Procure King Davids Spaceship Documented By Jerry Pournelle Displayed In Manuscript

to remember when I first read this book, this may have very well been my first encounter with the "hard scifi" genre, though looking back I wouldn't firmly put this book on that side of the aisle.
I picked it up because I really wanted to read "The Mote in Gods Eye" and "The Gripping Hand" and someone suggested I start with this one first.
To this day I don't know why, It was recommended to me in a backwards way that unfortunately biased me against the story: someone suggested it resembles Greece'syears of slavery and the eventual rebellion.
That's about where the similarities end, at the numbers,

Overall the story arc was solid and the execution, while falling a little flat at times, delivered in the end.
I liked how at the beginning you aren't sure who is the villain, and stories with unwilling heroes facing unlikely successful odds have always appealed to me.
One of my favourites Scifi story where following the collapse of a galactic empire a planet just rediscovering steam power is conquered by people on a spacefaring world.
If they are not to be relegated to being a secondclass colony world they need to demonstrate their technological advancement by building a spaceship.


Intrigue, interstellar travel, battles with primitive weapons, interesting characters, just a fun read, Might give it five if it were available on ebook, Great book similar to the works of H, Beam Piper Thoroughly enjoyable read from one of my all time favourite authors, King Davids Spaceship is the first book by Jerry Pournelle I remember reading, I picked it up from the local library in, and I could not put it down, Colonel Nathan MacKinnies desperate quest to find a forgotten database of ancient technology on a barbaric planet, and then spirit that information home under the watchful eyes of the Imperial Navy is a classic adventure.
Jerry Pournelles style is the place where intrigue, politics, and technology meet, often with a heavy dose of military tactics, King Davids Spaceship is all that and more,

When I discovered the works of Jerry Pournelle, I was in a slough of despond about science fiction novels, I simply couldnt find anything I liked, so when I stumbled on this book, it started a long love affair with the works of Pournelle.
Fortunately, Jerry had a long career, which was winding down in the earlys, but not yet over, So that gave me many works to read and enjoy, several of which would be at the top of my list of favorites.


Looking back, I now better understand why I liked Jerry Pournelles works so much, especially King Davids Spaceship, but also why I had trouble finding any other authors in the field that I liked for nearly a decade.
I simply couldnt articulate what it was that I liked about this book, so I adopted the ideas of others, Unfortunately, Ive come to realize that those ideas simply didnt map well to the kinds of stories I liked, and the ones that I didnt.


For example, since Jerry was a protege of John W, Campbell, I looked at Campbelline science fiction, When I did, I didnt find what I was looking for, Campbells vision was described by John C, Wright in Transhuman and Subhuman:

According to Wright, Campbellian Hard SF consists of:

Speculation about how nearfuture technological advances might affect man on a social and metaphysical level
Scientific optimism combined with classical Liberalism
A naive love of theory Which William M.
Briggs has wisely called the root of all evil,
Malleable human nature
Protagonists who tend to solve problems with their wits more than with brawn
Main characters guided by an ethical code of vague origin that holds up man as an inherently moral being


Jerry definitely put the first two of those elements into King Davids Spaceship.
He crafted a tale of multilayered political intrigue due to a planetary government being absorbed against its will into an interplanetary empire, but also managed to fit in technological elements that run from the construction of sailing ships to rocketry.
Both the Haven petty kingdoms and the Imperials have broadly technocratic governments in the mode of the Kennedy Enlightenment, high minded and also efficient.


However, the rest of the list isnt a good fit for King Davids Spaceship, or the rest of Jerrys work.
Jerry had a great love of protagonists who were military commanders, who were often
Procure King Davids Spaceship Documented By Jerry Pournelle Displayed In Manuscript
brilliant strategists, but solved their problems by killing them first.
And as for malleable human nature, the setting of this book, as well as many other novels in the CoDominium future history, are based on a notion of cyclical patterns in the form of human societies explicitly based on Arnold Toynbee.


And there is nothing vague about morality either, One of the major Imperial factions, and one with considerable clout, is the Catholic Church, state religion of the Second Empire of Man.
Various characters of course do things that fall short of sanctity, but everyone knows what the standard is,

So given that I dont think Wrights list applies to Jerry Pournelle, lets compare that list with JD Cowans description of Gothic novels:

White against black.
Dark against Light. Hero against Villain. Eternal Life against Endless Death, Temptation against Virtue. It goes beyond the surface into weighty themes of the Ultimate, God, and True Justice, The knowledge of a battle between forces beyond both parties at play that haunt the scenery and the overall world behind the story.
It underpins every action and decision, and the thought that salvation or damnation is a stone throw away is the most nailbiting experience of them all.


Jerry pretty clearly didnt write a pulp novel either, There are no explicit bad guys, except maybe for the Imperial Traders Association, who play the role of the heel in the Imperial factions.
What we get instead is a mass of different players with different motives and objectives all striving against one another, Given that these are hard men, making hard choices, I could see how someone could come away with the impression that the various characters we meet are all just various shades of gray.
But I think that impression misses not only the point of MacKinnie and his quest, but the real motives of most of the other characters too.


Since the Secession Wars shattered the First Empire of Man, various places and cultures ended up in different parts of the historical cycle.
Makassar relapsed into barbarism, something like theth orth century AD Europe, while Haven is more liketh orth century Europe, inventive and nationalistic.
The Imperials are at the second peak of their power, urbane and civilized,

Yet what unites them is a basic orientation to order versus chaos, Given their different frames, each culture interprets that need differently, and even within a culture, various factions also have competing impressions of what is to be done.
MacKinnie himself is driven by a sense of honor and duty, and one of the central themes of the quest is to whom does MacKinnie really owe his duty

But most of all, this is just a great adventure, where Colonel MacKinnie leaves his home, travels across the, journeys through great peril, and emerges at the end with his purpose in life restored.
I very much wanted to be Nathan MacKinnie, both the first time I read it, and now,

This book works because it combines elements of the Campbelline vision with a very Christian moral vision and a grand adventure.
If you havent gotten into the works of Jerry Pournelle, this is a great place to start, .