In "The Lieutenant," World War II veteran Aldiss describes the contradictory and evolving, or perhaps degenerating, psychology of an inexperienced Army officer in a tough spot. The world is being conquered by aliens, whom we eventually learn are not people but animals much like giant spiders, and our main character has to take command of an ad hoc unit of soldiers drawn from shattered formations as they travel across the devastated countryside, dealing with civilians as well as aliens. Aldiss very convincingly displays the young officer making mistakes, putting on an act to convince others and himself of his fitness to command, and, after a shocking event, radically shifting from pursuing a course that is calm and cool and cautious to one that is risky and based entirely on unbridled emotion.
Well done, though its fragmentary and inconclusive nature and focus on psychology (demonstrated through behavior and not sterile talk about theories) is perhaps more literary than what we expect in genre literature; it is easy to see why "The Lieutenant" appealed to Merril, who was always looking for stories that defied the boundaries between the literary mainstream and SF. The tone and setting might appeal to fans of post-apocalyptic fiction, and there are pretty effective shock scenes involving a dead body for all you horror fans.Thumbs up for "The Lieutenant."
"Brave to Be a King" by Poul Anderson
This is a long one; our friends in Italy serialized it over three issues of Urania. I don't think "Brave to Be a King" has been anthologized in a book, but it has appeared in a million Anderson collections. In general I am not crazy about time travel stories, so the fact that isfdb is telling me this is the second installment in the Time Patrol series is giving me pause, but I like Anderson so let's give "Brave to Be a King" a chance. I'm reading the novelette in a scan of the issue of F&SF in which it debuted, the issue that includes Carol Emshwiller's "Day at the Beach," which we read back in 2018; "Day at the Beach" is one of the stories Merril reprinted in The Year's Best S-F: 5th Annual Edition."The Law Breakers" by Christopher Anvil
I don't think I've read anything by Anvil before, so this is a real exercise in exploration for the MPorcius Fiction Log staff. "The Law Breakers" was an Astounding cover story, so I feel like both the leftist herald of the New Wave and the right-wing architect of the Golden Age are telling me this is a good place to start with Anvil, but the fact that, like Aldiss' "The Lieutenant," Anvil's "The Law Breakers" had to wait until the 21st century to be reprinted is making me wonder if the market is telling me that, no, this is not the place to start.Well, "The Law Breakers" is an OK adventure story told in a sort of jocular manner that tries to get across some historical and sociological theories. I guess the big one is about the effect of diversity and competition on technological development, and another is the drawbacks as well as the obvious benefits of the fact that the human race is ambitious and always striving, always trying to improve. We might consider "The Law breakers" an example of the kind of stories Astounding editor John W. Campbell, Jr. wanted to publish, an optimistic story that celebrates human achievement and teaches the reader something about science and technology.
Our main characters are two space aliens whose civilization has achieved interstellar travel but has yet to develop an FTL drive. These aliens look almost like humans and share humans' preferences for air and food and so forth, with the exception that their arms have more joints and these joints are extra flexible. Our protagonists are on a commando mission to Earth. Four hundred years ago, like 1600 or 1700, I guess, scouts came to Earth and saw that the human race was split up into many discrete and often hostile ethnic, cultural and political groups, and that there was no central authority controlling population growth or use of natural resources. The aliens' scientists figured the human race was going to exterminate itself through war or overuse of resources or something in a few centuries, so the aliens would be able to colonize the Earth without having to kill us themselves.
Recently, scouts returned to the vicinity of Terra and were astounded to find that the human race was not extinct--in fact, they had developed an FTL drive and were colonizing the galaxy! The aliens fretted that if they didn't deal with the humans soon, they (the aliens) would be subordinated to the Earthers! The alien space navy is far away, so to buy time and slow down Earth's expansion, successive small squads of commandos were sent to Earth to blow up the HQ of the human colonization effort. None of these squads has returned; our protagonists are the latest pair sent on this dangerous mission, armed with invisibility devices and high explosives and hand guns and charged with the task of blowing up the skyscraper in the middle of a rural district that is Earth colonization HQ.
Most of the text of "The Law Breakers" is moderately entertaining adventure stuff, the commandos crash landing, hiking to a road, stealing a car and driving to the skyscraper, sneaking around, setting the explosive charges. They are invisible, but dogs smell them and humans get suspicious and so the aliens try to hide in the building. The building includes, for training purposes, simulations of alien planets so the commandos, who can't read or speak English, blunder into a very cold room, a high gravity room, etc. Finally they fall into a trap and are captured.
The aliens find that their predecessors were also captured, and are now fully integrated into Earth society. We get lectures on the value of having multiple cultures and polities--the human race as a whole never became satisfied with any one method or piece of technology, because Earth had many competing cultures and polities. The aliens never got a FTL drive because they were satisfied with the drive they have, and those that invented it and produce it, in a civilization with only one society, were able to discourage competition.
The aliens are offered jobs as car mechanics. While the aliens' civilization has settled on a single, uniform, simple and reliable automobile, Earth automobiles are very complicated and very diverse and always being improved upon, so they require a lot of maintenance, and the aliens, with their super-flexible arms, can reach more easily into the recesses of an engine than can a human. But our joke ending, in which the aliens have to serve jail time for stealing a car and speeding, will keep them from their new jobs for a while. (The story title has two meanings--the alien protagonists broke Earthly laws relating to property and speed limits, while the human race has been breaking what the aliens considered laws of nature, like that you can't go faster than light.)An acceptable story. I'm not quite sure why Merril considered it a stand out...Anvil does depict international conflicts being resolved peacefully and the diversity angle extends to race--there are people of all races at the colonization center--so maybe that has something to do with it. In 2007 the people at Baen included "The Law Breakers" in the Anvil collection The Trouble with Humans.
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Not a bad start to our alphabetical journey through the SF of 1959. Aldiss' story--oppressive, pessimistic, claustrophobically stuck in one guy's head--is probably the most literary of the stories. Anderson's is tragic when it comes to the lives of individuals but optimistic when it comes to the sweep of human history, and depicts people doing the right thing and behaving with competence and confidence. Anvil's story is the most gee whiz and optimistic of the tales, but like Anderson's it tries to teach you something as well as offer adventure thrills and human drama.
Keep your eyes open for our excursion into 1959 SF "B"s under the direction of one Judith Merril.







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