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Five SFF Works Reminiscent of Andre Norton

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Five SFF Works Reminiscent of Andre Norton

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Rereads and Rewatches Andre Norton

Five SFF Works Reminiscent of Andre Norton

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Published on July 17, 2019

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What other authors wrote books with thematic similarities to the books of Andre Norton? Too bad that no one has ever asked me that question. Let’s pretend that someone has asked. Here are five suggestions.

 

David Gerrold might be surprised to find himself on this list, and even more surprised to see which book in particular comes to mind as Nortonesque. Moonstar Odyssey (the first and as far as I know only book in the Jobe sequence) is set on Satlik, a terraformed planet orbiting an atypical star. The same superb biotech that has guided the terraforming has also allowed the humans of Satlik to change themselves as they please. They can choose their gender; it’s usual to do this when adolescent. An unfortunate few are physically unable to do so. They are treated as pariahs. (Genetic engineering or no genetic engineering, humans can be jerks and they love having people to bully.) Jobe is one such pariah. They finds themselves on an epic and unpleasant journey that reminds me of several Norton protagonists. Like them, Jobe finds themself in the wrong place at the wrong time.

 

Elizabeth Moon’s Remnant Population reminds me of Norton’s Judgment on Janus. Like Janus, Remnant features a needlessly hierarchical social arrangement that would seem familiar to any of Norton’s street kids and outcasts. When a failed colony is closed down, elderly protagonist Ofelia opts to remain behind. Better to spend her few remaining years alone but free than to be to dragged off to the next badly planned colony. It turns out that while Ofelia may be (for the moment) the only human on the planet, she is in no sense alone. Just like the protagonist in Janus, Ofelia will have to reach an accommodation with natives of whose presence she had hitherto been unaware.

 

There are some authors who seem to have been directly influenced by Norton. Jo Clayton’s oeuvre could be seen (from one angle) as a long-running experiment in crafting Nortonesque stories with better writing and lots of sex1, Perhaps the most Nortonesque Clayton is the Skeen sequence, which begins with Skeen’s Leap. Skeen, a down-on-her-luck adventurer trapped on Kildun Alpha, faces arrest if she does not find a way off the planet. Huzzah for ancient, inter-dimensional gates leading to who knows where?!!!

Skeen’s habit of jumping into things without asking questions does not always work in her favour—after she leaps through a one-way gate, she accepts an ill-advised contract—but readers will be entertained by the consequences of Skeen’s lack of prudence as well as by her snarky voice.

 

Joan D. Vinge’s Psion is also unabashedly Nortonesque, the tale of half-alien, half-human Cat, a street kid with special powers. He’s trying to survive a system designed to exploit people like Cat. Cat’s psionics earn him an involuntary slot in Seibeling’s psion-training program (think how the X-Men would play out if Charles Xavier were a kapo). Cat is expected to become a draftee in a war against rogue psions (that is, psions who don’t want to be rich men’s slaves). But in the end, he’s dispatched to another disagreeable post—on Cinder, a remote mining world which has natives who disapprove of off-worlders strip-mining their planet. If you were looking for something like the Forerunner series with better prose, consider Psion.

 

Norton’s Forerunners, by way of an online discussion, led me to the book that inspired this little piece. I realized that the qhal, the enigmatic beings responsible for creating reality-violating gates in C. J. Cherryh’s Morgaine series, are Forerunners under another name. Norton’s fiction was replete with poorly documented inter-dimensional gates offering escape and adventure2 . Adventure, because you didn’t know where you might end up, or which vicious armies might decide to invade through such gates.

Cherryh’s Gate of Ivrel adds a twist Norton might have liked (Note: initially, I wasn’t sure if she had ever read Cherryh, until the blurb on the book cover made it clear that she had—it’s safe to say that Norton did enjoy the first of the Morgaine books, at the very least). The same gates that can bridge space and time can break it. Morgaine’s grand quest is to shut the gates down before this happens again. By the time Vanye meets Morgaine, Morgaine has been pursuing this quest for centuries. If Vanye joins the quest, he will have to abandon her world forever. It’s a good thing that Vanye is (like so many Norton characters) an outcast in desperate need of an exit….

