Philip José Farmer's
Riverworld series is recognised as a classic of the genre - it says so on the blurb of my 1981 paperback copy of
To Your Scattered Bodies Go, the first book in the series. The last time I read it was, I think, back in the mid-1980s. Like
Ringworld (see
here) and
Rendezvous With Rama (see
here), it's one of those sf novels which is overshadowed by a Big Dumb Object central to the story. In this case, it's Riverworld itself, a planet whose surface is one long river valley which weaves its away across the entire surface.
On reflection, that characterisation may be slightly unfair - yes, Riverworld qualifies as a BDO, but it's not that which is most often remembered about the
Riverworld series. It's that Riverworld is entirely populated by the resurrected dead of Earth, from all regions and all ages. Including known historical figures.
And it's a historical figure who is the protagonist of
To Your Scattered Bodies Go. He is Richard Burton, the Victorian explorer, discoverer of Lake Tanganyika, and translator of
1001 Nights and
Kama Sutra. The novel opens with him waking up in a vast space, whose limits he cannot see, floating in some sort of clear gel and surrounded by rank upon rank of sleeping human beings. He attempts to escape, but is caught and returned to sleep... only to awake at the side of the River.
![](http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_Fcar1Ga8VE8/Sxum3zPjnxI/AAAAAAAAAoo/ZIcDaLBZ6qA/s200/To_your_scattered_bodies_go.jpg)
The entire population of Earth from its entire history has been dumped along the River. Burton finds himself the leader of a small group which includes Alice Liddell Hargreaves (Carroll's inspiration for
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland) and a number of fictional characters - including a Neanderthal (I think), and an alien from Tau Ceti (who apparently visited the Earth at the start of the twenty-first century).
(Rest of post on
It Doesn't Have To Be Right...)