One mission is changed to the film version.[13]


The film is generally far more enigmatic about the reason for HAL's failure, while the novel spells out that HAL is caught up in an internal conflict because he is ordered to lie about the purpose of the mission.[14]


Because of what photographed well, the appearance of the monolith that guided Moon-watcher and the other 'man-apes' at the beginning of the story was changed from novel to film. In the novel, this monolith is a transparent crystal;[15] In the film, it is solid black. The TMA1 and TMA2 monoliths were unchanged.


While it is stated in the book that the ratio of the dimensions of the monolith are supposed to be 1:4:9, or the first 3 integral numbers squared, the shape of the actual monolith seen in the movie does not conform to this ratio. A ratio of 1:4:9 would produce an object that appears thick, wide, and squat. Kubrick wanted something taller and thinner, which he felt would be more imposing. Measurements taken from movie frames show that the movie monolith has dimensions approximately in the ratio 0.65:4:9 or 1:6:14.[original research?]


In the book, HAL became operational on 12 January 1997, but in the movie the year is given as 1992.[16] It has been thought that Kubrick wanted HAL to be the same age as a young bright child, nine years old.[citation needed]


The famous quote that opens the film sequel 2010: The Year We Make Contact—"My God—it's full of stars!"—is actually not in the 2001 film, although it is in the 2001 book.



Iapetus versus Japetus


The name of the Saturnian moon Iapetus is spelled Japetus in the book. This is an alternative rendering of the name, which derives from the fact that "consonantal I" often stands for "J" in the Latin language (see modern spelling of Latin).


In his exhaustive book on the film, The Making of Kubrick's 2001,[17] author Jerome Agel discusses the point that Iapetus is the most common rendering of the name, according to many sources, including the Oxford English Dictionary. He goes on to say that "Clarke, the perfectionist", spells it Japetus. Agel then cites the dictionary that defines jape as "to jest; to joke; to mock or make fun of". He then asks the reader, "Is Clarke trying to tell us something?"


Clarke himself directly addressed the spelling issue in chapter 19 of The Lost Worlds of 2001,[18] explaining that he simply (and unconsciously) used the spelling he was familiar with from The Conquest of Space (1949) by Willy Ley and Chesley Bonestell, presuming that the "J" form is the German rendering of the Greek.



Release details


  • 1968, USA, New American Library (
    ISBN 0-453-00269-2), June 1968, hardback (First edition)[19]

  • 1968, USA, Signet, July 1968, paperback (First paperback edition)[19]

  • 1968, UK, Hutchinson (
    ISBN 0-09-089830-3), 1968, hardback (First British edition)[19]

  • 1968, UK, Arrow Books (
    ISBN 0-09-001530-4), October 1968, paperback

  • 1976, Arrow Books (
    ISBN 9780099066101), August 1976, paperback

  • 1982, Roc (
    ISBN 9780451118646), November 1982, paperback

  • 1985, Ediciones Orbis – Hyspamerica (
    ISBN 9788476340530), paperback, Spanish Language edition (2001: Una odisea espacial) translated by Antonio Ribera

  • 1990, Orbit (
    ISBN 9781857236644), July 1990, paperback

  • 1993, USA, Roc (
    ISBN 0-451-45273-9), August 1993, hardback (25th Anniversary Edition)

  • 1993, USA, Turtleback Books (
    ISBN 9780606160087), August 1993, hardback

  • 1998, İthaki Yayınları (
    ISBN 9789756902011), October 1998, paperback, Turkish Language edition (2001: Bir Uzay Efsanesi) translated by Ardan Tüzünsoy

  • 1999, USA, New American Library, (
    ISBN 9780451198495), October 1999, hardback

  • 2000, USA, Roc (
    ISBN 978-0451457998), September 2000, paperback

  • 2000, UK, Orbit (
    ISBN 1-84149-055-5), December 2000, hardback (special edition)

  • 2001, Roc (ASIN B01A6E8EQ6), September 2001, Kindle edition

  • 2004, المؤسسة العربية الحديثة للطبع والنشر والتوزيع, January 2004, Arabic language edition (أوديسا الفضاء) translated by أحمد خالد توفيق

  • 2005, USA, Signet (
    ISBN 0-451-45273-9), July 2005, paperback

  • 2008, vis-a-vis/Etiuda (
    ISBN 9788389640949), 2008, Polish language edition (2001: Odyseja kosmiczna) translated by Jędrzej Polak

  • 2008, Brilliance Audio (
    ISBN 9781423336624), January 2008 Audiobook narrated by Dick Hill

  • 2008, Nord (
    ISBN 9788842915508), January 2008, paperback, Italian language edition (2001: Odissea nello spazio)

  • 2008, J'ai Lu (
    ISBN 9782290308141), March 2008, paperback, French language edition (2001: L'Odyssée de l'espace)

  • 2010, Editura Nemira (
    ISBN 9786068134604), Hardcover, Romanian language edition (2001: Odiseea spaţială)

  • 2010, Orbit (ASIN B003PPDIC4), June 2010, Kindle edition

  • 2012 Rosetta Books (ASIN B00ANA27IU), 2012, Kindle edition

  • 2013, BR, Aleph (
    ISBN 9788576571551), October 2013, Brazilian Portuguese language edition (2001: Uma Odisséia no Espaço) translated by Fábio Fernandes

