


On a planet called S’uthlam, for example, Tuf argues that overpopulation is going to prevent any solutions, which spurs a debate about religious beliefs vs. Many of the ecological problems that Tuf is called on to solve have a human element to them. It’s always a delight to find out that he understands perfectly. At times the reader thinks Tuf may not be perceiving what is happening around him. He’s a man of many words, delivered in a dry yet eloquent way that never gets old. The major appeal of Tuf Voyaging is the character of Haviland Tuf. With his cats, Tuf flies from world to world solving ecological problems. He parks the Cornucopia of Excellent Goods at Low Prices in one of the bays and starts using the ship’s stunning biological capabilities to make a living as an Ecological Engineer. Through a crazy series of events that involve a Tyrannosaurus rex, Tuf ends up in sole possession of the massive seedship he calls the Ark. The cause of the disease is found when Cornucopia of Excellent Goods at Low Prices is damaged after triggering a seedship’s defenses: a seedship of the Ecological Engineering Corp from the Federal Empire, an ancient polity that has since faded into myth. He takes on four people that hire him for transport to a “plague star”, which contains a planet that has been ravaged by disease. He’s not a great trader, but he’s earnest.

In the first story, Tuf is the captain of a trading spaceship he calls the Cornucopia of Excellent Goods at Low Prices. Tuf Voyaging is a fix-up novel containing stories he wrote during this period starring a man named Haviland Tuf. He wrote particularly excellent short fiction, which garnered him a handful of awards, including Hugos for “Sandkings”, “The Way of Cross and Dragon”, and “A Song for Lya”. In the 1970’s and 80’s, long before he wrote the Song of Ice and Fire books, George R.R.
