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Logan #1

La fuga de Logan

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En el futuro, la superpoblación del planeta
exige por ley que la vida acabe a los 21 años.
Quienes tratan de huir
son eliminados por los Vigilantes.
Pero, ¿y si un Vigilante
decidiera escapar?

288 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1967

327 people are currently reading
14453 people want to read

About the author

William F. Nolan

370 books241 followers
William F. Nolan is best known as the co-author (with George Clayton Johnson) of Logan's Run -- a science fiction novel that went on to become a movie, a television series and is about to become a movie again -- and as single author of its sequels. His short stories have been selected for scores of anthologies and textbooks and he is twice winner of the Edgar Allan Poe Special Award from the Mystery Writers of America.

Nolan was born in 1928 in Kansas City Missouri. He attended the Kansas City Art Institute and worked as an artist for Hallmark Cards. He moved to California in the late 1940s and studied at San Diego State College. He began concentrating on writing rather than art and, in 1952, was introduced by fellow Missouri native (and established writer) Ray Bradbury to another young up-and-coming author, Charles Beaumont. Moving to the Los Angeles area in 1953, Nolan became along with Bradbury, Beaumont, and Richard Matheson part of the "inner core" of the soon-to-be highly influential "Southern California Group" of writers. By 1956 Nolan was a full-time writer. Since 1951 he has sold more than 1500 stories, articles, books, and other works.

Although Nolan wrote roughly 2000 pieces, to include biographies, short stories, poetry, and novels, Logan’s Run retains its hold on the public consciousness as a political fable and dystopian warning. As Nolan has stated: “That I am known at all is still astonishing to me... "

He passed away at the age of 93 due to complications from an infection.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 935 reviews
Profile Image for Stuart.
23 reviews6 followers
March 24, 2011
In the year 2011, it is impossible to discuss the Logan's Run novel without mentioning the 1976 movie, which I believe has surpassed the original work in terms of notoriety. Upon comparison, the reason for this is all too clear. While my modern tastes found the 70's movie to be rather charming, I cannot say the same for the novel.

The first problem comes with the age limit. With no character over 21, descriptions of people as "man" and "woman" are confusing and try the limits of my suspension of disbelief. At no point was I convinced of the youth of the characters. The author very clearly just wrote whatever personality he pleased with no consideration to the limits imposed by his setting. (as a side note, the movie sets the age limit at the much more believable 30)

Moreover, the novel fails to familiarize the reader with the structure and composition of the world before plowing around in it. New locales are clumsily introduced immediately before the scenes in which the appear and abandoned right as the reader begins to get acclimated.

I came to this book hoping for a deeper world than that of the movie, and I was completely let down. The premise is intriguing, but honestly if you'd like to look into Logan's world, watch the movie and save yourself a couple hours.

Recommended for:
*People who hate movies
*People with bad taste
Profile Image for Anissa.
1,003 reviews330 followers
February 27, 2021
Over the last several years I've watched a number of 70s science fiction movies: ( Logan's Run, Soylent Green, Westworld, etc.) and read the books when I could. I finally got a copy of Logan's Run and gave it a read.

I liked this but I have to admit that I think the movie is more engaging. Perhaps that's simply because it was my introduction to the story. I'll just mention here what I most liked and didn't in the book. The characters beyond Logan and Jessica (and maybe Francis to an extent) were mere sketches and not memorable at all. I didn't much mind that because the settings were pretty detailed and interesting. Logan and Jessica see many places in this world that were not at all in the movie so that kept things fairly exciting. The story does linger overlong in a few places and it became surprisingly tedious. It's a short volume and feeling like something could have been edited down is somewhat a disappointment.

My favourite part of the book was in the last third where many things come together but most importantly for me, the reader finds out how and why the United States turned into this place. It was fascinating, sad and somewhat disturbingly imaginable given the current real world. There's a climate crisis, over-population, government over-reach, civil uprising and what I can only describe as a complete breakdown of a society that ultimately trades one handful of horrors for a basket of other horrors. The use of propaganda was also a scary feature here and there's a whole section surrounding a Civil War re-enactment in Virginia that just boggled the mind. The book was worth reading for these parts alone. The ending was great, and I think I may have liked it more than the movie's ending. There's a great twist and the back third of this book had me up late reading.

In the end, both the book and the movie had things to recommend them and I am glad that I read this. I have noticed that there are subsequent books in Logan, so perhaps I'll find and read those at some point also.

Recommended.

