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The chronicle of adventures of the survey ship Sarafand as it journeys through space exploring and mapping newly-discovered planets.
The mission brings them into contact with man startling life-forms and menacing aliens. On one world the Sarafand sends out six survey modules and seven return: one of them is a shape-changing malevolent alien - but which?
On another planet they discover a humanoid civilisation which can move around in time. Suddenly the Sarafand investigators are marooned millions of years in the past.
Finally the Sarafand and its crew are stranded in a distant galaxy where everything - including them - is shrinking inexorably to zero size...
154 pages, Kindle Edition
First published January 1, 1978
It was rare to find women among the Cartographical Service field crews. This was partly because of the physical demands - every crew member had, for example, to be able to change a survey module's wheels under any conditions...Doesn't sound all that demanding, to be honest with you. Time and again it feels like Shaw is trying to write an autonomous human being to show up his fellow sexist SF writers - "hey, you guys are doing it all wrong" - except it turns out that he can't escape those sexist tropes embedded within either. Thankfully, but also, disappointingly, since it detracts from the main plot line, this only occurs in the final story. Otherwise, it's a complete sausage-fest.