 

I’ve read lots of SFF books, but I haven’t read them all. Nor can I remember them all. If you can think of Nortonesque novels I have overlooked, please mention them in comments.

In the words of Wikipedia editor TexasAndroid, prolific book reviewer and perennial Darwin Award nominee James Davis Nicoll is of “questionable notability.” His work has appeared in Publishers Weekly and Romantic Times as well as on his own websites, James Nicoll Reviews and Young People Read Old SFF (where he is assisted by editor Karen Lofstrom and web person Adrienne L. Travis). He is a finalist for the 2019 Best Fan Writer Hugo Award, and is surprisingly flammable.

[1]Sex enjoyed (or at least without pregnant consequences) thanks to birth control. A technology which too few authors have explored in their SFF works. (Well now, that would be another interesting essay… hmmm.) Moonshadow (book two of the Duel of Sorcery) has an extensive subplot about one woman’s quest for a safe, affordable abortion. That’s something I don’t recall encountering in other novels.

[2]Adventure: someone else having a terrible time far, far away.

About the Author

James Davis Nicoll

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In the words of fanfiction author Musty181, current CSFFA Hall of Fame nominee, five-time Hugo finalist, prolific book reviewer, and perennial Darwin Award nominee James Davis Nicoll “looks like a default mii with glasses.” His work has appeared in Interzone, Publishers Weekly and Romantic Times as well as on his own websites, James Nicoll Reviews (where he is assisted by editor Karen Lofstrom and web person Adrienne L. Travis) and the 2021, 2022, 2023, and 2024 Aurora Award finalist Young People Read Old SFF (where he is assisted by web person Adrienne L. Travis). His Patreon can be found here.
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Shrike58
5 years ago

Ummm….vis-a-vis Cherryh, the last time I noticed Vanye is a guy.

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5 years ago

Yeah, looking at version one of this pre-edit, I see why my editor thought I was saying Vanye was a woman.

By the time Vanye meets Morgaine, Morgaine has pursued this quest for centuries. Joining her quest means abandoning Vanye’ s world forever.

 

And of course I didn’t spot the error after it crept in. My fault.

voidampersand
5 years ago

Melissa Scott’s Finders has plucky scavengers exploring the ruins of a super-high technology earlier civilization. 

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5 years ago

Just glanced through my list of books read with tmy reviews and found a few much more recent books.

STARSHIP MAGE, Glynn Stewart. Science fiction with a young adult feel.  Damien Montgomery is a newly graduated jump mage, an elite skill which allows him to use magic to transfer spacecraft for great distances.  His first job is aboard the Blue Jay, a freighter which seems to attract pirates.  He learns that his captain has a price on his head, courtesy of a space mafia, and Damien also has a secret—he can see magic so he can do things with it others can’t. When he’s accused of the dangerous use of magic, the captain and the crew come through for him, but they now have mafia bounty hunters and the government after them.  A good thing he’s improving his new skills. With the young main character, the hard science, and the exciting adventures, this book reminded me of a modernized version of Andre Norton’s Solar Queen series.  

 

WANDERER’S ESCAPE, Simon Goodson.  Young adult science fiction adventure.  Jess has been a slave his whole life, and, when he’s forced to try to break into a strange space ship, he figures he’ll die like the other slaves who have tried, but he and an older couple make it aboard, and they escape.  The ship bonds with Jess’s mind, and he becomes the new captain.  Soon, they are dealing with pirates, slavers, the evil Empire, and villainy within their growing crew.  An adventure with a very contemporary Andre Norton feel.  

