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Cycle of Fire (1957)

af Hal Clement

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Perhaps it was partially personal circumstances, but this book didn't draw me in quite as much as I had hoped. Dar and Kruger are friends, and I had hoped for that to be more strongly present, more emotionally present. It was clearly there, but it seemed to take second place to the discovery of the workings of the planet and the native people. The dilemma surrounding Dar is readily resolved and does not involve Kruger's friendship, which seemed a bit too easy for me. ( )
  zjakkelien | Jan 2, 2024 |
Adolescent space story by Clement. Typical 1950s story. Decent read but nothing special. ( )
  ikeman100 | Mar 8, 2022 |
Two suns, one red and one blue, hang in the sky, above a world where a young person seeks to survive. Familiar from Star Wars of course, and an image that's a natural for an adventure story. At the start, a native to the planet, Dar Lang Ahn, crash lands his glider in wilderness, and sets out to complete an urgent mission on foot. He meets Nils Kruger, a 16 year old human castaway from Earth. The two must cooperate to survive, and they gradually become friends.

But this novel is by Hal Clement, so we know those suns are not there just for decoration. The motion of each sun in the sky, as the two walk north, is carefully described, allowing the reader to figure out something about the planet's orbit. Hints about the planet's biology also accumulate. The two companions discover a deserted city with buildings that are not designed for Dar's 4+1/2 foot tall bipedal anatomy, nor for the 8 foot tall "Teachers" who raised him. Who lived in the city, and where are they now? When being questioned by the unseen Teachers associated with the city, Nils is asked "when do you die?" He learns that Dar does indeed expect to die at a definite time - and that time will be soon.

Eventually Nils is reunited with the rest of the expedition from Earth, and the human scientists set to work unraveling the planet's astrodynamics, geology, and biology. As usual, Clement leaves many details as an exercise for the reader, and some of the biology is left incomplete with no way for us to figure it out. He does take some of the usual Sci-Fi shortcuts to move the plot along - Nils's ship flies faster than light, and Dar and Nils learn each others' languages way too easily for beings from separate evolutions. As you'd expect from a 1957 story, Clement uses "he" as Dar's pronoun, even though Dar's nonhuman reproductive biology definitely doesn't fit with that usage.

About that biology: the picture assembled by the humans could serve as the engine of a horror novel - one that James Tiptree, Jr. might have written not many years after 1957. The fates of Dar and others of his species are treated with Clement's usual reticence, minimizing the horror aspect - but that aspect is still there. I have long thought that Clement is a much better writer than the hard-SF, essentially YA figure people often view him as, spinning clever science puzzles without much human depth. There's that greatest-generation reserve so many World War II veterans like him had, and his insistence on having the reader do the work of understanding what the book is about.

I've not been able to put these notions into a coherent account. I do want to read all the Clement I haven't already. This edition has been in my possession since 1968, so I had better speed things up. ( )
1 stem dukedom_enough | Dec 19, 2020 |
Pretty much exactly what you expect from a Hal Clement novel...Fascinating world populated by fascinating aliens. Check...Not particularly compelling characterization and not particularly compelling storytelling. Check.

In the end, the protagonist of this one proves to be the scientific method. The ending is rather touching. ( )
  clong | Apr 13, 2019 |
Nils is a teenage cadet abandoned for dead by his space ship crew after an accident on the planet Abyorman. Dar is transporting books to the Teachers at the Ice Ramparts, knowledge gathered during his life to be transmitted before his predetermined death, when his glider crashes. The two meet as both are attempting to survive on an expanse of desert. Nils assumes that Dar, who is near death from dehydration, must be an alien unfamiliar with the planet. Dar assumes that Nils, who has been sustained by a ubiquitous cactus-like plant, must be a resident of this region of the planet. Initially they cannot communicate verbally, but within mere pages of the continued trek toward the Ice Ramparts, Nils has adopted Dar’s language on the assumption that he will never leave the planet, understanding and speaking complete sentences minus the occasional crucial word. A few things are clarified. Nils puzzles out the arrangement of a planet with two suns, while becoming increasingly fond of Dar and sad about his anticipated death. Along the way, Nils and Dar discover an abandoned city with an electrical infrastructure, and are escorted to a disembodied voice that communicates by radio. Then the space ship comes to the intellectual rescue, returning to the planet with geologists and biologists and astronomers who rather rapidly explore and analyze the life cycle, of both the planet and its creatures. Nils and Dar are kind of sweet, and the planet is a geeky curiosity, but neither relationships nor science are all that strongly developed, and the style is skewed more toward description than drama.
  qebo | Feb 15, 2015 |
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Clement, HalForfatterprimær forfatteralle udgaverbekræftet
Morrow, GrayOmslagsfotograf/tegner/...medforfatternogle udgaverbekræftet
Nagel, HeinzOversættermedforfatternogle udgaverbekræftet
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