Saturday, January 27, 2018

Shadow On The Moon

     I've been reading Ingathering, the complete collection Zenna Henderson's short stories about The People, a group of very human aliens who fled the destruction of their planet some time in the late 19th Century.  A few scattered groups crash-landed on Earth, mostly in the West and Southwest.  Their technology was largely psionic and only a few among them are powerfully gifted, so it's a long, slow process of rebuilding while concealing their differences, surrounded by people who look like them, but have none of their powers--

     This is a setup that in different hands could be genuinely dreadful, a swamp of pulp cliches.  Not in hers.  Zenna Henderson was a lifelong teacher, usually in rural elementary schools; she had a deep affection for the best of small-town life and it permeates these stories.  She was also a gifted writer of understated prose, with an fine eye for just how much to leave unsaid.  The People are, by and large, genuinely good and a typical Henderson story has them overcoming adversity, rediscovering their past and/or helping others -- as if The Waltons could levitate and do a little mind-reading (etc.), while being careful to not get caught at it.  They're also genuinely, if somewhat ecumenically, religious, presented in a positive way rarely encountered in science fiction.  I suppose they could be considered a bit sentimental -- but far too much SF has no heart at all, or only a tritely bloody or bleeding heart.  Hers is neither.  Henderson's tales are far back from any front lines, mostly between the wars or riots, set with the healers, home and hearth.  She finds plenty of conflict there.

     Most of Henderson's work was published in a few paperback collections, now long out of print but still available.  A few were only published in SF magazines, or not at all -- until Ingathering was published in 1995.  I started reading near the end, past the stories I had already read and enjoyed, and so arrived at Shadow On The Moon (1962). 

     The plot is not too dissimilar to Robert A. Heinlein's Requiem, and yet the story she tells is very different.  I recommend it, and won't go into details lest I spoil your enjoyment.

7 comments:

  1. I have vague memories of a tv movie based on one of her stories. Possibly a treatment of the "swinging without a swing" story. Unfortunately, can't remember time or title.

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  2. I grew up reading those, they're still a favorite of mine.

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  3. Ruth, me, too!

    Homebru, you may be thinking of the 1972 TV movie, "The People."

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  4. http://www.ldsfilm.com/movies/EscapeToWitchMountain.html

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  5. Tam, interestingly enough, despite the similarities, the film is based on a book by a different author, Alexander Key. It's not plagarism, they just both tapped into similar ideas and images.

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  6. I remembered Shatner in that tv movie, couldn't remember the teacher, Kim Darby. Two Star Trek alumni!
    I thought it was a cute movie. Nicely done SF treatment. I wonder if Shatner had any input into it?
    F F Coppola. Pre-Godfather days.

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  7. I read one of her stories many years ago; didn't realize there were more. The cover art of a girl pooling moonlight in her hands springs readily to mind even after decades. To the library!

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