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Wasp (1957)

 Wasp (1957)
type
TVTItem
 Wasp (1957)
label
Wasp (1957)
 Wasp (1957)
page
Wasp1957
 Wasp (1957)
comment
Wasp is a 1957 Science Fiction spy thriller novel by Eric Frank Russell.In the future, Earth is engaged in a war with the alien Sirian Empire. The Terrans have the advantage of superior technology, but the Sirians have vastly greater resources and manpower. With the war at an impasse, Terrans need a way to tip the scales way into their favor, and bring the Sirians down for good.Enter James Mowry, who is given an offer he can't refuse: he will lend his skills and talents to the Terran cause and become a "wasp", a lone saboteur whose task is to bring one of the many Sirian planetary governments into chaos and give the Terrans an opportunity to attack. Mowry is given extensive training, disguised as a Sirian and sent to the planet Jaimec. With ample resources at his disposal, he proceeds with the plan, a great part of which is faking the existence of a revolutionary organization, the Dirac Angestun Gesept ("Sirian Freedom Party") to tie up the army and the Sirian State Sec, Kaitempi, with defending themselves against an imaginary enemy. But while the plan is going well, the government of Jaimec is slowly homing in on Mowry's person, and things are getting increasingly riskier.
 Wasp (1957)
fetched
2023-05-10T18:39:05Z
 Wasp (1957)
parsed
2023-05-10T18:39:05Z
 Wasp (1957)
isPartOf
DBTropes
 Wasp (1957) / int_18dd6739
type
Dressing as the Enemy
 Wasp (1957) / int_18dd6739
comment
Dressing as the Enemy: Mowry and a couple of hired thugs disguise themselves as Military Intelligence and Kaitempi in order to break an ally out of jail.
 Wasp (1957) / int_18dd6739
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1.0
 Wasp (1957) / int_18dd6739
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1.0
 Wasp (1957)
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Wasp (1957) / int_18dd6739
 Wasp (1957) / int_1e7159cf
type
Propaganda Machine
 Wasp (1957) / int_1e7159cf
comment
Propaganda Machine: The Sirian empire covers up their military failures and regularly claims spectacular victories over the Terran fleet. The Sirian citizens find it rather hard to believe, though, especially thanks to the "wasps" undermining their morale.
 Wasp (1957) / int_1e7159cf
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1.0
 Wasp (1957) / int_1e7159cf
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 Wasp (1957)
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Wasp (1957) / int_1e7159cf
 Wasp (1957) / int_26d1f65f
type
Verbal Tic
 Wasp (1957) / int_26d1f65f
comment
Verbal Tic: Sirians have a tendency to occasionally add "hi?" at the end of questions, especially when irritated or menacing.
 Wasp (1957) / int_26d1f65f
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1.0
 Wasp (1957) / int_26d1f65f
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1.0
 Wasp (1957)
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Wasp (1957) / int_26d1f65f
 Wasp (1957) / int_2a02e5c9
type
Guile Hero
 Wasp (1957) / int_2a02e5c9
comment
Guile Hero: Mowry relies on his wits and his ability to manipulate people and act unsuspicious.
 Wasp (1957) / int_2a02e5c9
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1.0
 Wasp (1957) / int_2a02e5c9
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 Wasp (1957)
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Wasp (1957) / int_2a02e5c9
 Wasp (1957) / int_34dcfc96
type
Kick the Dog
 Wasp (1957) / int_34dcfc96
comment
Kick the Dog: Sagramatholou's first on-page action is to beat up an old man and kick him while he's down. This grants him Asshole Victim status once he dies by Mowry's hand.
 Wasp (1957) / int_34dcfc96
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 Wasp (1957) / int_34dcfc96
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 Wasp (1957)
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Wasp (1957) / int_34dcfc96
 Wasp (1957) / int_34dd5f3
type
La Résistance
 Wasp (1957) / int_34dd5f3
comment
La Résistance: Mowry's primary task is to make it appear as if La Résistance exists in the form of Dirac Angestun Gesept (the Sirian Freedom Party) in order to distract the government and the State Sec with fighting a nonexistent enemy.
 Wasp (1957) / int_34dd5f3
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 Wasp (1957) / int_34dd5f3
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 Wasp (1957)
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Wasp (1957) / int_34dd5f3
 Wasp (1957) / int_49c62f72
type
Agent Provocateur
 Wasp (1957) / int_49c62f72
comment
Agent Provocateur: James Mowry's role.
 Wasp (1957) / int_49c62f72
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1.0
 Wasp (1957) / int_49c62f72
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 Wasp (1957)
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Wasp (1957) / int_49c62f72
 Wasp (1957) / int_5be7bcfa
type
Older Than They Think
 Wasp (1957) / int_5be7bcfa
comment
Older Than They Think: The book has been described as a "handbook for terrorists", but the techniques used would be very familiar to "dirty tricks" units operating in Nazi-occupied Europe during WW2. Note that the Wasps operate in advance of a military invasion. Attempts to use similar disruption techniques against communist countries during the early Cold War led to inevitable failure once the Secret Police became organized and the Soviet military made it clear they would use force against any serious insurgency.
