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1[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/tuf_2764.jpg]]
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3''Tuf Voyaging'' is an early work by Creator/GeorgeRRMartin of ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'' fame, described by Website/ThatOtherWiki as 'a darkly comic meditation on environmentalism and absolute power', which sounds about right. It stars the eponymous Haviland Tuf, a reclusive, phlegmatic, ''very'' eccentric chap with a great love of SpockSpeak and a great distaste for pettiness. And he often finds his fellow man to be very, very petty. He wants nothing more than to fly around the universe in his CoolStarship, The Ark, with his beloved cats and to make an honest living plying his trade.
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5There's a problem. A couple, actually. The Ark is a thirty-kilometer long seedship of the ancient Ecological Engineering Corps, with the power to clone and genetically engineer everything from plants to animals to bacteria. Tuf's trade is in ecological engineering, reshaping the ecologies of entire planets as his clients ask (for a [[BlatantLies modest]] fee). And the universe is [[CrapsackWorld not a nice place]].
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7The seven stories in ''Tuf Voyaging'' chart Haviland Tuf's [[CharacterDevelopment growth]] from a bumbling SpannerInTheWorks to a fully-fledged [[TheChessmaster chessmaster]] with a burgeoning [[AGodAmI god complex]]. The stories are as follows:
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9* '''The Plague Star''' (1985): OriginsEpisode. A {{Jerkass}} professor and her colleague theorise that the legendary Plague Star is a lost seedship of the E.E.C, and hire three mercenaries and a down-on-his-luck merchant by the name of Haviland Tuf to take them to it. Events... develop and ultimately lead to Tuf being the only "legitimate" owner of the ship.
10* '''Loaves and Fishes''' (1985): Tuf takes his newly-acquired prize to the technologically advanced planet of S'uthlam to get alterations made to the ancient ship. S'uthlam has a few problems of its own, though - the S'uthlamese breed like rabbits, and the planet is on the brink of famine.
11* '''Guardians''' (1981): A water world is being torn apart by sea monsters who are evolving and adapting at an insane rate. A [[PsychicPowers psychic]] kitten provides a solution.
12* '''Second Helpings''' (1985): Tuf returns to S'uthlam to pay off the first half of his debt and finds things have gotten worse.
13* '''A Beast for Norn''' (1986): A man from the gladiatorial fighting obsessed planet of Lyronica approaches Tuf for an animal that can reverse his faction's ailing fortunes.
14* '''Call Him Moses''' (1978): A terrorist has brought a colony to its knees by recreating the Biblical plagues, and Tuf is called in to beat him at his own game.
15* '''Manna from Heaven''' (1985): Once again, Tuf returns to S'uthlam to pay off the final part of his debt. Things are worse than ever there though, and the newly-elected Expansionist government has an entire solar system on the brink of war. Tuf has to solve the problem of S'uthlam once and for all, whether they like it or not.
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17!!This fix-up novel contains examples of:
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19* TheAlliance: Other planets form one to stop S'uthlam from colonizing them.
20* AlwaysABiggerFish: Subverted. WildCard Rica Dawnstar has Tuf outgunned and at her mercy, and refuses to believe him when he tries to point out the ''T. rex'' creeping up behind her. It looks like this trope will kick in... then it turns out she was toying with Tuf, and had the Phlebotinium to control the ''T. rex'' all along.
21* AmbiguouslyHuman: He's nearly eight feet tall, hairless and has an albino complexion (but dark eyes, so not an albino) but everyone accepts him as human, possibly because the only non-human sapients known are StarfishAliens. Made more ambiguous by the fact that his origins are never revealed.
22* ApocalypticLog: The prologue to ''The Plague Star.''
23* AppealToForce: “What matters fairness, when one party has a gun and one does not? Brute violence rules everywhere, and intelligence and good intent are trampled upon.”
24* ArtifactOfAttraction: The Ark. Tuf ended up with it simply by being the only one ''not'' trying to kill his associates to claim it. Then he takes it to S'uthlam for repairs, where the government starts doing all they can to get ahold of it.
25* ArtificialGravity: Available via something called a "gravity grid". It's only installed in expensive top-line spacecraft, though, and less expensive craft make do with centrifugal rotation or nothing.
26* BeastlyBloodsports: "A Beast for Norn". The twelve Great Houses of the planet Lyronica use creatures native to their planet as combatants in gaming pits. Tuf disapproves of this cruelty to animals, so he sells each of the Houses an alien creature that annihilates the other Houses' creatures in combat. He charges an ever-increasing outrageous fee for each creature, makes sure that each one has a serious quirk that will make it impossible to use over the long term, and gives each House an extra creature (a seemingly harmless prey animal that breeds quickly) that devastates its ecosystem. As a result, all of the Houses end up on the brink of bankruptcy and with no animals to use in their fights.
