8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Conflict Under a Dark Sun, September 23, 2007
Night of Masks (1964) is a standalone SF novel in the Dipple universe. A decade after the war, the Displaced Persons center remained on Korwar. Some inhabitants of the Dipple found their way out by working as casual laborers in Tikil, others by shipping offplanet in frozen sleep and a few by buying membership in the Thieves Guild.
In this novel, Nik Kolherne was one of the unlucky ones who stayed behind in the center. He had been evacuated from his planet on a space freighter that was forced down by the enemy. Most of the crew and passengers had died in the crash, but Nik was saved from the wreck.
After the rescue, the Dipple medical staff tried to regrow the torn and burned flesh on his face, but the attempts were unsuccessful. His disfigurements disturbed possible employers, so he cannot find a job on the outside. He even habitually hides his features from his fellow residents.
One day, Nik is settling down in a warehouse to listen to another fantasy escape tape when he overhears three men discussing an illegal operation. Although he stays as quiet as possible, one detects his presence and lifts him out of his hiding place. Another hits him and knocks him unconscious.
When Nik recovers, he finds himself in the home of Stowar, a man with connections and one of the conspirators. Captain Leeds -- the spacer who had discovered his presence -- recruits Nik for a risky proposition that will entail replacement of his face. Nik will do anything for a new face.
In this story, Nik is inserted onto the villa grounds, appearing to Vandy as a fantasy hero from the child's dreams, and conducts him to a lifeboat that will take them away from Korwar. They travel in stasis and Nik does not recover consciousness until the LB is about to land. Vandy becomes frightened by the pressure and seems to be questioning the Hacon identity, but Nik calms the boy until they have landed.
Dis is a planet of a red dwarf that doesn't emit visible light. The infra-red starshine leaves the world in perpetual darkness. The man who meets them after landing is wearing cin-goggles to transform the IR light to something human eyes can see. Fabic takes them to a set of native ruins that have been converted to human quarters. On the way, he blasts an attacking carnivore out of the sky.
Later, Fabic takes Nik to meet Orkhad, the local veep. Orkhad is a suequ weed smoker, which tends to make the user believe himself capable of any feat. Orkhad doesn't seem to have a high opinion of Leeds, but is willing to let Nik remain just to keep the boy peaceful. During the conversation, Orkhad says several things that contradict the story told by Leeds.
Vandy is very upset with the whole situation and conflicted over his feelings toward Hacon, the fantasy hero. He tries the door and finds it locked. Later he tries the door once again and finds it unlocked. Nik holds him back to plan their actions and then leads the escape.
They find one pair of cin-goggles and a pair of blasters in the living quarters and then sneak out through the tunnels. Far from their former quarters, they discover a hole to the outside. Nik leads them into the Dis darkness.
This story shows the adventures of Nik and Vandy under the dark sun. They find various forms of dangerous birds and beasts and are followed by several pack animals having more than usual intelligence. With only one set of goggles, Nik wears them most of the time, but passes them to Vandy as needed.
They use and lose their store of emergency rations and try to eat a native fish. Vandy has a violent reaction to the meat. Nik decides that he must risk their safety by returning to the tunnels.
This tale shows more about the Thieves Guild and their spacebased subsidiary, the Brethren. However, the author is still developing the Thieves Guild subculture. Later works will flesh out this skeleton into a separate subculture.
Recommended for Norton fans and for anyone else who enjoys tales of strange planets, future criminals, and high adventure.
-Arthur W. Jordin
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Fairly standard adventure story, but well written, September 1, 2009
This review is from: Night of Masks (Mass Market Paperback)
Nik Kolherne is an outcast on Korwar, stranded there after a freighter crash which left him with a horribly disfifured face. He is recruited by a man with ties to the Thieves' Guild, who convinces him to kidnap a child. The child has information vital to political powers on Korwar. Nik is promised a new face by a usually costly surgical procedure, in return for his assistance. He later learns the real motives of his conspirator, and has to rescue the child he helped to kidnap. The story is short and moves quickly, and like most Norton stories it is effectively told. The adventure is okay, but I have read more memorable ones by Norton. Her books are never a waste of time, and fans certainly should be satisfied.
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