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This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious,
and any resemblance to real people or events is purely coincidental.
N-SPACE
Copyright (c) 1990 by Larry Niven
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book, or portions thereof, in any form.
Verses from "We Can't Find," copyright (c) 1987 by Jane A. Robinson, were used with the author's
permission. All rights reserved.
A Tor Book
Published by Tom Doherty Associates, Inc.
49 West 24th Street
New York, N.Y. 10010
Printed in the United States of America
Book design by Jaye Zirnet,
Quality Printing and Binding by:
ARCATA Graphics/Kingsport
Press and Roller Streets
Kingsport, TN 37662 U.S.A.
CONTENTS
Introduction: The Maker of Worlds by Tom Clancy
On Niven (by David Brin, Gregory Benford, Wendy All, John Hertz, Steven Barnes, and Frederik Pohl)
Dramatis Personae
Foreword: Playgrounds for the Mind
From WORLD OF PTAVVS
Bordered in Black
Convergent Series
All the Myriad Ways
From A GIFT FROM EARTH
For a Foggy Night
The Meddler
Passerby
Down in Flames
From RINGWORLD
The Fourth Profession
"Shall We Indulge in Rishathra?" (with cartoons by William Rotsler)
Man of Steel, Woman of Kleenex
Inconstant Moon
What Can You Say about Chocolate Covered Manhole Covers?
Cloak of Anarchy
From PROTECTOR
The Hole Man
Night on Mispec Moor
Flare Time
The Locusts (with Steven Barnes)
From THE MOTE IN GOD'S EYE (with Jerry Pournelle)
Building The Mote in God's Eye (with Jerry Pournelle)
Brenda
The Return of William Proxmire
The Tale of the Jinni and the Sisters
Madness Has Its Place
Niven's Laws
The Kiteman
The Alien in Our Minds
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Space
Bibliography of Larry Niven
N-SPACE
INTRODUCTION
THE MAKER OF WORLDS BY TOM CLANCY
Some years ago, when I was still dreaming about becoming that special breed of cat called
"author," I had a birthday coming up and my wife was out of ideas. I told her to check out the
bookstores for any book by Larry Niven except the three I'd already acquired. I don't remember how
many Wanda returned with, but I do know that I still read them periodically.
One of the bad things about being a writer (and there are many) is that when writing a novel, you
often find it impossible to read someone else's novel. Some evil agency inside your brain takes
note of the fact that you are reading instead of writing and forbids you to read more than thirty
or forty pages. So, often you go back to vegetating in front of the TV because you can only write
so much in a day, and the reason you picked up that book in the first place is to get your mind
off what you were doing that morning. Writing is, therefore, both a form of compulsive behavior
and, I frequently tell people, a self-induced form of mental illness. Those few writers who don't
start off by being a little nuts soon get that way as a direct result of their vocation.
When I find myself in desperate need of removing my mind from THE PLOT so that I can look at it
just a little more objectively the next day, my helper and pshrink is Larry Niven. For some
reason, my brain does not recognize him as a threat to my compulsion.
The scope of Larry's work is so vast that only a writer of supreme talent could disguise the fact
as well as he does. He doesn't just set up a cute little story of ETs or interplanetary war. Not
Larry-he builds a complete universe. Oh, sure, he keeps the galaxy pretty much as we know it (or
think we know it), but he peoples it with whole sets of civilizations, some active, some extinct,
all interrelated somehow or other. Now, that's a pretty tall order, and if you're not careful how
you go about it, the reader would soon be overwhelmed by the background and have trouble catching
on to the story itself. But not with Larry. With little more than an occasional oh, by the way he
sets all the scenery in place and then gets on with his tale, which is always a story with an
interesting point and a fairly tight focus embellished by the scenery instead of being dominated
by it.
And this ain't easy. Trust me, I write for a living, too.
All authors get fan mail, some good, and some not so good. There are two kinds that really matter.
The stuff you get from kids is very special. Kids who read for recreation, and then have the
audacity actually to write a letter to the author (I never did) are something that always touches
you. These kids will go on to accomplish things, and it's rather nice to think that you've
influenced them a little bit. Next best is the mail you occasionally get from fellow writers. To
be read by someone in the same line of work-and the worst thing about being a writer is that it
really murders your reading-is rather like being a fighter pilot and having a beer handed to you
by another fighter pilot. Your basic good feeling. I expect that Larry gets a lot of such letters.
