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Ballroom of the Skies

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Ballroom of the Skies, a classic science fiction novel from John D. MacDonald, the beloved author of Cape Fear and the Travis McGee series, is now available as an eBook.
 
Have you ever stopped to wonder why the world is eternally torn by war? Why men of goodwill, seeking only peace, are driven relentlessly to further disaster? In a future society, where India rules the globe and everyone chases the mighty rupee, the First Atomic War has just ended. Already the Second is clearly building. People shrug. War is man’s nature, they think. And that’s what newspaper reporter Dake Lorin thinks, too . . . until he becomes aware of the aliens living among us and discovers their sinister purpose—as well as the strange and monstrous explanation for humankind’s seemingly limitless capacity for violence and destruction.
 
Features a new Introduction by Dean Koontz
 
Praise for John D. MacDonald
 
The great entertainer of our age, and a mesmerizing storyteller.”—Stephen King
 
“My favorite novelist of all time.”—Dean Koontz
 
“To diggers a thousand years from now, the works of John D. MacDonald would be a treasure on the order of the tomb of Tutankhamen.”—Kurt Vonnegut
 
“A master storyteller, a masterful suspense writer . . . John D. MacDonald is a shining example for all of us in the field. Talk about the best.”—Mary Higgins Clark

232 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 1952

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About the author

John D. MacDonald

575 books1,385 followers
John D. MacDonald was born in Sharon, Pennsylvania, and educated at the Universities of Pennsylvania, Syracuse and Harvard, where he took an MBA in 1939. During WW2, he rose to the rank of Colonel, and while serving in the Army and in the Far East, sent a short story to his wife for sale, successfully. He served in the Office of Strategic Services (O.S.S.) in the China-Burma-India Theater of Operations. After the war, he decided to try writing for a year, to see if he could make a living. Over 500 short stories and 70 novels resulted, including 21 Travis McGee novels.

Following complications of an earlier heart bypass operation, MacDonald slipped into a coma on December 10 and died at age 70, on December 28, 1986, in St. Mary's Hospital in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He was survived by his wife Dorothy (1911-1989) and a son, Maynard.

In the years since his death MacDonald has been praised by authors as diverse as Stephen King, Spider Robinson, Jimmy Buffett, Kingsley Amis and Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.. Thirty-three years after his passing the Travis McGee novels are still in print.

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 40 reviews
Profile Image for Dave.
3,693 reviews450 followers
January 20, 2019
Something Mysterious Is Going On

Ballroom of the Skies is MacDonald’s second science fiction novel, following on the heels of Wine of the Dreamers. This novel, written in 1951 and published in 1952 early in MacDonald’s career is a companion piece to Dreamers. It does not continue the same story, but explores the same themes such as how to account for the long history of wars and conflict, and the idea that space aliens with telepathic And telekinetic powers walk amongst us, often manipulating us for their own ends.

In the end, this turned out to be a brilliant, thoughtful novel. It was, however, a struggle to get into as a reader with this first part being a bit stiff and disjointed and the story not really exciting for a while. This one is worth sticking with though.

There are sequences in it that are horrific and filled with as much psychological turmoil as anything. Some of the ideas that are played out here were certainly further developed by later authors.

It’s odd that MacDonald gave up on science fiction because he seemed to have so many interesting ideas to explore, but it appears his interests lay elsewhere.
Profile Image for Bill.
2,018 reviews108 followers
February 5, 2017
I'm most familiar with John D. MacDonald's Travis McGee mystery series. I was surprised to find that he had also written a few Science Fiction (or as he calls them, science fantasy) stories. Ballroom of the Skies was originally written in 1951. It's an interesting story and takes a bit of time to get into the flow of what is happening.
We find the Earth working through the First Atomic War and being threatened with the 2nd. The US is no longer a powerhouse, instead it is the PacIndia that is the power.
Dake Lorin, a journalist, has been working for a year with an idol of his, Darwin Branson, to try and stop this imminent threat. But what happens will turn his life upside down. There are powers that monitor everything taking place on Earth and who can impact changes they perceive that will threaten this power. Where they are from and why they are doing this will become apparent as you delve more into the story.
I did find it confusing at time, but it is supposed to be. There are illusions, mind tricks, etc. that throw your image of what is real and what isn't into a tail spin. I don't think it is a perfect Science Fiction story by any means, but it is well worth reading, for the time period when it was written, for the author who wrote it (to gain a different perspective on his writing) and just for the interesting concept. (3 stars)
Profile Image for Cashmere.
38 reviews
August 10, 2019
This book was very tough going for me.

