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Triplanetary
Triplanetary
Triplanetary
Audiobook9 hours

Triplanetary

Written by E. E. "Doc" Smith

Narrated by Reed McColm

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

()

About this audiobook

From the atomic age in Atlantis to a world remote in space and time, two incredible ancient races, the Arisians and the Eddorians, are in the midst of an interstellar war with Earth as the prize. The Arisians, using advanced mental technology, have foreseen the invasion of their galaxy by the corrupt and evil Eddorians, so they begin a breeding program on every planet in their universe. Their goal...to produce super warriors who can hold off the invading Eddorians.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJan 15, 2006
ISBN9781596074507

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Reviews for Triplanetary

Rating: 3.333827810089021 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

337 ratings25 reviews

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I read this series over 30 years ago and thought then it would make a great mini series or series of movies case in point Star Trek, it maybe dated in some parts but I'm sure the wizz bang writers of today would have no trouble updating it,
    Here's hoping Mark.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I found this novel read like a WWII war-adventure story set in space. Interesting world building but not sure if I feel it is worth it to return to the Lensman universe.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A hidden gem of Classic sci-fi. I’d recommend this to fans of Bradbury, Clarke, or Asimov ; Specifically the foundation series.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    it is a really good story - the writing might be average, and the views on all kinds of things may be outdated in the mind of a modern reader - but the STORY is absolutely excellent!
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Another "classic" sci-fi novel and another reminder of how much the genre --and really society, as if sci-fi existed separately from that-- has changed in the last 70 to 85 years (this was originally published serially starting in the early- to mid-1930's, I think, then collected and amended/rewritten for publication in 1948.)

    More genre specific is the lower quality of the writing (reasonably decent here, considering, but still...) and the very time-specific plot/event style. E.g. "humans" discover some new technology based on some new physics and have a working, battleship-mounted weapon based on it in 3 days. E.g. the uber-competent agent/engineer/scientist builds a functioning first-of-its-kind "ultra wave" "camera" in-field in what sounds like hours, or at most days. I get it that (these days) that is a (sub-)genre specific trope and, moreover, that when e.g. someone on Star Trek picks a crystal up *off the ground* and "wires" it into their tricorder, or when someone in the Expanse decrypts and reprograms a Martian gunships' military-level encrypted computer with *hardware* tamper-triggers in what is apparently 9 to 90 minutes, that I am letting the exact same thing slide by... but it just seems so much worse and more obvious here.

    I feel like I can also detect the fingerprints of the post-WWII, building Red Scare re-writes here. There are passages that either were super-awkwardly inserted and/or just leap out now. Some (one passage RE: an outside power riling up, essentially, "minorities") almost seem prescient a la "Russian election tampering" OR as simply being quite racist (e.g. the attraction of Communism for many black people in the period was because it spoke about and criticized American racism.) Others seem immensely callous OR as subtle criticisms (e.g. the worthy adversary that the "Earthlings" make peace with... nevermind that the Earthlings already realized that those same aliens have brutally subjugated and continue a total war against the other intelligent species on their planet... is this commentary on Communist Russia? Nazi Germany? "Worthy" adversaries in general?)

    To be fair, I suppose that is another genre change. Early sci-fi was 100% action. The characters do not have, ah, "rich inner lives" nor do they live in societies.

    Anyway, as a historical piece this was interesting; for my particular interest it was worth reading; as a story... eh, probably a waste of your time.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Well, that's done.

    This has got to be the first novel I've read that opens with an introduction that prewarns that the author made a mistake with the first six chapters. And they weren't wrong. The first six chapters serve as an extended prologue. And it's boring and, for the most part, completely superfluous.

    Most of the rest of the issues I have with the novel are simply because it's a product of its time. It contains that standard misogyny inherent to any action novel up to at least the 80s. Men are manly or cowardly, and women are there to look beautiful, be admired, and be saved so they can fawn over their manly men. The science part of the science fiction doesn't hold up whatsoever, with its outdated various rays and gases and ultrawave communication. And the dialogue, though quite typical of an action/adventure novel of the time, is shockingly bad. So bad that I actually laughed out loud at times. The aliens, in some cases supposedly emotionless, come across as bad gangsters. And all the aliens, no matter how removed from the human race they are, all talk like they're rough tough business men from the 1950s.

