The following material was posted to the original
"larryniven-l" mail list in 1995 by its manager, Frank Wilson of Bucknell
University. As it was put in the public domain at that time I am assuming
that Dr Wilson has no objections to its being placed on a web page now.
However, if anyone who sees this page thinks that there may be some objection,
please let the webmasters know.
Frank Wilson wrote:
Since things have been quiet on the List
lately, as a prompting of discussion I'm posting a handout which I usually
distribute to my students when I teach Ringworld in my philosophy
classes (and other courses as well). The book is a lengthy (300+ pp.)
read, and many of the students find it difficult to pull everything
together, especially since it's only when one gets into the last quarter
of the book that the plot structure becomes really apparent. Thus I
provide the following as a kind of analytical table of contents for
them, which follows the divisions of the text that Niven himself seems
to have employed.
Let me know your reactions to this analysis,
and I'd certainly welcome any suggestions for improvement. Also, if
any of you have similar reading aids for any other works by Niven that
the Listmembers might find useful, you might post them as well. Such
analyses and organizational tools help to bring out the thematic and
the plot structures of Niven's works. For example, the one below helps
to point up the significance of the fact that Niven (quite deliberately)
structures the novel in terms of two chapters (#12 and #24) which are
both entitled "Fist of God", and which mark the ends of the two halves
of the novel.
Frank Wilson
List Manager/LARRYNlVEN-L
Department of Philosophy Bucknell University
Lewisburg, PA. 17837
fwilson@bucknell.edu
Manager, LOGIC-L, PHILCAMUS, KANT-L, PHIL-LOGIC, HEGEL-L, LARRYNIVEN-L,
DESCARTES-L
Ringworld:
Chapter and Scene Analysis
Ch. 1: Louis Wu (3 scenes)
- Louis Wu's 200th
Birthday; his situation
- Kidnap and interview
by a Pierson's Puppeteer
- Meeting with Kzinti
Ch. 2. And His Motley Crew (7 scenes)
- Louis' return to
his party and his conversation with Teela
- Arrival of Nessus
and Speaker at Louis' party
- Discussion of the
expedition in Louis' office
- Method of travel
and destination of the expedition
- Louis' further conversation
with Teela, and Nessus' discovery of who she is.
- Teela's qualifications
for the expedition
- The Birthright lottery
and breeding for luck
Ch. 3. Teela Brown (4 scenes)
- Teela's refusal
to join the expedition
- Teela's and Louis'
liason
- Two days later:
Nessus' depressive phase
- Louis and Teela
discuss the Core Explosion; Teela's decision to join the expedition.
Ch. 4. Speaker to Animals (3 scenes)
- Teela's love for
Louis
- Nereid, the Outsiders,
and Speaker's attempt to steal the ., Long Shot.
- Departure from Sol
System
Ch. 5. Rosette (3 scenes)
- The trip to the
Puppeteer migration; Louis' reflections on Teela
- Arrival at the Klemperer
rosette of puppeteer worlds and the awakening of the crew
- Puppeteer history,
heat pollution, the moving of worlds, and living forever
Ch. 6. Christmas Ribbon (3 scenes)
- Landing on the puppeteer
homeworld; Nessus's departure to report to the Hindmost and "Those-who-lead"
- Chiron briefs the
crew about the Ringworld
- History of human
first contacts with technologically advanced species, and speculations
about the Ringworld Engineers
Ch. 7: Stepping Discs (4 scenes)
- The puppeteers'
reasons for investigating the Ringworld; Nessus wins mating and parenthood
rights from Those-who-lead-from-behind
- The puppeteer system
of open transfer booths; introduction to the expedition spaceship
- Layout and equipment
of the ship; departure.
- Louis names the
ship the Lying Bastard
Ch. 8: Ringworld (4 scenes)
- Deceleration from
hyperdrive and entering the Ringworld system
- Attempts to communicate
with the Ringworlders; comments on Dyson spheres; Nessus' refusal to
land on the Ringworld.
- Along the Ringworld
rim; the abandoned spaceport
- The underside of
the Ringworld; size and scale, seabottoms and mountains, meteor impacts
Ch. 9: Shadow Squares (10 scenes)
- Arguments over next
steps
- Anomalies in the
Shadow Squares
- Orbital complications
- Laser attack
- Louis' theory of
Teela's luck as a statistical fluke
- Around the sun and
collision with the shadow square wires
- Speaker's EVA
- The nature and role
of shadow square wire.
- Pre-landing pleasures
- Landing (crash)
on the Ringworld.
Ch.
