Francis Stevens, The Heads of Cerberus

Francis Stevens, The Heads of Cerberus

User reviews
5

Customer Service

4.7

Quality of website

4.1

Value For Money

write a review

Francis Stevens, The Heads of Cerberus

Francis Stevens, The Heads of Cerberus
4.2 10 user reviews
560%
420%
310%
20%
110%
5

Customer Service

4.7

Quality of website

4.1

Value For Money

User Reviews

marya31

This Is An Amazing Book That Will Give You Somethi

This is an amazing book that will give you something to think about for a long time while questioning reality.

gj333

This Book Is Boring And I Really Do Not Know Why S

This book is boring and I really do not know why so many people give so much praise for this little boring book.

joanhart8

The Book Is Okay In My Opinion Nothing Special.

The book is okay in my opinion nothing special.

jasmin.ortiz5

If You Like To Learn Then Get This Book.

If you like to learn then get this book.

loy123
4

Value For Money

The Test Review Demo Dome

Remember not to include your name or names of staff members. Go in to plenty of detail, talk about the key elements you like, was there anything you particularly didn't like about it? (20 characters minimum)

cindycrawford12

One Of The Best Books I Have Ever Read.

One of the best books I have ever read.

Raytaylor2688

Great

Love this book. It is extremely interesting and actually teaches you a thing or two. I bought it on thursday and finished reading it on sunday.

CynthiaMarie

I Love This Book. First Time I Read It I Couldnt P

I love this book. First time I read it I couldnt put it down. I recommend this book to everyone.

AshJane55

Love It

One of my favorite books of all time. First page I read I was hooked. Recommended to everyone.

plappen
4

Value For Money

Works As A Dystopian Novel

The Heads of Cerberus, Francis Stevens, 2013, ISBN 9781617209390

This is a rarely reprinted science fiction novel of the early 20th Century about three people suddenly sent on a wild adventure.

Set in Philadelphia of the early 20th Century, Rob Drayton is a young lawyer in ethical trouble. Terry Trenmore is a big, strapping Irishman, full of muscles, but perhaps a bit lacking in brains. Viola is Terry's teenage sister. Through a busted burglary and a bit of intrigue, they are sitting at a table with a mysterious glass bottle in front of them. The sterling silver stopper is shaped into Cerberus, the mythological three-headed dog. It contains "the dust of Purgatory," said to have been collected by Dante himself during his time there. Terry touches the dust, and immediately disappears. Viola and Rob soon follow.

They find themselves in a strangely changed Philadelphia. After just a few minutes on the street, they are arrested for not wearing their number in public. It turns out that they have traveled 200 years into the future, to a dystopian Philadelphia, where everyone has numbers instead of names. They are taken to the Hall of Justice, where the punishment for breaking the law is to be thrown into the Pit of the Past. It is a large pit that is home to a carnivorous creature with steel spikes for teeth. Instead, the three are entered into "democratic" civil service exams, to become part of the ruling class.Actually, the contests are fixed, and the losers die. The ruling class does have names, like Cleverest, Swiftest and Loveliest; they also have total control over the population. History has been suppressed, and literacy is forbidden. Drayton gets in big trouble simply for asking for a newspaper. In 22nd Century Philadelphia, William Penn is worshiped as an angry god, and the Liberty Bell has been turned into a disintegrator machine. Can the three return home? Do they survive this dystopian nightmare?

This novel should be much more available than it has been. It does stereotype its characters, but the author stays away from insulting stereotypes. It certainly works as a dystopian novel, and is very much worth the reader's time.

1 - 10 of 10 items displayed
1

Q&A

There are no questions yet.