    The final problem I have is with the actual narrator of this audiobook version. He's simply awful and, should he ever step near a microphone to record anything other than a spoof commercial for a K-Tel Goofy Greatest Hits of the 60s collection, then he should be bludgeoned into submission with a very large, very blunt instrument. Perhaps a Smart Car. Or a house.

    Really. He's that bad.

    So, unfortunately, I won't be diving into the other five adventures of the Lensmen. They'll just have to somehow muddle through without me.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    "Immediately before the Coalescence began there was one,and only one, planetary solar system in the Second Galaxy; and, until the advent of Eddore, the Second Galaxy was entirely devoid of intelligent life"In "Triplanetary" by E. E. "Doc" SmithThere are only three real approaches to physics in SF:1. Absolute hard core real physics with speculative aspects;2. Realistic sounding nonsense;3. Unrealistic sounding nonsense.(bought in 1999; cost = 1980 Portuguese escudos, around 9.88 euros in today's European currency)I am personally a fan of approach 2. This gave us stuff like "Triplanetary", "First Lensman", etc.In response to those suggesting that dissecting the science in SF novels is redundant and possibly silly, I would argue for a dichotomy. On the one hand, you have SF that are just that, fiction (in case of "Triplanetary", crap fiction). Importantly, they do not claim to be more. They could be set in the distant future, use blatantly non-existent faux-physics terms to drive the plot (e.g. "dilithium" crystals, inertialess drives, colliding galaxies (*), etc.), not address time-travel paradoxes etc. That's fine... they stay within the realms of their claim and no-one expects them to be accurate. On the other hand, there's stuff that claims to be based on what we currently know about space and physics (e.g. Apollo 13, Gravity, Interstellar). I think this category of SF needs to get things right as much as possible. When truth and fiction are mixed, it is important to be able to tell which is which. As a parallel, I do know that "Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter" is not a historically accurate biography.If a film made the claim that it was a Lincoln biography, I would expect it to be broadly accurate. Otherwise, I would be misled. Yep, it is silly to suggest that Apollo 11 did not land on the moon... having said that, Apollo 13 also reached and successfully landed on the moon (not shown in the film). This was never disclosed because the secret world government does not want you to know that that's when we first made contact with aliens. This tripartite agreement for secrecy between the world government, the Bush family and Elvis representing the aliens, came about because humanity is not yet considered ready for alien contact. Furthermore, the aliens do not want you to know that tin-foil hats are indeed the best defense against their mind-control weapons. One day, the truth will come out thanks to people like me writing reviews and trying not to make derogatory comments on Doc Smith's "science". This story was published in serial form in 1934 ffs, more than 80 years ago! What did we know about science in the 30s when it came to Astrophysics and Cosmology! Nothing!PS. (*) Galaxies do actually collide, within local clusters and superclusters, just because of gravity. It's only on the very largest scales that they are all moving apart. So, Doc Smith was not that far off...NB: Read in 1985 for the first time. Re-read in 1995.SF = Speculative Fiction
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    A couple years ago I read A Brief and Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Diaz, which was delightful and educational. By reading that book I learned alot about the Dominican Republic and classic fantasy and sci fiction. I thought I knew the classics pretty well, but a careful reader can put together a fairly long list of authors by taking good notes throughout Oscar Wao. One of the authors I had never heard of was E.E. "Doc" Smith and so I picked up a cheesy looking paperback copy of Triplanetary, the first "Lensman" volume. This book was written right after WWII and reads a bit like an old episode of "Lost in Space", but there is something special going on because the book starts out with these strange historical vignettes. These are set in Atlantis, Rome, WWI Front, some future nuclear war, and then post solar system settlement. I could tell, Smith is really into obscure historical details, especially on the Rome and WWI bits. The future vocab of space pirates sounds a lot like the script from a Gidget movie. Good intel is called "dope", and some things "aren't my bag". That aside, there are truly weird aliens and Smith has thought about how they might have evolved on their home worlds. It's a bit more in depth then I thought it might be. I'm curious enough to read the next Lensman book, mainly to see if the author's writing style evolves at all. If and when that happens, I'll let you know.