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Big Planet Paperback – February 4, 2017

4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars 56 ratings

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Big Planet is populated by an odd assortment of splinter societies, where beauty and evil dwell in uneasy proximity. The self-styled Bajarnum of Beaujolais seeks to rule the planet; Claude Glystra leads a commission from Earth to investigate, but his ship is sabotaged in orbit and crashes far from safety. Glystra must trek 40,000 miles across the vast surface of Big Planet to Earth Enclave if he is to succeed - but his first challenge is to survive.

Big Planet is Volume 4 of the Spatterlight Press Signature Series.Released in the centenary of the author's birth, this handsome new collectionis based upon the prestigious Vance Integral Edition. Select volumes enjoyup-to-date maps, and many are graced with freshly-written forewords contributedby a distinguished group of authors. Each book bears a facsimile of theauthor's signature and a previously-unpublished photograph, chosen from family archives for the period the book was written. These uniquefeatures will be appreciated by all, from seasoned Vance collector to new reader sampling the spectrum of this author's influential work forthe first time. – John Vance II


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Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Spatterlight Press; 1st edition (February 4, 2017)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 180 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1619471191
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1619471191
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 9.6 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6 x 0.45 x 9 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars 56 ratings

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Jack Vance
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Jack (John Holbrook) Vance (August 28, 1916 San Francisco - May 26, 2013 Oakland) was an American mystery, fantasy and science fiction author. Most of his work has been published under the name Jack Vance. Vance has published 11 mysteries as John Holbrook Vance and 3 as Ellery Queen. Other pen names (each used only once) included Alan Wade, Peter Held, John van See, and Jay Kavanse.

Among his awards are: Hugo Awards, in 1963 for The Dragon Masters, in 1967 for The Last Castle, and in 2010 for his memoir This is Me, Jack Vance!; a Nebula Award in 1966, also for The Last Castle; the Jupiter Award in 1975; the World Fantasy Award in 1984 for life achievement and in 1990 for Lyonesse: Madouc; an Edgar (the mystery equivalent of the Nebula) for the best first mystery novel in 1961 for The Man in the Cage; in 1992, he was Guest of Honor at the WorldCon in Orlando, Florida; and in 1997 he was named a SFWA Grand Master. A 2009 profile in the New York Times Magazine described Vance as "one of American literature's most distinctive and undervalued voices."

BIOGRAPHY

Vance's grandfather supposedly arrived in California from Michigan a decade before the Gold Rush and married a San Francisco girl. (Early family records were apparently destroyed in the fire following the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake.) Vance's early childhood was spent in San Francisco. With the early separation of his parents, Vance's mother moved young Vance and his siblings to Vance's maternal grandfather's California ranch near Oakley in the delta of the Sacramento River. This early setting formed Vance's love of the outdoors, and allowed him time to indulge his passion as an avid reader. With the death of his grandfather, the Vance's family fortune nosedived, and Vance was forced to leave junior college and work to support himself, assisting his mother when able. Vance plied many trades for short stretches: a bell-hop (a "miserable year"), in a cannery, and on a gold dredge, before entering the University of California, Berkeley where, over a six-year period, he studied mining engineering, physics, journalism and English. Vance wrote one of his first science fiction stories for an English class assignment; his professor's reaction was "We also have a piece of science fiction" in a scornful tone, Vance's first negative review. He worked for a while as an electrician in the naval shipyards at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii -- for "56 cents an hour". After working on a degaussing crew for a period, he left about a month before the attack on Pearl Harbor.

Vance graduated in 1942. Weak eyesight prevented military service. He found a job as a rigger at the Kaiser Shipyard in Richmond, California, and enrolled in an Army Intelligence program to learn Japanese, but washed out. In 1943, he memorized an eye chart and became an able seaman in the Merchant Marine. In later years, boating remained his favorite recreation; boats and voyages are a frequent theme in his work. He worked as a seaman, a rigger, a surveyor, ceramicist, and carpenter before he established himself fully as a writer, which did not occur until the 1970s.

From his youth, Vance has been fascinated by Dixieland and traditional jazz. He is an amateur of the cornet and ukelele, often accompanying himself with a kazoo, and is a competent harmonica player. His first published writings were jazz reviews for The Daily Californian, his college paper, and music is an element in many of his works.

