Hello, Dopers; AMAPAC here with a question: Who knows that SF story about a guy who is part of a space crew in deep hibernation while the ship takes them to some faraway place? Something goes wrong and he is awakened in the middle of the voyage, still several decades away from the destination. He spends several years reading, watching movies, and drawing on the inside walls of the spacecraft, and then accidently falls to his death.
Wikipedia says of the PKD story “In it, a man regains consciousness during a failed attempt at cryosleep on board a spaceship, which is on a ten-year journey. The ship’s artificial intelligence attempts to maintain his sanity throughout the rest of the voyage by causing him to recall memories from his 200-year-long life. Like most of Philip K. Dick’s work, it involves a questioning of what it is to be human and of what reality is. The story also has a theme of guilt, as the memories of the passenger are spoiled by the guilt he retains about actions he initiated during his lifetime.”
Now the question becomes “How and where did I run across that story?” I can’t recall, and I don’t recall that author or title–but that’s definitely the story.
isfdb.org (the Internet SF database) appears to be down at the moment, but it’s a good way to find all the places where a particular story turned up. This was an award-winner so it was probably reprinted in a bunch of places
I remember another 1950s-era story in which a guy is awakened by the ship itself because the computer needs him to make a decision (to avoid a collision, maybe?). I remember he barfs when he wakes up, is fed a thin broth and has oils massaged into his very dry skin by the manipulator arms of his cryogenic bed. There was time travel later in the story, too. Anyone remember that story?
A somewhat similar thing happened in Robert Forward’s book Rocheworld (and maybe in the earlier versions of the book as well – i haven’t read them all), although in that case the crew isn’t asleep, but sort of regressed to childhood. The ship’s computer needs the ship’s doctor in functioning order to deal with a medical emergency.
I suspect there are lots of other examples of this scenario. I just don’t know of any others.
That actually happened to me. Except it was in the back of station wagon with “wood panel” siding rather than a spacecraft and our family vacation destination was the grand canyon rather than nearby star system.
This is making me think of A. E. Van Vogt’s “Far Centaurus” - there’s a suspended animation trip in it, and later time travel. Does “Electron psychology” ring a bell? “Far Centaurus” was written in 1944.
Asimov’s Science Fiction, March 2001
The Year’s Best Science Fiction: Nineteenth Annual Collection
The Mammoth Book of Best New Science Fiction: 15th Annual Collection
I think you may be describing “Coyote” by Allen Steele, published in 2002. From a plot summary:
"Just three months into the journey, something goes terribly wrong. Leslie Gillis, the senior communications officer, is awakened from biostasis. Expecting the year to be 2300, Gillis is horrified when he questions the AI. There was a mix up, and now it is impossible for Gillis to return to his dreamless sleep. His grueling options are either suicide or a lonely existence surviving off the ship’s supplies. While suicide may be more honorable than devouring his crewmates’ rations, Gillis chooses life…
During Leslie Gillis’ solitary life, he did everything he could to keep from going insane, attempting to eat and sleep at regular hours, reading all of the books which were on board, playing chess against the AI, writing stories, and painting. Using practically all of the ship’s art supplies, Gillis created a story about a prince named Rupert and the fantastic alien world he lived in. He painted scenes of his books on the ship’s inside walls. Eventually, Gillis died in his old age with a fall from the main ladder, after trying to get a better look at the alien ship he had seen. The AI automatically expelled his body into space with the arms of a maintenance bot, and the ship sailed on to 47 Ursae Majoris with no more incidents."
Definitely “Far Centurus.” The oil massage marks it completely (though he is awakened because he’s reached his destination). It also has time travel and the sort of Deus ex machina ending that only Van Vogt could pull off.