cover art by Paul Lehr |
Contrived. Back in the late 1970s I owned a copy of Pebble in the Sky with cover art by Paul Lehr. When it came time for me to move across the continent, I only kept a few of my Sci Fi books, and Pebble in the Sky was not one of them. I did keep my copies of Second Foundation and The End of Eternity, but it was easy to dispose of Pebble. Asimov started out writing short stories for publication in pulp magazines. Pebble in the Sky was Asimov's first attempt to directly publish a novel written from scratch without prior publication in the pulps of smaller parts of the story.
"I've contrived outrages all my life!" |
Asimov claimed that he could think of 1) a starting point for a novel and 2) the ending of the story and 3) then just sit down and write it all out, progressing chapter by chapter. "Having worked out the first scene, I have the second scene in mind, and so on all the way to the end of the novel." Yes, he could write that way, but it resulted in a silly contrived mess of a novel in the case of Pebble.
So why should I return to Pebble in the Sky, now, after 40 years? Back in the 1970s when I discovered written science fiction, I had no access to science fiction magazines. The old Sci Fi magazines are increasingly available via the internet, so I now get to re-experience stories that I first read decades ago in book format, now seeing them in their pulp magazine context.
recycled cover art (see) |
"Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent."
-Asimov
It was a surprise when I first saw the 1950s cover art for Pebble in the Sky that is shown to the right on this page. There is scene in Pebble in the Sky where the Imperial Storm Troopers actually wear glass helmets, but pain-inducing neuronic whips are the preferred weapon in this story, not blasters.
What about the interior art?
Interior art for Pebble in the Sky in Two Complete Science-Adventure Books, Winter 1950. There is no scene like this in the story, but readers are told that Earth has repeatedly had rebellions against the Imperials. |
In the Ekcolir Reality. Original cover art by Lawrence Stevens, Earle Bergey, Paul Lehr and Walt Miller. |
Another review of Pebble in the Sky, in Thrilling Wonder Stories, June 1950, assures readers that Asimov has a "quiet approach" to telling his story. Really, don't expect a book full of pitched battles in the streets!
L. Sprague de Camp wrote a glowing review of Pebble in the Sky for Astounding Science Fiction, August 1950. The dictatorial Secretary Balkis (insane puppet master of Earth's figurehead ruler, the High Minister) and the oppressive Council of Ancients on Earth, resenting how the down-trodden people of Earth have been treated by the rest of the rest of the galaxy, prepare "a dreadful revenge".
1950
nuclear explosion |
So, since he was writing in that atmosphere of nuclear tension, we can excuse Asimov for imagining a future Earth with radioactive wastelands. Asimov later expanded on this idea in some robot novels (Robots and Empire).
Mystery solved: Daneel did it in the Galactic Empire with telepathy! |
What I find harder to excuse is that in Asimov's imagined future, most of Humanity, now living on millions of exoplanets of the galaxy, had forgotten that humans evolved on Earth. In Pebble in the Sky, Asimov tries to tell us that the mutant people of radioactive Earth are so despised by everyone in the galaxy that nobody can allow themselves to imagine that Earth is the original home of Humanity. Later, in Foundation and Earth, Asimov blamed this galactic amnesia on Daneel, the telepathic robot.
If I had a hammer, or an ax, or other mixed metaphors. Asimov had an ax to grind, and through all of Pebble in the Sky, Asimov keeps grinding at the idea of racial prejudice blinding people to simple truths. Thank you, Dr. Asimov... now, back to our Sci Fi program.
Why, you might ask, did Daneel go to the trouble of hiding Earth? Apparently he did not want anyone to find his "secret hideout" on Earth's moon. This is all so silly that I continually spoof the whole concept in my Exode Saga by having everyone imagine that Observer Base is on the Moon.
nanoscale DNA analysis |
Sadly, Asimov was writing just a few years before a molecular structure of DNA was determined (the double helix) which quickly led to recognition of how genetic instructions are stored in a molecular genetic code; sequences of base pairs. These days, you can have your genome sequenced and the genomes of extinct human variants have also been studied.
The origin question. |
Sci Fi Empires |
Rathole World
Pebble in the Sky is set in a future time when there are tens of millions of planets that are home to humans, most of them unified under a sprawling Galactic Empire. This is Asimov's "all human galaxy", so there are no aliens running around. There is a kind of embassy on Earth where a representative of the Galactic Empire lives, the Procurator, Lord Ennius.
Get over it. Yes, Asimov modeled his galactic empire after the Roman Empire. The Procurator thinks of Earth as a rathole world and also calls it a pigpen world, a cesspool world and a brutish peasant world. However, Lord Ennius admits that there are a few good Earthlings, including Dr. Shekt, a physicist.
the doctor and the synapsifier |
Schwartz achieves telepathic superpowers after one session with the synapsifier. |
Shekt uses the synapsifier on Schwartz, a man magically transported through time from the far past (this time travel is some kind of silly nuclear energy magic; don't ask). The synapsifier treatment gives Schwartz telepathic powers.
Biological Warfare
virus engineering |
Schwartz gets lucky. |
Luck
Sometimes it seems like a fictional character is exceptionally lucky. I've previously speculated that Kirth Gersen is either exceptionally lucky or has telepathic abilities. Asimov drops a whole string of unlikely events into Pebble in the Sky. All the inexplicable coincidences are even recognized by Secretary Balkis and feed his paranoia.
Teela Brown: bred for luck |
Technological Change
time travel |
Time travel
How was Schwartz magically transported into the future? In Pebble in the Sky, Asimov suggests a temporal fault lines analogy to geological fault lines. One of the early stories written by Asimov was called "Cosmic Corkscrew". Sadly, he lost his copy of that story, but apparently it was constructed around the idea that it is easy to slip between some particular points in Time (see also: "A Statue for Father"). Alternatively, I prefer to think that Daneel and other time traveling robots were at work behind the scenes, and they might have made use of Schwartz to initiate a Reality Change.
Sci Fi Mutants
the golden mutant |
Good and Evil
Asimov would later write that his preferred style was to write stories in which it is not clear which characters are good or evil, right or wrong. There is no such ambiguity in Pebble in the Sky. Pebble in the Sky is like a James Bond story where the evil mastermind hatches a complex plot that after 90 minutes of hectic hand wringing eventually collapses under its own improbable weight.
future fiction |
Location, location, location
One of Asimov's favorite literary tricks was to imagine how the names of places could change through time. He could use the future variant of a place name, providing a hint as to a location, and then at the end of the story make clear the meaning of the hint. Schwartz is able to deduce that in the future, St. Louis is called Senloo.
Related Reading: The Caves of Steel - The Currents of Space
The Naked Sun - The Stars, Like Dust -
Next: 2020 writing change challenge
visit the Gallery of Book and Magazine Covers |
No comments:
Post a Comment