THE BUILDERS
Episode #550 · Written by Fox B. Holden · Narrated by Scott Miller
Humanity survived the end of the world, but almost everything else was lost with it. In the towering New City, civilization has been rebuilt around a single obsession: construction. Across the ruined continents, Research Builders scour the wreckage of dead cities searching for diagrams, blueprints, and forgotten technical plans that can still be understood.
Markten has spent forty years helping rebuild civilization from the ashes. To him, building is not simply useful—it is the only thing that matters. But when his young assistant discovers a strange surviving book hidden deep beneath a collapsed ruin, they uncover diagrams unlike anything the Research divisions have ever seen before. The design appears harmless, almost disappointingly simple, yet Markten becomes convinced they have discovered something revolutionary.
What follows is one of the most unsettling ideas in classic science fiction: a future where humanity remembers how to construct machines but no longer remembers itself. The people of New City can rebuild technology from fragments, yet entire fields of human thought have become meaningless relics. History, philosophy, and psychology are treated as worthless because they contain no diagrams.
“The Builders” slowly transforms from a story about technological recovery into something far more disturbing. Fox B. Holden creates a civilization trapped inside its own blind spot, where the most important discovery in human history is nearly dismissed because no one alive understands what they are looking at.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Very little verified biographical information survives about Fox B. Holden, but “The Builders” has endured because of its unusual premise and sharply ironic conclusion. The story appeared during the era when science fiction magazines regularly explored the dangers of technological advancement disconnected from historical memory or cultural understanding.
Unlike many post-apocalyptic stories of its time, “The Builders” approaches the collapse of civilization from an engineering perspective. The surviving population has preserved technical ability while losing nearly all knowledge of human identity and intellectual history. That idea gives the story its lasting impact and makes its final revelation especially memorable for modern readers.
LISTEN TO THE STORY
Listen to The Builders by Fox B. Holden — a haunting vintage science fiction story about lost knowledge, ruined cities, and a shocking discovery.LOST SCI-FI PREMIUM
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LOST VOICES OF VINTAGE SCI-FI
Not every science fiction writer built a long career in the field or became a widely recognized name. Some published only a handful of stories before disappearing from the magazines, leaving behind little biographical record and few surviving details. Others may be remembered for work in different genres, while their contribution to science fiction was brief.
Yet these writers helped shape the texture of the pulp era and beyond. Their stories experimented with bold ideas, filled the pages between the famous names, and added depth to the ever-expanding landscape of vintage science fiction.
The Lost Sci-Fi Podcast exists in part to rediscover these voices. The stories below were written by authors who published briefly, sparingly, or whose science fiction output was small - but whose work still deserves to be heard.
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- The Small Bears by Gene L. Henderson
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Each episode features carefully selected stories from the Golden Age of science fiction, professionally narrated. Timeless storytelling the way it was meant to be heard.What listeners are saying:
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