  • 2016, Penguin Galaxy (
    ISBN 9780143111573), October 2016, hardback

  • 2016, İthaki Yayınları (
    ISBN 9786053755951), October 2016, paperback, Turkish language edition (2001: Bir Uzay Destanı) translated by Oya İşeri

The film 2010 was released in 1984 resulting in movie tie-in editions of both the 2001 and 2010 novels. At the time Signet Books reported that over 2.8 million copies of 2001 were in print and that 2010 was one of 1983's top sellers with 300,000 hardcover copies and 1.75 million first paperback editions printed.[20][21]



See also


  • List of fictional computers

  • Toynbee tiles

  • Childhood's End

  • List of stories set in a future now past


References


Notes


  1. ^ Popular Contemporary Writers. Retrieved 4 October 2014.


  2. ^ ab See #Iapetus vs. Japetus in this article


  3. ^ See p. 254 of paperback edition of 2001: A Space Odyssey


  4. ^ Ebert 2004, p. 4.


  5. ^ "The Future in Books", Amazing Stories, January 1969, pp. 141-42


  6. ^ "Outward Bound". www.nytimes.com.


  7. ^ McLellan, Dennis (19 March 2008). "Arthur C. Clarke, 90; scientific visionary, acclaimed writer of '2001: A Space Odyssey'". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 23 March 2011.


  8. ^ LoBrutto 1999, p. 310.


  9. ^ Rasmussen 2005, p. 51.


  10. ^ See Arthur C. Clarke's forward to 2010: Odyssey Two


  11. ^ In reality, as will be explained in more details in the sequel, he's probing the extent of Bowman's knowledge of the true goal of the mission, which HAL was ordered to keep secret – this is precisely the conflict between that secrecy and his basic design as a computer to provide accurate informations in all circumstances, which triggers its murderous actions, based on the equivalent of a psychosis, according to his conceptor Dr. Chandra.


  12. ^ See p. 174 of paperback edition of 2001: A Space Odyssey


  13. ^ p. 185 of paperback edition


  14. ^ Chapter 27 of novel


  15. ^ pp. 11–21 of novel


  16. ^ DeMet, George D. (2001). "Meanings: The Search for Meaning in 2001 – HAL's "Birthday"". 2001: A Space Odyssey Internet Resource Archive. Retrieved 23 March 2011.


  17. ^ The Making of Kubrick's 2001, Signet Press, 1970, p. 290


  18. ^ The Making of Kubrick's 2001, Signet Press, 1970, p. 127


  19. ^ abc Locke 1974, p. 24.


  20. ^ "Books, Listed by Author, Clarke, Arthur C(harles)". Locus Magazine.


  21. ^ "Books, Listed by Author, Clarke, Arthur C(harles)". Locus Magazine.


Bibliography

.mw-parser-output .refbeginfont-size:90%;margin-bottom:0.5em.mw-parser-output .refbegin-hanging-indents>ullist-style-type:none;margin-left:0.mw-parser-output .refbegin-hanging-indents>ul>li,.mw-parser-output .refbegin-hanging-indents>dl>ddmargin-left:0;padding-left:3.2em;text-indent:-3.2em;list-style:none.mw-parser-output .refbegin-100font-size:100%


  • Ebert, Roger (2004). The Great Movies. Broadway Books. ISBN 0-7679-1038-9.


  • Hagerty, Jack; Jon C. Rogers (2001). Spaceship Handbook: Rocket and Spacecraft Designs of the 20th Century, Fictional, Factual, and Fantasy. ARA Press. pp. 322–351. ISBN 0-9707604-0-X.


  • LoBrutto, Vincent (1999). Stanley Kubrick: A Biography. Da Capo Press. ISBN 978-0-306-80906-4.


  • Locke, George (1978). Science Fiction First Editions: a select bibliography and notes for the collector.. London: Ferret Fantasy.


  • Ordway III, Frederick Ira (March 1970). "2001: A Space Odyssey". Spaceflight. The British Interplanetary Society. 12 (3): 110–117.


  • Ordway III, Frederick Ira (1982). "2001: A Space Odyssey in Retrospect". In Eugene M. Emme. American Astronautical Society History. Science Fiction and Space Futures: Past and Present. 5. pp. 47–105. ISBN 0-87703-172-X. Archived from the original on 26 April 2011. Retrieved 23 March 2011. A detailed account of development and filming of 2001: A Space Odyssey by its technical adviser.


  • Rasmussen, Randy (2005). Stanley Kubrick: Seven Films Analyzed. McFarland & Company. ISBN 0-7864-2152-5.


  • Tuck, Donald H. (1974). The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction and Fantasy. Chicago: Advent. p. 102. ISBN 0-911682-20-1.


  • Williams, Craig H.; with Leonard A. Dudzinski; Stanley K. Borowski and Albert J. Juhasz. (March 2005). Realizing "2001: A Space Odyssey": Piloted Spherical Torus Nuclear Fusion Propulsion (PDF). Cleveland, Ohio: John H. Glenn Research Center. Retrieved 19 September 2013.



External links


  • Book review – Hal's Legacy: 2001's Computer as Dream and Reality


  • 2001: A Space Odyssey title listing at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database









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