Retief! |
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edited & compiled by Eric Flint Baen: New York, 2001 |
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592 pages |
September 2012 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Keith Laumer's Retief science-fiction series was written over a number of years and contains novels as well as shorter pieces. Subsets have found their way into book form in various combinations. Retief! is the largest selection to date in a single book, with fifteen novelets and short stories, one novella, and a novel. It's a good introduction to the series. Jame Retief, diplomat extraordinaire, is shown in full spectrum, outwitting his superiors of the Corps Diplomatique Terrestrienne (CDT) and assorted conniving aliens, as well as outfighting some of the latter when necessary.
Among the novelets are a couple of my favorites, reviewed separately at Troynovant: "The Brass God" and "Wicker Wonderland". One thing to bear in mind about the spectrum in Retief! is that it includes a couple of outliers: the novella "Diplomat-at-Arms" (1960), the very first Retief story and the one which opens the book, is chronologically last in Retief's life. It is sober, harshly realistic, and has rather more of Retief's character than we are used to seeing in the funny novelets of red-tape and aliens. Other diplomats are scarcely present and there are no aliens. It's a unique adventure in the series, and striking in several ways. At the other end of the characterization spectrum is the included novel, Retief's War (1965). Here we have only about as much of Retief's personality and wit as we get in any of the novelets, so although on-stage throughout, he seems spread rather thin. Exotic aliens there are a-plenty, in an ecology of electro-mechano-organic creatures, all more or less intelligent and talkative. While there is lots of action, the resident aliens mostly hold center stage. By far the most memorable are the gigantic aerial Rhoon, flyers the size of rocs or four-engine bombers: intelligent, dangerous, and worth getting on the right side of — if you live survive meeting one. As always, Retief's diplomacy must out-think and out-maneuver his immediate superior Magnan and higher officialdom; here's a little verbal sidelight of a multi-race confrontation being mismanaged by the Ambassador:
Retief! is a good selection of Keith Laumer's Retief stories. Give several a try, to get the flavor; and then read the rest.
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© 2012 Robert Wilfred Franson |
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