THE RATIONAL ARGUMENTATOR |
Review of Robert Wilfred Franson's The Shadow of the Ship |
The Shadow of the Ship by
Robert Wilfred Franson is a science-fiction novel set in a universe with
a unique premise for methods of interstellar travel. A novel with strong
individualist and life-extensionist themes, this book has much to
recommend itself to libertarians and transhumanists alike. The Second
Edition of The
Shadow of the Ship was
released in Kindle format in December 2014, after Franson regained the
rights to the work from the publisher of the 1983 First Edition. The
Second Edition contains major enhancements, including more extensive
character development, explanation of key aspects of the world within
which the novel takes place, and an ending that clearly sets the stage
for additional books in what is to be Franson’s Overflight series.
Space travel in The
Shadow of the Ship is
accessible to a society that is otherwise technologically far behind our
own. The Trails Culture is dispersed among tens of worlds but lacks
access even to most twentieth-century technology, such as powered flight
or electricity. A series of trails across the “meadow” of subspace
connects planets and can be traversed by caravans conveyed by waybeasts
(squeakers) who are uniquely suited to crossing them. The book’s
protagonist, Hendrikal Eiverdein Rheinallt, is originally from Earth and
has been stranded within the region inhabited by the Trails Culture ever
since his spaceship crashed on a nearby world. He and his friend Arahant,
an intelligent aircat with the ability to speak and compose operas, are
“bloodswayers” – practitioners of a rare and challenging discipline that
allows the channeling of the body’s energies toward repair and
rejuvenation. Rheinallt and Arahant are therefore indefinitely lived and
more resilient than ordinary humans, though not indestructible.
Rheinallt is approximately six centuries old and endeavors to use his
vast scientific knowledge to eventually find his way back to Earth. In
the meantime, he carefully advances the scientific and technical
knowledge of the inhabitants of the Blue Free Nation, the most tolerant
and least regimented of the societies within the Trails Culture.
The book’s events take place aboard a caravan headed by Rheinallt with
the purpose of investigating rumors of a crashed starship along the Blue
Trail. The starship would be a paradigm-changing find for the people of
the Trails Culture, as it would permit space travel without the
limitations that the Trails pose; it could also be Rheinallt’s means to
return home. The caravan includes many travelers who join out of
scientific curiosity or a desire for fame, while others have more
personal motives. Accompanying Rheinallt is his wife and beast-master
Whitnadys, as well as a small contingent of crew to defend the caravan
and provide essential logistical support. Although Rheinallt is the
captain of the caravan, interactions aboard are largely guided by a
spontaneous order without explicit laws and with virtually no authority
for the captain to impose preemptive restrictions or discipline.
Rheinallt, apart from making sure that the caravan is properly organized
and maintained, only has the same prerogatives as ordinary passengers –
such as the right of self-defense and the ability to protect the caravan
against threats that have already manifested themselves. He considers
the circumstances carefully and is reluctant to resort to force unless
the existence of a physical threat is incontrovertible, as he does not
wish for the passengers to lose trust in his leadership or the
legitimacy of his decisions.
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“The more positive examples of protagonists
with unlimited lifespans arise in fiction, the greater will be the
cultural acceptance of the idea’s eventual application to our world. For
this reason and many others, readers should eagerly anticipate the
continuation of Franson’s Overflight series.” |
Apart from the mostly anarchistic order aboard the caravan – a
reflection of the broader lack of centralized authority within the Blue
Free Nation – there are competing visions presented in the book,
including an attempt by the Federated Trailmen, the area’s guild of
caravaneers, to bring subspace travel within their sphere of control, as
well as the efforts by the government of Fleurage – a world on the Yellow Trail – to clamp down on political dissent and quash “subversive”
innovators who threaten an establishment rapidly spiraling toward
totalitarianism. Various passengers on the caravan represent these
conflicting visions, which come to challenge Rheinallt’s ability to
peacefully coordinate the expedition.
As much of the novel centers around the mystery of the ship and the
stories of the passengers aboard, I will not delve into too much detail
regarding events that are crucial to the story’s suspense and surprise.
I note, however, that the Second Edition contains significant additions,
including thorough expositions of the main characters’ backgrounds and
key aspects of Franson’s universe – such as subspace travel, the
bloodswayer discipline, and the cultural and technological environment
of the Trails Culture. The newly added content allows for foreshadowing
of important discoveries and a more definitive elaboration on the
threads of the story that would be continued in subsequent novels of the
series. Furthermore, the revised ending is quite moving and immerses the
reader more deeply into the novel’s characters.
Indeed, the characters of Rheinallt and Arahant should be of interest to
all supporters of indefinite life extension, as here we have fine
examples of literary protagonists who do not senesce and are not
condemned to an inevitable demise – and who are also intelligent,
rational, benevolent, witty, creative, and resourceful. Their range of
abilities and vulnerabilities is much closer to what actual indefinitely
lived organisms would experience: they can still suffer from accidents
and external physical harm, but they lack a built-in expiration.
Therefore, their interactions in the environment of subspace are still
fraught with peril, but they have sufficient abilities and strengths to
give them a fighting chance – much like the fighting chance we humans
will need when faced with the many phenomena in the universe that are
far bigger than ourselves. The more positive examples of protagonists
with unlimited lifespans arise in fiction, the greater will be the
cultural acceptance of the idea’s eventual application to our world. For
this reason and many others, readers should eagerly anticipate the
continuation of Franson’s Overflight series, which will finally bring
the universe and ideas of The
Shadow of the Ship into
renewed prominence after more than three decades.
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From the same author |
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To Prevent World War III, Do Not Arm Ukraine's Regime
(no
329 – February 15, 2015)
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We Must Proudly Reassert Free Speech and Universal
Western Values
(no
328 – January 15, 2015)
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Henry Hazlitt's Time Will Run Back: Unleashing
Business to Improve the Human Condition
(no
327 – December 15, 2014)
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Individual Empowerment through Emerging Technologies:
Virtual Tools for a Better Physical World
(no
326 – November 15, 2014)
▪
The Strengths and Weaknesses of Atlas Shrugged:
Part III
(no
324 – Sept. 15, 2014)
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More...
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word 'liberty,' circa 2300 B.C. |
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