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Path: ...!2.eu.feeder.erje.net!feeder.erje.net!fu-berlin.de!uni-berlin.de!individual.net!not-for-mail From: ted@loft.tnolan.com (Ted Nolan <tednolan>) Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf.written Subject: RI August 2024 Date: 8 Sep 2024 04:24:38 GMT Organization: loft Lines: 297 Message-ID: <lk4n86Fd3b0U1@mid.individual.net> X-Trace: individual.net fGYgPELkbsmiQoZGLDyC5AiIP0OC/ZrA4JXQk5KyJkcRxHCCRs X-Orig-Path: not-for-mail Cancel-Lock: sha1:O8NrkdLvKX4GjVxPSARl4Fv+Dpc= sha256:LrEkZtGOGYIujSblT8+KRoA2KfDL9X3S4qj+U5IBlyg= X-Newsreader: trn 4.0-test76 (Apr 2, 2001) Bytes: 15207 Here is August, and one other. As usual the links (except for gutenberg) are Amazon Affiliate ones which could in theory earn me a pittance should you buy through one. I should probably let this rest overnight and read it for sanity tomorrow, but what the hey. == Scorpio Assassin (Dray Prescot Book 39) by Alan Burt Akers https://amzn.to/3XzXKDQ Scorpio Invasion (Dray Prescot Book 40) by Alan Burt Akers https://amzn.to/3TkSz87 Scorpio Ablaze (Dray Prescot Book 41) by Alan Burt Akers https://amzn.to/3TjdDfe When I was in high school, and into college, "Dray Prescot" was my favorite swords & planet series, and I was quite disappointed when DAW stopped publishing them. I know now that this was part of the regime change which went with Donald A. Wollheim's passing and the takeover of the publisher by his daughter Betsy Wollheim. She has said in fairly recent interviews that Wollheim senior continued to publish a number of authors who were friends of his despite the books not making money. I don't recall that she gave specifics, but I'm pretty sure that applied to Kenneth Bulmer (writing here as Alan Burt Akers), E. C. Tubb, and John Norman. I have my suspicions that this was only partly the case and that she just did not care for men's adventure books. In the case of "Dray Prescot", I wonder too if the series weren't tarred with the same brush in her mind as Norman's "Gor" since they were both ERB derived planetary adventure. That's all total speculation on my part however. At any rate the Dray Prescot series vanished from the racks, and though I heard from time to time that it was still being published in German, that really didn't help me at all. I was quite excited then when the first wave of e-books arrived, and "Savanti Press" started to offer the English versions of the "new" books. At the time, e-readers were not a thing, and there were really no format standards, so Savanti offered the books in PDF, and I printed out several, punching them and putting them in three ring binders. I had some indirect correspondence with Bulmer, writing to Savanti that he had inspired a story of mine which had won an award in the campus literary magazine, and with them passing back his congratulations and that he was happy to hear it. Unfortunately, Savanti was really a bit too early into the field and didn't last long enough to run through many books. Years later, once the Kindle and other e-readers were established, and the file formats standardized, another outfit, Mushroom Press took up the torch and started putting out the rest of the books. Again I read several, but then Bulmer passed and I understood that the series would never be finished, so I kind of put off reading the rest. I recently got back into them and read three in quick succession, and it was a bit of an "old home" week. Dray Prescot is an Englishman, a pressed sailor in Nelson's navy who rose improbably onto the officers' deck as a Lieutenant, about as far as a man of his origins could go, not that *that* story ever played out. Instead, he was taken up by the mysterious and mostly godlike Starlords, and the immortal but human Savapim and transported to the beautiful but brutal world of Kregan under the twin suns of Antares. Kregan is a mostly pre-industrial world (and lacks gunpowder), but has pockets of tech in advance of Earth (generally around flight) and is populated with numerous chimera races as well as standard homo-sapiens, each race and culture with its own quirks. Prescott quickly found his Dejah Thoris, Delia of Delphond whom he eventually married and had a number of children with though circumstances (and the Starlords) often conspired to keep them apart. Over the years the standard practice of the Starlords was to take Prescot up from whatever he was doing with the aid of their spectral blue scorpion, and then drop him naked and weaponless into some dire situation without any clue as to what he was supposed to do. He has only recently discovered that this is not their standard practice with their other agents, and is a bit sore about it. The general gist of these missions (which sometimes include time-loops so that Prescott is in several