In 1946, Vance met and married the late Norma Genevieve Ingold (died March 25, 2008), another Cal student. Vance continues to live in Oakland, in a house he built and extended with his family over the years, which includes a hand-carved wooden ceiling from Kashmir. The Vances have had extensive travels, including one around-the-world voyage, and often spent several months at a time living in places like Ireland, Tahiti, South Africa, Positano (in Italy) and on a houseboat on Lake Nagin in Kashmir.

Vance began trying to become a professional writer in the late 1940s, in the period of the San Francisco Renaissance--a movement of experimentation in literature and the arts. His first lucrative sale was one of the early Magnus Ridolph stories to Twentieth Century Fox, who also hired him as a screenwriter for the Captain Video television series. The proceeds supported the Vances for a year's travel in Europe. There are various references to the Bay Area Bohemian life in his work.

Science fiction authors Frank Herbert and Poul Anderson were among Vance's closest friends. The three jointly built a houseboat which they sailed in the Sacramento Delta. The Vances and the Herberts lived near Lake Chapala in Mexico together for a period.

Although legally blind since the 1980s, Vance has continued to write with the aid of BigEd software, written especially for him by Kim Kokkonen. His most recent novel was Lurulu. Although Vance had stated Lurulu would be his final book, he has since completed an autobiography which was published in July 2009.

WORK

Since his first published story, "The World-Thinker" (in Thrilling Wonder Stories) in 1945, Vance has written over sixty books. His work has been published in three categories: science fiction, fantasy and mystery.

Among Vance's earliest published work is a set of fantasy stories written while he served in the merchant marine during the war. They appeared in 1950, several years after Vance had started publishing science fiction in the pulp magazines, under the title The Dying Earth. (Vance's original title, used for the Vance Integral Edition, is Mazirian the Magician.)

Vance wrote many science fiction short stories in the late 1940s and through the 1950s, which were published in magazines. Of his novels written during this period, a few were science fiction, but most were mysteries. Few were published at the time, but Vance continued to write mysteries into the early 1970s. In total, he wrote 15 novels outside of science fiction and fantasy, including the extended outline, The Telephone was Ringing in the Dark, published only by the VIE, and three books published under the Ellery Queen pseudonym. Some of these are not mysteries, for example Bird Island, and many fit uneasily in the category. These stories are set in and around his native San Francisco, except for one set in Italy and another in Africa. Two begin in San Francisco but take to the sea.

Many themes important to his more famous science fiction novels appeared first in the mysteries. The most obvious is the "book of dreams", which appears in Bad Ronald and The View from Chickweed's Window, prior to being featured in The Book of Dreams. The revenge theme is also more prominent in certain mysteries than in the science fiction (The View from Chickweed's Window in particular). Bad Ronald was adapted to a not particularly faithful TV movie aired on ABC in 1974, as well as a French production (Méchant garçon) in 1992; this and Man in the Cage are the only works by Vance ever to be made into film.

Certain of the science fiction stories are also mysteries. In addition to the comic Magnus Ridolph stories, two major stories feature the effectuator 'Miro Hetzel', a futuristic detective, and Araminta Station is largely concerned with solving various murders. Vance returned to the "dying earth" setting (a far distant future in which the sun is slowly going out, and magic and technology coexist) to write the picaresque adventures of the ne'er-do-well scoundrel Cugel the Clever, and those of the magician Rhialto the Marvellous. These books were written in 1963, 1978 and 1981. His other major fantasy work, Lyonesse (a trilogy including Suldrun's Garden, The Green Pearl and Madouc), was completed in 1989 and set on a mythological archipelago off the coast of France in the early Middle Ages.

The mystery and fantasy genres span his entire career.

Vance's stories written for pulps in the 1940s and 1950s cover many science fiction themes, with a tendency to emphasis on mysterious and biological themes (ESP, genetics, brain parasites, body switching, other dimensions, cultures) rather than technical ones. Robots, for example, are almost entirely absent, (his short story "The Uninhibited Robot" features a computer gone awry). Many of the early stories are comic. By the 1960s, Vance had developed a futuristic setting which he came to call the "Gaean Reach". Thereafter, all his science fiction was, more or less explicitly, set therein. The Gaean Reach is loose and ever expanding. Each planet has its own history, state of development and culture. Within the Reach conditions tend to be peaceable and commerce tends to dominate. At the edges of the Reach, out in the lawless 'Beyond', conditions are sometimes, but not always, less secure.

