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Planet of the Apes #1

Maymunlar Gezegeni

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"Maymunlar Gezegeni, Gulliver'ın Gezileri'nin gelecekteki versiyonu."
-Louisville Times-

"Romanın şaşırtıcı finali bile tek başına dehşet verici."
-Newark News-

"Aklını kullanabilen insanlar mı? Hayır, bu mümkün değil; bu noktada yazar ne yazık ki maksadını aşıyor!"

Pierre Boulle, Avrupa'dan çıkıp yazdığı bilimkurgu romanıyla vahşi batılı meslektaşlarıyla baş edebilen ilk, belki de son frankofon. Maymunlar Cehennemi ve diğer sinema uyarlamalarına da ilham kaynağı olan Maymunlar Gezegeni ise, insanlığın en derin korkularından birinin eşsiz anlatısı.

Çok da uzak olmayan bir gelecekte üç uzay gezgini; verimli ormanları, yaşanabilir iklimi ve temiz havasıyla Dünya'ya fazlasıyla benzeyen bir gezegene iniş yapar. Bu gezegen her yönüyle kusursuz gözükse de aslında hiçbir şey göründüğü gibi değildir.

Gerçek, çok geçmeden açığa çıkar: Bu gezegende insanlar vahşiyken, uygar maymunlar onların efendileridir. Henüz maceranın başında yol arkadaşlarından kopup tek başına mücadele etmek zorunda kalan Ulysse Mérou, bu cennet görünümlü cehennemden kurtulmanın yollarını tek başına bulmak zorundadır.

Ulysse, insanlığın kurtarıcısı olmayı başarabilecek mi? Yoksa bu lanetli geleceğin son tanığı mı olacak?
Maymunlar Gezegeni, insanlar gezegeninden daha insani bir satir.
(Tanıtım Bülteninden)

205 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1963

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About the author

Pierre Boulle

110 books260 followers
Librarian Note: There is more than one author in the Goodreads database with this name.

Pierre Boulle (20 February 1912 – 30 January 1994) was a French novelist best known for two works, The Bridge over the River Kwai (1952) and Planet of the Apes (1963) that were both made into award-winning films.

Boulle was an engineer serving as a secret agent with the Free French in Singapore, when he was captured and subjected to two years' forced labour. He used these experiences in The Bridge over the River Kwai, about the notorious Death Railway, which became an international bestseller. The film by David Lean won many Oscars, and Boulle was credited with writing the screenplay, because its two genuine authors had been blacklisted.

His science-fiction novel Planet of the Apes, where intelligent apes gain mastery over humans, was adapted into a series of five award-winning films that spawned magazine versions and popular themed toys.

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5 stars
15,298 (34%)
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3 stars
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 2,902 reviews
Profile Image for Lyn.
1,933 reviews17.1k followers
January 13, 2020
I think Pierre Boulle’s novel Planet of the Apes is a social fantasy, an allegory for revealing our civilization as blindly mimicking our past, as “aping” the good and bad of what has come before. It is a statement against complacency, a warning that history will repeat itself if we are not eternally vigilant. The novel may also be read as a cautionary illustration of our relationship with our environment and the animals with which we share the Earth.

Or it’s a fun science fiction book about chimps, orangutans and gorillas ruling a planet.

Written by Pierre Boule and first published in 1963, as La Planète des singes, this bears a closer literary resemblance to Edgar Rice Burroughs or Jules Verne than to modern science fiction. Boulle himself, the author of The Bridge Over the River Kwai, described the novel as a social fantasy.

There is a scene of racial memory that is especially noteworthy, but a fine work throughout. I can say after reading the original novel that all of the films have been loosely based upon Boulle’s literature; although the most recent series may ultimately be the closest to Boulle’s vision. I am coming to believe that the 1960s were the zenith of science fiction and this is a good example.

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Profile Image for Nataliya.
884 reviews14.6k followers
May 8, 2023
I remember being seven or so and seeing the last scene of Planet of the Apes film (the old one with Charlton Heston) on my grandma’s TV. It blew my barely formed mind. Jaw dropping, speechless, all that. That was the only thing from the entire film I still remember.

Too bad that scene is not in this book. But I’ll get over that. (I think.)

Written in 1963, Pierre Boulle’s Planet of the Apes does feel dated in science and attitudes — but to me it also had that older “classic” feel that reminded me of Jules Verne. It may be the way the language came through in English translation from French, or just the overall vintage feel — or maybe just me.

But in the end it was interesting.



