- Paperback
- Publisher: Berkley Pub Group (April 1983)
- ISBN-10: 0425058638
- ISBN-13: 978-0425058633
- Product Dimensions: 17.3 x 10.4 x 1.8 cm
- Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 5,496,256 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
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In Mirkheim, the Polesotechnic League is a sprawling civilization encompassing many worlds and intelligent races. Unlike many other science fiction prognostications of the future, the Polesotechnic League is based on commerce--none of this "Star Trek" stuff about people not needing money and so on. Here, people and aliens act pretty much like humans do today, and for the same reasons. This means that while charitable and ethical motives exist, people and some aliens alike are out to make a buck (well, a credit). Notwithstanding this similarity to present day humans, Anderson does manage to make his aliens different from humans, and he generally has a pretty good scientific basis for these differences. His speculations along these lines are often quite interesting.
In this novel, the Polesotechnic League is faced with essentially a civil war between two rival factions, for mysterious reasons that the protagonists, Nicholas Van Rijn, David Falkayn and his "Trouble Twister" team, are trying to understand and overcome. This is really a conflict between freedom and big government, and there is some typically Poul Anderson debate about the desireablity of big versus small government. My only complaint about the novel is that it ends on something of a depressing note.
This is a "must read" for readers who have enjoyed other Poul Anderson stories set in the "Polesotechnic League" universe. A very interesting and readable yarn.