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Fuzzy Sapiens #2

Fuzzy Sapiens

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Are Fuzzies People?

Pendarvis' Decision had finally declared the Fuzzies to be intelligent beings, and that meant some drastic changes for the Earthmen who had colonized their planet, changes that a lot of people weren't going to accept easily. But why worry? said others.

The Fuzzies seemed lovable, fun-loving creatures, only two feet high, and covered with soft, golden fur. Give them plenty of extee-three and they'd do anything you asked.

What ruling race of invaders could ask for a more ideal native population?

240 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published January 1, 1964

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808 people want to read

About the author

H. Beam Piper

450 books241 followers
Henry Beam Piper (1904 - 1964) was an American science fiction author. He wrote many short stories and several novels. He is best known for his extensive Terro-Human Future History series of stories and a shorter series of "Paratime" alternate history tales.


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5 stars
784 (39%)
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388 (19%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 102 reviews
Profile Image for Craig.
6,186 reviews170 followers
July 13, 2022
The Other Human Race is the second novel in Piper's Fuzzy trilogy, his best-known and most popular work. It picks up right where Little Fuzzy left off and continues the exploration (and possible exploitation) of the brilliantly conceived species. The world building and legal battle aspects were wrapped up in the first book (which I'd say would have to be read first in order to appreciate this one), so there's not as much plot, but the scientific procedures are quite captivating, as, of course, are the characterizations. The Fuzzies are more convincing than the humans. Ace reprinted this one in the mid-1970s under a different title, Fuzzy Sapiens, with a lovely Michael Whelan cover. The cover of my Avon edition has faded into a black shadow over the years. Good, classic stuff!
Profile Image for Bryan.
326 reviews7 followers
December 2, 2014
A sequel that picks up the narrative immediately after the first book (as will the 3rd book in the series Fuzzies and Other People) - your best bet is to read these books together one after the other.

There is, however, a distinct drop in story quality and in reader impact in this second book. Most of it comes across as quite boring, and it's during this book that one really begins to feel antagonistic towards the paternalistic and patronizing attitudes the humans have toward the fuzzies. Fuzzies are cute and playful, yet primitive, so therefore they must be children. Let's adopt them!

The book also suffered in the way it dramatically yet simplistically flipped Victor Grego's character. He was the boss bad guy in the first novel, but fuzzies are just so cute that he can be won over and become good. So now we need some new bad guys... And thus good vs evil is once again starkly black-and-white.

It's worth reading this book to bridge to the 3rd book, which deals with the events in this story and finally begins getting some humanity into the human characters, as well as letting the fuzzies have some dignity as sapient beings and not just "cute kids".

3 stars at most.
Profile Image for Kaethe.
6,553 reviews531 followers
August 3, 2019
Reading old school science fiction is always fun: seeing what the author predicts and what they can't imagine. This was published in 1964. Booze, smoking, and coffee have spread to all the worlds in 500 years. There are flying cars and video calling and enormous computers; but also paper for all the business, cocktail parties, and those wacky fifties gender norms that some mistakenly call "traditional". (It wouldn't pass the Bechdel test, but there are actually quite a few women working)

Piper new what he was doing. The humans are nearly interchangeable, but none of that matters because he gave all the personality to the Fuzzies. Who are adorable! Everybody wants one! I want one!

There is a crime investigation to provide plot, but the crime is no worse than that found in your average Nancy Drew. It really feels like Piper sat down to write a fun-for-the-whole-family book about how the Fuzzies can possibly survive the human invasion, especially with an incredibly rare and valuable natural resource on their world. He nailed it.

Library copy
Profile Image for Ron.
Author 1 book171 followers
August 24, 2014
Disappointing.

Not nearly as good as Little Fuzzy, but--once it finally got started--an enjoyable bit of historic science fiction. It's fun reading books written in the 1960s for the quaint social practices which the authors assume will remain centuries later, but in fact died in fifty years. And, of course, the changes in technology make much for humorous reading also.

