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==Olaf Larssen==
 
==Olaf Larssen==
'''Olaf Larssen''', a [[Minnesota (Worldwar)|Minnesota]] farmer<ref>''[[In the Balance]]'', p. 463, HC.</ref>, was the father of [[Jens Larssen]]. Jens fondly remembered Olaf whacking him with birch twigs as part of the sauna ritual.<ref>Ibid., pgs. 319-320, HC.</ref> Olaf and his wife (Jens' mother) were still alive at the start of the [[Race Invasion of Tosev 3]], but Jens lost track of them in the resultant chaos.
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'''Olaf Larssen''', a [[Minnesota (Worldwar)|Minnesota]] farmer<ref>''In the Balance'', p. 463, HC.</ref>, was the father of [[Jens Larssen]]. Jens fondly remembered Olaf whacking him with birch twigs as part of the sauna ritual.<ref>Ibid., pgs. 319-320, HC.</ref> Olaf and his wife (Jens' mother) were still alive at the start of the [[Race Invasion of Tosev 3]], but Jens lost track of them in the resultant chaos.
   
 
==Mickey==
 
==Mickey==

Revision as of 19:30, 11 October 2019

The Yeager family of the United States were the most influential family in the history of relations between humanity and the Race. Sam Yeager rose from humble origins and a washed-up baseball career, to become America's foremost expert on the Race during the initial invasion. Sam Yeager and members of his immediate family played crucial roles in numerous historical events, whether for good or ill. Their cousins were the Jägers of Germany, which included Heinrich Jäger, who made a heroic conscientious defection from German service during the invasion.

Individuals who used the Yeager surname

Barbara Larssen Yeager

See Barbara Larssen Yeager.

Bruce Yeager

See Bruce Yeager.

Jessica Yeager

Jessica Yeager (b. c. 1998), daughter of Bruce, was a blue-eyed blonde with strong cheekbones, who bore little resemblance to her paternal grandparents Jonathan and Karen. Presumably her looks came from her mother, whom Bruce hadn't stayed married to. Jessica convinced her newly returned spacefaring great-grandfather Sam Yeager that he was welcome with her at any time, flatly contradicting his assertion that he'd be as out of place as a Neanderthal or a woolly mammoth.[1]

Jonathan Yeager

See Jonathan Yeager.

Jonathan Yeager senior

Jonathan Yeager was a Nebraska farmer at the turn of the 20th century. Yeager was a philosophical man, and often stated that arguing about religion was pointless because no one could prove a damn thing.[2] This open-minded view of the universe was passed onto his son Sam, who in turned named his own son after the old thinker.

Karen Yeager

See Karen Yeager.

Louise Yeager

Louise Yeager was married to Sam Yeager in the late 1920s and/or early 1930s. Unable to cope with his semi-nomadic lifestyle as a baseball player in the minor leagues, she divorced him some time before World War II.[3]

Richard Yeager

See Richard Yeager.

Sam Yeager

See Sam Yeager.

Diane Yeager

Diane Yeager (b. c. 1981) was the wife of Richard Yeager. Her father-in-law Jonathan Yeager, who due to cold sleep had an apparent age close to her own, found her to be very sharp witted and sensible.[4]


Related individuals

Donald

See Donald.

Ludmila Gorbunova

See Ludmila Gorbunova.

Heinrich Jäger

See Heinrich Jäger.

Johann Jäger

Johann Jäger was an engineer for Germany's Henschel company during the Second World War. His letters to his brother Heinrich, a tank commander on the Eastern Front, were necessarily censored, but the brothers had worked out a way of writing in hidden meanings that the censors would not notice.[5]

Jens Larssen

See Jens Larssen.

Olaf Larssen

Olaf Larssen, a Minnesota farmer[6], was the father of Jens Larssen. Jens fondly remembered Olaf whacking him with birch twigs as part of the sauna ritual.[7] Olaf and his wife (Jens' mother) were still alive at the start of the Race Invasion of Tosev 3, but Jens lost track of them in the resultant chaos.

Mickey

See Mickey.


Other Yeagers

Jens Larssen's mother is said to have been still alive in May 1942, but is never named.

In Upsetting the Balance, Sam names his mother as Paulette.

The probable biological mother of Mickey and Donald is encountered in Down to Earth but is not named. She and Nesseref spend a night in the same guest barracks in Egypt. This female approaches Nesseref and asks for ginger. Nesseref chides her on the socially destructive consequences of ginger use, to which the other female responds dismissively. Soon the conversation turns to the topic of hatchlings conceived because of unseasonable sexual behavior, and much to Nesseref's horror, the other female brags that, when she became gravid as a consequence of this side effect of ginger tasting, she immediately sold her eggs to unknown Tosevite agents in exchange for large quantities of the herb.[8]

Upon returning to Earth at the end of Homeward Bound, Sam, Jonathan, and Karen are introduced to a large number of descendants who were born in their absence. All are unnamed, except for Jessica.[9]

References

  1. Homeward Bound, pgs. 548-549, HC.
  2. Homeward Bound, p. 124, HC.
  3. In the Balance, pg. 66, PB.
  4. Homeward Bound, p. 550, HC.
  5. In the Balance, pgs. 14-15, HC.
  6. In the Balance, p. 463, HC.
  7. Ibid., pgs. 319-320, HC.
  8. Down to Earth, pg. 495.
  9. Homeward Bound, pgs. 595-598, HC.