A couple of favourite passages:

"Logan paused to survey the vast mural which gave the structure its name—a climbing mosaic composed of tiny bits of fireglass brilliantly arranged to commemorate the Burning of Washington. Orange, purple and raw red flames jeweled halfway up the façade; bodies flamed; buildings smoked and tumbled. Yet the awesome masterwork was flawed, incomplete. Stark, gaping areas broke the pattern. Only the famed muralist Roebler 7 could handle the corrosive fireglass, and when he had accepted Sleep his secret died with him. The project would never be finished."

"In his State of the Union address President Curtain had stressed the severity of the food shortage, as world population spiraled toward six billion. He called upon the young to exercise self-control in this crisis. But the sight of the fat, overfed President standing in living units across the country, talking of duty and restraint, had a negative effect on his audience. And the well-known fact that Curtain had fathered nine children made a showdown inevitable."

"The Little War had begun. By morning, half of Washington was in flames. Senators and congressmen were dragged in terror from their homes and hanged like criminals from trees and lampposts. The police and National Guard units were swept away in the first major wave of rioting. Buildings were set afire and explosives used. During the confusion an attendant at the Washington Zoo released the animals to save them from flames. The beasts were never recaptured."
Profile Image for Richard Derus.
4,325 reviews2,311 followers
December 28, 2019
Real Rating: 2.5* of five

I remembered this book fondly. The summer the film came out, I drove my licenseless buds to the Village Multiplex in Pygge, my 1968 Bonneville. (We'd passed the book around our Scooby-group, drinking it in.) There Michael York cheekboned his way into my, um, heart shall we say, and the rest of the film...and the entirety of the book...faded into insignificance.

Netflix loses the film on January 1st. I figured I'd rewatch it, while I give the book another go; after all, they're part of my formative years, so as I enter the last laps let's look back to the track, eh what?

You would think that, by now, I'd know better.

The book is just plain bad. The prose rises to the dizzying heights of serviceability a couple times, all the way up the slope of passable; the bulk of the 150pp are spent on the Plains of Puerility. A pair of fortyish numpties wrote about a world in which they'd be dead twenty years. It went about as well as that makes it sound. It's sexist, of course; it was ground-breaking for its day because the hedonism of its society isn't particularly concerned about who you do since there are no children born of sexual congress. Makes the property base of marriage pretty useless, so marriage simply isn't.

But the big draw, the martial arts bits, are tame and tedious 50 years on. (It came out in 1967, the film in 1976.) The action scenes are mildly fun. The story's versions of Logan and Francis are in a whole father/son dynamic that never gets much of anywhere because, well, you did see the page count, right? The ending takes place in Space. I won't say why, but it is the trippiest piece of dumbfuckery I can imagine. These guys were tripping when they wrote the ending, there's no other excuse. End it does, however, so I shook my head and started streaming the film.

Rob was here that day. He hadn't heard of the book or the film. He flipped through the book a bit and quietly reshelved it after about ten minutes. "Ready to see the film?" I asked; "not really" was the honest reply. Luckily Michael York is there from the get-go, cheekbones a-jut and body firmly and revealingly encased in a spiffy dark costume. I heard no further nose-sighs from little spoon...until a scene where Logan/Michael dials up a sex worker and gets, on his first try, a man.

"...?!!?..."

"Hey, even *I* had older mentors," I said. "Wait for the robot butcher scene. That's when we get to see Logan and Jessica naked!"

And that is pretty much it. The naked scene isn't him naked, it's just her, and some artfully obscured extras who earned that paycheck; a bit disappointing, but obscured by the fact that the film takes a turn for the idiotic from there on out. We ended up wondering what the hell was the point of this exercise, how far breaking ground can go in keeping a creative endeavor in active circulation. I think it's time to let this one slide into the background and we should pack it away in shredded copies of the awful book it was inspired by but doesn't much resemble.
Profile Image for Manny.
Author 52 books16.3k followers
November 6, 2011
Definitely a good bad book, which anticipated cyberpunk the way Robert Sheckley anticipated Douglas Adams. In Logan's world, everyone has to submit to voluntary euthanasia when they turn 21 and their palmflower goes black. But Logan decides he'll try and find Ballard, who's 42 and has lived a double lifetime. Maybe he can help him escape to the mythical Sanctuary.

It doesn't exactly make sense, but there are lots of very memorable sequences...

