Solar
Warden, Book One: Alien Secrets. By
Ian Douglas (pseudonym of William H. Keith, Jr.). Harper Voyager. $7.99.
An utterly ridiculous mixture of tin-foil-hat conspiracy theories with
space opera and heroic-military clichés, the first book in Ian Douglas’ new Solar Warden series is impossible to
take the slightest bit seriously – but insists that readers do so, since there
is perilously little in it played for even the slightest of laughs. You have to
admire Douglas’ sheer gall in combining multiple alien races competing on
Earth with the “true” meaning of Roswell, New Mexico events with Nazis
venturing into space as helpers/captives of nonhuman races with President
Eisenhower signing an agreement allowing periodic, small-scale alien abductions
of humans. Someone, probably Douglas,
is laughing all the way to the bank as this plot builds and builds – in fact, Alien Secrets reads mostly like a
scene-setter for future books in the Solar
Warden series, although there are enough intergalactic battles to keep fans
of military space fantasy (decidedly not science fiction, there being no
science here whatsoever) occupied and happy.
Government-conspiracy theorists will find plenty to masticate here, too.
Douglas tosses about the usual alphabet soup of government
agencies-within-agencies-within-agencies, all operating at cross-purposes with plausible
deniability and all dipping unceasingly into the apparently endless “black
budget” that conveniently funds just about everything Douglas wants funded. Whenever
the plot seems about to bog down, which is infrequently, Douglas can always
trot out a new super-secret, well-financed groups of something-or-others,
whether human or EBE – “Extraterrestrial Biological Entities.”
Oh, and there is also time travel, because “the Jew physicist Einstein
had supposedly demonstrated that space and time were the same thing,” as the resident
Nazi baddie notes. Clever, that Einstein.
A plot this sprawlingly silly is actually something of a wonder, with so
many strands and so much connective narrative needed that it is amazing to see
how Douglas keeps everything neatly in place while tossing in enough action
sequences to keep readers interested in the characters. In fact, it is
particularly fortunate that Douglas is so skilled presenting battles and other
mayhem, since character delineation and development is not and never has been
his strong suit. The protagonist here – someone has to be the center around
which everything else orbits – is Lieutenant Commander Mark Hunter of the Navy
SEALs, the requisite tough-and-hard-as-nails-but-still-human generic
military-hero-with-a-soft-side (he is sorry his wife left him and sorry that he
has to leave his girlfriend to go on outer-space deployment). Hunter, who of
course inspires tremendous loyalty among the men and women he supervises, is of
course a reluctant leader and disciplinarian who of course knows the right
thing to do is to tell the world about all those aliens and time travelers but
of course does not do so because the baddies, human and EBE, of course know
where his family and girlfriend can be found and won’t hesitate to do horrible
things to them because they are, you know, bad.
Solar Warden both undermines
and enlarges the notion that the planet Earth is somehow special. On the one
hand, humans are not special as an
intelligent, spacefaring race, since there are lots and lots and lots of other, more-advanced ones out
there. On the other hand, Earth is
special, because it is the focal point for plots and counterplots, battles and
chesslike maneuvers, in which alien and time-traveling characters constantly
jockey for position because – well, the “because” part of Alien Secrets is a little on the light side, although some elements
are clear enough, such as future humans’ determination to prevent present-day
humans from blowing themselves up because then the future humans would, like,
not exist, ok?
Douglas’ clever authorial touches abound here, notably including his
creation of wildly outré plot-supporting quotations that he then states are
“attributed” to real historical figures, from Eisenhower to Neil Armstrong. The
result is a tiny veneer of plausibility overlaid on the complete nonsense of
the story. Although nominally set in the present – make that an “alternative
present,” one of those conveniences of which Douglas takes full advantage – the
book exists primarily to give the background of the launch of a new military
space organization called the Interstellar Marine Force (a singularly
uninspired name). It is that force’s usual bold journey to the usual places
where humans have never been, to assert human moral superiority (or something)
and figure out what the various EBE factions are fighting about and when and
how Earth fits into whatever it is (or something), that Alien Secrets details. Damn the absurdity – full speed ahead, to
misquote David Farragut’s famed order, “Damn the torpedoes – full speed ahead,”
which Farragut actually did not say,
except maybe in some yet-to-be-written Ian Douglas book. Damn something, in any case, and full speed
to somewhere!
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