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The Far Side of the Stars: Prologue
Last updated: Tuesday, March 25, 2003 01:10 EST
THE FAR SIDE OF THE STARS
by David Drake
DEDICATION
For Tristan David Drake
The previous four generations of the family have read voraciously, so I hope he'll carry on the tradition.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Dan Breen continues as my first reader, making my prose better than it would be without him.
Dorothy Day and Evan Ladouceur have been addressing specialized continuity problems in this one, and my webmaster Karen Zimmerman not only helpfully read my drafts but also archived them. (After youve killed as many computers in the middle of projects as I have, you learn not to take chances.)
Speaking of which, my son Jonathan got me going again when I did kill a computer. I cant claim to have consciously raised my own techie, but it seems to work very well if you have the time. Im reminded of the Neolithic hunters who set their axeheads in split living branches, so that when the wood regrew it gripped the stone perfectly.
Clyde Howard helped research bits of information that I knew I had but couldn't put my finger on till he'd provided them.
My friend Mark Van Name made an observation that allowed me to write this book (and I expect future books) in a greater state of contentment than ever before. I dont think it makes the prose better, but its certainly an improvement for me.
Writers arent easy to live with, and I may be more difficult than most. My wife Jo manages, and she feeds me very well besides.
My thanks to all of you.
Dave Drake
david-drake.com
AUTHORS NOTE
One of the problems when youre writing of either the past or the future is How much should I translate? I dont mean simply language: there's a whole complex of things that people within any society take for granted but which vary between societies. (But language too: I had somebody complain that the Arthurian soldiers in The Dragon Lord talked like modern soldiers. My reaction to this was that I could write the soldiers dialogue in Latin, but the complainant couldnt read it; and if Im going to translate into English, why on Earth wouldnt I translate into the type of English the same sort of men speak today?)
Weights and measures are a particular problem. I dont assume that the world of the far future will use the weights and measures of today, but Im quite certain that my inventing new systems will do nothing desirable for my story. (There are people whore really happier for a glossary of made-up or foreign words. Im not, though Ill admit I still occasionally murmur to myself, Tarzan bundolo!)
In the RCN series Cinnabar is on the English system and the Alliance uses Metric, simply to suggest the enormous complexity I expect will exist after Mankind spreads among the stars. (Well, I certainly hope we'll spread among the stars, but I wont pretend Im sanguine about our chances at the moment.)
Communications protocols are very roughly based on those of the 2nd Squadron, 11th ACR, during the period it wasI wasunder the command of LTC Grayle Brookshier. There were a lot of stories about squadron and regimental commanding officers. The stories about Battle Six were all positive.
I think I should comment on the background of this novel also. Today physical travel is easier than ever before, and television takes us literally anywhere. The world is generally accessible to most people, and as a result its becoming homogenized. I dont insist that this is a bad thing, but its a major change from the situation of a generation ago, let alone that of a hundred years in the past.
In the late 19th century a party of Russian nobles bought a South Seas trading schooner from its owner/captain, hired as captain the former mate (a man named Robert Quinton), and for several years sailed the Pacific from Alaska to New Zealand, from Kamchatka to Diamond Head. They hunted, bought curios, visited ancient ruins, and viewed native rites in a score of localities.
This sort of experience was available only first-hand and only to the exceptionally wealthy (or their associates like Quinton, who wrote a memoir of the voyage). Today anybody who watches PBS and the Discovery Channel can see everything those aristocrats saw, or at any rate as many of those things as survive.
Ive tried as one of the themes of The Far Side of the Stars to give the feel of that former time, when travel was a risky adventure possible only for the few. While Im glad that many--myself included--can share the worlds wonders today, I do regret the passing of the romance of former times and the fact that maps no longer have splotches marked Terra Incognita.
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