commit 2b02dddf5e1438bbf4ef4ba8db49304a5681197c
parent 943808d0de753c5536d974949cfa0b3379a75b5e
Author: pyratebeard <root@pyratebeard.net>
Date: Fri, 10 Jun 2022 23:41:11 +0100
welcome_to_the_alien_jungle
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+In 2009 while on deployment I picked up a battered old sci-fi novel from the shelf of books in our equipment tent.
+
+I remember something about a spaceship crashing on an alien world and the crew having to travel through a dangerous jungle. That is it. I don't remember the name of the novel or the author. I don't remember the characters, major plot points, or even what the cover looked like.
+
+In the back of my mind I thought I know what the cover was but could never quite bring that image forward.
+
+For years I have searched for this novel. It is very hard to search for "spaceship crash in alien jungle", there is a surprisingly large number of sci-fi novels with spaceships and jungles.
+
+Sometimes I think I have come close but have never stumbled upon "the one". That was until last week. As happens on occasion I was going through another bout of searching when I happened on one of the cover images for "The Legion of Space" by Jack Williamson ([ISFDB](http://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/pl.cgi?222345){target="_blank" rel="noreferrer"}). The cover caught my eye and so I read the plot summary on [Wikipedia](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Legion_of_Space#Plot_summary){target="_blank" rel="noreferrer"} and while most of it didn't sound familiar there was one paragraph;
+
+> Through the machinations of his uncle, a powerful politician with a hidden agenda, John Ulnar is assigned to Aladoree's guard force at a secret fort on Mars. When she is kidnapped by a huge alien spaceship, John and the three other survivors of the guard force follow her kidnappers to a planet of Barnard's Star. They crash-land and must battle their way across a savage continent to the sole remaining citadel of the Medusae.
+
+I decided to give it a read, hoping for a moment of remembrance. First I had a look on [Project Gutenberg](https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/bookshelf/68){target="_blank" rel="noreferrer"} to no avail. They have some "Astonishing Stories", which Legion of Space was serialised in before being published, but I didn't know the issues and didn't really want to go digging through them all.
+
+I checked my local library but they also did not carry a copy. Thus I succumbed to Amazon. The novel was available on Kindle so I purchased it, excited that this may finally be it.
+
+My first thoughts were that my search had failed again. Nothing was sparking any memories. The plot, the characters, I didn't remember a thing.
+
+Soon the writing, Williamson's descriptive prose, started to feel familiar. Yet still no sudden recollection. Then the spaceship crash on a alien planet and the crew having to venture into a deadly jungle. The only plot points I vaguely remember, and yet, I couldn't be confident this was the same book.
+
+After finishing the novel a few days ago I have tried to accept that The Legion of Space is probably the novel I read back in 2009. I also am having to accept that for some reason I cannot, and probably never will, actually remember. There are lots of memories I have from that deployment, almost all of it (I think), but not the name, or even the cover art, of that novel.
+
+Hopefully by finding The Legion of Space I can finally lay this quest to rest. At the very least I have read a(nother) decent sci-fi adventure novel about a spaceship crash in an alien jungle.