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Nostalgia. This was the first science fiction book I remember reading, and is the first book of the Lensman series, which quickly had me rapt. The library editions I devoured had little postage-stamp sized line drawings at the head of each chapter, one (not Triplanetary) involved the hero visiting a planet of Amazons (the women, not the bookstore), and the illustration showed a topless lady flying a biplane. What more could a twelve year old want?Edward Elmer “Doc” Smith had a PhD in chemical engineering and worked mostly as a food scientist. There is an unverified claim that he invented a way to make powdered sugar stick to donuts. In his spare time, he verifiably invented the Space Opera; the six-volume Lensman series covers billions of years of galactic history and features noble heroes, their beautiful but spunky inamorata, space pirates galore, massive intragalactic battles, weird alien lifeforms and boldly going where no one had gone before. What more could a twelve year old want?Triplanetary starts all this off; the original Triplanetary was a stand-alone magazine serial; Smith latter added additional material to fit it into the Lensman series. The galaxy is a war zone between the beatific Arisians and the brutal Eddorians; the Arisians attempt to peacefully guide various planets – including Earth, which for reasons presumably known only to Smith, is always called “Tellus” – to civilization, while the Eddorians intervene, disguised as Earthmen (including Nero, Hitler, etc.), and screw things up. The main story in Triplanetary involves a three-way space battle between Roger the Space Pirate (actually, of course, a disguised Eddorian); the triplanetary (Venus, Tellus, and Mars) battle fleet; and the amphibious Nevians, who show up in the middle of things with a FTL drive and a ray that converts iron to a liquid. The Stalwart Hero and the Beautiful and Spunky Heroine get captured successively by the space pirates and the amphibians but escape in time to lead the three planets to victory against all comers. What more could a twelve year old want?Well, the science is dubious; there’s no mention of atomic energy (Triplanetary was published in 1933), the FTL drive works by removing inertia from matter, space is still “the ether”, “spy rays” see through walls; “tractor” and “pusher” beams shove stuff around. The heroes and heroines are all Red-Blooded American Boys and Girls (there’s a black man in First Lensman, but he’s a car hop; Smith is however, perfectly accepting of Martians, Venusians, four-dimensional aliens from Pluto, and miscellaneous other creatures). And everybody smokes. At twelve, I was OK with the racism – not even realizing it was racism. I was a little puzzled by the “ether”, as I was just well-read enough to realize there wasn’t any such thing. I was just beginning to be interested in the Red Blooded American Girls, as Smith always described them as wearing “wisps” of clothing; other than the aforementioned bare-breasted Amazon there were no pictures, but I could imagine a lot. And every adult I knew smoked.On re-reading the Lensman series about 50 years later, I find them most interesting for sort of a future socioarcheology; what people of the past thought the future would be like. Which turns out, as I suspect it always will turn out, to be just like the present but with spaceships and ray guns. Well, so what?
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This is the first novel that kicks off the classic "Lensman" series, probably my favorite SF series of all time.Triplanetary was originally published in four parts in 1934. That was followed a few years later by four novels that formed the original Lensman series. Smith then went back and revised Triplanetary to serve as the introduction to the series. It describes the early history of a breeding program established on Earth to create the ultimate weapon that will be capable of overcoming the Eddorians. The Kinneson family line and the family line characterized by gold-flecked-tawny eyes and red-bronze-auburn hair are introduced.Triplanetary incorporates the early history of that breeding program on Earth, illustrated with the lives of several warriors and soldiers, from ancient times to the discovery of the first interstellar space drive. It adds an additional short novel (originally published with the Triplanetary name) which is transitional to the novel First Lensman. It details some of the interactions and natures of two distinct breeding lines, one bearing some variant of the name "Kinnison", and another distinguished by possessing "red-bronze-auburn hair and gold-flecked, tawny eyes". The two lines do not commingle until the Arisian breeding plan brings them together.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I found this novel read like a WWII war-adventure story set in space. Interesting world building but not sure if I feel it is worth it to return to the Lensman universe.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Amateur and immature construction and prose mar the execution of a supreme imagination. Having written Galactic Patrol, this volume was cobbled together out of a number of stories, some of them re-written to become part of the series. This shows. Parts 1 & 2 are particularly poor and could be entirely excised from the book to its overall improvement. There's is however, something to be said for part 3. The special effects are superb and the visualisation of idiosyncratic space battles and technology are second to none. If you want to know where Lucas got the idea for the Death Star, then this is it. The shockingly low standard of prose continues throughout the book but it's PERHAPS worth it... if you're an sf nut like me.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5

