Crystal Singer

Crystal Singer
The Crystal Singer  
Author(s) Anne McCaffrey
Cover artist Rob Burt (first)
and others[1]
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Series Crystal Singer series
Genre(s) Science fiction novel
Publisher Severn House
Publication date February 1982
Media type Print (hardcover & paperback)
Pages 301 pp
ISBN 0-727-82022-2
OCLC Number 13050511
Followed by Killashandra

The Crystal Singer (1982), or Crystal Singer (US title) is a science fiction, young-adult novel by Anne McCaffrey. It is a fix-up of four stories published 1974 and 1975 and is the first book set in her "Crystal universe". At the same time, Crystal Singer is a trilogy named for the novel, its first book.[2]

The Crystal Singer novel is about the trials and tribulations of Killashandra Ree in becoming a crystal singer on the fictional planet Ballybran.

Contents

Origins

While a schoolgirl Anne McCaffrey enjoyed one year of piano lessons purchased by her Aunt.[3] Later she studied voice for nine years, performed in the first music circus in 1949, once directed a play, and worked for a record label, Liberty Music Shop.[4] DuPont transferred her husband temporarily to Düsseldorf, Germany in 1962/63, where Anne resumed vocal training[5] but suffered a crisis in that avocational field. Regarding that experience and subsequent emotional trauma, her fictional character Killashandra Ree is partly autobiographical.[6]

McCaffrey divorced her husband in August 1970 and emigrated to the vicinity of Dublin, Ireland in September with her second Dragonriders of Pern book nearly finished and a contract for the third. The White Dragon would complete her "original trilogy" with Ballantine Books in 1978 but for several years that work stalled.[7] The markets for children and young adults provided crucial opportunities, as when editor Roger Elwood solicited contributions of short genre fiction to anthologies. She was able to deliver "The Smallest Dragonboy" and the four-part story of Killashandra.[8][9] The 1982 novel is an expanded version of the four-part work, the author's note explains. She made some substantial changes too.[citation needed][clarification needed]

Plot summary (1982 novel)

Killashandra Ree has trained all her life to become a stellar class vocal soloist. After her final exams, she is told that there is a flaw in her voice which would prevent her from singing lead roles. She does not wish to continue a life in which she will be limited to choral work and secondary operatic roles. Resigning from the music school, she meets a crystal singer, a kind of miner who uses voice controlled technology in order to mine crystals on the planet Ballybran for uses in different technologies. Ballybran crystal has unique qualities that make it a necessity for almost any of the human civilization's interstellar transportation and communications equipment.

Life as a crystal singer strikes her as attractive — high pay, travel, prestige, and near-immortality. But her former vocal teacher has a low opinion of crystal singers and warns her not to succumb to the temptation to join them. In a fit of pique, Killashandra travels to Ballybran to investigate her chances of joining the Heptite Guild and becoming a crystal singer. She meets the main qualification, perfect pitch, and believes that if she cannot be first among operatic performers, perhaps she could become first among the select group of elite Ballybran crystal miners.

However, Ballybran is not a normal world. Habitation on the planet is restricted because of the planet’s dangers, primary of which is an alien symbiont that invades the human body, causing genetic mutations, for which there is no cure. Typically, the onset of infection is accompanied by severe physical sickness, passing in one to two weeks. When (and if) the host recovers, the symbiont provides many benefits, including increased sensory perception, rapid tissue regeneration and a vastly prolonged life expectancy, but it renders all hosts sterile, and eventually causes severe memory loss, paranoia and dementia.

The symbiont occasionally causes negative mutations of varying degree. In the most extreme cases the symbiont kills the host by crystallizing all bodily tissues. Sometimes there are both positive and negative mutations, such as vastly increased visual acuity along with complete deafness.

Those victims who are not functionally disabled remain on the planet and work as support staff for the Heptite Guild's facilities. The only persons allowed on the planet are the crystal singers and the support staff, and only the singers are able to travel away from the planet. Even they must return before too long in order to replenish their symbiont, or they will sicken and die.

The mining of Ballybran crystal is also a highly dangerous profession. In addition to the risks associated with any type of geological mining operation, Ballybran is regularly subject to hurricane-force storms which can cause crystal deposits to vibrate and collapse, or generate sympathetic vibrations ("sonic storms") that affect the symbiont and drive crystal singers mad.

The first part of the book describes Killashandra's efforts to cope with her mutation, and learn the craft of crystal singing. She also develops a mentor/student relationship with Lanzecki, the Guild Master (which eventually turns romantic by the story's end.) The Guild has a variety of idiosyncratic rules, customs and procedures regarding all facets of Ballybran society which she must learn, particularly dealing with an individual singer's mining claims.

Killashandra becomes a Crystal Singer of the top tier by locating and mining the rarest and most elusive form of Ballybran Crystal, Black Crystal, which can be used for instantaneous interstellar communication. She is subsequently sent offworld on assignment to install the set of crystals she mined for their contracted buyers. Lanzecki tells her she must "perform" the role of the Crystal Singer when representing the Guild in public, many of whom regard crystal singers as eccentric mutants and find them frightening, but are at the same time beholden to the highly respected and powerful Heptite Guild for the crystals that power their civilization's technology. Killashandra's performance as a mysterious member of the Heptite Guild to win over an audience of mistrusting asteroid miners who have mortgaged their futures on the badly needed black crystals is the climax of the story. Her success brings her full circle and she returns home to Ballybran to begin her new life of wealth and status.

Trilogy

The story of Killashandra continued in two sequels Killashandra (1986) and Crystal Line (1992). The original Continuum stories ended with the death of Killashandra, but the trilogy follows a different path.

Killashandra

In the second book, Killashandra is once again sent offworld, this time to the planet of Optheria. Her task is ostensibly to install new White Crystals into the manual of the planet's largest Optherian Organ, which was shattered under mysterious circumstances. ...

Crystal Line

In the third book, Killashandra Ree and Lars Dahl are sent to investigate a strange mineral discovered in a newly explored star system. It is believed that the stuff may have properties similar to Ballybran crystal, but when samples of crystal are placed in it, it creates a strange synergy that changes both the planet and Killashandra's mind.

Crystal universe

Beside the Crystal Singer trilogy, the Internet Speculative Fiction Database places in the Crystal universe (series) both The Coelura (1983 novella) and Nimisha's Ship (1998 novel).[2]

Awards

The Crystal Singer placed seventh for the 1983 annual Locus Award for Best Science Fiction Novel, voted by Locus readers. It was one of six finalists for the Balrog Award in the novel class.[10]

References

  1. ^ The Crystal Singer publication history at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database lists cover artist Rob Burt for the first edition (UK) and linked cover images show the same work used on UK paperbacks. In the US: Dennis Meehan, first edition (Doubleday Science Fiction Book Club); Michael Whelan, paperbacks.
  2. ^ a b The Crystal Universe series listing at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database (ISFDB). Retrieved 2011-11-03.
  3. ^ Dragonholder, p. 6.
  4. ^ "Anne's Biography". The Worlds of Anne McCaffrey. Pern Home. http://www.pernhome.com/aim/index.php?page_id=17. Retrieved 2011-07-07. 
  5. ^ Dragonholder, pp. 14–15.
  6. ^ Dragonholder, pp. 37, 41, 66.
  7. ^ Dragonholder, pp. 71–101
  8. ^ Dragonholder, pp. 82–83, 95.
  9. ^ Continuum series listing at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database. Retrieved 2011-10-27.
  10. ^ Anne McCaffrey. Locus Index to SF Awards. Retrieved 2011-10-09.
    • From any Locus Index entry, select the award name for details of the annual result; then select "About" for general information about the award.
Citations – books
  • McCaffrey, Todd (1999). Dragonholder: The Life and Dreams (So Far) of Anne McCaffrey by her son. New York: Ballantine. ISBN 0-345-42217-1. 

External links


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