1144 pages, Galaxy Press, ISBN-13:
978-1619865099
My
first encounter with L. Ron Hubbard and his Sci-Fi novel Battlefield Earth: A Saga of the Year 3000 came way back sometime
during the Glorious 80s when my older brother Tom bought a hardcover edition of
this thing with cover art by Gerald Grace (the softcover version I borrowed
from the Fraser Public Library – “21st Century Edition, complete
with Expanded Content, Author Interview and Discussion Guide” – featured art by
Frank Frazetta, a marked improvement). And I had my eye on it ever since,
because it was one of those instances that stayed with me for reasons I cannot
fathom. But one day when I was doing one of my laps around the Fraser Public
Library, I passed by this thing for the umpteenth time and decided at long last
to take the plunge. If you eliminate the long-winded introduction and the
post-novel Author Interview, that still leaves one with over 1000 pages to
barrel through, divided into 33 Parts and each Part into several chapters. So I
had my work cut out for me but, hey, who doesn’t like a challenge?
So
what’s it all about, then? It is the year 3000; after having been conquered a millennium
before by an alien species, the Psychlos, Mankind is on the brink of extinction,
reduced to a few primitive tribes in isolated parts of the Earth and numbering
fewer than 35,000 worldwide, while the Psychlos strip the planet of its mineral
wealth. In what was once Colorado, Jonnie Goodboy Tyler begins the long process
of discovering his world and how to drive the alien interloper off and freeing
all from its vile presence. So what we have here is some rather classic Sci-Fi
pulp fiction in which big themes are discussed, grand vistas are explored, huge
battles are fought and goodness and righteousness are tested; if Battlefield Earth had been published during
the golden era of pulp fiction then Jonnie Goodboy Tyler could very well have
taken his place alongside such exemplars of the genre like Buck Rogers or Flash
Gordon (not surprising, really, considering that Lafayette Ronald Hubbard was
born in 1911).
But
throughout reading this book I couldn’t shake the notion that I was reading
another type of book masquerading as Sci-Fi. Most of the first third is taken
up by the machinations of Terl, the Psychlo chief of security of Earth, who
desperately wants to escape this backwater world and return to Psychlo – and
get rich, in the bargain. This is when he captures Johnnie and launches his
plan to turn the Man Animals into unpaid workers who will mine the gold he needs.
This is all in keeping with the “leverage” that Terl seeks over his superiors,
a concept that dominates this part of the book so much that one forgets that
this is supposed to be science fiction. Not bad, mind you; seeing Terl plot and
plan his way off of Earth is all rather amusing, while Johnnie’s attempts to
gain some leverage of his own are likewise engrossing. And whenever one train
of thought seems to have run its course Hubbard always does a course correction
and refreshes the tale, keeping one interested enough through several hundred
pages.
But
(you just knew a “but” was coming, dintcha?) there are issues with this magnum
opus. While Mankind is on the brink of extinction, there are still several
groupings alive around the planet, such as in Scotland, where kilts are still
worn, bagpipes are still played and the word “laddie” is used liberally. And it
was all just a bit too precious for me. As Hubbard would have it, after 1000
years Scots culture is unaltered, which is nonsense; the Middle Ages lasted
from about 500 to 1500 and during that time Europe changed so much as to become
unrecognizable, and yet the Scots haven’t altered one iota during the
millennium (don’t get me started on the perils of inbreeding). This idea
becomes truly ridiculous as other tribes are discovered – like the Red Army –
across the globe who likewise have kept the old ways of a world a thousand years
dead and languages that, apparently, have remained unchanged. I like the idea
that Man and his cultures are resilient, but Hubbard takes this idea to absurd
conclusions that beggar belief.
Hubbard
liked to say that Battlefield Earth was “Hard Sci-Fi” – that is, science fiction
characterized by concern for scientific accuracy and logic (no sound effects in
space here) – but this, too, is absurd. From planes that “fly” through unknown
means to an alternate periodic table, this book is suffused with technology
that can only be described as fantastical. One would think, after reading this,
that Hubbard’s grasp of science was mediocre at best and that he made up that
which he didn’t know (which was a lot). Some of it works – like the enormous
teleportation plate by which the Psychlos transport their earthly
plunder back to the homeworld, or the learning machines that force-feed Johnnie
the knowledge Terl thinks he needs; I could suspend my disbelief over those. But
there were just too many convenient technological solutions to the myriad
problems Hubbard raises and then just as easily dismisses in order for his
heroic hero to man-up and take on the evil aliens and defeat them at their own
game.
But
all that isn’t the worst thing about Battlefield
Earth. As I noted earlier this
book has its roots firmly in the pulp fiction era of novels, and so it is big,
brash, loud and as unsubtle as a brick to the head. If Hubbard can say
something using 20 words rather than only 5 than you can bet that’s just what
he’ll do. The characterizations are simplistic and paper-thin, and while
Hubbard can write about the most base and evil impulses, other, grander ideas –
like, say, love, generosity, compassion – are ignored altogether. Several times
Tyler is challenged and forced to grow and develop, which at least gives him a
hero’s arc to complete. And Terl is as devious and plotting a villain as one
could hope for, not just a stupid alien to be defeated and purged. But the fate
of Psychlo is absurd at best (to say nothing of convenient), the dismissal of
the Psychlo Empire is weak, other alien species of the universe are ridiculous
and half of the book meanders about, like Hubbard wanted to write a Sci-Fi
equivalent to The Lord of the Rings without enough material.
So
then…I don’t regret having read Battlefield
Earth, but I also can’t recommend
it. Not as bad as others have said it was, it certainly isn’t as good as it’s
backers would have you believe. There are better uses for trees than all those
killed printing this thing (and if you think I’ll go anywhere near the Mission Earth dekalogy you’re nucking futs).