The very last word on p. 585 is:
"'Sol..."
Over the page, the sentence continues:
"'...went there with a camera.'" (p. 586)
So this "Sol" is the name of a man, not of Earth's sun.
On p. 590:
"Grass whispered under [Raven's] boots..."
In a narrative set on the surface of another planet, Poul Anderson usually uses some phrase like "pseudo-grass" or "the local equivalent of grass" in order to make the point that, if there is any ground cover there, then it cannot be identical to any kind of Terrestrial grass - and should be shown to be different in any screen adaptation. The entire environment, not just some of its inhabitants, should look extra-terrestrial even in those cases, like the present one, where the planet is described as terrestroid.
The precision of Anderson's texts makes close readers sensitive even to minor terminological issues.
1 comment:
Kaor, Paul!
Yes, but extra-Solar terrestroid planets, by definition, will also have enough similarities to Earth if humans are able to live there without needing to wear HazMat suits.
Ad astra! Sean
Post a Comment