 Wasp (1957) / int_5be7bcfa
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 Wasp (1957) / int_5be7bcfa
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 Wasp (1957)
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Wasp (1957) / int_5be7bcfa
 Wasp (1957) / int_62fd5552
type
Bavarian Fire Drill
 Wasp (1957) / int_62fd5552
comment
Bavarian Fire Drill: Used by Mowry to great effect. Half of his schemes work on the basis "act as if you were in charge, and nobody will question you". For example, he gets past a military cordon without an exit permit and without being asked too many questions by virtue of being disguised as a Military Intelligence officer and speaking with complete confidence. In another case he manages to plant fake wire-tapping devices on rooftops in full view of numerous bystanders, simply by doing so "openly and with quiet confidence."
 Wasp (1957) / int_62fd5552
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 Wasp (1957) / int_62fd5552
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 Wasp (1957)
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Wasp (1957) / int_62fd5552
 Wasp (1957) / int_7f38c0cd
type
An Offer You Can't Refuse
 Wasp (1957) / int_7f38c0cd
comment
An Offer You Can't Refuse: Mowry has a choice—either to become a wasp, or get conscripted into the regular army.
 Wasp (1957) / int_7f38c0cd
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1.0
 Wasp (1957) / int_7f38c0cd
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 Wasp (1957)
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Wasp (1957) / int_7f38c0cd
 Wasp (1957) / int_8767b1f3
type
Black-and-Gray Morality
 Wasp (1957) / int_8767b1f3
comment
Black-and-Gray Morality: Some characters are deeply immoral, but certain of Mowry's actions are morally gray, such as when he booby-traps two civilian merchant ships, implicitly causing their crews' deaths.
 Wasp (1957) / int_8767b1f3
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1.0
 Wasp (1957) / int_8767b1f3
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1.0
 Wasp (1957)
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Wasp (1957) / int_8767b1f3
 Wasp (1957) / int_8ed5c6e4
type
Asshole Victim
 Wasp (1957) / int_8ed5c6e4
comment
Asshole Victim: Mowry kills two agents of the Kaitempi, the Sirian State Sec known for their sadism and brutality.
 Wasp (1957) / int_8ed5c6e4
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1.0
 Wasp (1957) / int_8ed5c6e4
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 Wasp (1957)
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Wasp (1957) / int_8ed5c6e4
 Wasp (1957) / int_973291cd
type
Pardon My Klingon
 Wasp (1957) / int_973291cd
comment
Pardon My Klingon: The Sirian insult "soko", which apparently means something analogous to "bastard".
 Wasp (1957) / int_973291cd
featureApplicability
1.0
 Wasp (1957) / int_973291cd
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1.0
 Wasp (1957)
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Wasp (1957) / int_973291cd
 Wasp (1957) / int_a0f6ab07
type
Nicknaming the Enemy
 Wasp (1957) / int_a0f6ab07
comment
Nicknaming the Enemy: Sirians call humans "Spakum", which means "bed bug". Humans return the favor by referring to them as "blowflies" (because of their blue bottoms.)
 Wasp (1957) / int_a0f6ab07
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1.0
 Wasp (1957) / int_a0f6ab07
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 Wasp (1957)
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Wasp (1957) / int_a0f6ab07
 Wasp (1957) / int_c6ae3121
type
Modern Stasis
 Wasp (1957) / int_c6ae3121
comment
Modern Stasis: For a planet settled by an interplanetary alien empire from the future, Jaimec's technological level is pretty much on par with 1950s Earth. It might be a tad justified, because Sirians are stated to be technologically inferior, but still.
 Wasp (1957) / int_c6ae3121
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 Wasp (1957) / int_c6ae3121
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 Wasp (1957)
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Wasp (1957) / int_c6ae3121
 Wasp (1957) / int_d0f0a80d
type
One-Word Title
 Wasp (1957) / int_d0f0a80d
comment
One-Word Title
 Wasp (1957) / int_d0f0a80d
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 Wasp (1957) / int_d0f0a80d
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 Wasp (1957)
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Wasp (1957) / int_d0f0a80d
 Wasp (1957) / int_d214a453
type
Planet Terra
 Wasp (1957) / int_d214a453
comment
Planet Terra: Earth is called "Terra" and humans are "Terrans".
 Wasp (1957) / int_d214a453
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 Wasp (1957) / int_d214a453
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Wasp (1957) / int_d214a453
 Wasp (1957) / int_e069fae8
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Bad Guy Bar
 Wasp (1957) / int_e069fae8
comment
Bad-Guy Bar: The Café Susun.
