
Who Goes There?
Now it’s time for an unusual team-up, between two writers who wrote for the same magazines and at the same time, but who otherwise seemed to have little in common. Laumer was from New York (although not NYC} and had a respectable military career, which he retired from to focus on writing. He bought a tiny island in Florida where he could do his work in peace. He made his SF debut in 1959 and spent the next decade or so growing a following with a mix of standalones and a couple series, most famously the episodic Retief series. Laumer was a pioneer of military SF, although that label wouldn’t become “a thing” until later. Unfortunately, Laumer suffered a stroke in 1971, at just 46, which left him unable to write for a time; and when he did return to writing, his work was not of the quality or consistency of his pre-stroke output. It’s hard to blame him for this: such a calamity would’ve ended a lot of authors’ careers. Laumer died in 1993, at a reasonably old age, but it’s his work in the ’60s that’s most remembered, though he’s somewhat obscure now.
Rosel George Brown was from New Orleans, and as far as I can tell she mostly stayed in Louisiana for the rest of her life. She had earned a Master’s in Greek, and did work as a teacher while being married to a college professor, so it’s fair to say she was a highly learned woman. She, like Laumer, made her SF debut in 1959, although she wrote only a few novels and not that many short stories. She may have done more, had she not died from lymphoma at the tragically young age of 41, just one year after Earthblood was published. Despite the small output, Brown was one of the best writers to come about during those awkward years between the end of the ’50s SF boom and the New Wave era.
Placing Coordinates
Serialized in If, April to July 1966. It was published in hardcover by Doubleday later that year. It’s been reprinted on occasion, but the best way to find it now would be the Baen omnibus Earthblood and Other Stories, which comes bundled with stories by Laumer and Brown each writing solo. Why they felt the need to bundle it I’m not sure, given it’s a longish novel by the standards of ’60s SF.
Enhancing Image
Earthblood reads in part like one of Robert Heinlein’s adventure-oriented ’50s novels, with the beginning seeming to pay homage to the memorable start of Citizen of the Galaxy. Raff and his wife Bella are looking to buy a human child, or rather a human embryo. Pure Terran. Raff is a mutant while Bella is a humanoid alien. This is a future in which there was once a human galactic empire, but the empire has long since crumbled, leaving little in the way of pureblood humans. However, mankind was prolific, and there being quite a few humanoid alien races, there are many mixed-race humanoids to be found. But like I said, pure Terrans without mutations are rare, so such an embryo would be expensive. Raff and Bella end up having to sell their passports to afford an embryo that was originally meant for “the Shah,” which makes me think this is a timeline where the Iranian revolution never happened. Now both poor and stranded on some backwater planet, the couple at least have their human boy to raise, although even then their troubles aren’t over. They’re attacked one day by a small gang of Yill, a race with a penchant for viciousness. Raff is wounded in the encounter to the point of being crippled, but since the couple technically win, by Yill custom they take in a survivor as a servant.
The embryo becomes a baby and the baby become a boy, named Roan, who in his childhood lives apart from mankind. He has his parents, the servant I mentioned, and some birdlike intelligent aliens called the gracyl. His first friend is a gracyl named Clanth, although sadly this friendship will not last too long. The gracyl are prone to cowardness, which is understandable given they’re physically weak and rather small in size. It’s clear (at least from the authors’ point of view) that Roan is meant for bigger and better things. A big part of Roan’s character arc, indeed what gets him started on his quest from a young age, is the notion that humans are in some way inherently superior to other intelligent races—that once upon a time, humanity ruled the whole known galaxy. Roan is a descendant, in biology if not exact bloodline, of rulers. (The sentiment of human supremacy is not helped in its unsavory implications by Roan being vaguely white, even being drawn as your typical square-jawed hero in the interiors.) The conflict is that he grows up in a world (or worlds) where friends are few and most people are either looking to take advantage of him or kill him outright. This is made apparent early on when he survives an attack by a predatory race called the Veed, which leaves several gracyl dead, including Clanth. It’ll be a hot minute before Roan befriends another living soul. His life, from then until the time he reaches adulthood, is an unhappy one.
