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- Newsgroups: aus.sf
- Path: sparky!uunet!munnari.oz.au!mtiame!iconix!iconix.oz.au!mwp
- From: mwp@iconix.oz.au (Michael Paddon)
- Subject: A Recommendation (was Re: Isn't anyone READING anymore?)
- Message-ID: <mwp.724833400@iconix.oz.au>
- Sender: news@iconix.oz.au (USENET)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: titanic
- Organization: Iconix Pty Ltd (World Headquarters)
- References: <1992Dec18.063642.14667@sserve.cc.adfa.oz.au>
- Date: Sun, 20 Dec 1992 06:36:40 GMT
- Lines: 51
-
- In <1992Dec18.063642.14667@sserve.cc.adfa.oz.au> ghm@sserve.cc.adfa.oz.au (Geoff Miller) writes:
- >I'm sure the detailed discussion of the latest ST:TNG episode
- >is interesting (although I usually skip it until I've had
- >time to watch the programme on tape), but is that really all
- >there is to SF in Aus? Come on, people - what happened to
- >all the discussion of favourite authors, pulling plots apart
- >and so on?
-
- I'll bite.
-
- Just finished reading _The LaNague Chronicles_ by F. Paul Wilson.
- Paperback, October 1992, ISBN 0-671-72139-9.
-
- F. Paul Wilson is perhaps better known for his work in the horror genre
- (_The Keep_ especially), but he has been resposible for some top notch,
- if not well marketed, SF.
-
- _The LaNague Chronicles_ is a collection of two novels (_Enemy of the State_,
- and _Healer_) and a novella (_Wheels within Wheels_). All of these have
- seen previous publication, but I doubt that many people have seen them.
- While the entire book is extremely well written (as is usual for Wilson),
- I'm going to concentrate on _Enemy of the State_ in this article.
-
- Wilson states in the first sentence of the introduction:
- "Galactic empires are a joke."
- His reasons are fundametally economic, with a good dash of individualist
- idealism thrown in for measure. _Enemy of the State_ is set within a
- democratic empire (ie. the emporer is elected for life), and it examines
- the true stability of such a system.
-
- The empire consists of colony worlds which have seceeded from Earth's
- control. Classic stuff. The twist is Peter LaNague, a man who intends
- to bring down the empire by purely economic means. Through the medium
- of this character, Wilson examines the dynamics of State, targeting
- inflationary monetary monopolies, the lack of a gold standard, the
- problems of having a majority of employment funded by the government,
- and other simpliar issues.
-
- Put simply, this is an eloquent Anarchocapitalist manifesto. It is a
- credit to Wilson, however, that the ideology never dominates the plot
- which is always well paced and absorbing. Neither does he try to force
- feed the ideas to the reader, he just puts forward cogent, logical
- arguments.
-
- The result is a novel which has immediate relevance to our own tottering
- government; a novel that presents an alternative to replacing one party of
- criminals with another.
-
- Not only that, but it's a good read.
-
- Michael
-