A few weeks ago, in my review of A Plague of Pythons by Frederick Pohl, I mentioned that the basic
plot idea of people using machines to exercise telepathic control of others at
a distance had already been used by John D MacDonald. This author is best known
for his very enjoyable private eye thrillers featuring Travis McGee (a series
of twenty novels written over twenty years), but before this he did write a
couple of works of SF: Wine of the
Dreamers (reprinted as Planet of the
Dreamers) and Ballroom of the Skies,
as well as a comic fantasy, The Girl,
the Gold Watch and Everything.
Wine of the Dreamers,
published in 1951 some fourteen years before Pohl's novel, begins on a
near-future Earth in which exploration of the Solar System is underway and
plans are being made in the USA for the first interstellar spaceship. This is
designed to avoid the limitations of light speed, involving some
pseudo-scientific explanations that sound rather more original and impressive
than the now clichéd warp drives and wormholes. The controversial project is
however knocked back by an act of sabotage by a trusted engineer, just one of a
whole series of inexplicable actions by normally rational people who seem to go
temporarily insane and claim to have been possessed. Project Director Bard
Lane, aided by the project's psychologist Sharan Inly, tries to understand what
is happening while fending off the military who want to control the project and
politicians who want to scrap it.
Meanwhile, in a strange world that appears to consist
entirely of rooms and corridors, the Watchers live their restricted lives,
spending much of each day in coffin-like dreaming machines, which they believe
have been designed for their entertainment. Here they can dream of visiting
other worlds, strange places where people exist on the surface of planets and
experience lives very different from that of the Watchers. To add to their
entertainment, the Watchers can take over the bodies of any of those people at
will and make them do as they wish. A few of the more senior Watchers remember
that they have one particular duty while dreaming – to destroy any attempts to
develop technology advanced enough to construct space ships – but all of them
believe that the worlds they watch are entirely imaginary.
Raul Kinson is one of the Watchers, a misfit who constantly
questions and challenges their lives and who comes to believe that the worlds
they visit really exist. The drama plays out in two parallel plot threads,
alternating between Earth and the Watchers.
To be honest I wasn't expecting much from this story since
it was written at a time when most SF was simplistic stuff of no great merit
and, at 170 pages (coincidentally the same as Pohl's work), there was little
space available for plot or character development. However, I was pleasantly
surprised. The story is well told, the characterisation much better than usual
for the period and, even though I remembered the basic outline of the plot, I
was still gripped from start to finish. It is a different kind of story from
Pohl's, without any of the intriguing moral ambiguity, but is still a welcome
reminder of what a great spinner of yarns John D MacDonald was, whatever genre
he was writing in.
2 comments:
It's too bad (for SF readers anyway) that he later concentrated on mysteries. Along with _Wine of the Dreamers_ and _Ballroom of the Skies_, I have a collection of his short SF fiction, _Other Times, Other Worlds_.
Thanks for reminding me of some excellent SF from long ago.
On the other hand, I really enjoyed the Travis McGee stories!
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