Vance has Influenced many writers in the genre. Most notably, Michael Shea wrote a sequel to Eyes Of The Overworld, featuring Cugel The Clever, before Vance did one himself (called Cugel's Saga). Vance gave permission, and the book by Shea went into print before Vance's. Shea's book, The Quest For Symbilis, is entirely in keeping with the vision of Vance. Cugel is a complete rogue, who is nevertheless worthy of sympathy in always failing to achieve his goals.

LITERARY INFLUENCES

When asked about literary influences, Vance most often cites Jeffery Farnol, a writer of adventure books, whose style of 'high' language he mentions (the Farnol title Guyfford of Weare being a typical instance); P.G. Wodehouse, an influence apparent in Vance's taste for overbearing aunts; and L. Frank Baum, fantasy elements in whose work have been directly borrowed by Vance (see 'The Emerald City of Oz'). In the introduction to Dowling and Strahan's The Jack Vance Treasury, Vance mentions that his childhood reading including Edgar Rice Burroughs, Jules Verne, Robert W. Chambers, science fiction published by Edward Stratemeyer, the magazines Weird Tales and Amazing Stories, and Lord Dunsany." According to pulp editor Sam Merwin, Vance's earliest magazine submissions in the 1940s were heavily influenced by the style of James Branch Cabell. Fantasy historian Lin Carter has noted several probable lasting influences of Cabell on Vance's work, and suggests that the early "pseudo-Cabell" experiments bore fruit in The Dying Earth (1950).

CHARACTERISTICS AND COMMENTARY

Vance's science fiction runs the gamut from stories written for pulps in the 1940s to multi-volume tales set in the space age. While Vance's stories have a wide variety of temporal settings, a majority of them belong to a period long after humanity has colonized other stars, culminating in the development of the "Gaean Reach". In its early phases (the Oikumene of the Demon Princes series), this expanding, loose and pacific agglomerate has an aura of colonial adventure, commerce and exoticism. In its more established phases, it becomes peace-loving and stolidly middle class.

Vance's stories are seldom concerned directly with war. The conflicts are rarely direct. Sometimes at the edges of the Reach, or in the lawless "Beyond", a planet is menaced or craftily exploited, though more extensive battles are described in The Dragon Masters, "The Miracle Workers", and the Lyonesse trilogy, in which medieval-style combat abounds. His characters usually become inadvertently enmeshed in low-intensity conflicts between alien cultures; this is the case in Emphyrio, the Tschai series, the Durdane series, or the comic stories in Galactic Effectuator, featuring Miro Hetzel. Personal, cultural, social, or political conflicts are the central concerns. This is most particularly the case in the Cadwal series, though it is equally characteristic of the three Alastor books, Maske: Thaery, and, one way or another, most of the science fiction novels.

The "Joe Bain" stories (The Fox Valley Murders, The Pleasant Grove Murders, and an unfinished outline published by the VIE) are set in an imaginary northern California county; these are the nearest to the classical mystery form, with a rural policeman as protagonist. Bird Island, by contrast, is not a mystery at all, but a Wodehousian idyll (also set near San Francisco), while The Flesh Mask or Strange People... emphasize psychological drama. The theme of both The House on Lily Street and Bad Ronald is solipsistic megalomania, taken up again in the "Demon Princes" cycle of science fiction novels. Bad Ronald was made into a TV-movie, which aired on ABC in 1974.

Three books published under the Ellery Queen pseudonym were written to editorial requirements (and rewritten by the publisher). Four others reflect Vance's world travels: Strange People, Queer Notions based on his stay in Positano, Italy; The Man in the Cage, based on a trip to Morocco; The Dark Ocean, set on a merchant marine vessel; and The Deadly Isles, based on a stay in Tahiti. (The Vance Integral Edition contains a volume with Vance's original text for the three Ellery Queen novels. Vance had previously refused to acknowledge these books as they were drastically rewritten by the publishers.)

