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For no reason I glanced at Armageddon 2419 last night
james_nicoll
And noticed this passage, which I failed to note the last time I read this book, probably back in the 1970s:

"You want to report by phone then, don't you?" Alan took a compact packet about six inches square from a holster attached to her belt and handed it to Wilma.

So far as I could see, it had no special receiver for the ear. Wilma merely threw back a lid, as though she were opening a book, and began to talk. The voice that came back from the machine was as audible as her own.


Is that text really in the original? Did Nowlan foresee mobile phones in 1928?

Yellow Menace Warning: the Americans are inexplicably hostile to the people who brought civilization to the Americas in a manner no more oppressive than the old Americans visited on their predecessors.

Something I did remember (more Yellow Menace stuff)
was that despite this being an Yellow Menace book, Nowlan also wanted his book to feature a brotherhood of all men theme, which as turns out is pretty hard to reconcile with treating one specific race as inhuman and beyond the boundaries of basic decency. Not that he didn't try to reconcile the two


"In the years that followed," Wilma and I travelled nearly every nation on the earth which had succeeded in throwing off the Han domination, spurred on by our success in America, and I never knew her to show to the men or women of any race anything but the utmost of sympathetic courtesy and consideration, whether they were the noble brown-skinned Caucasians of India, the sturdy Balkanites of Southern Europe, or the simple, spiritual Blacks of Africa, today one of the leading races of the world, although in the Twentieth Century we regarded them as inferior. This charity and gentleness of hers did not fail even in our contacts with the non-Han Mongolians of Japan and the coast provinces of China.

But that monstrosity among the races of men which originated as a hybrid somewhere in the dark fastnesses of interior Asia, and spread itself like an inhuman yellow blight over the face of the globe—for that race, like all of us, she felt nothing but horror and the irresistible urge to extermination.

Latterly, our historians and anthropologists find much support for the theory that the Hans sprang from a genus of human-like creatures that may have arrived on this earth with a small planet (or large meteor) which is known to have crashed in interior Asia late in the Twentieth Century, causing certain permanent changes in the earth's orbit and climate.


by literally dehumanizing the Han. Although this could also be seen as less "how is it we're simultaneously preaching the brotherhood of man and committing genocide against one specific group?" and more "how do I deal with the fact the woman I have fallen in love with is merrily committing racially motivated mass murder in such a way as not to reflect badly on her and by extension on me for staying with her?"

I am unaware of any other book that is quite so confused about the distinction between Tibetan, Mongols and Han Chinese as The Airlords of Han, although Gregory Benford's The Stars in Shroud comes close:

"It was Tonji, his Mongol mask in place."


Tonji is from Japan.

Also posted at Dreamwidth, where there are comment count unavailable comment(s); comment here or there.

The Project Gutenberg version appears to be painstakingly transcribed from the August 1928 Amazing, along with decorative initial capitals, Frank R. Paul illustrations, and an editorial introduction in which we hear the inimitable tone of Hugo Gernsback:

"Here, once more, is a real scientifiction story plus. It is a story which will make the heart of many readers leap with joy."

Plus, mind you. Plus!

So I think that confirms that the belt-holstered flipphone appeared in the original story.

Speaking of races, one of the pictures has the following interesting caption:

On the left of the illustration is a Han girl, and on the right is an American girl, who, like all of her race, is equipped with an inertron belt and a rocket gun.


Inertron, as readers of the story will recall, is a gravity-cancelling metal that allows the Americans to fly or anyway take giant leaps-- thus justifying the use of my special jetpack icon for this comment.

I was a little surprised to see in the early sections Nowlan gave some thought to how annoying inertron could be to work with:

The inadvertent dropping of weight is not a serious matter. The motor thrust always can be used to descend. But as an extra precaution, in case the motor should fail, for any reason, there are built into every belt a number of detachable sections, one or more of which can be discarded to balance off any loss in weight.

[...]

Wilma caught it, however, and though it reinforced the lift of her own belt so that she had to hook her knee around a branch to hold herself down, she saved it.


I bet in the early days unfortunate early adopters of jumpers and floaters got to examine interplanetary space up close.

Edited at 2012-07-09 03:32 pm (UTC)

That sounds like a description of hot-air balloon handling I read once, only I take it the action applies in the opposite direction.

Every future reflects the era it was written in...

Bruce