27* BewareTheNiceOnes: Harass, inconvenience or worst of all, ''disgust'' Haviland Tuf at your own peril.
28* BondCreature: The Ecological Engineering Corps bred telepathic cats that bonded with human handlers to counteract alien psi-weapons. In "Guardians" Tuf clones several to act as intermediaries between the planet's human colonists and the StarfishAliens natives, including Dax, his constant companion in chronologically later stories.
29* BondOneLiner: From ''The Plague Star'': "I had a [[{{BFG}} gun]], too."
30* CatsAreMagic: Tuf maintains that all cats have a measure of psi ability, Dax and his siblings/clones certainly do, as do the "cobalt panthers" he sells to House Norn.
31* ComesGreatResponsibility: Tuf ''lives'' by this trope... and ultimately deconstructs it by pointing out that "responsibility" doesn't just mean "ethical action" but "don't delegate hard decisions"; [[spoiler:when S'uthlam summons him to design new food sources for the ''third'' time rather than stem their population growth, he gives them the best food source he can design... infused with a SterilityPlague]].
32-->"I do indeed wield godlike powers and traffic in the life and death of worlds. Enjoying as I do these godlike abilities, can I rightfully decline the accompanying responsibility, the equally awesome burden of moral authority? I think not."
33* ChekhovsGun: [[spoiler:An especially literal example with the plasma cannon]] at the end of "The Plague Star".
34* TheChessmaster / MagnificentBastard: Tuf starts off as a ''very'' clever man who others constantly underestimate. He plays off this advantage brilliantly, and by the end of the book evolves into a MagnificentBastard, holding sway over the lives of billions by controlling whether or not a massive interstellar war will erupt.
35* ChronicBackstabbingDisorder: Every single character in ''The Plague Star'' except Tuf himself seems to suffer from it, possibly combined with an acute case of GoldFever.
36* ComicBookAdaptation: An adaptation of ''The Plague Star'' by Raya Golden and Ann Marcilleno has been announced. With possibly more stories adapted if it's successful.
37* CrapsackWorld: The setting is shared with another Martin novel, ''Literature/DyingOfTheLight'' (and a number of short stories), and the universe is a pretty chaotic place. Ever since the Human-Hrangan war and the devastation that followed the Hrangan's desperate LastStand, Earth has been a closed-off planet, along with its most prosperous and advanced colonies, like Prometheus. There is no centralized government, leaving individual colonies to degenerate into near-barbaric feudal-like societies (with a few exceptions; Avalon, Baldur and Jameson's World are shown to be doing well for themselves in other stories), and the technologies behind genetic/ecological engineering and time manipulation are all but lost to everyone else, which makes the Ark a very sought-after treasure trove. Oh, and there were a bunch of [[AIIsACrapshoot AI rebellions]] at some point.
38* CrewOfOne: Tuf (if you don't count his pets as crew). One of the most extreme examples out there, in terms of ship size. After acquiring the ship, one of the first things he does is get drastic modifications made to the control systems, which were clearly designed to partition different responsibilities to different people.
39* DeadpanSnarker: Tuf's never averse to slipping a bit of snark in via his usual SpockSpeak.
40* TheDitherer: {{Deconstructed}}. No matter how complex, sadistic or just plain ''hard'' a decision is, waiting too long to make it is the worst thing one can do.
41-->"Make no choice, and you have chosen. Failure to decide, because you lack the right, is itself a decision, First Councillor. In abstaining, you vote."
42* DumbIsGood: From The Plague Star, "An intriguing notion, with much to recommend it," said Tuf. "Some might venture to suggest that it was unethical, true, but the true sophisticate retains a certain moral flexibility."
43* FutureFoodIsArtificial: Meatbeasts are a carnivorous version; they're basically giant edible tumors. S'uthlam also has the technology to manufacture artificial food out of inedible organic materials like petroleum or plankton, although the taste is unimpressive.
44* FutureImperfect: It's not a big deal, but there are moments showing that history hasn't survived entirely intact.
45** In "Second Helpings", Tolly Mune lists great lovers of legend - Theatre/RomeoAndJuliet, [[Literature/BookOfJudges Samson and Delilah]], [[Literature/TheBible Sodom and Gomorrah]], [[OddNameOut Marx and Lenin.]]
46** In "Call Him Moses", Tuf notes that there's a historical connection between the original Moses and the Noah after whose Ark his ship is named, but he's not sure what it is -- brothers, perhaps?
