Friday, September 10, 2021






 TALES OF PIRX THE PILOT & MORE TALES OF PIRX THE PILOT


Stanislaw Lem (1921-2006)


The above pictures are there just to represent the type of unusual mind possessed by Dr. Lem.  These two books describe the adventures and mishaps in the life of Pirx as he graduates from the Space Academy and pursues his career in exploration and colonization of the planets in the Solar System.  "The Test" describes how Pirx flubs his final test while graduating, piloting a ship from initial take-off to the moon, but how everything, accidentally, turns out perfectly in spite of his ham-fistedness.  Each tale in the balance of the book and its successor features a new predicament for Pirx to either solve or muddle through.  There's an ongoing atmosphere of sardonic humor permeating many of the early stories, but as Pirx and the reader grow with experience, the tales magically evolve into subtle analyses of human nature and its relation to the utter strangeness of outer space.  

Several of the stories in the first book  are basically mysteries.  In "The Accident", Pirx is sent to the far side of the moon where two scientists have died under mysterious circumstances.  The descriptions of walking across the surface and through boulder fields and craters are superb, as if Lem himself had actually been there and was merely recording his own experiences.  When Pirx arrives at the remote station after doing a bit of lunar mountain-climbing, he manages to make sense out of the various electronic clues left by the late victims, and to solve what seems to be a series of nonsensical events. 

 In fact, as Pirx ages and the tales become more sophisticated, the relations between robot and human become more important.  Prejudice is examined, amorality plays a role, and the history of anti-android bias is educed.  

Lem doesn't just pontificate about what he thinks human attitudes and morals should be, he arranges his plot structures to show what happens under circumstances that bring out latent, instinctive convictions lurking in the human psyche.  In "The Inquest", an advanced android, the equivalent of a human being, controls an accidental mishap in order to alter the fabric of civilization so as to favor the ascendancy of robots in the future.  During an attempt to deposit satellites in the rings of Saturn, one of them is stuck in the ejection slot while being fired out, and the resulting forces endanger the ship.  Pirx calculates the android's intentions and is able to explicate his behavior.

And in the final story, "Ananke", the force of psychological conviction leads to a major disaster on the surface of Mars, when a 1/4 mile long freighter crashes into the planet.  The predisposition to detail has led the designer of the on-board computer to over-program the security protocols of the computer so it gets overloaded while trying to land the ship and literally dithers its way into a major cataclysm.

I've read most of Lem's work, i think, and i have the greatest respect for his penetrating and adept intelligence, as well as his underlying humor and wisdom.  There is a lot of techno-babble included in the context which might put some readers off, but Lem's intentions and perceptions are spot on as regards the human race and its behavior.  I'd recommend these books to any person interested in experiencing what it might really be like to explore other planets in the near - or remote - future.


15 comments:

  1. Ooh. I've just been rereading Pirx the pilot myself. Great minds think alike, as my mother would have said. I'm only halfway through the first book at the moment.

    I just read Fiasco for the first time--do you know it? The main protagonist might be Pirx, but it's complicated. That's what sent me back to rereading the Pirx tales. (As if one needed a reason.)

    It would be Lem's 100th birthday this year. There was an article in the NYTimes (https://www.nytimes.com/2021/08/11/books/stanislaw-lem.html)--I don't know if you'll be able to see it, but I thought it was interesting. And it says MIT Press is reissuing a bunch of his novels in honor of the centenary.

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    1. i've read several biographical essays about him. i'll try to get the NY one... pretty exciting that his books are going to be reissued! i'm sure i read "Fiasco" but like so much else, it's gone in the winds of the past... the one i recall the best is "Eden", if i'm not erroneously attributing the image of two astronauts hiding behind a bush watching odd looking vehicles whiz past them to the wrong book, lol...

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    2. That sounds like Eden, but I didn't go back & check. Fiasco is the one where they send out an expedition to make contact with an alien civilization & the title rather gives away how that turns out.

      There's still a couple I haven't read, including His Master's Voice. Sounds like I should read that one.

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    3. i read an article that stated many of his books had never been translated, but i have no idea how accurate that might be...

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  2. Solaris is one of my favorite SF novels, but I have never read any of the Pirx books. Your review encourages me to explore some of Lem's other books.

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    1. all of his are worth reading... Ijon Tichy is the funniest, His Master's Voice is perhaps the most complex...

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  3. This is fascinating. I don't recall ever hearing of this author. Once again you have broadened my reading horizons.

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    1. so many books... Lem has a lot to offer, imo of course...

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  4. I love the photo of Lem surrounded by books. I also love mysteries so even though I'm not much of a Sci Fi fan I think I'm going to look him up. Hope you're not affected by the fires. My relatives in Idaho are dealing with smoke.

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    1. after the first couple of tales, the rest are basically mysteries, so i believe you'd like his writing... we get high haze here occasionally, but the prevailing winds normally blow from the west...

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  5. These Pirx stories sound like a lot of fun. I think I'd really like them. :)

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    1. you might like his books about Ijon Tichy more... well, i did, anyway... they're more madcap and humorous, i thought; which reminds me, i should dig around and see if i can find the latter - i know i have them somewhere...

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  6. Madcap & humorous appeals to me. :)
    I haven't heard of this author either. Have you read 'We' by by Yevgeny Zamyatin. It's dystopian, not really SF but your thoughts on the
    Pirx called him to mind. 'We' definitely isn't humorous, though.

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    1. i think so... i know ms. M read it for a class of some sort. it's the one in the future where citizens are locked down under government regulation inside a sealed city? and at the end some manage to escape? i found it interesting if that's the same one, but i recall thinking P.K. Dick did that sort of thing a little differently, not to say better, tho...

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    2. Mmm...sort of. It was a mechanical, regimented state that had built a Green Wall & everyone had a number. It was quite weird. George Orwell wrote a review of it: https://orwell.ru/library/reviews/zamyatin/english/e_zamy

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