Thursday, 14 September 2023

A Rushed Narrative And Kheraskov's Office

Sometimes, for reasons of word limit, a narrative is shorter than we would have liked. In Poul Anderson's A Circus of Hells, we would have liked a chapter on the conversation between Dominic Flandry and the main computer on Wayland.

In The Rebel Worlds, CHAPTER TWO ends as Flandry is about to leave Kheraskov's office and CHAPTER THREE begins with the Asieneuve's tthird stop en route to Llynathawr. That third stop is at Shalmu whereas the first and second had been at humanly colonised planets so would maybe have been less interesting.

However, I feel that the entire narrative is rushed. I would like to have lingered in Kheraskov's office:

on the 90th floor of Intelligence headquarters;
scanner, talkbox and computer for reception;
large;
high-ceilinged;
lushly carpeted;
an infotriever;
an outsize vidphone;
a small refreshment unit;
pictures;
shelves for mementos of victories;
a vivid wall-size animation of Jupiter filmed from an approaching ship;
an expanse of desktop;
Kheraskov in plain uniform without decorations but the jewel of knighthood and the nebula and star of admiralty;
cigar and coffee, tea or jaine offered.

Kheraskov is:

"...the master of perhaps a million agents through the Empire and beyond." (p. 383)

7 comments:

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Paul!

I agree, the irksome word limits imposed on many SF writers in the 1960's forced Anderson to be briefer than we would have liked in some of his novels. Pity!

Ad astra! Sean

S.M. Stirling said...

One thing I like about the Flandry novels is that you occasionally get a vivid impression of just how -big- the Terran Empire is.

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Mr. Stirling!

Something I noted in my "Sector Governors" piece.

Ad astra! Sean

S.M. Stirling said...

Incidentally, one thing studying the reign of Marcus Aurelius has shown me is that an Emperor, to do the job right, had to be prepared to work really hard. MA did -- despite fairly frail health.

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Mr. Stirling!

I think that is pretty much true of all leaders, thru out the ages, no matter what titles (emperor, king, president, prime minister, etc.) they had. I also think the strain and stress of all that work and the long war with the Marcomanni shortened Marcus Aurelius' life.

Ad astra! Sean

S.M. Stirling said...

Sean: the historian's consensus right now is that he had bad ulcers. Which are exacerbated by stress, but usually caused by bacterial infections.

Hence my time-travelers put him on a course of antibiotics.

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Mr. Stirling!

Good, pity that could not be done for real! I also recall, I think, your stranded time travelers recommending certain changes in the Emperor's diet, because some types of food were not suitable for people with bad ulcers.

Ad astra! Sean