The mystery novels of Vance reveal much about his evolution as a science-fiction and fantasy writer. (He stopped working in the mystery genre in the early 1970s, except for science-fiction mysteries; see below). Bad Ronald is especially noteworthy for its portrayal of a trial-run for Howard Alan Treesong of The Book of Dreams. The Edgar-Award-winning The Man in the Cage is a thriller set in North Africa at around the period of the French-Algerian war. A Room to Die In is a classic 'locked-room' murder mystery featuring a strong-willed young woman as the amateur detective. Bird Isle, a mystery set at a hotel on an island off the California coast, reflects Vance's taste for farce.

Vance's two rural Northern California mysteries featuring Sheriff Joe Bain were well received by the critics. The New York Times said of The Fox Valley Murders: "Mr. Vance has created the county with the same detailed and loving care with which, in the science fiction he writes as Jack Vance, he can create a believable alien planet." And Dorothy B. Hughes, in The Los Angeles Times, wrote that it was "fat with character and scene". As for the second Bain novel, The New York Times said: "I like regionalism in American detective stories, and I enjoy reading about the problems of a rural county sheriff... and I bless John Holbrook Vance for the best job of satisfying these tastes with his wonderful tales of Sheriff Joe Bain..."

Vance has also written mysteries set in his science-fiction universes. An early 1950s short story series features Magnus Ridolph, an interstellar adventurer and amateur detective who is elderly and not prone to knocking anyone down, and whose exploits appear to have been inspired, in part, by those of Jack London's South Seas adventurer, Captain David Grief. The "Galactic Effectuator" novelettes feature Miro Hetzel, a figure who resembles Ridolph in his blending of detecting and troubleshooting (the "effectuating" indicated by the title). A number of the other science fiction novels include mystery, spy thriller, or crime-novel elements: The Houses of Iszm, Son of the Tree, the Alastor books Trullion and Marune, the Cadwal series, and large parts of the Demon Princes series.

PUBLICATION

For most of his career, Vance's work suffered the vicissitudes common to most writers in his chosen field: ephemeral publication of stories in magazine form, short-lived softcover editions, insensitive editing beyond his control. As he became more widely recognized, conditions improved, and his works became internationally renowned among aficionados. Much of his work has been translated into several languages, including Dutch, French, Spanish, Russian, and Italian. Beginning in the 1960s, Jack Vance's work has also been extensively translated into German. In the large German-language market, his books continue to be widely read.

In 1976, the fantasy/sf small press Underwood-Miller released their first publication, the first hardcover edition of The Dying Earth in a high-quality limited edition of just over 1000 copies. Other titles in the "Dying Earth" cycle also received hardcover treatment from Underwood-Miller shortly thereafter, such as The Eyes of the Overworld and Cugel's Saga. After these first publications and until the mid-1990s, Underwood-Miller published many of Vance's works, including his mystery fiction, often in limited editions featuring dustjacket artwork by leading fantasy artists. The entire Jack Vance output from Underwood-Miller comes close to a complete collection of Vance's previously published works, many of which had not seen hardcover publication. Also, many of these editions are described as "the author's preferred text", meaning that they have not been drastically edited. In the mid-1990s, Tim Underwood and Charles Miller parted company. However, they have continued to publish Vance titles individually, including such works as Emphyrio and To Live Forever by Miller, and a reprint edition of The Eyes of the Overworld by Underwood. Because of the low print-run on many of these titles, which often could only be found in science fiction bookstores at the time of their release, these books are highly sought after by ardent Vance readers and collectors, and some titles fetch premium prices.

Customer reviews

4.3 out of 5 stars
4.3 out of 5
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on July 21, 2020
This book follows the most famous archetype that Vance used: civilized and talented man (Claude Glystra in this book) is stranded in a new and mysterious place (Big Planet) and seeks to travel to a destination (Earth Enclave). In the course of his travels through strange lands and encounters unusual new cultures. It's a relatively short and easy read and the VIE edition is perfect.
Reviewed in the United States on August 17, 2011
Jack Vance's baroque writing style comes-to-the-fore in this astonishing story. The preeminent world building sci/fi adventure writer in generations tantalizes his readers with an imagination of huge scope and originality and brings all of his genius to bare with "Big Planet." You will marvel at "the monoline" and heroic efforts of Glystra the earthman in this amazing action/adventure story...truly brilliant storytelling by a master in the genre....
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Reviewed in the United States on November 13, 2013
One cannot but like Vance's simple and direct storytelling. However, like someone said before, "Showboat World" is really a better novel than this one.
Reviewed in the United States on July 10, 2012
This 1952 sci-fi novel takes place on the aptly named "Big Planet", a vast untamed world of high diameter and low density, where a lack of heavy metals impedes advanced technology. It has been settled by countless Earth colonies seeking the freedom to pursue their own particular way of life.

