Free Space
Edited by Brad Linaweaver and Edward E. Kramer
Tor Books, July 1997, $24.95 (hardbound)
Reviewed by Claire Wolfe 
[email protected]
Special to The Libertarian Enterprise
     "Space is a dream, like flight was.
              And dreams need dreamers to become real ...
              people who dance on the cliff for answers
              to "Why?" and "How?" ... "What if?"
                         -- Wendy McElroy
                         "How Do You Tell the Dreamer From the Dream?"
         Science fiction 
is libertarian.  Oh, yes, there's plenty of 
statist SF, or SF with no overt philosophical bent.  But SF is ours 
in the same way the Internet is ours.  
         The medium 
lends itself to individualists and individualism, 
something that has been true since Eric Frank Russell, A.E. Van Vogt 
and, most of all, Robert Heinlein.  SF is, after all, largely about 
creating the future, taking risks, discovering new worlds -- notions 
that don't come naturally to groupthinkers or securitarians, but that 
do grow healthily in the minds of libertarian neophiles.  
         Furthermore, 
as Enterprise publisher L. Neil Smith emphasized in 
his speech before this year's Arizona Libertarian Party convention, 
the (no)forces of freedom are in a culture war with the forces of 
statism, and SF is a vivid, important expression of our culture.  
         Given that, 
it's more than a little mind-boggling that the first 
explicitly libertarian SF anthology has just been introduced, now, in 
1997.  
         It's 
Free Space, a labor of love from editors Brad Linaweaver 
and Edward E. Kramer and 20 notable authors.
         Most of 
the 20 stories and poems in the collection were written 
expressly for Free Space.  The authors include Prometheus Award 
winners, Nebula and Hugo winners, famous names and lesser knowns.  Not 
all contributors are libertarian, but the theme of the book most 
emphatically is.
         The editors 
began by proposing a very loose structure, that of a 
future human society divided into three major segments.  In this 
galactic society, members of the Federation are planet-bound and 
government-ridden.  (The name is a deliberate dig at Star Trek's 
insipid overlordship.)  Spacers roam the galaxy as anarchistic free 
traders and adventurers.  "Jeffies" operate spaceports and space 
colonies, serving as a liaison between inimical planet dwellers and 
space roamers.
         That said, 
the editors turned the authors free to create their own 
visions.  The resulting tales range over 300 years and are as wildly 
different as their authors.  
         A sampling:
         J. Neil Schulman's 
contribution, "Day of Atonement," is an 
intellectually challenging story of Jewish activists battling a 
biblical-style Israeli theocracy.
         In his 
exquisite "Kwan Tingui," William Wu uses ancient Chinese 
techniques of negotiation and indirection to recount the life of a 
woman exiled from her Singaporian family.  The reasons for Tingui's 
exile are both ancient and painfully contemporary.
         "Nerfworld" 
by Dafydd ab Hugh pulls the reader through frustration 
after frustration, as bureaucrats attempt to subvert a promising 
private-enterprise space endeavor.
         "Early Bird" 
by Gregory Benford -- the hardest hard-science story 
in the collection -- shows a young woman spacer working herself out of 
debt in a manner possible only in a free society.
         "Madame Butterfly" 
opens as a cleaning woman in Tokyo finds a 
flower she believes represents one of the gods of her home village.  
She nurtures the plant, hoping its god will protect her son, engaged 
in dangerous and prohibited activities in space.  How that flower 
does, in fact, touch the life of far-away Icoro Shimoto is a wonderful 
tale of science, character and coincidence that only James P. Hogan 
could relate so well.
         L. Neil Smith 
meets one of SF's most difficult challenges by 
putting us into the mind of an alien being in "A Matter of Certainty."  
This warring alien must negotiate with a peace emissary -- a creature 
more loathsome to him than any bug-eyed monster to thee and me.  A 
Neilism:  "You'll have to achieve peace the hard way, with a gun in 
your hand.  Civilizations can't disinvent technology.  They either 
die of it or learn to live with it."
         Victor Koman 
weighs in with the wickedly, wittily satiric 
"Demokratus," in which a descendent of his greatest fictional hero 
becomes a statist wannabe.  Welder Volnos, a born spacer, exiles 
himself to a Federation planet, " ... where I don't have to be 
so ... responsible for my life." Victor also gives us a useful new 
epithet (not to be uttered in the presence of ladies):  "Taxers!"
