A critical, annotated version of Narlikar's iconic novel about a cybervirus attack by an advanced alien species--with updated text and added material. A year before Robin Cook's
Invasion (1997)--in which an alien force activated a latent biological virus in humans--and almost a decade before Liu Cixin's
The Remembrance of Earth's Past trilogy (2008-10)--in which humanity's scientific progress was curtailed by an alien supercomputer's "sophon-lock"--Jayant Vishnu Narlikar's
Virus (1996) painted a similar scenario. In his novel, a cybervirus broadcast by an advanced, extraterrestrial species invaded Earth and froze its digital infrastructure: a prelude to an alien invasion. The novel, first published in Marathi, recounts how vast radio arrays on Earth intercept a seemingly innocuous message from an unknown planet orbiting Barnard's Star. The radio signal, sent six years ago, coalesces into a cybervirus that has the potential to cause a complete digital meltdown and lead humanity into an age of chaos--an alien First Strike to prevent humanity from evolving further.
This book--a critical, annotated version of
Virus, edited and revised by Sami Ahmad Khan
--reissues Narlikar's iconic novel with updated text and added dimensions. It includes detailed annotations that locate the technology of the text along the axis of contemporary scientific thought
, as well as critical essays that focus on the literary, political, and sociocultural dimensions of the novel; articles on Narlikar's role in India's science and science fiction; an exclusive conversation with the author; bibliographical information on his works; and a bonus short story.