Admittedly, the wonky “science” in this “science fiction” takes a bit to get past, with some parts more difficult to ignore than others (ancestral human voice memories being more ridiculous than identical convergent evolution around Betelgeuse, even if we embrace the theory of Panspermia — seriously, Heston film made more sense there).

But science is not the point here, it seems. It’s the social commentary — the disregard of and cruelty to those we perceive as “lesser”, the injustice of powerlessness, the perils of complacency and stagnation that lead to usurpation by a species with more drive and motivation, and how it’s easy to repeat the same mistakes over and over again, even on planets lightyears apart. And yes, it’s done in the way that’s very dated, even for 1963 — but that’s inevitable. Not everyone can be a Le Guin, after all.
“True, we also have known a period of semi-stagnation. We, too, have had our orangutans, our falsified education and ridiculous curricula, and this period lasted a long time.”

Our protagonist was an obstacle for me enjoying this book, however. Ulysse Mérou is a self-important man who has no issues sleeping with a woman who possesses an equivalent of animal intelligence (she’s beautiful and has “golden breasts”, after all) and yet treating her cruelly and with physical violence. She’s “human” enough to sleep with, but “animal” enough to hit and taunt. He carries within him a conviction of human superiority over the “inferior” species — and is smugly satisfied coming to the conclusion that apes are nothing but imitators of humans despite evidence to the contrary.
“My self-respect notes with satisfaction that apes have invented nothing, that they are mere imitators. My humiliation derives from the fact that a human civilization could have been so easily assimilated by apes.”

And therefore the end of the story brings a strange satisfaction even if it wasn’t meant to. Or was it? Hmmmm….

3.5 stars. I liked it, but didn’t quite love it. But it’s worth a read.
“He is a gorilla.”

——————
Buddy read with Dennis and Cathy.
Profile Image for Nika.
205 reviews242 followers
April 2, 2024
When you hear Planet of the Apes, the first thing that probably comes to mind is the movie trilogy with the evolved chimp Caesar as a protagonist. Forget about the movie. The book by Pierre Boule, first published in 1963, tells an entirely different story.


Three men from France embark on a journey. They set out to find a remote planet. They have a little chimp on board. This chimp is destined to be the first but not the last victim.
But let us not jump ahead.

The men plan to spend only a few years traveling and exploring space. But by the time they return home many decades will have elapsed on Earth. The travelers are aware of the fact that the voyage that lasts around two years for them equals about three and a half centuries on Earth due to the theory of relativity.

So, by making their decision the characters voluntarily accept that they will never see their friends and relatives. Such a choice must be a difficult one.
They end up landing on an unknown planet that strangely resembles Earth. The landscape and the atmosphere are strikingly similar to Earth. Our travelers decide to call the planet Soror.

The space travelers start exploring the place. Imagine their surprise when they find out who rules this planet. Evolved apes, namely gorillas, orangutans, and chimpanzees, have taken the role traditionally played by Sapiens. They can talk and think. They can cooperate in large numbers, while human beings on the planet Soror are deprived of those abilities. Humans lack intelligence and are relegated to conditions similar to those in which animals live in our world.
On the planet Soror reality appeared to be quite the reverse: we had to do with inhabitants resembling us in every way from the physical point of view but who appeared to be completely devoid of the power of reason.


The way the author portrays society organized by the apes is fascinating. It mirrors human society in many ways, but the order is reversed. Apes are smart and sophisticated. Men and women lead primitive lives, sleeping in nests in the forests and eating raw products. More than that, it turns out that one of the three humans from Earth has been quickly sliding into a primitive lifestyle.
Another man, Ulysse Merou, tries to establish contact with a young female chimpanzee Zira. He seems to be able to make a favorable impression on Zira. Ulysse, this strange creature, intrigues her. But can he rely on her help?

Apes, the rulers of this planet, have their own legends and mythical narratives rooted in history and their own insecurities connected with those legends. One of these stories is the question of origins. How did apes come to dominate this planet? What was the reason for that? When did they start ruling this planet? Did God create them? Or was it an accident? The theory of evolution? Thinking of those questions often makes apes feel uncomfortable.
Like humans in our world, the apes fear that their official history can be challenged. And an 'evolved' human being from Earth (Ulisse) risks becoming an obstacle for them.


As we already know, there are three races - gorillas, orangutans, and chimpanzees. It seems that they coexist peacefully. The ape society functions more or less smoothly. Freedoms and rights of citizens exist in their world which gives an overall impression of a normal place to be living in. Public opinion and media are influential but not always influential enough to impact decisions made by powerful individuals. There is a division of labor. The orangutans are official science. The chimpanzees are essentially intellectuals. "They seem animated by a powerful spirit of research," one of the characters speaks of the chimpanzees.
The gorillas are considered the most powerful class. There are many high administrators among them.
Apes hold science in high regard. To further scientific knowledge, they use humans in their laboratory experiments. Sounds familiar? Also, apes study the behavior of humans, including their amorous behavior.

