A review by topdragon
Needle by Hal Clement

3.0

My brother was cleaning out his bookshelves in anticipation of his upcoming move, and so I "inherited" about 100 of his books. A nice haul all the way around and among them, were about 30-35 science fiction books, many from the so-called classical era. I haven't really read all that much of the older science fiction for many years now but have wanted to get back into it and thought this the perfect opportunity.

So this book was my first to read out of that whole collection from my brother. I had read one other Hal Clement book, [b:Mission Of Gravity|525285|Mission Of Gravity|Hal Clement|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1328628795s/525285.jpg|894625] but that was at least 25 years ago. This one, I believe, was Mr, Clement's first published work, written in 1949. Unfortunately it shows. The book opened delightfully, with the nice hard science that the author is known for. A protoplasmic alien creature has crash landed on earth while chasing another of the same species who has committed some sort of crime. The "hunter" alien absorbs into a 15 year old boy and uses him to function and chase after the criminal alien. Yeah I know it sounds a bit hokey but the first 1/3rd of the book was quite riveting to see how the biology of the alien species worked. This was just the sort of hard science I was looking for. Unfortunately, the actual "story" took off from there and turned into a detective story that seemed aimed at younger readers, reminiscent of Heinlein's juveniles only not nearly as good.

The book spawned a sequel several years later, which I may read, but I may have to get through those other 99 books from my brother first.