The Land of Foam also known as At the Edge of Oikoumene (Russian: На краю Ойкумены, romanizedNa krayu Oikumeny) and Great Arc (Russian: Великая Дуга, romanizedVelikaya Duga) is a novel written by Soviet writer Ivan Yefremov in 1946.[1]

The Land of Foam
First English edition, 1957
AuthorIvan Yefremov
CountrySoviet Union
LanguageRussian
GenreAdventure
Science fiction
PublisherForeign Languages Publishing House (Moscow) - English
Publication date
1946
Published in English
1957

Plot summary edit

The novel is divided in two parts, separated by more than 1000 years.

The first part takes place during the rule of the pharaoh Djedefra (26th century BC), who decides to send an expedition to the South, in order to seek the famous and fabled Land of Punt and to seek the limits of the land and the start of the Great Arc, the circular ocean encompassing the entire world in Egyptian cosmology.

The second part starts in Ancient Greece during its Aegean Period (no precise dates are provided, but one can assume a date c. 1000–900 BC).[2] A young sculptor named Pandion sets off on a journey to Crete, but he ends up on Phoenician Trading Ship ( while trying to escape captivity from some local wild Crete people), and after 4 days, he jumps the ship in the middle of the storm ( while escaping sacrifice from frightened sailors), and a storm finally lands him in Egypt, where he is enslaved. He manages to win his freedom and find friends and after a long and perilous journey through African savanna and jungle comes back home. On the way, he carves a cameo which portrays his friends and some details of their adventures.

In a short framing narrative, modern researchers examine the cameo and contemplate its possible origins.

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Best Sellers: From the U.S. Government Printing Office". 19 (2). 15 April 1959: 39. Retrieved 3 March 2021. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  2. ^ The book mentions the abandoned capital of Akhetaten, constructed by the pharaoh of same name c. 1350 BC and abandoned shortly afterward. Those facts are placed as 400 years away at the time the novel takes place.

External links edit