Dayworld

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Authors: Philip José Farmer

BOOK: Dayworld
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Just one day That’s all you get. The world’s crowded, and the government appreciates your cooperation. You’re allowed one day each week to live your life. The rest of the week, you’re “stoned”—frozen solid.

Unless, of course, you’re a daybreaker. Then you can live every day of the week. You can assume seven

different personalities and work seven different jobs. You can slip from culture to culture, in seven different worlds.

Unless, of course, you get caught... or go crazy

DAYWORLD

Beginning a new series by the bestselling creator of RIVERWORLD

“FARMER’S BEST BOOK IN YEARS ‘‘
—LOCUS

Jeff Caird is a daybreaker. A criminal. . .

Illegally living seven different lives in seven different worlds. . .

Exploring seven possibilities, seven realities. . .

Enjoying his self-imposed schizophrenia. . .

Until things start getting a little weird. . .

DAYWORLD

Philip José Farmer’s astonishing new fantasy.

 

“Solid, assured ... absorbing.”

—Kirkus Reviews

“A near-perfect treat from beginning to end... full of interesting characters... steamrolls to a fabulous ending.”

—Register

“Every bit as appealing as the RIVERWORLD saga.”

—Booklist

 

Berkley books by Philip José Farmer

A BARNSTORMER IN OZ

THE BOOK OF PHILIP JOSÉ FARMER

DAYWORLD

THE GRAND ADVENTURE

THE GREEN ODYSSEY

IMAGE OF THE BEAST

NIGHT OF LIGHT

THE UNREASONING MASK

A WOMAN A DAY

The Riverworld Series:

TO YOUR SCATTERED BODIES GO

THE FABULOUS RIVERBOAT

THE DARK DESIGN

THE MAGIC LABYRINTH

GODS OF RIVERWORLD

RIVERWORLD AND OTHER STORIES

The World of Tiers Series:

THE MAKER OF UNIVERSES

THE GATES OF CREATION

A PRIVATE COSMOS

 

 

 

 

This Berkley book contains the complete text of the original hardcover edition. It has been completely reset in a typeface designed for easy reading, and was printed from new film.

DAYWORLD

A Berkley Book/published by arrangement with G. P. Putnam’s Sons

PRINTING HISTORY

G. P. Putnam’s edition/February 1985 Berkley edition/March 1986

All rights reserved. Copyright © 1985 by Philip Jos£ Farmer. This book may not be reproduced in whole or in part, by mimeograph or any other means, without permission. For information address: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 200 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10016.

ISBN: 0-425-08474-4

A BERKLEY BOOK • TM 757,375 Berkley Books are published by The Berkley Publishing Group, 200 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10016. The name “BERKLEY” and the stylized “B” with design are trademarks belonging to Berkley Publishing Corporation.

PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

 

 

To my latest grandchild, Thomas José Joséphsohn, born March 25, 1983. May he live to be old and be always as bright, friendly, outgoing, cheerful, curious, and healthy as he is now.

My thanks to Father James D. Shaughnessy of Peoria for his counsel and stimulating ideas re future popes. Any opinions and conclusions herein about seven simultaneous popes are, however, my responsibility, not his.

 

 

 

Author’s Preface

 

The basis or springboard for this novel is my short story “The-Sliced-Crosswise-Only-On-Tuesday-World.” This took place in A.D. 2214 (old style) or N.E. 130 (new style): N.E. stands for New Era, and N.E. 130 indicates the one hundred and thirtieth year after the official beginning of the “stoner” society. The events of
Dayworld
occur in A.D. 3414 or N.E. 1330. Thirteen hundred and thirty years have passed since the start of the New Era, N.E. 1.

Though there are twelve hundred years between the events of the short story and the novel, only seven and a half generations (arithmetically speaking) have been born. The reason for this will become apparent during the course of the novel.

In the future, the U.S.A. will have to adopt the metric and twenty-four-hour time systems. I use the present systems for the convenience of the American reader.

Some contemporary English words have different meanings in the New Era culture. These changes should be obvious.

Do not be confused because some of the male characters have female names and some females have male names. Times change; customs die.

The protagonist of
Dayworld
is an outlaw, a daybreaker. He lives by the horizontal calendar.

For an explanation of the horizontal and vertical calendars, refer to the illustration on the next page.

