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Loading... Planets for Sale (1965)by A. E. Van Vogt, E. Mayne Hull (Author)
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. A novel constructed from a string of stories about Artur Blord, originally published in Astounding SF (1943-46) under the pen-name E. Mayne Hull (the name of his first wife, later credited as co-author). Classic pulp stuff, in which attractive yet resourceful females do the bidding of a calm and powerful tycoon in his rivalries with unpleasant thugs and slave-traffickers, and interplanetary businesses are equipped with typewriters and metal filing cabinets. This is the kind of book in which the hero snarls "Go to hell" at a reptilian alien, while the woman he has just rescued finds time to do something to her hair. MB 18-vii-2007 Information credit: A. E. van Vogt Information Site http://www.home.earthlink.net/~icshi/index.html no reviews | add a review
Belongs to Publisher SeriesScala SF (9) Contains
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)823.9Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction 1900-LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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van Vogt's heroes also have superpowers, not only can Blord hypnotise people within moments, he can also perform fantastic feats of physics-bending awesomeness like this, when, trapped in a powerless spaceship ('Lorelei', the dark star off the port bow, is doing unexplained, but not unexpected, energy sucky things to his ship's nuclear pile) Blord plays his emergency Get Out of Jail Free card:
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'He began to turn a wheel that shoved at a bigger wheel, which shoved at a still bigger wheel, until, under the control dais, a ten-foot wheel with an Earth weight of fifteen tons was spinning at approximately thirty revolutions a minute. At the proper moment, Blord pushed in a clutch, and an electric dynamo began to operate. It was literally an emergency power plant. Electricity was too course an energy to be powerfully affected by the Lorelei [star].'
....which makes you wonder why he didn't just take a couple of batteries with him or even crank the bloody generator himself! I've no idea how to do the maths but just how much 'shoving' would one man have to do to get ten foot (Diameter? Radius? Circumference? Hight?), 15 ton, wheel spinning at 30 rpm?
I once joked that van Vogt so loved secret tunnels that he probably wrote them into spaceships when he could. Turns out I was right, for, having got his emergency power supply going, our hero then moves his ship's pilot seat aside to reveal a secret tunnel leading to a second control room where he sits and listens in on the plot-point dropping conversations of the space pirates who then board his ship. (They have a newly developed super-secret anti-energy sucky thing device on their ship.) ( )