An Astronomer on a moon base awakes from a dream in which his dog, Laika, is barking. He then flashes back to when he found Laika on the side of the road years ago, and how his fondness for her grew after she alerted him of an earthquake. He comes out of the flashback just in time to sound the alert for a lunar tremor that, thanks to his prompt action, kills only two of his fellow crew members. He remembers his dead dog, He realizes that Laika could not have saved him, for she was separated by 5 years time and a barrier that no man or dog could ever bridge (her death.) It was his never sleeping sub conscious mind, sensing the tremors, that knew how to wake him, by making him dream of Laikas's barking as she did in the earlier earthquake.
In "Dog Star" by Arthur C. Clarke, the foreshadowing occurs when the protagonist, Hank, discovers the eerie silence and lack of communication from Earth. This hints at the impending catastrophic event that wipes out most life on Earth and sets the stage for the bleak future faced by Hank and his dog, Sirius, in their journey through the post-apocalyptic world.
the characters in the story is laika and her owner
How a beautiful story can be ruined by an ugly fact. That things are only what they are, not what we want them to be.
It starts when he stated that she was with him when he drve north to attend that ill-fated seminar at berekley.
The setting in the story Dog Star is on the Moon where she has left earth to live. This is because though most of the story talks about how Laika and them met and lived on earth, it is only a flashback so therefore it can't be the setting.
he dies and then falls into a dream thinking about dogs
The Dog Star is a fictional story. It is not about a personal experience the Arthur C Clark had on the moon. Nor is there any expectation in the story.
No. The term came from the first Star Wars movie in the 1970’s. A thousand years after he existed.A Jedi is also a fictional character for the story and aren’t real. Historians aren’t sure who Arthur really was and the story we know comes from a 18th century French story.
Big Star Story was created in 2003.
No, but she was in the Star Wars Holiday Special(1978), which was on television.
Arthur Ashe
The film 2001: A Space Odyssey, from the novel by Arthur C. Clarke, directed by Stanley Kubrick and starring Keir Dullea, was released in 1968. It featured groundbreaking special effects and influenced many future science fiction films, such as Star Wars.The HAL 9000 computer is one of the most interesting characters in the film, seemingly becoming the film's villain. However, in the sequel 2010, HAL's behaviour is vindicated by his first instructor, Dr. Chandra. There has been much discussion about HAL's name, and it was widely believed that HAL is one letter behind the initials of IBM, but this was denied by the film makers. In the original Arthur C. Clarke novel, it states that HAL stands for Heuristically programmed ALgorithmic computer.
The author is likely foreshadowing the later implications or consequences of the yellow star mentioned in the quote. The seemingly innocuous nature of the star now may not necessarily reveal its true significance or danger later on. The phrase "so what it's not lethal" suggests a dismissal of immediate concerns that may become more serious or life-threatening as the story progresses.
The Star Of Bethlehem story is the Christian story about the birth of Christ. According to the story a star appeared over the manger where Jesus was born that allowed the three wise men to find him.