Star Rangers (novel)
First edition cover | |
Author | Andre Norton |
---|---|
Cover artist | Richard Powers |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Series | Central Control |
Genre | Science-fiction novel |
Published | 1953 (Harcourt, Brace & Company) |
Media type | Print (Hardback) |
Pages | 280 (Hardback edition) |
ISBN | 978-0152794262 |
OCLC | 586596 |
Star Rangers, also known as The Last Planet, is a science-fiction novel written by Andre Norton and published on 1953 Aug 20 by Harcourt, Brace & Company.[1] This is one of Norton’s Central Control books, which lay out the history of a galactic empire through events suggested by Norton’s understanding of Terran history (see also Star Guard).
Background
The First Galactic Empire is falling apart and petty tyrants are creating their own little fiefdoms out of the fragments. Near the edge of the Empire one Central Control agent seeks to rid himself of the Stellar Patrol, the last protector of law and order, by sending it out to locate lost stellar systems, allegedly to bring them back under the benign rule of Central Control. The ships are not expected nor intended to return. One of those ships is the Scout Starfire.
Among the humans, several kinds of aliens (some known as Bemmies, from BEM = Bug-eyed monster) appear in the story. All possess, to some degree, telepathy, the ability to read and to project mental imagery. The aliens in the story are:
- Zacathan; a reptilian people from the planet Zacan.
- Trystian; bird people, clad in feathers and very light and nimble.
- Faltharian; from dusky Falthar, they are sensitive to light.
- Ageratan; humanoids from Agerat, they are the Romans of the First Galactic Empire.
Plot
In the year AD 8054 the Stellar Patrol Scoutship Starfire has crashed in a desert on an Arth-type planet that displays no readily visible signs of civilization. Atmosphere, gravity, and solar radiation are almost ideal for the Rangers and the Patrolmen. After burying their dead, the survivors set up camp in a forest along a nearby river.
One night one of the men notices the bright beam of a beacon sweeping across the sky. Ranger Sergeant Kartr and Ranger Rolth take the aerial sled to investigate a few nights later. They find an abandoned city lit up as if it were inhabited. There they meet Joyd Cummi, an Ageratan Vice-Sector Lord, who has come to the city with almost two hundred people from a starliner that has made an emergency landing nearby.
Against Kartr's advice, the Patrol's ranking officer decides that the Patrolmen and the Rangers will move to the city and join the other refugees. Not trusting Cummi, the Rangers take up residence in a tower isolated from the rest of the building occupied by the starliner's passengers and crew. Soon Kartr and the others discover that all is not well in the Cummi dictatorship.
Inspired by the arrival of the Patrol, the rebels begin their revolt and the Rangers are drawn into the battle. With their expertise, the Patrolmen and the Rangers help the rebels win the fight. Cummi flees the city, taking telepathic control of Kartr's body and using him to fly the Rangers' aerial sled for him.
Kartr wakes up on the ground in a rainstorm. The surviving Patrolmen and Rangers soon find him and take him to their new camp. Several days later he and his Zacathan buddy go hunting for Cummi, starting from the wreckage of the sled. In the wilderness they rescue an injured boy and take him back to his clan's camp, where Kartr must confront Cummi. In that mind-to-mind battle Cummi succumbs to a hideous disease that he has spread to the natives.
Kartr and the other refugees decide to avoid the natives, lest they spread even more disease. With nothing else to do and with a faint hope of finding an intact spaceship, they set out to find the Meeting Place of the Gods that the native boy had mentioned to Kartr. When they come to that sacred place they see a building that looks exactly like the Place of Free Planets in the Imperial capitol, but much older. Inside the building they find the legendary, almost mythical, Hall of Leave-Taking and discern that the planet on which they stand is Terra of Sol, old Earth, the original home of Humanity.
As they marvel at the discovery another band of refugees, from a Stellar Patrol base destroyed by pirates, joins them. As ranking officer, Kartr asks for a vote on whether to return to the city or try to live in the wilderness. The people vote unanimously for a new start and Kartr leads them into their future.