    This book is just about a cheezy as they get while still being readable and enjoyable in its own way. It is horrendously dated and uses very, very two-dimensional characters (nearly one dimensional) but it is actually fairly well plotted and internally consistent. I enjoyed it again as an adult - but not nearly so much as a child. But that could be said for many novels.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This novel would confirm all the preconceptions of a reader who is not in tune with early popular science fiction. The characters are two dimensional and their interactions are almost laughable, the writing hardly rises above the adequate and at times is much worse than that, the plot if there is one is of the and then.. and then...variety, its realpolitik is crass in the extreme and the novel was cobbled together following publication of stories in science fiction pulp magazines like Amazing Stories and the joins are all too obvious. And yet...... it does have an undeniable sense of wonder, the action is fast moving and extremely imaginative, it broke new ground in a genre that has become known as "space opera" and the underlying theme of super intelligent aliens guiding or hampering emerging civilisations is a good one.The adventure story in space, which takes up two thirds of this book appeared in 1934; serialised in Amazing Stories, but before we get to this we read Smith's additions that attempt to adapt the story into a sort of prequel to his famous Lensman series. Two old civilizations the Arisians and the Eddorians are fighting for control of the universe; both races have developed powers of the mind that enable them to influence all other races, their latest battleground is the planet earth and Doc Smith inventively sketches in a few key events in earth's history that have been the result of the ancient races machinations. At page 127 in my edition we reach the age of space travel and the adventures in space begin. The quality of some of the writing here is sacrificed for an all out action story that pits a few quintessential American heroes against alien invaders and a representative presence from one of the super powerful Eddorian race who is bent on shaping events for his own evil ends. Doc Smith's superbly orchestrated space battles involving "ultra wave" weapons, inertial-less space ships, tractor beams, shields and blasting weapons, read like an early evocation of something written by Alastair Reynolds. They are as thrilling as they are preposterous and our heroes emerge largely unscathed from overwhelming odds through their courage, resourcefulness and ability to invent whole new scientific technologies at the drop of a hat. The pulpiness of the writing and the story telling must be swallowed whole to enjoy this novel, but if you can do this then there is a fast paced action adventure story that pushed the boundaries of science fiction writing in it's time; those space battles and the escape from the Navian fish men have that sense of wonder that makes this whole science fiction genre so rewarding to read. This together with a truly magnificent underlying theme of universal struggle encourages me to read some more books in the series. I am hoping that the quality of the writing improves a little, but I am not counting on it and so "on with the schlock". A Three star read.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I love the Lensman series, this is no doubt the best 'space opera' series of all time. Reading it now is a bit of a challenge, due to the outdated technology and somewhat scary politics, but even so, this is still great stuff. Just remember it was written a long, long time ago, before computers became common and before the space race. Sit back and enjoy the fun!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    OK, I admit that I possibly wouldn't love the Lensman series if I hadn't grown up reading them. My husband's face just before he gave up on the prologue was an absolute picture.
    But these books are perfect of their type, and not above slightly sending themselves up, either.
    If you want universe spanning high adventure, a multi millennial battle between good and evil, superhuman heroes, reptilian and feline and starkly incomprehensible aliens, scantily clad heroines, bloody hand to hand combat, and a sequence of planet smashing ultra weapons of increasingly barking proportions . . . then why haven't you read these yet?
    Oh yes, and despite anything else I might have said, as long as you skip the prologues they're really rather well written, too.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Don't trust my rating of this book; it's part of my childhood, when I read it over and over again, and I have no way of objectively rating it.

    For reasons I no longer recall, I got rid of these books at some point, probably during a house move when I was trying to de-clutter. I found all seven in the series in a second hand book shop a few years ago and, struck by nostalgia, I bought them all. Reading them again, I found that the clunky writing, the cardboard characters, the outdated social mores, the bad science - everything that should make me drop this book like a venomous snake - was just charming. I was a kid again, thrilling to the adventures of Kim Kinninson and his spaceship crew.

