Monday, 19 April 2021

Land And Sea

One of the greatest environmental contrasts in our experience is between sea and land: two realms each lethal to most of the organisms living in the other; perhaps our closest approach to visiting another planet without leaving Earth. Compare diving suits and submarines with spacesuits and spaceships.

In the first Biblical creation myth, water covers the earth whereas, in the second, the earth is dry, without rain. In some sf works, e.g., Poul Anderson's "Sister Planet," Venus is oceanic whereas, in others, e.g., Anderson's "The Big Rain," it is a hot desert.

Dominic Flandry travels from the cold, dry planet Altai to torrential rain and Swamp Town on Unan Besar and later to Nyanza, almost completely covered with water. Another oceanic planet in the Technic History, although not visited by Flandry, is Kraken.

Of course, there are also many other planets, like Jupiter and Mirkheim, that are simply not comparable to anything on Earth. Over many works, Poul Anderson shows us the universe.

1 comment:

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Paul!

I remember "The Big Rain" and "Sister Planet." The latter story was so sad and tragic I could not bear to reread it for years. "Sister Planet" was written at the very edge of the time when people had to give up the last lingering hopes Venus was a watery, terrestroid word.

And "The Big Rain" will, for me, always be associated with Jerry Pournelle's essay of the same name (taken from Anderson's story). In that paper Pournelle discussed how he believed Venus could be terraformed, using he science and technology available in 1979. I think that paper could still be used as a basis for seriously attempting the terraforming of Venus.

The Technic stories also mentions he colonizing and partial terraforming of the Moon, as we see in SATAN'S WORLD. Plus, Anderson's non-Technic "Strange Bedfellows" shows us his speculations about a far more complete terraforming of Luna. Two persons, solidly educated in the sciences, to whom I quoted relevant parts from the story, thought it was actually DOABLE.

I'm annoyed, yet again, at how Ace Books inflicted on one of Anderson's stories a thoroughly unsatisfactory title! The title he preferred, THE PLAGUE OF MASTERS,* is so much better than EARTHMAN, GO HOME. At least the cover illustration accurately reflects how Flandry escaped from Biocontrol Central.

Ad astra! Sean


*Alternately, A PLAGUE OF MASTERS.