by Gideon Marcus
Options in Space
Just two months ago, men set foot on the Moon. It was the culmination of 12 years of American progress in space, nine years of manned flights.
And yet, it is also just the beginning. This nation has built the infrastructure to begin a new era of space exploration and exploitation. As of this moment, the National Air and Space Administration (NASA) has no formal plans for human spaceflight beyond the flight of Apollo 20 sometime in 1973, and a somewhat inchoate, 3-man space station project—this latter to utilize a converted Saturn rocket upper stage.
In order to turn further dreams into reality, President Nixon has created a "Space Task Group", headed by Vice President Agnew and comprising luminaries like NASA chief Thomas Paine and Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird, to map what the next decade in outer space will look like. They submitted their report, "The post-Apollo space program: directions for the future", on September 15.
The 29-page report outlines an ambitious set of proposals, even the most modest of which still sets lofty goals. In short, the options are:
- Land a man on Mars by 1980; orbit a multi-person lunar station; orbit a 50-person space station in Earth orbit; develop a reusable spacecraft to shuttle personnel and supplies to and from these stations;
- The same, but with a deferred Mars landing; and,
- The same, but with no Mars landing.
With regard to the station, it appears that it won't be a all-of-a-piece spinning wheel as seen in 2001 or the old Collier's articles from the early '50s. Instead, NASA will mass-produce station modules, which can be put together like Tinkertoys.
There are three options presented for military spaceflight, as well, but these are not fleshed out proposals, merely budget amount suggestions based on how hot or cool international tensions are over the next decade.
Only time will tell which of these options, or which portions of these plans will be implemented and when. It is one thing for the Vice President to boost space (a consistent tradition since 1961!) It remains to be seen if Dick Nixon will commit this nation to a grand, interplanetary goal, in the vein of his erstwhile opponent, Jack Kennedy.
Options in Print
As the STG offers up a number of options for the future of human spaceflight, so Analog editor Campbell offers up a number of possible futures set further beyond in the latest issue of Analog.
by Kelly Freas
The Yngling (Part 1 of 2), by John Dalmas
It is the 29th Century, and the world is recovering from a disaster that killed off the overwhelming majority of its population. Earth has reverted to the Dark Ages, at least in Europe. In fact, the setting of the book strongly resembles the 9th Century, with food pressure impelling the Scandinavians to raid and settle the warmer climes to the south. Meanwhile, an Oriental despot is plotting the takeover of Europe from his advance base in the Balkans.
The main difference between the future and our past is the existence of psi powers, specifically telepathy and precognition. Though not widespread, it is common enough that possessors of these powers are recognized and valued.
by Kelly Freas
One such possessor is Nils Järnhand, a Svear from the frigid land of Svea. Banished from his lands for an accidental manslaughter, he travels to many places, becoming perhaps Europe's greatest warrior. He also develops his psi powers, using his telepathy to aid his interactions and his premonitory power to stay one step ahead of assailants. His ultimate goal seems to be a date with destiny with the evil Kazi, the would-be dictator of all lands west of the Urals.
John Dalmas seems to be a new author, and his Nils is a character in the Conan mold—a superman who can be placed in a number of adventure scenarios. His defining traits, asside from his martial puissance, is his adaptibility and his complete lack of an internal monologue. He simply senses, processes, and acts, with no consideration or doubts. This should make for a dull character, but somehow, Dalmas keeps things going, lively and interesting. There are a couple of rough transitions where it seems thousands of words got pared for length considerations; perhaps they will be restored in the book version.
Anyway, I give it three stars for now, but it's possible the second part will raise my estimation. I'm certainly enjoying it, at least.
A Relic of War, by Keith Laumer
by Vincent Difate
Three generations after the cataclysmic human/alien war, a battered sentient tank has become adopted by the citizens of a small town. When a government man comes along intending to euthanize the old machine, the mayor is the first to defend their mascot. But when Bobby the tank suddenly charges off, weapons armed, there is cause for all to reconsider their positions.
This is the Simakiest of Laumer's Bolo stories, pastoral and sensitive. What I find so interesting about these tales is that so many take place long after the conflict for which the mammoth tanks were built. Others would prefer to tell war stories, but not Laumer.
Four stories.
The Big Rock, by Robert Chilson
by Kelly Freas
A future-day Australia is set up on an airless world, importing criminals from six worlds whose citizens would rather offload the malcontents than pay the taxes for things like prisons and rehabilitation. It's all part of a grand experiment: can a den of thieves become a self-sustaining population?
Chilson tells the story from the point of view of the intellectual (and much bullied) prisoner, Hargraves. His tale is punctuated by scenes of a conversation in which one government official explains the experiment to another politician.
The setup is interesting—sort of a precursor to The Moon is a Harsh Mistress—and Chilson tells an interesting story…but the piece just ends. Even the dialogue between the two bureaucrats doesn't tie things up. We never find out how the experiment ends, or even if it can end successfully.
