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== Plot summary ==
== Plot summary ==
In a far-flung future in which Earth is not so much as mentioned, [[Homo sapiens]] and other sentient species, namely the Gowachin, Laclac, Wreaves, Pan Spechi, Taprisiots, and Caleban, comprise the galaxy-spanning ConSentiency. After suffering the unexpected consequences a pure democracy –laws could be created so quickly that no thought could be given to their full consequences– the sentients formed [[Bureau of Sabotage]] (BuSab) to slow the wheels of government, thereby precluding reckless legislation. Not itself a law-enforcement organization, its ambit comprises elements of both espionage and diplomacy.


[[Jorj X. McKie]] is a ''saboteur extraordinary'', a born troublemaker who has naturally become one of BuSab's best agents. As the novel opens, the small population of immensely powerful Calebans, by far the most powerful and inscrutable members of the ConSentiency, have been disappearing one by one, inexplicably leaving millions of deaths and numerous cases of incurable insanity in their wake. Only one remains: the partially incorporeal, gnomic Fanny May.
In the far future, humankind has made contact with numerous other sentient species: Gowachin, [[Laclac]], [[Wreaves]], [[Pan Spechi]], [[Taprisiot]]s, and Caleban (among others) and has helped to form the ConSentiency to govern among the species. After suffering under a tyrannous pure democracy which had the power to create laws so fast that no thought could be given to the effects, the sentients of the galaxy found the need for a [[Bureau of Sabotage]] (BuSab) to slow the wheels of government, thereby preventing it from legislating recklessly.


Ninety years prior to the setting of ''Whipping Star'', the Calebans had appeared and offered jumpdoors to the ConSentiency, affording instantaneous travel to any point in the galaxy. This seemingly miraculous technology was accepted with out `too many questions being asked (and even fewer being answered), and the sociology of the ConSentiency was remade. Mliss Abnethe, a [[sociopath]]ic [[sadistic personality disorder|sadist]] human female of immense power and wealth had however somehow contractually bound the all-too-curious Caleban Fanny Mae to be apparently whipped to death; when Fanny May dies, everyone who has ever used a jumpdoor (which is practically speaking everyone in existence) will die as well.
In ''Whipping Star'', [[Jorj X. McKie]] is a ''saboteur extraordinary'', a born troublemaker who has naturally become one of BuSab's best agents. As the novel opens, it is revealed that Calebans, who are beings visible to other sentient species as stars, have been disappearing one by one. Each disappearance is accompanied by millions of sentient deaths and instances of incurable insanity.


The Calebans begin to flee one at a time, leaving our plane of existence (or exiting "our wave"). Inasmuch as all Calebans are interconnected, if they were to remain in our wave of existence when Fanny Mae dies, they would also die. McKie has to find Mliss and stop her mad, [[solipism|solipsistic]] project before Fanny Mae reaches, in her words, "ultimate discontinuity" and civilization utterly collapses and all sentience with it—but maddeningly he is constrained by the law protecting private individuals by restricting the ministrations of BuSab to public entities.
Ninety years prior to the setting of ''Whipping Star'', the Calebans appeared and offered jumpdoors to the collective species, allowing sentients to travel instantly to any point in the universe. Gratefully accepting, the sentiency didn't question the consequences. Now Mliss Abnethe, a psychotic human female with immense power and wealth, has bound a Caleban (called Fannie Mae) in a contract that allows the Caleban to be whipped to death; when the Caleban dies, everyone who has ever used a jumpdoor (which is almost every adult in the sentient world and many of the young) will die as well.


The action ranges from solar systems to office politics, [[ontology]] to [[semantics]], and more. In the [[denouement]] Fanny Mae's insatiable curiosity stands her in good stead, and sufficient communication is established with BuSab for the mystery to be solved and the omnigenocidal gang to be hoist by their own petard. It proves that the Caleban are more alien than any of the other species imagined, or could have imagined. Not only were the jumpdoors intrinsic aspects of their own hyperdimensional being (they ''were'' the network), they partially manifested in our wave as stars. Accordingly "[[Fannie Mae]]", [[home]] being an important plot element and her identity more fully revealed, requests that she be addressed as Thyone, a star in the [[Pleiades]] henceforth.
The Calebans begin to disappear one at a time, leaving our plane of existence (or exiting "our wave") to save themselves. As all Calebans are connected, if all were to remain in our existence, when Fannie Mae died, all Calebans would die. As each Caleban exits, millions of the ConSentiency are killed or rendered insane. McKie has to find Mliss and stop her before Fannie Mae reaches, in her words, "ultimate discontinuity", but he is constrained by the law protecting private individuals by restricting the ''ministrations'' of BuSab to public entities.

