Time traveller rescuing works of art which had not survived a nuclear war












18














Many years ago I read a story about a time-traveler who was rescuing works of art which had not survived a nuclear war; it ended with his machine being destroyed and causing the nuclear war. Anyone have a clue what this story is, or the author?



[Added from OP's comment:]



I read the story sometime in the 1970s or '80s; for some reason I had associated it with Robert Silverberg, but I haven't found anything by him that sounds close. It was an English-language story, and as I recall, the time machine was a sphere hidden underwater, and when he tries to escape with the works of art, the sphere is interpreted as a weapon and destroyed, which touches off the war.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Charles Oliver is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • Hey, welcome! Do you remember anything about this story? What language did you read it in? What context did you read it in? What country were you in? How many years is "many years ago"? How did you come across this book? Was it in a collection, published online, or what? Every detail helps, no matter how small!
    – Mithrandir
    Dec 22 at 16:33










  • What year do you think it was published/when did you read it? (i.e, 1960's/70's)
    – Mikasa
    Dec 22 at 16:53










  • Did he work for some kind of company? We had a question like this about two weeks ago... I'll link if I find it :)
    – Jenayah
    Dec 22 at 17:00






  • 1




    How sure are you about the fact that the time-machine caused the war? Because when I think about artworks, nuclear war and time travel, I am reminded of a short story by Clarke.
    – Martin Handrlica
    Dec 22 at 17:32






  • 2




    I read the story sometime in the 1970s or '80s; for some reason I had associated it with Robert Silverberg, but I haven't found anything by him that sounds close. It was an English-language story, and as I recall, the time machine was a sphere hidden underwater, and when he tries to escape with the works of art, the sphere is interpreted as a weapon and destroyed, which touches off the war.
    – Charles Oliver
    Dec 22 at 21:15
















18














Many years ago I read a story about a time-traveler who was rescuing works of art which had not survived a nuclear war; it ended with his machine being destroyed and causing the nuclear war. Anyone have a clue what this story is, or the author?



[Added from OP's comment:]



I read the story sometime in the 1970s or '80s; for some reason I had associated it with Robert Silverberg, but I haven't found anything by him that sounds close. It was an English-language story, and as I recall, the time machine was a sphere hidden underwater, and when he tries to escape with the works of art, the sphere is interpreted as a weapon and destroyed, which touches off the war.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Charles Oliver is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • Hey, welcome! Do you remember anything about this story? What language did you read it in? What context did you read it in? What country were you in? How many years is "many years ago"? How did you come across this book? Was it in a collection, published online, or what? Every detail helps, no matter how small!
    – Mithrandir
    Dec 22 at 16:33










  • What year do you think it was published/when did you read it? (i.e, 1960's/70's)
    – Mikasa
    Dec 22 at 16:53










  • Did he work for some kind of company? We had a question like this about two weeks ago... I'll link if I find it :)
    – Jenayah
    Dec 22 at 17:00






  • 1




    How sure are you about the fact that the time-machine caused the war? Because when I think about artworks, nuclear war and time travel, I am reminded of a short story by Clarke.
    – Martin Handrlica
    Dec 22 at 17:32






  • 2




    I read the story sometime in the 1970s or '80s; for some reason I had associated it with Robert Silverberg, but I haven't found anything by him that sounds close. It was an English-language story, and as I recall, the time machine was a sphere hidden underwater, and when he tries to escape with the works of art, the sphere is interpreted as a weapon and destroyed, which touches off the war.
    – Charles Oliver
    Dec 22 at 21:15














18












18








18


2





Many years ago I read a story about a time-traveler who was rescuing works of art which had not survived a nuclear war; it ended with his machine being destroyed and causing the nuclear war. Anyone have a clue what this story is, or the author?



[Added from OP's comment:]



I read the story sometime in the 1970s or '80s; for some reason I had associated it with Robert Silverberg, but I haven't found anything by him that sounds close. It was an English-language story, and as I recall, the time machine was a sphere hidden underwater, and when he tries to escape with the works of art, the sphere is interpreted as a weapon and destroyed, which touches off the war.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Charles Oliver is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











Many years ago I read a story about a time-traveler who was rescuing works of art which had not survived a nuclear war; it ended with his machine being destroyed and causing the nuclear war. Anyone have a clue what this story is, or the author?