Earth authorities, concerned about the activities of a local warlord/slaver, send a team to investigate/intervene. However, their ship is sabotaged and crashlands on Big Planet. The survivors, led by Claude Glystra, set out on an impossibly ambitious trek to reach Earth Enclave, located on the other side of the planet, 40,000 miles away. Meanwhile, they continue to worry about the possibility of an enemy agent in their midst.

Although I like the idea of "Big Planet", I don't think Vance puts that idea to its best use here. The overarching warlord/sabotage plot tended to distract from the challenge of the planet itself, and tended to have the effect of making a big planet seem small again. Part of the problem, perhaps, is that Vance's original 1948 manuscript (now lost) was almost twice as long, but edited down after he was told it would not sell. But, for whatever reason, we are left with a rushed adventure story that could just as easily taken place on a small planet.

Vance's inventiveness is on display, but he has done better elsewhere. In particular, he has done better with his vastly superior 1975 novel SHOWBOAT WORLD (a/k/a THE MAGIFICENT SHOWBOATS OF THE LOWER VISSEL RIVER, LUNE XIII SOUTH, BIG PLANET), written 23 years later, which is also set on Big Planet. Read that one first - it stands on its own. Read this later, and only if determined to read all things Vance.

If you do seek out BIG PLANET, make sure you find an edition that reverts to the 1952 text that appeared in Startling Stories. The 1957 Ace edition, and later editions based on it (such as the 1977 coronet edition), massacred the 1952 text. The 2012 Kindle edition from Spatterlight Press, the Gollancz Kindle edition, 1978 Miller-Underwood edition (but not, as Wikipedia wrongly says, the 1978 Ace edition) and the unobtainable Vance Integral Edition revert to the 1952 text. I'm not sure about the Gollancz paperbacks. One test is whether the opening paragraph refers to Hidders' mixed-race origens and ends with a reference to "many brains". If so, then read on. If not, and if the second page refers to a "Sister of Succor" rather than a "nun", then hold off and wait for a better copy.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 3, 2014
Big Planet (1957) is a standalone SF novel. The Big Planet is much larger than Earth, but has virtually no metals. Thus the surface gravity is about the same as Earth.

Big Planet was settled by hordes of restless people looking for someplace other than the highly regulated home planet. Over four hundred years, millions of people migrate to Big Planet and find a home. The planet is now filled with thousands of small societies, who perpetuate every crime outlawed on Earth.

In this novel, Claude Glystra is the Executive Chairman of a commission sent to the Big Planet to investigate the Bajarnum of Beaujolais .

Pianza is a well-meaning, but dense old man. He is the team organizer and administrator.

Bishop is the team data specialist. He has memorized many records on the planet cultures and terrain.

Cloyville is the team mineralogist

Ketch runs the team video and sound equipment.

Darrot is the team ecologist.

Corbus is the Chief Engineer of the ship.

Vallusser is the Second Engineer of the ship.

Abbigens is the ship radio operator and purser.

Arthur Hidders says he is a trader in furs.

Charley Lysidder is the Bajarnum of Beaujolais. He has been taking over nearby territories.

In this story, Pianza and Hidders are discussing the planet they are approaching. Hidders seems interested in the latest team sent to Big Planet. He wonders what they can do that previous teams could not.

Claude comes to the observation lounge just in time for the dinner chime to ring. As they leave the lounge, the ship appears to sway. Claude asks Abbigens if anything is wrong.

Then the alarms sound. Clause learns that the lifeboats have been ejected without them. The Captain and First Mate are dead and the ship is out of control.

When Claude returns to consciousness, he learns that the ship crashed. Abbigens and Hidders are missing and Corbus and Vallusser are the only surviving crew. A nun passenger is presumed dead since her cabin is at the bottom of the ship.

All of his team have survived. Claude orders them to pack anything useful for a hike and tells them to get ready to leave. If Abbigens or Hidders survived, they are probably off to fetch soldiers to capture them.

His nurse Nancy wants to go with them. Claude refuses, but says she can go with them as far as the woods. As they leave the village, the residents are dancing around them.