In the times when I need to escape from inside my head and relax, Larry's the guy who relaxes me.
As I suspect he does with a lot of others. Thanks, pal.
ON NIVEN
The first time I met Larry Niven I accused him, in a jocular way, of stealing some of my best
ideas and publishing them before I had even had them. For instance, I read PROTECTOR about a year
after I'd had the idea about why immortality in an individual would never make sense. There happen
to be powerful Darwinistic reasons for people to die and get out of the way and stop breeding.
However, Larry had already taken this notion, explored it so thoroughly that, in effect, no one
could ever explore that territory again without tipping his hat to Larry. This is actually a
fairly rapacious thing to do. If you think that the territory of notions is limited, then the hard
sf writer is like a wildcat miner drilling out resources that are shrinking. For whatever it's
worth, some people think that way. A lot of sf writers aren't writing hard science fiction because
they think most of it has been written. If their reasoning is true-and I don't think it is-one of
the reasons is that you have writers like Larry Niven out there mining out whole veins and leaving
nothing left for the rest of us to explore.
In hard science fiction originality is especially prized. If you're the first to explore a certain
idea, a new technology-black holes, neutron stars-you get a fair amount of acclaim. But for Niven
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it's not enough to be the first. He has to also be last. That is his attitude, and in a sense it
is a very aggressive attitude.
So in the end we writers revere Larry Niven, even though he makes our jobs harder. He not only
mines all these marvelous veins of ideas, he mines them to exhaustion.
-David Brin
I met Larry in the mid-1960s, when he was just starting as a writer. Like many of us he began
shakily, unsure of many aspects of his craft, but absolutely firm in the realm of ideas. He knew
what he thought and felt a solid assurance.
I saw in him then a facet I've witnessed since in many university students: a love for the
scientific worldview, but an impatience with the humdrum daily grind of science itself as
universities too often present the field. Larry always liked the big picture, the supple
intersection of ideas. After Cal-Tech and his mathematics degree, he seemed to feel an urge for
larger landscapes.
I suspect many sf writers encounter such a moment, which becomes the launching point for careers.
Poul Anderson finished his degree in physics and then turned not to ornate calculations but to a
typewriter. This desire to sing rather than walk the pedestrian pathways of science is all to the
good: we need our bards. Indeed, perhaps we need them more than we need more careful but closed
thinkers.
Many science fiction readers are similar sorts. Larry was a breath of Campbellian clarity in the
New Wave murk, and he is the natural voice of a whole segment of the scientific-technical
community, irreplaceable and golden. Long may he sing!
-Gregory Benford
The first time I read Larry Niven? It was in college just before a chemistry exam. I discovered
these Larry Niven books and read straight through them instead of studying for the exam.
I eventually got to meet him, and I've known Larry ever since-about fifteen years now (longer if
you count knowing him through his books). I think my favorite thing about Larry personally is that
he always has time for people. If you show an interest in him or what he does, he's always ready
to listen to you-I mean listen intently. You never feel as if you have just a little bit of his
attention. He puts his whole self into listening and talking.
There are a lot of science fiction writers who frighten fans. Fans are actually scared of them.
Larry's never been that way. Never.
-Wendy All
Larry is probably the most beloved pro in the science fiction fan world. Panels in which he is
participating, parties at which he is likely to appear, are thronged. With good reason. He says
wonderful things. He is truly congenial (which few science fiction pros are). People like to be
around him.
-John Hertz
About 11 years ago I'd done a lot of writing but the only payment I'd received was something like
1/5 of a cent a word or payment in contributor's copies. Still I considered myself a writer.
So one day I'm in the club house of the Los Angeles Science Fiction Society, and Larry Niven walks
in. When Larry walks in, you understand, he is completely surrounded by the people there. It's
like he's a god, and this is his domain.
I walked up to him and said: "Hello, Mr. Niven, my name's Steven Barnes, and I'm a writer."
He took a puff on his pipe, looked at me and said: "Okay, tell me a story."
I just about died. But it so happened I'd sent out a story earlier that day about a compulsive
gambler who pawns his pacemaker, and somehow I stumbled through it.
