Scide Splitters: The Flying Sorcerers by David Gerrold & Larry Niven

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One of the challenges of being a fan of humorous science fiction is finding enough quality material to satisfy the appetite, so it is always a pleasure when I find an older book that I’ve overlooked for one reason or another. I only recently came to realize that The Flying Sorcerers by David Gerrold and Larry Niven is a work of humorous SF. Considering that it was originally serialized in If magazine in 1970, I am not sure how I managed to remain ignorant of this fact for so long. The embarrassing part is that I must have ordered this title more than a dozen times off the backlist when I was a buyer for a bookstore.

The central narrative revolves around a clash of cultures and magicians. A man from a space-faring civilization visits a world with primitive villages where the short and furry locals see everything as the workings of gods and magic. The story is told from the perspective of Lant, a native tradesman and close friend of Shoogar, the temperamental village magician. Much of the most effective humor in the story comes from Lant’s attempts to describe the actions and devices of the spaceman in terms of magic (a la Clarke’s Law).

The tradition filled lives of the villagers are disrupted by the arrival of this man from space whom they presume to be a mad magician. Almost immediately, trouble brews between the two magicians as the newcomer inadvertently insults Shoogar by not observing prescribed customs. Additionally, the mad magician appears to have great power, threatening Shoogar’s supremacy as village magician and bruising his ego. As a matter of pride and honor, Shoogar decides a duel is necessary and sets out to kill his adversary. Knowing that magicians’ duels are notoriously violent, the villagers head for the hills. Life, at least for those who manage to keep it, will never be the same.

Gerrold and Niven engage in a variety of word play, often eliciting a laugh, occasionally producing a groan. Of particular note is the novel’s heavy use of Tuckerizations and inside jokes for SF/F fans. Reader reactions to these will vary depending on background and knowledge of personalities that were active in the SF/F community at the time. Generally, I felt they added to the enjoyment of the story. For instance, I found the perception that certain events were the result of angering the god Elcin (Harlan Ellison) to be hilarious. The story, however, is sufficiently funny and entertaining for younger or more casual fans to enjoy without getting these inside jokes.

David-Kilman-May-2013-blog-image-2Considering the playfulness of the novel, I think it would be a mistake to overanalyze the story for heavy messages of social importance. To be sure, there are social commentaries on a variety of issues ranging from industrialization to women’s liberation, but these are not the central themes of the story. Even so, the impulse to find hidden things in the story is strong, in part because the reader is already looking below the surface for in-jokes and such. Perhaps if there is a sub-surface message to take away it would be in the subtle exploration of the related natures of magic and science.

As one might expect from a book that involves Niven, you are bound to learn a thing or two about science and engineering (unless you already happen to be a scientist or engineer). From this novel, you will come away with at least a rudimentary understanding of how to build an airship from scratch (something steampunk fans might enjoy).

Ultimately, The Flying Sorcerers is an entertainingly playful, and sometimes silly, comedy written by two major talents in the field. I highly recommend it to any SF/F fan looking for a good laugh.

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6 Comments

  1. A Tuckerization is when an author uses a real person’s name (often disguised in some way such as the Elcin = Ellison example I gave) for a character in a story. Sometimes they also use personal characteristics (physical or personality). This is a term used by science fiction fans (not sure what they call it in other genres) named after Wilson Tucker (SF fan, author, & SF Hall of Fame member) because he used it often. Early on, this practice was just an in-joke for fans, but it has become fairly common for authors to auction off a Tuckerization in a forthcoming novel for charity. I have also seen it recently used in kickstarter campaigns as a reward.

    Now it is my turn to expose my ignorance, who (or whose creation) is Marmalade Atkins?

    1. I did it again – I keep hitting the wrong reply button which results in my response appearing above the question rather than below – oops.

    2. I see! I’ve heard of “name a character after yourself” raffles and such, but Tuckerization is a much neater way of describing the idea.

      Marmalade Atkins was the greatest creation of Andrew Davies, an otherwise obscure BBC screenwriter. He wrote the books as children’s novels and then they got turned into a TV series and had the soul sucked out of them and our naughty heroine (whom I imagined at 8 to be just my own age) was turned into a sassy teenager. Anyway Marmalade is the ultimate diabolical child. Her parents send her into space in hopes that she will never come back, and this awful perky tourguide takes her to a cave where she faces every child’s worst nightmare: the Ordeal of Excruciating Tedium!!! Gosh it still makes my hair stand on end to think about it.

      1. Ah, I suspect I was probably too old when those came out. I like the idea of parents sending kids into space in hopes they will never return. I have a son that I am trying to convince to apply for Mars One’s one-way colonization trip. 😉

        1. I just wrote a blog about that! (Not scheduled yet.) I ought to go back and add a few lines about the potential for frazzled parents to sign up their offspring 😀

  2. I love humorous science fiction (Douglas Adams, Red Dwarf by Grant Naylor, and the ultimate science fiction comedy: Marmalade Atkins In Space!) but not in-jokes or puns. So I’m on the fence about this one, but glad you brought it to my attention!

    At the risk of exposing my ignorance I have to know. What is a “Tuckerization”?

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