In the woods, Clause leaves his team and Nancy to reconnoiter. He finds Beaujolais soldiers settling in for the night. One sets up a blaster and goes back for something.

Clause settles behind the blaster and tells the soldiers to freeze. The gunner rushes him and six soldiers die. Claude calls his team and has them set guards on the soldiers.

Clause pretends to sleep, but keeps an eye on the blaster. The far guards go into the woods one at a time to relief themselves. Vallusser sneaks around and attacks the two men on the blaster. Claude shoots him with his ion shine.

Vallusser and Darrot are dead. Corbus is wounded in the neck. During the excitement, three soldiers escape from the camp. Ketch uses the first aid kit to tend to Corbus.

The next day, the dead are buried. Nancy is sent back. The soldiers are tied together with ankle ropes and marched out of the camp.

This tale takes Claude and his group toward the Earth Enclave. They have forty thousand miles to travel to get there. Along the way, the people of the planet will try to kill them for their wealth and as food.

Claude is determined to let nothing stop him. This story is also available in the 
Jack Vance SF Gateway Omnibus .

Highly recommended for Vance fans and for anyone else who enjoys tales of human settled, but anarchical planets with many cultures. Read and enjoy!

-Arthur W. Jordin
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Reviewed in the United States on February 25, 2019
In my opinion Vance didn't work up much of a sweat to write this novel. As Heinlein did later with the 1958 Starship Troopers, I think Vance grafted interstellar travel onto very simplistic pre-WW2 US society. Speaking of which, the premise that the original colonists of the BP arrived there in starships, yet couldn't build a high technology with light metals is just plain silly. Read this as lightweight and early space opera and you'll probably enjoy it.
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Jess Thompson-Hughes
5.0 out of 5 stars Great creation of a range of cultures
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on March 22, 2020
In Vances' inimitable style, a great discovery after my time with Cugal.
Dalek
5.0 out of 5 stars Imperdibile
Reviewed in Italy on June 21, 2017
Grazie a Big Planet (it. "L'odissea di Glystra" o "Il Grande Pianeta"), storia pubblicata nel settembre 1952 sulla rivista Startling Stories, poi in volume dalla Avalon Books nel 1957 in versione ridotta, Jack Vance (28 agosto 1916 – 26 maggio 2013) diede un forte impulso al genere del planetary romance, "filone della narrativa fantascientifica che ambienta le avventure su un pianeta diverso dalla Terra e come tema generale si concentra sull'esplorazione e la scoperta delle meraviglie di questo pianeta esotico e spesso primitivo" (fonte wiki).
Scritto subito dopo il lungo viaggio in Europa intrapreso da Vance e dalla moglie Norma alla fine degli anni '40, questo romanzo rappresenta infatti un modello di riferimento per molti scrittori dei decenni successivi. In precedenza i mondi alieni erano stati semplici palcoscenici, più o meno pittoreschi, dove ambientare avventure rocambolesche, secondo lo stile tanto amato di E. R. Burroughs. Con Vance per la prima volta il pianeta diventa il vero protagonista: più che le peripezie di Glystra e del suo gruppo di naufraghi, a catalizzare l'attenzione del lettore sono le civiltà umane che nel giro di mezzo millennio dalla scoperta si sono sviluppate sul Grande Pianeta. Lo scrittore californiano crea così un modello di planetary romance che avrebbe riscosso un lungo successo, basti pensare alla corposa saga di Majipoor firmata Robert Silverberg. Il mondo descritto nel romanzo di Vance è enorme, tanto vasto quanto povero di metalli e quindi a bassa densità, con una gravità paragonabile a quella terrestre, dal clima mite e accogliente; luogo ideale per ospitare gli insoddisfatti della civiltà tecnologica, i rivoluzionari, gli eremiti e in generale tutte le comunità stravaganti e anticonformiste. Non a caso i primi ad aver colonizzato questo mondo benevolo sono stati, nella fantasia del grande Jack, gruppi di nudisti alla ricerca di un luogo dove vivere liberamente e, soprattutto, senza vestiti. L'autore si dimostra abile nel dipingere un quadro affascinante, ricco di popoli strani e civiltà esotiche, a volte ispirate a quelle terrestri, a volte originali ed eccentriche, persino utopiche. I vari personaggi mancano di un'approfondita introspezione psicologica, a tratti appaiono stereotipati nella loro caratterizzazione, e anche i dialoghi difettano della verve e dell'umorismo che avrebbero contraddistinto le successive opere vanceane e che già si erano palesati nei primi racconti della Terra morente (usciti nel 1950). Ma la forza di questo romanzo sta nelle descrizioni dei grandi paesaggi, nelle invenzioni degli abitanti per sopperire alla penuria di metalli lavorabili, nelle elaborate forme sociali che si sono evolute alla luce del sole alieno di nome Phedra, nei colpi di scena e nelle avventure picaresche che comunque non mancano e scandiscono la trama sino all'ultimo capitolo.
Sparsi nell'opera vi avvertono echi del già citato Burroughs, di Clark Ashton Smith, soprattutto di C. L. Moore, nonché delle esperienze personali di Vance, persona che fu sempre amante dei viaggi e curiosa delle altre culture, anche molto lontane da quella statunitense e fonte inesauribile di spunti e idee.
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Enrico Assorati
4.0 out of 5 stars it's Jack Vance
Reviewed in Italy on November 22, 2021
Wide and colourful, Vance-style.
Amazon Customer
4.0 out of 5 stars Big Planet by Jack Vance
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 10, 2014
Big Planet is a lawless and fragmented world many times larger than Earth, which is largely self-governed, save for a small administrative safe area known as Earth Enclave. The story begins as a spaceship arrives at the planet carrying a commission of people from Earth who have been sent to keep up good relations with the inhabitants and to investigate Earth's growing concern with the Bajarnum of Beaujolais, Charley Lysidder, who is trying to unify the various peoples of Big Planet and take control of it. However, the ship is sabotaged by one of the crew members and crash landed into a remote village of Big Planet called Jubilith and thus begins a quest to travel 40,000 miles across the planet to the safety of Earth Enclave, with the Bajarnum on their tales at every step.

