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Legion of Space #1-3

Легионеры космоса

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Джон Стар, отпрыск знаменитого рода Ульнаров и свежеиспеченный выпускник Академии Космического Легиона, получает первое назначение. Вместе с группой легионеров он отправляется на секретный объект для охраны АККА — мощного оружия, гарантирующего безопасность людской цивилизации.

В сборник вошли произведения из серии «Легионеры космоса»:
- Космический легион (роман)
- Кометчики (роман)
- Один против Легиона (роман)
- Край света (повесть)

480 pages, Hardcover

First published April 1, 1979

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About the author

Jack Williamson

541 books166 followers
John Stewart Williamson who wrote as Jack Williamson (and occasionally under the pseudonym Will Stewart) was a U.S. writer often referred to as the "Dean of Science Fiction".

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5 stars
18 (20%)
4 stars
34 (39%)
3 stars
28 (32%)
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1 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Rafeeq O..
Author 11 books10 followers
June 24, 2024
Having already written a review of The Legion of Space https://www.goodreads.com/review/show... before realizing that this novel also is collected in Three from the Legion, now I will finish up with the full omnibus trilogy.

Although I had harped on some nagging features of the first Legion novel, the following works in the series struck me as noticeably better, which was a pleasant surprise. Yes, we are still reading space opera from the Golden Age of science fiction, so good is good, and bad is bad, with non-humans such as aliens from outside the Solar System or mad-scientist-created androids being the latter, and the flinty-eyed, usually tall officers of the mighty Legion of Space guarding the former. Fair enough for the genre. Still, the characters and the points of view brought by these succeeding books pull a series that began for me in the two-to-three star region into the neighborhood of more like four stars.

Whereas John Star of The Legion of Space (1935) does not seem very well developed, even for the 1930s, his son, Bob Star, the protagonist of The Cometeers (1936), is more conflicted, more human, and hence more interesting. Bob is young and very capable, but he is less sure of himself than was his father at that age, and secretly vulnerable. In striving to beat the grades of the number-one student at the Academy, an upperclassman who has it out for Bob and hazes him mercilessly, the boy has worked himself to the edge of a nervous breakdown. Now after graduation his parents have tried to keep him at home, shielded from the peculiar news brewing at the edge of the Solar System, so that he might rest up before receiving his first space assignment. Such treatment galls...and the throbbing beneath the scar on his forehead, a reminder of the torture--literal torture--of rival Stephen Orco never goes away either. Still, when a strange green comet-like object sails in from interstellar space like a dreadnought, the youngster at last will have the chance to prove himself--oh, yes, and save the Solar System and find himself a girlfriend, too.

When Williamson revisits the series almost a decade and a half later in One Against the Legion (1950), the protagonist is another firm-jawed young officer aching for his first assignment, only here the youngster is framed for murder and the theft of a top-secret device, and he is imprisoned, convicted as a traitor, and even tortured by Legion interrogators before finally escaping. This time, therefore, the once-infallible Legion of Space is fallible indeed, and as the deeply wronged Chan Derron tries to find out why a super-criminal calling himself the Basilisk is framing him for crime after crime, he will have to get to the bottom of another threat to all humanity.

Finally, although Nowhere Near (1967) is listed as being part of One against the Legion, it is a completely separate novella, taking place years after and light years away from the previous tales. This one is told in first-person point of view rather the sometimes-pompous third person, and it is...well, let us say a decade and a half more sophisticated. Cosmological speculations on the age of the universe and whatnot happen to be rather dated now, but the piece is so much more modern and subtle than even the 1950 book. The narrator, the commander of a space station near a strange spacetime anomaly, is experienced and a little weary, and he is not immediately swept to breathless admiration by the waddling entrance of the Giles Habibula, the now-famous gourmand/lockpick/incipient alky of the previous novels, nor even by the flourishing of the name of the distinguished Star family. And when some grizzled-veteran-meets-girl occurs, even that is made almost tolerable by its less cliched execution.

While the first installment of the Legion of Space saga does not age especially well, the ensuing works get better and better, slowly shedding their histrionics across the decades, and even growing quite palatable indeed. I only wish Williamson had not begun the series with a "found manuscript" narrative frame that he then seems to forget and never close...
263 reviews5 followers
February 18, 2021
Five stars as weirder, smarter pulp SF than one might expect from the titles. Williamson's name isn't properly respected enough, or so it seems to me. Also, a lovely bonus-- in addition to the three Legion of Space novels, there is the novella "Nowhere Near" tucked in at the end, a coda to the series.

Note- I read the first LoS novel in ppback, so read the last two in this collection + the novella.
Profile Image for Joseph Loehr.
60 reviews1 follower
July 22, 2018
Entertains Space Opera. Cringe-worthy, in spots, but worst reading. Pulp-style, and started in the mid-30s, I can almost picture Buster Crabbe in Legion livery
25 reviews1 follower
June 17, 2021
Well. This was a ride.
Book 1: Legion of Space: 3 Stars
This one starts out interesting and fast paced. Though no masterpiece, the first half of this book is a top example of good writing style leading to a nice and easy read. Too bad that it stalls and loses focus in the second half of the book, pushing it's rating down to 3 stars. I might have been more inclined to forgive it, but it already held flaws such as somewhat arbitrary characterization.
Book 2: The Cometeers: 2 Stars
Much like the previous, starts off strong but weakens in the latter section. This one makes clear attempts to improve characterization, replacing generic John Star with the more nuanced Bob, and giving more detail to characters who were one-dimensional in the first, such as Hal and Giles. However, I count it as the worst of the trilogy as it drops its momentum earlier than the first. Also, it has quite possibly the most arbitrary romantic pairing of all time, even worse than the previous, as not only have the two characters involved barely spoken to each other they don't speak the same language and thus never had an intelligible conversation. It was clear that the romance was simply shoved into the end as a standard finale requirement, added with all the passion of a mark on a checklist.
Book 3: One Against the Legion: 4 Stars
This one manages to keep focus through the whole book, and furthermore fleshes out Giles into a major character. In addition the new characters are a nice addition the cast. Not too much to say here, as there were no obvious flaws that hadn't been discussed in the previous books already. If only the rest of the series had been like this.
Book 3.5: Nowhere Near: 3 Stars
An added novella that ignores all the improvements the author made in the third book and regressed to all the painful errors of the first book, such as losing steam halfway through and occasionally arbitrary characterization. Not really required reading for the series but if one enjoyed the first two this one is better put together and a quick read.
Overall: 3 Stars
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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