[Added from OP's comment:]



I read the story sometime in the 1970s or '80s; for some reason I had associated it with Robert Silverberg, but I haven't found anything by him that sounds close. It was an English-language story, and as I recall, the time machine was a sphere hidden underwater, and when he tries to escape with the works of art, the sphere is interpreted as a weapon and destroyed, which touches off the war.







story-identification time-travel






share|improve this question









New contributor




Charles Oliver is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




Charles Oliver is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Dec 22 at 23:18









user14111

98.5k6385495




98.5k6385495






New contributor




Charles Oliver is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked Dec 22 at 16:25









Charles Oliver

933




933




New contributor




Charles Oliver is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





Charles Oliver is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Charles Oliver is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












  • Hey, welcome! Do you remember anything about this story? What language did you read it in? What context did you read it in? What country were you in? How many years is "many years ago"? How did you come across this book? Was it in a collection, published online, or what? Every detail helps, no matter how small!
    – Mithrandir
    Dec 22 at 16:33










  • What year do you think it was published/when did you read it? (i.e, 1960's/70's)
    – Mikasa
    Dec 22 at 16:53










  • Did he work for some kind of company? We had a question like this about two weeks ago... I'll link if I find it :)
    – Jenayah
    Dec 22 at 17:00






  • 1




    How sure are you about the fact that the time-machine caused the war? Because when I think about artworks, nuclear war and time travel, I am reminded of a short story by Clarke.
    – Martin Handrlica
    Dec 22 at 17:32






  • 2




    I read the story sometime in the 1970s or '80s; for some reason I had associated it with Robert Silverberg, but I haven't found anything by him that sounds close. It was an English-language story, and as I recall, the time machine was a sphere hidden underwater, and when he tries to escape with the works of art, the sphere is interpreted as a weapon and destroyed, which touches off the war.
    – Charles Oliver
    Dec 22 at 21:15


















  • Hey, welcome! Do you remember anything about this story? What language did you read it in? What context did you read it in? What country were you in? How many years is "many years ago"? How did you come across this book? Was it in a collection, published online, or what? Every detail helps, no matter how small!
    – Mithrandir
    Dec 22 at 16:33










  • What year do you think it was published/when did you read it? (i.e, 1960's/70's)
    – Mikasa
    Dec 22 at 16:53










  • Did he work for some kind of company? We had a question like this about two weeks ago... I'll link if I find it :)
    – Jenayah
    Dec 22 at 17:00






  • 1




    How sure are you about the fact that the time-machine caused the war? Because when I think about artworks, nuclear war and time travel, I am reminded of a short story by Clarke.
    – Martin Handrlica
    Dec 22 at 17:32






  • 2




    I read the story sometime in the 1970s or '80s; for some reason I had associated it with Robert Silverberg, but I haven't found anything by him that sounds close. It was an English-language story, and as I recall, the time machine was a sphere hidden underwater, and when he tries to escape with the works of art, the sphere is interpreted as a weapon and destroyed, which touches off the war.
    – Charles Oliver
    Dec 22 at 21:15
















Hey, welcome! Do you remember anything about this story? What language did you read it in? What context did you read it in? What country were you in? How many years is "many years ago"? How did you come across this book? Was it in a collection, published online, or what? Every detail helps, no matter how small!
– Mithrandir
Dec 22 at 16:33




Hey, welcome! Do you remember anything about this story? What language did you read it in? What context did you read it in? What country were you in? How many years is "many years ago"? How did you come across this book? Was it in a collection, published online, or what? Every detail helps, no matter how small!
– Mithrandir
Dec 22 at 16:33












What year do you think it was published/when did you read it? (i.e, 1960's/70's)
– Mikasa
Dec 22 at 16:53




What year do you think it was published/when did you read it? (i.e, 1960's/70's)
– Mikasa
Dec 22 at 16:53












