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==Plot summary== | ==Plot summary== | ||
In the year AD 3017, humanity is recovering slowly from an interstellar civil war that tore apart the first Empire of Man. |
In the year AD 3017, humanity is recovering slowly from an interstellar civil war that tore apart the first Empire of Man. The Second Empire is busy establishing control over the remnants of its predecessor, by force if necessary. After a rebellion on the planet New Chicago is subdued, the captain of the Imperial battlecruiser INSS ''MacArthur'' remains behind as the new governor, while Commander Roderick Blaine is given temporary command of the ship, along with secret orders to take Horace Hussein Bury, a powerful interstellar merchant suspected of instigating the revolt, to the Imperial capital, Sparta. Another passenger is Lady Sandra Bright "Sally" Fowler, the niece of an Imperial senator. | ||
New Caledonia is the capital of the Trans-Coalsack sector, |
New Caledonia is the capital of the Trans-Coalsack sector, on the opposite side of the ] from Earth. Also in the sector is a ] star known as Murcheson's Eye. Associated with it is a yellow Sun-like star, which from New Caledonia appears in front of the Eye. Since some see the Eye and the Coalsack as the face of God, the yellow star is known as the Mote in God's Eye. | ||
Human ships use the ], which allows them to move instantaneously between |
Human ships use the ], which allows them to move instantaneously between "]s" in specific star systems. Approaching New Caledonia, ''MacArthur'' is ordered to investigate when an alien, sub-light speed spacecraft, propelled by a ], is detected. After the spacecraft fires upon ''MacArthur'', Blaine has its main capsule detached from the sail and taken aboard. Its sole occupant, a brown and white furred creature, is dead. | ||
After much debate, ''MacArthur'' and the battleship ''Lenin'' are sent to the star from which the alien ship came, the Mote. ''MacArthur'' carries civilian researchers to make ] with the aliens, or "Moties" as they are quickly nicknamed. Admiral Kutuzov, aboard ''Lenin'', has strict orders to avoid all contact with the aliens and ensure that human technology does not fall into their hands. The Moties seem friendly and have advanced technology that they are willing to trade. Although they also possess the Alderson Drive, none of their ships have ever returned. This is because, unknown to the Moties, the Mote's only Alderson point lies within the outer layers of the star Murcheson's Eye. Human warships are protected by ]s, which the Moties do not have. | |||
The Moties are an old species, native to a planet |
The Moties are an old species, native to a planet that the humans call Mote Prime, that has evolved into many specialized sub-species. The first taken board ''MacArthur'' is an "Engineer", possessing amazing technical abilities, but limited speech and free will. It brings along a pair of tiny "Watchmakers" as assistants. Some days later, a delegation of "Mediators" (like the dead pilot of the probe ship) arrive. Their specialty is communication and negotiation. The Mediators invite the humans to send a party to Mote Prime to negotiate. Each person in this group acquires a "Fyunch(click)", a Mediator who studies their subject and tries to learn how to think like them. | ||
Back on ''MacArthur'', the Watchmakers |
Back on ''MacArthur'', the Watchmakers escape, and although it was assumed they had died, they have actually been breeding furiously. Unknown to the human crew, they quietly modify ''MacArthur'' to suit their needs. When they are discovered, several attempts to rid ''MacArthur'' of the infestation fail, and a battle for control of the ship erupts. The crew is eventually forced to abandon ship after suffering casualties. The party on Mote Prime is quickly recalled and told to rendezvous directly with ''Lenin''. Once ''MacArthur'' is evacuated, ''Lenin'' fires on her to prevent the capture of human technology. This reveals that the Watchmakers have improved ''MacArthur''{{'}}s Langston Field, so that it expands as it absorbs energy, increasing its surface area and dissipating energy more efficiently. Nevertheless, ''MacArthur'' is destroyed. | ||
During the evacuation, |
During the evacuation, ''MacArthur'' midshipmen Staley, Whitbread and Potter are cut off and forced to escape from the ship in Watchmaker-modified lifeboats. The lifeboats automatically land in an unpopulated area of Mote Prime, where they find a fortified museum. It provides evidence of a very long and violent history, though the Moties had carefully portrayed themselves as completely peaceful. Following this discovery, the midshipmen are reunited with Whitbread's Mediator Fyunch(click), who reveals that Moties (other than the short-lived, sterile Mediators) must become pregnant periodically or die in an agonizing manner. This inevitably results in overpopulation ... and civilization-ending wars. Attempts at population control have always failed, because those who breed uncontrollably eventually swamp those Moties who do not. | ||
The Masters, whom the Mediators obey, concealed the existence of one type from the humans: Warriors superior to any human, even modified ]. | |||
