To the Stars is a science fiction novel by Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard. The novel's story is set in a dystopian future, and chronicles the experiences of protagonist Alan Corday aboard a starship called the Hound of Heaven as he copes with the travails of time dilation from traveling at near light speed. Corday is kidnapped by the ship's captain and forced to become a member of their crew, and when he next returns to Earth his fiancee has aged and barely remembers him.

PropertyValue
dbpedia-owl:Book/isbn
  • 1592121756
dbpedia-owl:Book/mediaType
dbpedia-owl:Book/pages
  • 210 (xsd:integer)
dbpedia-owl:Book/subject
dbpedia-owl:Work/author
dbpedia-owl:Work/genre
dbpedia-owl:Work/publisher
dbpedia-owl:author
dbpedia-owl:genre
dbpedia-owl:isbn
  • 1592121756
dbpedia-owl:mediaType
dbpedia-owl:pages
  • 210 (xsd:integer)
dbpedia-owl:publisher
dbpedia-owl:subject
dbpprop:abstract
  • To the Stars is a science fiction novel by Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard. The novel's story is set in a dystopian future, and chronicles the experiences of protagonist Alan Corday aboard a starship called the Hound of Heaven as he copes with the travails of time dilation from traveling at near light speed. Corday is kidnapped by the ship's captain and forced to become a member of their crew, and when he next returns to Earth his fiancee has aged and barely remembers him. He becomes accustomed to life aboard the ship, and when the captain dies Corday assumes command. Hubbard's story was first published by John W. Campbell in two parts in a serialized format in 1950 in Astounding Science Fiction. It was first published in book format in 1954 under the title Return to Tomorrow, and was published in hardcover in 1975 under the same title. In 1997, film producers were in the process of developing the work as a movie for Touchstone Pictures. Jazz musician Chick Corea released a 2004 album of the same name with music inspired by the story, and Scientology-owned Galaxy Press reissued a hardcover edition of Hubbard's novel the same year as a form of cross marketing. The book was generally positively received, and garnered a 2001 nomination for a "Retro" Hugo Award for Best Novella. Publishers Weekly gave the book a positive review, calling it one of Hubbard's "finest works", and Alan Cheuse highlighted the work on National Public Radio's program All Things Considered as a top literature holiday pick.
dbpprop:author
dbpprop:country
  • United States
dbpprop:coverArtist
  • Mike Manoogian
dbpprop:genre
dbpprop:imageCaption
  • Cover of 2004 hardcover edition
dbpprop:isbn
  • 1592121756 (xsd:integer)
dbpprop:isfdbTitleProperty
  • To the Stars
  • 92605 (xsd:integer)
dbpprop:language
  • English
dbpprop:mediaType
  • Print
dbpprop:name
  • To the Stars
dbpprop:oclc
  • 56342556 (xsd:integer)
dbpprop:pages
  • 210 pp
dbpprop:portalProperty
  • Books-aj.svg aj ashton 01.svg
  • Literature
dbpprop:publisher
dbpprop:releaseDate
dbpprop:subject
dbpprop:wikiPageUsesTemplate
rdf:type
rdfs:comment
  • To the Stars is a science fiction novel by Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard. The novel's story is set in a dystopian future, and chronicles the experiences of protagonist Alan Corday aboard a starship called the Hound of Heaven as he copes with the travails of time dilation from traveling at near light speed. Corday is kidnapped by the ship's captain and forced to become a member of their crew, and when he next returns to Earth his fiancee has aged and barely remembers him.
rdfs:label
  • To the Stars (novel)
owl:sameAs
skos:subject
foaf:name
  • To the Stars
foaf:page
is dbpprop:redirect of