Nicholas ([info]nhw) wrote,
@ 2005-12-18 13:03:00
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Entry tags:bookblog 2005, ee doc smith

December Books 8) Triplanetary
8) Triplanetary, by E.E. "Doc" Smith

Over the last week or so, when I got tired of concentrating on downloaded Doctor Who novels on my PDA screen, I've been turning for variety to this classic novel, the first in Smith's famous Lensman series. I bought a whole bunch of them at Worldcon; hadn't read any before; and to be honest it will be a while before I try getting into them again. Humanity is the battleground for the centuries-long struggle for galactic domination between the Arisian and Eddorian civilisations. We start with a snapshot of an ancient high-tech Atlantis, wiped out by atomic war, and then a rather puzzling vignette from Rome under Nero; then the first and second world wars. And then a third of the way through the book, we're in space opera territory; our heroes are kidnapped by space pirates, re-kidnapped by an amphibian race, themselves under attack by other forces:

[The attackers were] fish some five feet in length. Fish with huge, goggling eyes; fish plentifully equipped with long, arm-like tentacles; fish poised before control panels or darting about intent upon their various duties. Fish with brains, waging war!
The war between the alien amphibians and humanity is resolved, the Earth is saved (apart from Pittsburgh), and the pirate captain, in fact an incarnation of the evil Eddorians, escapes to the next novel.

I can see why this (and I suppose the rest of the series) is a taproot text for so much sf - direct or indirect descendants must include [info]autopope's Singularity Sky and Iron Sunrise, much of Bujold, Ender's Game, etc etc etc. The amphibians' habit of sucking all the iron out of planets they encounter reminded me of Douglas Adams' Doctor Who story, The Pirate Planet. But I can't really pretend that it was very good.


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[info]swisstone
2005-12-18 02:44 pm UTC (link)
Triplanetary isn't very good. If you're going to read any 'Lensman' book, I'd go for Galactic Patrol, which, though chronologically the third, was the first written for the series proper (Triplanetary was written before, but only later retconned into the series). (I may be wrong about that, but I believe that's how it works.)

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Well, now...
[info]seawasp
2005-12-18 03:50 pm UTC (link)
First, "Triplanetary", while chronologically first, is actually a "fix-up" novel that Doc retconned into the series. Nothing wrong with it, in my view -- I actually like it a great deal -- but a purist would start with "Galactic Patrol" and pretend he knew nothing of the backstory, because in the original published version there was NO prologue explaining what was going on. The readers didn't find out about the Arisian-Eddorian element until FAR later.

And it WAS good. For its time. It's STILL better than a hell of a lot of other things -- like some of the old Doctor Who adaptations, which had prose so clunky I couldn't read it to my 8 year old.

Naturally, I'm an unrepentant Smith fanboy.

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Re: Well, now...
[info]nhw
2005-12-18 03:55 pm UTC (link)
Agreed on the Doctor Who adaptations. Well, maybe I should give Galactic Patrol a go...

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[info]nickbarnes
2005-12-18 05:43 pm UTC (link)
Although I have been familiar with both works, the connection between Triplanetary and The Fish That Ate Pittsburgh has only just occurred to me.

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[info]nhw
2005-12-18 08:42 pm UTC (link)
You have the advantage of me on the latter!

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[info]nickbarnes
2005-12-19 11:13 am UTC (link)
Ah, The Fish That Ate Pittsburgh, aka The Fish That Saved Pittsburgh. Something of a cult item. My recollection is that there is a book of the same title, although Google and Amazon both deny it.

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[info]nhw
2005-12-19 11:39 am UTC (link)
ADDALL is your friend.

The Fish That Saved Pittsburgh, Based on the Screenplay By Jaison Starkes and Edmond Stevens, by Richard Woodley, Bantam Books, NY, 1979, ISBN 0553130870.

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[info]wyvernfriend
2005-12-18 11:49 pm UTC (link)
Triplanetary is probabaly one of my least favourite Lensman books and my enjoyment of the series is probably helped by the fact that I read the rest first.

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