______________________________________

Just saw that Nicolas Winding Refn and Ryan Gosling are going to be teaming up again to do a new movie version. If it's as good as Drive, it should really be worth watching. Though I'm disappointed to see that they've already announced one major change: people in Logan's world will be euthanased at 30, not 21 as in the book.
Profile Image for Little Timmy.
7,783 reviews63 followers
December 24, 2025
Loved the TV show and the book was just as amazing to me. Recommended
Profile Image for ꕥ Ange_Lives_To_Read ꕥ.
911 reviews
August 18, 2024
Like other novels I've read from the 70's, this crazy thing makes me suspect that the authors took some kind of hallucinogenic drug and then just wrote down what they saw and heard while they were tripping. Then they added a few passages and organized it all into a story of sorts, albeit a ridiculous story that makes very little sense.

In a futuristic society circa the 2270's, life is all beautiful hedonism until you turn 21, when the glowing crystal embedded in your palm goes black, and you patriotically agree to take the dirt nap. This has to do with overpopulation and food shortages or something.

A few people somehow escape the lifelong brainwashing they've been subjected to, and they want to see what it's like to be 22. These "Runners" try to escape the domed city to reach a mythical Sanctuary. They are pursued and killed by trained assassins called "Sandmen," who are enthusiastically supported by the other citizens.

Logan is a Sandman who finds a strange key in the hand of a Runner he has killed. While investigating the key, he meets Jessica, the Runner's sister. She knows something about Sanctuary and how to get there. When Logan's crystal goes black, he decides to run, the first Sandman ever to do so. Jessica goes with him.

The rest of the book went like this:

Logan and Jessica run to someplace. They are attacked by someone/something that they can't possibly escape. They escape. Logan and Jessica run someplace else. They are attacked by someone/something that they can't possibly escape. They escape. Repeat 25 times.

Do they ever reach sanctuary?

I liked this quote, a realization Logan has at the end:

...Dying young is a waste and a shame and a perversion. The young don't build. They use. The wonders of Man were achieved by the mature, the wise, who lived in this world before we did.


FYI for those of us who remember the cheesy 1976 movie starring Michael York and Jenny Agutter, the novel is very different.
Profile Image for Alexander Peterhans.
Author 2 books302 followers
January 10, 2023
Logan's Run is one of those movies I grew up with, so even if it is quite silly, it has a special place in my sci-fi heart.

Turns out the book is even sillier! The movie is much tighter, and better plotted.

The book does contain the most 1960s sci-fi line I've read in a long while:

"The tri-dimensional newsman was dressed in Lifeleather trimfits."

Of course he was.
Profile Image for Bill.
1,190 reviews194 followers
March 26, 2017
The novel Logan's Run was published 40 years ago & still holds up well as an entertaining piece of science fiction. I've always liked the 1976 film version starring Michael York & Jenny Agutter & was pleased to see that there were noticeable differences between the film & the novel. I wonder had the novel had been published today, in a world of The Hunger Games, Divergent etc, it might have been a huge hit & inspired a whole series of films & merchandise spin offs. While I would recommend the book to any fan of science fiction I must admit that I still prefer the film.
Profile Image for Craig.
6,722 reviews192 followers
March 31, 2026
Logan's Run, which was published in 1967, is the first volume of a trilogy, though the two novels that followed this one didn't appear until after the very successful film was released in 1976, and they were written solely by Nolan. It's a dystopian adventure novel set in a world where resources and population are controlled by the Malthusian expedient of allowing people to only live to the age of twenty-one. There are several differences between the film, which was written by David Zelag Goodman, and the book (the age was thirty in the film, for example), though the gist is the same. It's a bit of a romance and a bit of a quest and a bit of commentary and satire on excesses and preferences of society, and the chapters count down rather up, which was quite cool. It was well-suited to screen adaptation, perhaps because of the experience co-author George Clayton Johnson had with the Twilight Zone production. The Bantam paperback movie tie-in edition has a very nice Charles Moll cover (the first edition hardback had a really ugly Mercer Mayer cover), as well as sixteen pages of color stills from the film bound in the middle, which contributed to the eyebrow-raisingly very high cover price of $1.75. Apparently the original also had an additional chapter, a "0", which was left out of the paperback. It's a fun, fast read, certainly not great prose, but easy to follow. My favorite part is the two-page dedication, "To all the wild friends we grew up with-".
Profile Image for St-Michel.
111 reviews
June 14, 2008
So I picked this up for 87 cents basically for two reasons:
1. It's Logan's Run!!! What more need be said?
2. Come on, 87 cents? Did I mention that it's Logan's Run?