The museums exist to accelerate the rise to civilization after a collapse. The "Cycles" of civilization, war, and collapse have gone on for hundreds of thousands of years. The Moties have become fatalistically resigned to their fate. Only a mythical character called "Crazy Eddie" believes there is a way to change this, and any Motie who comes to believe a solution is possible is labeled a "Crazy Eddie" and deemed insane. | |||
The current civilization is a type of industrial ], with coalitions of Masters governing the planet. One faction, led by "King Peter", wants to reveal the truth to the humans, but is overruled. The smaller group recognizes that colonization of other planets would inexorably bring them into conflict with humans, as the inevitable Motie population explosion would force them to seek to take over human worlds. Nonetheless, the more powerful coalition sees this temporary solution as preferable to the impending collapse. Both factions send Warriors after the midshipmen, one to capture them, the other to rescue them. The stronger group's Warriors trap the midshipmen, but the trio refuse to surrender and die as a result. | |||
The current civilization is organized as a type of industrial ], where coalitions of related Masters govern the planet. Colonizing other planets is proposed as one solution to the cycles. Conflict erupts on Mote Prime between two groups of Masters considering this idea. | |||
⚫ | ''Lenin'' returns home, taking with it three Motie ambassadors, a sterile Master and two Mediators, whose mission is to open the galaxy to their species while concealing their terrible secret. | ||
The smaller group recognizes that expansion to other planets would eventually bring them into conflict with humans for their planets, especially since humans cannot compete with Moties, technologically, biologically, or even numerically. Motie victory would be inevitable, but eventually futile as the population continues to expand exponentially. The more powerful coalition of Masters sees this temporary solution as more appealing than the impending collapse. Both groups send envoys with instructions to negotiate for the majority position. To conceal the danger to human civilization, the three midshipmen who reached Mote Prime are not permitted to return to ''Lenin'' and are killed while resisting capture. | |||
Back on New Caledonia, an Imperial Commission is on the verge of granting colonies to the Moties, not realizing the danger they represent. However, ''MacArthur'' Sailing Master/Lieutenant Kevin Renner figures out the truth just in time. The decision is made to gather a battle fleet to either disarm or try to annihilate the Moties. The ambassadors are faced with the extinction of their species, knowing that the Masters would never submit. However, one of the Motie Mediators comes up with a third option: a blockade of the system's only Alderson exit point. This plan is adopted, over the strenuous opposition of Bury, who sees the Moties as the greatest danger humanity has ever faced. | |||
⚫ | |||
Back on New Caledonia, an Imperial Commission is on the verge of granting colonies to the Moties, not realizing the danger they represent. But investigation of a series of images taken when the Motie probe ship was intercepted reveals the existence of the Motie Warrior caste. Combined with the knowledge of their rapid population growth, this information forces the commission to decide against permitting the Moties to leave their home system. | |||
Because the Moties have seen the Langston Field, it is only a matter of time before they can duplicate it, enabling them to establish colonies independently. It seems the only option is to send the fleet to disarm or, as the disillusioned trader Bury advocates, to eradicate the entire Motie species. However, with the support of Blaine and Fowler, one of the Motie ambassadors, who represents the minority view from Mote Prime, persuades the Commission to establish a permanent blockade of the system's only Alderson point, forcing the Moties to continue with the seemingly endless cycles, until such time as the humans can find a cure for their birth rate, something sane Moties think impossible. | |||
==Characters== | ==Characters== |
Revision as of 10:11, 5 July 2016
First edition (hardcover) | |
Author | Larry Niven & Jerry Pournelle |
---|---|
Language | English |
Series | CoDominium |
Genre | Science fiction |
Publisher | Simon & Schuster |
Publication date | 1974 |
Publication place | United States |
Media type | Print (hardback & paperback) |
Pages | 537 pp |
ISBN | 0-671-21833-6 |
OCLC | 934734 |
Dewey Decimal | 813/.5/4 |
LC Class | PZ4.N734 Mo PS3564.I9 |
Preceded by | King David's Spaceship |
Followed by | The Gripping Hand, 1993 |
The Mote in God's Eye is a science fiction novel by American writers Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle, first published in 1974. The story is set in the distant future of Pournelle's CoDominium universe, and charts the first contact between humanity and an alien species. The title of the novel is a wordplay on the Biblical "The Mote and the Beam" parable and names a star as seen from a newly settled planet. The Mote in God's Eye was nominated for the Hugo, Nebula and Locus Awards in 1975. Robert A. Heinlein, who gave the authors extensive advice on the novel, described the story as "possibly the finest science fiction novel I have ever read."
