The defiant agents

No cover

Andre Norton: The defiant agents (1962, Ace Books)

192 pages

English language

Published Oct. 28, 1962 by Ace Books.

OCLC Number:
367761

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No rating (1 review)

Humans being what they are will always find an excuse (usually rather stupid) to war with each other. Such is the case for this plane of existence that the story is based on. Alien spacecraft have been discovered by western and Russian forces. The aliens who built and operated them have mysteriously vanished, but left large storehouses behind on various planets. To give their explorers a better chance of survival, both sides reach into their past for the most hardy warrior types, Apaches for the West, Mongol Tartars for the Russians. Not content with volunteers, both sides use mind control devices on their own people to ensure they act as desired - ah. but what happens when those devices don't work? A great tale by the Dame of science fiction/fantasy, Andre Norton.

9 editions

An enjoyable space western with Apaches as the good guys

No rating

An enjoyable space western with Apaches as the good guys, wrapped up in the cold war and tossing in the Golden Horde, a lost alien city and Russians with a mind-control ray.

Third in the Time Traders series, it stands alone pretty well even though it appears much more closely linked to the second book (which I haven’t read) than the first (which I have), largely because the setting has moved from Earth’s past to a distant world in the near future.

It’s kind of a mish-mash, but as an adventure it moves quickly. The characters’ memories are all scrambled, mixed with those of their ancestors (this is how the western and Mongol Horde tropes are brought into the future). But they’re still distinct characters, and when alliances shift they’re actually for character and cultural reasons, not just plot contrivances.

All that said, I’m a white guy reading a book …

Subjects

  • Space colonies -- Fiction