Shortest/Longest Book In Relation to Time

Not sure how this came about but here is a question that has plagued me for quite some time…

What is the shortest book about the longest period of time, and conversely the longest book about the shortest period of time. I’m guessing a possible topic for the latter might be the Big Bang?

Although I haven’t read it, I imagine that’s exactly what’s going on in The First Three Minutes: A Modern View of the Origin of the Universe (203 pages)

perhaps

" Brief History of Time" S.Hawking

Amazon link

I haven’t had a chance to read it yet, but I’ve been told The Mezzanine by Nicholson Baker takes place during an escalator ride.

In Restaurant at the End of the Universe our protagonists go forward in time one hundred seventy thousand million billion (170,000,000,000,000,000,000) years, or about 10 billion times the current age of the universe. The book doesn’t cover this whole period, though, just near the beginning and the end. I imagine some science fiction covers a longer range anyway.

What about some Sci-Fi short stories which manage to cover an infinite amount of time using a recursive loop of itself?

I’ve been told that the science fiction novel StarMaker holds the world record for fictional time, as it covers 10 billion years in 100 pages. Haven’t read it, though.

I quote from my novel, “Time Sandwich”

"In the beginning, there was nothing.

In the middle, there was something.

In the end, there was nothing."

There, infinity in 3 lines, and as much sense as this thread. :slight_smile:

Tau Zero by Fredrick Pohl concerns a spaceship moving at relativistic velocities which manages to outlast the end of the Universe. I think Ben Bova had a short story with a similar concept (I think the title was something like “Sinner Man”).

Triplanetary by Doc Smith starts a few billion years in the past, before the Earth (excuse me, “Tellus”) is even formed.

If we’re talking about non-fiction, there’s Asimov’s Chronology of the World which starts with the Big Bang and goes to WWII. Of course it’s 704 pages so it may be too long.

Not a book, but An Occurance at Owl Creek Bridge technically only spans a few seconds.

Ulysses takes place over 24 hours, but is over 900 pages.

Each of the books in Piers Anthony’s Geodyssey series covers just about the entirety of human habitation on the earth. Each takes a single family or group of people, and follows them throughout different eras. The same characters show up in different contintents, different decades, from neadertal man all the way up to the present. Chapter by chapter, they are ‘reborn’ into a different time and place. Quite interesting series, really. As for the length of the books, I can’t be sure but I think they’re around 300 pages each.

Robert L. Forward’s novel Dragon’s Egg recounts the history of an entire species, from its first evolutionary glimmerings all the way to its expansion into interstellar exploration. The parts of the novel that recount human study of this development are shockingly amateurish, but stick with it; the story of the cheela is one of the most mind-blowing things I’ve ever read.

The Last Question” by Isaac Asimov, which starts May 21, 2061 and ends with the end of the universe. It’s a short story, just a few pages.

My autobiography.

:groan:

The Bible goes from about 4.6 Billion years ago to about 2,000 years ago, if you don’t believe the people who say is is factual. But it does have a lot of pages, and not enough pictures!