Poul Anderson Appreciation
Sunday, 15 February 2026
Two Future Histories
A Future History Outline
conflicting sovereign nations were a disruptive factor on Earth;
the bulk of the population became technologically redundant;
when the hyperdrive was discovered, there was mass emigration from Earth;
the Traveller became lost in space, searched unsuccessfully for Earth, then settled on Harbor but some of its crew resumed their endless voyage and became the first Nomads;
the Coordination Service served the Stellar Union;
Coordinator Trevelyan Micah intervened in the Good Luck case, then later worked with and joined the Nomads;
the Nomads carried knowledge through the Third Dark Ages and influenced later interstellar civilizations whether or not those civilizations include the Galactic Civilization of "The Chapter Ends."
Anderson later added "The Pirate" because that story fitted into that background but it was the story that counted. "The Pirate" refers to the planet Nerthus which is a common setting and reference point in the series although the stories referring to it are quite dissimilar.
Saturday, 14 February 2026
The Case
This story is not only about Trevelyan Micah and the other individuals listed on its opening page. (See the above link.) It is also:
"The case of the slain world named Good Luck..." (p. 211)
- which we are told:
"...is typical." (ibid.)
So a world is slain? Someone commits global genocide? And this is typical? Well, no. A planetary population has died from natural causes, has been killed by the radiation from a supernova. (In the Technic History, another planetary population is saved from such a fate.) But the dead must be respected. The physical remains of their civilization must be studied. So the depopulated planet must not be immediately exploited for commercial gain. That is what the young generations so often do not understand.
Guarding The Pact
Something similar although on a much smaller scale happened in Anderson's Psychotechnic History. "Gypsy" and The Peregrine are two instalments about the Nomads. The latter also features Trevelyan Micah of the Stellar Union Coordination Service. "The Pirate" is a later written story about Trevelyan set between "Gypsy" and The Peregrine but it also contains an extra layer of commentary contributed by its first person narrator who remains off-stage and speaks from one generation later than the events involving:
Poul Anderson
In the post before that, we compared Anderson to Larry Niven and James Blish regarding faster than light interstellar travel.
We can also make the following comparisons -
Mary Shelley: the creation of life.
HG Wells: time travel to the future; Martian invasion; future society.
Olaf Stapledon: cosmic history.
Robert Heinlein: future history; immortality; generation ships; circular causality; magic as a technology.
Isaac Asimov: robots; a science of society; detective fiction.
James Blish: historical fiction; fantasy.
Hal Clement: extraterrestrial organisms.
Neil Gaiman: an inter-universal inn.
Nothing that we have not said before. Poul Anderson deserves to be promoted and not just by me. He was a visionary of the second half of the twentieth century and the beginning of the twenty-first. His values were freedom and diversity. He looked backward, forward and outward - to history, the future and the universe. We move forward with Andersonian vision, to learn about exo-planets and receding galaxies.
A Debate In Three Stages
Example:
Mark Twain: A Connecticut Yankee..., Premise:
A twentieth century man is mysteriously transported to an earlier period.
Twenty Years In The Traveler
Even faster than light spaceships take time to move between stars so sf writers need to be clear about how much time and whether there are different rates of FTL. In Known Space, Larry Niven has Quantum I and Quantum II hyperdrives. The latter takes Beowulf Shaeffer to somewhere near the galactic core and back. In Cities In Flight, James Blish simply forgot what the Okies' top speed was meant to be and described a fleet of cities moving at impossible speeds across the galaxy. Blish acknowledged that this was an error. Then a dirigible planet went all the way to the Metagalactic Centre. Greater mass is meant to enable greater speed but the Metagalactic Centre, if such exists, is a long way.
In just two decades plus, Poul Anderson's Traveler visits:
Friday, 13 February 2026
Psychology And Other Races
This is a psychological story. It is not explicitly stated but should be obvious to any attentive reader that Thorkild Erling's wife, Alanna, is happy on Harbor and does not want to resume spacefaring but nevertheless proposes this and pretends to want it because she knows that it is what her husband and several others want. I meant to quote some passages that clearly demonstrate that this is the case but it would have meant copying out large chunks of the text. Just read or reread the story!
The Traveler had been launched toward Alpha Centauri soon after the invention of the hyperdrive but the ship went off course and became lost in interstellar vastness. How does Thorkild know that there are other "...races..." (p. 32) in the Galaxy?
Three ways:
the fifth planet in the same system as Harbor is inhabited;
in Spacecamp Cove on Harbor, there are traces of non-human visitors who had hyperdrive;
the Traveler visited many inhabited planets during its twenty plus years searching for Earth.
These proto-Nomads know what kind of Galaxy they inhabit.
Relevance Or Irrelevance Of Psychotechnics
Although there are many intelligent species in the Galaxy, none is more intelligent than mankind because there is a natural limit to the complexity of nervous systems and particularly of brains. An overcomplex brain becomes unable to control itself. The same limit applies to computers and to systems of computers. Terminologically, Coordinator Trevelyan Micah refers not to "computers" but to "computing machines" (or just "machines") and "integrators." He tells Diane: