Skylark Three (Original 1930 version)
Skylark Three (written in 1930) is the second book in the Skylark series and is set a year after the events of The Skylark of Space ¸ during which year antagonist Marc DuQuesne has used the wealth he obtained in the previous book to buy a controlling interest in the story's 'World Steel Corporation'¸ a large company known for its ruthless attitude. When the story begins DuQuesne announces a long absence from Earth¸ to find another species more knowledgeable than the Osnomians allied with protagonist Richard Seaton. Shortly thereafter¸ DuQuesne and a henchman disappear from Earth. DuQuesne¸ by now aware of the 'Object Compass' trained on him¸ travels far enough to break the connection¸ then turns toward the 'Green System' of which Osnome is a part. Seaton discovers this¸ but is distracted by attempts to master a "zone of force": essentially a spherical¸ immaterial shield¸ with whose present form Seaton is dissatisfied for its opacity and impenetrability even by the user.
The Amazing Stories publication of The Skylark of Space in 1928 heralded the debut of a major new voice in American pulp science fiction and ushered in its golden age. Skylark Three is the next book in the series¸ and continues in the interstellar exploration.
Skylark Three (written in 1930) is the second book in the Skylark series and is set a year after the events of The Skylark of Space¸ during which year antagonist Marc DuQuesne has used the wealth he obtained in the previous book to buy a controlling interest in the story's 'World Steel Corporation'¸ a large company known for its ruthless attitude. When the story begins DuQuesne announces a long absence from Earth¸ to find another species more knowledgeable than the Osnomians allied with protagonist Richard Seaton. Shortly thereafter¸ DuQuesne and a henchman disappear from Earth. DuQuesne¸ by now aware of the 'Object Compass' trained on him¸ travels far enough to break the connection¸ then turns toward the 'Green System' of which Osnome is a part. Seaton discovers this¸ but is distracted by attempts to master a "zone of force": essentially a spherical¸ immaterial shield¸ with whose present form Seaton is dissatisfied for its opacity and impenetrability even by the user.
The Amazing Stories publication of The Skylark of Space in 1928 heralded the debut of a major new voice in American pulp science fiction and ushered in its golden age. Skylark Three is the next book in the series¸ and continues in the interstellar exploration.