One of the things one can take away from this science-fiction story concerns reciprocity. If the reader does not like the way humans are treated in this story by apes, maybe they should think of their own treatment of animals. According to estimates, ape populations are today under a lot of pressure. They face threats from poaching, deforestation, and pet trade.

A few insignificant inexactitudes caught my eye.
Gorillas are presented as meat eaters when in reality they feed mainly on a vegetarian diet.
Humans in the story are described as ignorant of laughter. It is implied that humans that inhabit this planet resemble apes in our world. But great apes are known to laugh during tickling or when playing with each other. I better stop here if I do not want to sound too nagging.

All in all, this was entertaining and at times unsettling. The author succeeded in marrying an engaging plot to social commentary.
My gripe about this story was its somewhat slow beginning. The ending was wild, though. One of the travelers gets the opportunity to return to Earth. What he sees upon his arrival leaves him flabbergasted.
Profile Image for Henry Avila.
511 reviews3,304 followers
May 27, 2020
When a film becomes so immensely popular they achieve pop culture status, such as The Planet of the Apes, (1968's version with Charlton Heston of course) and the many different reincarnations that follow, nothing can match it... including ironically the book which originated all the hubbub. Now a return to this novel and examine the quality of, not an even contest since countless hundreds of millions have viewed the motion picture, with relatively speaking a few million read the publication I'm guessing. A futuristic couple Jinn and Phyllis acting appropriately bored, while taking a soothing, leisurely vacation in remote , dark, endless Space still strangely enthralling in the distant year of A.D. 2500 ...
They quite unexpectedly arrive upon an object outside their spaceship. Curious the pair retreats the item and memories go back to the days of sailing ships on the high seas of Earth, come forth with a rush . A message in a bottle is found, imagine; the manuscript is in the ancient language of the third rock from the Sun, French ...However Jinn having been well educated there and can read the papers though, he uncovers the author's name... written by Ulysse Merou and telling of an expedition from our world to the giant star Betelgeuse, 642 light years from good old Earth, their object was to explore planets suspected of orbiting that legendary star, maybe find life. Along with journalist Merou , are botanist Professor Antellet and physician Arthur Levain, when landing on one of the four planets discovered, they surprisingly meet humanoid like mutes, harmless creatures, primitives to be honest and easily dominated by the spacemen. Soon however the Earthmen, along with the natives are ambushed by...Apes more human than humans , no exaggeration either nor dream brutal reality sets in quickly and consequences begin ...Slaughtering them these intelligent ape-like animals; the men run for their lives but are soon captured, separated from his friends Ulysse is put in a humiliating cage with enchanting Nova a female mute he has befriended. This planet of the apes looks at Merou like a lowly animal in a zoo, leaving this upside down place is the ultimate goal of Ulysse, a nice place to visit but you wouldn't want to live there. A fine satire of the silliness of our world's numerous foibles and downright if I may say the old- fashioned word evil, everything changes but all remains the same...
Profile Image for Luca Ambrosino.
105 reviews13.6k followers
January 16, 2020
ENGLISH (Planet of the Apes) / ITALIANO

«Jinn and Phyllis were spending a wonderful holiday in space, as far away as possible from the inhabited stars»
A couple of tourists on an interplanetary trip runs into a bottle drifting in the space. They obtain in this way a manuscript in which is told the story of Ulysse Mérou, a French journalist, and his space journey toward the Betelgeuse star, 300 light years far away from Earth.

I fell in love with this novel after half a page. Simple, addictive, shocking. The core of the science fiction.

Vote: 9


description

«Jinn e Phyllis stavano passando delle meravigliose vacanze nello spazio, il più lontano possibile dagli astri abitati»
Una coppia di turisti in gita nello spazio si imbatte in una bottiglia alla deriva nello spazio. Vengono così in possesso di un manoscritto nel quale è narrata la storia di Ulisse Mèrou, giornalista francese, e del suo viaggio spaziale verso il sistema solare di Betelgeuse, distante 300 anni luce dalla Terra.

Mi sono innamorato di questo romanzo dopo mezza pagina. Semplice, coinvolgente e sconvolgente. L'essenza della fantascienza.

