• RI April 2024

    From Ted Nolan @21:1/5 to All on Thu Jul 4 20:05:53 2024
    Once again Tony inspires me to, belatedly, get on the ball.

    As usual, the links below are Amazon affiliate ones which, in theory,
    though never yet in practice, could earn me something should you enter
    Amazon that way.

    =====
    The Long Night Paperback January 1, 1983
    by Poul Anderson
    https://amzn.to/4bt6jEy

    I had this book sitting around for a long time, but kept putting it
    off because the thought of "The Long Night", after Flandry lost, was
    kind of depressing, and on some subconscious level, I expected the
    stories would be too. In the event, that turned out not to be the
    case. This collection comprises five Anderson Technic Universe
    stories with some third-party interstitial material. I had
    occasion to go back to look at the Planet Stories version of one
    story as I wondered if some very "modern" attitudes had been present
    in the original (they were) and found it the same text as presented
    here, which I assume is true of the others as well.

    1) "The Star Plunderer"

    This is actually not a Long Night story at all, but rather the story
    of the founding of the Terran Empire. Published in 1952 in "Planet
    Stories", there are some traces of the Planet Stories "habitable
    solar system" trope remaining, but nothing really explicit. The
    story opens with the defeat in pitched battle of two of the last
    of Earth's defense force after a wave of alien invasions and governmental collapse. The survivors, a man & a woman (apparently the armed forces
    are integrated) are captured as slaves for the alien raiders, but
    gradually come to understand that the alien ship is actually being puppet-mastered by a fellow captive, Manuel Argos, who is waiting
    to make his move. Argos is a bit of a bastard, as he would almost
    have to be to pull off what he is planning. In the meantime,
    we learn a bit more about the founding principles of the Empire, some of which are surprisingly forward-looking:

    We'll have to get the racist complex out of mankind. We
    can't conquer anyone, even the Gorzuni, and keep them as
    inferiors and hope to have a stable empire. All races must
    be equal. --- He rubbed his strong square chin. "I think
    I'll borrow a leaf from the old Romans. All worthy individuals,
    of any race, can become terrestrial citizens. It'll be a
    stabilizing factor."

    With the pair of survivors pulled into Argos's plan, things proceed
    to a satisfactory climax, though the male of that pair (our viewpoint character) had not sufficiently considered another stabilizing factor
    a new Empire would need...

    I enjoyed this one quite a bit, and don't recall reading about the
    early days in any other story. (Interestingly, at this point
    the civilization fighting for its life and losing really should be
    the "Polesotechnic League", but I believe a different name is given,
    as perhaps the Future History was not quite locked down at this
    point).

    2) "Outpost of Empire"

    This is also not a Long Night story, but a Flandry era story, or perhaps
    a bit before Flandry. It may be past Noon in the Empire, but it is
    definitely not Dusk.

    The planet Freehold is on the marches of the Empire, and has a civil war problem, as well as an intertwined resident-alien revolt one. Over the
    years, the somewhat birdlike Arulians had been allowed to settle and
    been granted some extra-territorial rights. They had their gripes against
    the humans, but nothing major for some years until their off-world polity allied with Merseia at which point agents-provocateur started fanning those grievances. The human component of the problem came from those who
    left the Empire settlements to forge an Arulian influenced way of life
    much more in tune with the ways of the planet than the original settlements.

    The Empire considers the whole civil-war cum alien rebellion to be a very
    minor problem all told in the grand scheme of things what with the ongoing Merseia stand-off and can't even dedicate a Flandry level agent to deal with it. Instead they hire a private xenologist John Ridenour, who has to
    arrange his own transport, to look into things. In the event, of course, Ridenour turns out to be an Anderson "Man Who Counts" (though there is
    a brush with an unexpected other such) and manages to bring things to a livable, if not perfect, conclusion, admittedly after lots of death and destruction. In the meantime his fidelity is tested and proves more
    resistant than you might expect for that of a somewhat past Noon Imperial...

    This is probably my favorite story in the collection, though I think the motivation for the pseudo-psychic talents of the rebels was a bit weak.

    3) "A Tragedy Of Errors"

    This is the first real Long Night story here, and follows the adventures
    of the warlord Roan Tom, and his two wives as they escape a losing battle
    in a failing spaceship and must perforce put down for repairs on a
    puzzling world filled with forces turned hostile by linguistic drift.

    I thought this one was a bit weak, with the wives's solo adventure
    (complicated by the fact that they don't have a language in common)
    being somewhat underplayed due to length constraints, and with the
    main impetus to the overall struggle being a little facile. I could tell
    the odd nature of the planet would figure in at some point, but I'm not
    sure it did convincingly in the end. Still OK, but not up to the first
    two.

    4) "The Sharing Of Flesh"

    This one is well into the rebirth of civilization after the Fall,
    and concerns a scientific expedition rediscovering a lost colony,
    and the vengeance of one of the principle scientists (from Roan Tom's
    world) after the murder of her husband by natives. It suffers a
    bit from the fact that I suspect most of the readers are more
    perspicacious than the scientists as to what is really going on.

