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Anthony G Williams
Greybeard



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   Posted 2/26/2008 4:00 AM (GMT -5)    Quote This PostAlert An Admin About This Post.

Cordwainer Smith (real name Paul Anthony Myron Linebarger) was an unusual man; an expert on the Far East and on psychological warfare, who served in US Army Intelligence in both World War 2 and the Korean War, he also left behind a series of linked stories set some 15 millennia in the future. These envisage a strange universe in which man has developed in various forms on different planets and has in addition changed animals into "underpeople"; mainly human but retaining some characteristics of their animal origins. The whole is ruled by the Instrumentality of Mankind, a self-perpetuating and self-governing group of Lords and Ladies who have absolute power.

 

Norstrilia is the one full-length novel in the sequence. It follows the adventures of Rod McBan, born heir to a farm on the planet Old North Australia (Norstrilia for short) which maintains the way of life of the long-lost Earth original. Despite the simple life of the people, they are fabulously rich because the planet is the only source of stroon, a life-perpetuating drug extracted from diseased sheep. At the start of the book McBan is in serious trouble as he has a handicap – his telepathic ability is unreliable – and Norstrilia has a rigorous screening policy to keep the population in check by very pleasantly killing off anyone who doesn't measure up. With the aid of an old computer, programmed long ago in the science of economic warfare, he protects himself with a sustained assault on humanity's economic system, which leads to him buying Old Earth, to which he escapes. The rest of the story tells of his adventures there among the Lords of the Instrumentality and the underpeople.

 

If the plot sounds strange, the writing style is even stranger. Cordwainer Smith had a unique, unmistakeable style with which to express his truly bizarre genius. While just about qualifying as SF, it has more of the feel of fantasy. However, it isn't all smoke and mirrors created by an imagination careering away with itself; there is thinking and writing of real substance here, passages to make the reader stop, and think, and re-read them.

 

It is quite possible that some people will really dislike the result; I suspect that you either love or hate his work. Personally I love it, and believe that the author has earned a special niche in science fiction's wall of honour. Everyone with a real interest in the genre should read at least one of these stories, and will then most likely not rest until finishing the lot.

 

(An extract from my SFF blog)

 


Tony Williams
Scales (2007), The Foresight War (2004)
Homepage: http://www.quarry.nildram.co.uk

Blog: http://sciencefictionfantasy.blogspot.com/ >>


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Stuart Clark
Alien Trapper



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   Posted 2/26/2008 8:19 PM (GMT -5)    Quote This PostAlert An Admin About This Post.
Anthony,

You should send this to Pete and have him stick it up as an SFReader review.



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Bill Ward
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   Posted 2/26/2008 9:54 PM (GMT -5)    Quote This PostAlert An Admin About This Post.
I've yet to read any of Smith's full length work, but his shorts, especially the immortal 'Scanners Live in Vain,' are amazing.


billwardwriter.com

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Daniel Ausema
Acolyte

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   Posted 2/29/2008 5:32 PM (GMT -5)    Quote This PostAlert An Admin About This Post.
I've been hearing so much about Smith but hadn't read him yet, so despite my piles of books to read, I grabbed a collection of his from the library yesterday. The people who've been mentioning it seem to vacillate between "Scanners Live in Vain" and "Dead Lady of Clown Town" as his greatest, so I'm beginning with Clown Town...but I wasn't aware of this novel. Sounds interesting.


Twigs and Brambles (my writing blog)

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James Enge
Maker



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   Posted 2/29/2008 6:16 PM (GMT -5)    Quote This PostAlert An Admin About This Post.
Cordwainer Smith's greatest would be hard to pick. "Alpha Ralpha Boulevard"? "Ballad of Lost C'Mell"? "Game of Rat and Dragon"? It's hard to go wrong. But I'd definitely read most of the short stories before Nostrilia, because several figures from the stories make reappearances in the novel (like C'Mell, Lord Jestocost, Mother Hitton's Little Kittens etc).



James Enge
http://jamesenge.com/

"A Covenant with Death" in Flashing Swords
"The Lawless Hours" in Black Gate 11
"The Gordian Stone" in Every Day Fiction
"The Red Worm's Way" forthcoming in Return of the Sword
"Payment in Full" forthcoming in Black Gate

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rimworlder
Stablehand



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   Posted 3/29/2008 11:50 AM (GMT -5)    Quote This PostAlert An Admin About This Post.
There's a collection of his stuff available from NESFA - get that and get Norstrilia and you've got it all.
 
Truly one of the greats.  I'm still waiting for "cat-derived underpeople" to show up.
 
Its pretty easy to read everything by Smith, the canon is unfortunately fairly limited.  On the other hand, you can do it in a weekend and, therefore, there is no good reason to remain ignorant of his works.
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