Voto: 9

Profile Image for Bradley.
Author 5 books4,537 followers
June 3, 2023
Re-Read 6/3/23:

My Buddy reader surprised me by finding and wanting to read this (for free, now) on Audible, and I thought it sounded great. So here I am, enjoying this very excellent skewering of all racism.

Of course, it's veiled behind SPECIES, but it really puts a pin in the kinds of assumptions that keep such bullshit going.

Suffice to say, it's a smarter, more intellectual, and heartfelt novel than most of the movies it has since spawned.


Original Review:

This is a book that deserves to stand the test of time. I think it's as valid now as it was back in the fifties.

Let's ignore the movies for just a moment. They're important in their own right for capturing a cultural zeitgeist and for showing us all how damning cultural bias can be. One can make the argument that the Planet of the Apes movies underscored the 60's, put it all in sharp relief.

But I'm going to talk about the book -- about why the book needs to be read now.

Cultural bias is everywhere. All around us. It's in the very air we breathe. In general, we don't see it.

Our assumptions make us prisoners.

The apes are the epitome of Western Thought. Casually racist in everything they do, they rationalize everyone OTHER than themselves into a kind of slavery. Whether it's about cultural superiority, scientific superiority, military superiority, or ANY reason to make themselves appear more important than the OTHER, they take it.

Because what would happen otherwise?

Rhetoric would fall apart, giving way to a careful observation of the real circumstances.

People are being kept in cages. They're experimented upon. They are left in atrocious conditions and made to fight for scraps to survive. The purpose is to turn them into animals FIRST in order to prove the original assumption that they are animals.

If this isn't classic racism, I don't know what is. Every argument they make must revolve around the basic assumption that THEY are better than US. If the argument doesn't fit, it is thrown out.

Only OVERWHELMING evidence to the contrary can lift a single human out of this bondage, and but the great emancipation only works for this single human.

The pervasive racism persists.

Classic cultural bias.

We are fully immersed in it. We feel the hopelessness underlying their bulwarks of rationalizations. We are made small, helpless, even as we retain our dignity in all the tiniest of ways. And ultimately, we lose.



It takes a whole society to change a whole society.
Profile Image for Brett C.
866 reviews200 followers
May 2, 2021
I enjoyed this story. I can say both the book and the movie are great in their own way. The movie was science fiction but the book seemed more socially-based lo-fi science fiction.

The book goes way more in depth about the planet our narrator and his crew have landed on. Through the narrator we discover much more about the ape planet than the movie gives. The interaction between the primitive man, chimpanzees, gorillas, and orangutans follows the movie yet the author does a great job of telling the tale.

On the planet exists social constructs and norms, a Simian language, art and science, zoos, lobotomy experiments, and more. Lastly, we discover how the shift occurred and monkeys came to rule the world.

Pierre Boulle has a unique way of telling a story full of detail yet is entertaining and creative. Overall I enjoyed this book and would recommend it to anyone who likes any movies from the franchise. Thanks!
Profile Image for Melki.
6,682 reviews2,515 followers
August 2, 2024
"Almost all the great discoveries," she stated vehemently, "have been made by chimpanzees."

Experimentation is needed for all great discoveries, and what would a chimpanzee use as a lab animal? Why, a human, of course! Oh, those damn dirty apes!

Despite Charleton Heston's scenery-chewing, I've always loved Planet of the Apes, the movie.
The book? Well, it gets off to an awkward start.

The writing is clunky, and the plot, so improbable - - I actually thought about trotting this right back to the library, but I kept saying to myself, "This is the same guy who wrote Bridge Over the River Kwai...how bad can it be?"

Not bad at all, it turns out, though I'm still not sure first-person was the way to go.

The movie was mostly faithful to the book.

The main character is a Frenchman named Ulysse. The apes do not speak the same language, which makes for some interesting communication problems. There is also some friction between the chimps, the orangutans and the gorillas, with each group believing theirs is the superior collection of beings.

Dr. Zaius https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M2E1m... is much the same in the book as in the movie, part orangutan/ part jackass.

And I was quite pleased that one of my favorite bits in the film was taken directly from the book - the sweet, somewhat flirty relationship between Zira and her too-ugly-to-kiss human captive.
Profile Image for K.D. Absolutely.
1,820 reviews
November 8, 2012
French writer Pierre Boulle (1912-1994) made use of his experience as a soldier in WWII in depicting the relationship of apes and men in this 1963 book, Planet of the Apes. While stationed in Indochina in 1943, he was captured by Vichy France loyalists on the Mekong River and was subjected to severe hardship and forced labour. The way the loyalists treated him and his fellow Gaulle and resistance supporters inspired Boulle to write this novel.