For the complete review (including spoilers) see: http://amatteroffancy.wordpress.com/2014/08/24/fuzzy-sapiens-by-h-beam-piper-three-stars/

Still, a good read.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Jacqueline.
101 reviews1 follower
July 3, 2013
Fuzzy Sapiens takes up a week after the book Little Fuzzy finishes. Though the Fuzzies have been deemed Sapient beings I found through this entire book they were treated more like pets (who can speak) and the whole adoption process felt to me just like going to the local pound to adopt a stray. Having a Fuzzy enter their lives seemed to instantly change the villains from the previous book into good guys.
All in all an ok read, if you enjoyed the first book, but only just!
Profile Image for PAR.
474 reviews22 followers
June 16, 2025
4 Stars! A bit of a slow start but turned out to be thoroughly enjoyable. These are pretty fun books and I like how most of the people are actually pretty good. Looking forward to the last of the original trilogy. Enjoy!

Quotes:
- “There is a gunsmith here in town who has a sign in his shop, There are only twenty-four hours in a day and there is only one of me. I have often considered copying that sign in my laboratory.” (p241)
- “Wherever Terran humans went, they planted tobacco and coffee, to have coffee and cigarettes for breakfast, and wherever they went they found or introduced something that would ferment to produce C2H5OH, and around 1730-ish each day, they had Cocktail Hour.” (p244-245)
- “He forgot about the drink he was going to have with Mr. Victor Grego. You had a drink when the work was done, and there was still work to do.” (p247)
- “Why, it was unthinkable!.. Unthinkable, hell. He was thinking about it now, wasn't he?” (p275)
Profile Image for Raj.
1,660 reviews42 followers
February 18, 2011
This book takes up pretty much immediately after its predecessor, Little Fuzzy, finishes and continues the story of the (now legally protected as) sapient species Fuzzy Fuzzy Holloway on the colony world Zarathustra. The jacket blurb on my edition was actually misleading, hinting at an existential threat to the species that didn't turn up until pretty late in the book, and was then resolved pretty quickly and without much drama.

I was somewhat bemused throughout the book by the treatment of the Fuzzies by the Humans. Despite repeatedly stating that they were sentient, they were often treated like pets, although I'm not sure if this is was deliberately done by the author to show confusion in the colonists' minds or was an issue that Piper had.

One thing that I found quite quaint was the very mid-twentieth century attitudes on display, partially in the treatment of courting and women (not as bad as some, since it actually allowed women to work in serious jobs) and very much in the fact that everyone seemed to stop in the early evening for a cocktail hour. It somehow felt quite colonial, in the British Empire sense, and not really like a frontier colony world at all, but it was charming, in its own way.

Charming is a good word to describe the book as a whole, really. There's little sense of threat and the whole thing just feels like an extended footnote to the previous volume. I still found it enjoyable though and one thing that I did like was how it rehabilitated the villains from the previous book. In that, the Company that ran the planet had a vested interest in proving the Fuzzies non-sapient, since otherwise they would lose their claim to the planet, but now that that has happened, the company brass shrug and just get on with dealing with the aftermath, and are portrayed much more sympathetically than before.

