Memorium
Wells, Basil, 1912-2003
Memorium - 1 online resource : multiple file formats - Produced from Fantastic Universe, March 1956 (Vol. 5, No. 2.). . - Produced from Fantastic Universe, March 1956 (Vol. 5, No. 2.). .
Release date is 2025-11-24
Sean/IB and Tom Trussel Sean/IB and Tom Trussel
Memorium by Basil Wells is a science fiction short story written in the mid-20th century. It imagines a future where every person’s thoughts and memories are recorded for posterity, probing how universal transparency reshapes intimacy, ethics, and history.
An aged Vance Norall, living in a comfortable Antarctic dome, reminisces with his great-great grandson, Ronnie, in a world where “memorium tapes” preserve a life’s inner truth. Through the posthumous playback of his three wives’ minds, he learns that Elsie’s public brilliance masked loneliness and infidelity born of hurt; Vivian’s dutiful propriety hid trauma, illness, and a recoil from affection; and Eldris, whom he long suspected of marrying for comfort, had in fact loved him deeply. Framed by a brief history of the memorium system—evolving from authoritarian screenings to a universal deterrent—Vance cautions Ronnie not to judge earlier generations, who lived without knowing their private selves would be laid bare. After the boy leaves, he turns again to Eldris’s tapes, choosing solace in the shared memories that correct his lifelong misreadings. (This is an automatically generated summary.)
Science fiction Short stories Memory -- Fiction
PS
Memorium - 1 online resource : multiple file formats - Produced from Fantastic Universe, March 1956 (Vol. 5, No. 2.). . - Produced from Fantastic Universe, March 1956 (Vol. 5, No. 2.). .
Release date is 2025-11-24
Sean/IB and Tom Trussel Sean/IB and Tom Trussel
Memorium by Basil Wells is a science fiction short story written in the mid-20th century. It imagines a future where every person’s thoughts and memories are recorded for posterity, probing how universal transparency reshapes intimacy, ethics, and history.
An aged Vance Norall, living in a comfortable Antarctic dome, reminisces with his great-great grandson, Ronnie, in a world where “memorium tapes” preserve a life’s inner truth. Through the posthumous playback of his three wives’ minds, he learns that Elsie’s public brilliance masked loneliness and infidelity born of hurt; Vivian’s dutiful propriety hid trauma, illness, and a recoil from affection; and Eldris, whom he long suspected of marrying for comfort, had in fact loved him deeply. Framed by a brief history of the memorium system—evolving from authoritarian screenings to a universal deterrent—Vance cautions Ronnie not to judge earlier generations, who lived without knowing their private selves would be laid bare. After the boy leaves, he turns again to Eldris’s tapes, choosing solace in the shared memories that correct his lifelong misreadings. (This is an automatically generated summary.)
Science fiction Short stories Memory -- Fiction
PS