Did he work for some kind of company? We had a question like this about two weeks ago... I'll link if I find it :)
– Jenayah
Dec 22 at 17:00




Did he work for some kind of company? We had a question like this about two weeks ago... I'll link if I find it :)
– Jenayah
Dec 22 at 17:00




1




1




How sure are you about the fact that the time-machine caused the war? Because when I think about artworks, nuclear war and time travel, I am reminded of a short story by Clarke.
– Martin Handrlica
Dec 22 at 17:32




How sure are you about the fact that the time-machine caused the war? Because when I think about artworks, nuclear war and time travel, I am reminded of a short story by Clarke.
– Martin Handrlica
Dec 22 at 17:32




2




2




I read the story sometime in the 1970s or '80s; for some reason I had associated it with Robert Silverberg, but I haven't found anything by him that sounds close. It was an English-language story, and as I recall, the time machine was a sphere hidden underwater, and when he tries to escape with the works of art, the sphere is interpreted as a weapon and destroyed, which touches off the war.
– Charles Oliver
Dec 22 at 21:15




I read the story sometime in the 1970s or '80s; for some reason I had associated it with Robert Silverberg, but I haven't found anything by him that sounds close. It was an English-language story, and as I recall, the time machine was a sphere hidden underwater, and when he tries to escape with the works of art, the sphere is interpreted as a weapon and destroyed, which touches off the war.
– Charles Oliver
Dec 22 at 21:15










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















17














I think the story you are looking for is “The Past Master” by Robert Bloch, first published in 1955. Here's a short summary:




[...] the mysterious time machine of a visitor to our near future from the thirtieth century is mistaken for a secret Soviet weapon and thereby triggers nuclear war. The time traveler had journeyed back, in fact, to save masterpieces of fine art from being destroyed in that very war (which he knew from history had been caused by some “trivial incident, unnamed”).
Source: “Time Machines: Time Travel in Physics, Metaphysics, and Science Fiction” by Paul J. Nahin, 1999




And a blurb:




In a United States on the verge of atomic war with the Communists, a handsome, naked man—call him John Smith—walks out of the ocean with a bag full of money and, according to eyewitnesses, a mind to buy the Mona Lisa and a long list of other masterpieces.
Source: “The Big List of Time Travel Adventures: 1955”, storypilot.com.







share|improve this answer























  • I think you nailed it. The story was published in Blue Book, January 1955 and reprinted in Fantastic, June 1962. Links to the Internet Archive where those magazines are freely available. You might want to enhance your answer with excerpts from the story.
    – user14111
    Dec 22 at 23:01










  • Upon re-reading the story in "The Best of..." this is pretty clearly it.
    – Organic Marble
    Dec 22 at 23:16










  • That's it! "The Past Master" is exactly the one I was looking for! Thank you so much!
    – Charles Oliver
    Dec 22 at 23:52



















8














The Arthur Clarke story "All the Time in the World" matches many of the clues in your question, but not all.




  • The protagonist is recruited by time-travelers, but is not himself a
    time-traveler.

  • The protagonist is stealing works of art to preserve them.

  • The world is not destroyed by the time machine, but by a "super-bomb
    test".

  • Read many years ago (published in 1952)


Also the answer to this fairly recent question: Identify a short story involving art thieves given a device which can significantly slow time






share|improve this answer























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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    17














    I think the story you are looking for is “The Past Master” by Robert Bloch, first published in 1955. Here's a short summary:




    [...] the mysterious time machine of a visitor to our near future from the thirtieth century is mistaken for a secret Soviet weapon and thereby triggers nuclear war. The time traveler had journeyed back, in fact, to save masterpieces of fine art from being destroyed in that very war (which he knew from history had been caused by some “trivial incident, unnamed”).
    Source: “Time Machines: Time Travel in Physics, Metaphysics, and Science Fiction” by Paul J. Nahin, 1999




    And a blurb:




    In a United States on the verge of atomic war with the Communists, a handsome, naked man—call him John Smith—walks out of the ocean with a bag full of money and, according to eyewitnesses, a mind to buy the Mona Lisa and a long list of other masterpieces.
    Source: “The Big List of Time Travel Adventures: 1955”, storypilot.com.







