The Coming of the Ice : Eternity Beneath the Snow

In The Coming of the Ice, a man accepts an experimental operation that promises endless life. At first, the future opens wide. Centuries pass. Knowledge multiplies. Civilizations rise, reorganize, and leave him standing still while humanity races ahead. What once felt like godhood becomes a fixed point in a moving universe, and eventually even that universe begins to fail.

This is not a story about sudden catastrophe. It is about slow accumulation. Time stretches. Emotional ties thin. Familiar ways of thinking harden while the world evolves beyond recognition. When climate shifts and the ice begins its relentless advance, survival is no longer a question of intelligence or strength alone. The last decisions are smaller, colder, and made without witnesses.

Written with haunting restraint, the story unfolds as a personal record left behind by someone who outlived everyone else. Each era passes quickly, but the weight of memory never does. The tension lies not in whether the world ends, but in how much of oneself can endure before isolation finishes its work.

G. Peyton Wertenbaker published The Coming of the Ice in 1926, at a moment when speculative fiction was still defining its boundaries. The story appeared in Amazing Stories, standing out for its long temporal scope and its refusal to treat immortality as a simple victory. Rather than focusing on invention alone, Wertenbaker follows one man across ages, using endurance itself as the experiment. The result is an early, unsettling vision of deep time, emotional erosion, and the quiet end of humanity.

Commencez ce livre dès aujourd'hui pour 0 €

  • Accédez à tous les livres de l'app pendant la période d'essai
  • Sans engagement, annulez à tout moment
Essayer gratuitement
Plus de 52 000 personnes ont noté Nextory 5 étoiles sur l'App Store et Google Play.

  1. 1900 - 1939 Science Fiction 3 - 13 Classic Science Fiction Short Stories by Jack London, H. P. Lovecraft, EE Doc Smith, Clark Ashton Smith, Paul Ernst and many more

    Jack London, Arthur C. Clarke, H.P. Lovecraft, E. E. "doc" Smith, Clark Ashton Smith, E. M. Forster, Henry Kuttner, G. Peyton Wertenbaker, Harl Vincent, Clare Winger Harris, Edwin Baird, Paul Ernst

  2. Lost Sci-Fi Books 396 thru 400 - Four Vintage Sci-Fi Short Stories from the 1930s, 40s, 50s and 60s and one from 1926 : From Cosmic Gods to Kitchen Chemistry—Strange Adventures Await!

    Philip K Dick, Nelson S. Bond, G. Peyton Wertenbaker, Charles Dye, Clark Ashton Smith

  3. 50 Vintage Sci-Fi Short Stories 8

    Edgar Allan Poe, Robert Silverberg, Jack London, Arthur C. Clarke, Katherine MacLean, Clyde Beck, Clifford D. Simak, Mack Reynolds, Donald E. Westlake, Harlan Ellison, H.P. Lovecraft, H.G. Wells, Nelson S. Bond, Alfred Coppel, William Tenn, Lyn Venable, Robert Moore Williams, Francis Stevens, Miriam Allen deFord, Robert Sheckley, Harry Harrison, Fritz Leiber, Noel Loomis, Charles Dye, Alfred Bester, Henry Kuttner, Michael Shaara, Zenna Henderson, Isaac Asimov, Clark Ashton Smith, Donald A. Wollheim, Randall Garrett, Philip K Dick, Winston Marks, Frank Belknap Long, G. Peyton Wertenbaker, James Rosenquest, Raymond Z. Gallun, Harl Vincent, Edward Page Mitchell

  4. Lost Sci-Fi Books 391 thru 400 - Nine Lost Vintage Sci-Fi Short Stories from the 1920s, 30s, 40s, 50s and 60s and one from 1897 : When Ice Comes, Time Stops, and the Asteroids Fight Back

    E. E. "doc" Smith, H.G. Wells, Randall Garrett, Philip K Dick, Nelson S. Bond, Clark Ashton Smith, Noel Loomis, Zenna Henderson, G. Peyton Wertenbaker, Charles Dye