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Mass Market Paperback Spacehounds of Ipc Book

ISBN: 0425061604

ISBN13: 9780425061602

Spacehounds of Ipc

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Book Overview

E.E. Smith was a 20th century American author who helped pioneer the sci-fi genre with works like the Lensman and Skylark series. This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

It all began right here!

This novel, first serialized in the AMAZING pulp magazine in 1931, is where it all began... space adventure, space opera, space heroics, rocketeers, space passenger liners, an alliance between natives of Venus, earth and Mars, routine interplanetary travel, vile and inhuman aliens... there had been nothing like it before. "Doc" Smith (his Ph.D. was in food chemistry) had written the first great novels of interstellar exploration, the "Skylark" series. He later created another sweeping multivolume series about the Galactic Patrol protecting all civilized planets of the Milky Way from a gradually unfolding, seemingly all-powerful menace, in the "Lensman" novels. But SPACEHOUNDS OF IPC stands alone; Smith never returned to this setting (the moons of Jupiter) or these characters. Perhaps one reason is that the technology presented is hardly futuristic. Our heroes somehow get along with mainly late 19th Century gadgets in what might be the 22nd or 23rd Century. Modern readers will be more astonished by the novel's depiction of women, but in fact it is completely standard, as found in almost all popular fiction of the era, say 1880 - 1930. At least in such fiction, whenever nice girls were tempted to "do it," they got up, went out, and played 18 holes of golf. What was not standard was Smith's creation of a world in which the reader's sense of wonder was continuously engaged, in an adventure where every page offered amazing action and excitement. STAR WARS started right here. I can't remember when I first read this novel... probably in the mid-1950s. I come back to re-read it about once every 10 years.

Solid Retro Sci Fi

This is an early 20th century sci fi novel. It has many anachronisms regarding scientific theory. Taking that into account, its an excellent read. An entertaining story line, with some solid science (as it stood at the time). For those wanting to get a feel for the origins of sci-fi writing, E E Doc Smith is an author you shouldn't miss.

Making the solar system safe

Safe for our kind, that is. You know, two-legged Earthian kind, not those nasty six-legged critters. Brilliant physicist Dr. Stevens is off on a fact-finding mission, to save the honor of the brave pilots of the space-liner Arcturus from the desk-jockeys' imprecations of imprecision - the nastiest insult in his super-scientific world. He and the pilots are right, of course, but that's cold consolation when marauders from the depths of space hack up their ship and drag it off, in obvious violation of salvage laws. Stevens and his beloved escape to an isolated moon of Jupiter, which happens to Earth-like right down to wildlife that's pretty tasty, when cooked up right. There, the fond couple struggle to rebuild all of Western technology from the ground up, and struggle to maintain the chastity of their impromptu engagement - lots of cold showers all around, I guess. They do a fair job of both, while events progress on just about every other bit of planetary real estate around. After much zooming around between worlds, the bad guys are all vanquished, the good guys and gals get properly hitched, and the space pilots protect their manly honor. Parts of "Spacehounds" date back to the early 1930s, 75 years ago as of this writing. The goofy anachronisms are half the fun here, based on Smith's odd inability to imagine any technology much different from his own. The dated social commentary is amusing, too, for example in his mention of a dozen-plus of the space-liner's female passengers getting married before their rescuers arrived. They obviously didn't marry each other, but it somehow appears that women marry but men don't. The date of writing is closer to Jules Verne than to today's science fiction, but a good bit harder to take seriously. Well, being serious isn't all that much fun anyway. If you want a happy bit of heroic space-silliness, Doc Smith is the man to bring it to you. //wiredweird

First SF book I ever read - have been a convert ever since.

This book contains a number of elements that are unrealistic (e.g. it features real live Martians, and the author's take on womankind is, to put it lightly, less than politically correct - though I'm told that that was simply how American society viewed women at the time). If you can look past things like that, this book is *brilliant* ! And it's a prime example of what SF was like when it all began. That also means that, compared to current SF, the story is kind of dated - SF has gone a long way since way back then. But this book really opened my eyes in regard to the fun of discovering what an author thinks the universe would be like if ____ (just fill in the blank however you like) was true, possible, and/or had turned out differently.

Moons of Jupiter, then and now.

Edward E. Smith, Ph.D, in addition to being the foremost writer of all time about "Space Opera" was in many ways a visionary, and with his "Skylark" and "Lensman Series" constructed a universe so filled with spacefaring heroes and weird and wonderful aliens of all description as to boggle the imagination. Unlike the two series mentioned above, Spacehounds of IPC was a "stand alone" book about a huge spaceship on a standard run from Earth to Mars being partially destroyed by aliens who begin towing the spaceship back to Jupiter, where they live. In light of todays space probe explorations of the planet Jupiter and its moons, one of which is thought to have frozen seas capable of supporting possible lifeforms, Smith's saga about "Steve Stevens" and "Nadia" Newton's adventures on Ganymede and Callisto, two of the moons of Jupiter, their subsequent rescue by Stevens' Interplanetary Corporation friends in the IPC research spaceship "Sirius" and their involvement in the war between the Hexans and Vorkulians of Jupiter, makes one wonder what we will find when our "Spacehounds" venture out past the Asteroid Belt and begin our own explorations of the moons of Jupiter. I consider myself fortunate to have a hard-cover copy of this book I purchased from Fantasy Press a half-century ago, and recommend it particularly to those science-fiction enthusiasts who like the grandeur and sweep of Smith's books.
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