    share|improve this answer























    • I think you nailed it. The story was published in Blue Book, January 1955 and reprinted in Fantastic, June 1962. Links to the Internet Archive where those magazines are freely available. You might want to enhance your answer with excerpts from the story.
      – user14111
      Dec 22 at 23:01










    • Upon re-reading the story in "The Best of..." this is pretty clearly it.
      – Organic Marble
      Dec 22 at 23:16










    • That's it! "The Past Master" is exactly the one I was looking for! Thank you so much!
      – Charles Oliver
      Dec 22 at 23:52
















    17














    I think the story you are looking for is “The Past Master” by Robert Bloch, first published in 1955. Here's a short summary:




    [...] the mysterious time machine of a visitor to our near future from the thirtieth century is mistaken for a secret Soviet weapon and thereby triggers nuclear war. The time traveler had journeyed back, in fact, to save masterpieces of fine art from being destroyed in that very war (which he knew from history had been caused by some “trivial incident, unnamed”).
    Source: “Time Machines: Time Travel in Physics, Metaphysics, and Science Fiction” by Paul J. Nahin, 1999




    And a blurb:




    In a United States on the verge of atomic war with the Communists, a handsome, naked man—call him John Smith—walks out of the ocean with a bag full of money and, according to eyewitnesses, a mind to buy the Mona Lisa and a long list of other masterpieces.
    Source: “The Big List of Time Travel Adventures: 1955”, storypilot.com.







    share|improve this answer























    • I think you nailed it. The story was published in Blue Book, January 1955 and reprinted in Fantastic, June 1962. Links to the Internet Archive where those magazines are freely available. You might want to enhance your answer with excerpts from the story.
      – user14111
      Dec 22 at 23:01










    • Upon re-reading the story in "The Best of..." this is pretty clearly it.
      – Organic Marble
      Dec 22 at 23:16










    • That's it! "The Past Master" is exactly the one I was looking for! Thank you so much!
      – Charles Oliver
      Dec 22 at 23:52














    17












    17








    17






    I think the story you are looking for is “The Past Master” by Robert Bloch, first published in 1955. Here's a short summary:




    [...] the mysterious time machine of a visitor to our near future from the thirtieth century is mistaken for a secret Soviet weapon and thereby triggers nuclear war. The time traveler had journeyed back, in fact, to save masterpieces of fine art from being destroyed in that very war (which he knew from history had been caused by some “trivial incident, unnamed”).
    Source: “Time Machines: Time Travel in Physics, Metaphysics, and Science Fiction” by Paul J. Nahin, 1999




    And a blurb:




    In a United States on the verge of atomic war with the Communists, a handsome, naked man—call him John Smith—walks out of the ocean with a bag full of money and, according to eyewitnesses, a mind to buy the Mona Lisa and a long list of other masterpieces.
    Source: “The Big List of Time Travel Adventures: 1955”, storypilot.com.







    share|improve this answer














    I think the story you are looking for is “The Past Master” by Robert Bloch, first published in 1955. Here's a short summary:




    [...] the mysterious time machine of a visitor to our near future from the thirtieth century is mistaken for a secret Soviet weapon and thereby triggers nuclear war. The time traveler had journeyed back, in fact, to save masterpieces of fine art from being destroyed in that very war (which he knew from history had been caused by some “trivial incident, unnamed”).
    Source: “Time Machines: Time Travel in Physics, Metaphysics, and Science Fiction” by Paul J. Nahin, 1999




    And a blurb:




    In a United States on the verge of atomic war with the Communists, a handsome, naked man—call him John Smith—walks out of the ocean with a bag full of money and, according to eyewitnesses, a mind to buy the Mona Lisa and a long list of other masterpieces.
    Source: “The Big List of Time Travel Adventures: 1955”, storypilot.com.