47* GeniusBruiser: Tuf is north of seven feet tall; once, when he was attacked, he subdued his opponent by picking him up and dropping him.
48* GlobalCurrency: "Standards", which Tuf usually insists on being paid in, seem to be some sort of interstellar currency of high value. Though there are local currencies like S'uthlam's "calories" (backed by local food) and the iron and gold coins used on Lyronica.
49* AGodAmI: Having always had the power of a god through The Ark, Tuf slowly begins to wonder if he also has the responsibility and authority of one to boot. The question is left open, of course, and even his most questionable acts are borne out of generally good intentions.
50* HatesBeingTouched: Haviland Tuf.
51* HostileTerraforming: The Ark's original purpose, having originally been a warship. The old Empire's Ecological Engineering Corps used it to rain down plagues and bioweapons upon hostile worlds.
52* AHouseDivided: The five people who hire Tuf for the expedition to the titular ''Plague Star'' aren't all that ethical, rational, or perhaps ''sane.'' As soon as they get there, everyone save Tuf starts screwing everyone else over trying to control it. Then the ship's countermeasures start activating, demonstrating exactly ''why'' it's called the "Plague Star." Tuf ends up the [[FinalGirl only survivor]] simply by being the only one trying to survive with minimal bloodshed.
53* IntroducedSpeciesCalamity: The Ark was designed by the ancient Terran Federation to perform this using cell samples from a thousand worlds and cloning tanks with temporal acceleration. In one notable story Tuf is hired to produce gladiatorial animals for a feudal world and throws in some "harmless" animals for their beasts to prey upon, only for the rapid-breeding critters to ravage his clients' farmland (he despises cruelty to animals you know.)
54* KarmicDeath: After causing the death of Tuf's cat, Mushroom, Celise Waan bumps into a bunch of "[[KillerRabbit hellkittens]]" - felines from a DeathWorld. Who spit acid. She can't defend herself because she's infected with a debilitating plague. In fact, she got Mushroom killed by using it to test the air's safety, but her stupidity prevented her from realizing the air was ''not'' safe to breathe.
55* KickTheDog: Celise Waan, the professor who hires Tuf, never got on with his cats. But ''cycling one out of the airlock into the Ark's disease-ridden air?'' Tuf later has to MercyKill the poor animal, [[TearJerker prompting one of the only shows of emotion we ever get from him]].
56* LivingLieDetector: Dax is psychic, and can alert Tuf when someone isn't being completely honest.
57* LookBehindYou: Played with in "The Plague Star". When Tuf attempts to warn Rica Dawnstar that there's a ravenous ''T. rex'' sneaking up behind her, she tells him sternly that she's not going to fall for "the old there's-a-dinosaur-behind-you gambit" -- even though it's making enough noise that she must know it's there. It turns out she's messing with Tuf, as she's perfectly aware that it's there, and she's actually controlling it.
58* MeaningfulName: Tuf ''is'' tough, and never let his attitude fool you.
59* MileLongShip: The Ark is 30 kilometers, some 18.6 miles, in length.
60* MiniMecha: The Unquin battlesuit.
61* MultipurposeMonoculturedCrop: Tuf creates several of these, particularly for S'uthlam, which is so overpopulated that it needs it. Finally, he presents them with "manna", a plant which grows anywhere, provides all the nutrition a human needs, and tastes different and wonderful every time. [[spoiler:It also nips the root cause of S'uthlam's problems in the bud by inflicting a SterilityPlague]].
62* NoSuchThingAsSpaceJesus: Moses uses genetic engineering to recreate the plagues of Egypt. Tuf uses holograms to pretend to be God and uses genetic engineering to outdo Moses' plagues.
63* PlanetOfHats: Done in rather more detail than usual with S'uthlam. Their tendency to pop out babies at a ridiculous rate is tied in to everything: their main religion, the Church of Life Evolving, believes mankind can find divinity through procreating and evolution, calling someone an "abortion" is a dire insult and even the planet's technological expertise is tied in to number of geniuses the large population ends up producing.
64** Also done in less depth with Lyronica, where everything revolves around the [[SeriousBusiness pit fighting]].
65* PracticalCurrency: The S’uthlamese currency is ''literally'' the calorie. Period. Off-world money is only worth the food it will buy -- either raw synthetic protein or expensive cultivated/imported crops. If you want something tastier than mush, you must not be very hungry.
66* PsychicPowers: Tuf maintains that all cats have a touch of psi, and in the later stories he is accompanied at all times by a cat that he has engineered to be actively psychic, which functions as a LivingLieDetector and an early warning system for people planning to attack him. Also there's the telepathic StarfishAliens in "Guardians", and the eponymous critter in "A Beast for Norn" that gains an advantage in fights by reading the intentions of its opponent.
