Wednesday, September 4, 2024

Jack Sharkey’s The Secret Martians

Jack Sharkey’s science fiction novel The Secret Martians was written in 1960.

Jack Sharkey (1931-1992) was a prolific American playwright. He also wrote a lot of science fiction short stories, mostly between 1959 and 1965. He published a few novels with The Secret Martians being one of his few novels in the science fiction genre.

The setting would appear to be the mid to late 21st century. Jery Devlin works in advertising. His current assignment is to persuade American women that Plasti-Flex bras will make them irresistible to men. Jery has a particular talent that has made him a success in advertising. Advertising is of course based entirely on lies and misleading claims. Jery has an uncanny ability to spot lies and misleading or false information. He can spot things that just don’t add up or don’t ring true. If Jery can spot the lie in a piece of advertising copy in less than five seconds the copy is rejected, but if it can fool Jery for five seconds it will fool the general public indefinitely.

This skill is about to become important in a completely different context. Jery has been chosen by Interplanetary Security (IS) for a secret mission. Or rather he has been chosen by the Brain, the super-advanced computer on which IS relies. Jery has no experience in secret agent work but the Brain has decided that that skill of his makes him the only man for the job. Jery is given a little disc known as an Amnesty. This disc gives him unlimited authority. It’s not just a licence to kill, it’s a licence to do anything at all that he considers necessary.

Jery is sent to Mars on a rescue mission. On his journey to the red planet Jery acquires a travelling companion, Snow White. No, not that Snow White. This Snow White is just a regular human, albeit a very blonde and very pretty young female human. His meeting with Snow White was no accident.

The mission involves a missing party of Space Scouts. They’re like space age Boy Scouts. They were on a trip to Mars which was a kind of PR stunt on behalf of Earth’s government. They simply vanished from the spaceship Phobos II. Vanished in totally impossible circumstances. Jery solves that mystery very quickly but it leads to a whole series of other mysteries and conspiracies and counter-conspiracies.

Jery discovers that all sorts of things that people have taken for granted about Mars are not necessarily true. In fact all sorts of things that people have taken for granted about various subjects Mars might not be strictly true. Everyone knew about the Sugarfeet. They’re a Martian life form resembling smallish crystalline dragons. They’re dumb and harmless. There had been another much more advanced Martian race but they’re long since extinct, leaving behind only a few ruins. Everyone knew about parabolite, a common Martian rock that is potentially immensely valuable that is impossible to exploit.

There are at least four different factions which might intend to kill Jery. Or they might see him as a potential ally. There are shifting alliances and betrayals. Each faction has an agenda, but their agendas seem to be changeable. Jery can’t trust anyone other than Snow White. He is sure he can trust her. Of course Jery admits that he is absolutely hopeless about women.

The plots and counter-plots get more and more convoluted but they’re certainly ingenious.

As you might expect in a tale with a heroine named Snow White there’s a bit of a tongue-in-cheek vibe. It’s a wild crazy romp of a story.

There are cool very alien-like aliens. There’s some action. Jery is not your standard square-jawed action hero. He’s not much of an action hero at all. But he does have that ability to spot the true meanings behind things, to see beneath the surface of the obvious. And an ability to tease out the tangled motives of others. He’s likeable enough. Snow White is a fairly feisty heroine.

There’s some amusing technobabble. I have no idea how much of a grounding in science the author possessed but he had enough to make his technobabble sound vaguely plausible and it is undeniably clever. There’s some wild pseudo-science and fringe science and it’s worked into the book’s plot rather nicely.

The Secret Martians is fast-moving and entertaining with enough solid science fiction content to make it much more than just an adventure story set on Mars. Highly recommended.

This novel is paired with Secret of the Flaming Ring by Rog Phillips in an Armchair Fiction double-header paperback edition.

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