Poul Anderson Appreciation
Saturday, 28 February 2026
Two Time Charts
1930, 1950, 1990, 2000
Equally significant in any future history are:
(i) if it is a single novel (Wells, Stapledon), its date of publication - if it is a series (Heinlein, Anderson etc), the date of publication of its earliest published instalment;
(ii) the earliest date in its fictional chronology.
(i) tells us what was "future" to the author.
(ii) tells us an earliest date at which the fictional timeline has definitely diverged from our "real"/experienced timeline, albeit with the additional complication that sometimes instalment are written later but set earlier. Thus, in Poul Anderson's Psychotechnic History, "Un-Man" ceased to be the earliest instalment when "Marius" was published and, in Anderson's Technic History, "Wings of Victory" ceased to be the earliest instalment when "The Saturn Game" was published.
Olaf Stapledon's Last And First Men (1930) begins by referring to the "European War."
HG Wells' The Shape Of Things To Come (1933), BOOK THE FIRST, TO-DAY AND TO-MORROW: THE AGE OF FRUSTRATION DAWNS, includes a section on "The Great War of 1914-18."
The first instalment in Robert Heinlein's Future History, "Life-Line" (August, 1939) (the month before the outbreak of World War II), is set in 1951.
The first date and event in Poul Anderson's "History of the Future" (1955) is "1950 Korean War." Between 1950 and 1980 comes World War III.
Jerry Pournelle's CoDominium Chronology begins with Neil Armstrong on the Moon in 1969 and the CoDominium itself is created in 1990.
Larry Niven's Known Space future history begins with interplanetary exploration, 1975-2000.
Poul Anderson's Technic History begins by quoting a report dated 2057. This is in "The Saturn Game," published in 1981.
Thus, we read these seven future histories in conjunction with the history of the twentieth century.
"A Much More Complex Thing"
"History of the Future" - Poul Anderson
The editorial note on p. 28 quotes Poul Anderson as saying that the time chart:
"...is only a bare outline of a much more complex thing."
That is good to know. An sf author always has more background material than he can incorporate into his texts. In this case, this is indicated both by the stories "To be written..." and by the lists of "Events," "Sociology" and "Technology," which Anderson, imitating Heinlein, includes in the chart. There is more detail here than in the charts presented in the much later collected Psychotechnic History editions.
This information should provide material for another post or posts later today but right now I need to finish some coffee and get into town to our vibrant Market Square.
In the name of Cosmos, rendezvous.
Friday, 27 February 2026
We Are Living In A Science Fictional Future
Years ago now, I wondered whether Larry Niven had written anything more about the Ringworld. Before leaving work on a Friday afternoon, I Googled "Larry Niven Ringworld" and discovered the then new title, Ringworld's Children. I located a copy of this book in the sf section of the Public Library the following day.
I had thought that we would be having holidays on the Moon by now but we have fulfilled the sf prediction of a worldwide computer linkage and hand-held access to all recorded knowledge.
Is Niven's Known Space bigger than Anderson's Technic History? Not in my opinion.
"History of the Future" - Poul Anderson
The Snows of Ganymede by Poul Anderson is on pp. 10-57.
p. 28 is interrupted by an editorial note entitled Poul Anderson's Future History. This note explains that Robert Heinlein wrote a "future history" and so also does Anderson.
p. 29 is a chart of "...the first 250 years of Anderson's history..."
The chart shows:
Sunday, 22 February 2026
Massacre
The violence had stopped and the crowd in the Stadium was electing a new President. I would have left them to it. That President and any government that he would have been able to lead would have implemented disastrous policies? Maybe. Such accusations are always made during elections. Of course, Pournelle as author loads the dice so that his readers and those characters whom we regard as trustworthy know that this time the accusation is accurate. But it is never as clear cut as that in real life. People claim to know the truth of every contradictory proposition. And does such certainty justify replacing an election with a massacre? Never.
Sure, Falkenberg's men were fired on in the Stadium but this was because they had gone into the Stadium where Falkenberg had then announced the arrest of everyone present. And, after being fired on by some of those present, Falkenberg's men then, on his orders, used grenades and bayonets against a mostly unarmed crowd. Did Pournelle set out to defy and sicken his audience?
The novel is entirely about how human beings, both as individuals and in groups, large or small, interact with each other. This is what novels should be about. But this is an sf novel which should also be about our place in the universe and that does not mean just under-described terrestroid planets used as platforms for a continuation of all-too-familiar Terrestrial violence.
I am not sure how much more of Pournelle I will reread.
As previously stated, I will be away from this computer from early tomorrow until late on Friday. Saturday will be the last day of this month so maybe there will be a few more February posts then.
Future History Background Details
Early in Jerry Pournelle's The Mercenary (London, 1977), there are references to:
Six Future Historians
Colonizable Planets?
Contrast Asimov's and Pournelle's sketchily described extra-solar planets with the details that Anderson provides about Hermes, Avalon, Dennitza, Aeneas etc.
For further discussion of this issue, see also:
Aldiss, Amis, Anderson, Asimov, Lewis
The question currently in my mind is not whether exo-planets have life but whether they have multi-cellular organisms.
See:
The Improbability Of Complex Organisms
The discussion is good even if not all the works discussed are.
Starward.
Saturday, 21 February 2026
Another Comparison
In Pournelle's CoDominium History, the US and the USSR become the CoDominium whereas, in James Blish's Cities In Flight, the USSR incorporates the US. In both these histories, life is bad on Earth but no one knows how to improve it - but some can escape out of the Solar System. The CoDominium is succeeded by Empires whereas, in Cities In Flight, the Bureaucratic State is succeeded by interstellar trade and peripheral empires although the trade is more important - as it is in Anderson's Polesotechnic League and Kith series.
Like sf in general, future histories are a dialogue.
Addendum: The CoDominium suppresses scientific research. In Cities In Flight, security stifles research.