67* ReplacementGoldfish: The first thing Tuf does with the god-like powers of the ''Ark'' at his disposal? Clone his dead cat.
68* RightHandCat: A succession of cats take this role for Tuf over the course of the series. The later ones, as Tuf becomes more adept with the seedship's tools, have a variety of useful abilities built in.
69* RuleOfSymbolism: Tuf eventually comes to realize this applies to his voyages upon the Ark.
70-->"I began as a trader, yet having come upon this ship called Ark, I began to find myself dogged at every step by gods, prophets, and demons. Noah and the flood, Moses and his plagues, loaves and fishes, manna, pillars of fire, wives of salt—I must needs have become acquainted with all."
71* SapientShip: Subverted, where the biological engineering warship Tuf 'inherits' as the last surviving member of a freelance salvage team is specifically NOT sentient, though it could have been made so; there is brief mention of AI installed on other Earth warships which [[AIIsACrapshoot mutinied and/or started fighting each other]].
72* SdrawkcabName: S'uthlam, with the "th" resisting inversion.
73* ScienceHero: Tuf, who uses the Ark and his knowledge of ecological engineering to solve various worlds' problems... for a fee.
74* SesquipedalianLoquaciousness: Tuf's usual mode of speaking. Hell, the merchant ship he flew before he had The Ark was named ''The Cornucopia of Excellent Goods At Low Prices''.
75* SingleBiomePlanet: [[MeaningfulName Namor]], an ocean world.
76* SpaceAmish: Moses and the Altruists.
77* SpaceElevator: S'uthlam has one, connecting the orbital spaceport to the planet's surface. It's mentioned as a sign of the planet being highly advanced technologically.
78* StandardTimeUnits: The setting has standard years, weeks, hours, etc. The "standard" part is dropped some but not all of the time. S'uthlam also uses a local month (of unknown length). In addition, the text refers to a "standard kilometre" at one point, even though logically there should be no reason to have a non-standard kilometre.
79* StarbucksSkinScale: Anittas in "The Plague Star" has "mocha-colored" skin.
80* StarfishAliens: Are at the root of the problem in "Guardians". [[spoiler: Almost literally, although to be precise they are perhaps more limpet than starfish. People eat them as delicacies because they're so ''alien'' that nobody expected them to be capable of feeling pain, much less communicating.]]
81* SterilityPlague: S'uthlam is so obsessed with having children that, in "Manna from Heaven", [[spoiler:Tuf gets so sick of having to come back and design new food sources for ''third time'' that he engineers his new MultipurposeMonoculturedCrop to irreversibly sterilize 95% of its consumers, simply because they will not curb their population explosion voluntarily]].
82* TheStoic: Haviland Tuf is expressionless in face and voice. In moments of high emotion, he might blink. He smiles exactly ''once'' in the entire book, and that's more for effect than an expression of genuine emotion.
83* SyntheticPlague: The seedships' primary purpose, along with larger living weapons. The ''Ark's'' prior crew set it to expose its virus cultures to radiation and rain down the resulting plagues on the Hrun planet they were near whenever its orbit brought them close together. [[spoiler:And Tuf solves the S'uthlam's overpopulation problems permanently by putting a SterilityPlague in the third and final food supply he gives them]].
84* TakeTheWheel: Haviland Tuf has Tolly Mune take the wheel while he concentrates on calming his favorite cat and keeping it from leaping into trouble.
85* {{Terraforming}}: S'uthlam has a series of terraformed asteroids called The Larder where they grow crops.
86* TheTopicOfCancer: There's a "cancer creature/living tumor" example in the "Meatbeast" that Haviland Tuf proposes as a temporary solution to [[SdrawkcabName S'uthlam's]] overpopulation induced food shortage.
87* TrademarkFavoriteFood: Tuf loves mushrooms.
88* WhoWouldWantToWatchUs: Upon his first return to S'uthlam, Tuf finds himself hailed as a hero and the subject of a hagiographic movie VeryLooselyBasedOnATrueStory. Bonus points; the movie was created by Tolly Mune, the {{Deuteragonist}} involved, who ''deliberately'' made up '''everything''' except the key events which were public record; "Tuf comes to S'uthlam to have his amazing seedship repaired, pays for the repairs with miraculous food technology, and is forced to escape with the help of the heroic Tolly Mune when the government tries to steal the ship." Mune even added a [[RomanticPlotTumor torrid romance between herself and Tuf]] to play on S'uthlamese obsession with breeding and boost her nascent political career.

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