Ok, I hate reading the book after I've seen the movie (this pretty much goes with any book-to-eventual-movie combo), but really, I vaguely even recall the movie - I remember scant parts and I think most of the parts I remember aren't even in the book and I think the other parts I remember are those refreshed by stills wedged into the middle of the book after being reprinted in '76 to promote the movie. (Sigh, I hate movie promoting versions of books too, but oh well, it's not like I had a choice.)

Now, despite what I can remember from the movie, I loved it and more than anything, I sort of picked this up for a good laugh. Actually, I was pleasantly surprised. This was actually pretty damn good. It was short, fast-paced and amazingly gripping. Seriously, I couldn't put it down and rolled through in a few short hours...and now...well now I gotta go track down the movie again.

There's few book/movie combinations I enjoy - it's usually one or the other, either the book was fantastic and the movie was nothing more than shallow hollywood droll or...well, the other doesn't happen very often. This is one of the few exceptions where both were superb.
Profile Image for Olethros.
2,724 reviews547 followers
November 9, 2021
-Una idea interesante para su época, no tanto ahora, y una ejecución irregular, tanto entonces como ahora.-

Género. Ciencia ficción.

Lo que nos cuenta. El libro La fuga de Logan (publicación original: Logan’s Run, 1967) nos presenta al Vigilante Logan, un agente de Sueño Profundo dedicado a la caza de Fugitivos, personas que no siguen la ley y, al cumplir los veintiún años, tratan de evitar su final en las Casas del Sueño. Hay más Fugitivos cada vez y parecen estar organizados, buscando un lugar llamado Santuario donde podrán evitar su destino dictado por el sistema sociopolítico en el que viven. Cuando llega su último día, Logan tiene dudas y un contacto casi fortuito con Jessica, la hermana de una de sus víctimas, hace que él mismo se convierta en un Fugitivo.

¿Quiere saber más de este libro, sin spoilers? Visite:

https://librosdeolethros.blogspot.com...
Profile Image for Checkman.
623 reviews75 followers
February 15, 2023
Sometimes classic science-fiction isn't as good as one hopes. While a better written novel than the sequel it isn't as fun. As pointed out by Stacey it's really nothing more than a glorified chase through a exotic series of sets. The future world of "Logan's Run" isn't as developed as it should be while predictions of future events are wildly off the mark, weighing the story down and hurting it as a result. A product of its time (late Sixties) it's also apparent that the authors (who were in their late thirties and forties at the time of writing) didn't think very highly of the so-called Youth Culture/Counterculture. That isn't necessarily a bad thing (depending on one's political and social orientation I suppose), but it hurts "Logan's Run". This is one case in which the movie is better. Not a horrible book, but not all that great either.
Profile Image for Ian.
505 reviews154 followers
October 24, 2023
I first read this a few years after it first came out (1967) and my just barely teenaged self thought it was fabulous. My original four star rating reflected my enjoyment of the book, back then. I'm going to leave the rating alone, even though my older, cynical self needed a lot more suspension of disbelief to get through it. The story's very much a product of it's time (the youth obsessed 60's) and place ( California), with it's retro future automated utopia of free love and halucenogenic drugs. But as a short, fast paced thriller, it holds up reasonably well. I was inspired to go back for another look because I'm reading Tanith Lee's "Biting The Sun" which has some similarities in plot but is more complex in its story-telling and in its ideas. Still, 4 big, nostalgia soaked stars.


.
Profile Image for Shauny Free Palestine.
232 reviews25 followers
March 28, 2023
A product of the 60’s, in particular the Vietnam war, and the fear of the bomb. Nolan creates a story about the young, for the young, and a future that’s a mishmash of politics and dystopian ideas found in better novels.

No one can live over the age of 21. Once the age is reached, death is mandatory. Sometimes people run. Logan is a hunter of such rebels. That is until his time comes.

The first half is really fun, even if the writing is pretty bad. The middle drags a little, with too many references to the civil war, but fortunately the ending is pretty satisfying.

Overall, Logan’s Run is exactly what you expect, a pulpy sci-fi adventure story that is easy to digest. Entertaining trash.
Profile Image for Jim Kuenzli.
530 reviews42 followers
December 27, 2025
This is one of those rare cases where the movie is better than the book. It was a bit of a jumbled mess, but it had its moments. A lot of science fiction or dystopian books from the 60s suffer from same.
Profile Image for Mike (the Paladin).
3,148 reviews2,206 followers
January 9, 2010
I read this back in the 70s. The movie appeared (not a bad science fiction movie for the day) and I ran the book down. It was better than the movie by quite a bit.