    The golden glow of summer afternoons in the garden and dimly-lit late nights in bed (I had a thing then for dozing off while reading by candlelight - luckily no fires!) so I could get to the end of a chapter (and just one more... maybe another one), illuminates this book with fond memories. It's just not possible for me, the adult, to betray me, the child, by giving this (and the rest of the Lensman series) anything less than 5 stars. Forgive me, you more discerning readers.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Edward E. “Doc” Smith, Ph. D. is one of the few mainstream science fiction authors of the Golden Age with an advanced degree. At least, one of the few to flaunt it. As such, you can expect that his writing is far from more modern “soft sci-fi”, which uses more hand-waving than actual scientific fact or reasonable extrapolation.Triplanetary, a novel that was first serialized in Amazing Stories, has become a prequel to his popular Lensman series. The book itself, as originally published serially, never seemed to have its copyright renewed, and as such, is one of the gems of public domain work originally published in the last 80 years. As it is, though, this public domain version doesn’t include the aspects later added, which firmly set Triplanetary into the Lensman universe, and gave it a a few chapters detailing a somewhat Lovecraftian/Hubbardian alien eugenics project involving humans.The story itself has a complex plot: An undercover spy gets caught up between space pirates and a technologically advanced amphibious alien race. He, his captain, and his damsel in distress are constantly being tossed out of the pan and into the fire, only to make it through via sheer luck and ingenuity.In some ways, I envy Smith, as well as the other Golden Age writers. The corpus of sci-fi was a blank slate, and if you wrote a space adventure about an undiscovered alien race with highly advanced technology, or a story about space pirates, it was new, and exciting. It today’s day and age, a book about those things would seem trite, cliche, or pastiche. It’s good, though, to read such concepts that we have become desensitized to, written under the hand of a pro like Smith. It also has the added benefit of pushing the envelope for today’s writers, giving them a target, a goal, and letting them shoot for the stars.If you are at all interested in Golden Age sci-fi, when spirits were brave, the stakes were high, men were REAL men, women were REAL women, and small furry creatures from Alpha Centauri were REAL small furry creatures from Aplha Centauri (to quote a non-Golden Age sci-fi author).
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This is the second book I started in 2010, but it took me so long to read, that it got lost in my review order. I skipped it and am just now reviewing it in April. No it didn't take me 4 months to read, more like 15 days.This was actually a re-read, and it broke my heart, so I suspect I was also delaying the review on purpose. I was participating in the 75 Book Challenge Lensman Series read. I am way far behind in the reading, so I am not sure if I am still participating.I wish I could say I loved it, or even that it was a good book, but I can't. The reason for heartbreak is that the books in this series are the first SF books I ever read, back when I was 10 or so. They were my dad's books and I loved them and the SF world they opened to me. I have re-read them before as a young adult, but this is the first time as a mature adult. This book does not hold up well.Smith is one of the founders of Space Opera and his themes and tropes are used by most of the authors working today. He is rightfully a legend in SF, and in the New England SF community. Our 2 largest cons are called: Arisia and Boskone. One of my fondest moments was writing a note to his family in the memorial book the Boston SF Worldcon (2004) set up. I still well up thinking about it. This book is supposed to be a prequel to the series. it is chronologically the 1st book, but it was written as the 5th book. What it does is give the background of the conflict between the Arisians and the Eddorians, and how it impacted earth and the growth of human civilization. The book is divided into 3 sections.Smith uses ancient history (Atlantis, Rome) in the first section to show how we developed with the secret influences of the Eddoirans (bad) and the countermeasures of the Arisians (good). The next section covers the world Wars, and adds the the use of technology into the mix. The final section takes us into the future and space. As humans move into space they become aware of others already there. Like many early SF writers Smith thought we would develop technologically faster than we have in terms of becoming a space-faring civilization. The Eddorians find humans who are willing to be their tools in exchange for unlimited wealth and power. These human tools wreak havoc to further the Eddoiran's goals. The forces for law, order and goodness also become aware of the Eddorians and end up getting help from the Arisians to battle the evil that is the result of the Eddorian's and their human tools.The Eddorians are interested in power, domination and personal supremacy. Individuals find planets with life and work to subjugate and control them. There are few Eddorians (they killed each other off), and they nominally cooperate with each other to advance the goal of total domination.The Arisians are those who developed through the stages of civilization and didn't wipe