In summary, the book was enjoyable and fun, but by no means essential reading for fans of Little Fuzzy.
Profile Image for Jim.
1,424 reviews94 followers
June 29, 2021
"Fuzzy Sapiens" is the sequel to "Little Fuzzy" and, as I enjoyed that book so much, I had to read the sequel. No surprise, it was not as good as the original story and I should give it only 2 stars. But the Little Fuzzies are such cute and lovable little creatures that I have to give this one 3 stars, not bad though not great. I want to point out that many science fiction fans reading this will think the Fuzzies are a rip-off of Star Wars' Ewoks. Nope. "Fuzzy Sapiens" was published in 1964 ( the original in 1962) so long before the Ewoks came along in 1983-was it? I think it's the other way around and someone (?) ripped-off the Fuzzies.
Anyway, in the original story, the Fuzzies have been saved by their human protectors on the planet of Zarathustra. In the sequel, we have a mystery. A group of the small creatures are missing....I will add that I'm somewhat leery about the humans adopting Fuzzies as pets...While the sequel is not as good as the original, I want to continue reading this series. FUZZY POWER!
A note on the author, H. Beam Piper (1904--1964). He was a late bloomer as a writer, beginning his writing career when he was in his forties. Then he died way too young when he took his own life. A tragic life story...but at least we have the Little Fuzzies.
Profile Image for Lisa (Harmonybites).
1,834 reviews405 followers
June 28, 2013
This is the second of the Fuzzy books that feature among the most memorable aliens in science fiction. Mind you, they're so cute as to induce sugar shock. Creatures "two feet tall, with wide-eyed... face... covered with soft golden fur," playful, sane, sweet and emotionally and intellectually about ten years old. The first book dealt with some sophisticated concepts. The "Fuzzies" are on a planet colonized by humans and largely owned and ruled by a corporation under a charter only valid if there are no sapient indigenous life forms. So when the Fuzzies first show up, it soon becomes a very serious matter indeed whether they're just cute animals--or people. The second novel develops some issues not resolved in the first one, and is still entertaining, although perhaps not as fresh in conception. I did like how in the second novel things were less black and white. Piper's not an elegant prose stylist. There are point-of-view jumps, and flaky section breaks (might be more an issue of bad editing than writing) and at times clumsy phrasing. But Piper's a good storyteller nevertheless and presents appealing characters--human and non-human alike. It's an good read.
Profile Image for Mark Ford.
487 reviews25 followers
March 13, 2022
@murph Finished Fuzzy Sapiens on the third one now and apparently there are about six other books by various authors including Scalzi, see Goodreads.
https://www.goodreads.com/series/4937...

The second Fuzzy novel takes place immediately after the Fuzzy trial (so does the third book, Fuzzies and Other People) that proves them sentient.
Maybe because it's the second Fuzzy book the quality drops a little and the story becomes a little dull.
The people in it get to be rather annoying in the way they treat the Fuzzies, treating them like children one minute then like pets the next, giving them cigarettes and pipes and teaching them how to smoke (different times eh) but what do you expect when nearly every human character in this book smokes like a chimney, drinks like a fish and goes around armed at all times, it's a wonder the place isn't a bloodbath.
Now there sentience is proven the Zarathustra company who lost possession of the planet to its indigenous natives and were the "bad guys" in the first novel have done a 180° turn and are now actively helping Jack Holloway and pals in protecting the~~Ewoks~~Fuzzies.
Profile Image for Igzy Dewitt.
34 reviews5 followers
August 16, 2015
H. Beam Piper is a treasure. This isn't quite as exciting as "Little Fuzzy," but Piper keeps the tone, humor, and regret coming in a manner that is both uplifting and inspiring. If you love Dobby the elf, "The Wind in the Willows," or the passionate drive for social change found in the late Terry Pratchett's work, Piper's Fuzzy books might be just the gem you've been searching for.
Profile Image for Andrew Obrigewitsch.
951 reviews165 followers
April 19, 2013
Well this book hit it's sophomore slump. Lucky it was quite short. I hear the next one is a lot better so looking forward to reading that.
Profile Image for Helen .
846 reviews38 followers
December 26, 2017
This book held a lot of promise, but I felt some of the major issues were somewhat glossed over and could have been dealt with better.
Still interested enough to try to seek out the third in the trilogy, but not a story I'd re-read multiple times.
517 reviews3 followers
November 11, 2022
I read Little Fuzzy last month after picking the entire trilogy, alongside John Scalzi's reboot, up at a senior center. Of all the places to find nice vintage Science Fiction... well, I sure didn't complain when I found the series, and I'm still not complaining after reading the first two installments; I enjoyed Little Fuzzy a decent amount (7.5/10), and while Fuzzy Sapiens isn't quite as good, it's still a fun read.

I liken Fuzzy Sapiens to the sequel of a family/kids' movie sequel. It's got the entire cast of the first installment, and adds some new ones: here, we've got some nasty criminals playing around with the politics of Zarathustra's recent Federation incorporation to give us some baddies now that Victor and most of the other bad guys from book one have learned to love the Fuzzies in the course of a couple weeks. Unrealistic? Probably. Does it detract from the story? Not really. The other unfortunate element to this comparison is that, just like that box-office-induced animated sequel, Fuzzy Sapiens lacks a bit of Little Fuzzy's sophistication. One of the themes that elevated that book was the question: what does it mean to be sentient? There's no real philosophical or science fictional musing here, which brings the story down a notch.

There's still stuff going on: this shady criminal guy is trying to claim Zaratustran land through the legal system, pushing the Corporation and the Fuzzy Lovers closer together. A Fuzzy winds up in Victor's office and it sees him transformed into a kind and caring person. They try to figure out where the Fuzzy (Diamond) came from, and it leads to Mr Criminal trying to sell Fuzzies as pets. As they're sentient beings, that's a no-no. But apparently it's a yes-yes that the human government can divvie up all the Fuzzies that show up among the Fuzzy-seeking people of Zarathustra, even though they're sentient?... silly humans. The judge's wife is put in charge of the adoption board. In other news, some scientists discover that Fuzzy birth rates are morbidly low, and the species might be driven to extinction. This happens at the same time that the planet's Extee-Three (the emergency food that Fuzzies rabidly crave) is running out, and Victor wants to synthesize their own instead of waiting for six months for official Earth crap to come through. There are a few other plot threads running through the book, and I enjoyed them all. Piper did a good job of balancing everything that needed balancing. None of it was horribly significant or memorable (except for when the Fuzzies ). It was kind of weird having Corporation Victor as the main character, but I still enjoyed it.

Also, Piper's just a good writer. I continue to enjoy his prose, which consists both charm and substance. I don't have the toolbox necessary to analyze his influences, but whatever they are, they did him well. I will be reading more of this prose soon with the final book, Fuzzies and Other People, and then I'll have to keep my eyes peeled for some of Piper's non-Fuzzy work in the wild. I will also be reading the John Scalzi reboot, Fuzzy Nation, before the year is out. Don't know how I'll feel about that one... either way, this was a fun, if more lightweight, divergent into early cozy 60s science fiction.
Profile Image for Wampuscat.
320 reviews17 followers
June 6, 2019
This book is an OK read, and being an OK read is not a terrible thing. I sincerely enjoyed Little Fuzzy when I read it a few years ago. H. Beam Piper is one of those 'old school' sci-fi authors that I found quite late, but have enjoyed immensely. This sequel to Little Fuzzy is only a mediocre read, however, because of its slow pace and lack of dramatic plot. It tends toward the analytical side of the developing Fuzzy situation which is boring. The only real excitement happens in the last 5% of the book.

One of the strangest quirks (It's not necessarily a negative, but I didn't like it) I encountered while reading this book is the anachronistic feel of it. I've seen this in other books, especially from authors of the 40's, 50's & 60's who fail to generalize their scientific advancements enough to overcome the paradigm shift of the digital age. I usually can get past it, but this time the slow pace of things made it really stand out. I think I'll coin a new genre term to describe it called Anachronistic Analog Punk... Ananapunk. Ananapunk is where futuristic technology is still based off of analog technology that is now obsolete, but the story is not focused on being that (as Steampunk is toward the Victorian Era steam technologies, etc.), it simply IS that by virtue of being written prior to the digital tech curve. It's effectively Atompunk or Steelpunk, but written IN the era it depicts. I've seen it before. Sometimes I like it; sometimes I don't. This time I didn't. Thus the two star rating.

