- 00 - Dedication
- 01 - Chapter I
- 02 - Chapter II
- 03 - Chapter III
- 04 - Chapter IV
- 05 - Chapter V
- 06 - Chapter VI
- 07 - Chapter VII
- 08 - Chapter VIII
- 09 - Chapter IX
- 10 - Chapter X
- 11 - Chapter XI
- 12 - Chapter XII
- 13 - Chapter XIII
- 14 - Chapter XIV
- 15 - Chapter XV
- 16 - Chapter XVI
- 17 - Chapter XVII
- 18 - Chapter XVIII
- 19 - Chapter XIX
- 20 - Chapter XX
- 21 - Chapter XXI
- 22 - Chapter XXII
- 23 - Chapter XXIII
- 24 - Chapter XXIV
- 25 - Chapter XXV
- 26 - Chapter XXVI
- 27 - Chapter XXVII
- 28 - Chapter XXVIII
- 29 - Chapter XXIX
- 30 - Chapter XXX
- 31 - Chapter XXXI
- 32 - Chapter XXXII
- 33 - Chapter XXXIII
- 34 - Epilogue (Part 1)
- 35 - Epilogue (Part 2) and Stray Shots
"I doubt that anyone who reads [Born Again] will ever forget it: it is quite singularly bad, with long indigestible rants against the evils of the world, an impossibly idealistic Utopian prescription for the said evils, and - as you will have gathered - a very silly plot." - oddbooks.co.uk
Alfred Lawson was a veritable Renaissance man: a professional baseball player, a luminary in the field of aviation, an outspoken advocate of vegetarianism and economic reform, and the founder of a pseudo-scientific crackpot philosophy called Lawsonomy. Born Again, his only novel, is a bizarre, delirious, and delightfully silly utopian science-fiction novel that lays the groundwork for the philosophy that would later dominate Lawson's life. It tells the story of John Convert, a wayward, seafaring soul (based loosely on Lawson, minus the conveniently symbolic initials) who is tossed overboard by his crewmen after a physical altercation. Convert awakens on an island inhabited by a race of superhuman giants -- called the Sagemen -- who slumber in their subterranean city. He then meets Arletta, a giantess who takes Convert on a journey that will change his life in ways too fantastically strange to imagine. (Introduction by ChuckW)
Alfred Lawson was a veritable Renaissance man: a professional baseball player, a luminary in the field of aviation, an outspoken advocate of vegetarianism and economic reform, and the founder of a pseudo-scientific crackpot philosophy called Lawsonomy. Born Again, his only novel, is a bizarre, delirious, and delightfully silly utopian science-fiction novel that lays the groundwork for the philosophy that would later dominate Lawson's life. It tells the story of John Convert, a wayward, seafaring soul (based loosely on Lawson, minus the conveniently symbolic initials) who is tossed overboard by his crewmen after a physical altercation. Convert awakens on an island inhabited by a race of superhuman giants -- called the Sagemen -- who slumber in their subterranean city. He then meets Arletta, a giantess who takes Convert on a journey that will change his life in ways too fantastically strange to imagine. (Introduction by ChuckW)
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