The Jupiter Theft is a 1977 science fiction novel by American writer Donald Moffitt, re-printed in 2003 with a new afterword.[1]

The Jupiter Theft
Cover of the first edition
AuthorDonald Moffitt
Cover artistH. R. Van Dongen
LanguageEnglish
GenreScience fiction
PublisherDel Rey Books
Publication date
1977
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint (Paperback)
ISBN0-345-25505-4
OCLC3034690
813/.5/4
LC ClassPZ4.M6964 Ju PS3563.O297

Plot summary

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The initial part of the novel mixes near-future thriller and disaster novel scenarios that focusses on the discovery of a moving gamma-ray sources headed towards Earth from the direction of Cygnus X-1. The diversion of a Chinese-American joint Jupiter mission to investigate the new Solar System intruder. The Chinese and Americans are mutually antagonistic politically, espionage, and suspicion must be overcome for the Jupiter Mission to go ahead.

Once the Mission intercepts the intruder, the story shifts into an alien contact scenario. The "intruder" is actually the silicate core of a Jovian planet which is orbited by a moon and five immense alien spacecraft. The Jupiter Mission is intercepted mid-space by aliens, dubbed Cygnans, that rides on matter-annihilation powered "broomsticks".

The mission is essentially destroyed with the surviving crew taken alive as specimens for a Cygnan zoo.

Now imprisoned, the Sino-American crew attempt to contact the Cygnans and seek to discover their true purpose of appearing in this Solar System. Using a Moog synthesizer and one member named Jameson's natural gift of perfect pitch, he learns to understand and then "speak" the Cygnan musical language. Jameson then learns more about the Cygnans through their didactic historical films.

Jameson discovers that the Cygnans have travelled for 6,000 light years escaping a home planet orbiting the progenitor star of Cygnus X-1. The Cygnans discovered that it was on course to collapse to a black hole that now occupies their origin in space. While searching for a new home and to do so, they raided numerous star systems for Jupiter-mass "gas giant" planets to use as fuel.

The stop-off proved to be a particularly significant one because after they found in every other visited habitable planets heading progressively further from the Galactic Center of the Milky Way that they had already been populated with intelligent beings. Their next destination is Andromeda with the hope that a new galaxy may offer better results.

A fluffy pink bird-like humanoid, 61 Cygni, was another zoo kept prisoner. 61 who helped the earthlings with escaping the Cygnans.

The Sino-Americans foil a last-ditch sabotage attempt and escape the starship just before the strange convoy was planning to leave our Solar System. Their escape from the zoo required a working example of a new Cygnan Thrust System that the Sino-Americans develop into a much faster though still, barely, subluminal, and more efficient that could use passing comets to fuel this system instead of stealing entire planets.

References

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  1. ^ Stableford, Brian M. (2004). Historical Dictionary of Science Fiction Literature. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-4938-9.