I'm a big fan of John D. MacDonald, and have at least started the ambitious goal of trying to read his entire published oeuvre, in chronological order no less.

As many readers no doubt know, John D. is best known for his pulpy crime fiction, and most notably his Travis McGee series. It is those books that really caught my attention and ingratiated him and his writing to me.

Of course I was surprised to learn that John D. did dabble in science-fiction, with a grand total of three novels. I'm in general not especially a sci-fi fan beyond the most mainstream: original and even prequel Star Wars and original Star Trek. Phillip K. Dick's Blade Runner is as "edgy" as my sci-fi tastes tend to go, and even then I strongly prefer the movie to his original book. All that being said, I did read John D.'s first sci-fi novel, Wine of the Dreamers and it was alright. It was at least tolerable.

I know that later on, John D. ventured into sci-fi with The Girl, the Gold Watch & Everything and with fond memories of the early 1980's TV movie, I look forward to reading it!

Perhaps all of that is why Ballroom of the Skies was such a disappointment. I had great difficulty getting into it, and even getting through it. Please forgive me for being brutally honest: after trying to get through the first half off the book, I skimmed through the rest of it. It just didn't catch (let alone hold) my interest. Perhaps if it had been anyone other than John D., I would have given up on the book altogether and simply abandoned it. However, I do have a loyalty to John D. and the ambitious goal of trying to read his entire output, even if that means just skimming through part of this book in order to "finish" it.

So, I continue to heartily endorse John D. MacDonald and the vast majority of his books that I have read. I look forward to continuing my way through his catalog and reading the next in line, The Damned. I view this foray of his into science-fiction (or, as he says in the afterward of the book, "science-fantasy") as one big exception.
5,305 reviews62 followers
December 18, 2012
This 1952 novel is John D. MacDonald's second science fiction entry of the three he wrote in his long career. AT this point, he had been writing novel length fiction for two years and was still learning his craft.

SciFi - After WWIII, the United States has been reduced to a second rate country, tensions in the world are high, and Dake Lorin has taken a year to help Darwin Branson work out a peace accords with all the nations. He witnesses Branson accept watered down conciliations from Irania and knows that will cause the other nations to start waffling. What caused this aboutface?
Profile Image for John.
38 reviews2 followers
December 22, 2013
Wasn't sure where this one was going for a while, but the plot turn at the end really made this book for me. I'm really starting to appreciate and enjoy 50's science fiction far more than contemporary. Maybe the ideas were just newer, fresher, more bizarre. Not a "classic" in the most rigid sense, but a great and rewarding read, nonetheless.
Profile Image for Al "Tank".
370 reviews58 followers
June 14, 2019
The story bored me a bit at first, but not too much. Then it got really interesting. Our hero, a modern Don Quixote, gets knocked around from one end of the planet to the other. But he perseveres.

I've read this before and forgotten a bit of it. I thought the ending was a bit different.
Profile Image for Joshua Buhs.
647 reviews132 followers
February 4, 2017
In a career as prolific as MacDonald's, there's bound to be some clunkers, especially early on.

And this is one.

MacDonald is mostly known as a mystery writer, but he had an itch to write some science fiction toward the beginning of his career, and turned out this one and the earlier Wine of the Dreamers, both on the same theme. Judging by the afterword of these edition, MacDonald wasn't exactly familiar with the genre--thinking science fiction necessarily included either bug-eyed monsters, space opera, or mad scientists, possibly also robots--and what he was after was a way of working out a question: why, smart as humans are, do they keep effing up the world.