    5) "Starfog"

    Here we are into the heyday of the Empire's replacement civilization
    (though they seem oddly unwilling to check out what has actually happened
    on Earth itself) and have another "troubleshooter" story as the very
    junior "Ranger of the Commonalty" Daven Laure is sent to another
    fringe world to check out the story of a ship of travelers who seem
    to come from another universe, and to get them home if possible.

    His working out of the actual source for the ship, and his arranging
    to help them within the limits his society sets is satisfying though
    there is a bit of artificial tension where they perceive him to
    be working at cross-purposes that is not fully convincing.

    The ending here is a bit ambiguous. A new problem is set, which
    in the decadent days of the Empire would have obvious solutions, but
    which it is not clear either side could avail themselves of here.
    Interestingly this is the only Technic story I can think of that
    involves AI, though still not fully acknowledged by society.

    Soul Harvest: A Post-Apocalyptic Fantasy Harem (Dread Knight Book 2)
    by Sarah Hawke
    https://amzn.to/3QCQSS7

    Betrayed by both his Order & his allies, Dread Knight Duncan Keene
    continues to fight a hopeless battle to turn back the zombie hordes
    unleashed by his erstwhile companions, twisted by a major spell
    gone wrong, and to find the ultimate method behind the madness.

    In the meantime, he and his proto-harem are coming to terms, and
    finding information that suggests his lost first-love is in the
    thick of things where corrupted mages are working to bring back the
    war machines that shattered civilization the first time, but not
    as spellfire powered, which was bad enough then, but as soulfire
    powered which will be many times worse...

    As usual, Hawke tells a good story, never letting the harem aspect
    overweigh the plot. Along with Mike Truk (who may have retired?)
    she is the best I've seen in this genre. I did feel there was a
    bit overmuch to-ing & fro-ing in this installment that could probably
    have been condensed a bit.

    Skulduggery Pleasant (16) A Mind Full of Murder:
    The new epic detective adventure story in the
    Skulduggery Pleasant series
    by Derek Landy
    https://amzn.to/3yllUHJ

    I had a real problem with the way Darquesse reset the Universe in the
    last installment, as well as the notion that we (the non-magical readers)
    were probably bad people. To be fair, Landy does not back away from either aspect of the previous denouement here. The magical tend to remember what happened *before* the Reset, and it was not pleasant.

    In particular, it motivates a serial killer (who very consciously uses
    horror movie tropes) whom neither Skulduggery nor Valkyrie are able to
    stop. The manner in which they very conspicuously fail at that stopping
    also gets them on the wrong side of their friend the now alive again
    tailor and Sanctuary leader Ghastly Bespoke. Having fallen flat on their
    faces as the free-wheeling (and at this point two member) Arbiter Corps
    also puts the pair in line for a poisoned-chalice offer from the Sanctuaries
    as a whole. There is also a pretty successful bit of misdirection enabled
    by the Magical's use of taken names...

    As I mentioned I really did not like the ending of the previous book,
    so this one is a step up in my estimation. There are still some chickens unroosted here, and I'm not sure how I feel about their eventual nesting
    place. Still quite enjoyable.
    --
    columbiaclosings.com
    What's not in Columbia anymore..

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  • From Ted Nolan @21:1/5 to [email protected] on Mon Jul 8 20:04:49 2024
    In article <v6heqe$10bmh$[email protected]>,
    Tony Nance <[email protected]> wrote:
    On 7/4/24 4:05 PM, Ted Nolan <tednolan> wrote:
    Once again Tony inspires me to, belatedly, get on the ball.

    As usual, the links below are Amazon affiliate ones which, in theory,
    though never yet in practice, could earn me something should you enter
    Amazon that way.


    Thanks for these posts - I find them interesting & valuable.


    =====
    The Long Night Paperback January 1, 1983
    by Poul Anderson
    https://amzn.to/4bt6jEy


    I do not have this volume, but I do have all of its stories in various
    other volumes. I am pretty sure I haven't read 1-2 of the stories (yet).

    The only one I remember decently well is "Starfog", so I should probably >chase down the rest and read them.

    Tony

    Thank you -- I often wonder if anyone is reading them. I know
    nobody is going to follow me down the harem rabbit-hole, but I
    thought the Devi book was pretty mainstream & good despite the
    rpgisms, and the Grimm books are entertaining milsf.

    As I said the title for TLN is a bit of a misnomer given that one of
    the stories is the literal founding of the Empire, but I thought it was
    a pretty decent collection. I would not have minded "The Sharing Of The
    Flesh" being dropped if it meant more words for the others, but that's
    the Anderson we have and there'll be no more.
    --
    columbiaclosings.com
    What's not in Columbia anymore..

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Jaimie Vandenbergh@21:1/5 to tednolan on Wed Jul 24 20:14:46 2024
    On 8 Jul 2024 at 21:04:49 BST, "Ted Nolan <tednolan>" <Ted Nolan
    <tednolan>> wrote:

    Thank you -- I often wonder if anyone is reading them.

    I do, and appreciate them too. At, obviously, a considerable delay.

    Cheers - Jaimie
    --
    Tetris has taught me that accomplishments disappear and mistakes pile up.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)