There's also the issue of the social customs of the 'era when written' being carried over so far into the future, and being a focal point of the story. Cocktail hour and tobacco smoking are a highly overused personal action for almost every character. It's the filler and transition to almost every scene. It is monotonous and cannot be avoided or ignored during the read.

But, still, the story of Fuzzies and the discovery of who and what they are, as well as human reactions to them are interesting enough to keep me reading to the end. In fact, the third book in the series looks to be more interesting than this one, so I will probably read it as well. It also has the benefit of being a 'manuscript found in a trunk after the author's death' which means I'm already interested.

So, while not being exactly a superlative story, it was interesting, and I am glad to have read it, if for no other reason than continuity of the series leading to the third book. I give it two stars and call it a Semi-Descent Read.

106 reviews2 followers
August 20, 2025
I really liked 'Little Fuzzy," the first book in a trilogy about the fuzzies, but I didn't enjoy "Fuzzy Sapiens" as much. The first book centered around a debate as to whether or not fuzzies were sapient, which was an interesting philosophical/scientific issue and also made for a very entertaining plot. The question of the fuzzies' sapience is brought to a court of law and a ruling is issued. "Fuzzy Sapiens" is largely taken up with how the human population deals with that ruling. The book is very readable, but it lacks the drama of "Little Fuzzy." Also, I think the fuzzies could have been portrayed as more than just adorable and somewhat comical moppets. They lack any complexity and there is nothing alien about them. You would think a species that evolved on a planet other than Earth would be different in some way, but they mostly act like human children. Nonetheless, the book was a pleasant read.
Profile Image for Deb Omnivorous Reader.
1,964 reviews172 followers
June 20, 2024
This is a many, many times re-read; I have owned this same copy since my teenage years and re-read it often. It never disappoints, continuing on from Little Fuzzy on Zarathustra as the 'friends of little fuzzy' continue to try and protect the species, politically and otherwise. New revelations about the miniscule birth rate allow the author to bring in more types of science (with biology, embryology ect) than were commonly used in the first one. Great book
I also review it here;
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0UKop...
Profile Image for Mitch Fountain.
117 reviews1 follower
April 14, 2022
You gotta love a book that starts out with the premise that a love of coffee, cigarettes and the cocktail hour has been successfully exported from Earth to it's wider galactic neighbors. It's also a sequel to a pretty good book with some original ideas. It's just not as good. It unfolds a little slowly and really shows its' age when we humans treat this newly stamped sentient race as little better than living talking teddy bears that can be adopted out to humans as pets. It's worth a read once, then give it to your ten year old nephew.
Profile Image for Dennis.
272 reviews
May 4, 2022
I really enjoyed reading more about Fuzzies and the various plots and intrigues in the story. This book encompassed a lot of mini plots throughout instead of one significant drama unfolding, unless you count the five missing Fuzzies. One thing to note, this second book deals more with Victor Greggo and Diamond his Fuzzy. Jack Holloway and Little Fuzzy play a more secondary role. Most of the CZC characters also are more prominent in this book. I guess the author felt the need to rehabilitate those characters and bring forth new antagonists to root against.
Profile Image for Mary Catelli.
Author 57 books201 followers
June 26, 2016
The second of these little classics.

Life after the consequences of the crime (in Little Fuzzy). Discovering what it is that makes certain human foods attractive to Fuzzies, and discovering why there are so few children among them, and what is needed to keep the race alive. With some fun philosophical observations about dependence.
Profile Image for Jenny Thompson.
1,455 reviews40 followers
August 16, 2020
Almost as enjoyable as the first one. I'll admit I was distracted by some of the politics - I can't help wondering if someone pointed out to Piper that the first book could be read as anti-capitalist, and this book was an attempt to swing back the other way. The characters were always righteous in the author's eyes, but in my opinion, they had somewhat flexible morals. The big bad from the last book got a redemption arc, but all of his goons evidently deserved the death penalty.
354 reviews2 followers
April 12, 2021
It's a classic!

