Gordon Rupert Dickson was an American science fiction author. He was born in Canada, then moved to Minneapolis, Minnesota as a teenager. He is probably most famous for his Childe Cycle and the Dragon Knight series. He won three Hugo awards and one Nebula award.
Name: Dickson, Gordon Rupert, Birthplace: Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, (1 November 1923 - 31 January 2001).
Heisenberg's uncertainty principle combines with witchcraft to save humanity from choking on a ravaged environment. This is hard nosed technological science fiction with the twist that the technology is psychic rather than mechanical. An old-fashioned approach to a newfangled subject, the plot keeps you guessing and a (nonphysical) gadget steals the show.
The only hope for mankind's survival after the contamination of the Earth lay in the Pritcher Mass, a psychic force field construction out beyond the orbit of Pluto. Created by the efforts of individuals with extraordinary paranormal powers, the Mass was designed to search the universe for a new habitable planet. Chaz Sant knew he had the kind of special ability to contribute effectively to the building of the Mass, but somehow the qualifying tests were stacked against him. Then he learned that he had become the special target of an insidious organization that fattened on the fears of the last cities of the world. His confrontation with this organization, their real motives and his unexpected reactions, were to touch off the final showdown for mankind's last enterprise.
There were lots of books about humans with paranormal powers back in the 60s and 70s but this is the only one I recall reading that deals with the prospect of multiple people pooling their paranormal powers to build a "paranormal machine". In this case, they're hoping to construct a huge, invisible, machine of paranormal energy that's capable of finding and contacting alien worlds. This paranormal machine is called the "Pritcher Mass" after the scientist who came up with the idea. The book's main character believes he has the right powers to work on construction of the mass but he keeps failing his paranormal powers test. Eventually, he finds out it's because there is a secret cabal on Earth trying to control the mass for their own purposes and they're afraid his special powers could thwart their plans.
Like other books of that era, it also includes some witches, under the theory that witches were just people with paranormal powers who came up with a superstitious rather than scientific explanation for their abilities. There is also a completely inexplicable talking wolverine hanging around one of the witches. It shows up just long enough to give our main character some advice but no explanation is ever offered for what it is; a witch's familiar? an alien? who knows.
The book is short. In fact, it seems about 100 pages shorter than is really needed to tell the complete story. At times, things seem to happen a little too fast. I'm guessing this was originally published in the pulps as a two or three part story and got compiled and published as a novel.
It's readable and entertaining but not Dickson's best work. Try his novel Time Storm if you're looking for Dickson at his best.
Now I’ll own up to liking a lot of Gordon R. Dickson’s work, even though most of it has a strong military cast to it, but this book is a mish-mash of ingredients that doesn’t actually cohere into anything much. In this future, Earth has become infested with Job’s berry, which releases spores deadly to humans, and therefore cities are enclosed and anybody infected is cast out into the Open, to die. The plan to combat it seems to be to run away, and to this end an enormous psychic machine known as the Pritcher Mass is constructed out beyond Pluto, to search for a new planet to inhabit. Aspiring Mass worker Chaz Sant gets involved when a sabotaged train crashes which exposes him to the spores, but he ruthlessly gets back inside using violent subterfuge. A coven of Witches (psychics) and gangsters from the Citadel have secretly taken over the Mass however, and only Chaz comes to realise that the planet they seek is barred to them. Lots of magical thinking and a cartoon planet leads to a conclusion of sorts but I’m afraid I have no idea what it is. You can live without this book.
I read this in serialized form (as published over 3 parts in the August through September 1972 issues of Analog). It may differ from the final complete publication.
Chaz is absolutely convinced that he has the paranormal abilities necessary to join the "Pritcher Mass" project that will be necessary to save humanity from the Rot-infested Earth by finding a new way to the stars. Except--that's not quite what happens, as a series of improbable (ha!) events occur to allow Chaz to figure out how to do what he wants. The way Dickson sets up the "logic-chain" principles always felt odd to me. This is my 3rd or 4th Dickson novel, and while it's not my least favorite (that's The Outposter so far), it didn't quite make the cut for me.
A very good book indeed with a very satisfying ending. It contemplates humanity's self destructive compulsions along with its innate will to survive. Coupled with the use of pyschic will and energy to be combined into a single mass and force being battled over with the victor determining what its actual purpose is meant to be.
Liked this a lot. Paced and structured like a modern thriller, with big and endearingly clumsy Jungian ideas about the collective unconscious creating a “psychic machine” that can do… just about anything.