This book was highly praised and was given such reviews as this example from England's Guardian newspaper: "Classic science fiction...full of suspense and satirical intelligence." I agree to this. It is a sci-fi because of the idea of having apes ruling the universe as they think that men have lesser intelligence than them. The Ape planet, called Soror (Latin for sister), revolves around the red Sun called Betelguese (that is real). Then the ape scientists in the said planet conduct Pavlov-like experiments to their captured human beings and one of the three was Ulysse, the author of the journal found floating in the space as narrated in the frame story. His companion, the genius scientist from Earth, Professor Antell turns crazy while his fellow crew, physicist Arthur Levaine is killed during the landing of their spaceship.

For me, its main theme is an reminder of the things we take for granted or better yet, the people who we take for granted. Sometimes, we think that they are lesser than us: in stature, job title, wealth, skin color, etc. But in reality, we don't realize that they can be more than us. It's just that we are too focused on ourselves that we don't see what they have that we lack.

For example as a reader, we think that we all pick and read the better books and we look down on people who read other books not realizing that those could be better than what we are reading.

This book is a sci-fi and I know some people look down on sci-fi readers. Not true, figment of imagination, will never happen, yadda, yadda. But hey, how about this main theme that I deduced from this book?
Profile Image for podczytany.
244 reviews5,490 followers
November 17, 2023
Zakończenie tej książki to jedno z moich ulubionych zakończeń ever!!

Ocena: 4,0.
Profile Image for Sean Barrs .
1,122 reviews46.9k followers
May 25, 2022
Planet of the Apes is an extraordinary book; it does wonders at questioning and reversing human to animal relations: it is a powerful statement against anthropocentrism.

Firstly, I want to talk about the films. Although they have all captured the basic idea of the book, a planet ruled by apes where humans are primitive, they have all failed tremendously to capture the essence of the novel. This is about reversal and its also about writing a story from the animal’s perspective. It highlights the injustice of treating primates in such awful ways; it captures the brutality of vivisection, the inauthentic and inhumane nature of zoos and the heartlessness of a world driven by scientific progress (at the cost of the liberty of creatures deemed lesser.)

Again, it’s all about perspective. It’s about putting a human in an animal’s situation, giving them the opportunity to experience exactly what an animal feels and think. They are powerless, dominated and utterly at the mercy of man. Rather than directly presenting a case for animal rights, Boulle has created a subversive sci-fi horror which questions the normative treatment of animals. And it’s certainly a book that gets you thinking, thinking about how awful it would be to be treated how humans treat animals. The writing also breaks down barriers between human and animal; it shows that under certain circumstances they are not too far from each other. And this is a really important point.

What strikes me as most unusual is how relatively unread this work is when considering the success of the films. There have been numerous versions made, all of which have been quite successful. I feel like the source material has been somewhat overlooked and neglected, which is a huge shame considering how intelligent the writing is and how challenging the subject matter is. The films stay true to some of the themes, but they just don’t quite capture the essence of the book. The most recent version really plays with the source material and adapts it into something quite different, and along the way this original story has become a bit lost and overshadowed.

My point here is that this is a very good book indeed and I think you should go read it. The ending, although I knew it was coming because of the movie, is perhaps one of the finest and strongest I have ever read.

___________________________________

You can connect with me on social media via My Linktree.
__________________________________
Profile Image for Велислав Върбанов.
686 reviews90 followers
September 10, 2024
4.5 ⭐

„Планетата на маймуните“ е много хубава фантастика със силни антиутопични елементи! Чрез тази определено запомняща се история, Пиер Бул съвсем разбираемо е представил недостатъците на всяко общество, което заради своите интелектуални постижения е решило да господства над планетата си и подчинява останалите живи същества на нея. Да, авторовата ирония към човечеството е доста силна... Освен това, той е вложил философски размисли върху темата за проблемите в комуникацията между различни видове, както и елегантно е отправил критика към подражаването в литературата и изкуствата.

