"Davey Jones' Ambassador" by Raymond Z. Gallun
This is a traditional old time science fiction tale in which the author envisions an alien society, portrays human first contact with that society, and in which a scientist, the protagonist, uses his brains--his science and engineering knowledge and his ability to outwit others--to overcome plot obstacles. There are no swords or sexy princesses--this is true hard science fiction that glorifies the search for knowledge and Man's ability to improve life by manipulating His environment through application of that knowledge.
Clifford Rodney is in his one-man submarine on the bottom of the Atlantic when he is attacked by the heretofore unknown local intelligent race, people with crustacean-like bodies, eyes on eye-stalks, and lots of fins and tentacles. These people have developed a whole technology based on selective breeding--they use specially bred beasts as vehicles and weapons and construction machinery, for example. These submarine people have no way to refine or work metal, so some of their most complex devices integrate metal components from sunken ships--while we on the surface know nothing about the submarine civilization, from these wrecked vessels--and especially from the books that sank with them--the undersea people know quite a bit about us.
And want to learn more. Rodney and his submarine are put into a dome made from mollusk shell and pumped full of air--this terrarium has been specially prepared for the human the ocean floor's natives have been hoping to capture someday. One of the sea people, a scientist who like Tarzan learned written English entirely from books, communicates with Rodney by writing notes on the clear surface of the dome--Rodney writes back in sand left in the terrarium for the purpose.
It seems like the submarine people expect to keep Rodney until he dies, learning from him while he survives, but Rodney, of course, wants to get back home, and figures out how to do so, employing his vast knowledge of chemistry and physics and engineering. It is a longshot, but he gets the unexpected aid of that scientist whose desire to see the surface world for himself Rodney has encouraged.
The ideas and themes of the story are good, but it is a little dry--his story lives up to the stereotype that old SF is all about ideas and its authors neglected (or, if you want to be a jerk about it, were incompetent to provide) literary values. This is one of those stories that doesn't feel like hot stuff while you are reading it because it doesn't push any of your buttons, seeing as it lacks sex, violence, surprises or poetic sentences, but after you've read it you have fond memories of the story's meaty substance. We'll say it is on the high end of "Acceptable." A good example of its type, "Davey Jones' Ambassador" has been reprinted in quite a few anthologies as well as in The Best of Raymond Z. Gallun.
"Nova Solis" by Raymond Z. Gallun
"Nova Solis" appeared under the pen name E. V. Raymond and has never been reprinted. Soon I will be one of the few people who has read this story since the 1930s!
Brad Keyston awakes after spending two thousand years in suspended animation! It is explained to us, via flashback exposition and in a speech from luxuriously bearded scientist Dr. Elias Heth, that in the 1950s a "cloud of meteoric refuse from interstellar space" drifted into the solar system and was sucked up by the Sun, causing old Sol to go nova on us! What did the government do to try to save our civilization? Who knows? Luckily, private industry stepped into the breach! The chemical company Keyston co-owned with Dr. Heth had discovered a gas called "hibernite" and here was just the opportunity to test it out! The company dug a miles-deep shaft and sheltered three hundred employees of the company down there; after setting the alarm clock for twenty centuries they put everybody into a state of suspended animation.
Those centuries are up and Keyston and his blonde wife and her brother put on sealed and armored suits and ascend the shaft to explore. They find that the Earth's surface is a hell of temperatures exceeding 130 degrees Centigrade! The three hundred survivors only have one year's worth of preserved food, and they won't be able to cultivate any crops in these conditions, so it looks like it is all over for the human race.
But wait! Keyston and the two beneficiaries of his nepotism see some kind of weird flying thing--like "Davey Jones' Ambassador," "Nova Solis" is a story of first contact. Our heroes learn that aliens, beings of superheated gas, colonized the Earth during the centuries after the nova, but as the Earth cools they are departing, leaving behind domes of superinsulation. Within these domes the aliens maintained the kinds of conditions they find comfortable, temperatures around 4,000 degrees Centigrade, but the humans can use them to create cool microclimates in which they can live and grow crops. Within these domes the human race can endure!
A competent filler story. In describing Dr. Heth's beard, Gallun mentions Sennacherib, assuming his audience has a level of education or familiarity with the Bible that I for one lack. Did a majority of readers of Astounding in 1935 know who Sennacherib was? The past was a different world!
"Avalanche" by Raymond Z. Gallun
Here's another story that has never been reprinted.
Fai Toran and his "Negro servitor" Nareth are "the greatest wizards of the period," master scientists and the leaders of the resistance to the Rothel. The Rothel are the product of a centuries-long eugenics program, a race of seven-foot-tall warriors who are conquering the world. With bombs they level the last city to hold out against them, with poison gas they exterminate its citizens. Fai Toran and Nareth, the town's only survivors, the only living foes of the Rothel, are temporarily safe within their specially shielded HQ, which is shortly surrounded by the Rothel soldiers, half of whom are women. The Rothel may be committed to conquest and genocide, but you gotta hand it to them, they have a progressive attitude about gender roles.
The scientists have built two spherical flying robots, one animated by a perfect mechanical replica of Fai Toran's brain, the other by a similarly exact mechanical duplicate of Nareth's. Fai Toran delivers a speech to the surrounding Rothel, explaining what these spheres are, and warning the conquerors that they will face a doom in three years' time. The robots fly off into space and then Fai Toran detonates an atomic bomb that kills them and many of the Rothel.
Three years later a horde of millions and millions of self-replicating spherical robots, lead by the Fai Toran and Nreth robots, devours not only the Earth but every significant body in the solar system, converting the raw material of the Sun, and every planet, moon and asteroid, into still more robots. These robots will, it seems, conquer and destroy the galaxy, maybe the universe. In the final scene the Fai Toran robot muses on the meaning of progress and the meaning of life, not sure if his accomplishment is a source of pride or regret.
This is an acceptable sense-of-wonder story that depicts an alien milieu and has as its themes amazing technology and the planet-shattering physical implications and norms-shattering philosophical implications of such technology. The thing people today will find noteworthy about the story, of course, is that Nareth the black scientist is the slave of Fai Toran instead of his equal partner or his trusty lieutenant or something. What role does Nareth play in the story, why is he even included? It sort of makes structural sense for Fai Toran to have somebody to talk to, so that the story's themes can be presented in dialogue form, but why a black guy and why a slave? One possibility is that the inclusion of a black slave is a device to sort of make the story seem like an "Oriental" fable; the same motive is likely behind the fact that the scientists Fai Toran and Nareth are introduced as "wizards." Another possibility is to make the distant future of Fai Toran seem more alien, to indicate that Fai Toran's values are not the values of 1935 Americans, and to foreshadow that, while Fai Toran is an enemy of those destructive conquerors, the Rothel, he is not some freedom fighter deeply opposed to destruction and conquest, but perhaps sees such achievements as a form of progress and is not averse to committing destruction and conquest on a scale even greater than that of the Earth-conquering Rothel.
"The Fourth Dimensional Demonstrator" by Murray Leinster
This story seems to be well-liked, appearing in many Leinster collections and anthologies, in multiple languages. This is where I have the opportunity to go against the grain--I didn't like "The Fourth Dimensional Demonstrator," finding it a tedious waste of time. It is introduced as a satire, but, while I suppose it satirizes government employees (corrupt and incompetent goofballs) and women (greedy and petty bitches) and men (ensorcelled by pretty girls, no matter how greedy and petty they might be) it is more like a slapstick comedy.
No comments:
Post a Comment