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Legion of Space #3

One Against The Legion

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UK 1st.

220 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1939

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About the author

Jack Williamson

541 books165 followers
John Stewart Williamson who wrote as Jack Williamson (and occasionally under the pseudonym Will Stewart) was a U.S. writer often referred to as the "Dean of Science Fiction".

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Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews
Profile Image for Denis.
Author 1 book34 followers
December 10, 2019
First publishedin Astounding in 1939, and the third intallment of "The Legion of Space" series. This is the end of the pre-golden age (pre-van Vogt, Heinlein, Asimov, Sturgeon... scifi - post E. G. Burroughs, Doc Smith, Hamilton...) Great adventure, comic bookcharacters, a fun "good, clean, beautiful", old school yarn.
Profile Image for Tomislav.
1,162 reviews98 followers
December 30, 2013
One Against The Legion (1939) This is classic space opera, complete with Bug-Eyed Monsters (BEMs) that kidnap the girl, and a simpering elderly alcoholic grifter intended as comic relief. I was actually well entertained by the cliche of it all, but I don't think I could read a lot of this sort of thing. In the end, I found the ending too abrupt, even for writing of that era - but satisfying.

Nowhere Near (1967) was written 30 years after the rest of The Legion of Space novels, but is definitely a continuation in the same universe. It attempts to back-justify some of that universe in terms of a more contemporary cosmology - but of course even that update is now 45 years old, and some of the original trivial concepts cannot be erased from the story line. For anyone who has read the original Legion of Space novels, this updated novella should also be read.
Profile Image for Sandy.
577 reviews117 followers
August 18, 2011
The third installment of Jack Williamson's Legion of Space tetralogy, "One Against the Legion," initially appeared in the April, May and June 1939 issues of "Astounding Science-Fiction." A short, colorful and fast-moving novel, it reacquaints us with the Legionnaires Jay Kalam, Hal Samdu and Giles Habibula; John Star and his extended family only make cameo appearances in this one. Whereas in book 1, "The Legion of Space," the Legionnaires had defended our solar system from the jellyfishlike Medusae invaders, and in book 2, "The Cometeers," from the threat of a 12,000,000-mile-long comet, here, the threat to mankind is of a more human nature: the Basilisk, a criminal whose theft of a secret weapon enables him to accomplish seemingly miraculous feats of teleportation (across billions of miles!) and eavesdropping. The story takes the form of a classic mystery, as no one knows just who the mysterious Basilisk really is, and there are many prime suspects. Much of the action takes place on the New Moon (readers may recall that our old satellite had been destroyed by Aladoree Anthar during the war with the Medusae), an artificial orbiting world that is part casino, part pleasure resort. And taking up the brunt of the action mantle this go-round is Capt. Chan Derron, a Legionnaire who had been arrested and jailed in the mistaken belief that he is the archcriminal, and who now, an escaped convict, must try to clear his name by tracking down the real madman. The novel provides us with much of Habibula's criminal background history, only teasingly referred to in previous installments, as well as a meatier role for Samdu, who had been reduced to pretty much a lumbering cipher in "The Cometeers." In one early scene, Samdu tells the perpetually whining Giles to "shut up"; a long overdue statement, most readers will feel, despite Giles' innate lovability. The novel has been written by Williamson in the best of pulp styles, although some instances of fuzzy writing do crop up (when the author writes of "Andromeda," for instance, we don't know if he's referring to the constellation or the galaxy), as well as inconsistencies (a mysterious object that enters our solar system is said to weigh 10 million tons; 70 pages later, it is said to weigh 20 million tons). Williamson also coins a new word in his tale, with most unfortunate results. His made-up word for a futuristic building material is "cellulite"; how could he know that 40 years later, this word would actually be coined to refer to our bodies' lumpy thigh fat? Quibbles aside, however, "One Against the Legion" is a prime example of a Golden Age sci-fi/mystery, which ends on a most satisfying note indeed.

