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The ''Seetee'' series is a science fiction series by American writer [[Jack Williamson]] (writing under the pseudonym "Will Stewart.") It consists of several books and stories set in the late 22nd century, amid space-dwelling [[Asteroid Belt]] colonists who are attempting to harness the titular ''seetee'' (a phonetic for "CT" or "contraterrene" matter, an obsolete term for [[antimatter]]) for the benefit of humanity, while also attempting to overthrow the tyrannical central authority of the High Space Mandate.
The ''Seetee'' series is a [[Golden Age of Science Fiction|golden age]] science fiction cycle by the American writer [[Jack Williamson]] (writing under the pseudonym "Will Stewart.") It takes place in the late 22nd century in the [[Asteroid Belt]], where colonists are attempting to harness the titular ''seetee'' (a phonetic for "CT" or "contraterrene" matter, an obsolete term for [[antimatter]]) - both for the benefit of humanity and a tool in their struggle against the tyrannical central authority of the High Space Mandate.


==Publication History==
==Publication History==
Line 62: Line 62:
The stories' internal chronological order is identical to their order of publication, save for the [[1951 in literature|1951]] fix-up ''Seetee Ship'', which is set before ''Seetee Shock'' ([[1949 in literature|1949]]), the first part of the series to be published in book form.
The stories' internal chronological order is identical to their order of publication, save for the [[1951 in literature|1951]] fix-up ''Seetee Ship'', which is set before ''Seetee Shock'' ([[1949 in literature|1949]]), the first part of the series to be published in book form.


While directly based on the Seetee series, with a very similar setting, characters, and technology base, the 1952 comic strip ''[[Beyond Mars]]'' did not share the same continuity; the strip's departures included Mars and Venus being home to intelligent alien races, and neither solar-system politics nor antimatter played a major part in the story.
While directly based on the Seetee series, with a very similar setting, characters, and technology base, the 1952 comic strip ''[[Beyond Mars]]'' did not share the same continuity; the strip's departures included Mars and Venus being home to intelligent alien races, and neither solar-system politics nor antimatter played major parts in the story.


==Setting==
==Setting==

Revision as of 09:35, 3 March 2023

Seetee Shock
Dust-jacket from the first edition
AuthorWill Stewart
Cover artistEdward R. Collins
LanguageEnglish
GenreScience fiction
PublisherSimon & Schuster
Publication date
1950
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint (hardback)
Pages238
Seetee Ship
Dust-jacket from the first edition
AuthorWill Stewart
Cover artistEdd Cartier
LanguageEnglish
GenreScience fiction
PublisherGnome Press
Publication date
1951
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint (hardback)
Pages255

The Seetee series is a golden age science fiction cycle by the American writer Jack Williamson (writing under the pseudonym "Will Stewart.") It takes place in the late 22nd century in the Asteroid Belt, where colonists are attempting to harness the titular seetee (a phonetic for "CT" or "contraterrene" matter, an obsolete term for antimatter) - both for the benefit of humanity and a tool in their struggle against the tyrannical central authority of the High Space Mandate.

Publication History

All the prose entries in the series were initially published in short story-length installments in Astounding Science Fiction magazine:

  • Collision Orbit (short story, July 1942)
  • Minus Sign (short story, November 1942)
  • Opposites—React! (novelette, serialized January–February 1943)
  • Seetee Shock (novel, serialized February–April 1949)
  • Seetee Ship (novel, 1951, fixup of Minus Sign and Opposites—React!)
  • Beyond Mars (comic strip, 1952–1955)

The short story Collision Orbit was published in the July 1942 issue,[1] and was followed by "Minus Sign" (in the November 1942 issue) and "Opposites—React!" (two installments in January and February 1943.)

After a six-year hiatus, Williamson revisited the setting with "Seetee Shock," a novel-length story serialized in Astounding between February and April 1949. The second and third stories were subsequently combined into a fix-up novel, released as Seetee Ship in 1951 by Gnome Press[2] in an edition of 4,000 copies, and had subsequent reprintings from several publishers, including a Lancer omnibus edition in 1972. (The first story in the series, "Collision Orbit," was not collected in either of the Gnome Press books, or in any later omnibus editions.)

The stories' internal chronological order is identical to their order of publication, save for the 1951 fix-up Seetee Ship, which is set before Seetee Shock (1949), the first part of the series to be published in book form.

While directly based on the Seetee series, with a very similar setting, characters, and technology base, the 1952 comic strip Beyond Mars did not share the same continuity; the strip's departures included Mars and Venus being home to intelligent alien races, and neither solar-system politics nor antimatter played major parts in the story.