each other out. They learned to be better people with better societies. They watch over others who are developing, and upon discovering the Eddorians, secretly move to counter their evil influences.Both the Arisians and Eddorians are immortal if not killed by accident or violence.The book was first published in 1948, I think. Prior to that many of the 'chapters' were published as short stories in SF magazines (1934). That is one of the issues with the book. It is a group of short stories cobbled together with a little bit of connectivity. It jumps around and really lacks cohesion.The other issue is the writing. It is lacking in feeling, drawn out, and often purple. Its almost like you are reading a purposefully bad parody of SF. The final issue is the characters and the story. Characters are not developed, they are flat and often just representations of 'hero', 'villain', 'victim' , 'stooge' .... Given how old they are there are no minorities and women are not portrayed in a modern fashion, though they are often intelligent and involved.The story is very simple tale of good versus evil. Some have called it a western in space.That said with all the problems and issues, I still fondly remember the joy I had from them previously and love the series still. I just couldn't recommend the book to a new reader. And that too breaks my heart.I was supposed to read the next one: First Lensman in February and I haven't been able to face it.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The audio version of this book starts with a forward that I really wish was not there. I listened to that first and was not looking forward to the book at all, but then once it actually started, I quite liked it. The book was rather exciting with some excellent action scenes. It is definitely evident of the age of the story with some of the dialogue and word choice, but overall, with some changes it could have been written recently. The characters could have had more development, but I blame that on the age to a degree as well. This was written in the very beginnings of sci-fi books, after all. I particularly liked the alien race of Niveans. I'd definitely read this again in book form.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I actually need to find a copy with all the pages. The old book I had (from my dad's bookshelf) was missing the ending. I know there's more based on info I found online, but I've read most of the book. No lensmen in it yet.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Some of the worst dialog and characters ever. It is rare when you root for failure by the "hero" before he murders another city full of alien creatures and then gives some lame assed justification for it. There are some cool retro sci-fi bits mixed in but generally this is a train wreck. Unless the rest of the Lensman series is much better I'd skip it all.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Triplanetary is the first book in the classic Lensman series, the Space Opera that to a great extent defined the format. The list of later fiction that owes a debt to the themes and forms of this series is long and impressive: Green Lantern, Babylon 5, Star Trek, and even Star Wars among others owe much to E.E. "Doc" Smith.Triplanetary starts at the beginning of the universe, and unfortunately starts somewhat slowly. The virtuous and altruistic Arisians and the vile, power-hungry Eddorians, mutually antagonistic alien races, are introduced. The supposedly benevolent Arisians decide (using their advanced powers of precognition) that Earth cannot be protected until the time is right, and allow Atlantis, Rome and finally, the United States, to fall to the forces of the Eddorians. One must simply accept that the Arisians are benevolent given this sort of callousness as they condemn millions of humans to death and suffering.Finally, humanity develops enough to explore the solar system and form the Triplanetary League. Interplanetary commerce is plagued by pirates (who, unbeknownst to the Patrol, are backed by the Eddorian "Roger"), and the Triplanetary Patrol are in the midst of a large scale engagement with the pirate fleet when the Nevians, a race from an iron poor planet, show up and begin reducing both sides' ships to "allotropic iron", which is what they use to power their interstellar ships.The hero of the story, a Patrol agent named Costigan, is kidnapped by the Nevians along with his love interest and an old space hand. The Nevians decide that humans are inferior beings, and carve up both fleets, and head for home. Costigan uses his ultra-wave spy ray to figure out a lot of the Nevian technology and sends reports home to Earth scientists. "Roger" flees and starts a new operation on a distant world.Costigan and his companions stage several escape attempts from their Nevian kidnappers, but are foiled again and again. Human scientists (who, after all, are simply better than the Nevians) figure out Nevian technology, and improve upon it. After much fighting, "Roger" is defeated by a resurgent Patrol armed with both human and Nevian technology, the Nevians acknowledge humans are equals, and peace is negotiated.In some ways, this is not so much "Book One" as it is "Book Zero" in the series. There are no actual Lensmen in the book, there is no Galactic Patrol, and the "Civilization" consists of humans, and by the end, Nevians. Despite some 1950s sensibilities (most notably with respect to relationships between the sexes), the story (once it gets going) is a fun and fast-paced ride through space battles and intrigue. Although it is probably the weakest of the six books in the series, it is stil a very worthy jumping off point for one of the most influential works of sceince fiction.