Publication history
- 1953, US, Harcourt, Brace & Co., Pub date 1953 Aug 20, Hardback (280 pp)[2]
- 1953, Canada, McLeod, Pub date 1953 Oct, Hardback (280 pp)[2]
- 1955, US, Ace Books (#D-96), Paperback (192 pp), as The Last Planet (in a double with A Man Obsessed by Alan E. Nourse)[2]
- 1956, Germany, Pabel Verlag (Utopia Grossband #41), Pub date 1956 Aug, Paperback digest (92 pp), as Weltraum-Ranger greifen ein (Space Ranger Intervenes)[2]
- 1957, Argentina, Jacobo Muchnik, Buenos Aires (Fantaciencia #11), Paperback (188 pp), as La Patrulla Estelar (The Stellar Patrol)[2]
- 1962, US, Harcourt, Brace & World, Hardback (280 pp)[2]
- 1962, 1965, 1966, US, Ace Books (#D-542, #F-366, #M-151), Paperback (192 pp), as The Last Planet [2]
- 1968, UK, Gollancz, ISBN 0-575-00074-0, Pub date 1968 Aug, Hardback (280 pp)[2]
- 1972, 1974, US, Ace Books (#47162, #47163), Paperback (192 pp), as The Last Planet [2]
- 1978, Italy, Rizzoli (Fantascienza junior stellar #3), Pub date 1978 Dec, Paperback (190 pp), as Il pianeta degli dei (The Planet of the Gods)[2]
- 1979, US, Fawcett Crest, ISBN 0-449-24076-2, Pub date 1979 Aug, Paperback (223 pp)[2]
- 1985, US, Del Rey/Ballantine, ISBN 0-345-32308-4, Pub date 1985 Aug, Paperback (223 pp)[2]
Reviews
The book was reviewed by
- The Editors at The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction (Nov 1953),[2] who said:
"A magnificent success, both in romance and wonder. An engrossing adventure that is skillfully set on a small stage against the massive background of intergalactic intrigue and decadence."
- Emory Lewis at Science Fiction Digest, Vol 1, No. 1 (1954)[2]
- Groff Conklin at Galaxy Science Fiction (Apr 1954)[2]
- P. Schuyler Miller at Astounding Science Fiction (Jun 1954)[2]
- Groff Conklin at Galaxy Science Fiction (Jul 1955)[2]
- P. Schuyler Miller at Astounding Science Fiction (Sep 1955)[2]
- Spider Robinson at Analog Science Fiction/Science Fact (Feb 1980)[2]
- Kirkus Reviews (1953 Aug 01 Issue),[3] in which the reviewer wrote:
The 80th century A.D. when an impartial rule of galactic systems is disintegrating frames a science fiction story with adult concepts and a catchy theme. Kartr of the loyal Space Patrol crashes on a strange planet where they find that the democracy to which they have been faithful is no more than a shell and that their own chieftain has false ambitions. They explore and settle the new planet which becomes a refuge for others, and as a new and better life unfolds, they learn that the planet is the legendary Terra of the first spacemen. Reptiles and birdmen as well as humans people this and their worlds are a myriad of far-reaching systems, quite imaginatively projected.
- In the Saturday Review for 1953 Nov 14 the reviewer wrote:[4]
Natives of a dozen planets, the Rangers were a varied lot, birdmen, reptile men, human beings, and others, but they were all loyal to Central Control, which commanded the First Galactic Empire. Things were in a bad way in the year 8054 A.D.; there was corruption in high places, space pirates had disrupted celestial commerce, and one by one the universes were falling to enemies. Short of supplies because of betrayal, the crew of the patrol ship ‘’Starfire’‘ was wrecked on a planet that had been unmapped and forgotten for centuries. There was no hope of escape so the Rangers set out to adapt themselves to the ways of the lost world and its people. And what a time they had, a super-hair-raising time! The story has a style that is not always easy to follow, but it will be eaten up by older boys and adult space fans. - Merritt P. Allen.
References
Notes
- ↑ Harrison, Irene R., and Roger C. Schlobin, Andre Norton: a primary and secondary bibliography, NESFA Press (Framingham, MA), 1994, Pg 3
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 Star Rangers at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database Retrieved 2014 Apr 30
- ↑ Star Rangers, Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1st, 1953]
- ↑ Review from Saturday Review for 1953 Nov 14
Sources
- Clute, John. "Norton, Andre." The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction. Eds. John Clute, David Langford, Peter Nicholls and Graham Sleight. Gollancz, 8 Mar. 2015. Web. 26 Mar. 2015:
The sf novels, mostly told against the shared Galactic Empire backdrop, are widely varied, featuring a multitude of space-opera themes and plots, along with several comparatively intimate studies of humans and Aliens and beasts, and their relationships under various circumstances. Most of these novels were incorporated into sequences, usually not retrofitted, though some are of stronger interest than others. Those of strong interest include Central Control sequence – which comprises Star Rangers (1953; vt The Last Planet 1955 dos) and Star Guard (1955) – is set six thousand years hence, when the Empire is dissolving (> Decadence) and interregnum threatens, and focuses on the last-stand centurions of the fading Space Patrol, who attempt to hold things together.
- Tuck, Donald H. (1974). The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction and Fantasy. Chicago: Advent. pg. 332. ISBN 0-911682-20-1.
Listings
The book is listed at
- The Library of Congress as http://lccn.loc.gov/53007869
- The British Library as UIN = BLL01002674316 (1968 Gollancz edition)