McKie succeeds in saving Fannie Mae by opening a jumpdoor into space which shunts a large interstellar cloud of (presumably) hydrogen into her stellar body, rejuvenating her from her torture at the hands of the Palenki henchmen hired by Mliss Abnethe. Fannie Mae agreed to the contract with Abnethe in return for education. Calebans have great difficulty understanding and communicating with the more limited species of the ConSentiency (and vice versa), but Fannie Mae is curious. Abnethe's wealth provides the best tutors in exchange for Fannie Mae's agreement to take the whippings. Abnethe has an insane sadistic streak, but a court-mandated ''Clockwork Orange''–style conditioning session leaves her unable to tolerate the suffering of others. Abnethe needs a Caleban to take the whippings because she still craves a way to satisfy her sadistic urges and Calebans do not broadcast their pain in a way that is easily recognized by other species.


==Related works==
==Related works==

Revision as of 04:08, 23 April 2024

Whipping Star
Cover of the first edition
AuthorFrank Herbert
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreScience fiction
PublisherG. P. Putnam's Sons
Publication date
1970
Media typePrint (hardback & paperback)
ISBN0-8398-2648-6
Preceded byThe Tactful Saboteur” 
Followed byThe Dosadi Experiment 

Whipping Star is a 1970 science fiction novel by American writer Frank Herbert. It is the first full-length novel set in the ConSentiency universe established by Herbert in his short stories “A Matter of Traces” and “The Tactful Saboteur”.

Plot summary

In a far-flung future in which Earth is not so much as mentioned, Homo sapiens and other sentient species, namely the Gowachin, Laclac, Wreaves, Pan Spechi, Taprisiots, and Caleban, comprise the galaxy-spanning ConSentiency. After suffering the unexpected consequences a pure democracy –laws could be created so quickly that no thought could be given to their full consequences– the sentients formed Bureau of Sabotage (BuSab) to slow the wheels of government, thereby precluding reckless legislation. Not itself a law-enforcement organization, its ambit comprises elements of both espionage and diplomacy.

Jorj X. McKie is a saboteur extraordinary, a born troublemaker who has naturally become one of BuSab's best agents. As the novel opens, the small population of immensely powerful Calebans, by far the most powerful and inscrutable members of the ConSentiency, have been disappearing one by one, inexplicably leaving millions of deaths and numerous cases of incurable insanity in their wake. Only one remains: the partially incorporeal, gnomic Fanny May.

Ninety years prior to the setting of Whipping Star, the Calebans had appeared and offered jumpdoors to the ConSentiency, affording instantaneous travel to any point in the galaxy. This seemingly miraculous technology was accepted with out `too many questions being asked (and even fewer being answered), and the sociology of the ConSentiency was remade. Mliss Abnethe, a sociopathic sadist human female of immense power and wealth had however somehow contractually bound the all-too-curious Caleban Fanny Mae to be apparently whipped to death; when Fanny May dies, everyone who has ever used a jumpdoor (which is practically speaking everyone in existence) will die as well.

The Calebans begin to flee one at a time, leaving our plane of existence (or exiting "our wave"). Inasmuch as all Calebans are interconnected, if they were to remain in our wave of existence when Fanny Mae dies, they would also die. McKie has to find Mliss and stop her mad, solipsistic project before Fanny Mae reaches, in her words, "ultimate discontinuity" and civilization utterly collapses and all sentience with it—but maddeningly he is constrained by the law protecting private individuals by restricting the ministrations of BuSab to public entities.

The action ranges from solar systems to office politics, ontology to semantics, and more. In the denouement Fanny Mae's insatiable curiosity stands her in good stead, and sufficient communication is established with BuSab for the mystery to be solved and the omnigenocidal gang to be hoist by their own petard. It proves that the Caleban are more alien than any of the other species imagined, or could have imagined. Not only were the jumpdoors intrinsic aspects of their own hyperdimensional being (they were the network), they partially manifested in our wave as stars. Accordingly "Fannie Mae", home being an important plot element and her identity more fully revealed, requests that she be addressed as Thyone, a star in the Pleiades henceforth.

Related works

Whipping Star was followed in 1977 by Herbert's The Dosadi Experiment and preceded by the short story "The Tactful Saboteur". While these stories are not exactly related to Whipping Star, they take place in the same imaginary universe and have the same main character, Jorj X. McKie.

Chairdogs appear throughout the story[1] and also are mentioned in multiple Dune novels; both the original series by Frank Herbert as well as the extended series by Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson.

Main characters

  • Jorj X. McKie - BuSab Saboteur Extraordinary - Human
  • Bildoon - BuSab Director - Pan Spechi
  • Fannie Mae - Caleban
  • Mliss Abnethe - wealthy female - human

References

  1. ^ Herbert, Frank. Whipping Star. 26 mentions of chairdogs found in chapters 2, 5, 11, 13, 15, 18, 21, 22, and 23.

External links