Tuesday, June 2, 2026

Re-Read for the Nth Time: Protector by Larry Niven


After last week's slog-fest, I had to clear my mind with some actual science fiction, and Larry Niven's 1973 novel Protector is always a good choice.  You can find others' plot summaries and spoilers elsewhere, but here's why it's so good.  In a scant 217 pages it tells one hell of a story, but the first 100 pages cover:
  • humanity's status on Earth in 2125
  • humanity's status in the asteroid belt as well
  • a glimpse into the friendly but slightly strained interplanetary politics of the era
  • an alien first contact story
  • everything you need to know about the aliens' motives and their unusual life-cycle
  • how this all ties into one big package
  • and finally, several tidbits to link the story into Niven's larger future history universe.
And that's just the first half of the book.  There are many more thrills, chills, and chase scenes in the second half, before the ride comes to a graceful halt with the gas tank nearly empty and all four tires smoking.

You see, this is how a good science fiction author does it.  None of it is forced or rushed, and Niven never, ever resorts to the tired "Well professor, tell us how it all happened" trope.  The whole book is just one big cavalcade of interesting ideas strung together with believable characters and competent prose.

Four point five out of Five Stars,  Recommended.

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