The Tactful Saboteur

"The Tactful Saboteur" is a science fiction novelette by American writer Frank Herbert, which first appeared in Galaxy Science Fiction magazine in October 1964. It established the setting for Herbert's ConSentiency universe, one of his three elaborate universes or franchises spanning multiple volumes (the others being the Dune universe and the Destination: Void universe developed with co-author Bill Ransom).

"The Tactful Saboteur"
AuthorFrank Herbert
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Published inGalaxy Science Fiction
Publication typePeriodical
Media typePrint (Magazine)
Publication dateOctober 1964

The three chapter story "The Tactful Saboteur", written in a brisk, economical style, proved to be one of Herbert's most popular works. It was subsequently republished in The Worlds of Frank Herbert in 1971 and again in Herbert's 1985 short story collection Eye after interest was renewed in the wake of the film adaptation of Herbert's novel Dune.

Plot

The protagonist of "The Tactful Saboteur" is saboteur extraordinary Jorj X. McKie, an employee of the Bureau of Sabotage (or BuSab). BuSab is a government agency responsible for conducting dirty tricks "in lieu of red tape" to help slow down and regulate the vast galaxy-spanning bureaucracy of the ConSentiency (under BuSab rules the Secretary of the agency retains his position until he himself is sabotaged). Tasked with finding missing saboteur Napoleon Bildoon, McKie attempts to penetrate the secrets of the Pan-Spechi, a race divided into groups of five "crèche mates", only one of whom possess ego-awareness at a time. In so doing he runs afoul of the "Tax Watchers" organization, which is adamantly opposed to the existence of BuSab.

Sources

gollark: We don't have data on any, so I don't know what you're referring to there.
gollark: If you pick a random species on Earth the chance it has two sexes is not actually exactly 50%, see. Even if that was true, it would be ridiculous to just assume alien life would turn out exactly the same way.
gollark: - alien life does not have to match ours in any way- that isn't true for Earth life either
gollark: How can you possibly know that?
gollark: They will probably be really different to humans in various ways. Why would they care at all?
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