I think the concept was great. Two alien intelligences meet, both recognize each other as intelligent, but both completely fail at communication. What's more, their attempts at communication threaten to drive at least one of them insane.Obiwanshinobi wrote:The novel is "gothic" compared to The Invincible, but I don't consider either a particulary good Lem book. Better than The Chain of Chance, but it's not saying much. For such a skillful writer, Lem had some soft spot for pretty shit literature (Nabokov, Dick) and sometimes it seems to me as if he tried hard to write a shit novel by himself (never quite succeeding).blackoak wrote:Tarkovsky injected his russian mysticism into what was an archly rational novel. Based on what options wrote, I can't imagine him liking Tarkovsky's Solaris, but the novel is required reading for anyone with a passing interest in sci-fi.
I don't understand what about Tarkovsky's "mysticism" was particulary "Russian". If there's any distinctive "Russian mysticism" I heard of, it's eschatological (anticipating the coming of Antichrist).
And Solaris gave a better idea of the "how" behind contact with an alien intelligence driving you insane than H.P. Lovecraft's "It's just so weird and wrong, dude!"