I mentioned before that the Legion of Space series is a tetralogy (the final installment, "Queen of the Legion," would be released 44 years later!), but this is not strictly true. In the 1967 Pyramid paperback edition of "One Against the Legion" there appeared, for the first time, a novella-length tale featuring Giles Habibula alone, and entitled "Nowhere Near." (And by the way, I believe that just last year, a posthumous Legion tale, "The Luck of the Legion," was released!) In many ways, "Nowhere Near" can lay claim to being the most realistic Legion story thus far. Set on a space station constructed on an ice asteroid 65 light-years from Earth, at the edge of a cosmic anomaly that has been warping time, space, gravity and magnetic fields, the tale dishes out a fascinating theory of cosmogony that incorporates Karl Schwarzschild's gravitational radius statement of 1916. In the story, Giles arrives at the ice asteroid (the eponymous Nowhere Near) in the company of a mysterious woman, while the station's commander, Lars Ulnar (yes, a distant relative of John Star himself) views their visit as most untimely. The baffling anomaly had recently begun to swell alarmingly, and before long, some monstrous machines begin to emerge from it. The reader makes the acquaintance of another son of John Star in this tale, Ken, now a captain of the survey ship that had been monitoring the anomaly, and his is one cool presence indeed. In this compact little tale, that elusive "sense of wonder" is in great evidence, and the origin of the machine invaders an imaginative one that few readers will foresee. My only problem with this story is Williamson's descriptions of the Nowhere Near station itself. They are almost impossible to visualize (the station is some kind of doughnut-shaped affair either on or under the asteroid--maybe both--with spokes and counter-spinning hubs and inner slices of cylinders that are pierced to be used as space valves...AARRGH!), and this is a real shame, as the asteroid and its space base are major players in the tale. The reader's imagination will surely be put to the test here, and I myself just did as well as I could. It was all worth it, though, as the story really is a mind-blowing one. Taken together with "One Against the Legion," it turns this old paperback into one helluva double feature!
Profile Image for Little Timmy.
7,393 reviews59 followers
February 9, 2016
Fantastic SiFi from one of the early masters. Follow the adventures of 3 members of the legion. Highly recommended!
Profile Image for Alex Shevtsov.
5 reviews1 follower
August 25, 2019
A solid old school 4 – though a sizable chunk of it is for the"Nowhere near" novella.
Profile Image for Federico Mangano.
103 reviews1 follower
October 21, 2024
Un classico della fantascienza prima maniere delle riviste pulp: avventura e damigelle in pericolo sono la chiave. Condite da uno stile che pur avendo quasi 100 anni è ancora godibile
Profile Image for Ilario Gobbi.
Author 6 books12 followers
August 24, 2015
Un pregevole esempio di fantascienza galattica secondo i canoni della prima metà del Novecento: avventure spaziali in mondi sconosciuti al fianco dei coraggiosi membri della Legione dello spazio, contro il misterioso e inafferrabile ladro detto Basilisco che sembra essere in grado di mettere le mani su qualsiasi cosa e di uccidere chiunque lo ostacoli.
Anche se un po' lontano per canoni narrativi dalla narrativa fantascientifica odierna risulta comunque un romanzo solido, con gradevoli elementi fantascientifici pulp (la "videoonda", "quelli della cometa"...) che risultano piacevoli per chi ama lo sci-fi di una volta e che contribuiscono a definire l'ambientazione (le vicende della "Legione dello spazio" infatti coinvolgono diversi volumi).
Piacevole il personaggio del vecchio ex-ladro e legionario Gilles Habibullah, che trasuda esperienza pratica e carisma.
Profile Image for Karmakosmik.
473 reviews6 followers
January 4, 2015
Un pochino meglio dei due romanzi precedenti, poichè sembra più un giallo, anche ben organizzato, che la classica spacconata sci-fi. Peccato che il finale è davvero pessimo ed il romanzo si chiude in maniera davvero deludente.
Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews

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