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Mission to Universe (1965)

by Gordon R. Dickson

Other authors: See the other authors section.

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322280,819 (3)1
General Benjamin Shore was heading for the stars under forged orders - and in defiance of the commands of the President. He was leaving Earth in an untested ship with a crew chosen by neccesity and with nothing but faith to guide him. His onlt yhope was to find habitable worlds in the unexplored reaches of space ahead. Thus began Man's first mission to the uncharted universe. Shore had no illusions. Before him lay danger, probable disappointment - even death. But nothing had prepared him for the nightmare he would have to face on the planet of the Gray-Furs...for the menace of the Golden People who had driven all other races from Galactic Center - or for what awaited him if he returned to the world he called home!ted their robot-like existence. Either way, the human race was doomed!… (more)
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1st line: "Ben Shore woke--and the long interior of the barracks-like building around him was still, moonlit dark."

It's funny to read this because it seems completely cliche now, almost like a parody of an SF novel...but of course in 1965 most of this was probably brand new and exciting!

What we have is General Ben Shore, who hijacks the just-finished "phase ship" (whose infinite probability drive is clearly what Douglas Adams was parodying with the Heart of Gold) so that he can go off to search for other planets for Earth to colonize instead of getting into a nuclear war.
He pretty much behaves like a 14-year-old the entire time, all OH IT'S SO TRAGIC I'M ALWAYS AN OUTSIDER and OH GOD I CAN'T BELIEVE THE CREW MEMBERS SAW ME CRY THAT ONE TIME WHEN ALIENS TOOK OVER MY BRAIN.
Oh and then he falls in love with the ship's nurse. I guess just because she was there, since they never had a conversation about anything personal, ever. ( )
1 vote JenneB | Apr 2, 2013 |
Not terrible. But almost. I really had to push myself to finish it. It hasn't aged well. And the whole sub-plot about the main character's insistence of enforcing military discipline on the civilian crew of humanity's first faster-than-light spaceship as it explores the universe is eye-rollingly bad, as is his insistence on the need to show no emotions or feelings, keep the rest of the crew at a distance and bark orders at them rudely all the time. I think we're meant to sympathize with his shouldering this great burden of command which leaves him isolated and lonely, seeing it as a necessary sacrifice for the sake of all mankind. But really, its stupid. Overall the book comes across as a kind of proto-fascist Star Trek. ( )
1 vote iftyzaidi | Aug 3, 2011 |
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» Add other authors

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Gordon R. Dicksonprimary authorall editionscalculated
Elson, PeterCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Kidd, TomCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Russo, BiancaTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Sternbach, RickCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Thole, KarelCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Van Dongen,H.R.Cover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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To Lester del Rey, Craftmaster in the Mystery of Story-smithing.
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Ben Shore woke - and the long interior of the barracks-like building around him was still, moonlit dark.
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Quietly, unobtrusively, over the past six months, he had tried to weed out the nervous ones, the fearful, the unreliable among both the men and women. For that matter he had tried to weed out the women entirely, but that had not worked.
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General Benjamin Shore was heading for the stars under forged orders - and in defiance of the commands of the President. He was leaving Earth in an untested ship with a crew chosen by neccesity and with nothing but faith to guide him. His onlt yhope was to find habitable worlds in the unexplored reaches of space ahead. Thus began Man's first mission to the uncharted universe. Shore had no illusions. Before him lay danger, probable disappointment - even death. But nothing had prepared him for the nightmare he would have to face on the planet of the Gray-Furs...for the menace of the Golden People who had driven all other races from Galactic Center - or for what awaited him if he returned to the world he called home!ted their robot-like existence. Either way, the human race was doomed!

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Ship powered by phase drive explores for Earth-type planets. Meets aliens and regressed civilizations.
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