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    On one hand, the series is pure pulp fiction from the 30s, is terribly out of date scientifically, has characters that are either completely good or unredeemably evil, views women as little gals needing protection, and you're never left guessing who's going to win a battle.On the other hand, it is completely addictive, unadulterated fun. This is space opera at its most enjoyable.This first volume gets a lower rating because the first two thirds of it were separately published short stories that got glued together...and they show it. The last third starts to ramp up to the pace of the remaining volumes, which race through this galaxy (and the next) at a headlong pace.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Triplanetary is chronologically the first but in order of writing actually one of the later Lensman books. It is a fixup of several short stories and a novella, which describe the early history of the Lensman universe as it relates to Earth.The stories are organized into three "books." Book I, "Dawn," is divided into "Arisia and Eddore," which describes how the Eddorians came to our cosmos and how the Arisians decided to oppose them: "The Fall of Atlantis," which describes how Gharlane brought down the first Tellurian technological civilization and "The Fall of Rome," which shows Gharlane-as-Nero. Book II, "Dawn," is comprised of "1918," about the experiences of a Kinnison in the Great War; "1941," which depicts the same Kinnison as an industrial engineer in WWII (1); and "19--?," (2) which describes another Kinnison's participation in World War III (which wrecks the second Tellurian technological civilization.Finally, Book III, "Triplanetary," is based on Smith's original novella of the same title. It is set centuries after the atomic war, after humans have constructed their third (and greatest) technological civilization. In this age, humans have fairly rapid STL travel throughout the Solar System, and have made peaceful contact (and fought some wars) with the other sapient races to be found there (3): notably, those of Mars, Venus and Jupiter. The Tellurians, Martians and Venusians have formed the "Triplanetary League," a precursor to the later "Galactic Patrol."It is the story of Conway Costigan and Clio Marsden, and how they face (and overcome) in succession "Gray Rogers," (this cycle's incarnation of Gharlane of Eddore) and the Nevians (a hostile spacefaring race). It is a love story, a war story, and a tale of high adventure and discovery. Like all of "Doc" Smith's writing, it is fascinating, thrilling, and quite addictive. Gray Rogers has a classic Villain Lair, one that much other science fiction was to copy (4). Complete with at least one Fembot (not called such). The Nevians (and their home planet foes) are two interesting races. And the battles and technologies, as usual, are enjoyable, imaginative, and colorfully described.This is, however, hardly "Doc" Smith's greatest book. As a lash-up of several stories, it suffers from the usual problems in transition (compare with Asimov's Foundation, which was written from several short stories). Smith's choice of historical villains (to be energized by Gharlane of Eddore) is debatable, to say the least -- ok, I'll buy Adolf Hitler and the "Tyrant of Asia" (4). But poor, pathetic Kaiser Wilhelm II? (5) Or Nero, who was more the artistic buffoon than the calculating tyrant? (6)Had most of Smith's work been to this standard, he would today be remembered as a rather mediocre Golden Age writer, rather than the seminal figure he is. Fortunately, the rest of the Lensman series is better.===(1) Semi-autobiographical: "Doc" Smith did war work. This chapter comes off with utter authenticity, for that reason.(2) According to the later, retconned GURPS Lensman, this started from an AH version of the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962. Steve Jackson games would make the same assumption about the atomic war in DeCamp's main story universe, as well.(3) Smith of course assumes that most other Solar planets are habitable: this was a common sf-nal assumption until the late 1950's and not totally disproven until the 1960's to 1970's, when we began to send probe to other worlds. He should not be condemned for this assumption.(4) You could make a case that Jack Williamson's "Prince of Space" was the first to have such a lair.(5) An imaginary figure, presumably Stalin's successor. Even an Eddorian would probably have had difficulties with being both Hitler and Stalin simultaneously, and given the course of WWII this would have made no sense.(6) Of course, as a member of the generation to whom World War I was very much part of living memory, Smith had a rather harsher opinion of "Kaiser Billy" than mine.(7) Nero is a major villain in most Christian-centered Roman fiction, since he was the first Roman Emperor to seriously persecute that faith. Ironically, he is more hated for this fairly minor aspect of his policy than for his other blunders and crimes, some of which were worse (such as losing control of the Empire and thus preciptating the War of the Four Emperors). In the case of both the Kaiser and Nero, we must believe that Gharlane was deliberately sabotaging his respective realms, since he's much more competent than that!