[September 30, 1966] Return to Base (October 1966 Analog)


by Gideon Marcus

The Comfort of Old Friends

One of the brilliant things about the new show, Star Trek, is that it combines the storytelling breadth of a science fiction anthology show (a la The Twilight Zone and The Outer Limits with the anchoring of a returning ensemble cast.  This has never really been done before (at least in the United States — the UK has Doctor Who and the various marionette shows).  In addition to the exciting new situations that arise every week, we can also enjoy watching our favorite characters grow over time.

Many science fiction magazines are like the older anthology shows, offering a brand new cast of characters and new ideas with every montly set of stories.  Others, like Analog, and in particular this month's issue, are like Star Trek, bringing us back to familiar territory for further explorations of a known universe.

I think both are valid formats, particularly if the established properties are successful.  Analog did a pretty good job this month.  Let's dive in…

The Issue at Hand


by John Schoenherr

Strangers to Paradise, by Christopher Anvil

Chris Anvil is an author who has occasionally shown flashes of promise — but always in other magazines.  In Analog, he has dug himself a rut with an anvil-weighted plow and happily buried himself in it.


by John Schoenherr

Strangers is yet another story that takes place in his galactic trade universe.  This one involves a ship whose gravitor has broken down, and whose crew has made planetfall to seek repairs.  Unfortunately, though the Michelin guide said there was a Class II repair facility on the colony world, it was never actually built.  Instead, the colonists proved so unruly that the computer running the outpost established draconian control.  The technicians who could override the machine exiled themselves rather than deal with either the colonists or the computer!

To fix their ship, the traders need help from the city dwellers.  But to get the help, they need the technicians back.  How do they repair the impasse?

I thought this might be setting up a Deathworld scenario, where the immigrants are the key to restoring harmony.  But this is Chris Anvil in Campbell's mag.  Instead, they accidentally develop a psychic projector, able to instill any emotion into any human at any range.  Over the course of many pages, they manipulate the entire planetary population in a haphazard fashion, ultimately getting what they need.  In the end, they consider dismantling the device as an unethical abomination…but decide to keep it.  Just too useful to destroy, you know.

I found this story quite distasteful.  Less glib than Anvil's other tales, but callous in a way that suggests support rather than condemnation for the actions of the shipwrecked crew.

Two stars.

The Sons of Prometheus, by Alexei Panshin


by Leo Summers

Sons sees the return of a fine new author who you've not only seen before, but who has even written a guest article for the Journey!  (the line between fan and pro in the 'zines is a blurry one.) This new tale appears to be set in the compelling timeline set up in What Size are Giants? and the amazing Down to the Worlds of Men.

The premise: on the brink of atomic self-destruction, Earth sends out more than a hundred colonies.  Fifteen years later, Earth is a radiated wasteland.  The only humans left live either in struggling settlements or rather comfortably as crew and passengers on starships.  This sets up a haves and have-nots situation.  The planeteers are primitive, suspicious folks.  The ship dwellers have limited resources to assist.

This particular tale involves a fellow named Tansman, who embeds himself on a plague-infested colony to conduct anthropological research.  His ultimate dilemma: does he offer what limited medicine he can to save a few, revealing himself, putting his mission and possibly his person in danger?  Or does he watch as the colonists die in droves?

It's a vivid story, though I feel it doesn't do quite enough with the setup.  It also stacks the deck a bit toward a certain outcome.  I also could have done without the extremely graphic, drawn out scene in which Tansman puts a suffering colonist out of his misery (warning: it's in the last third of the tale).

So, three stars, but I wouldn't mind seeing more in this setting.

Challenge: The Insurgent vs. the Counterinsurgent (Part 2), by Joe Poyer

With the non-fiction column, we return to last month's topic — namely counterinsurgency.  Poyer notes the great strides that have been made in tracking insurgents, using infrared, electronic bugs, even scent.  He correlates this increase in counterinsurgency effectiveness with the decline in successful insurgencies since 1956.  He makes the hopeful prediction that the golden age of guerrilas may be at an end.

The problem, of course, is that better counterinsurgents only addresses one prong of the problem.  As even Poyer notes, until the populace's needs are addressed, insurgency will thrive.  Moreover, I was reading in the latest diplomatic journals that few expect the United States to be successful in Vietnam, our latest counterinsurgent operation.  That is because the issue is an Asian problem, and the US has limited ability to project force and influence in another continent.  Vietnam is not a colony.  It is a sovereign country riven with civil war.  One way or another, they're going to have to solve their own issues.  Our presence is an ephemeral condition, and it is arguable that it is making the situation any better.

Three stars for an interesting read and lots of pretty charts, but I doubt the author's conclusion.

Romp, by Mack Reynolds


by Leo Summers

Back to the world of Joe Mauser, where the Earth of the 1980s is divided into four camps: the free countries of Latin America and Africa, Common Europe, the somewhat democratic SovWorld, and the "People's Capitalism" of the West.  The United States has calcified into economic castes, and upward mobility is virtually impossible.

