Also, in other reading, Somerset Maugham's World War I secret agent, Avenden, has just been sent to:
Poul Anderson Appreciation
Monday, 9 March 2026
Where To Next?
Sunday, 8 March 2026
Abrams And Avenden
Future Historical Writing
In Poul Anderson's World Without Stars, Hugh Valland is three thousand years old, thanks to the antithanatic. He is possibly the oldest human being in his timeline like Lazarus Long in Heinlein's Future History and Hanno in Anderson's own The Boat Of A Million Years. Valland was young when the antithanatic was developed. The dates on his girlfriend's grave are 2018-2037. Thus, this novel represents a history stretching from our lifetimes to three millennia hence. It is a piece of future history although not a volume of a future history series.
Anderson's After Doomsday begins in a near future soon after the advent of extra-solar aliens and recounts history-changing events on an interstellar scale, including a space battle celebrated in a ballad that will continue to be sung in bars and inns on different planets into an indefinite future. This is clearly future historical material although the novel does not cover a long enough period for this text itself to be classified as a "future history."
The Campbell Future Historians
Past And Future History
The opening story of Robert Heinlein's Future History is set in 1951. Volume I of the Future History covers the second half of the twentieth century. The stories in Volume II are set around 2000. The chronologically earliest dialogue in Volume IV is in a flashback to 1874 (which was past when Heinlein wrote it).
Certain works by Poul Anderson span past, present and future:
An End
We needed to be told that:
the Stellar Union did not last;
there was a Third Dark Ages;
the Nomads, with some recruited Coordinators, preserved knowledge into a further future;
there was an eventual Galactic civilization where psychotechnics was at last developed fully.
Some of this knowledge comes to us from an interstitial passage by Sandra Miesel rather than from a text by Anderson but nevertheless it completes the picture.
Miesel makes two points:
Saturday, 7 March 2026
Wind On Loaluani
The Peregrine, CHAPTER XIX.
We notice the wind during a pause in the dialogue. I want to post about yet another reference to the wind in an Anderson work but first search the blog and find that I have twice before (here and here) posted about this very passage better than I would have been able to do this evening after cheese and onion pie followed by cheescake with ice cream at the Water Witch (also here) on Lancaster Canal.
In any screen adaptations of Poul Anderson's works, it will be essential that all of these winds are heard on the soundtrack and also that they last long enough to have at least a subliminal effect on their auditors. This conversational silence filled by wind, surf and bird cries captures the conflict between the Stellar Union and Alori ways of life, whether or not we consciously realize this while reading or even hearing.
We approach the end of The Peregrine and of Anderson's Psychotechnic History.
Writing About Now
Contemporary novels can bring us almost to the present and can contain content that was sf: satellites, computers etc. We cannot read a novel about what is happening right now today although I once bought a novel and a newspaper in the same railway station newsagent and found that the former was ahead of the latter.
See:
We are pleased to accompany Anderson and others into the futures.
Interstellar Threats
The Peregrine, CHAPTER XVI.
The Alori are a strange threat. If they had their way, there would be no interstellar travel and they themselves would never have left their home planet although they have taken the opportunity to colonize a few more. They travel through space only to prevent others from doing so, surely a forlorn hope in view of the amount of inter-system travel already going on and by a number of species?
What is a credible threat? We would be subordinated by the Merseians or enslaved and eaten by the kzinti. But these scenarios presuppose both (i) many intelligent species and (ii) faster than light travel. There are reasons to think that (i) is unlikely while (ii), of course, is (currently) theoretically impossible.
We seem to be threatened only by ourselves although, of course, anything can change. A spaceship might arrive tomorrow - although I think that, when the unexpected does happen, it is also the previously unimagined.
The Alori
The Peregrine, CHAPTER XVI.
The Alori are strange interstellar imperialists. They do not build spaceships but steal those that land on their planets, then buy more on Erulan. Having acquired spaceships, they colonize about fifty planets, importing their own life forms and exterminating natives. Some of the crews of stolen ships join them, accepting their life style.
Ilaloa directs the Peregrine on a course that will take it into the trepidation vortex. Destruction of a ship seen as a threat would have been a welcome outcome to the Alori but there is a Coordinator in the ship who knows how to survive the vortex.
The Alori need to learn how to coexist which I would have thought that their life style prepared them to do.