Anyone
who has read the autobiography Hey, It’s Me, Jack Vance! is
aware the gregarious author was an avid world traveler. Embarking on
lengthy international trips with his family, he used the time as both
relaxation and work, writing many of his novels in exotic locations.
And the evidence is there if one looks just an inch below the surface
of his work; almost all of Vance’s novels and stories feature
cultures at once familiar yet bizarre from our own. But none of the
novels may capture the traveler’s life like Vance’s final two—a
duology, in fact—Ports of Call (1998) and Lurulu (2004), both of
which take all of the man’s 80-something years of travel
experiences and distill them into a galactic tour as only Vance can
write.
Myron
Tany is a young man on a planet far from the center of the galaxy.
From a poor family, he dreams of seeing exotic places he knows he
never will. But a university degree in galactic economics and a
wealthy but eccentric aunt change things. Dame Lajoie taking an
interest in Myron’s life, she involves him in her aristocratic and
social enterprises, even including him on an interplanetary trip to
find a supposed fountain of youth. Matters going awry en route,
Myron finds himself alone on a planet with only a suitcase and a few
sols in his pocket. What happens next is up to him.
As
stated already, everyone who has read Vance knows he enjoys creating
cultures that are a twist on our own—complete with ridiculous hats
and comical musical ensembles. In Ports of Call/Lurulu he
revels in it, but in a subtle way. The novels more a tour of Vance’s
Gean Reach than tight adventure/drama, Myron’s travels are laid
back, colorful, fun, and enjoyable, but not as dynamic as one might
expect having read the Tschai, Durdane, or Cugel series. Like
Vance’s own world travels, Myron’s adventures are more caught in
the singularities of time and place than any planetary takeover plot
or alien invasion.
To
be clear, Ports of Call and Lurulu duology is not
Vance’s swan song; it is the vintage of his oeuvre. Vance’s last
published work, it’s as mature an offering as you could expect from
the convivial author, and as such compares favorably to Night Lamp
and Maske: Thaery. The duology bittersweet, Lurulu
ends on a note that speaks Vance’s heart, and knowing it was
written when he was in his 80s and 90s, makes for stirring sentiment.
Having experienced much of the travel Vance did, I can only close my
eyes in quiet accord, and tip my hat in gratitude and satisfaction at
yet another unique Vance offering.
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