Космически пътешественици пристигат на далечна и непозната планета. Оказва се, че на нея маймуните са изградили най-развитото и напреднало в науките общество, докато хората са примитивен вид, който не умее да говори. Един от новопоявилите се хора от Земята е главният герой Юлис, който описва в книгата своите страни приключения. Той се забърква в сериозни опасности, опитвайки се да докаже на интелигентните маймуни, че също притежава разум, както и да разбере загадъчната ситуация...
Profile Image for Doğan.
202 reviews13 followers
October 1, 2016
Kitabın bir çok filmi çekilmiş olduğu için konusunu neredeyse bilmeyen yoktur. 2001 y��lı yapımı olan Maymunlar Gezegenini izlemiştim ve şaşırtıcı bir sonla karşılaşacağımı biliyordum. Ancak kitap bir darbeyle yetinmemiş ve ikinci darbeyi vurmuş. Kitabın sonu adamın beynini yakıyor, hemde iki kere... Okuduktan sonra keşke filmini izlemeseydim beynim daha güzel yansaydı demedim değil. :) Sonuç olarak ters-psikoloji ile yazılmış, insana bazı şeyleri sorgulatan tam bir baş yapıt okudum. Şiddetle tavsiye ederim.
Profile Image for Sv.
323 reviews105 followers
November 12, 2018
Bayılıyorum bu klasik seriye. O kadar kıymetli ki. Günümüze, toplumumuza geçmişten çok farklı bakış açıları mevcut. Bu kitap da öyleydi ve her sayfası ayrı keyifliydi.
Profile Image for Becky.
1,490 reviews1,865 followers
August 15, 2009
Caution: Vague Spoilers Ahead

I don't really think that I can do this book justice in my review. I thought that it was brilliant. I know that I have seen the movie long ago, and remember the big reveal at the end and Charlton yelling about damning everyone all to hell, but I don't remember much more than that. I'll have to watch the movie again.

I really loved the subtle cautionary tale running throughout the story. Maybe it's just my feminist liberal bleeding heart whispering to me, but I feel that Boulle just plain hated live-animal experiments and was determined to show people that the tables could be turned one day. Easily. But more than that, the book cautions us not to be complacent and lazy about our place in life and in the food chain and to keep striving and learning and bettering ourselves, but NOT at the cost of other life-forms. We're on top now, but only time will tell if we stay there.

And do we actually deserve to be? We, the "Lords of Creation," seem to think that we can do anything and everything we want to do. We're so filled with pride that we never think that OUR civilization could fall. Those kind of things are for history books, not real life. Yet we consume resources like they're going out of style, and pollute the earth like we have a spare, and just generally act like there's a "Reset" button somewhere that we can just press when we've reached the point of no return. Why shouldn't another species give running things a try? If they can do it better...

But that's the thing. They imitate us, so WOULD they do it better? At one point in the story, when Merou was being shown the experiments, I thought to myself, "They are proud of the fact that they are keeping the "animals" down... Taking any vestiges of humanity or rational thought away as soon as it is displayed in order to protect themselves. They are so fearful of the possibility of human uprising that they commit atrocities to prevent them." And then I thought to myself, "Oh, snap! So do we." We can justify anything. And so can Apes, who apparently learned from the best. In examining the Apes, we're looking at ourselves. Can we really pass judgment?

But, I was happy to see that the three "races" of Apes could cohabitate and cooperate in peace, which is more than we've accomplished so far. Our differences divide us, but the Apes recognize and relish their differences and use them well. But Apes still seem to rival Man in the fear department: the unknown is scary, so just destroy it and move on.

I do have to say that I was kind of annoyed with Merou's assumption that life forms in a far, far away galaxy would automatically be human to be intelligent. It just goes to show that our pride will be our downfall. But it reminded me of a quote from another science-fiction book that I enjoyed, Solaris by Stanislaw Lem (which you should remember if you keep up with my reviews):

"...We take off into the cosmos, ready for anything: for solitude, for hardship, for exhaustion, death. Modesty forbids us to say so, but there are times when we think pretty well of ourselves. And yet, if we examine it more closely, our enthusiasm turns out to be all sham. We don't want to conquer the cosmos, we simply want to extend the boundaries of Earth to the frontiers of the cosmos. For us, such and such a planet is as arid as the Sahara, another as frozen as the North Pole, yet another as lush as the Amazon basin. We are humanitarian and chivalrous; we don't want to enslave other races, we simply want to bequeath them our values and take over their heritage in exchange. We think of ourselves as the Knights of the Holy Contact. This is another lie. We are only seeking Man. We have no need of other worlds. We need mirrors. We don't know what to do with other worlds. [...:] We arrive here as we are in reality, and when the page is turned and that reality is revealed to us--that part of our reality which we would prefer to pass over in silence--then we don't like it anymore."


Oh, it's so apt. We inherently assume that anyone of any worth or intelligence will be just like us. Even the "Little Green Men" type aliens that pop up in the Weekly World News magazines are still modeled after humans, and hell, they are nicknamed "men"! I just hope that one day we'll be able to see the bigger picture.