Plot summary
In the year AD 3017, humanity is recovering slowly from an interstellar civil war that tore apart the first Empire of Man. The Second Empire is busy establishing control over the remnants of its predecessor, by force if necessary. After a rebellion on the planet New Chicago is subdued, the captain of the Imperial battlecruiser INSS MacArthur remains behind as the new governor, while Commander Roderick Blaine is given temporary command of the ship, along with secret orders to take Horace Hussein Bury, a powerful interstellar merchant suspected of instigating the revolt, to the Imperial capital, Sparta. Another passenger is Lady Sandra Bright "Sally" Fowler, the niece of an Imperial senator.
New Caledonia is the capital of the Trans-Coalsack sector, on the opposite side of the Coalsack Nebula from Earth. Also in the sector is a red supergiant star known as Murcheson's Eye. Associated with it is a yellow Sun-like star, which from New Caledonia appears in front of the Eye. Since some see the Eye and the Coalsack as the face of God, the yellow star is known as the Mote in God's Eye.
Human ships use the Alderson Drive, which allows them to move instantaneously between "Alderson points" in specific star systems. Approaching New Caledonia, MacArthur is ordered to investigate when an alien, sub-light speed spacecraft, propelled by a solar sail, is detected. After the spacecraft fires upon MacArthur, Blaine has its main capsule detached from the sail and taken aboard. Its sole occupant, a brown and white furred creature, is dead.
After much debate, MacArthur and the battleship Lenin are sent to the star from which the alien ship came, the Mote. MacArthur carries civilian researchers to make first contact with the aliens, or "Moties" as they are quickly nicknamed. Admiral Kutuzov, aboard Lenin, has strict orders to avoid all contact with the aliens and ensure that human technology does not fall into their hands. The Moties seem friendly and have advanced technology that they are willing to trade. Although they also possess the Alderson Drive, none of their ships have ever returned. This is because, unknown to the Moties, the Mote's only Alderson point lies within the outer layers of the star Murcheson's Eye. Human warships are protected by Langston Fields, which the Moties do not have.
The Moties are an old species, native to a planet that the humans call Mote Prime, that has evolved into many specialized sub-species. The first taken board MacArthur is an "Engineer", possessing amazing technical abilities, but limited speech and free will. It brings along a pair of tiny "Watchmakers" as assistants. Some days later, a delegation of "Mediators" (like the dead pilot of the probe ship) arrive. Their specialty is communication and negotiation. The Mediators invite the humans to send a party to Mote Prime to negotiate. Each person in this group acquires a "Fyunch(click)", a Mediator who studies their subject and tries to learn how to think like them.
Back on MacArthur, the Watchmakers escape, and although it was assumed they had died, they have actually been breeding furiously. Unknown to the human crew, they quietly modify MacArthur to suit their needs. When they are discovered, several attempts to rid MacArthur of the infestation fail, and a battle for control of the ship erupts. The crew is eventually forced to abandon ship after suffering casualties. The party on Mote Prime is quickly recalled and told to rendezvous directly with Lenin. Once MacArthur is evacuated, Lenin fires on her to prevent the capture of human technology. This reveals that the Watchmakers have improved MacArthur's Langston Field, so that it expands as it absorbs energy, increasing its surface area and dissipating energy more efficiently. Nevertheless, MacArthur is destroyed.
During the evacuation, MacArthur midshipmen Staley, Whitbread and Potter are cut off and forced to escape from the ship in Watchmaker-modified lifeboats. The lifeboats automatically land in an unpopulated area of Mote Prime, where they find a fortified museum. It provides evidence of a very long and violent history, though the Moties had carefully portrayed themselves as completely peaceful. Following this discovery, the midshipmen are reunited with Whitbread's Mediator Fyunch(click), who reveals that Moties (other than the short-lived, sterile Mediators) must become pregnant periodically or die in an agonizing manner. This inevitably results in overpopulation ... and civilization-ending wars. Attempts at population control have always failed, because those who breed uncontrollably eventually swamp those Moties who do not.
The Masters, whom the Mediators obey, concealed the existence of one type from the humans: Warriors superior to any human, even modified Sauron supersoldiers.
