Ace Double book (1960), cover code D-479, two short novels. Cover art by Ed Emshwiller , Ed Valigursky. "To The Tombaugh Station" was first published in "The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction," July 1960. "Earthman, Go Home!" is part of Anderson's "Ensign Flandry" series, and was serialized in Fantastic Stories (December 1960, January 1961) under the title "A Plague of Masters."
Pseudonym A. A. Craig, Michael Karageorge, Winston P. Sanders, P. A. Kingsley.
Poul William Anderson was an American science fiction author who began his career during one of the Golden Ages of the genre and continued to write and remain popular into the 21st century. Anderson also authored several works of fantasy, historical novels, and a prodigious number of short stories. He received numerous awards for his writing, including seven Hugo Awards and three Nebula Awards.
Anderson received a degree in physics from the University of Minnesota in 1948. He married Karen Kruse in 1953. They had one daughter, Astrid, who is married to science fiction author Greg Bear. Anderson was the sixth President of Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America, taking office in 1972. He was a member of the Swordsmen and Sorcerers' Guild of America, a loose-knit group of Heroic Fantasy authors founded in the 1960s, some of whose works were anthologized in Lin Carter's Flashing Swords! anthologies. He was a founding member of the Society for Creative Anachronism. Robert A. Heinlein dedicated his 1985 novel The Cat Who Walks Through Walls to Anderson and eight of the other members of the Citizens' Advisory Council on National Space Policy.[2][3]
Poul Anderson died of cancer on July 31, 2001, after a month in the hospital. Several of his novels were published posthumously.
'Was His Spaceship Haunted - or Only Booby-trapped?
MANTRACK TO THE ENDS OF SPACE
Kate Bristol was a born huntress. Her keen senses and steel nerves were infallible, and nobody knew it better than her superiors at Interworld Insurance. They took it for granted that when they put Bristol on the case she would bring back the man — and the facts! But even Kate began to doubt her ability when they handed her the job of tracking a murder suspect on board the spaceship Xanthus. One, the ship was bound for the farthermost outpost of civilization. Two, there would be no one on board the ship but Kate and the suspected murder-pilot. And three, the trip would take at least two months! For Kate this assignment was more than just a challenge — it was life or death. She had always to stay one step ahead of the suspect or she might never live to return from that trip TO THE TOMBAUGH STATION.'
Blurb from the 1960 D-479 Ace Double paperback edition
The unfortunately-named Kate Bristol is a kind of female ninja insurance investigator who has been asked to take on an undercover insurance investigation. One of the partners in what is essentially an interplanetary haulage business is dead, possibly murdered. Kate hires their only ship to take her on a long haul flight across the solar system, knowing that her main murder suspect will be the captain and pilot. Bristol leaves the destination up to Webb, the man suspected of the foul deed, but she is not expecting Webb to pick up a lucrative haulage deal from the Tombaugh station on Pluto. It's a bit of an odd premise that insurance investigators would go to such lengths as chartering a space ship to fly to Pluto and back, but this was in the days when writers imagined that in the future we'd have individuals with their own spaceships flying hither, thither and yon. It's not one of Tucker's best and lacks suspense. Bristol is hardly ever in danger at all so the journey to Pluto is hardly a rollercoaster of white knuckle drama. Having said that, Tucker has created two credible characters here between whom the dialogue and interaction work very well. With a little more work, some moments of tension and more ambiguity over Webb's guilt or innocence, it could have been raised to a whole other level. Tucker should also be credited with creating a tough independent (and intelligent) female lead character at a time when most writers (and editors) were still a little Neanderthal in relation to gender equality. One could argue that she is, to a certain extent, still being portrayed as a sex object. It's a step in the right direction however and a far cry from van Vogt's dumb helpless maidens who need Men to sort out their problems. Nineteen Sixty, it appears, was a pivotal point for change.
Anderson, Poul. Earthman, Go Home. Flandry No. 11. Ace, 1960. Tucker, Wilson. To Tombaugh Station. Ace, 1960. Nostalgic old man alert! I miss the Ace Doubles, which were two science fiction paperback novellas published back-to-back with two front covers with the print running in opposite directions. They were common in the paperback racks in drugstores and the like in the 1950s and ‘60s and provided a second life for magazine stores by writers who were not the big three or four. The Earthman, Go Home/ To Tombaugh Station combo is still an entertaining genre romp. Poul Anderson was the best known of the writers, and Dominic Flandry stories were already magazine staples by the time Earthman, Go Home appeared. Flandry, a dashing intelligence agent for the Imperial Navy, investigates a planet that uses toxins to control its population. In the magazine version, it was titled A Plague of Masters. Flandry is James Bond in space. Tucker Wilson’s To Tombaugh Station is a bit more original. Kathy Bristol, a no-nonsense tracker, is hired by an insurance company to investigate the accidental death of a crewman on a tramp freighter. Undercover, she buys passage on the freighter for a long voyage out to Tombaugh Station on Pluto. The pilot worries that she is setting him up to take the fall. A hardboiled detective story that should have been made into a film with Bogart and Bacall. 3.5 stars is the true rating. But give the double a four for period nostalgia.
A Science Fiction story from 1960, Irvin Webb is the skipper on the Xanthus, a small space freighter who is a suspect in the death of Singleton, one of his crewmates. His other crewmate, Jimmy Cross, is in jail on suspicion of committing murder. Naturally, the insurance company, Interworld Insurance Company, was reluctant to pay Webb, the beneficiary of the life insurance policy on Singleton so they send Kate Bristol, to discover whether Webb was really guilty. So, Kate finagles with Webb to charter a space trip on his ship so she can figure out whether he really was guilty or not. Webb is a cantankerous, profane character who was reluctant to have her along, but she pays the exorbitant sum he demands for the trip (secretly financed by the insurance company), and Webb, being greedy, gives in. He also takes on a cargo to be delivered to the Tombaugh Station on Pluto. He dislikes having Kate along and tries to ditch her on Titan, a moon of Saturn, where there is a space station, but Kate manages to stay on board. So, on to the Tombaugh Station and the rest of the story, where she will discover what really happened to Singleton.
To The Tombaugh Station gelesen als Der letzte Flug der Xanthus
Zusammengepfercht in der Enge einer kleinen, schrottreifen Frachtrakete, fliegen zwei Personen bis zur Grenze des Sonnensystems - ein Mann und eine Frau. Der Mann ist ein harter Raumtramp, der unter Mordverdacht steht, die Frau ist eine Agentin - beauftragt, den Mann des Mordes zu überführen ...
Kopfgeldjägerin / Agentin der Interwelt-Versicherungs-Gesellschaft versucht vermeintlichen Mörder im All zu überführen.
Ein 08/15 Krimi, der im All spielt, da schau ich mir lieber alte Folgen von Columbo an die ich schon hundertmal gesehen hab.