A Million Open Doors is a science fictionnovel by John Barnes centered around a maturing adult who is transported to a faraway planet and encounters many obstacles which cause him to become a more productive member of the blossoming Interstellar culture than he would have been otherwise.
A Million Open Doors is basically a study on the effects of globalization.
Unfolding on the planet of Wilson in the city of Nou Occitan, the story begins with a man named Giraut and his romantic, swashbuckling friends, who are all residents in the Quartier de Jovents, a sort of playground for teens and twenty-somethings who have not yet moved on to the more "grown-up" lifestyle of their parents. Technologically safeguarded, these young adults have swordfights in the streets with "neuroducer" epees and frequent the taverns of the Quartier. However, unlike his friends, Giraut is forced to grow up much more quickly than most of his friends, because one day his friend, Aimeric, is called upon by the government to travel to the distant planet, Nansen, as an aid to the coming of the springer: a method of instantaneous transportation, which will have adverse affects on Caledonian economy. Giraut decides to leave when he catches his girlfriend getting into the Interstellar "arts scene," which is a euphemism for pornography. Thus, Aimeric and Giraut advise the rational council of the Caledonians to adjust their economy to adjust to that of the rest of the universe so that the springer will have as few adverse effects as possible. When the Caledonians decide that Aimeric and Giraut, as well as the Interstellar government, are trying to usurp their power, they begin to try to seize back control of everything, and an urbanconflict ensues. Giraut discovers among the strife who he really is and begins to see how fake his life back home was.
Characters
Giraut - a talented swordsman forced to grow up suddenly as he encounters complicated political struggles between opposing ideological groups as a Caledonian ambassador.
Garsenda - Giraut's ex-girlfriend back in Nou Occitan.
Aimeric - fellow troubadour and friend to Giraut, trained in economic principles and business and ambassador to Caledony.
Bieris _ Aimeric's girlfriend, who accompanies him to Nansen.
Bruce _ Aimeric's childhood friend from Nansen, who greets them upon their arrival on the harsh planet.
Margaret _ a woman Giraut falls in love with at the end of the novel.
Planets referenced
Earth
Nou Occitan
Wilson
Significance
This novel can be most clearly understood as a commentary on globalization via a fictional account of the effects of the Earth's expanding political, seconomic and social influence over human inhabited planets. Barnes appears to suggest that those most harmed by globalization are the ones least willing to change in response.
These opportunities are likely to increase in the future, and discerning groups should continue to take advantage of this opendoor as long as they acknowledge the risks and remain aware of the levels of corruption involved.
It is not OpenDoorsÂ’ policy to criticize but to commend those involved in this work, so long as the price of involvement is not to be silent about persecution.
We at OpenDoors seek to articulate the views of such house church leaders, speaking out on behalf of those who cannot speak for themselves.
OpenDoors 2005 reports that Asia, which continues to be the largest sending region by a wide margin, showed a slight increase in enrollments, with the number of students enrolled in U.S. colleges and universities growing by 0.3% to 325,112 students, or 58% of the total international enrollment.
OpenDoors 2004/05 data from campuses indicate that nearly 72% of all international students reported their primary source of funding coming from personal and family sources or other sources outside of the United States.
A full press kit and further details on the OpenDoors 2005 surveys and their findings can be accessed on www.opendoors.iienetwork.org, and the full 100 page report can be ordered for $49.95 from IIE Books at http://www.iiebooks.org.