QRM-Interplanetary by George O. Smith

(11 User reviews)   2327
By Andrew Robinson Posted on Apr 1, 2026
In Category - The Front Room
Smith, George O. (George Oliver), 1911-1981 Smith, George O. (George Oliver), 1911-1981
English
Hey, have you ever wondered what happens when the communication system that connects an entire solar empire starts to fail? Not just a glitch, but something that feels deliberate? That's the hook for 'QRM-Interplanetary.' Forget fancy aliens or laser battles; this is a classic sci-fi mystery where the villain might just be a crackle of static. George O. Smith drops you into a future where Venus, Earth, and Mars rely on a delicate web of radio signals. When those signals get jammed by mysterious interference—what they call QRM—it's not just an inconvenience. It threatens to cut planets off from each other, sparking panic and pointing fingers. The story follows the engineers and officials scrambling to find the source. Is it sabotage? A natural phenomenon? Or something nobody anticipated? It's a race against time to save the thing that holds civilization together: the ability to talk. If you like smart, idea-driven stories where the real drama is in solving a technical puzzle with huge stakes, you'll get a kick out of this.
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Published in 1947, QRM-Interplanetary is a fascinating slice of classic science fiction. George O. Smith imagines a settled Solar System where Venus and Mars are colonies, all connected by a complex network of radio communication. This isn't background detail—it's the central nervous system of human civilization. The plot kicks off when this system comes under attack from pervasive radio interference, known as QRM. Messages are garbled, navigation is thrown off, and trust between planets begins to fray.

The Story

The book follows a team of engineers and government agents as they try to hunt down the source of the jamming. Suspicions fly: Is it Martian separatists? Venusian industrial spies? Or is it coming from somewhere closer to home? The investigation is a step-by-step process of elimination, using the science of radio waves as their primary tool. There are corporate rivalries, political tensions, and a real sense of urgency as the economic and social fabric of interplanetary society starts to unravel. The solution isn't found with a blaster, but with a schematic and a lot of logical deduction.

Why You Should Read It

What makes this book special is its focus on problem-solving. The heroes are thinkers, not fighters. Smith, who was an electrical engineer, makes the tech feel real and integral to the plot. You don't need to be an expert to follow along—he explains the concepts clearly through the characters' actions. The central idea—that our greatest vulnerability might be the systems we depend on to communicate—feels incredibly relevant today. It's a quiet, clever story about ingenuity under pressure.

Final Verdict

This is a perfect pick for readers who enjoy "hard" sci-fi where the science is part of the plot, not just set dressing. If you like the puzzle-box mysteries of Arthur C. Clarke's early work or the technical thrill of stories about preventing a disaster, you'll appreciate this. It's not a character-driven epic; it's a tight, focused novel about an idea. Think of it as a scientific detective story set in space. A genuine gem from the Golden Age that still has something to say about technology, society, and the quiet heroes who keep it all running.



📢 Public Domain Content

This text is dedicated to the public domain. Feel free to use it for personal or commercial purposes.

Sandra Jones
11 months ago

A bit long but worth it.

5
5 out of 5 (11 User reviews )

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