Poul Anderson, who passed away in 2001, was one of the true super luminaries in the field of science fiction, and it is unfortunate indeed that much of his writing, amounting to more than one hundred books, is hard to find and thus eroding from collective science fiction memory. The Enemy Stars is one of his earlier novels and serves as a wonderful way for readers to introduce or reintroduce themselves to this science fiction legend. This rather short novel first appeared in the magazine Astounding Science Fiction with the title We Have Fed Our Seas in August and September 1958. The title was changed, for reasons I certainly don’t understand, to The Enemy Stars, and the book was nominated for a Hugo award for best science fiction novel of 1959. In 1979, Anderson went back and slightly revised the novel, principally updating the hard science fiction aspects of the tale based on the knowledge gained over the course of the twenty years since the book was written.
I can't say I was blown away by this novel, although it is certainly a good read. In my opinion, it is too short; it took me a while to get really acquainted with each of the characters, and by that time there was too little insight left to share before the rapidly approaching ending. There are some wonderful ideas wrapped into this narrative, but I didn't feel as if enough of them were given the time and care to make them truly flourish. The historical context of the drama also wasn't exploited as much as I would have liked. Basically, at some time in the future, Earth and its colonial satellites and planets maintain a tough alliance, with suspicion and dislike seemingly bred into the respective settlers. The government is some type of one-world entity called the Protectorate, but we don't learn much about the system beyond the fact that many men oppose it both philosophically and practically. In this world, a spaceship exists far out in space, a ship launched by a country that no longer exists. Scientists can effectively "beam up" to the ship across vast distances in space, and four very different men do so in order to study a newly discovered dark star. Naturally, something goes wrong, and the foursome must look death in the face and work together in order to survive. Any truths we learn from the novel come out over the course of this life and death drama in space.
The Enemy Stars didn't really provide the level of philosophical revelation I half expected at the end, and certain parts of the story (especially that concerning Earth's government) never got the attention they seemed to deserve, yet this was still an enjoyable and thought-provoking read. The science is definitely of the hard science fiction variety, yet the human element takes its rightful place at the core of the novel. Man's infinite search for truth, for a reason for being, is what Anderson approaches via The Enemy Stars, and while he might not have put a spotlight on the true answer of existence, he does manage to sweep his flashlight of imagination over some important and meaningful aspects of that ultimate answer.