tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3538502828554372917.post589094983034123495..comments2024-03-28T07:57:49.338+00:00Comments on Poul Anderson Appreciation: ...And LewisKetlanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08588156788583883454noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3538502828554372917.post-70152080365166259942016-10-11T16:37:19.336+01:002016-10-11T16:37:19.336+01:00Kaor, Paul!
I consider Anderson's "Siste...Kaor, Paul!<br /><br />I consider Anderson's "Sister Planet" to be one of the most powerful stories ever written by him (despite PA using the now discredited view of Venus as being oceanic). The story packed such intensity of emotion and thought alike into it that I could not bring myself to reread it again for years.<br /><br />I recall how the scientific research station on Venus was explicitly compared to a monastery. And the scientists as the Brothers of Venus Station.<br /><br />A special intensity of feeling came from how the narrator discovered that the dolphin like animals of Venus were not animals but intelligent beings and the danger they faced from Venus being made more like Earth. Extra intensity came from the other scientist who had worked out a practical means of making Venus more like Earth voluntarily destroying the records of his plans on being convinced the dolphin like animals were intelligent. That was not enough for the narrator, who destroyed both a city of the Venusians and his fellow scientists, so that Venus would be definitely saved.<br /><br />I've read quite a few of C.S. Lewis' works, but I somehow missed his "The Dark Tower" (was the title inspired by his friend JRR Tolkien's use of "the Dark Tower" for the stronghold of Sauron in THE LORD OF THE RINGS?). I would be interested in reading the story to find out more about the argument against time travel that you thought unconvincing.<br /><br />Also, the idea that Lewis' "The Dark Tower" "ties in" with various stories by Poul Anderson, Harry Turtledove, and S.M. Stirling is very interesting. Lewis died in 1963, some 16 years after Anderson started regularly writing, so I hope an SF fan like Lewis read a fair number of PA's earlier works. If so, what did Lewis think of them?<br /><br />I see what you mean by Fr. Axor pursuing a "Lewisian" project, because Lewis did speculate about whether Our Lord became incarnate on other worlds. Lewis also wondered if UnFallen intelligent races would be endangered by a Fallen mankind--with them either corrupted by mankind of fending us off.<br /><br />An important point to keep in mind about Anderson's HARVEST OF STARS books and GENESIS was not only the threat posed by AIs to mankind but also the ways to either defy or find ways around that threat.<br /><br />Sean<br /><br />Sean M. Brookshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13973738112230622557noreply@blogger.com