The calendar is “vertical,” not our present-day “horizontal” calendar. Our calendars present the seven days of the week as if we moved through time horizontally. Sunday precedes Monday, and Monday precedes Tuesday, and by the time we have reached next Sunday, we have stepped off onto another horizontal chronological path.

The New Era or “stoner” society uses a “vertical” calendar.

Reason: One-seventh of the world’s population lives on only one day of the week. To put it another way, six-sevenths of the world’s population is in a “stoned” or “suspended-animation” state for six days of each week. Sunday’s people live on Sunday only; Monday’s, on Monday, and so forth.

At the end of one passage of Earth around the sun, a Sunday citizen has lived only fifty-two days. If born in, say, N.E. 100, that person has been on Earth two hundred years by N.E. 300. But that person is not quite twenty-nine years old in physiological development. If that person has been on Earth for six hundred years, he or she is not quite eighty-six years old in terms of aging.

The stoner culture greatly reduces the demand for food and goods, amount of pollution, and living space required. If the global population is, say, ten billion, then, on each day, only a little over one billion, four hundred and twenty-eight million, five hundred thousand people are eating food, drinking, using space, and adding trash, junk, and waste matter for disposal.

The New Era government decreed a new calendar for two reasons. One, it wanted to make a clean break with the past. Two, it made sure that each day’s population would not be cheated out of its full quota of days per year because of the different days of the months as set by the Gregorian calendar. The summer solstice, which occurs on or near June 21, arbitrarily became the first day of the year, and that day was designated as Sunday.

The year was divided into thirteen months of four seven-day weeks. The end of the year was followed by a
zero
or
lost
day to ensure that there were three hundred and sixty-five days in the year. During leap years, an extra zero or lost day was added. Everybody except a minimum number of firefighters, police, administrators, and so on was kept in the stoned state.

The citizens would, of course, refer to two different types of time. Objective time, that is, time as measured by the annual circling of the Earth around the sun and Earth’s spinning, would be termed obyears, obmonths, and obweeks. Subjective time, that is, the actual number of days, weeks, months, and years a person has lived, would be subdays, subweeks, submonths, and subyears.

The names of the months are, in order of succession, Unity, Variety, Joy, Hope, Comradeship, Love, Freedom, Plenty, Peace, Knowledge, Wisdom, Serenity, and Fulfillment. These are also the Thirteen Principles upon which the New Era society is supposedly based.

 

 

 

 

 

Tuesday-World

Organic Commonwealth of Earth

North American Ministering Organ

Manhattan State

Manhattan total population: 2,100,000

Manhattan daily population: 300,000

Greenwich Village District

House on corner of Bleecker Street and Kropotkin Canal (formerly the Avenue of the Americas)

VARIETY,
Second Month of N.E. 1330

D5-W1
(Day-Five, Week-One)

Time Zone 5, 12:15 A.M.

 

 

 

 

1.

 

When the hounds bay, the fox and the hare are brothers. Today, Jeff Caird, the fox, would hear the hounds.

At the moment, he could not hear anything because he was standing in a soundproof cylinder. If he had been outside it, he still would have heard nothing. Except for himself and a few organics, firefighters, and technicians, he was the only living person in the city.

A few minutes before entering the cylinder and closing its door, he had slid back a small panel in the wall. Behind the control panel in the wall recess was a tiny device he had long ago connected to the power circuits. He had voice-activated the device, thus ensuring that “destoning” power would not be applied to the cylinder he now occupied.

Though power was absent, the city monitoring computer would receive false data that power had been turned on in his cylinder.

His cylinder or “stoner” was like those of all other healthy adults. It stood on one end, had a round window a foot in diameter in the door, and was made of gray paper. The paper, however, was permanently “stoned,” and thus was indestructible and always cool.

Nude, his feet planted on a thick disc set in the middle of the cylinder, he waited. The inflated facsimile of himself had been deflated and was in the shoulderbag on the cylinder floor.

The figures in the other cylinders in the room were nonliving things whose molecules had been electromagnetically commanded to slow down. Result: a hardening throughout the body, which became unbreakable and unburnable, though a diamond could scratch it. Result: a lowering of body temperature, though it was not so low that it caused moisture to precipitate in the ambient air.

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