Ports of Call
By (Author) Jack Vance
HarperCollins Publishers
HarperVoyager
28th April 1999
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Fantasy
813.54
Paperback
400
Width 111mm, Height 178mm, Spine 20mm
160g
New galaxy-hopping, picaresque adventure from a master storyteller.
Sf grand master Vances latest is a tongue-in-cheek swashbuckler about a young man, Myron Tany, who has taken a degree in space studies but has much to learn when he first boards a ship. Myron is in thrall to his zany aunt, who has heard of a faraway fountain of youth and sets off in her space yacht to find it. Her captain flatters her agreeably, and when Myron points out that the man is a swindler, she wont hear of it and maroons poor Myron on an inhospitable planet with barely his passage home.
Luckily, the tramp cargo vessel Glicca is just then in need of a supercargo, and Myron signs on with cool, competent Captain Maloof, Chief Engineer/gambler
Schwatzendale, and Chief Steward/photographer Wingo. The four enjoy a string of rare adventures on a spectacular series of planets.
They acquire as passengers a group of pilgrims (and their mysterious luggage), or rather, pirates masquerading as religious pilgrims, and engage in to-the-death struggles with the pirates pursuers; on Terce, Myron narrowly avoids being skinned (there is a flourishing trade in human skins) and eaten.
Finally, they encounter a Swiftian, legalistic planet on which one may be punished or betrothed for the slightest whimsical offense. Myron is bound to commit one
Grand yarn-spinning
Kirkus Reviews
Vance at his most effortless and pleasant: a romp
American Library Association
On Night Lamp:
Buy it. Its cheaper and at least as exotic as two weeks in the sun
Financial Times
The quintessential Vance novel. Rush out and buy this glorious book
Interzone
Night Lamp yields rich rewards in its humorous complexities
Publishers Weekly
Jack Vance was born in 1916 and educated at the University of California, first as a mining engineer, then majoring in physics and finally in journalism. He has since had a varied career: his first story was written while he was serving in the US Merchant Marine during the Second World War. During the late 1940s and early 1950s, he contributed a variety of short stories to the science fiction and fantasy magazines of the time. His first published book was The Dying Earth' (1950). Since then he has won the two most coveted trophies of the science fiction world, the Hugo Award and the Nebula Award. He has also won the Edgar Award of the Mystery Writers of America for his novel The Man in the Cage' (1960). In addition, he has written scripts for television science fiction series. Jack Vance's non-literary interests include blue water sailing and early jazz. He lives in California in a house he designed and largely built himself.