Kelson Reads reviewed Galactic Derelict by Andre Norton (Ross Murdock Time War #2)
A decent space adventure story...
3 stars
...from the anything-goes era of science fiction. About a third of it is a quasi-military time travel mission to retrieve an alien spaceship that crashed in the distant past, before it decays to ruins. Mammoths, sabre-toothed tigers, volcanoes, etc. That part goes by too quickly, because Norton is using it to pivot from time travel to space travel. The rest is an outer space adventure as the team is dragged around the galaxy by the ship's autopilot...in the present day...after the civilization that built it has been dead for millennia.
There's a lot of improvising and jerry-rigging, with a crew stuck in a spaceship without sufficient provisions, not sure how long they'll be up there. At times I was reminded of Apollo 13, which of course hadn't happened yet when Norton was writing this in the late 1950s!
Like book three, it handles Native Americans better than I …
...from the anything-goes era of science fiction. About a third of it is a quasi-military time travel mission to retrieve an alien spaceship that crashed in the distant past, before it decays to ruins. Mammoths, sabre-toothed tigers, volcanoes, etc. That part goes by too quickly, because Norton is using it to pivot from time travel to space travel. The rest is an outer space adventure as the team is dragged around the galaxy by the ship's autopilot...in the present day...after the civilization that built it has been dead for millennia.
There's a lot of improvising and jerry-rigging, with a crew stuck in a spaceship without sufficient provisions, not sure how long they'll be up there. At times I was reminded of Apollo 13, which of course hadn't happened yet when Norton was writing this in the late 1950s!
Like book three, it handles Native Americans better than I would expect from its contemporaries. Though I did cringe at the two white guys and modern Apache being spray-tanned to pass as prehistoric Native Americans.
The space voyage drags after a while, though. With the ship being on autopilot, it feels like the characters are just along for the ride. They can't even explore too far when the ship stops along its route, because they can't be 100% certain when it will lift off again.