james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2014-06-03 12:34 pm

Psion by Joan D. Vinge

Psion: Special Twenty-Fifth Anniversary Edition
Joan D. Vinge




This is the book that made me ask on Facebook if it makes sense to talk about an Andre Norton lineage of SF writers. In many ways it's what you might get if Norton had been a better writer. In others, it's what you might get if the X-Men used a draft to gain recruits.



Psion:
When we meet him, Cat is a half-Hydran, half-human [1] street kid on the run from the press-gangs of the interstellar corporations that run most of human space. Swept up despite his best efforts, he is spotted as a potential psionic and dropped into a very special training course run by Seibeling, who would be the Charles Xavier of this story if he wasn't closer to being a kapo.

Sadly for Cat, this isn't a universe where poors get to enjoy self-actualization programs for free. Not only is being IDed as a psion at best a lateral shift from being a despised half-breed gutter rat but the purpose of the program is to create a task force of psions who can be used to infiltrate and undermine The Brotherhood of Evil Mutants Rubiy's plans to organize dissatisfied psions into a force able to take Cinder away from the Federation.

The security on the program is terrible and Rubiy is completely aware of it, what it is for and who is in it. From his point of view, it's great because it's just another took for him to subvert and use.

Cinder is a planet-massed post-stellar object in the Crab Nebula, the main source of telhassium, the computronium on which the Federation runs, and it's a heck of lever for someone to use to blackmail the Federation. Rather like Dune or Trouble on Titan, the people who run the place have decided that the best way to control it is to treat the workers on whose labour they depend as badly as possible, giving Rubiy a lot of material to work with.

Unsurprisingly for a kid who has been living on the street as long as he can remember, Cat is poorly socialized and he manages to get himself ejected from the program in fairly short order. Since this is a comparatively short book, this lands him on an express train to plotsville, dropped into cold-sleep and shipped out to Cinder to spend his days mining telhassium while dodging the natives nobody seems to have questioned would be on a world that until about seven or eight thousand years ago was part of a star.

Cat spends enough time as a miner to get a good idea of what that is like (being a street kid was better) and to learn what's up with the natives before getting sucked back into the struggle between the Federation, that corrupt and vast organization that is the only hope of billions for something like rule of law, and Rubiy, nihilisitic, self-centered but also in the short run a lot closer to looking like an ally for the oppressed psions than anything the Federation cares to offer, with Seibeling's organization and the poor natives of Cinder caught up in the struggle as well.

Psiren: This picks up shortly after Psion. Cat, still suffering the consquences of how Psion's plot played out, encounters a Hydran woman a lot further down the slope of despair than he is, which has left her even more vulnerable to exploitation than Cat is and Cat was a slave for a while. She doesn't see a way out for herself aside from death, leaving Cat as the only one interested in her fate willing to actually help her.

The Tor edition also includes an introduction Joan D. Vinge but since I am cheaping out and reading the copies I already own, I have not read it (This also means if there are egregious errors in turning this from book to ebook like the rn > m issue I have run into elsewhere, I will not be aware of it.

Having mocked The Phoenix Legacy for the way it feigns concern for the lower orders while choosing an assortment of aristocrats as protagonists, I will give this points for picking someone from the bottom of the heap (2) something that isn't very common in SF. The great and powerful still hold all the cards but at least in this that's not presented as the best one should hope for.

That said, there is a certain level of learned helplessness where the alien Hydrans are concerned. Humans or at least some humans feel kind of badly that humans destroyed most of the Hydran culture while they were stealing bits for themselves, something that mirrors anxieties in SF about the treatment of Native Americans but doing anything that's actually helpful or useful to the Hydrans is not really on the menu. Kindly doctor Seibeling married one but it worked out about as well for her as Pocahantas marrying Rolfe did for Pocahantas. Actually, worse. I think we're supposed to see Seibeling as a sympathetic character but I have to admit if at some point he had been shanked by an outraged psion, I would not have cried.

Speaking of the Hydrans, there are a number of elements most easily explained by the fact Cat is an ignorant street kid or by invoking what Kung Fu Monkey called "You uncurious motherfuckers" when discussing Lost.

A: Why does nobody wonder why something that was part of a star in historical times has humanoid natives? That's answered by "You uncurious motherfuckers"; knowing the answer won't make anyone more money.

B: Some people think Earth was settled by telepathic mute Hydrans. Some people also think homeopathy works. I don't have an issue with the idea people might believe this, especially someone like Cat who has never been educated, but it is nonsense. Humans and hominids on Earth have left fossil traces going back millions of years and their relatives go back even farther.

