Posted by Diana Hamilton on May 18, 1998 at 18:51:37:
In Reply to: Re: Jack Vance and Ports of Call posted by Mick Scannell on May 15, 1998 at 04:28:26:
: : There has been a lot of discussion concerning the lack of plot in Ports of Call. As I read the novel it occurred to me that this was probably very much the sort of life that Jack led during his merchant marine days, moving from port to port, picking up and leaving off cargo, having brief shore leaves in communities whose cultures might be far removed from that of the U.S., perhaps seeing unusual or unique events. Just a thought.
: A thought it may be, and one which is very much in phase with my own!
Wow, I'm amazed to read these comments! For as I read the book,
I had a something of an epiphany in this respect.
My father was in the Merchant Marines, probably about the same
time as Vance. He has a box of wonderful trinkets collected
during his travels, and when my brothers and I were small, we'd
pester him over and over to bring out the box. He'd lift out an
object and with it would come forth an anecdote about some
faraway place.
My favorite was the ruble. There was a thriving black market by
which the sailors traded cartons of cigarettes for local
currencies. Dad received the folded, ordinary-seeming ruble in a
trade; when opened, he found whole back side was blank. It had
been shaved precisely and painstakingly in half- the *long* way,
in the plane of the paper. Dad so appreciated the work the poor
guy went to for the swindle that of course it became far more
valuable than any ordinary money.
For me, reading Ports of Call felt just like having that old
trinket box open. The ruble story (and many others) would have
fit right in.
And by the way, my father always had mouth-watering descriptions
of the tropical fruits he consumed along the way. Is it my
imagination or are there more meals and snacks described in POC
than in any other Vance work? I guess those sailors knew how to
appreciate fresh food after so long aboard ship...
Diana Hamilton -- hamilton@umbc.edu -- Baltimore, MD USA