Three stars.
Proton to Proton, by R. Dean Wilson
Wilson proposes a mechanism for the abstruse but universal conversion of sunlight into the molecule ATP, which is fundamental to most biological processes.
I must confess, it's all beyond me, but then I've never taken a chemistry course in my life.
Three stars.
Test Ultimate, by Christopher Anvil
by Vincent Difate
Here is another tale of Anvil's "Space Patrol". This time, a recruit is facing the final challenge before induction, one of courage. He has to wade through a pool of giant piranha and then climb a 25-foot sheer facing. Accompanying him on is a chipper guide, who exhorts him cheerfully to plunge on through, heedless of the danger.
Naturally, this is all simulated, so if said recruit gets eaten on the way, he'll only feel his death, not experience it. Nevertheless, our hero smells something fishy (beyond what's in the pond), and responds accordingly.
It's cute, perhaps a trifle long. Three stars.
Jump, by William Earls
by Vincent Difate
99 out of 100 Spacers have no trouble with Jump, that moment of transition between normal and hyper-space. But Lacey is in that unlucky 1%, and despite a luminary career in the scout services, he finds he just can't take the experience anymore. So he musters out at Titan base and tries to make a go of it as a civilian. In the end, he determines space is in his blood, fear of the void between voids be damned.
There's not a lot to this tale, which could just as easily have been written about the Navy, with seasickness or fear of typhoons standing in for Jump aversion. Plus, I was a bit turned off when the author had Titan be a Moon of Jupiter. Titan orbits around Saturn!
Two stars.
Compassion, by J. R. Pierce
by Leo Summers
In the near future, New York becomes a protected enclave for Black Americans, not unlike the reservations for Native Americans (as Indians are beginning to be called). The parallel is not specious—it is made in the story!
The heroine of the tale is Sari, a 20-year old tourguide from the Big Apple, whisked away by a handsome, middle-aged man as dark as she is, but representative of the mainstream world, progressing right along. He introduces her to the modern era, gauges her considerable talents, and then sends her back to New York to be a leader of her society, someone who can bring promising souls into the wider world.
I'm not sure I like or buy the premise, but it is a nicely written piece, with enough consideration given both to the world (like something Mack Reynolds might spin) and to Sari's emotions and inner thoughts, to feel fleshed out. Not much happens, but I enjoyed the story.
Three stars.
Doing the math
All in all, not a bad issue, really. Unlike a lot of the rest of the slog this month, I never found myself dreading the next page of Analog. Of course, a three-star average is hardly anything to brag about, but it does beat all the other collections of short SF this month, with the exception of Galaxy (3.2).
Lesser entries for October include:
- IF (2.8)
- Fantastic (2.7)
- Orbit (2.6)
- Fantasy and Science Fiction (2.4)
You could take all the four and five star stuff and squeeze it into one overlarge magazine, and though women contributed 6.5% of the newly published material this month, you have to regard Orbit as a magazine, even though it's printed in paperback format.
We're definitely at a nadir for short SF these days. Let's hope this is the bottom rather than a height compared to what's coming!
I really enjoyed "The Yngling," and I'm interested in seeing where Dalmas is going with it. Given the subject matter, it's impossible not to compare it with Poul Anderson. While it's not as good as Anderson at his best, it's also better than Anderson at his worst.
"Relic" is the sort of thing Laumer does so well, but so rarely. I like him best when gets into this mode. So much better than his two-fisted action or his humor.
So many little things about "The Big Rock" bothered me, that I never got around to considering the story as a story. Chilson's still fairly new, so he might turn out to be a decent writer. If he gets away from Campbell at least.
I understood enough of the science article to grasp the premise (very roughly), but not well enough to judge it. It seems more plausible than a lot of Analog science articles, and probably warrants actual testing.
The Anvil was an Anvil story. At least it was better than the first couple of stories in this series where the protagonist was manipulating the emotions of an entire planet. If he's not going to drop the series, at least we're done with the unorthodox training methods. (Sort of, there's a story in the new IF that comes right before this one.)
"Jump" was on the trite side. It was better than a similar story from a month or so ago where the crewman jumped ship on an alien world buck naked. I think that was in Analog, too. And you'd think Campbell would have spotted that Titan error.
"Compassion" was fine. I'm not too sure about the premise either. But it is the second story this month that has had Black reservations. "Tomorrow Cum Laude" in Galaxy had something awfully similar; the system here could easily arise from the situation there. Have we not figured out by now that "separate but equal" doesn't work?
If Yngling was by Anderson, I'd expect more of his archaic verbal tics, like "must needs".
Sounds like, as usual, we're in agreement. I'm reserving judgment on Yngling because I don't know where it's going. And I agree that this kind of Laumer is best Laumer.