Enter Rosy Porras, born into the long-dead job of pretzel twister.  He has figured out how to live a life of crime in an ostensibly crimeless world.  When his latest "romp" goes sour, he has to make a run for the border.  Can he make it in time?

I find the Mauser setting fascinating if based on increasingly unlikely premises.  This story is a bit too pat, but it's a competent thriller.  Three stars.

Too Many Magicians (Part 3 of 4), by Randall Garrett


by John Schoenherr

And now we return to the world of Lord Darcy, a timeline in which magic has displaced science, the Angevin Empire is squared against the Polish Confederation, and a Holmes analog is tasked with solving two murders.  We learned in the last installment that both were secret agents in the employ of HRM, and that their deaths are connected with a super secret magical confusion ray.

What we don't know is how one succumbed in a locked room, how Demoiselle Tia Einzig (accused of dealing in the Black Arts) of a southern slavic state was involved, or how certain was the loyalty of the murdered agents.

This continues to be a fun novel, and the setting is positively lavish.  If there's just one thing that's mildly unconvincing, it's the development of modern-style military ranks, as well as English colloquialisms, in a timeline that diverged from ours nearly a millennium ago.

Also, it can be a little tough to keep track of an intricate mystery spread out over four months of reading.  Nevertheless, four stars for another fine installment, and high hopes for a satistfying ending in October!

Reading the Results

It's a shame about the Anvil, as it drags the issue down to a straight 3 stars.  The issue feels better than that because it improves as it goes along.  Ah well. 3 still puts Analog alongside Alien Worlds (3.0) and just below Galaxy (rounds to 3 but was slightly above).

This makes Campbell's mag better than New Writings #9 (2.9),
Amazing (2.5), and IF (2.5) this month, and not as good as Impulse (3.2), New Worlds (3.3), or Fantasy and Science Fiction (3.3).

Worthy stuff (four and five stars) could easily fill two magazine's worth, but women wrote just 7.5% of the new fiction this month.  So much for the renaissance I predicted last month.

That wraps up the October 1966 magazines.  In two days, the November crop comes in!





6 thoughts on “[September 30, 1966] Return to Base (October 1966 Analog)”

  1. Spot on on the Anvil. I think the thing that bothered me the most was the message that people are poor because they're lazy and vicious and delight in breaking things. Great way to sell a story to Campbell, though.

    As near as I can tell, the Panshin story is set in exactly the same universe as his other stories. It might be at a slightly different time, but it felt to me like a logical extension of the ideas in "What Size Are Giants?" It was still a good story.

    I was less enamored with the counterinsurgency article. There were lots of pictures, but I'm not sure they were really in service of anything. I also disagree with his conclusions, but I found getting there a chore.

    The Reynolds was all right. Not his best work, nor his best in this setting (which includes a lot more than Joe Mauser). Indeed, it was a little forgettable, but three stars is fair.

    Lord Darcy continues to delight. Garrett has really found something in this niche and is clearly demonstrating how he has matured as an author. In spite of having been edited by Campbell! And I look forward to reading this all in one go once the final installment appears.

    Is it just me, or does it seem like Analog actually has less in it since they added more pages?  Four stories and one article isn't much. Even the smaller mags with a lower page count offer more variety.

    1. Thanks, D.  I've made corrections with the new edition.  Looking back on the other two stories Panshin has written, it's clearly the same universe, which even further reinforces my theme for this month.  Whew!

      As for less is more, Analog has always been like this — a serial and a few stories.

    2. "I think the thing that bothered me the most was the message that people are poor because they’re lazy and vicious and delight in breaking things. Great way to sell a story to Campbell, though."

      If you want an even stronger dose of this kind of sentiment, take a look at Anvil's "The Sieve" in the April 1959 ASTOUNDING.  Though I can't imagine why anyone would want a stronger dose other than to map the outer limits of deplorability in Campbell's magazine.

  2. The US Air Force says that those defoliating chemicals are harmless to human and animal life. Well, I hope they're right. After all, a lot of supposedly harmless pesticides, medications and other chemicals have been proven very harmful indeed.

  3. Gah!

    The two main stories in this issue — the Anvil and the Garrett — both depend on wish-fulfillment-type magic not just being a real thing but the central plot point, which makes for claims for ANALOG being the magazine of the Hard SF-reading competent engineer type a seriously bad joke. Meanwhile, the fact article promotes the mass-spraying of carcinogenic chemical agents over a country filled with impoverished Asian peasants as a way of spreading American-style Freedom ©.

    Campbell has become a sad, pathetic, and truly stupid old man.

    1. Lord knows I'm no Campbell booster, and the Anvil was an example of the worse end of Analog, I wouldn't call the magic of Garrett's universe in the wish-fulfillment realm. What I like about it is that it obeys consistent laws within the setting.

      Now, I recognize that it's right in alignment with Campbell's endorsed assertion that magic is just another kind of science (c'mon, really?) but I also think Garrett's Darcy would be right at home (and would grace) any of the other prestigious SF mags.

      We're not really arguing, since I don't disagree with your point. If there is a home for hard SF right now, it's probably the Pohl mags.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *