Star Surgeon

Not to be confused with Star Surgeon, a 1959 juvenile sf novel by Alan E. Nourse.
Star Surgeon

First Edition
Author James White
Cover artist Richard M. Powers
Language English
Series Sector General
Genre Science-fiction
Publisher Ballantine Books
Publication date
1963
Media type Print (hardback & paperback)
Preceded by Hospital Station
Followed by Major Operation

Star Surgeon is a 1963 science-fiction book by Northern Iriah author James White, part of his Sector General series.[1][2]

Synopsis

Dr. Conway must deal with an unconscious patient, classification ELPH, who may be a cannibal or a demigod, or both. It came from the "other galaxy", and the species is well known, almost infamous, to the Ians, who are also from another galaxy. It is extremely long-lived, and regularly takes complete rejuvenation treatments, including the brain and memory, to keep itself young. By doing this, it is practically immortal. It, although unconscious, appeared to have the ability to negate the most powerful drugs and resist surgery to cure its skin condition. This later turned out to be the work of the entity's "doctor", who is an intelligent, organised collection of microscopic, virus-type cells. Once Doctor Conway realises this, he uses a wooden stake to make the ELPH's doctor focus itself in one small location, at which time it is removed from the ELPH, informed regarding the physiology-problems of its patient, and put back in. The patient, whose name is Lonvellin, quickly makes a full recovery, and it leaves to do what it does best: bona fide missions that involve taking backwards planetary cultures and pulling them up "by their bootstraps". His particular mission, this time, is to cure a diseased planet called Etla, and he recruits Dr. Conway and the "Monitor Corps" to help him. When The Empire that controls the Planet of Etla misinterprets Lonvellin's efforts as an Act of War, the Empire declares war on the Sector General space hospital.

Conway helps organise the evacuation of most of the station's staff and patients, and following the death or injury of more senior staff, becomes the most senior surviving physician. After a brutal series of attacks, and with the hospital on the brink of defeat, a group of Federation and Empire soldiers convince Conway to help in a mutiny against the Federation commander Dermod. The Empire soldiers had been told that the Federation had attacked Etla, rather than trying to help it, but seeing the way all casualties were treated equally on the station, and in particular witnessing Conway breaking down after failing to save the life of an alien Empire soldier, convinced them that they had been lied to.

Characters

References

  1. Andrews, G. "A Bio-bibliography of James White". Retrieved 17 December 2008.
  2. ""James White"". British Fantasy and Science-Fiction Writers Since 1960. Dictionary of Literary Biography. Vol. 261. Gale Research Publications. Retrieved 17 December 2008.
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