After that we started talking. He seemed kind of reserved, but even then I could see he was still
in touch with his child-personality. I could especially see it in his eyes. In some ways it was as
if the beard and pipe were props to convince you that, yes, these are the badges of adulthood. But
back there were these little boy's eyes.
I asked him if he'd read a story, and he said he would, and the next week I gave him an envelope
containing three. I saw him the week following and asked if he had read them, and he said, yes,
Jerry Poumelle and he had both read them. He said he was intrigued and asked me whether I'd be
interested in looking at a story he'd tried writing ten years before and hadn't been able to
complete to his satisfaction.
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Thank God the problems with the story had nothing to do with astrophysics or any of the technical
things that Larry is a master of. They had to do with the way the human beings were relating to
one another, and I was able to fix it.
We've been collaborating ever since.
The imperative for men in our culture is that they must go out and create-work, produce, change
the land around them. Now people often think that it's easy when you have a lot of money handed to
you as a kid, as Larry had. All that does is say to you that the chances are very good you'll
never live up to the man who created all that wealth.
But Larry created a career separate from anything his family had handed him. He could have taken
their money and lain by the side of the pool and vegetated or put it into land or condominiums and
made a lot of money. And, indeed, he has made money off the money his father handed him. But the
most important thing Larry did was to go out and define a whole new world. If his world in
California had already been conquered, then Larry would create new worlds to conquer and people
them with his own creations.
-from a conversation with Steven Barnes
Since I happened to be the lucky editor who published Larry Niven's first story, I've been asked
to tell a little bit about him, which I'm glad to do. Let me tell you about that first story . . .
but forgive me if I start by explaining something about my own editorial practices.
When I was editing Galaxy and If in the 1960s I had made it a condition of employment that no one
was to expect me to spend much time in the office of the publishing company. I was willing to
appear now and then-one afternoon a week wasn't objectionable-but that was as far as I would go.
Between times I had an assistant to sit at a desk in the office for the purpose of answering the
telephone and dealing with whatever routine things had to be dealt with. (For most of that time my
assistant was a young woman named Judy-Lynn Benjamin, later Judy-Lynn del Rey, who went on to
considerably better things later on-Del Rey Books is named after her.) One of Judy-Lynn's jobs was
to go through the week's accumulations of w~isolicited manuscripts by unknown writers
(unflatteringly called "the slush pile") for me. She wasn't to read them-I have always read
everything that was submitted to me myself, on the grounds that, as Frank Munsey once said, no
magazine can survive the mistakes of more than one person-but Judy-Lynn took the stories out of
the envelopes they arrived in, clipped rejection slips on them, put them in return envelopes with
postage attached and stacked them up, unsealed, for me to pick up when I came in. Then, in the
smoking car of the train back to the Jersey Shore each week, I read the fifty or a hundred stories
that had turned up in that week's slush. There would generally be a handful that required some
sort of letter to the author, and, if I was very lucky, one or two that I could actually buy. All
the rest I sealed up and dropped into the mailbox at the Red Bank train station, and that was the
end of that. One doesn't expect much out of the slush, you see. One is generally right about that,
too.
So it was on just such a train ride, somewhere between Newark and Matawan, that I pulled out of
its envelope a slim little manuscript called "The Coldest Place," by some previously unknown
person who said his name was Larry Niven.
That manuscript didn't get mailed back. "The Coldest Place" wasn't a great story. But it had a
number of good things going for it. It started with a clever science-based idea-the "coldest
place" of the title, paradoxically, was on the dark side of the very hottest planet in the solar
system, Mercury-and the writing was competent enough, and besides the story was beautifully short.
(I was always particularly looking for short stories, because-since we paid by the word-all those
savvy professional writers had learned early that they ate better if they wrote long ones.)
So I kept that story out, and wrote a letter to the author saying I would be happy to buy it (for
very little money, to be sure), and asked him a few questions about himself. And by return mail he
answered that he'd take the offer and, yes, he had never sold a story before so I could call it a
"first." I put the check through, and marked it up for the printer, and all was well.
Or so I thought.