This is sequel to H Beam Piper's "Little Fuzzy". Be sure to read it first! This story is is definitely good, too. Oh, and "Little Fuzzy" is in the public domain for free. Enjoy!
Profile Image for Blaine Mullins.
13 reviews
November 18, 2021
Great book to read for leasure

Read Fuzzy Sapiens first and you will love this book. Good character building and story. The Fuzzies are wonderful little people and their human friends are well developed
Profile Image for Jon.
838 reviews251 followers
Read
August 21, 2014
3.5 stars. Not as amazing as the first book, but still pretty darn good. And fun too. Some great comedic moments.
141 reviews
May 29, 2018
Not as interesting as the first book, but a good read.
Profile Image for Kristin.
1,190 reviews32 followers
January 25, 2021
Read for January 2021 book group.

Fuzzy Sapiens picks up right where Fuzzy Nation left off. A Zarathrustra Corporation no longer has control of the planet, the planet is trying to establish a new government, and Jack Holloway is in charge of the Department of Native Liaisons. Zarathrustra Corporation has had a complete change of heart with its CEO finds a Fuzzy in his own apartment and realizes there are four missing Fuzzies. Enemies become allies as everyone discovers there's a larger problem at stake.

Loosely summarizing...

Written in 1964, this has all the makings of a classic science fiction book - planetary drama, futuristic society, newly discovered alien species, Good Guys vs Bad Guys and triumph over evil. The plot is still engaging, the story moves smartly along, and its an interesting look back at how authors were looking forward.

From a modern perspective I found it to be a bit cringe-worthy: patronizing, androcentric, and socially unbelievable. From a modern perspective. It amazes me how authors could create a space faring future with interstellar travel, float cars, and more, but keep people in a 1960's mindset of women as secretaries and fuzzy sitters and where everyone smokes. Scientifically looking forward, socially stuck. Rather fascinating and I wonder why that was.

I do believe it's worth reading when viewed with a historical eye. It an easy and entertaining read if that is kept in mind. Recommended.
Profile Image for Megan.
1,116 reviews6 followers
February 29, 2024
This book in the Fuzzy series was not anywhere close to as good as the first book. The main gripe I had with this book was the changing of sides for the main bad guy in the first book. Victor, the same guy that wanted the Fuzzies hunted to extinction, all of a sudden is a kind and caring man? I had a really hard time believing that complete 180. It would have been better to keep him as a bad guy and slowly use him to push the CZC off the planet and give it over to the good guys from the first book. Also, Jack and Little Fuzzy were hardly in this book and that was disappointing.
I also had trouble with the whole "adopt a Fuzzy" thing. It felt very much like the people were just adopting pets, not sentient, intelligent beings. There was a little passage that indicated that the Fuzzies were thinking about humans in a similar way "every Fuzzy wants a Big One of his own" and that made it a little easier to buy but it still felt off.
Overall 3/5 stars, not nearly as good as the first one but still entertaining and quick to read.
Profile Image for BRANDON.
256 reviews
May 25, 2025
Romanticizing any time period is generally frowned upon these days. But I think it's okay to appreciate a time period's aesthetic/vibe as long as you remember the starker reality. Fuzzy Sapiens was written in the sixties and even though it is set in a far-flung future where humanity has reached the stars, it is still very much set in the sixties. Everyone is smoking and it's fine, it's so fine that even the fuzzies get smoke. Unmarried women are called girls and married women are expected to cast aside their careers and support their mediocre white man. It's cheesy and charming and horrible but it's a window into a different time. I think it's okay to come home, pour yourself a highball and listen to a record on the hi-fi, you can appreciate the aesthetic and vibe without actually wanting to embrace the cultural values of the time.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 102 reviews

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