The lengthiest piece in this issue is a satire of the Kelly staffing services, which, back in the 20th century, advertised itself as the go-to place for the temporary hire of young women to do routine office work. The advertisements for Kelly emphasized that the 'Kelly girl' was quite attractive and presentable; the perfect marketing tool to aim at the older men who might be interested in hiring a temp.
Saturday, November 23, 2024
National Lampoon November 1975
The lengthiest piece in this issue is a satire of the Kelly staffing services, which, back in the 20th century, advertised itself as the go-to place for the temporary hire of young women to do routine office work. The advertisements for Kelly emphasized that the 'Kelly girl' was quite attractive and presentable; the perfect marketing tool to aim at the older men who might be interested in hiring a temp.
Wednesday, November 20, 2024
Book Review: The Yngling
2 / 5 Stars
'The Yngling' first appeared as a novelette in the October and November 1969 issues of Analog. Author Dalmas expanded the novelette into a 224-page novel, published by Pyramid Books in August, 1971. The cover art is by Jeff Jones.
'John Dalmas' was the pen name of the U.S. writer John Robert Jones, 1926 - 2017. 'The Yngling' was his first novel; during the next 40 years, he went on to published a large body of novels, mainly in the genres of space opera and military sci-fi.
'The Yngling' is set in a post-apocalyptic Europe, some one thousand years into the future. Civilization has reverted to a medieval level, recapitulating the era of duchies, principalities, earldoms, and kingdoms. A quasi-clandestine network of telepaths (or 'psis'), known as the Inner Circle, provide counsel to the lords and serve as communications hubs.
While the nation-states of Western Europe are busy quarreling with one another, the psis have gained knowledge of an alarming development in Asia Minor. A tyrant known as Kazi the Undying has used a mixture of charisma and brutality to bring nomadic horsemen and Turkic soldiery under his rule. Kazi's army of thirty thousand well-trained and ruthless fighters is heading West, bring fear and destruction in its wake.
Fortunately for the peoples of Western Europe, a hero, or 'Yngling' in Scandinavian society, has arisen. A physical specimen of a man named Nils Hammarson. Despite his youth, Nils has a stoic quality that, teamed with a quick intelligence, allows him to defeat all comers.
As Kazi's army draws closer to the territory of Ukraine, responsibility for leading the combined armies of Western Europe against Kazi falls on the immense shoulders of Nils Hammarson. Outnumbered, and unused to working cooperatively, the Europeans are at a distinct disadvantage. But Nils has a genius for tactics, and Kazi is going to learn that it is costly to tangle with the barbaric men from the North.....
'The Yngling' is a mediocre novel, even by the standards of sci-fi and fantasy writing of the late 1960s. This mediocrity is due mostly to the narrative, which is crammed with ad hoc plot developments. These have a perfunctory, tossed-off quality that is worsened by the fact that Nils is a superman, able to defeat anyone in armed combat; gifted with psi abilities that give him forewarning of enemy intentions; and able to heal grievous wounds simply by going into a lengthy trance state (?!). There's little suspense or tension in the narrative, when Nils can win every encounter.
The novel somewhat redeems itself in its final third, when the armies of Nils and Kazi clash in the steppes and marshes of Ukraine; these segments are well-rendered accounts of medieval warfare and the value of using good strategy to counter numerical superiority.
'Yngling' ends in such a way as to hint at a sequel. However, Dalmas did not publish this until 1984, and 'The Homecoming.' In 1992 Baen Books issued 'The Yngling' and 'Homecoming' as a two-volume omnibus, titled 'The Orc Wars'.
Further books in the series include 'The Yngling and the Circle of Power' (1994), and 'The Yngling in Yamato.'
The fact that the series features four novels suggests that some must find the Yngling saga entertaining. What can I say ? I'll end with the observation that in a 2016 review posted at his blog, M. Porcius found 'The Yngling' to be just as underwhelming (if not more so) than I did. Let our critiques aid you, in any decision you make to sit down with something from the Yngling saga........
Monday, November 18, 2024
The Brad Johannsen Archive
Friday, November 15, 2024
Wednesday, November 13, 2024
Book Review: For Texas and Zed
'For Texas and Zed' (189 pp.) was published by Popular Library in May, 1976. The artist who provided the cover illustration is not credited.
Zach Hughes was the pseudonym of the U.S. writer Hugh Zachary (1926 - 2016) who had success from the late 1960s to the 1980s in publishing short stories and novels in the genres of sci-fi and horror. My review of his 1980 novel 'Killbird' is here.
'Texas and Zed' is set in the year 2589. The thousands of inhabited planets in the galaxy are divided between the Empire and the Cassiopeian Alliance. These polities are engaged in a centuries-old Cold War, a war continuously on the precipice of turning into a galaxywide conflict of unprecedented destruction.
The planet Texas, which orbits the star Zed, is the lone independent planet, siding neither with the Empire, nor the Alliance. The inhabitants (referred to as 'Texicans') of Texas carefully shield their world from detection by the Empire, for Texas is one of the most bountiful and pleasant worlds in the known galaxy. So much so, that if the Emperor learned of its whereabouts he would seek to capture it, and add it to his collection.
As the novel opens, a Texas official, Murchison Burns, and his son Lex Burns, are negotiating with Empire bureaucrats for a trade deal involving the exchange of Texas beef for Empire metals. Being only 17 and headstrong, Lex enjoys the favors of the fetching Empire representative Lady Gwyn Ingles. Lex makes the fateful act of abducting the Lady Gwyn, intending to make her his bride, when the Burns delegation leaves Empire space to return home.
The Empire will not tolerate such a transgression and as punishment, Lex is obliged to spend two years in service aboard an Empire battle cruiser. What he learns on that duty leads him to an audacious plan: defy the Empire, and make Texas a military and economic power.
Defying the Empire is seeming folly, for it has a million ships, and tens of millions of men to man them. But even as a confrontation with the Empire looms, Lex believes that Texas can win. The Emperor, for all his military resources, is about to learn a truism: you don't mess with Texas.
'Texas and Zed' basically is a homage to the space operas of the pulp era. It has a stripped-down prose style and breathless pacing; space battles involving thousands of ships are related in the span of a page or two. Major plot points are disposed of in a few paragraphs. Lex Burns is so indomitable and self-confident a hero that there never really is any tension or suspense generated in the narrative. The frenetic action sequences are periodically interrupted by more retrospective passages, but these seem perfunctory.
Author Hughes imbues the novel with his personal philosophy, which centers on rugged individualism and a conservative political stance. This stance is of course intrinsic to Texas (at least, outside Houston and Austin) and is both quaint and novel when contrasted with the Woke ideology that predominates in today's sci-fi publications.
Readers looking for a short and sweet space opera will likely enjoy 'For Texas and Zed,' but those interested in a more deliberate treatment of this sub-genre probably will want to look elsewhere.
Saturday, November 9, 2024
The Last Temptation graphic novel
Marvel / Dynamite, 1994 / 2014
original (top) and recolored (bottom) pages |