10: The Ring Floor (4 scenes)
- Teela's impulsive
exit from the ship and her first lesson
- Teela's second lesson;
Louis' view of the Liar's landing track and of the Ringworld horizon;
his first sight of Fist-of-God. Local topography of the landing area
- Preparations for
exploration; the decision to seek civilization for help in repairing
the Liar; Louis' advice to Teela about the Finagle universe; Flycycles,
weapons, and command
- Final preparations
for departure: food and camping supplies, communicator discs.
Ch. 11: The Arch of Heaven (4 scenes)
- Takeoff, and the
rest of the crew's reactions to the scenery and size of the Ringworld;
the emergence of the Arch in the night sky, and Nessus' flight response;
Speaker's decision on the direction of travel.
- Louis and Nessus
consult, and Nessus agrees to turn command over to Speaker; Nessus'
reconsideration of the "lucky human" theory
- The expedition's
first dawn on Ringworld; first notice of the "bright spot" ahead
- Teela's trance;
the first sighting of Ringworld inhabitants, (human)
Ch. 12: Fist-of-God (7 scenes)
- Landing; testing
of the flora and fauna
- Louis' attempt to
explain hypnosis to Speaker and Nessus; Nessus' revelation of the existence
of starseed lures, and Speaker's reaction; Teela's awakening
- Teela's and Louis'
interlude; Speaker's rabbit-chasing
- Discussion of the
Ringworld natives, and plans for making contact with them
- The city of ruined
flying buildings (Zignamuclikclik)
- The city-dwellers,
and the teams's first communication with Ringworld inhabitants
- The lynch mob, and
Nessus' demonstration of the the puppeteer defense reaction; Speaker's
fighting reflex
Ch. 13: Starseed Lure (5 scenes)
- Afterthoughts on
the city-dweller's reactions, on mistakes, and on the true nature of
the puppeteer flight reflex
- Size and scale of
the Ringworld
- Second dawn, viewed
in flight, and Louis' reflections on the puppeteers' relations with
humans and kzinti; "the light dawns" for him about the significance
of Nessus' references to the starseed lures and the puppeteers' manipulations
of humans and kzinti; he inadvertently lets "the cat out of the bag,"
revealing to Speaker what he's concluded; Speaker confronts Nessus with
their conclusions over the intercom, and Nessus cuts and runs. Nessus's
verbal confirmation of their inferences, and his revelation of the puppeteer
strategy. Teela's reaction, and Louis' realization of the puppeteer's
breeding of humans for luck. The "playing god" theme; Nessus is excluded
from the group.
- Erosion, and Louis'
conference with Nessus
- Empty river channels
Ch.
14: Interlude, with Sunflowers (8 scenes)
- Louis talks Speaker
into landing for rest and consultation
- Louis calls Teela
to invite her to land also.
- Louis' proposal
to play God to the Ringworld natives.
- Speaker's rejection
of Nessus' participation in the god gambit
- Louis' consoling
of Teela
- More arguments about
bringing Nessus back
- Sunflower attack,
with Speaker injured.
- Investigation of
the Sunflowers, and the question of their origin
Ch.
15. Dream Castle (10 scenes)
- Digging a hiding
hole
- Medical treatment
for Speaker
- A warning to Nessus
about the Sunflower field
- Sleeping through
the day
- Leaving the Sunflower
field behind.
- A light in the night
- Landing on the floating
castle (Heaven)
- Sight-seeing, sleep,
and shadow-square wire
- The castle kitchen
- Breakfast, and Speaker's
announcement about the discovery of the Map Room
Ch. 16: The Map Room (4 scenes)
- Louis and Speaker
climb (laboriously) to the map room and examine its revelations
- Views of the spaceport,
and Teela's (easy) arrival (by a luckily operating escalator)
- The congregation
in the square below the building, and the god gambit again; second communication
with Ringworld natives
- Louis' conversation
with the priest; the destruction of the translator discs
Ch. 17.
The Eye of the Storm (4 scenes)
- Departure from Heaven,
and Louis' exchange with Nessus . about the collapse of Ringworld civilization.
- The sighting of
the "Eye of God," and Speaker's account of the Kdapt-Preacher heresy
on Kzin; the question of whether to go through the Eye, or around it.
- Nessus' explanation
of the Eye storm, and his argument for going through it to investigate
the phenomenon
- Teela gets caught
by the vortex, and escapes it by luck
Ch. 18. The Perils of Teela Brown (4 scenes)
- Speaker allows Nessus
to rejoin the expedition, and Louis realizes the influence of Teela's
luck; they regain communication with Teela and prepare to meet with
her.
- Nessus arrives,
and Louis explains his theory about the nature of Teela's luck; Teela
encounters a trap over a lighted city, and falls out of contact with
the rest of the team. The team arrives at the skyscraper city hunting
her.
- Over Nessus's objections,
Speaker and Louis embark on a night search of the city for Teela, leaving
Nessus behind.
- Speaker and Louis
are captured by the police vehicle trap.
Ch. 19. In the Trap (5 scenes)
- Louis attempts to
escape, and damages his flycycle.
- Upside down in the
prison; Nessus brings news of an eavesdropper, and proposes his first
plan for Louis to escape
- Louis' climb to
turn over the flycycle; encounter with the woman watcher, and Speaker's
confession of Kdaptist upbringing. Nessus' new plan
- Nessus' arrival
in the prison, and preparations to influence their woman captor
- The return of the
woman, and her testing of Louis; Nessus uses the tasp on her; Opening
exchanges and language lesson
Ch. 20. Meat (5 scenes)
- Nessus' exploration
of the prison cell; the return of their woman captor, and Nessus' release
- Nessus' departure
from the vehicle trap with the woman
- The shutdown of
the vehicle trap, and the landing of Louis' and Speaker's flycycles;
water and the need for food; Louis' discovery of Teela's flycycle, and
the likelihood of Teela's death; Speaker's honor versus his hunger;
investigation of other cells; the sights of the city, the ocean, the
horizon; Louis' suspicions about Nessus' motivations; his observations
of the Eye Storm, and Fist-of-God, and his realization of the size of
Fist-of-God
- Food
- Nessus' revelations
about the woman's origin
Ch. 21. The Girl from Beyond the Edge (9 scenes)
- Prill's story: Arrival
at the Ringworld spaceport
- Prill's story (continued):
Getting through the spaceport
- The cause of the
collapse of Ringworld civilization
- Converting the floating
building into a vehicle
- Louis's interlude
with Prill
- Louis' full realization
of the nature of Teela's luck
- Prill's age, her
longevity drug, and her long walk
- Prill's story (continued):
The journey from the rim wall
- Prill's story (continued):
Prill's arrival at her home city; she sets up headquarters in the abandoned
police station, to look for other civilized survivors.
Ch. 22. Seeker (11 scenes)
- Lightening the floating
building, and spotting people below
- Departure from Prill's
home city, headed toward Heaven; objective: to obtain some shadow square
wire.
- Louis' doubts about
his plan
- Louis' explanation
of the first step of his plan to Speaker
- Christening of the
Improbable; language lessons continued
- Prill's attempt
to gain control of the tasp; Louis' explanation of why she can't get
it from Nessus
- Prill's seduction
of Louis, and its backlash, due to Nessus' use of the tasp on her
- Louis' angry confrontation
with Nessus, and Nessus' use of the tasp on Louis
- Louis' guilt about
the treatment of Prill; his discovery of Teela and Seeker in the police
vehicle trap, being dragged along by their building
- Meeting on the bridge
of the Improbable
- Teela's story: Her
fortunate landing, loss of her flycycle, and rescue by Seeker. Seeker's
quest for "the base of the Arch," and Teela's devotion to him; her decision
to remain on the Ringworld and accompany Seeker on his travels. Their
attempt to chase the Improbable, and their capture by the building's
speed trap. Louis' explanation of Teela's luck.
Ch.
23. The God Gambit (8 scenes)
- The city of Heaven
again, and the pile of shadow-square wire 2. The descent into the city,
the investigation of the wire, and the attack by the city dwellers;
Nessus' decapitation, and Louis' rescue of him, with Teela's assistance
- Louis and Speaker
discuss the significance for Teela Brown of Nessus' decapitation; Teela's
luck as directed toward her growth; Speaker's acquisition of the shadow-square
wire.
- Attachment of the
shadow-square wire to the Improbable
- Teela and Seeker
leave the Improbable and take over the floating castle
- Departure of the
Improbable from the city of Heaven; Nessus' condition, and Prill's withdrawal
symptoms; her language lessons with Louis and discussions about godhood.
- Prill's gradual
recovery; Playing god to the Ringworld natives enroute, and Speaker's
misgivings about his role as a god to humans; Prill's solution to the
problem
- Heading back into
the barrens; Prill's choice to remain with the expedition
Ch. 24. Fist-of-God (8 scenes)
- The Ringworld as
protection against the Core Explosion
- Louis points out
to Speaker that they will have to decide whether to play god to their
species about revealing the puppeteer manipulations.
- Arrival at the Liar
- Rest and recovery
- Looping the wire
through the Liar
- Up Fist-of-God with
the Improbable, and into the crater
- Flashback: The creation
of Fist-of-God
- Escape from the
Ringworld. Louis' explanation of his reasoning about the nature of Fist-of-God,
and Speaker's decision not to steal the Long Shot
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