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For Love and Glory by Poul Anderson
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For Love and Glory (edition 2003)

by Poul Anderson

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2376112,544 (2.69)3
On the uncharted planet Jonna lies the archaeological find of a lifetime. An immense artifact left behind by the mysterious race known as the Forerunners, who predate all the known cultures in the seafaring galaxy and had long vanished before any intelligent species had taken to the stars. But human Lissa and her Tyrannosaurus look-alike partner, Karl, aren't the first to make the discovery. Two freeboaters whose motives aren't purely scientific are also after the object. The Forerunners had revolutionized entire fields of technology, and each discovery has reaped huge financial rewards. If the same holds true for the newest discovery, Lissa realizes only she and Karl stand between what could be the scientific discovery of a lifetime or an unsolved mystery waiting to be unleashed.… (more)
Member:brightcopy
Title:For Love and Glory
Authors:Poul Anderson
Info:Tor Books (2003), Edition: 1st, Hardcover, 304 pages
Collections:Your library, To read
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Tags:science fiction

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For Love and Glory by Poul Anderson

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Showing 1-5 of 6 (next | show all)
Judging by the publication data this was published posthumously, it has an incomplete and unedited feel. Most of the story follows Lissa, an idealistic naturalist and Hebo, an aged entrepreneur out to make money wherever he can. They meet, part, meet several years later, part and meet again- all without any real sense of narrative connection. There are some really intriguing ideas here that would individually make a good story but nothing gets developed.
library book read 11/13/2023 ( )
  catseyegreen | Nov 13, 2023 |
This book is a fix-up, built around two stories originally written for the Isaac's Universe project, substantially modified and with new materal written to expand it out to novel length. Unfortunately, while each piece of it is a pleasant enough read, the overall effect is choppily episodic, the parts not complete enough to stand as separate stories, and not blended together sufficiently to make a satisfactory novel.

The background is a loose, multi-species civilization occupying mostly the near galactic neighborhood. The various species trade with each other, and have treaties governing how they decide who owns what, and sometimes mount joint scientific expeditions, but mostly don't interact too closely. Like other species, the humans aren't all under one government and one culture, and most of the principal human characters are citizens of Asborg, which has the kind of corporate feudalism Anderson has featured in other novels. Earth also has the computer intelligence-based Gaia culture/blended identity that has appeared in other works, but the widespread, ftl-based interstellar culture in this book is incompatible with the stl limitations on travel and colonization featured in some of them. Another of the important human characters is from Earth, but, as one of the first generation for whom serious life extension was available, he's over nine hundred years old and hasn't been back to Earth in several centuries, in part because he chose not to become a member of the shared Gaia mind.

Lissa Windholm is a daughter of one of the noble houses of Asborg, still fairly young (only one rejuvenation), and not yet quite ready to settle down and give up adventuring. While on one of those adventures, as part of a multi-species scientific expedition to a newly-discovered habitable planet, she encounters a pair of freelance explorers. One of them's the Earth-native human mentioned above, Torben Hebo, and the other is Dzesi of the Ulas Trek, one of the vaguely catlike natives of Rikha. Hebo and Dzesi have discovered a Forerunner artifact, and the problem in this episode is making sure the artifact is turned over to proper scientific investigation while not depriving the freelancers of fair compensation for their discovery. Other episodes involve other scientific discoveries related to the Forerunners, and conflict with the lizard-like species known as the Susaians and with another Asborgian house, Seafell, concerning exactly who is going to get to acquire and exploit that knowledge. Hebo and Dzesi wind up playing a major role in Lissa's efforts to ensure that the knowledge is widely shared, rather than becoming the private property of one government.

This is all much more involving to read than it may sound when described like that, but still, this is very minor Anderson. ( )
  LisCarey | Sep 19, 2018 |
Pearl Ruled @ page 60

Nope. Not even a little bit sorry to see you go, book. Poul Anderson standard writing, and that's neither praise nor blame. Plot better than average; but there's no there there. Frankly it's just dull and I am way too old to slog through average to dull prose unless I'm being paid.

No one's paying me. Bye now!

PS The three stars means it's not a bad read just not for me ( )
  richardderus | Jun 5, 2018 |
For those who crave one last novel from Anderson, Tor has produced For Love and Glory. This book is a prime example of Anderson's ability to tell a tale with depth and integrity. In the far future, the adventurous have left Earth and the last inhabitants turn increasingly to a machine-maintained mental community. Far-flung human colonies build homogenous and increasingly divergent societies. Lissa Davysdaughter Windholm, from a ruling merchant house on the planet of Asborg, meets "freelancer" Torben Hebo (a man so old he was born on Earth) when they both explore an important artifact left by the mysterious Forerunners.

In another's hands this story might degenerate into the clichéd Beauty and the Beastly Man, but Anderson sends them on separate adventures, deftly weaving back and forth. In a time when information is power, Lissa steals a march on the Susaians, a paranoid military race hoarding a secret. Torben takes a necessary, but nostalgic, trip to Earth. Rejuvenation has extended human life indefinitely, but has not provided a system for handling the increasing memories. Torben needs his memories "edited," but what to discard and what to keep? The two eventually meet up again to squabble and foil another plot by the Susaians, but this time at a deadly cost.

For Love and Glory is not among my favorite books from Poul Anderson. Its fragmented nature betrays the inspiration for the novel—two short stories reworked and expanded. But Anderson doesn't take the easy way out, doing the cliched or expected in his story telling. The characters are true to themselves. They don't have any sudden or inexplicable changes in behavior or personality to suit the plot. For Love and Glory is an "average" Anderson novel, but his "average" is better than most people's best.

This an excerpt of a longer review I published at Strange Horizons (http://www.strangehorizons.com/2003/20031201/posthumous.shtml) ( )
  MarysGirl | Sep 4, 2010 |
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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Poul Andersonprimary authorall editionscalculated
DiFate, VincentCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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To Geoff Kidd for help above and beond the call of friendship.
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At first sight Lissa thought it was an island -- a strange one, yes, but this whole world was strange to her.
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On the uncharted planet Jonna lies the archaeological find of a lifetime. An immense artifact left behind by the mysterious race known as the Forerunners, who predate all the known cultures in the seafaring galaxy and had long vanished before any intelligent species had taken to the stars. But human Lissa and her Tyrannosaurus look-alike partner, Karl, aren't the first to make the discovery. Two freeboaters whose motives aren't purely scientific are also after the object. The Forerunners had revolutionized entire fields of technology, and each discovery has reaped huge financial rewards. If the same holds true for the newest discovery, Lissa realizes only she and Karl stand between what could be the scientific discovery of a lifetime or an unsolved mystery waiting to be unleashed.

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