This is another cold war view of the future and a fairly dark outlook. While it's not the best or the worst one I read it's a fair read.
Profile Image for Fatman.
127 reviews77 followers
February 22, 2022
The most remarkable thing about this novel is that reading it is exactly like watching a B-movie. Uncannily so. Almost as if the author was visualizing "so bad it's good" film sequences as he wrote it. Haven't seen the '70s movie, but will definitely look for it now.
Profile Image for Love of Hopeless Causes.
721 reviews56 followers
February 16, 2017
A bitter disappointment after waiting years to acquire this. Minus one star for ubiquitous, unnamed, and unnecessary opening female point of view (third present?) Minus another for head hopping without achieving anything the main character couldn't have conveyed. Minus a third star for being repeatedly tossed into the deep end of this world's vocabulary and left to float without a life preserver.

Minus another star for trying to turn narrative into poetry ( I believe Stephen King labels this stuff, "My Angry Lesbian Breasts," no offense to breasts, lesbians, or anger-heads intended on my part.) Whoops, straight outta fuc--stars--to give: whether they flash in handy color coded ways or not.

You'd have to self publish this if you wrote it today, because the technology is built around what the authors wanted to happen, and not what we know computers are capable of, like shutting off access to elevators and credit cards. I wanted to gain a series read from this, but it only furthers a sneaking suspicion I've been nurturing, that the only Sci-fi worth a look is hot off the presses, otherwise it smacks of the backward times in which it was penned. Blech.
Profile Image for Brad.
Author 2 books1,944 followers
April 1, 2023
It's fair to say that Logan's Run is too fucked up for our time.

Its weird acceptance of ten year old prostitutes, no one over twenty-one being left alive (unless they "Run"), rape, rape everywhere!, some space shit, lots of post-WW3 shit, beau coup dystopian shit, a Cracker's wet dream in the form of a bizarro Civil War re-enactments, racism here, there and everywhere, and misplaced faith in youth, which is tragic.

It is full of shit but simultaneously full of wonderful (or critically wonderful) things: futuristic Roma, the negativity of nostalgia, the growth of Logan, the power that is Jess, and the conceit of the finale. It isn't anywhere the best Sci-Fi novel -- even of its year -- but it is worth a read (/listen), unless you are J. David Thompson because you might just get 35% of the text and consider yourself lazy. Poor bastard.
Profile Image for Stacey.
266 reviews542 followers
July 8, 2011
I always like the idea of reading old sci-fi more than the actual experience, and it certainly held true with this book as well. Logan's Run is, of course, iconic. Immortalized in a futuristic, and now cult-classic b-movie, it has cinematic influences on everything from Bladerunner to Minority Report. But there's really just not that much story here. Ultimately, that's what disappoints - that there could have been such an interesting story, but all we get is a chase through various decaying and exotic scenes.

Still, there are some passages that stand out, one being a (1967) impression of the modern Internet, described thus:

"Here was a constellation of winking fireflies stretching to infinity. Here was an immense electronic silence. In the endless, glowing dark was Tangier and London, Macao and Capri and Beirut, El Quederef and Chateau-Chinon and Wounded Knee. From these caverns leapt the motive force of a dispensary in Chemnitz, a glasshouse in Shropshire, a call box in Billings, Montana ... This vast mountain brain sent it's signals along Earth's nervous system to the distant places, the villages, towns and cities, bringing order out of disorder, calmness out of confusion.

They beheld the world.

The final realization of the computer age. A direct extension of the electronic brains at Columbia and Cal Tech in the 1960s, it was a massive breakthrough in solid-state technology. Computer was linked with computer in ever widening complexity."

Brilliant.

And a giggle-worthy description of a "dirty bomb":

“Brigadier General Matthew Pope authorized the use of one vest-pocket tactical atomic bomb. It was the last act of his life, and no other nuclear weapon was used in the Little War. Ground zero for the bomb was the site of the Smithsonian Institute – and the resultant crater was thereafter known as Pope's Hole. It was a remarkably dirty bomb, and for two weeks Washington was virtually uninhabitable – until the Geiger count fell low enough for observers to re-enter the city and test the atmosphere. Already the zoo animals had begun to breed.”