Implicit racism aside, a quibble I have with this first installment is that we don’t get to spend much time with any one of the races, and there are a handful introduced here. The no-nonsense pacing is for the most part a positive, but it does leave characters who are not Roan on the side of underdeveloped. Granted, we’re only a quarter into the novel. It does seem like we gloss over the time between Roan as a young boy and when he decides to join the circus—and by “decide,” I mean he’s forced into it. He’s captured by a bipedal lobster-like alien named Ithc, but wounds one of Ithc’s hands (or claws) in the process. Gom Bulj, the owner of the “Extravaganzoo,” is mad at Roan for injuring one of his performers, but he makes a deal with Roan that the young man can’t refuse. Pure Terrans are a novelty, and years of living on a rough-and-tumble planet made Roan physically strong and agile. He’ll make a good high-wire performer—or else. Ithc is the villain of this first installment, being Roan’s nemesis, and as you can see with the front cover, their fight is one worth illustrating. Despite being a young adult, Roan has the vocabulary and stubbornness of a five-year-old, which seems to come from the lack of a proper education. He’s immature for his age, which doesn’t stop him from being both a capable fighter and clever in his own way. It also doesn’t stop him from getting a girlfriend, although it’s unclear how romantic their relationship is.
Up to this point Roan made it clear he wanted a romantic companion of his own, but he specifically wanted a human woman, or at least a humanoid alien who appears human enough. Maybe he is a bit of a racist. In Roan’s defense, the circumstances of his upbringing make it so that he has only an idea of what a human woman is like. In the first installment of Earthblood there’s the implicit question of nature versus nurture. The idea is that Roan’s “pure” genetics destine him for greatness, assuming he doesn’t get killed first, but his upbringing in a tough environment by a mixed-race couple who gave up their wealth to raise him means he has something of the scoundrel in him. He’s basically Tarzan IN SPAAAAAAACE, or to make another comparison, he’s like Superman. He was meant to be heir to royalty but ended up in the hands of loving but impoverished parents. Enter Stellaraire, a dancer and fellow “freak” at the circus, who appears human enough to Roan’s liking. Having never been involved with a woman like this before, Roan is curious rather than violently misogynistic like how you might expect—a curiosity Stella is happy to indulge. Something unusual for magazine SF of the time, at least in the US (New Worlds was spicing things up in the UK), is the unequivocal sexual component of Roan and Stella’s bond. One of the first things they do together is Stella teaching Roan how to bathe like a civilized person, involving the shedding of clothes.
There Be Spoilers
Roan discovers before he’s even taken on as a member of the crew that the Extravaganzoo is about as cutthroat as life on the outside, not least because he has to play nice with Ithc. Understandably the two hate each other. The only friends Roan is able to make are Stella and a gentle giant by the name of Iron Robert (well, he came up with the “Iron” part). Shit finally comes to a head when Roan finds Ithc torturing Stella after a show, the torture itself a kind of exhibition, and decides to take matters into his own hands—quite literally. The climax of the first installment is the bloodiest part, with Roan beating Ithc to a pulp, breaking his limbs and choking him before putting the asshole out of his misery. Roan can avoid the short-term consequences of killing a fellow performer, on account of the spectators promising to not rat out on him, but this still raises the question as to how he’s supposed to survive here, and if there’s even a way out. Presumably there is, because I can’t imagine the rest of the novel taking place at the circus. Roan is meant for bigger and better things than this.
A Step Farther Out
It’s problematic and a bit sleazy, but I’m also interested in where Earthblood goes from here. Of course, the mild sleaziness is a breath of fresh air for pre-New Wave SF. There’s sexuality, a good deal of violence, and even some mild swearing (wow). The Heinlein influence is apparent, but then Heinlein had just stopped writing novels of this sort. Also, I think it’s worth mentioning, and it’s probably because of Brown’s contributions (I’m unsure of Laumer’s skill with writing women), but this is not nearly as creepy or misogynistic as Heinlein in writing-for-adults mode. There are other issues, namely regarding race, but I’m willing to see the novel’s treatment of race (or speciesism, rather) unfold over the coming installments.
See you next time.