Here he offers a solution very similar to the one put forth by Eric Frank Russell more than a decade earlier: because it's in the best interest of aliens. (That's from Russell's Sinister Barrier, but there's also hints of his Dreadful Sanctuary: that sanity means ignoring the alien forces at work on humanity.) The whole story builds to a long lecture at the end. If you're worried about spoilers for a book some 66 years old, skip the next bit:

The rest of the galaxy, we learn, is controlled by an empire, advised by supercomputers. The imperials realize that their bringing peace to the galaxy means that they are no longer growing, working, and competing, making them prey to aliens beyond the galaxy or simply at risk of fizzling away. And so the earth is kept unpeaceful, meaning people have to struggle and compete--only through this process can the greatest minds be found, abducted, and brought to lead the empire, making it always better. Further increasing the empire's strength is that there are various factions within it, meaning even the leaders of it need to continually struggle.

With this as the ending, it is no surprise that our hero, who starts out working for world peace, will instead come to be one of the great potential leaders of the galactic empire.

The rest of the book is mostly set up. There are some nice grace notes: the man we think will be the main character is killed off quickly. MacDonald tries for some structural razzle dazzle, but mostly to no effect. The problem is that the first 2/3 of the book is really exposition heavy. The setting is the 1970s, after another world war, this time atomic, and just as a fourth is being prepared, India is now the leader of the world, which is otherwise divided into three blocs. America is a fringe, decadent place (except for the strong heartland!) MacDonald spends a lot of time simply stating all of this, rather than showing it.

The dialogue tends to be very on-the-nose with a lot of -as-you-knows. MacDonald seems to think stilted dialogue is another necessary component of the genre. Everyone is very earnest, even those with seemingly nefarious plots. Conversations are often heavy-handed bits of more exposition.

MacDonald also tries to keep the reader off balance by monkeying with reality. The aliens have mental powers that allow them to alter perceptions. (Buried deep in this book is an early version of cyberpunk, with drugs and decadence and altered consensual reality, but MacDonald never brings it out.) This technique has a few striking pay-offs, but other times the fact that someone's perception will be altered is told, then the perception altered, and the narrative goes on to describe the person's actions--these amount to extended dream pieces that fluff an already short novel to no real purpose.

Can't really recommend it to anyone but a MacDonald completist.
Profile Image for Sierra Smith.
1 review
January 21, 2024
The world is in conflict and approaching war, but there is hope: a political meeting is going to take place that will steer the world in a positive direction. Then, a mysterious duo expertly kills the political pacifist before he can make peace agreement. The duo replaces the man with an exact, more evil clone who then makes a decision leading to further conflict and war.
Our main character Darwin, a friend of the first, soon finds out that something is very wrong — he knows his friend was altered in some sick way. Darwin attempts to broadcast this to the world, ignoring the legal repercussions of political betrayal. Darwin is then given illusions and controlled by a force which deters him from publicizing his story. He is then kidnapped into another planet and where he is taught supernatural powers. This makes him feel lonely and separated from humanity.
The tale ends with Darwin learning that that the world is held in a perpetual state of conflict by supernatural force because it breeds competition, progress, and perpetual life. The ending also bends into romance as he finds acceptance in his new gifts and extra-human love.
Although I struggled to finish the story (for personal reasons; “reading block”) I did like the story. The beginning was strong. It held my attention for most of the book, and I truly did feel for Darwin in his journey. I was surprised the reception online was not favorable. I can understand, as it is almost a 70 year old book, there was some phrasing and sections that were a bit … odd. And the story was hard to get a hold onto at parts. But I thought his story concept was solid and the execution wasn’t bad!
I didn’t love it, but I did enjoy it moderately. It was interesting. I would reread it, especially because it would be easier when you know what is happening and can better appreciate it. I wouldn’t necessarily recommend it generally, but it is good for someone wants some vintage, unique ‘science fantasy’, as Mc.Donald terms it.

