Spaceship Medic

Spaceship Medic is a 1970 science fiction novel for young people by Harry Harrison. The story originally appeared in the November 1969 issue of the magazine Venture Science Fiction as "Plague Ship".[3]

Spaceship Medic
First edition
AuthorHarry Harrison
Cover artistGask & Page[1]
LanguageEnglish
GenreChildren's science fiction
PublisherFaber & Faber[2]
Publication date
1970

Plot

On a routine trip to Mars, the passenger liner Johannes Kepler is hit by a meteoroid, killing the captain and almost all the senior members of the crew and resulting in the loss of much of the ship's breathable air. Lieutenant Donald Chase, a junior medical officer, finds himself the highest-ranked surviving crew member and has to take over the running of the ship. He is helped by Chief Petty Officer Kurikka, who is familiar with the technical aspects; the Mexican scientist Dr Ugalde, a passenger whose mathematical genius enables the new crew to navigate the ship; and various others. Chase solves the air shortage by using the oxygen content of some of the ship's water. Once the situation has stabilised, a passenger, General Mathew Briggs, who had criticised Chase's methods, overthrows him by force with the apparent help of Ugalde. However, it turns out that Ugalde had only pretended to shift his loyalties and Briggs is faced down by Kurikka, defeated and imprisoned. The ship's occupants are also struck by a deadly plague carried by the meteorite, but Chase and his medical colleagues eventually find a cure, although Chase collapses from disease and exhaustion. Recovering in hospital after the ship has docked safely, he is presented with a captain's cap by his crew.

gollark: Bytecode *can* be decompiled though.
gollark: What you can do is compile to bytecode or minify it.
gollark: The fundamental issue is that the computer has to have/generate some runnable form of the code at some point in order to, well, run it.
gollark: <@!209142270195138560> SKyCrafter0 is wrong and you cannot just encrypt it to protect it, since the computer must obviously store the encryption key.
gollark: <@331644985378078720> Obfuscate yes, entirely protect no.

References

  1. "Spaceship Medic". Iol.ie. 1970-10-15. Retrieved 2012-08-15.
  2. "Spaceship Medic by Harry Harrison". Fantasticfiction.co.uk. Retrieved 2012-08-15.
  3. "Harry Harrison: An Annotated Bibliography"


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