CAPTAIN FUTURE
The Horror at Jupiter
By Allen Steele
Amazing Selects
159 pgs
With the publication of this book, writer Allen Steele wraps
up his four volume saga featuring Edmond Hamilton’s pulp hero Captain Future.
With the series, Steele did not change Future and his Futuremen as much as
revamp them for modern readers. To that end he succeeded and each of the books
has been a fun, wild, space adventure that respectfully paid homage to those
classic rough edged magazines of the 30s and 40s. This book, the finale, is no
exception. In fact it is easily the best with a non-stop pacing any pulp writer
would have applauded.
“The Horror at Jupiter” picks up where the third entry, “1,500
Light Years from Home” ended. Captain Future, aka Curt Newton, has shot and supposedly
killed the President of the Solar Coalition after having been brainwashed his
arch enemy, the Magician of Mars, Ul Quorn. Without giving away too much, let’s
just say things are not what they seem and President Carthew not only survives
but Curt is freed of his mental imprisonment and once more put in charge of
foiling Ul Quorn’s newest threat to the planet Earth.
On a distant alien world, Ul Quorn has come into possession
of a giant space machine with enough firepower to destroy a planet. Shades of
Star War’s Death Star, Steel’s Vengeance of Kosk may look like a 70s disco
ball, but its threat is no laughing matter. Quorn has it appear out of
hyper-space in orbit around Jupiter, along with his own command ship. He then
immediately notifies the President that unless his demands are met with hour,
he will destroy the Earth. The renegade scientist’s scheme is to achieve
independence for several rebel colonies in the Solar System and ultimately
establish his own empire all under the guise of being a freedom fighter.
With the clock clicking away, Captain Future and his team, Brain, Otho and Grag must devise a plan to foil the madman’s nightmarish threat and once again save the day. How they do so is what kept this reviewer rapidly turning pages; unable to put the book down until its climatic and totally satisfying conclusion. Honestly, that story alone will have you cheering but there’s more. Yup. Steele then offers up a truly fascinating and equally entertaining essay on Space Opera. Familiar with perhaps 50% of this stuff, we truly appreciated his showcasing those tidbids of science-fiction history we were not aware of it. Thanks so much, Allen Steele and please, give us more Captain Future.
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