“Heat from the nuclear explosion stored in tidal salts beneath the earth was still leaching out after all these years. The furnace heat, combined with the high humidity, had created a tropical rainforest. Winter ceased to exist in Washington.”

I like a little humor in my fiction.
Profile Image for Jamie.
1,460 reviews227 followers
October 27, 2019
A literary masterpiece this is not, but it's been influential to some extent in the world of sci-fi, especially film, and is good fun. Fueled by mid-20th century fears of global overpopulation, Logan's dystopian society is based on the concept of putting people out to pasture when they reach the ripe old age of 21 (30 in the film). It's rife with implausibilities and hastily explained settings and scene changes, but the action, at least, doesn't let up.
Profile Image for Michael.
1,308 reviews156 followers
March 21, 2011
Can I make a confession here? I've never seen the movie version of "Logan's Run."

I know, I know. I should probably turn in my geek card at this point. Either that or I should dust off the DVD version I picked up for a low price and put the shiny disc into the player and cross it off my list of shame.

For a long time, my excuse has been that I'd never read the book. And once I found out that the book came first, as a book-a-holic, I could at least say that I wanted to read the book first. So, finally after years of searching used book stores and various books swapping sites for a reasonably priced copy of the book, I finally got one. And then it promptly sat on my to be read shelf for a long period of time.

Then, I actually promised the book to a friend who loved the film but hadn't read the book. So, it was that I finally found myself at a point in time that I felt like it was time I should sit down and finally crack the cover of "Logan's Run."

Was it worth the wait, the build-up and the hype?

Yes and no.

As with all books that are made into movies, it's nice to see what the authors originally intended for the world and characters to be on the printed page. The edition I acquired is an old one from the when the movie was out, so I had to resist the temptation to look at the 16 pages of full color photos from the film. Part of it was curiosity to see how my mental image of characters and settings was different and part of it was curiosity to see which parts of the books might be included and which might be dropped. Thankfully, I was able to resist the siren call of full color stills from the movie until after I'd read the final page.

The story itself starts off fairly well. The concept of a future society in which overpopulation means everyone submits to death at the age of 21 is intriguing. Logan is part of the police force that hunts down those who don't want to die and become "runners." Logan is very good at what he does and doesn't really question his place in things. That is, until the crystal on his hand begins to blink red, indicating he has 24 hours to live.

At times, the concept of people lining up for the death machines to terminate their lives reminded me a lot of classic Star Trek's "A Taste of Armageddon." But where that society was fighting a war via computers and counting up deaths to meet quotas and not violate a treaty, the society here is trying to curb overpopulation.

At this point, some interesting ideas begin to crop up, including why this society chose 21 as the cut-off point for its people and what kind of impact it was having on the world. Is part of the future world of "Logan" that people mature faster? And how does the society function when run by the younger set without the older group there to guide them and offer wisdom and/or insight?

Unfortunately, the novel never really delves into any of these questions. It also never delves much into how anything runs with any efficiency since it seems like there's not a lot of time to train people on how to do things or to give them time to learn new skills. How Logan becomes a great Sandman isn't really delved into and it's a question that could and should be addressed.

Instead, the story is more of a straight-forward chase and adventure narrative. In many ways, it reminded me of 24 with characters chasing about from location to location geographically without any consideration for how long it might take people to get from here to there in the real universe. The story also could have used a lot more development in Logan as he goes from a man who decides if he's going out, he's going to take out the rebel sanctuary known as "Sanctuary" in his final day to being a guy who is on the run and could be a leader of the new rebellion. As far as I can tell, the book seems to say all you need is love and you'll become a revolutionary.

It all ends up feeling like the novel is being written to be quickly and easily adapted as a screenplay.

And it may work better as a movie. Looks like it's time to dust off that DVD and find out.
Profile Image for Franky.
634 reviews63 followers
May 4, 2024
The year is 2116. In order to “solve” the overpopulation, it is required by law for those who turn twenty-one to go into a Deep Sleep (a form of forced suicide). Individuals have a crystal flower inserted into their hands and when it turns from red to black, it is deemed Last Day.

However, as you can imagine, some people will not just accept and go off so easily into the far beyond without some sort of fight. These people who fight the system are Runners, and it is up to Sandmen, enforcers of the system, to take them down.

Initially, there is a little bit of heavy lifting for the reader as we are just randomly thrust into the novel and this world haphazardly and jarringly without much in the way of exposition. However, this is a case where the novel almost works backwards, as we are given more context about the dystopic world individuals live in and how things came to be gradually, especially in the novel’s second half.