I do want to mention two things that I wish were clarified a little more in the book. I'd been told that the twist in the book was different than the twist in the movie. I had had a theory that somehow during the journey from Earth, something got mixed up and the planet they landed on WAS Earth, only far in the future. Since it seems that was not correct, I'm confused as to how two planets so distant actually would be so very similar. The two main races (Apes and humans) are the same genetically (or so it seems as Merou was able to successfully mate with an "alien" human), and there are several other animals that are similar. Not to mention the society and transportation etc. It just seems so unlikely that Soror would be so similar to Earth without knowing of its existence.

And speaking of which, that brings me to the second thing. Merou named the planet Soror prior to meeting any sentient beings. Didn't they have their own name for the planet? I cannot believe that throughout ANY of the discussions they had regarding the origins of their species, or space travel, or anything, that they did not once say, "Oh, and by the way, we call our planet Apex." (Haha, get it?) But really, that point bothered me in the story.

Anyway, Aside from those two points, I thought that this was a really great book. I hope that everyone gets a chance to read it one day.
Profile Image for Pedro Ceballos.
292 reviews32 followers
March 29, 2021
No tenía muchas esperanzas con esta novela ya que pensé que no había envejecido adecuadamente, sin embargo me ha sorprendido gratamente.
Un grupo de exploradores espaciales alcanzan un planeta lejano donde luego se dan cuenta que también viven humanos, sin embargo, la especie dominante es el simio.
La novela te hace analizar que pasaría si el humano no fuera el que domina, si el humano fuera desprovisto de su inteligencia, y si una de las especies más cercanas, que además es más fuerte físicamente, desarrollara dicha inteligencia? Efectivamente ocurriría lo que los humanos le hacemos al resto de los animales, cazarlos, encerrarlos para zoológicos y como sujetos de pruebas científicas, Agotarlos hasta extinguirlos o casi extinguirlos...
Profile Image for Rachel (TheShadesofOrange).
2,611 reviews4,010 followers
October 10, 2021
4.0 Stars
I was a huge fan of the old movies so I was very excited to check out the original material. I am happy to report that I was not disappointed.  I expected the novel to be campy but it was much more serious in tone. The story was told through the inner monologue of the male Earther so it was a quieter reflective narrative. There are some plot points that are rather cringey, but overall I was surprised how well this story held up to reading for the first time in the modern day. The book presents some interesting questions surrounding ethics even if the premise of the story is a bit outlandish. The ending was fantastic. Even better than the movie in my opinion.
June 2, 2023
Wow! I couldn't begin to tell you how much i loved this book! I literally devoured it. I had previously watched almost all the movies based on the novel and none resembles it even slightly.
"Planet of the apes" is sci fi at it's best, a story that is told in a simple, understandable manner that the reader is delighted to digest. It's a book that doesn't leave unanswered questions and at the same time it's thought provoking concept is somehow relevant to standard human behaviour . What might happen if another more intelligent species takes over the world and the human race is somewhat deteriorated? Also the ape society is a mirror of our own homo sapiens society. It's like the writer comments on how we behave towards other living species by merely seeing how the apes treat humans.
The ending of the book is even more striking, unexpected and crafty. This is really one of the best books i've read this year. Thumbs up to the writer and the excellent audiobook narrator, Greg Wise, who gave life to this fantastic adventure! 5 stars without hesitation or second thoughts.
Profile Image for Megu.
171 reviews2,116 followers
August 15, 2023
3.5. Zaskakująco dobrze się zestarzała
Profile Image for RJ - Slayer of Trolls.
985 reviews198 followers
August 18, 2024
“Machines will always be machines; the most perfected robot, always a robot. But what of living creatures possessing a certain degree of intelligence, like apes? And apes, precisely, are endowed with a keen sense of imitation.…”

Astronauts from Earth travel to the Betelgeuse solar system and land on a planet with civilized apes and bestial humans. This short and very readable novel, written by French novelist Pierre Boulle, was intended as social satire (like much of the best Science-Fiction of the time) and may have been best summarized by Wikipedia as "a wry parable on science, evolution, and the relationship between man and animal." Like Boulle's earlier novel The Bridge Over the River Kwai, this novel is said to have been adapted into a successful film.

