military maneuvers;
ESP;
post-nuclear reconstruction;
interstellar travel;
covert alien manipulation of human society;
a practical science of society, in this case applied by the aliens.
So does it all hang together?
So far, twenty seven pages into the narrative, we have had:
autumn, the viewpoint of Colonel Mackenzie;
an italicized dialogue between two of the aliens;
spring, the viewpoint of Mackenzie's son-in-law, on the opposite side in a civil war, in conversation with an as yet unexplained Esper (they have communities and teachings, not just psychic powers);
winter, back to Mackenzie although (this is not the author's fault) without a warning gap in the text;
information about the complicated social set-up in North America.
Thus, a characteristically substantial Andersonian text, too early to say whether it is all coming together or pulling in opposite directions.
Hi, Paul!
ReplyDeleteI would add to your list of features in "No Truce With Kings" Anderson's preference for decentralized government. Which in this story took the form of a landed aristocracy which imposed severe limits on the powers of the state. With, by the time of this story, the rise of a party opposing not only feudalism but also advocating the conquest and unification of North America.
Sean
Sean,
ReplyDeleteYes, and they talk about RE-unification of the continent.
Paul.
Hi, Paul!
DeleteTrue! I could be literal minded and say the anti feudalists wanted to include in their empire what used to be Canada and Mexico as well as the old USA.
Sean