I felt like my opinion of this book changed quite dramatically (and favorably) from the initial stages to when we get into the meat of the book, and especially in the later stages.

The basic premise and the novel’s main crux is Logan 3, a DS man (Sandman), getting an epiphany when his unlucky number is called on his twenty-first birthday and deciding to break from society and become a runner himself. When Logan hears one of the runners, a man named Doyle 10, whisper the words “Sanctuary” on his last breath, he becomes intrigued with the mysterious place, and it becomes his quest to find it. He eventually ends up meeting Doyle’s sister, Jess, and eventually winning her trust, and the two try to make their escape.

One of the more distinctive and impressive features of Logan’s Run from the duo of authors is simply creating such a topsy-turvy, futuristic, bizarrely dystopian world. This is most evident when Logan and Jess are in flight and on the run-- in pursuit and quest for Sanctuary--which consumes much of the plot, and is easily the most exciting and engaging parts of the book.

A frantic, energized tempo ensues, especially after they are hit with pitfall after pitfall, danger after danger and villains of all types, from robotic guards sounding the alarm, to psychotic half-man, half-machine artists, to a band of crazed youngsters, etc. It takes on almost a carnivalesque, dystopian dark amusement park with impending doom at every turn as they trek into various futuristic, post-apocalyptic wastelands. (One of the most bizarre points is when Logan and Jess make their escape past a group of androids doing a reenactment of a battle from the Civil War with onlookers).

Additionally, the futuristic, dystopic concepts are quite innovative and impressive considering this book was written in 1967. For example, one of the features of society is an all-consuming artificial intelligence named Thinker, who basically runs the show and keeps everything in order for this upside-down world. There is also a hovercraft of sorts that Logan and others use as a means of transportation. There are so many fascinating (and scary) technological concepts brought forth, and it seems evident that these ideas were likely inspiration for more modern dystopian works.

I guess if there was one drawback is that the world building and character development could have been more flushed out a bit and gone a little deeper. However, at a lean 165 pages, this was difficult to accomplish.

Still, I enjoyed this book thoroughly, and Logan’s Run is a wonderful addition to the science fiction classic collection. I have actually never sat down and watched the classic 1970s film version with Michael York, but that is next on my to-do list.

Profile Image for Dori.
145 reviews1 follower
March 4, 2014
I admit I'm a little torn on this one. Written in the late 1960s, this sci-fi thriller had an interesting message and seems to have influenced a fair bit of modern sci-fi, but it was done in a somewhat superficial manner.

A synopsis: It's a couple hundred years after the 20th century and nobody is allowed to live past age 21. The entire world is connected by a giant subway system controlled by a powerful computer in the heart of a mountain in the middle of America. Everyone wears implanted "flowers" on their hands that are programmed to change color every seven years to denote different phases of life and, ultimately, to alert everyone to when a person is scheduled to go to Sleep, or surrender their lives at age 21. The people who refuse to go to Sleep are called Runners, and they are tracked down by an elite police force called Sandmen, who kill the Runner on sight. Presumably, all Runners are looking for Sanctuary, or the place where they can live out a natural human life. Logan is a Sandman who decides to run on his last day, teaming up with a female runner and going on an intense journey within the course of 24 hours that leads them to an underground railroad seeking Sanctuary.

It reminded me a lot of the movie In Time, with regards to an artificially-set end of life for political and economic reasons. Whenever I read mid century sci-fi, I have to take a step back and remember that it's not derivative, but rather informative. Right now, this type of story seems completely overdone, but that's probably because it actually helped influence a fair amount of mediocre sci-fi currently being released. This story was a sort of "what if" scenario that doesn't really transcend time like 1984 or other great and beloved sci-fi stories have.

Logan's Run was a result of the writers watching a cultural revolution take place in the late 60s, where young people changed the country, something not really seen before in America. With all the protests, riots, and incredible news coverage, the future probably felt incredibly tentative at that time. In that way, Logan's Run is an interesting historical document, looking into the minds of writers who were unsure what the cultural revolution could engender and wanted to pursue one outlandish avenue to its natural conclusion. Looking at that idea now, it seems ridiculous since all those hippies mellowed out and became the much-maligned baby boomer generation who grumps about the laziness of their kids and saps social security - basically what the authors of Logan's Run thought might be avoided if everyone committed suicide by 21. Ok, so maybe there still is something poignant about the story after all.

