Little Fuzzy Henry Beam Piper 9781475036510 Books
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Little Fuzzy
Little Fuzzy Henry Beam Piper 9781475036510 Books
Awesome first contact story. Most of the characters weren't real in depth, but well enough developed to understand their motivations. Characters with conscience are infinitely more relatable than immoral or amoral ones. Even the bad guys here were characters that you could find sympathy for. And while I wouldn't want to call most of these people friends, or even sit down to have a drink with them, I liked them as characters. They weren't there simply to be a focal point of every negative feeling one might have.The main character, Jack Holloway, reminded me of the main character from Keith Laumer's Planet Run, Captain Henry. I guess some would describe him as a manly man getting manly things done. He's a man of action with a moral compass. He's willing to do the nasty work that needs to be done and stand for what's right.
The court room drama seemed a little strained at times, and the occasional shifts to Fuzzy point of view seemed odd, but otherwise the story was well paced and kept my interest.
The eBook was formatted well with no obvious spelling or grammatical errors.
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Little Fuzzy Henry Beam Piper 9781475036510 Books Reviews
A quick read, but surprisingly deep. Really, this is an excuse to discuss the definition of sapience (or sentience, or consciousness) and how we might treat other sapient species should we ever discover them. It is refreshingly optimistic in its treatment of the human race's benevolence; while there is an "evil" corporation at the center of the plot who stands to lose billions if the furry creatures they discover living on a planet they are mining for resources to send back to earth, there is plenty of push-back from people and government, and not nearly as much corruption as there would be in most stories written today.
I read it years and years ago as a kid, and I liked it just as much this time around.
The plot is delightfully simple - the Protagonist - a good, old, hardworking lone underdog finds adorable little furry people. Old man keeps little furry people, old man tries to get little furry people recognized as sapient life forms. The Antagonist - a heartless CEO of Zarathustra corporation doesn't want adorable little furry people recognized as sapient life form because the corporation would have to give up the claim for the planet. Heartless CEO hires an equally heartless lawyer to help him with the case. But Jack Holloway - good old hardworking space farmer - also has friends - scientists, who put Science above personal interests, constable, who puts Law above his own interests, honest lawyer in a plaid shirt - and together they drop whatever they normally do to help the old man with his court case against corporation - good chunk of the story happens either in court or discussing case strategies.
Written in 1963, this story is a product of it's time, when space colonization was imagined like idealized colonization of the West. Good ole' guys travel hundreds of light years away to be able to do their manual labor on some quiet planet away from civilization's noise, greed and scurry. Piper's idea how less advanced civilization should be approached is outdated as well - treating young hunter-gather civilization like children or pets because they are cute by human standards quite unsettling to me. The science, especially the psychology, is noticeably dated as well.
While the story is a little too naive and black-and-white for my liking, in the light of the recent events - Enron, Monsanto, big bank bail-outs and so on - it is definitely a guilty pleasure to see big players being held accountable by just and impartial judge, even if it's only Sci-Fi.
Looking forward to reading this novel's reboot by John Scalzi, currently one of my favorite new Sci-Fi authors.
"Little Fuzzy" is a short sci-fi novel or novella written and published in 1962 by H. Beam Piper. It has long since passed into the pubic domain, and several (anonymous) sci-fi lovers got together and scanned, retyped and/or somehow rendered it into e-book format and made it available for free at . To those involved, and to , a heartfelt thanks!
Little Fuzzy takes place on a planet called Zarathustra, some 500 or 600 years from now. A gem prospector, grizzled old Jack Hollaway, is surprised one day by the appearance of a small, fuzzy, previously unknown, bipedal animal, kind of like a teddy bear, but with opposable thumbs. The planet, originally colonized by a large corporation for some 25 years, is known to be home to a large and diverse population of flora and fauna, but not any intelligent ("sentient") life forms. Holloway quickly finds that LIttle Fuzzy is not only cute, friendly and smart, but also seems to be clearly sentient. This is big trouble for the corporation, because according to the rules of colonization, companies cannot own the rights to planets with an indigenous population of sentient beings. Thus, the corporation wants very much to have the Fuzzies declared as non-sentient animals, in the name of money and profits. Much of the novel is given over to consideration of what it means to be sentient, and a bunch of legal wrangling with dialog that reminded me fondly of Robert A. Heinlein.
This is clearly a work from the golden age of sci-fi in the 1960s, and it is a gem. The bad guys (the corporation) and the good guys (Jack Holloway and friends who have actually interacted with the Fuzzies) are boldly penned in black and white, and there is a 1960s style happy ending for all (well, almost all).
I'm sort of amazed that I never ran into this before (and there are other Fuzzy novels by Piper and other authors) but sure am glad I did now. For free too!
Highly recommended for all true sci-fi fans.
J.M. Tepper
Awesome first contact story. Most of the characters weren't real in depth, but well enough developed to understand their motivations. Characters with conscience are infinitely more relatable than immoral or amoral ones. Even the bad guys here were characters that you could find sympathy for. And while I wouldn't want to call most of these people friends, or even sit down to have a drink with them, I liked them as characters. They weren't there simply to be a focal point of every negative feeling one might have.
The main character, Jack Holloway, reminded me of the main character from Keith Laumer's Planet Run, Captain Henry. I guess some would describe him as a manly man getting manly things done. He's a man of action with a moral compass. He's willing to do the nasty work that needs to be done and stand for what's right.
The court room drama seemed a little strained at times, and the occasional shifts to Fuzzy point of view seemed odd, but otherwise the story was well paced and kept my interest.
The eBook was formatted well with no obvious spelling or grammatical errors.
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