The museums exist to accelerate the rise to civilization after a collapse. The "Cycles" of civilization, war, and collapse have gone on for hundreds of thousands of years. The Moties have become fatalistically resigned to their fate. Only a mythical character called "Crazy Eddie" believes there is a way to change this, and any Motie who comes to believe a solution is possible is labeled a "Crazy Eddie" and deemed insane.
The current civilization is a type of industrial feudalism, with coalitions of Masters governing the planet. One faction, led by "King Peter", wants to reveal the truth to the humans, but is overruled. The smaller group recognizes that colonization of other planets would inexorably bring them into conflict with humans, as the inevitable Motie population explosion would force them to seek to take over human worlds. Nonetheless, the more powerful coalition sees this temporary solution as preferable to the impending collapse. Both factions send Warriors after the midshipmen, one to capture them, the other to rescue them. The stronger group's Warriors trap the midshipmen, but the trio refuse to surrender and die as a result.
Lenin returns home, taking with it three Motie ambassadors, a sterile Master and two Mediators, whose mission is to open the galaxy to their species while concealing their terrible secret.
Back on New Caledonia, an Imperial Commission is on the verge of granting colonies to the Moties, not realizing the danger they represent. However, MacArthur Sailing Master/Lieutenant Kevin Renner figures out the truth just in time. The decision is made to gather a battle fleet to either disarm or try to annihilate the Moties. The ambassadors are faced with the extinction of their species, knowing that the Masters would never submit. However, one of the Motie Mediators comes up with a third option: a blockade of the system's only Alderson exit point. This plan is adopted, over the strenuous opposition of Bury, who sees the Moties as the greatest danger humanity has ever faced.
Characters
- Commander Roderick "Rod" Blaine: A navy officer, member of an aristocratic family, commanding the Imperial battlecruiser, INSS MacArthur.
- Lady Sandra "Sally" Bright Fowler: An anthropologist and the niece of an Imperial senator.
- His Excellency, Horace Hussein Chamoun al Shamlan Bury: Magnate, Chairman of the Board of Imperial Autonetics, and influential member of the Imperial Traders Association.
- Nabil: Bury's servant.
- Jack Cargill: First Lieutenant on board the MacArthur.
- Jock Sinclair: the Chief Engineer on board the MacArthur.
- Jonathon Whitbread: Midshipman on board the MacArthur.
- Horst Staley: Midshipman on board the MacArthur.
- Gavin Potter: Midshipman on board the MacArthur.
- Kevin Renner: Sailing Master of MacArthur.
- Admiral Lavrenti Kutuzov: Commander of the mission to the Mote, aboard the flagship Lenin.
Reception
Theodore Sturgeon, describing Mote as "one of the most engrossing tales I have encountered in years," reported that "the overall pace of the book the sheer solid story of it" excuse whatever flaws might remain, particularly an unexplained key feature in the imagined alien society. Portsmouth Times reviewer Terry McLaughlin found the novel "a superior tale, told without the pseudo-psychology background that seems to mar many a new science fiction novel."
Brian W. Aldiss and Wingrove reported that while the imagined aliens were "fascinating creations," the "style and characterization the weaknesses of both Niven and Pournelle."
Awards and nominations
- Nominated for the Nebula Award for Best Novel in 1975.
- Nominated for the Hugo Award for Best Novel in 1975.
- Nominated for the Locus Award for Best Science Fiction Novel in 1975.
Sequels
Pournelle and Niven followed up with the sequel The Gripping Hand and in 2010 Pournelle's daughter, Jennifer, published an authorized sequel entitled "Outies."
References
- ^ "1975 Award Winners & Nominees". Worlds Without End. Retrieved 2009-07-20.
- "Letter to Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle about 'The Mote in God's Eye'", The Virginia Edition
- "Galaxy Bookshelf", Galaxy Science Fiction, September 1974, pp.121-22
- "At the Library", Portsmouth Times, November 14, 1974, p.20
- Aldiss & Wingrove, Trillion Year Spree, Victor Gollancz, 1986, p.655n43
External links
- Portions of the book are available online for free (or the entirety, for pay) through Baen's WebScription service including the prologue which was cut from the original publication.
- The Mote in God's Eye title listing at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- The Mote in God's Eye at Worlds Without End
- Portions of the sequel Outies are available for free download from Amazon.com.
- Links to Maps of part of the Domain of Man and the Mote solar system: