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Author’s Note to the Original 1982 Edition

As he has on other book-length projects, my editor, David Hartwell, worked very closely with me on the final version of this manuscript. I wish to thank both him and his family for boarding me over the three-day period that he and I devoted to an intense scrutiny of my work.

I also owe a great deal to my wife, Jeri Bishop, for her support, encouragement, and suggestions during both the protracted research that this novel entailed and the many months of actual writing.

No Enemy but Time is a work of fiction. The country Zarakal does not exist on any map, but I imagine its geographic dimensions roughly coextensive with those of Kenya. However, the reader may not automatically suppose that Zarakal and Kenya are historically, sociologically, and politically identical. They are not, nor were they intended to be.

Likewise, the protohuman hominid that my characters refer to as Homo zarakalensis is a fictional construct, a spurious ancestral human loosed as a means to a specific narrative end. Mostly, though, my paleoanthropological nomenclature conforms to the usage of those scientists currently struggling to solve the riddle of human origins. Although I urge readers not to regard this work as a textbook on hominid evolution, I have not deliberately misconstrued the enormous amounts of data available to those fascinated by the topic.

Debates about classifications and interpretations will certainly continue to rage. A decade on, maybe even sooner, the terms identifying Homo habilis and Australopithecus afarensis may be taxonomic fossils, just as the bones they are intended to identify are virtually all that remain of the small bipedal creatures who pioneered the frontiers of our humanity so many million years ago.


—Michael Bishop

Pine Mountain, Georgia

June 23, 1981


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Framed