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1[[quoteright:284:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/true_history.png]]
2->''"I write of matters of which I neither saw nor suffered, nor heard by reports from people I made up. Let no man therefore in any case believe these words."''
3-->--The novel's preface, the only part that breaks {{Kayfabe}}
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5''True History'', or ''A True Story'', is a {{satir|e}}ical 2nd century adventure novel by Greco-Syrian writer [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucian Lucian of Samosata]], parodying then-popular {{travelogue|show}} novels that often reported wild {{Tall Tale}}s as [[BasedOnAGreatBigLie true events]]. It is frequently cited as the earliest known work of ScienceFiction and/or ScienceFantasy, though its actual contents [[GenreBusting are difficult to classify by modern genre definitions]].
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7After a preface in which Lucian [[ThisIsAWorkOfFiction admits that everything he's about to tell you is made up]], he recounts a tale of his voyages with a group of adventurers, sailing from Greece to the Atlantic Ocean. The book details various "absolutely true" encounters with outlandish and fantastical places, from an island of dryads with a river of wine to the insides of a miles-long whale, and even to outer space, where he recounts the details of a war between the Kingdoms of the Moon and the Sun.
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9While perhaps not the first story to feature space travel (the preface implies that it may have been written as a jab at an earlier travelogue that featured a similar tale), it is the oldest surviving example of the concept in fiction, and contains many {{Unbuilt Trope}}s that would come to define the SpaceOpera centuries later, such as interplanetary conflict and alien lifeforms.
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11The book can be found online [[http://www.sacred-texts.com/cla/luc/wl2/wl211.htm here]] or [[http://lucianofsamosata.info/TheTrueHistory.html here.]]
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13-----
14!!''True History'' provides examples of:
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16* AliensSpeakingEnglish: All the strange and far-off peoples the Greek adventurers meet speak Greek -- even the people of the moon.
17* AllPlanetsAreEarthLike: The Moon, albeit filled with all sorts of wacky monsters, is otherwise earth-like, but it gets even weirder when it turns out there are also civilizations (and people, and trees) on the Sun and several stars. It's hard to tell whether this is a case of ScienceMarchesOn, or part of the parody. (It was pretty obvious even at the time that the Sun was something very hot and fire-like, an idea that plays a part in several myths.)
18* AuthorTract: The book's preface is the only part where the author drops the charade of this being a "True Story", and is primarily a sardonic tirade about how annoyed he is at the popularity and profitability of deceitful, BasedOnAGreatBigLie "travelogues"... before noting that [[SelfDeprecation he's not above cashing in on the trend]] -- thus, this novel.
19* BasedOnAGreatBigLie: Parodied. Despite the story being an utterly outrageous {{tall tale}}, with the preface outright admitting it's a lie, the narrator and the title itself contend that it is entirely true and actually, really happened.
20* BizarreAlienBiology: Moon people. Among other traits, they sweat milk (and use it to make cheese), and can remove and replace their own eyeballs and genitals (which are made of gold for the nobles and wood for the poors) at will.
21* BizarreAlienReproduction: Moon people are all "male" (what we'd probably call hermaphroditic). In addition to the removeable genitals, they reproduce with gay sex, apparently involving kneecaps, then store fetuses in their calves. They can also plant testicle trees that look like giant penises, and grow people on the branches.
22* BoldlyComing: Some of the narrator's traveling companions have sex with tree-women on a remote island, and end up stuck to them.
23* GiantSpider: Space invasions are accomplished by getting ginormous spiders to spin webs between the Moon and Sun, so the armies can walk across, while the Moon and Sun are sailing around the sky. Don't fall off!
24* HorseOfADifferentColor: The king and knights of the Moon rides on a vulture-horse. Other aliens ride a wide variety of animals like giant bugs and wingless birds.
25* ItRunsOnNonsensoleum: The point of this book.
26* LevelAte: The sailors visit an island with rivers of wine, and an island made entirely out of cheese in a sea of milk. The cheese island is a pun on the Phoenician city of Tyre ("Tyros" in Greek), which is the same as the Greek word for cheese.
27* MidSeasonTwist: The explorers go to the moon.
28* MisterSeahorse: The lunar people are all men, so this trope naturally appears. The sons grow inside the calves of the men, like Zeus did with Dionysus. At the time, [[GetTheeToANunnery calf of the leg was a euphemism for a man's family jewels]].
29%%* MixAndMatchCritters: The vulture-horses of the moon.
30* NoBiochemicalBarriers: Moon food is the same as human food -- onions, cheese, milk, etc. -- and edible for humans. The moon and sun are located ''within'' the Earth's atmosphere, as people believed at the time, so there's no atmospheric mismatch either.
31* OneGenderRace: The lunar people are all male.
32* RubberForeheadAliens: Moon People have leaves for ears and tails, removable eyes and genitals, and only one toe per foot, but otherwise they basically look human.
33* SarcasticTitle: The story begins by stating that everything in it is an utter lie.
34* ShoutOut: One of the many places Lucian "visits" is Cloudcuckooland from Creator/{{Aristophanes}}' satire ''Theatre/TheBirds''.
35* StandardHeroReward: Possibly parodied and turned upside-down: Our heroes help the Moon People in their war against the Sun People and are defeated. Nevertheless, the Moon King still rewards the main character with goods and give him his son as a spouse.
36* SwallowedWhole: On returning to Earth, the crew's ship is swallowed by a whale 200 miles long, in whose cavernous interior they find a landscape of forests and cities home to different kinds of fish people. They eventually escape by setting its internal forests on fire, killing the beast and letting them slip out through its mouth.
37* TakeThat: Against Creator/{{Herodotus}} and generally the Greek authorities.
38* TallTale: The book is a big TropeMaker for the literary tall tale and had a huge influence on later works in that genre.
39* ThisIsAWorkOfFiction: The [[UrExample earliest known example]] is the disclaimer at the beginning. Lucian wanted to be very clear that he did not want to ''actually'' contribute to the BasedOnAGreatBigLie nature of the typical TravelogueShow at the time.
40* ToBeContinued: The story ends with Lucian and his crew shipwrecked on a new land and setting out to explore, with the text closing on the note that their following adventures will be revealed in the next book. It seems that Lucian never actually wrote a continuation (and probably never intended to).
41* TravelogueShow: Written as a [[ParodiedTrope vicious lampooning]] of the genre as a whole at the time.
42* UrExample: The earliest surviving ScienceFiction and, possibly, literary TallTale. As well as the earliest that [[ThisIsAWorkOfFiction acknowledges itself as such]].

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