    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Dec 22 at 22:31

























    answered Dec 22 at 22:24









    Ubik

    5,90412729




    5,90412729












    • I think you nailed it. The story was published in Blue Book, January 1955 and reprinted in Fantastic, June 1962. Links to the Internet Archive where those magazines are freely available. You might want to enhance your answer with excerpts from the story.
      – user14111
      Dec 22 at 23:01










    • Upon re-reading the story in "The Best of..." this is pretty clearly it.
      – Organic Marble
      Dec 22 at 23:16










    • That's it! "The Past Master" is exactly the one I was looking for! Thank you so much!
      – Charles Oliver
      Dec 22 at 23:52


















    • I think you nailed it. The story was published in Blue Book, January 1955 and reprinted in Fantastic, June 1962. Links to the Internet Archive where those magazines are freely available. You might want to enhance your answer with excerpts from the story.
      – user14111
      Dec 22 at 23:01










    • Upon re-reading the story in "The Best of..." this is pretty clearly it.
      – Organic Marble
      Dec 22 at 23:16










    • That's it! "The Past Master" is exactly the one I was looking for! Thank you so much!
      – Charles Oliver
      Dec 22 at 23:52
















    I think you nailed it. The story was published in Blue Book, January 1955 and reprinted in Fantastic, June 1962. Links to the Internet Archive where those magazines are freely available. You might want to enhance your answer with excerpts from the story.
    – user14111
    Dec 22 at 23:01




    I think you nailed it. The story was published in Blue Book, January 1955 and reprinted in Fantastic, June 1962. Links to the Internet Archive where those magazines are freely available. You might want to enhance your answer with excerpts from the story.
    – user14111
    Dec 22 at 23:01












    Upon re-reading the story in "The Best of..." this is pretty clearly it.
    – Organic Marble
    Dec 22 at 23:16




    Upon re-reading the story in "The Best of..." this is pretty clearly it.
    – Organic Marble
    Dec 22 at 23:16












    That's it! "The Past Master" is exactly the one I was looking for! Thank you so much!
    – Charles Oliver
    Dec 22 at 23:52




    That's it! "The Past Master" is exactly the one I was looking for! Thank you so much!
    – Charles Oliver
    Dec 22 at 23:52













    8














    The Arthur Clarke story "All the Time in the World" matches many of the clues in your question, but not all.




    • The protagonist is recruited by time-travelers, but is not himself a
      time-traveler.

    • The protagonist is stealing works of art to preserve them.

    • The world is not destroyed by the time machine, but by a "super-bomb
      test".

    • Read many years ago (published in 1952)


    Also the answer to this fairly recent question: Identify a short story involving art thieves given a device which can significantly slow time






    share|improve this answer




























      8














      The Arthur Clarke story "All the Time in the World" matches many of the clues in your question, but not all.




      • The protagonist is recruited by time-travelers, but is not himself a
        time-traveler.

      • The protagonist is stealing works of art to preserve them.

      • The world is not destroyed by the time machine, but by a "super-bomb
        test".

      • Read many years ago (published in 1952)


      Also the answer to this fairly recent question: Identify a short story involving art thieves given a device which can significantly slow time






      share|improve this answer


























        8












        8








        8






        The Arthur Clarke story "All the Time in the World" matches many of the clues in your question, but not all.




        • The protagonist is recruited by time-travelers, but is not himself a
          time-traveler.

        • The protagonist is stealing works of art to preserve them.

        • The world is not destroyed by the time machine, but by a "super-bomb
          test".

        • Read many years ago (published in 1952)


        Also the answer to this fairly recent question: Identify a short story involving art thieves given a device which can significantly slow time






        share|improve this answer














        The Arthur Clarke story "All the Time in the World" matches many of the clues in your question, but not all.




        • The protagonist is recruited by time-travelers, but is not himself a
          time-traveler.

        • The protagonist is stealing works of art to preserve them.

        • The world is not destroyed by the time machine, but by a "super-bomb
          test".

        • Read many years ago (published in 1952)


        Also the answer to this fairly recent question: Identify a short story involving art thieves given a device which can significantly slow time







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Dec 22 at 18:47

























        answered Dec 22 at 18:24









        Organic Marble

        23.9k483124




        23.9k483124






















            Charles Oliver is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










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