2015 |
"I'll Build Your Dream Castle" is set in the future, in a time when spaceships powered by atomic energy are in routine use. Vance worked as a house builder for a time and apparently took a strong dislike to at least one of the house builders who employed him. The protagonist of the the story is a young man, Ernest Farrero, who is full of new ideas for how to satisfy wealthy customers seeking to build their "dream castles".
interior art by William Timmins |
atomic spaceship |
Is Farrero's boss happy? No, this is a capitalistic future in which Douane Angker, of the "Structors" Marlais and Angker, does not want his profits trimmed by lowering the cost of building projects. So Farrero is fired and has to go into business for himself. Sadly, it is not easy to get a builder's license on Earth of the future. No problem! Farrero builds in outer space.
in the Ekcolir Reality |
Farrero's office assistant, Flora. Watch for an analogue of Flora in "The Synpaz of Seelie". |
2020
Seventy three years later, it is fairly easy to move past the techno-scientific defects in "I'll Build Your Dream Castle". Vance needed a source of gravity for his mini-planets and he did not just do a hand wave and say "artificial gravity". By having a naturally occurring source of high-density degenerate matter in the Solar System, Farrero was able to lay claim to all 1122 asteroids that could be used to construct mini-planets, giving him a monopoly on the process (which he rubs in the noses of his former bosses, Marlais and Angker).
cover art by Henry Van Dongen |
Mary and Artep in Seelie |
In his novel, The Languages of Pao, Vance made use of "anti-gravity mesh" as a future technology that allowed humans to fly through the air.
For my new science fantasy story "The Synpaz of Seelie", I imagine a type of hierion that has negative mass. By mixing those special hierions (which are very tiny) into the bodies of the sy'Paz, they can defy gravity. I still do not know what allows the sy'Paz to fly around at high speed. Since this is science fantasy, I'm not really trying very hard to invent fictional science that can explain that.
Related Reading: August 2019 Vance
Next: "The Synpaz of Seelie"
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