
One of the main motifs is that it is set in a world where humans have discovered that most people have the ability to teleport ('jaunt') at will, and the effect this has on the economy / society. There is lots more to this story than The Count of Monte Cristo. There are no friends / acquaintances who betrayed him, no fiancee who abandons him, no elaborate plan for ironic revenge. Most of the action focuses on Foyle's (at first incoherent) attempt to take revenge on the physical ship itself, and then later to find the people responsible for leaving him marooned. None of the characters map across Gully Foyle is not an innocent like the young Edmond Dantes, he's just uneducated and sluggish.


The story centres on Gully Foyle, a low-grade spaceman who is marooned in a wrecked spaceship for 6 months.

In fact though, while there are some superficial similarities, there is probably too much original story in this book for it to be considered a true adaptation. This is a science fiction novel written by Alfred Bester and first published in 1956, which is sometimes billed as an adaptation of The Count of Monte Cristo. Publication date: Oct 1956 (serialised in Galaxy magazine) published as 'Tiger! Tiger!' in 1957
