in "The Trouble Twisters," David Falkayn begins to lead Nicholas van Rijn's first trader team;
in "Day of Burning," many Merseians resent owing their survival to the Polesotechnic League;
in Satan's World, Technic civilization is vulnerable to an external threat from the belligerent Shenna;
in "Lodestar," the conflicts within Technic civilization come to a head and this leads to a major confrontation between van Rijn and Falkayn.
Continuing the theme of corners turned, in Volume III, Rise of the Terran Empire:
in Mirkheim, there is civil war within the Polesotechnic League;
in "Wingless" and "Rescue on Avalon," Avalon is colonized;
in "The Star Plunderer," Earth is sacked but Manuel Argos proclaims the Terran Empire;
in The People of the Wind, the Terran Empire and the Domain of Ythri wage war to settle a border dispute but Avalon remains in the Domain.
And the world - in this case meaning a volume of galactic space - is a very different place after all those corners have been turned.
1 comment:
Kaor, Paul!
As for the poor, delicate sensibilities of the abused Merseians in "Day of Burning," tough beans! Getting rescued, for a reasonable fee, by the League sure beats becoming starving savages because of that nearby supernova.
I agree it was fortunate for the Empire that it accepted the minor defeat at Avalon in THE PEOPLE OF THE WIND, because of the events seen a little over two centuries later in THE DAY OF THEIR RETURN.
Ad astra! Sea
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