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  1. Hawksbill Station is a science fiction novel by American writer Robert Silverberg. The novel is an expanded version of a short story first published in Galaxy Science Fiction in August 1967. The novel was published in 1968 and was released in the United Kingdom under the title The Anvil of Time.

  2. Resumen y sinopsis de Estación Hawksbill de Robert Silverberg. En las primeras décadas del siglo XXI se instala en Estados Unidos un gobierno autoritario que secuestra a los disidentes y los mete en la cárcel secreta de mayor seguridad de todos los tiempos: el pasado remoto. Usando una nueva tecnología que permite trasladar objetos y seres ...

  3. Robert Silverberg. 3.78. 1,928 ratings163 reviews. In the mid-21st century, time travel is used to send political prisoners to Hawksbill Station, a prison camp in the late Cambrian Era. When the latest arrival suspiciously deflects questions about his crimes and knowledge of 'Up Front', the inmates decide to find out his secret.

  4. 26 de abr. de 2022 · New York : Berkeley. Collection. internetarchivebooks; printdisabled; inlibrary. Contributor. Internet Archive. Language. English. 185 pages ; 18 cm. This novel is an exciting, new slant on the time machine theme, set in the complicated political world of the future and the empty world of the prehistoric past.

  5. 7 de feb. de 2011 · Hawksbill Station. by. Silverberg, Robert. Publication date. 1968. Topics. Science fiction, American, Science fiction, English. Publisher. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday.

  6. 13 de dic. de 2021 · La novela se construye a partir de la alternancia de dos planos temporales: el actual de la novela (año 2029), y en el que se sitúa la estación Hawksbill (mil millones de años en el pasado). Tanto el protagonista como los demás personajes pertenecían a pequeñas células revolucionarias.

  7. Hawksbill Station by Robert Silverberg. Although it had been over 45 years since I initially read Robert Silverberg’s novella “Hawksbill Station,” several scenes were as fresh in my memory as if I had read them just yesterday; such is the power and the vividness of this oft-anthologized classic.