Founder of the Dialog service
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The first truly serious book publication for Boryansky was the short story “The Founder of the Dialogue Service,” which was included in the next collection of the All-Union Creative Association of Young Science Fiction Writers “The Sorcerer’s Widow” (1991). Boryansky’s small work was not lost against the background of the rest of the works in this collection, despite the fact that the overall level of the book was very high for the WTO. The main character of Boryansky's text, imbued with the humanistic spirit, Mikhail Andrievsky, is trying to prove to his fellow chrononauts that time travel can be used for the benefit of people of the past without changing history. The main thing is that Andrievsky’s colleagues can give their ancestors the confidence that the deeds of their fathers and grandfathers will not be forgotten, that the future remembers and knows about them, and give consolation in difficult times. Misunderstood by their contemporaries, the great people of the era, at least before their death, have the right to know that their lives were not lived in vain. To this end, Andrievsky and his friends conduct several risky dives into the past, and provide psychological assistance to historical figures on the verge of a nervous breakdown. However, during one of these dives, Andrievsky is caught by the hand, and society, seriously alarmed by the possibility of chronoclasm, forbids the terminally ill founder of the Dialogue service to continue his activities. But Andrievsky’s work does not die: on the last, brightest pages of the story, the middle-aged romantic, who has already seemingly lost everything, is visited by two young guys from an even more distant future, where the “Dialogue” service has become a respected and officially recognized organization.
Data sheet
- Name of the Author
- Александр Борянский Витальевич
- Language
- Russian