That wasn't it.
Thereafter, through junior high and high school, I hated Andre Norton, and refused to read any of her works.
But when I was in college, the bookstore gang loved Andre Norton, so I gave her another try.
And found a homoerotic paradise, where men forged intense, passionate, loving bonds with men, mostly with covers that were beefcake-heavy masterpieces.
The Time Traders: crosstime adventures of crook-turned-adventurer Ross Murdock and his far-future companion Ashe.
Galactic Derelict: Ross and Ashe are accompanied by muscular Apache Travis Fox to investigate a space ship from another galaxy.
Storm Over Warlock: A Terran survey expedition is attacked, leaving only two survivors: elite Scout Ragnar Thorvald and servant Shan Lantee. They must travel together across the hostile planet to safety.
Voodoo Planet: Same plot, Voodoo Planet.
Star Man's Son: Two muscular barbarians bond in a post-apocalyptic world.
Operation Time Search: Photographer Ray Osborne is accidentally transported back to ancient Atlantis, where he befriends the muscular young Cho and gets involved in royal intrigue. And the most explicit gay romance I had ever seen in science fiction.
And on and on -- she wrote hundreds, and is still publishing, though she died in 2005.
There are also a lot of novels about women forming strong same-sex bonds, and a few with heterosexual romances.
I don't know why the gay subtexts predominate. Maybe Norton was writing for an audience of juvenile boys, and assumed that they wouldn't be interested in hetero-romance "yet."? Or maybe she thought that the world of intergalactic exploration would exclude women, just as her contemporary society excluded women from the sciences and technology.
I just wish I had read them in junior high.
I must have read some of her novels but Ray Bradbury was my favorite science fiction writer- I don't think he has any gay stories or subtext- well yes the relationship between the narrator and the Illustrated man has some subtle erotic tension.
ReplyDeletewhy did you hate moon of 3 rings?
ReplyDeleteBecause I thought it was "The Lord of the Rings," and it wasn't.
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