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The Five Gold Bands

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(Redirected from Five Gold Bands) 1950 novel by Jack Vance "The Space Pirate" redirects here. For other uses, see Space Pirate (disambiguation).
The Five Gold Bands
Cover of first standalone edition
(1953, Toby Press)
AuthorJack Vance
LanguageEnglish
GenreScience fiction
Publication date1950
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint (Paperback)
Pages128

The Five Gold Bands is a science fiction novel by American writer Jack Vance, first published in the November 1950 issue of Startling Stories magazine. It was published in 1953 as a separate book under the title The Space Pirate, and in 1963 it was paired with Vance's Hugo Award-winning novella The Dragon Masters in the form of an Ace Double.

Plot summary

Twenty generations ago, an Earthman named Langtry stumbled on a way to travel efficiently among the stars. He divided the secret among his five sons, each of whom settled on a different planet. The heirs of the five, known as the Sons of Langtry, now dominate the human universe. Generations of life on strange worlds have made them visibly distinct from each other and from Earthers, who are held in contempt on each of the Sons' five homeworlds.

Picaresque Irish adventurer Paddy Blackthorn is caught attempting to steal a space drive, and is sentenced to death. In escaping from his sentence, Paddy accidentally kills the Sons of Langtry and takes from each a bracelet containing a clue to the location of one-fifth of the secret. With the help of a beautiful human secret agent, Fay Bursill, Paddy follows the clues on each of the five dominant worlds, in the hope that Earthfolk will be able to resume their rightful place in space.

Major themes

First publication in November 1950 edition of Startling Stories
Cover art by Earle Bergey

Although one of Vance's earliest efforts, The Five Gold Bands exhibits many of the stylistic elements that would come to characterize many of his later works: a colorful protagonist who unintentionally achieves the greater good in a frantic and desperate attempt to save his own life (and fortune), numerous exotic locales populated by equally exotic sentient species, and the theme of a treasure hunt. It also introduces another frequent theme of Vance’s work – that the environment of an alien planet will change any human colonists within a few generations to the extent that they will scarcely be recognizable as human.

References

External links

Works by Jack Vance
Dying Earth
related
Demon Princes
Planet of Adventure
Durdane
Alastor
Lyonesse
Cadwal Chronicles
Ports of Call
Other novels
Big Planet novels
Short fiction
  • "Abercrombie Station"
  • "The Brains of Earth"
  • "Cholwell's Chickens"
  • "Dodkin's Job"
  • The Dragon Masters
  • "Gateway to Strangeness"
  • "The Gift of Gab"
  • The Houses of Iszm
  • The Last Castle
  • "Men of the Twelve Books"
  • The Miracle Workers
  • "Monsters in Orbit"
  • "The Moon Moth"
  • "The New Prime"
  • "Noise"
  • "Rumfuddle"
  • Son of the Tree
  • Telek
  • "Ullward's Retreat"
  • Autobiography
    See also
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