The Black Star Passes by John W. Campbell (read e book .txt) ๐

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In the year 2126, scientists Arcot and Morey chase a sky pirateโand invent the technology to travel through space. In the second story, the heroes travel to Venus and make first contact with an alien species. Finally, they must defend the solar system from invaders whose own star has long since gone dark.
Originally published separately as โPiracy Preferredโ in Amazing Stories June 1930 edition, โSolariteโ in Amazing Stories November 1930, and โThe Black Star Passesโ in Amazing Stories Quarterly Fall 1930, these three novellas were edited and collected into this volume in 1953.
This is the first book in John W. Campbellโs Arcot, Morey, and Wade trilogy. Most famous for editing Astounding Science Fiction and Fact magazine and introducing Isaac Asimov, Robert Heinlein, and many other great science fiction authors to the world, Campbellโs other notable works include the novella โWho Goes There?โ, which was adapted to film as The Thing by John Carpenter in 1982.
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- Author: John W. Campbell
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By John W. Campbell.
Table of Contents Titlepage Imprint Introduction The Black Star Passes Book I: Piracy Preferred Prologue I II III IV Book II: Solarite I II III IV V VI VII VIII Book III: The Black Star Passes Prologue I II III IV V VI Epilogue Colophon Uncopyright ImprintThis ebook is the product of many hours of hard work by volunteers for Standard Ebooks, and builds on the hard work of other literature lovers made possible by the public domain.
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IntroductionThese stories were written nearly a quarter of a century ago, for the old Amazing Stories magazine. The essence of any magazine is not its name, but its philosophy, its purpose. That old Amazing Stories is long since gone; the magazine of the same name today is as different as the times today are different from the world of 1930.
Science-fiction was new, in 1930; atomic energy was a dream we believed in, and space-travel was something we tried to understand better. Today, science-fiction has become a broad field, atomic energyโ โdespite the feelings of many present adults!โ โis no dream. (Nor is it a nightmare; it is simply a fact, and calling it a nightmare is another form of effort to push it out of reality.)
In 1930, the only audience for science-fiction was among those who were still young enough in spirit to be willing to hope and speculate on a new and wider futureโ โand in 1930 that meant almost nothing but teenagers. It meant the brightest group of teenagers, youngsters who were willing to play with ideas and understandings of physics and chemistry and astronomy that most of their contemporaries considered โtoo hard work.โ
I grew up with that group; the stories I wrote over the years, and, later, the stories I bought for Astounding Science Fiction changed and grew more mature too. Astounding Science Fiction today has many of the audience that read those early stories; theyโre not high school and college students any more, of course, but professional engineers, technologists and researchers now. Naturally, for them we need a totally different kind of story. In growing with them, I and my work had to lose much of the enthusiastic scope that went with the earlier science fiction.
When a young man goes to college, he is apt to say, โI want to be a scientist,โ or โI want to be an engineer,โ but his concepts are broad and generalized. Most major technical schools, well knowing this, have the first year course for all students the same. Only in the second and subsequent years does specialization start.
By the sophomore year, a student may say, โI want to be a chemical engineer.โ
At graduation, he may say, โIโm going into chemical engineering construction.โ
Ten years later he may explain that heโs a chemical engineer specializing in the construction of corrosion-resistant structures, such as electroplating baths and pickling tanks for stainless steel.
Year by year, his knowledge has become more specialized, and much deeper. Heโs better and better able to do the important work the world needs done, but in learning to do it, heโs necessarily lost some of the broad and enthusiastic scope he once had.
These are early stories of the early days of science-fiction. Radar hadnโt been invented; we missed that idea. But while these stories donโt have the finesse of later workโ โthey have a bounding enthusiasm that belongs with a young field, designed for and built by young men. Most of the writers of those early stories were, like myself, college students. (โPiracy Preferredโ was written while I was a sophomore at MIT)
For old-timers in science-fictionโ โthese are typical of the days when the field was starting. Theyโve got a fine flavor of our own younger enthusiasm.
For new readers of science-fictionโ โthese have the stuff that laid the groundwork of todayโs work, theyโre the stories that were meant for young imaginations, for people who wanted to think about the world they had to build in the years to come.
Along about sixteen to nineteen, a young man has to decide what is, for him, the Job That Needs Doingโ โand get ready to get in and pitch. If he selects well, selects with understanding and foresight, heโll pick a job that does need doing, one that will return rewards in satisfaction as well as money. No other man can pick that for him; he must choose the Job that he feels fitting.
Crystal balls can be bought fairly reasonablyโ โbut they donโt work well. History books can be bought even more cheaply, and theyโre moderately reliable. (Though necessarily filtered through the cultural attitudes of the man who wrote them.) But they donโt work well as predicting machines, because the world is changing too rapidly.
The world today, for instance, needs engineers desperately. There a lot of jobs that the Nation would like to get done that canโt even be started; not enough engineers available.
Fifty years ago the engineering student was a sort of second class citizen of the college campus. Today the Liberal Arts are fighting for a comeback, the pendulum
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