Immortality, Inc.
From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Immortality, Inc. is a 1959 science fiction novel by American writer Robert Sheckley, about a fictional process whereby a human's consciousness may be transferred into a brain-dead body. A striking concept in the novel is its description of random killings of strangers by people who intend to die. The serialised form (published under the title Time Killer in the magazine Galaxy Science Fiction) was nominated for the Hugo Award for Best Novel.[1]
The story was loosely adapted into the 1992 film Freejack. A famous scene from the novel involving a character lost in a future New York City and mistakenly getting in line for a suicide booth was dramatized in the pilot episode of Futurama.
Notes
External links
- Official site of Robert Sheckley
- Immortality, Inc. title listing at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- Time Killer parts one, two, three, and four at the Internet Archive
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