areas of Kregan at once) is to bring Prescott into rulership of numerous different lands with the apparent goal of making him emperor of the continent of Paz so that he can forge a defense against the shark-men chimera race of Shanks who are "raiding around the curve of the world" and have already subdued several areas of Paz. Previous to book 39, Prescott has already spent a good deal of time in Southern Loh, where the people take reincarnation very seriously, trying to arrange the local throne so that a Queen who will actually fight is in charge. Although he is unhappy, as usual, about being torn away from Delia, I get the feeling he takes the time almost as a vacation. Due to the odd circumstances of his arrival, the other Starlord agent on the scene is convinced that he is a screwup and that she is in charge, and Prescott is content to play along at that using an assumed name (something he does quite often), and mixing it up with the local gangs and nobles watching the situation develop. Things come to a head quite suddenly, and due to the ill-timed intervention of the Starlords, Prescott is unable to save one Queen, and due to his vituperation of his masters is snatched up punitively (and apparently into some sort of internecine struggle) before being dropped hundreds of miles away. That's where book 40 starts, and after a numerous series of books where the Shanks are merely the background menace whom Prescot is maneuvering to counter, here they finally come on stage and Prescot has to organize the scattered resistance in a fallen kingdom (not altogether successfully) and has to infiltrate the Shank stronghold. All the time, he is in intermittent contact with home through one of his wizard friends, but the promised flying armada never seems to actually get to Loh... Book 41 finally sees the mass confrontation with the Shanks which has been building for the whole "Lovian Cycle". The armadas of Vallia & Hamal are mighty indeed, but Prescot's settlement of an ally on the throne of Hamal is not universally acclaimed in the Hamalese fleet, and the Shanks seem to have a supernatural ally of their own who is greatly blunting the utility of Prescot's Wizards of Loh in the battle, and the overall morale of his forces. It will be a near run thing... These were, as I said, like old-home week, and I slipped into Prescot's first person narrative like a comfortable old shoe. He says he has mellowed over the years, and you can see some of that playing out in his increasing use of guile and working anonymously behind the scenes (and in odd incidents like saving the life of a venomous beast which has just attacked one of his Queen candidates), but when the time is right, he is still ready to grab of his great bar of steel and run naked into the fight. If you are thinking of starting the series, I wouldn't start here, of course, but you *could*, and if you didn't know every incident Prescot is musing about, you would get the gist. There are several more books in the Lovian Cycle, which I presume comes to a resolution of sorts, though I believe the next Cycle is unfinished. Hai, Jikai! Gods' Battleground (Legion of Angels Book 12) by Ella Summers https://amzn.to/47gdSgO Leda Pandora has come a long way since she joined the Legion of Angels as a way to level-up enough to rescue her kidnapped brother. She long ago accomplished that, but by that time her life was complicated enough that that was hardly the end of her adventures. Now as the child of both a god & a demon, she has the task of coordinating both of those fractious pantheons against the ultimate menace of the "Guardians" who have cursed her sister as well as being just generally mean & nasty. It plays out well enough, including a standard fantasy "arena fighter" sequence, but on the whole, it feels like what it is, a wrap-up book and doesn't quite have the energy of the early books. Leda's arc is basically finished, but I believe we can expect more books in this universe. In particular, Leda's daughter is a child of Prophecy... "Subspace Survivors" by Edward E. Smith https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/21647 (Astounding Science Fact and Fiction, July 1960) This is a late Smith novella that harks back to a number of his earlier works, most notably to _Triplanetary_ and _The Skylark Of Space_ for reasons which I think would be quickly apparent, as well as to Van Vogt's "The Storm" in a way as well. Space travel is established and as safe in the future as flying is to us now, but just as we lose a plane every now and then, so a space-liner will go missing from time to time. The ships are never found, and nobody has a satisfactory explanation so as to keep it from happening again since nobody has ever come back from such an event. ========== REMAINDER OF ARTICLE TRUNCATED ==========