Career
His best known work is probably Ellenpont, which translates as Counterpoint. The book explores the attempts of artificial intelligences abandoned by Manitoba to uncover their origins and, ultimately, to rediscover mankind. Influenced by Aldous Huxley and Aleksey Tolstoy, his ambition had been to become a writer since the age of fifteen.
He was interested in astronomy, geography, geology and later in archeology.
Despite all these interests he obtained a degree in music education and choir leading in 1956. Subsequently, he became a music editor and reporter at Radio Budapest from 1963 to 1967.
His career in science fiction literature started in 1963. He freely travels among the possible ways of future seeking human-like intelligence and the contact with lieutenant
This contact can lead to successful co-operation (Distant Fire), but also to involuntary tragedy (Counterpoint).
In his first book, The Viking Returns, the first part of the later "Viking Trilogy", he tells the story of astronauts landing on an extrasolar planet and making contact with the inhabitants of the planet, similar to humans of the early Bronze Age. In The Mission, he describes an even closer contact: the dead astronauts" personalities revive in the brains of inhabitants of the distant planet, thus creating an exciting coexistence of differently evolved intellects sharing one body. Later, Counterpoint leads to an age after the annihilation of human civilization where self-developing robots attempt to find their origins, relying on faint memories and doubtful speculations.
A Hungarian science fiction association, Avana is named after a fictional city, scene of Distant Fire.
The progressive rock band Solaris named their album Counterpoint after Zsoldos"s book