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The Year of the Cloud

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There was a race going on such as the world had never experienced before. It was a race to save humanity from death by thirst....It was a race that man might not even finish, much less win.

192 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1970

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About the author

Ted Thomas

12 books
Librarian Note: There is more than one author by this name in the Goodreads database.

Theodore L. Thomas

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Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
75 reviews4 followers
February 4, 2020
Scientists led by Dr. Yudkin at an American observatory take photographic plates of a mysterious celestial object near Mars using a highly sophisticated telescope and determine it is a cloud of some sort. Predicting that it will reach Earth in a matter of days and that the planet will in fact pass through it, NASA sends a rocket to collect samples of it. Analyzing the samples, they determine the cloud is organic in nature, composed primarily of polymers and a few other elements they can't identify. However, test animals subjected to the particles the rocket collected don't seem affected by it, and so at first it seems as if nothing harmful will come of its contact with Earth.

The cloud soon permeates the planet's atmosphere. Although Earth is only enveloped in its mass for a day before it moves on, the organic polymers start having an unusual effect on the environment. Oceanographer Dr. Sam Brooks and a colleague along with a science reporter named Carl Loudermilch are out on the ocean collecting samples of seawater for analysis when they discover that the cloud is increasing water viscosity somehow. All water on Earth is slowly taking on a consistency roughly akin to rubber cement or gel. With nothing to drink, no rain, no water to irrigate crops and the oceans slowly solidifying into a viscous glop, Brooks and Loudermilch, along with wealthy yacht owners Hugh Winthrop and Gail Cooper, stranded in the ocean, have to figure out a means of reversing the cloud's effects as order begins to break down around the world with Earth facing a potentially apocalyptic global drought.

I really liked Thomas and Wilhelm's earlier collaboration, The Clone, and The Year of the Cloud doesn't disappoint. To an extent, it reminds me of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's The Poison Belt. Like The Clone, it focuses on a catastrophe (an interstellar cloud as opposed to a blob monster) affecting a large and varied cast of characters, showing the reader how the authorities, the scientific community and ordinary people deal with the crisis, but with a few key differences.

First and foremost is the nature of the threat. The "clone" in the previous novel was an amorphous flesh glob possessing a rudimentary intelligence (of a sort); it had agency and motivation and was decidedly terrestrial in origin, created accidentally by human carelessness. The Yudkin Cloud, as it's named after the kinda pompous scientist who takes credit for its discovery (although it's actually an assistant named Porter who first notices it on the photographic plates) despite its informed organic nature is just, well, a cloud, traveling aimlessly through outer space with no end goal in mind; that it happened to cross paths with Earth is pure chance.

Secondly, there's the scale of the disaster. In The Clone, the eponymous monster only threatens Chicago; there is the threat of it spreading beyond the city limits and into the rest of Illinois and eventually the country/the world, but the authorities, led by the heroic Dr. Mark Kenniston, are able to successfully beat it. In this novel, however, the entire world is already under threat from the cloud's effects; the damage is done and it's up to Brooks and co. to reverse rather than prevent the apocalypse.

And thirdly, although there are other characters, unlike The Clone, The Year of the Cloud is primarily concerned with the people on the yacht, and said core group are more or less stuck; Mark, his girlfriend Nurse Edie Hempstead and his friend Harry Schwartz run around from place to place in Chicago aiding the authorities, but Brooks, Loudermilch and co. are pretty much stranded on the boat for the duration.

So the two books are similar but different and it's nice to see that Thomas and Wilhelm don't repeat ALL of their previous novel's themes.
1,646 reviews7 followers
February 28, 2024
A large but tenuous cloud of organic matter has enveloped Earth for a few days and then gone, but the effects are starting to appear to a pair of crews. Sam Brookes and Carl Loudermilch, marine biologist and science reporter respectively; and Hugh Winthrop, a seemingly indolent trust fund baby, and his partner Gail Cooper, both aboard the Donado off the Bahamas. What both seem to have discovered is that the organic molecules from space have increased the viscosity of global water by at least a hundredfold. This has dire effects. Waves don’t break, they roll; condensation nuclei don’t form, thus drought; and most chilling of all, blood gets thicker causing serious medical issues for all animals including humans. Ted Thomas and Kate Wilhelm have cobbled together a nice little disaster novel (possibly triggered by the polywater controversy around at the time), and with carefully thought out and logical consequences. The solution to the problem lies in the concept of swift adaptation but it will require quite a bit of suspension of disbelief. Not the worst way to while away a day.
412 reviews9 followers
January 12, 2021
A cosy catastrophe penned by Americans. Zounds! This is Ballardian in affect, and Hoylean in focus on the science. A winner worth the effort to procure. Another lost gem, though very, very, very 20th century in outlook. (The presence of Wilhelm on the masthead does not prevent the somewhat ancillary presence of females in the story, alas.)
Profile Image for Claudio.
325 reviews
January 19, 2020
Un vecchio Urania comprato su una bancarella di Cesenatico, mai letto prima. Titolo originale: Year of the Cloud, 1970. Non male, mostra la sua età ma si legge ancora bene. Abbastanza avvincente e realistico secondo me.
Profile Image for Nicola Strangis.
94 reviews1 follower
July 13, 2022
Ottimo libro da ombrellone! Non si tratta di un capolavoro, anzi, il lessico è piuttosto povero ma la storia nel complesso si regge bene e palesa diversi significati ambientalisti. Io me lo sono goduto.

Molto divertente il racconto finale di Richard Curtis (Zoo 2000).
Profile Image for Diann.
203 reviews5 followers
November 26, 2024
It has gaps like most end of the world disasters have. I haven't read this type of disaster before.
Profile Image for Robert.
250 reviews4 followers
March 23, 2016
I read this book when I was in my third year of college and my roommate had read it and recommended it way back in 1973. I enjoyed it although the constant consumption of Heineken was a bit much, Heineken here, Heineken there, and everywhere as I recall. Funny that it sticks in my mind so much. The overall story was somewhat more involved than that though. I had difficulty remembering the title but combining the correct words on google succeeded and now I know the title once again.
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews

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