Sunday, 7 April 2019

Constructing A Series

A future history series is a literary construct. A few revisions were necessary in the early period of Heinlein's Future History.

Poul Anderson's "The Moonrakers" refers back to his "The Innocent Arrival" and ends by anticipating possible human interstellar travel. Thus, this is a potential series. These two works could be collected in a single volume to be concluded by one other Anderson story that would involve interstellar travel and that would not explicitly contradict any of the events of "The Moonrakers." This should be easy enough to do. A possible candidate might be "Among Thieves" which concludes the Strangers From Earth collection. I will reread that story shortly.

The point is that "The Moonrakers" can be expected to be followed by an interstellar period and "Among Thieves" must have been preceded by an interplanetary period so there is no reason why these stories cannot be fitted together or, at least, they could be collected in one volume, leaving the reader to infer either that this is an arbitrary collection or that the anticipation of interstellar travel at the end of one story is indeed fulfilled in the succeeding story. Readers are in fact at liberty to connect stories in ways that might not have been conceived of by authors, editors or publishers. In fact, the Technic History was brought into existence by its author's whimsical linking of van Rijn's expansive period to Flandry's decadent era.

3 comments:

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Paul!

Aha, and "Among Thieves" also ties in earlier with what was said about hoaxes and frauds. I like that story, I found "Among Thieves" particularly clever.

And when PA linked the stories featuring Dominic Flandry with the era of Nicholas van Rijn, he soon found he had a "Tiger By The Tail"!

Sean

paulshackley2017@gmail.com said...

Sean,
Because these are works of fiction, they can be reconnected in potentially interesting ways.
Paul.

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Paul!

I agree! And the accidental linking up of the Nicholas van Rijn stories with those featuring Dominic Flandry was esp. serendipitous and successful!

Sean