 

WENDIGO FEVER, Kevin Hardman.  “Warden” series.  Young adult dystopian fantasy. Novella. Errol Magnus is being trained by his older brother to be a fellow Warden, magic users who protect the outlying settlements from magical monsters.  When his brother disappears, he must step up to the role to protect locals as well as find his brother.  The characters and action are reminiscent of Andre Norton’s early young adult novels.  Decently written and should please young male readers.  

 

SHADOW MAGIC, Patricia C Wrede.  “A Lyra Novel.”  Traditional fantasy.  Alethia, the daughter of a powerful lord, is kidnapped by men filled with dark magic, but she is rescued by magical beings she believed to be myths.  Soon, she’s joined by her brother and his friend Maurin, and they must help stop an invasion of dark magic with a magic Alethia is just discovering.  The worldbuilding is Tolkien, the characters and plot very much Andre Norton.  Although this is one of Wrede’s first novels and bit derivative, it is an excellent grand adventure with great characters and high stakes.  

 

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5 years ago

It’s weird: I have Wrede firmly in “debuted in the late 1970s” in the part of my brain that remembers things incorrectly but when I reviewed Shadow Magic rediscovered that it was an early 1980s release.

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5 years ago

Lee and Miller’s Liaden series have Free Traders, psionics, and several Witch World-like women’s religions. 

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5 years ago

Come to think of it, not only does the venerable roleplaying game Traveller have traders, the character generation has a very Nortoneque feeling, in that a lot of the characters died before play, and the ones that lived generally emerged having flamed out of a career or two, saddled with crushing debt.

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Magewolf
5 years ago

Traveller’s character generation was a hoot.  My group’s first time playing , the newest version at the time but we were all old Traveller hands, Mongoose’s Traveller  we ended up with two retired Admirals,a retired General and a retired Diplomat running a second hand free trader.  We were all on anagathics with Social Standing of 10+ , one of them had 14 I think.  We spent a whole session trying to come up with good reasons for us to be in debt and going on adventures.

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5 years ago

  We spent a whole session trying to come up with good reasons for us to be in debt and going on adventures.

 

“So, here’s how me and my buddies accidentally provoked the Fifth Frontier War.”

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5 years ago

Although i suspect he was more inspired by James Schmitz, McEnroe’s The Shattered Stars presents a very Nortonesque view of the economics of free traders, which is that they get to chase after the scraps the big companies don’t want for as long as it takes them to go broke, 

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5 years ago

Jobe is not actually a “pariah” (intersex, called Unchosen in the book) who was unable to choose a gender. Due to her particular history, Jobe ended up with a female gender but considered herself “wrong-chosen” (she wished she had ended up male). Jobe’s “aunt” was an Unchosen.

Like Ancillary Justice, feminine first person pronouns are used for all people on this world regardless of their Chosen gender. It’s only when some Earthicans arrive that the word “he” gets used.

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5 years ago

I haven’t read Norton, what would you say are the defining factors that make a work thematically similar to theirs? 

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Robert Carnegie
5 years ago

I seem to be misremembering slightly an arc of the alternate-universe “Ultimate X-Men” comic in which I thought that the heroes were enslaved by Nick Fury and used as covert warfare soldiers; Wikipedia says Fury came in on the side of liberation in that encounter.  This is the first version of Fury that looks (exactly) like Samuel L. Jackson, by the way.  He did go on to tell Ultimate Spider-Man to consider himself property of SHIELD, which is creepy.

voidampersand
5 years ago

: I hesitate to summarize Norton’s work. She had a long career and she wrote many books that were innovative and ahead of the curve in different ways. Also, everything is subject to interpretation. If you read something by Norton, what are the themes that you find in it? 

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5 years ago

#6: also Scouts, and Scouts First-In.  James mentions Norton Scouts (and Korval-pilot-like eugenics) here https://jamesdavisnicoll.com/review/the-scouts-are-dicks and I think I’ve seen mention of “First-In Scouts” in Norton too.

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5 years ago

interesting list .

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5 years ago

It looks like book 2 of the Duel of Sorcery series is “Moonscatter”, not “Moonshadow”. Guess I’ll add those to my list.

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