Posted April 03, 2021
Well of the Worlds, by Henry Kuttner (and CL Moore). I really like a lot of Kuttner and Moore's work, although every once in a while you get something like Earth's Last Citadel, which I didn't like much at all. This one is not up there with their best, but it's not terrible, either.
The story is that in the atomic future of 1970, every country is bully for uranium mining. Sawyer is a Canadian investigator sent by a mining company to investigate reports of ghosts in a mine and a conflict between the mine owners, a young woman named Klai (who is weirdly exotic-looking and sounding and was found as an amnesiac in the depths of the mine as a girl) and Alper, a crotchety old man who's supposedly out to do away with Klai. They end up getting whisked off to a parallel, cylindrical world of floating islands ruled by the godlike Issier, who enslave humans and are at war with the brutish Sselli from the lower parts of the world.
The sci-fi aspect is covered in that the world and its residents are inspired by radioactive isotopes and subatomic structures. The plot isn't very interesting. The protagonists show up, they get captured, Sawyer escapes, and spends most of the rest of the short novel evading stuff and learning in awkward exposition dumps about how things work. It mostly has some memorable imagery, it's not slow-paced, and doesn't overstay its welcome.
The story is that in the atomic future of 1970, every country is bully for uranium mining. Sawyer is a Canadian investigator sent by a mining company to investigate reports of ghosts in a mine and a conflict between the mine owners, a young woman named Klai (who is weirdly exotic-looking and sounding and was found as an amnesiac in the depths of the mine as a girl) and Alper, a crotchety old man who's supposedly out to do away with Klai. They end up getting whisked off to a parallel, cylindrical world of floating islands ruled by the godlike Issier, who enslave humans and are at war with the brutish Sselli from the lower parts of the world.
The sci-fi aspect is covered in that the world and its residents are inspired by radioactive isotopes and subatomic structures. The plot isn't very interesting. The protagonists show up, they get captured, Sawyer escapes, and spends most of the rest of the short novel evading stuff and learning in awkward exposition dumps about how things work. It mostly has some memorable imagery, it's not slow-paced, and doesn't overstay its welcome.