Thursday, May 2, 2024

Review: The Amsirs and the Iron Thorn, by Algis Budrys

Review: The Amsirs and the Iron Thorn, by Algis Budrys

by Rich Horton

Algis Budrys only wrote eight novels in a writing career that spanned over 40 years. Five appeared between 1954 and 1960 (with a revised version of the first appearing in 1961). Michaelmas came out in 1977. Hard Landing in 1993. And what of the interval between 1961 and 1977? A very strange novel, serialized in If in 1967 as "The Iron Thorn", published in paperback that year as The Amsirs and the Iron Thorn. (Later reissues have been titled just The Iron Thorn, implying that that was Budrys' preferred title, but I confess a fondness for the longer title under which I first read the novel.)

I read the paperback many years ago, and enjoyed it, but my memory of details was lacking. So I have just reread it in the serial version. This appeared in four parts, January through April of 1967. Four parts is a long serial, usually, but in fact these parts are fairly short, and the complete serial runs about about 50,000 words, by my rough estimate. The book version says "A shorter version of this novel appeared in If magazine", and indeed by my best estimate, the book is slightly longer, at perhaps 55,000 words. A cursory comparison of the texts does show slight cuts in the magazine version -- no missing scenes, but a sentence here, a clause there. And a couple of word choice changes -- for example, in the magazine, the Amsirs call humans "damp things" but in the book it's "wet devils". The overall substance of the novel is essentially the same, though I will say I think the book version is slightly better. I don't know if the changes were cuts editor Frederik Pohl made, or the result of revisions Budrys made before book publication.

The story concerns a young man named, variously, Honor White Jackson, Honor Secon Black Jackson, and Honor Red Jackson. Jackson is a member of a small society of humans living in a strange environment, consisting of a small fairly fertile valley surrounded by desert -- and with the atmosphere unbreathable outside their home. The "Iron Thorn" is a tower in the middle of their valley. "Honors" are a privileged caste, who venture out in to the desert to hunt the strange human-sized flying creatures called Amsirs. And the opening extended scene shows Honor White Jackson on his first Amsir hunt, or "hon". The hunt is successful, of course, and Jackson returns, ready for his welcome to the full privileges of an Honor (including the name of "Black" -- with "Secon" meaning that he is the second in his familty to become a Honor.) But Jackson is disturbed, for he has learned that Amsirs can talk -- there are not dumb animals, but intelligent. And he soon realizes that the more intelligent Honors, including the "Eld" who rules the society, are aware of this, but unwilling to change. Jackson, as a Honor, can take any woman he wants, but it's soon clear he's only interested in one -- Petra Jovans, who is as independent minded as he.

So, the novel at this point seems reasonably conventional. Jackson will foment some sort of revolution, perhaps make peace with the Amsirs, make a life with the lovely Petra, etc. etc. etc. But Budrys has no interest in such a conclusion at all. (And, indeed, Petra never again appears in the novel.)

In the second section, Jackson does decide to confront the Amsirs. He goes back into the desert, pursued by another Honor who suspects his plans, and after dispatching that threat he waits for an Amsir -- and when one comes, he yields to it, and is taken to their home valley. There he encounters the Amsir "Eld", and learns that they are rather more advanced in understanding than the humans, but that they too are constrained to a small area. But besides their thorn, there is a smaller tower -- a tower with a door in it ...

From this point, spoilerphobic readers may wish to stop. Suffice it to say that the two remaining sections feature more revelations, some predictable, some unexpected, and Jackson makes more radical journeys, and learns a great deal about this strange future. But -- uncompromisingly -- though he learns much he remains unable to truly make effective change: this world is the world as it will be, and its people are not of much import.

This isn't one of Budrys' best novels -- my ranking is Rogue Moon, then Hard Landing, then Michaelmas and Who? But it's an effective and interesting novel, with some nice ideas, some unexpected twists, and a dark and unyielding view of humanity. There is some silliness, and the science doesn't work, and the gender political are awfully retro. But it's worth reading, refreshing, very strange.

So, after spoiler space,


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The smaller tower in Amsir space is of course a spaceship. The door will not admit any Amsirs who try to enter, and indeed it kills them. But humans it tolerates, though they still cannot enter. The Amsirs capture humans in an attempt to find one who can open the door -- and Honor succeeds. But, naturally, he proceeds immediately to commanding the spaceship to take off -- and soon learns that he is on Mars, and the humans -- and also Amsirs, who are humans modified to better tolerate Martian conditions -- have been placed there as a research project. And, apparently have since been forgotten. Part 3 of the book (and serial) concerns his trip back to Earth, including a simulated time in college (at Ohio State of all places). And Part 4, then, is about what he finds on Earth. I'll leave the revelations about that for the reader to learn -- suffice it to say that the environment on Earth is not much to Jackson's liking, but there is little enough he can do about it. He won't revolutionize decadent Earth, he won't rescue the abandoned Mars people, neither Amsirs nor humans, he won't return to Petra.

(The relatively short four parts of the serial are easily explained -- each section of the novel neatly fits a serial section, and it hardly would have made sense to divide it up differently.)


5 comments:

  1. Finally, someone else who's read this.

    Firstly, Budrys got off a couple of amusing lines about this novel to the effect that "it's about a boy raised by apes on Mars" and its theme was "eating people is wrong."

    Secondly --

    YES: as a whole piece of work THE IRON THORN definitely isn't the equal of the great Budrys novels. Budrys said he was inveigled by Fred Pohl into writing it for serialization and was then constrained to meet deadlines, and hated the experience and wasn't that happy with the final result either.

    BUT: that said, the final segment where Jackson gets to Earth, and we're shown Comp and its exteroaffectors, and the human society those things enable, is the most foresighted take on what a world of ubiquitous computing and swarm technologies (as we later came to call these things) would ultimately look like that I've seen from SF even now, unless we're talking about some of Stanislaw Lem's extrapolations in his non-fiction SUMMA TECHNOLOGIAE
    (amazingly enough written in the same mid-1960s period as the Budrys).

    (Re: ubiquitous computing predictions, I discount the nanotech-magic worlds of more recent slipstream-y SF, as that mostly isn't feasible physics-wise. Whereas one can very much see how could get from here, our present world, to there, something like Comp and its exteroaffectors).

    Lastly, I interviewed Pohl in 2008 for a piece about Budrys for MIT TECHNOLOGY REVIEW, and I asked him how Budrys might have come to work up the predictions about ubiquitous computing and networks and swarms in IRON THORN (and in MICHAELMAS) and, for that matter, how Pohl came up with his 'joymakers' -- modern cellphones, essentially -- in Pohl's THE AGE OF THE PUSSYFOOT (1965).

    Pohl said he and Budrys used to take trips to MIT, and see what people like Marvin Minsky and co. were thinking about.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Age_of_the_Pussyfoot#Joymaker


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    1. I think you are spot on about that, and that last section is one of the things that made that novel seem so strange on reading it back in the mid-70s.

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  2. Should I put this on my generation ship list?

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    1. No -- the only space travel is between Earth and Mars and it seems to take a reasonably time -- a few weeks or months maybe?

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    2. My mistake. I think I misread tower for town -- a spaceship town screams generation ship. Sorry. It's been a long semester... almost done :)

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