On the flip side, I didn't love the writing. It was an action-packed thriller, low on character development and high on quick, sparse sentences and crazy-fast plot movement. The runners are dashing around the country, encountering new villains here and there and defeating them just as quickly as they meet them. It all felt more like a comic book than a novel, which just isn't my cup of tea. The authors (sci-fi guys William F. Nolan and George Clayton Johnson teaming up) do a decent job of quickly creating a vivid world and dystopian future, but it feels quite dated and more pulpy as opposed to literary. Though we are meant to have mixed feelings about Logan, who we know to be a killer but also a seeker of human connections, there's no real character arc that occurs and in fact, there's a strange climax to the novel where he maybe seems to go through some sort of inner turmoil, but it is very strangely executed and unclear whether or not his whole dash for freedom was planned by the Sandmen or not. This is part of the blurriness of the writing, where settings are much more fleshed out than people. The climax takes place in Washington, DC, which has become a tropical jungle due to a nuclear bomb explosion, and is infested with escaped zoo animals. I loved the imagery of this place, but everything that occurs there is like a fever dream of incomprehensible plot. I'll also say that Logan's fellow runner, Jessica, is a painfully useless character, playing the part of a beautiful, weak woman who constantly needs saving. *Eye roll*. It really makes me appreciate the new sci-fi heroines in the form of The Hunger Games and probably Divergent and stuff, according to the movie trailers I've seen.

Because of its messy and immature writing style I can't say I really enjoyed it, but I do appreciate it as a valid influence on its genre and as a statement about the era in which it was written.
Profile Image for Veeral.
371 reviews133 followers
April 16, 2012
This might be the worst book I have read this year.

Here is the plot: In a dystopian future world, nobody should live for more than 21 years. They should go to ‘Sleep’. Logan who is a sandman - policeman of the future - who catches the ‘runners’ (people who run instead of going to ‘Sleep’ when their time has come), decides to become a ‘runner’ himself when it is his time to die.

End of the Story. Really.

William F. Nolan never thought beyond this point. Even the end could not salvage this wreck of a novel. It felt forced and cheesy.

I have read grocery lists better written and more interesting than this abomination.
Profile Image for Maria Lago.
487 reviews141 followers
February 7, 2020
¿Pero a dónde te querías fugar, alma de cántaro? Si todo es la misma mierda.
Profile Image for Sammy.
304 reviews1 follower
August 14, 2011
This is a book I have been searching for, but was having trouble finding at the used book shops. I have always wanted to read it and to my great surprise, recieved it from my parents on my 25th birthday. It is the 1976 version with the silly picture insert of movie images. To say I was thrilled is a drastic understatement. In fact, no words can come close to describing the nerd-uphoria I felt. It took me very little time to read the tiny book, but it was quite the adventure and I would love to see them make a technologically advanced film version that actually matches the book instead of the weird 70's one.

Logan's Run takes place in the not so distant future of 2116. There is rumor that one man, Ballard, is the oldest living man at age 42 which is twice the normal lifespan of 21. The new America is goverened by the young and moderated by an implant in the palm that signals when their life will end. Once the implant turns black, the person must voluntarily embrace the big Sleep. This has created runners and the Sandmen are forced to hunt them down and kill them. Logan is a Sandman who embarks on a journey, with a runner named Jessica, in his last 24 hours before his palm implant turns black.

The break neck pace leaves very little time for deep character development, which is the only downside. You get a sense of who Logan is and his inner turmoil, but it isn't spoon fed to us like most novels. We can only see glimpses of Logan is flashback and see his choices to understand who he is. I personally loved it, despite its flaws and give it 4 out of 5 because I wish Logan and Jessica were developed on a deeper level.
Profile Image for Roxy.
168 reviews1 follower
August 17, 2015
I'm not sure how old Nolan and Clayton were when they wrote this, but it definitely felt like it came from the mind of 12 year old boys. Why develop character or plot points when you can just add in a change of scenery and a robot every couple of pages? Seems like a solid strategy. My copy had pictures from the movie stuck in the middle which only confused me more, since the movie seems to have a totally different but equally bad storyline. I do not recommend this book unless you are an actual 12 year old boy.
1,141 reviews
August 27, 2023
Oof, that was…bad. A hazard of having a book where everyone is under 21, any sex scene involves a child, so the yuck factor starts early. The main characters are also incredibly lucky at every turn…and near death is written away in just a few sentences. I’m at a loss to explain what even happened, but at least it’s done.
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