C: How is it the Hydrans never stumbled over Earth, given that they had a vast empire and their nearest colony (Beta Hydra) isn't that far away? Well, maybe they did but I cannot imagine they'd do anything with Earth aside from drawing a bright red circle around its position on a map and warning people not to go there. It's good for Terrans and bad for Hydrans that they aren't able to envision just running an asteroid into Earth.

"Psiren" was published in 1981 in New Voices 4 while Psion was published in 1982 by Delacorte Press. It would not have been out of place published in 1961 or even 1951, except the quality of the prose is much better than I would expect from a book of an older vintage. Specifically, I am reminded of such Andre Norton books as Night of Masks or the Forerunner series (3). It's not the psionics angle, although that helps, but the choice to tell the story from the point of view of someone so far down the pecking order that the closest to a happy ending they can reasonably hope for is to reach a place where they can imagine someday having a happy ending. As I said over on Facebook, the difference between Norton and someone like Van Vogt is in something like a Van Vogt if our oppressed hero tried very hard, he could become President of all the King-Popes, whereas in a Norton, they might move up from criminal squalor to a respectable blue-collar job.

It's clear from the introduction in New Voices 4 that Vinge already has the Cat series sketched out in her mind and from Psiren that she knew where Psion was going to end up.

If you would like to read Psion, the 25th anniversary edition is available
here.

1: AAAAUUUUUUGGGGGHHHH. We will be returning to this point.

2: There is a character from a high-ranking family but due to the way society is set up she has all the standing of the mad cousin the family keeps locked up in the attic.

3: Which admittedly ran from 1960 to 1985. And O'Donnell's Flinger series, which features similarly exploited psionics (albiet with a much better reason for treating them the way they do than 'because we can'), was roughly contemporary with Psion.

[identity profile] scentofviolets.livejournal.com 2014-06-03 10:01 pm (UTC)(link)
Norton was one of my top five authors as a kid (del Rey was number one[1]). How does she hold up on rereading? And are the 'updates' -- I'm guessing -- something to run screaming from?


[1]Looking back through the cataract lens of memory, I think most of my fave authors were women, people like Cameron, Lightner, Nourse, Norton, et. al. I don't know why that was except perhaps that writing for kids maybe wasn't considered terribly manly.

[identity profile] james-nicoll.livejournal.com 2014-06-03 10:05 pm (UTC)(link)
The sf ones are very straight forward but not without pulp charm, plus she did things with protagonist choice I find interesting. I found her witchworld stuff kind of dire.

Avoid Quag Keep.

[identity profile] ann-leckie.livejournal.com 2014-06-03 10:07 pm (UTC)(link)
Norton holds up on re-reading, for me, granted a fair amount of obvious old-fashionedness. I'm probably not an impartial judge here, though, because my love for Norton in my youth was long and deep, and I don't think I'm yet able to read her without that lens in place. Just overhearing people's comments, I gather that most readers who don't come to her at the right time--middle school or high school, perhaps?--aren't going to find her appealing.

Some of the updates/late co-authored stuff...well, some of them I enjoyed and some I've run screaming from, and I find myself pretty much entirely uninterested in them as a whole.

[identity profile] ann-leckie.livejournal.com 2014-06-03 10:08 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, gods, yes, avoid Quag Keep. I say this as a diehard fan.

On the other hand, I find three or four of the Witch World books to be comfort reads, and still enjoyable. Three or four--maybe more?--are pretty dire, and the rest are, you know, they're ok, but I haven't re-read them in a long, long time.

[identity profile] james-nicoll.livejournal.com 2014-06-03 10:14 pm (UTC)(link)
You know what is worse than Quag Keep?


Image

[identity profile] james-nicoll.livejournal.com 2014-06-03 10:21 pm (UTC)(link)
Ask me how I know, he said with a hollow laugh.

This was also an unreadable labour of love:

Image

[identity profile] james-nicoll.livejournal.com 2014-06-03 10:25 pm (UTC)(link)
I leave the "ill-conceived sequels to old favorites" series of reviews to someone else.

[identity profile] ann-leckie.livejournal.com 2014-06-03 10:33 pm (UTC)(link)
OH MY GOD I had repressed the memory of learning this existed. Why did you remind me????

[identity profile] tandw.livejournal.com 2014-06-03 10:41 pm (UTC)(link)
...women, people like Cameron, Lightner, Nourse, Norton, et. al.

This Nourse?

I didn't know about his safe sex/STD nonfiction books.

[identity profile] scentofviolets.livejournal.com 2014-06-03 11:15 pm (UTC)(link)
Is the gentleman in the lower left copping a feel during a running fire fight? My eyes!!!