This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Chris.
46 reviews
April 24, 2021
Better than I expected! I read and enjoyed MacDonald's Wine of the Dreamers in high school. For years I'd been trying to figure out which writer better known for hard-boiled detective fiction had written a pretty solid SF novel. Mickey Spillane? Nope. I finally found the answer and had to come back to these two. The novel moves along briskly, introducing pretty intriguing ideas along the way. My main beef is that the grand secret to it all is revealed all too quickly in the last few pages without enough hints for the reader to have the slightest chance at figuring it out. It does all come together in consistent and thought provoking package. Can you ask more from at 178 page paperback?
Profile Image for John JJJJJJJJ.
199 reviews
July 28, 2025
A novel I truly wanted to love.

The story takes place in the 2000s, after a devastating atomic conflict that killed millions. The United States is no longer a dominant power. Journalist Dake Lorin discovers that his mentor, Darwin Branson, might be an infiltrating alien. This revelation threatens the world’s fragile balance... and sends ripples across the cosmos.

I just couldn’t get into it. I pushed myself to keep reading, hoping the story would draw me in over time. Sadly, it never happened. 😔😔
Profile Image for Jack Webb.
360 reviews2 followers
February 19, 2020
What an ending!

This is one of only two excursions into sci-fi by JDM, or science fantasy, as he called it. Written in the early 50s, it was an "exercise" to try to explain why the world was so messed up. While it starts a bit slowly and strangely, I'm willing to bet the ending "explanation" will surprise you as much as it did me. As usual for this fantastic author, he'll give you a lot to think about.
Profile Image for James.
64 reviews
December 30, 2024
Initially, I found the book highly enjoyable. However, the pacing in the opening chapters, and perhaps the narrative style, created a sense of unevenness, hindering the initial engagement for approximately fifty pages. Furthermore, the introduction of the science fiction elements felt underdeveloped within this slow-paced, non-action-oriented plot structure.

1⭐️ DNF or Forced myself to Finish
2⭐️ It's Just a book
3⭐️ A Good Book
4⭐️ On My Reread List
5⭐️ god mode
583 reviews11 followers
February 19, 2018
MacDonald expressed some interesting and thought provoking ideas about war and peace and progress. What was disappointing for me was the story as a story; I have read roughly a dozen or more books by MacDonald, not just Travis McGee tales, and the storytelling here is the weakest I have read by him.
858 reviews9 followers
August 20, 2018
SF novel with a theme fromthe fifties

Many reflections of ideas and philosophies that were outgrowths of WW II. While a contemporary writer would write a different story, it will no doubt be retold. Perhaps in a way stories like the Matrix reflect a similar idea - or Elon Musk’s idea that our lives and civilization are really an elaborate simulaton.
Profile Image for Mark Zodda.
801 reviews1 follower
July 14, 2021
Something very different from John D. MacDonald, a scientific fantasy as he calls it. Very dated and with a bit of an odd feel, this story seems to bounce all over the place without getting anywhere. I think John D. had too much too drink while channeling his inner Ayn Rand. It's only worth reading if you're a John D. MacDonald completist.
35 reviews
July 24, 2023
Fascinating premise for a book - and very different in style and substance from the first few John MacDonald books that I have read. As MacDonald himself said with the intro to the re-release after 20 years, the topic of why the human race is continuing to strive and to struggle and be constantly on the brink of war or other catastrophe makes this book timeless and relevant
Profile Image for tin_foil_tinnu.
371 reviews
December 7, 2020
2.5 maybe? Randomly grabbed some old books from up at the cabin and this was one of them. The plot was original I guess, but it wasn't particularly fun/exciting/interesting. Just kind of a weird 1950s novel with aliens in it, and mind reading, I think.
Profile Image for Ken Stampe.
540 reviews4 followers
May 16, 2022
strange

