- Paperback
- Publisher: Voyager (1954)
- ASIN: B000M64VQG
- Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars See all reviews (20 customer reviews)
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A must read for the faithful. Recommended for newcomers.,
By lagg@ix.netcom.com (Detroit, MI) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Night Lamp (Paperback)
For those who loved Vance's 70s classics such as Marune, Wyst, Emphryio, Trullian and others, this one will fit in your hand like a well worn glove. It will also suit the readers of the Amarminta Station books, although it is better. The plot is generally the same as all of them: a decent young man falls into bad circumstances and emerges victorious after a series of wild adventures.Like Vance's later works this one is longer, and incorporates more elements of mystery than the early tales from the Gaen Reach. All of the standard Vance themes are there, to include the revenge of evil deeds, sly and appealing young women, travels through colorful and bizarre lands, unusual cultural depravities, and a young man's emergence from innocence to realism and competance. The Vance humor shows itself as always; in a comic farce, a series of lectures given by academics quickly disintegrates into name-calling and mayhem. Vance is at his best, however, when describing alien cultures that are completely foreign to any present or past human condition, yet completely believable. Hes given us that here as well, with a series of societies that seem all too likely. Is this one of Vance's very best? I've just read it, and I need a little time to let it settle in. For those of you who may be new to Vance, however, you may have little choice since a lot of his very best is no longer readily available.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Vance-lovers will need their midnight oil for Night Lamp!,
By A Customer
This review is from: Night Lamp (Paperback)
If you are a reader with that special attraction for Vance's writing style & subtle humor (you know it if you are one), you already own this book, and all that I write here is redundant to you. If you HAVEN'T read The Dying Earth, The Blue World, The Dragon Masters, or Emphyrio - then you may need to be enticed to read Night Lamp. This latest work is classic Vance - he has included the expected imagery, biting humor and social commentary, and singular style of dialog & description. The story unfolds into gratifying resolution of conflicts & mysteries, with a dose of surprise & tragedy for dessert. I liked Night Lamp very much, and I'm waiting for my recollection of the story's details to dissipate, so that I can read it again. Night Lamp is unique in that it's my only Vance book which has been read but once ... A very temporary condition, I assure you, as I re-read while waiting for Ports of Call. A great story by a man who is, in my opinion, the most skilled manipulator of language in the business of creating and constructing speculative fiction.
17 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Good book for Vance fans, but not his best,
By
This review is from: Night Lamp (Paperback)
Night Lamp will be satisfying to Vance fans: it is Science Fiction in Vance's most familiar style, elegantly written, full of ironic bits, often downright funny, portraying at least three complex social structures based on intricate manners. It also shares the weaknesses of much of Vance's work: it is discursive, the Science content is notional at best (for instance, his spaceships seem basically to be automobiles that can fly in space and travel at many multiples of the speed of light without relativistic effects), and it seemed short one rewrite. The story is that of Jaro Fath, a young boy who is found, on the remote planet of Camberwell, by Hilyer and Anthea Fath, while in the process of being beaten nearly to death by local thugs. The Faths rescue Jaro, and in the process of restoring him to health it is necessary that his memory of the first six years of his life be erased. Hilyer and Anthea take Jaro back to their home world of Gallingale, where they are somewhat unconventional (by Gallingale standards) university professors, and they raise Jaro as their son. Jaro grows up intelligent and strong, but his life is complicated by several factors. He hears voices in his head which seem to be associated with his early life. His ambition to become a spaceman and seek out the mysteries of the lost six years of his life is thwarted as much as possible by the Faths, who fear that he will come to grief tracing his apparently violent history. And he inherits from the Faths disdain for the social system of Gallingale, which is based on the concept of "striving" up social "ledges", trying to reach clubs of higher and higher status. This disdain leads to conflict with his fellow students, and naturally seems to increase his interest in a classmate (Skirlet Hutsenreiter, a wonderful name!) who is hereditarily a Clam Muffin: that is, a member of one of the highest ranked clubs. As Jaro comes to maturity, he slowly learns more and more about his past, and of course is eventually free to track down the mystery of his birth and how he came to be alone on Camberwell. However, as I said, the plot is discursive, and the resolutions seem too often to be the result of coincidence. Often great difficulties melt out of Jaro's way. Furthermore, the climaxes of the book (there are a few) seem muffled: and the final climax is not that of the original plot problem but of one introduced only a few tens of pages prior to the end. That said, the book is interesting to read throughout, and Jaro's story is romantic and is resolved more or less satisfactorily. The prose style is a true joy: Vance is his inimitable self. His writing has a reputation for ornateness, but it seems to me that his sentences are in fact simple, well constructed, and often relatively short. The ornateness comes from the wonderful names (of characters, of stars and planets, of the clubs on Gallingale), and from the elegance and formality of the writing, including the dialect. Vance's work has usually, it seems to me, had an ironic edge: this book has full measure of irony, and is also often much more forthrightly funny than many of his novels.
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