Monday, 10 May 2021

Where Is Home?

"Gypsy."

A few years after the invention of the hyperdrive, the Traveler was carrying colonists to Alpha Centauri when a then unexplained explosion in her engines threw the ship thousands of light-years off course. The ship was repaired and more than twenty years were spent searching for Earth before Harbor was settled. Thorkild Erling, born during the search, was among the minority who voted to continue searching because:

"'...it wasn't Earth but the search itself that I wanted. I liked to find new planets.'" (p. 19)

Might the Nomad life-style be sustained not because it is economically necessary but only because enough people want it? In Britain, a small number of people want to maintain the Traveler life-style and, like Anderson's Nomads, are regarded as disruptive nuisances by the powers that be:

"'Why do you Cordys have it in for the poor Nomads so much?'
".They're the worst disruptive factor our civilization has,' he said grimly. 'They go everywhere and do anything, with no thought of the consequences. To Earth, the Nomads are romantic wanderers; to me, they're a pain.'"
-Poul Anderson, The Peregrine (New York, 1979), CHAPTER IV, p. 30.
 
Meanwhile, before the Traveler becomes the first Nomad ship, the question, "Where is home?" is raised in an acute form. Erling tells one of his sons:
 
"'But we've got a good home now, Einar, here on Harbor.'" ("Gypsy," p. 19)
 
But then he says:
 
"'...after repairing the ship, we spent more than twenty years looking. We never found home.' I added quickly, 'Until we decided to settle on Harbor. That was our home.'" (p. 20)
 
But Erling was born in the Traveler

1 comment:

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Paul!

Given some kind of FTL drive, I can't really see anything like the Nomads of the Psychotechnic series making sense. Even if FTL tech is RELATIVELY cheap, spaceships like that remains very costly, in an absolute sense. The people who build and then buy them still have to recover the costs and expenses for them over the expected useful lifetime of such ships. And I don't see clans of Nomads being able to do that when ordinary merchant ships needing only small crews will plainly out compete them.

I still argue that cultures like the Nomads will be possible only if STL is all that is available. As we see in the Kith stories.

Ad astra! Sean