 Wasp (1957) / int_e069fae8
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 Wasp (1957) / int_e069fae8
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 Wasp (1957)
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Wasp (1957) / int_e069fae8
 Wasp (1957) / int_e11b003d
type
Translation Convention
 Wasp (1957) / int_e11b003d
comment
Translation Convention: All conversations in Sirian are in English, but a number of Sirian slang terms remain (the swearword "soko", "yar" and "nar" which mean yes and no, and the Verbal Tic "hi?")
 Wasp (1957) / int_e11b003d
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 Wasp (1957) / int_e11b003d
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 Wasp (1957)
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Wasp (1957) / int_e11b003d
 Wasp (1957) / int_e78aa97d
type
Rubber-Forehead Aliens
 Wasp (1957) / int_e78aa97d
comment
Rubber-Forehead Aliens: The Sirians are very similar to humans, their most striking feature being their purple skin, a "bow-legged gait", and a number of other minor differences. This allows Mowry to pass as a Sirian without suspicions. It also helps (and the primary reason he was recruited) that his family used to live on the Sirian homeworld for a number of years before hostilities arose, so he knows their language and customs (one of the plot points is his inability to hide his homeworld accent on a remote, backwater planet).
 Wasp (1957) / int_e78aa97d
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 Wasp (1957) / int_e78aa97d
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 Wasp (1957)
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Wasp (1957) / int_e78aa97d
 Wasp (1957) / int_e933b1f7
type
Follow That Car
 Wasp (1957) / int_e933b1f7
comment
Follow That Car: A variant. Mowry doesn't outright tell the taxi driver to "follow that car" to avoid drawing suspicion to himself. Instead he claims that he's unable to exactly name where he's heading, but he remembers how to get there, so if the driver would just please follow the directions that Mowry will give during the journey...
 Wasp (1957) / int_e933b1f7
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 Wasp (1957) / int_e933b1f7
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 Wasp (1957)
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Wasp (1957) / int_e933b1f7
 Wasp (1957) / int_f1c860c4
type
Spider-Sense
 Wasp (1957) / int_f1c860c4
comment
Spider-Sense: One of the things that Mowry is taught: if you ever feel an inexplicable sense of dread, treat it seriously and run, because it usually means that they're onto you. (It's speculated that this is actually subconscious telepathy, sensing the enemy agents' mental focus on catching him.) It saves Mowry's life at least once, making him move to a different apartament just before his current one is raided.
 Wasp (1957) / int_f1c860c4
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 Wasp (1957) / int_f1c860c4
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 Wasp (1957)
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Wasp (1957) / int_f1c860c4
 Wasp (1957) / int_f777d4b9
type
You Got Murder
 Wasp (1957) / int_f777d4b9
comment
You Got Murder: One of Mowry's tactics is to send packages to several officials, which contain a loudly ticking mechanism and a message saying "This package could have killed you". He later sends another batch which looks and sounds exactly the same on the outside... except this time the bombs are real.
 Wasp (1957) / int_f777d4b9
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 Wasp (1957) / int_f777d4b9
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 Wasp (1957)
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Wasp (1957) / int_f777d4b9
 Wasp (1957) / int_f9adfcdf
type
Enemies List
 Wasp (1957) / int_f9adfcdf
comment
Enemies List: Invoked. After every kill, the "Dirac Angestun Gesept" sends out a message where they claim responsibility and state that "the list is long."
 Wasp (1957) / int_f9adfcdf
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1.0
 Wasp (1957) / int_f9adfcdf
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 Wasp (1957)
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Wasp (1957) / int_f9adfcdf
 Wasp (1957) / int_ffb79066
type
Chromosome Casting
 Wasp (1957) / int_ffb79066
comment
Chromosome Casting: An extreme example. No women are ever mentioned in the novel, even as background characters.
 Wasp (1957) / int_ffb79066
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Wasp (1957)

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Wasp (1957)
hasFeature
Alien Works / int_84fe82fe
 Animal Title Index
processingUnknown
Wasp (1957)
 Wasp (1957)
hasFeature
Chromosome Casting / int_84fe82fe
 Wasp (1957)
hasFeature
Dressing as the Enemy / int_84fe82fe
 Wasp (1957)
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English Literature / int_84fe82fe
 Wasp (1957)
hasFeature
Follow That Car / int_84fe82fe
 Wasp (1957)
hasFeature
Modern Stasis / int_84fe82fe
 Wasp (1957)
hasFeature
Nicknaming the Enemy / int_84fe82fe
 Wasp (1957)
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Pardon My Klingon / int_84fe82fe
 Wasp (1957)
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Propaganda Machine / int_84fe82fe
 Wasp (1957)
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Rubber-Forehead Aliens / int_84fe82fe
 Wasp (1957)
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Spider-Sense / int_84fe82fe
 Wasp (1957)
hasFeature
You Got Murder / int_84fe82fe