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.
Kaor, Paul!
ReplyDeleteYes, 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