You never know, though, do you? There was a wholly unexpected development. Just at that time some
busybody scientists, who should have found some more productive use for their time, were
conducting radar studies of Mercury. They came up with the surprising (and just at that moment
really unwelcome) information that the planet did not always present the same face to the Sun, as
everyone (including Larry and I) had always thought. The damn thing revolved. It didn't have a
"coldest place."
It was evident that Larry Niven read the same journals as I did, because a day or two later I got
a worried letter from him to say that he'd just discovered his story had turned out to be
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scientifically wrong, and should he give the money back?
By then I had been giving the question some hard thought at my end. There was a kind of moral
question involved. I believe that science-fiction writers have a duty to be careful about the
science in their stories (and over the years I rejected a good many otherwise good stories, most
of which sold elsewhere, because of scientific flaws).
On the other hand, I don't believe that science-fiction writers have to be more right than the
scientists themselves are. Larry had done his homework. At the time he had written "The Coldest
Place" the science in it was fine; it wasn't his fault that the scientists had changed their
minds. (We can still read, for instance, Edgar Rice Burroughs's Barsoom stories with as much
pleasure as ever, in spite of the fact that the Percival Lowell picture that he based them on of a
somewhat habitable Mars turned out to be all wrong.) Besides, for any writer his very first sale
is a major landmark, and I didn't have the heart to ask him to unsell it.
In any case, the story was already well along in the assembly line, and so I let it go through and
it appeared as written. No one seemed to mind.
The key thing that struck me about Larry was that he not only wrote well, he had gone to the
trouble of getting his science right, and even of making the science an important part of his
stories. He still does. Larry is a member of that sub-class of the class of science-fiction
writers which
I particularly admire: He doesn't just like science fiction, he likes science, and he even does
his best to keep up with and understand it.
Finding somebody like Larry Niven was a delight for me, because I could suggest science-based
story ideas to him, and rely on him to make the most of them. He was a natural. Writing science
fiction asks more of an author than getting the science right; the characters have to be good, the
settings have to be imaginative, the societies and psychologies involved need to be worked out
carefully and consistently. Larry was fine in all those ways.
For instance: Neutron stars were a new discovery in the 1960s, so I suggested he write a story
about a neutron star. He sat right down and wrote it, and he put into it some grand picaresque
characters with intriguing plot problems. Between us we thought of a wonderful title for the story
about the neutron star-we called it "Neutron Star' '-and it won him his first Hugo the following
year. A little later Freeman Dyson, at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, came out
with his suggestion that a truly advanced civilization would want to capture all the energy
radiated from its parent star by building a sort of shell around the star to trap it for their use-
what came to be called a "Dyson sphere." And of course I immediately asked Larry to write me one
of those.
I'm sorry to say that I never got to print that one. The magazines I edited were sold to another
publisher around then, and I didn't want to go along. Actually, the story never quite got written
quite the way Dyson had in mind, either, because when Larry got down to serious thinking about it
he redesigned the concept. Instead of a sphere, the artifact became a sort of hula-hoop around the
star, peopled with Larry's always intriguing aliens. He called the story that came out of it
RINGWORLD, and it remains one of his best novels.
I think I did one other important thing for Larry Niven around that time. I wanted to encourage
his interest in science-not that he needed much encouragement-and, most of all, to make it easier
for him to keep in touch with the up-to-the-minute developments, even the developments that hadn't
quite happened yet, by getting a chance to talk with some of the actual scientists who were doing
the latest research. So I suggested to him a couple of research establishments he might want to
visit, and in particular recommended he go and talk to some of my friends in the Artificial
Intelligence labs at MIT.
I suspect that that was Larry's first encounter with the MIT people, which led to coming to know
the MIT Science Fiction Society. . . which led to his meeting a member who chanced to be a pretty
young female fan called "Fuzzy Pink." A few years later I was delighted to be an
usher at the wedding which transformed Fuzzy Pink into Mrs. Marilyn Niven-a marriage which still
sturdily survives and shows every sign of having been made in heaven.
You will have noted from the above evidence of one of the great character flaws shared by almost
all editors: They love to brag about the writers they have "discovered," and the ways in which
through their fond parental guidance and instruction the writers attained success.
Partly that's jealousy; a successful writer generally winds up with a lot more success than the
editor who buys his stories. Editors have expense accounts, but writers have more fun. (That's the
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