Tue 9 Dec 2025
SF Diary Review: EDMOND HAMILTON – The Weapon from Beyond.
Posted by Steve under Diary Reviews , Science Fiction & Fantasy[7] Comments

EDMOND HAMILTON – The Weapon from Beyond. Starwolf #1. Ace G-639. Paperback original; 1st printing, 1967. Cover art by Jack Gaughan. Collected in Starwolf (Ace, paperback, 1982); and in Starwolves and the Interstellar Patrol (Baen, paperback, 2008).
Space opera in the old tradition, but with an added measure of characterization and ideas.
Margan Chane, ex-Starwolf, hunted by his former allies in pirating and raiding, joins a crew of mercenaries from Earth in a hunt for a weapon supposedly hidden in the depths of Corvus Nebula. There is no weapon, only the remains of a wrecked alien spaceship, but there are indication that a rescue fleet is on the way.

The mercenaries, interesting in themselves, are the realization of Earth’s most valuable resources in a universe of riches: Men. Men capable of doing the job asked of them. Chane has to sort out his emotions in a personal conflict caused by his sudden change of environment, now having to be hunted and perhaps having to fight his old comrades on the side of fellow Earthmen, with one he can like and even respect.
Humans of this future have their scientific research oriented toward weaponry, while the liens do not seem to have had to suffer and learn to turn away from violence. Which is better?
Logically constructed, except that the mercenaries still expect to fin the “weapon” after landing when the enemy cruisers leave the planet “defenseless.” Otherwise, the story has both action and thoughtful passages in the right proportion. Most entertaining,
Rating: ****
December 10th, 2025 at 9:00 pm
I have been trying to come up with another SF writer who made an equal or better transition from the early bedrock pulps to the 50s and later than Edmond Hamilton, and the only one I was able to was Jack Williamson. Any other contenders?
December 11th, 2025 at 6:27 am
And, of course, Hamilton and Williamson were the best of friends.
December 11th, 2025 at 5:18 pm
I did not know that, but on the other hand, I am not in the least surprised.
December 15th, 2025 at 3:26 pm
Robert Silverberg started out pretty much as a hack writer but transitioned to a quality writer in the 70s.
December 20th, 2025 at 2:39 pm
Right. Silverberg had the same career trajectory as these other fellows, that’s for sure. He doesn’t fit into the category I’m thinking of, though, guys who started in the 30s, maybe even the 20s, and who ended up still making names for themselves in the 50s, 60s, and 70s.
December 20th, 2025 at 1:35 am
Steve,
Not quite as early, but Kuttner comes to mind.
I recall critics were hard and dismissive of these, but I thought Hamilton did a splendid job of updating the Space Opera tropes he helped invent.
December 20th, 2025 at 2:35 pm
I’d forgotten about Henry Kuttner, and so has almost everyone else. He should have lived years longer than he did.