Setting

In the late 22nd century, many asteroids had been made habitable decades ago by "asterites" or Belt colonists through the use of paragravity technology. They are currently governed by the High Space Mandate, a joint multilateral administration run for the benefit of - the major planets of the solar system. The four constituent powers of the Mandate are the Earth-Moon Union (which is apparently American-dominated), the Martian Reich, the Jovian Soviet, and an unnamed Chinese regime on Venus; the Earth-based Interplanet conglomerate, which holds a century-old uranium monopoly, is a de-facto fifth power, and largely controls the government of Earth.

The Mandate, whose capital is located on the asteroid Pallas, had been established in 2171 by the peace treaty concluding a nearly ten-year war started by the Martian Reich, which saw all of Earth's colonies except the Moon gain independence. The more moderate Venusians and Jovians had invited Earth to join the post-war Mandate to counterbalance hard-line Martian influence, but the asterites - despite having fought on the rebel side in the hope of establishing their own independent High Space Union - were betrayed by their former allies at the conclusion of the war.

Plot

"Collision Orbit" begins in early 2191, as the sleepy asteroid Obania is suddenly menaced by a smaller rogue asteroid after a random seetee collision alters its orbit. Spatial engineer Jim Drake, tugboat pilot Rob McGee, and young heiress Ann O'Banion try to divert the asteroid - which they name Freedonia - which would enable them to claim it in recompense and use it as a laboratory for Drake's seetee experimentation. The attempt to install a paragravity engine at the center of Freedonia fails due to bad luck and economic sabotage by Mandate authorities, but in the end Jim succeeds by steering a mass of anti-iron into a borehole, where the resultant matter-antimatter reaction can faction as an improvised rocket. The Mandate recognizes Drake's claim, and his son Rick - impressed by his father' success and angered by Mandate action joins project - joins the family business.

"Minus Sign" begins in March 2191, immediately after the conclusion of the preceding story, but switches viewpoints to Rick Drake, also a spatial engineer and a rising star with Interplanet. Angered and disillusioned by the Mandate's treatment of his father, he joints Drake, McGee and Drake as a partner, just in time for a race against a Mandate science expedition to unlock the secret of a seetee asteroid exhibiting anomalous properties.

In "Opposites—React!" a contraterrene alien artifact is discovered, and competing parties race to reach it and learn its secrets.[3] The plot of the later book version differs somewhat from the magazine version, particularly in incorporating the speculation that time might run backwards in the neighborhood of a contraterrene object.

Reviews

Groff Conklin gave Seetee Ship a mixed review, finding it "a good story if you can bear ploughing through pages of literary corn starch."[4] P. Schuyler Miller noted that Williamson's rewrite of the stories into a more cohesive novel was "an excellent job of unification."[5] New York Times reviewer Villiers Gersen, however, commented that "it is a pity that the quality of Stewart's writing . . . ranks only slightly above that of a comic-strip adventure."[6]

"Terraforming"

The word "terraforming" was a neologism coined in Collision Orbit, although the concept itself had been suggested previously.[7][8] Willliamson's definition of the term in the story differs significantly from the concept's later development; he applied it to a process for creating a shirt-sleeve environment on very small asteroids, by installing a fictional "paragravity" unit at their centers, thereby endowing them with Earth-level gravity and making them capable of retaining a breathable atmosphere.

During the 1980s, American geographer Richard Cathcart successfully lobbied for formal recognition of the verb "to terraform." The word was added to the fourth edition of the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary in 1993. [9]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Jack Williamson". Symmetry Magazine. Retrieved 12 August 2014.
  2. ^ Seetee Ship, The Gnome Press Release. Retrieved 26 December 2017.
  3. ^ William S. Higgins, "The Road to Seetee," in Jack Williamson, Opposites—React!, Haffner Press, 2010, p. 23-24
  4. ^ "Galaxy's 5 Star Shelf," Galaxy Science Fiction, November 1951, p.100
  5. ^ "The Reference Library", Astounding Science Fiction, November 1951, p.118
  6. ^ "Realm of the Spacemen", The New York Times, October 7, 1951
  7. ^ "Science Fiction Citations: terraforming". Jesse Word. Retrieved 12 August 2014.
  8. ^ "Collision Orbit". ISFDB. Retrieved 12 August 2014.
  9. ^ *Fogg, Martyn J. (1995), Terraforming: Engineering Planetary Environments, SAE, pp. 9, 16, ISBN 1-56091-609-5.

Sources