Tuesday 13 August 2019

San Francisco And Falkayn Bays


"Clouds were massing in the west, but it was still a clear night for early November. From the window where he stood, Michael Stefanik looked down, across the glitter of San Francisco and the darkness of the Bay, to those hills which enclosed the farther shore. They were strewn with firefly light, their own cities, against a windy sky."
-Poul Anderson, Perish By The Sword (New York, 1959), 1, p. 1.

These are the opening sentences of the novel.

For previous blog references to San Francisco Bay, see here.

"Nob Hill was more than a good address; it was seeing the great two-footed stride of the Bay Bridge, or the lovely curve men had thrown across the Golden Gate, or ships standing in past blue islands, whenever you wished."
-ibid.

For previous blog references to the Golden Gate, see here.

For comparable descriptions of Falkayn Bay on the colonized planet, Avalon, see here. (Scroll down.)

There is no direct connection between a contemporary detective novel and a futuristic sf novel. However, a real Bay on Earth and a fictional Bay on a terrestroid planet are comparable. Further, fictionally speaking, Avalon will be colonized in our future just as, fictitiously again, the events of the detective novel occurred in the 1950s. Thus, these two narratives could fit into a single timeline. In any case, we appreciate the descriptive passages set in such diverse periods and worlds of Poul Anderson's imagination.

13 comments:

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Paul!

I've also thought of the view to be seen from Old Nick's "modest" rooftop penthouse in Chicago Integrate, as described in "The Master Key." And Chicago is a port city as well.

Sean

S.M. Stirling said...

I'm about to start a chapter (of a book tentatively entitled DAGGERS IN THE DARK) and it's set in San Francisco (and involves a murder done with a dagger, in the dark).

I had resolved to reread Poul's mysteries for that.

S.M. Stirling said...

The rest of the book is set in Shanghai and surroundings in the early 1920's. Great Ghu, talk about a wide-open town!

paulshackley2017@gmail.com said...

You read it first here, folks! (At least I assume you did.)

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Mr. Stirling and Paul!

Mr. Stirling: many thanks for informing us of you are now writing and tentatively called DAGGERS IN THE DARK. Something both Paul, myself, and others will be eagerly waiting for!

At one time I went thru a "Chinese" phase and read many books about China's history. A big reason for why Shanghai was such a "wide open town" in the 1920's was because, after the fall of the Ch'ing Dynasty in 1911-12, China had no truly effective gov't (till the rise of the Kuomintang) capable of maintaining some kind of order. So I would expect cities like Shanghai to be often chaotic and even anarchical.

Paul: I did! (Smiles)

Sean

S.M. Stirling said...

It's part of the BLACK CHAMBER series, so I get to throw in some alternate-history goodness. The working titles are: DAGGERS IN THE DARK, THE TOMB OF THE GREAT KHAN, and THE WARLORD OF THE STEPPES.

A lot of the classic pulp adventures of the 1920's through 40's were set in that area, and it's easy to see why. You could not make some of this stuff up.

Take Baron Nikolai Robert Maximilian von Ungern-Sternberg aka "The Bloody Baron", an insane Russian (well, Baltic-German) adventurer who took over Mongolia and expelled the Chinese for a while around then.

Apart from being a theosophist and very odd variety of Buddhist, and his probably sincerely believed claim to be the reincarnation of Genghis Khan, he -actually- had one eye bigger than the other and a scar that flushed when he was about to begin killing people.

He's like an Edgar Rice Burroughs or Talbot Mundy villain, only with the icky bits left in.

paulshackley2017@gmail.com said...

Mr Stirling,

Thank you for all this preview stuff.

The life of the late Christopher Lee was apparently comparable to the contents of some of his films.

Paul.

David Birr said...

Paul:
Sir Christopher Lee...
Was a direct descendant of Charlemagne.
In his late 80s and early 90s, he recorded heavy metal albums about the afore-mentioned ancestor.
He served in Special Operations Executive during World War II.
When told by director Peter Jackson to imagine what a man being stabbed in the back sounds like, he replied that he didn't have to imagine because he'd heard it for real at close range.
In addition to English, he was fluent in Italian, French, German, and Spanish, and could at least get by in Greek, Russian, and Swedish. Some accounts include knowledge of Latin and Mandarin Chinese as well.
Ian Fleming was his step-cousin.

He was ... the REAL Most Interesting Man in the World.

paulshackley2017@gmail.com said...

Sounds like it.

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Mr. Stirling, Paul, and DAVID!

Mr. Stirling: I was very fascinated by your comments about the book you are writing. And I look forward to reading the tentatively titled DAGGERS IN THE DARK. And I do recall what that other Black Chamber agent said about the "Bloody Baron" in THEATER OF SPIES. And how contact with a truly EVIL man like von Ungern-Sternberg had a very sobering effect on him.

I can see how the collapse of the Ch'ing Dynasty led to the outlying dependencies of China, such as Mongolia, becoming prey to adventurers like the Bloody Baron.

David: And I had only thought of Sir Christopher for his role in those vampire movies and for playing Saruman in Peter Jackson's LORD OF THE RINGS movies! He was more than simply an actor. And it's interesting that he was a descendant of Charlemagne.

Paul: ditto, what you said!

Sean

S.M. Stirling said...

I think most North Europeans are descendants of Charlemagne by now! And every tenth person in Asia is a descendant of Genghis Khan.

S.M. Stirling said...

You meet interesting people, if you keep your eyes and ears open. Or they can happen closer to home.

Eg., my father was in Morocco early in the 1950's, scouting locations for airbases (he was in the RCAF at the time). When he came back to his jeep, his local driver was sitting behind the wheel stone dead, with his throat slit from ear to ear...

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Mr. Stirling!

I am sure you are right as regards descendants of Charlemagne and Ghenghis Khan. The problem is an interesting person might not always be able to prove that.

My two LEAST favorite British leaders, for example, are Henry VIII and Cromwell. I really don't want to be descended from either of them! Or worse, both of them!

Brrrrrrrrr, your father had a REALLY narrow escape that time in Morocco! Maybe a quiet, boring life in a civilized country isn't that bad!

Sean