         William Alan Ritch 
counters Koman with a Heinleinesque juvenile, 
"If Pigs Had Wings," in which a young "ground hog" girl dreams and 
plots to get into space.
         In 
"Planet in the Balance" John DeChancie writes a howlingly funny 
conclusion to a story of a freelance planetologist forced to land on a 
planet run by devout preservationists.
         Other 
contributors include William F. Buckley, Jr., Ray Bradbury, 
Poul Anderson, Peter Crowther, Wendy McElroy, Arthur Byron Cover,  
Robert J. Sawyer, Jared Lobdell, John Barnes, Robert Anton Wilson and 
Free Space co-editor Brad Linaweaver.
SUCCESSES; MINOR MISSES
         My standards 
for libertarian fiction are impossibly high.  I want 
every work in the collection to be as good as  The Probability 
Broach or Kings of the High Frontier -- that is, a perfect blend of 
storytelling and philosophy, in which the reader vicariously 
experiences libertarianism in action.
         Free Space 
doesn't meet that expectation.  But that may be all 
for the best, because it also means the book offers a very wide 
variety of themes and styles for different tastes.
         I was 
enchanted with "Kwan Tingui."  "Madame Butterfly" left me 
breathless.  One of the finest "stories" in the collection is Wendy 
McElroy's profound poem, "How Do You Tell the Dreamer from the Dream?"  
All are delicate, subtle or lyrical works.  For people who prefer 
other styles, there's plenty to choose from in Free Space.  
         Peter Crowther's 
"The Killing of Davis-Davis," for instance, is 
totally non-linear and a huge challenge to read.  As Brad notes in his 
introduction, it's "An odd one -- a sophisticated meditation about the 
game of power politics."  But Crowther delivers a worthwhile reward 
for your hard work; the fragmented narrative is the perfect expression 
for one of the most complex time paradoxes you're likely to encounter.
         I read the 
book twice.  On second reading, I found that even 
stories with little initial appeal contained gems.  There is not a 
single truly weak story in the book, and there are many strong ones.
         Am I still 
going to find something to complain about?  Oh, sure.   
Three or four authors seemed more focused on delivering a philosophy 
lecture than telling an engaging story.  I won't mention any names.   
You know who you are, guys.
         (Well, I 
will mention one:  In an interview with Prometheus, 
Brad Linaweaver laughingly admitted his own story was, "The most 
brilliant essay in the book.")  
         Several 
other stories only peripherally have libertarian themes, 
and two struck me as being at odds with the very concept of the book.  
Yet each was enjoyable on its merits.
A MINOR MIRACLE
         If it's 
mind-boggling that it took generations for the genre to 
give birth to its first libertarian anthology, it's also a minor 
miracle that the book survived to publication.  
         After a 
year collecting stories, the editors were forced to spend 
an additional year battling the publisher to keep their vision intact.  
Tor wanted to cut the works of some of the most libertarian writers 
(sometimes in favor of those with more salable names).  Prometheans L. 
Neil Smith, Robert Anton Wilson, Victor Koman, and William Alan Ritch 
were among those who might have hit the proverbial cutting room floor.
         It's safe 
to say that, had Tor had its way, we'd still be 
waiting for the first thoroughly libertarian SF anthology.  Free 
Space might have been a good anthology without its most hardcore 
writers, but it wouldn't have been what it is.
         Fortunately, 
Linaweaver and Kramer passionately defended both art 
and philosophy, and prevailed in all but a few cases.  The result is a 
book they can be proud of, and a book I hope tens of thousands of 
libertarians will purchase.
         I have a 
selfish motive in urging you to buy it, of course.  I 
want to read Volume II.  
         Soon.
View the Cover
Claire Wolfe is the author of 101 Things to Do 'Til the Revolution 
(Loompanics Unlimited), a compendium of ideas for people who've had it 
with conventional, polite, totally ineffective political activism.  
Until recently, she was also a respected corporate communications 
writer.  Maintaining the facade of normalcy became too difficult, 
however, and she is now starving in a garret while writing her next 
book, I Am Not a Number! (Loompanics Unlimited, 1998).  Number 
will feature ideas and resources for people who refuse to cooperate 
with various new federal ID laws and databases.