[identity profile] scentofviolets.livejournal.com 2014-06-03 11:18 pm (UTC)(link)
My daughter wasn't grabbed by Norton in her elementary/middle school years. I'm pretty sure it was the the old-style dialogue -- no one she knew really talked that way! Same for Lord of the Rings.

[identity profile] scentofviolets.livejournal.com 2014-06-03 11:20 pm (UTC)(link)
Augh!! You're right, of course. I meant Joan North (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joan_North). I guess creeping senility isn't really an excuse.

[identity profile] scentofviolets.livejournal.com 2014-06-03 11:24 pm (UTC)(link)
Reading over the thread prompts my memory, I was thinking of the other Norton (The Borrowers) and North, which came out as Nourse. Don't ask me why.

[identity profile] james-nicoll.livejournal.com 2014-06-03 11:25 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm...not....sure.....

[identity profile] w. dow rieder (from livejournal.com) 2014-06-04 12:03 am (UTC)(link)
I stand corrected. Proto-Competent-Man sounds like such a great name for a teen superhero, but what does MOTAG refer to? Google failed me.

[identity profile] w. dow rieder (from livejournal.com) 2014-06-04 12:16 am (UTC)(link)
I don't know if or what you were paid to review that, but it wasn't enough. I believe Quag Keep was the very first RPG tie-in novel, and it introduced me to the concept that an RPG tie-in drops the mean expected quality of a book, given the author and genre, by a lot.

[identity profile] mmcirvin.livejournal.com 2014-06-04 12:28 am (UTC)(link)
People keep making the analogy that Xavier is to Magneto as Martin Luther King is to Malcolm X... but that's unfair to both King and Malcolm X; King really wasn't a "play along to get along" kind of guy, he just had different confrontational tactics. Booker T. Washington might have been a closer analogue, though it was probably just because, living at the time he did, he had to play with a much worse hand.

[identity profile] tandw.livejournal.com 2014-06-04 12:52 am (UTC)(link)
Member of the Appropriate Gender. I think.

[identity profile] w. dow rieder (from livejournal.com) 2014-06-04 01:04 am (UTC)(link)
Aha! Makes sense, and a very useful acronym indeed. Thanks.

[identity profile] nathan helfinstine (from livejournal.com) 2014-06-04 01:28 am (UTC)(link)
It looks to me like his hand's a little too high. He's grabbing the jumpsuit collar/lapel.

OTOH, the lady doesn't seem to have any visible wounds. She is apparently suffering an attack of the vapors during said running fire fight.

That woman on the right, though. She apparently is extra vulnerable on her right forearm, right thigh, and waist, which is why she has the strangest collection of armor bits ever. Even if we grant that her weapon has no recoil, she is in a dynamically unstable position and is in the process of falling over backwards. She's going to fall into Mr. Handsy, and all three people are going to end up in an embarrassing pile on the floor.

Finally, the guy in the back with the Hapsburg chin who hasn't bothered to draw? He's also unstable, unless that right elbow is resting on the window ledge. The step he's on suggests that the window is background, but I'm feeling confused by the spatial relations.

[identity profile] nathan helfinstine (from livejournal.com) 2014-06-04 01:30 am (UTC)(link)
I got the impression her late co-authored stuff was of the same nature as Marion Zimmer Bradley's late co-authored stuff, i.e. assuming a 90/10 split was probably generous.

[identity profile] scott-sanford.livejournal.com 2014-06-04 01:50 am (UTC)(link)
The guy in the back seems to be about to fall onto the forthcoming pile of people in front of him, slowed only by his left hand's grip on random scenery. At least he's well situated to land on top of everyone else.

I assume this is meant to portray a firefight rather than the 2651 Nicoll Family Reunion...

[identity profile] ethelmay.livejournal.com 2014-06-04 02:01 am (UTC)(link)
I really, really hope there was no specific reason (I mean apart from friendship) that Heinlein dedicated Farnham's Freehold to him. Poor guy.

I am amused that he wrote So You Want to Be a Doctor and SYWTBA Nurse, given Diane Duane's So You Want to Be a Wizard.

My sister used to work at Virginia Mason Hospital, and some of the same doctors who appeared in Intern were still there.

[identity profile] ethelmay.livejournal.com 2014-06-04 02:03 am (UTC)(link)
That sounds frightfully like Roosh's adventures, or rather lack of same, in Denmark. (Memetic prophylactic recommended.)

[identity profile] james-nicoll.livejournal.com 2014-06-04 02:19 am (UTC)(link)
WHY DID I GOOGLE?

Page 2 of 4