On a whim a few days ago I ordered this book – First Lensman, © 1950, by E. E. “Doc”
Smith. It’s been two months since I’ve read some good ol’ SF, and for some
reason this book popped into my mind. Now, it’s not exactly a classic, in the
sense that Asimov’s Foundation,
Clarke’s Childhood’s End, or Heinlein’s
Starship Troopers is. Indeed, Smith is
not of that Holy Trinity of Science Fiction, that Pantheon of the Gods. But if
Asimov, Clarke, and Heinlein (and also Bradbury and Silverberg, I would argue)
are the Olympians of Science Fiction, E. E. “Doc” Smith was a member of the
Titans, their predecessors.
First
Lensman is actually the second of seven interrelated novels,
which in turn evolved from stories Smith published in the pulps in the ‘’40s.
The first novel, I am told, is not essential to the story, but the others
should be read in sequence.
Unfortunately, I first came across Smith fourteen
years ago when I picked up – again on a whim, always on a whim – the seventh and
final book in the series, Children of the
Lens. I liked it, sorta, but was kinda lost, and I’m thinking it was
because, well, I’m reading the final book of the series and there’s a whole galaxy
of stuff referenced in it that I’m quite unaware of. So it was always in the
back of my mind to start at the beginning, or close to it, at some undefined
future point in time.
That time is now. I think.
In a nutshell, Smith is the quintessential “space opera”
guy. The writer whose books George Lucas and Steven Spielberg devoured when
they were wee lads. Children of the Lens
struck me as very Flash Gordon-esque. I have a neat little memory of my father
getting all excited introducing Flash Gordon to my brother and I one afternoon
when he caught it on the black and white TV. I enjoyed it, as much as one could
who was in the thrall of Star Wars,
before Star Wars was known as Episode IV: A New Hope.
So that’s what I envisioned when I read Children of the Lens a decade-and-a-half
ago, piecing together the plot and the setting as best I could while fighting
my employer, raising a three year old and dealing with a pregnant wife, and
trying to figure out what I want to be when I grow up. Soon after I had all my
heart issues and the basement flooded – the one and only time it did because
the sleep-deprived Mrs. forgot to shut off a water valve – a flood which
resulted in the destruction of numerous books, Children of the Lens included.
One of my aunts somehow learned of this and bought me
a replacement copy. Which, to this day, sits in the On Deck circle on the shelf
behind me. (Well, until it got packed away a few weeks ago as we prepare for
The Move.) I’d like to revisit it, this time prepared. Hence, First Lensman now in my hands.
A review to follow in the next couple of weeks …
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