Saturday, March 14, 2026

Frank Belknap Long’s Space Station #1

Frank Belknap Long’s science fiction novel Space Station #1 was published in 1957.

American science fiction/weird fiction writer Frank Belknap Long (1901-1994) was a close friend of H.P. Lovecraft.

Space Station #1 is by far the biggest space station ever constructed. This is the 2020s by which time Mars has been colonised. But all is not well on Mars. A fabulously wealthy man named Ramsey now runs the planet and the original colonists are impoverished and disaffected. They believe (correctly) that he has cheated them.

The protagonist of the novel is Lieutenant Corristan, a young officer on a space liner on its way to the station. He meets a charming young lady. She is accompanied by her bodyguard. Corristan finds out that she is Ramsey’s daughter Helen. Which makes it a very big deal when she vanishes. And then her bodyguard is murdered. The killer flees. Corristan gives chase, unsuccessfully.

Corristan expects to be regarded not perhaps as a hero but at least given credit for effort. He is mystified and dismayed when no-one believes a word of his account of the event. Helen Ramsey was not aboard the spaceship. The dead man was not her bodyguard.

When they reach the station Corristan finds himself diagnosed as another tragic case of space shock. He must have been hallucinating. Perhaps in time he will recover.

Corristan isn’t giving up. He escapes from custody and then he makes some truly puzzling and bizarre discoveries. These discoveries seem impossible, but Corristan is convinced that he is not mad.

It seems that things aboard the spaceship are not what they seem to be.

Corristan hasn’t just stumbled into a fight between two factions. There are three factions involved. There are multiple conspiracies.

And lots of paranoia.

What Corristan cares about is the girl. He’s only exchanged a dozen words with Helen Ramsey but he knows that he’s in love with her. He doesn’t even know if she’s still alive. He has no idea where she is.

And he’s soon in the middle of a space battle. A space battle that is not as wildly unrealistic as most science fiction space battles.

And the author doesn’t forget the thin atmosphere on Mars, and the implications of that. And he remembers to at least mention the low gravity. The space station spins to provide artificial gravity through centrifugal fore. This is not quite hard science fiction but at least the author makes an effort to keep things science fictional rather than just being an adventure in space.

There’s more drama when Corristan arrives on Mars. And a major battle seems likely, with no clear indication as to which groups belong to which factions and what their objectives are.

Corristan is a fine hero. His love for Helen Ramsey provides him with plenty of motivation. He’s gutsy and determined.

The plot has some very nice twists and there are enough hints of weird stuff to keep things interesting. There are conflicted characters and betrayals and suspicions.

This is a decent fairly grown-up and entertaining science fiction tale and I’m going to highly recommend it.

I’ve also reviewed Frank Belknap Long's Mission to a Distant Star, which is a good story ruined by a catastrophically bad ending.

Armchair Fiction have paired this novel with William P. McGivern’s The Galaxy Raiders in a two-novel edition.

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