The plot is quite straight forward and primarily serves as a means for Vance to do what he does best--that is, take the reader on a grand tour of an exotic, alien world. This was Vance's typical brand of science fiction which he so fondly used throughout his career--the so called planetary romance--and whilst this book was quite unique in it's day and helped establish the genre, in retrospect it suffers from being a little uneven at times due to it being an early work, showing evidence of a young Jack Vance still perfecting his craft.

The book begins a little clumsily and descends into a 'whodunit', with the main protagonist Claude Glystra taking charge of the impossible mission and trying to establish who has betrayed the commission and crash landed the ship. But as the novel progresses and the quest goes on, Vance hits his stride and begins to paint an interesting travelogue which becomes very enjoyable. The highlight of the book is no doubt the intriguing settlement of Kirstendale, to which the central characters arrive at by means of the monoline--which is a sort of wind-powered overhead cable car stretching many hundreds of miles. The group realise that Kirstendale is not what it first appears to be as they discover that an interesting system is in place which allows all of it's settlers to enjoy a part-time life of luxury by dividing their time up between acting as a masters in their own estate and then acting as a servant to other residents at other parts of the day!

Myrtlesee Fountain was another highlight of the book--the religious zealotry built an intense and creepy atmosphere and learning about the bizarre process of how Oracles are created was particularly enjoyable, and quintessential Vance.

The book's main weakness is probably it's characterisation. Our main protagonist, Claude Glystra is your typical hero, who is endlessly motivated to the task at hand. The book's love interest is a local girl called Nancy who joins the group at the crash site of Jubilith, and the relationship between her and Claude is rather predictable. Charley Lysidder, the books villain, is probably the most intriguing character, and his role reminded me of the various villains in Vance's later Demon Princes books. But unfortunately, the rest of the cast--including the other members of the commission--are rather unmemorable and are not really fleshed out enough to make them distinguishable.

Big Planet was a very satisfying read, it was a little slow to get going, but there were lots of interesting and unique ideas as the book progressed. Perhaps not a book to recommend for readers new to Vance, but definitely one that will be enjoyable to those already accustomed to his style.
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Karl Gallagher
5.0 out of 5 stars Classic Golden Age SciFi Novel
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on June 20, 2013
A mixed bag of spaceship crash survivors forced to trek across an anarchic backwards planet many times the size of Earth hunted by a tyrant. Jack Vance proves again that good scifi hinges on plausible science and familiar human personalities. Utterly readable.