I’m not sure what I think about this book. A definite departure from his Travis McGee stories. I nearly put it down twice but soldiered forth. I’m still not sure WHY he wrote it…what point he was attempting to get across.
9 reviews
December 4, 2017
This interesting tale explains why the world is eternally war torn.
Profile Image for Mortimer Roxbrough.
91 reviews3 followers
March 9, 2018
One of the best alien invasion novels I have ever read. If you want something a bit different in that line then this is highly recommended, try it
Profile Image for Valerie.
270 reviews14 followers
March 6, 2019
It didn't go where I expected and the ending was surprising.
I was afraid it was going to be a lot of political intrigues, but it was much different.
Profile Image for James.
71 reviews1 follower
May 14, 2019
A good read with lots of interesting science fiction twists and political turns.
Profile Image for Gabriel Kalb.
40 reviews
December 23, 2023
Que livro estranho, no início eu não estava entendendo nada, acho que foi o início de livro mais confuso que já vi, depois vai ficando melhor mas realmente não surpreende muito até o final
Profile Image for Rob Smith, Jr..
1,300 reviews36 followers
November 15, 2020
MacDonald was too much a fatalist and this I liked least in his books. I endeavored to read his two science fiction novels and now have. Apparently I read this in 2000. Reading it again, I have no memory of it. That's most likely due to 1) this being a tiresome book and 2) this is just another example of my dislike of science fiction.

The two are less science fiction than fatalist social commentary. In this one the world has nearly ended and conspiracy theories are all the rage and MacDonald unfolds this one in novel form. In other MacDonald novels this would be greedy land holders in place of take over aliens versus Travis McGee, in this case a bunch of scientists. The ending is obvious and this racks up as a waste of time.

There's a bunch of psycho-babble about power hungry types (Greedy Land Owners) out to get us all and the silly idea of inevitable war. This book from 52 and still world ending war. I recall reading MacDonald back in the alte '70s and into the '80s wondering of JDM's health. I well recall learning of his death. I was more sad than surprised, but I was not surprised. As both science fiction books demonstrate, JDM was far, far too upset about nonsense.

The writing is OK. He got much, much better later. The dialogue OK. Often silly. The settings were lacking as he makes up areas that came from his imagination.

Bottom line: i don't recommend this book. 3 out of ten points.
Profile Image for wally.
3,670 reviews5 followers
November 29, 2015
26 nov 15, #62 from macdonald for me...just finished The Damned. macdonald rocks the casbah, always entertaining...have read the other sci-fi story...forget the title. Wine of the Dreamers a good one if you're in the market. onward upward

29 nov 15 finished.
good story. i don't remember much about wine of the dreamers although i think that one also contained the idea expressed best by macdonald in an afterword in this story:

the two novels are companion pieces in that they provide two congruent methods of accounting for all the random madness and unmotivated violence in out known world, and two quite different answers as to why, with all our technology, we seem unable to move a fraction of an inch toward bettering the human condition and making of life a universally more rewarding experience.


calls it science fantasy...so as not to pizz-off the die-hard sci-fi buckeroos who might could draw that laser-beam bead on the story and all who praise its lines...and says it is a human story more so than devices. but the story line here argues otherwise. onward upward.
Profile Image for Merredith.
1,022 reviews24 followers
October 7, 2016
This is a classic sci-fi book written in the 1950s. By the time it came up on my list and I started reading it, I had forgotten when it was published and was very confused about the timeline, especially when they kept talking about the ‘70s and things being only fifty years after silent films. I finally figured out this book is set in the 1970s, which was the future. War has shaken up world politics and India is the lead country. Americans are second class citizens. Instead of building skyscrapers, we build downward into the earth for stories. Things are future and antiquated at the same time. Two American men had been working towards world peace when suddenly one ruins their whole work. We find out right away this is because of aliens. This all sounds exciting, but the execution was dull. I tried to force myself through it, but it’s too slow and academic seeming. If you are super into sci-fi, you may want to read this as popular cannon, but for a more light reader like me, it’s a skip.
Profile Image for Gabrielle.
5 reviews16 followers
February 10, 2015
I enjoyed this book. It lit up my imagination, lots of visuals came throughout the story. MacDonald had a writing style that I thoroughly enjoyed, many choice sentences that could have have stood completely alone, which in this day of age, where internet "memes" are all the rage, is a wonderful plus. thoughtful, artful construction of words. which MacDonald also communicates his respect for in the way he illustrates the topic of communication throughout this book.

it was less alien and spacey than most SciFi of that time, perhaps not dressed in all the reliably cliche trends of SciFi of the times, as MacDonald recognized in the afterward, but the scifis that really try to put a mirror on sociopolitical aspects of our world always intrigue me. I'm interested in reading his other work, sci fi or no.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 40 reviews

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