“Take your stinking paws off me, you damned dirty ape!”
- Charlton Heston


Profile Image for Kirk.
Author 39 books241 followers
January 4, 2008
So in fourth grade we had an assignment to write our favorite author. Being a dork, I went for Pierre Boulle because he had written the only book I knew of that let you put on a gorilla mask and run around like you'd taken over the world. Imagine my surprise when one day a letter from Paris arrived in the mail from none other than the very tolerant Mr. Boulle (then about sixty), who answered such probing questions as "Why are Jinn and Phyllis not in the movie?" (There's an opening narrative frame featuring two swinging astronauts having a holiday in space....) I still have the letter Mr. B sent me (yes, it's framed, but no, it's not hanging on a wall). Unfortunately, I don't have the two or three subsequent letters where he even more tolerantly entertained my endless ideas for even more Planet of the Ape-sequels. And Lord knows I fear the thought that somewhere in some French library a scholar is poring over scratchy Michigan penmanship wondering what the hell the author of THE BRIDGE OVER THE RIVER KWAI was doing wasting his time with fan letters from nine-year olds. Please, God, don't letter there ever be a scholarly edition of Mr. B's correspondence.

Anyway, the other day AMC ran the entire PoftheA marathon, but I was busy (reading!), so I didn't watch. Still, it reminded me that it'd been more than 30 years since I read this, so I went and dug it out. For Roddy McDowell fans, be prepared: this is not your father's Charleton Heston. Yes, there's Drs. Cornelius and Zira, and the stratified ape society, but there's no "get your stinking paws off of me, you damned dirty ape"---and no statue of liberty surprise ending (Pierre Boulle was French, remember). This is a fast-paced, literate satire that tweaks human vanity, science, classism, and Peter Tork---well, ok there's no Peter Tork. But he's about the only thing in 50s/60s society that doesn't get a ribbing. Fun stuff, inevitably tainted by boyhood nostalgia.
Profile Image for Kasia, co z tymi książkami?.
267 reviews1,193 followers
February 16, 2024
nadal za Małpami
vintage sci-fi, bardzo aktualne, ludzie i tak się nie nauczą

/ jest na Legimi

currently-reading update
well, w filmach byłam za Małpami, zobaczmy jak będzie tutaj

Do jakiej rasy należały zatem istoty wyłapywane i zabijane przez małpy? Czy były to zacofane plemiona? Jeśli tak, jakim okrucieństwem wykazywali się władcy tej planety, by tolerować, a może i nakazywać podobne masakry!
Profile Image for Tom Mathews.
725 reviews
October 25, 2016
Originally written in 1963 by the same author who brought us The Bridge Over the River Kwai, this book will most likely be remembered for the many movies that were based on it's premise of a world where the roles of apes and men are reversed. Originally written in French, the main character in the novel is Ulysse Mérou: A journalist who took part in the space expedition that lands on Soror, a planet orbiting the star Betelgeuse. There is some argument as to whether the book can be considered science fiction or if it's a work of satire in the vein of Gulliver's Travel. Personally,I tend to see most science fiction as a study of society so I'm not going to say this isn't it.

Bottom line: PotA is an entertaining read but not extremely imaginative. I listened to the audio version recorded by Greg Wise in 2012 and was surprised to find that in many cases the word ape in the print version was changed to monkey in the audio recording. As one who knows that apes and monkeys come from distinct simian families, I felt the change made no sense and found it extremely irritating.

Thanks to the Goodreads Time Travel reading group for choosing this book and giving me the opportunity to read and discuss it with others.
Profile Image for Tomasz.
549 reviews974 followers
September 30, 2023
Dobrze się czyta, ciekawa konstrukcja świata i aspekt filozoficzny faktycznie zmuszający do przemyśleń. Książką się średnio zestarzała, zwłaszcza w kwestii opisywania kobiet, co było dość męczące zwłaszcza na początku, potem już człowiek się przyzwyczaja. Końcowy plot twist tak samo świetny jak w przypadku ekranizacji. 3.5, bo nie jestem w stanie wykrzesać więcej.
Profile Image for _och_man_.
279 reviews3 followers
February 22, 2024
Jestem ostatnią osobą, która mogłaby czerpać nawet najmniejszą przyjemność z konsumpcji takiego tytułu jak ten. Proszę wybaczyć, zasypiam na sam dźwięk słowa "KOSMOS". A jednak... Bawiłam się przednio! Co prawda im dalej w las (tfu, galaktykę), tym bardziej dawała o sobie znać moja słaba głowa, ale nie umniejsza to wcale satysfakcji, jaką dało mi poznanie tej historii.
Profile Image for Krell75 (Stefano).
362 reviews59 followers
September 17, 2024
Affascinato dal film (quello originale del 1968) dopo anni ho colto l'occasione per dedicarmi alla lettura del libro da cui ne è stato tratto. Una lettura semplice ma efficace, la trama risulta abbastanza diversa dal film ma allo stesso modo intrigante e ben strutturata, forse anche più interessante.
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