Author: Jason W. Ellis

  • John W. Campbell’s “Night”

    Before he assumed the post of editor of Astounding, John W. Campbell was primarily an SF writer. He began selling stories while he was pursuing a degree in Physics from MIT and Duke University. The manuscript for his first sold story, “Invaders from the Infinite,” was lost by the editor of Amazing Stories, so his first published story was, “When the Atoms Failed,” which appeared in 1930. Malcolm J. Edwards writes in The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction that Campbell had two phases to his writing career directly followed by his career as an editor during which time he wrote little SF (187). In the first phase of his writing career, Campbell established himself as E.E. “Doc” Smith’s “chief rival in writing galactic epics of superscience” (Edwards 187). His second writing phase began with the story, “Twilight” in 1934, which is “a tale of the far future written in a moody, ‘poetic’ style, the first of a number of stories, far more literary in tone and varied in mood, published under the pseudonym Don A. Stuart” (Edwards 187). It’s from this phase and following that style that Campbell published “Night” in Astounding Stories in October 1935.

    The story is about a flight test gone awry that results in the aircraft’s destruction, but the pilot mysteriously disappears. The experimental craft employed what was believed to be an anti-gravity generator, but as is illustrated in other SF examples such as the film, Primer, technology often has unintended consequences and uses not originally envisioned by the engineer/designer.

    After the pilot miraculously reappears and is discovered by the farmer guarding the wreckage, he tells his superiors a dream-like tale about the distant future and the eventual death of our solar system. Campbell evokes H.G. Wells in the way that the pilot relates his tale. As Edwards points out, Campbell is employing a poetic voice in describing the future both experientially as well as scientifically.

    In the far future, the pilot discovers a ‘race’ of machines that have subsumed humanity in the the solar system. Earth is lifeless and without atmosphere, and the machines have a vast city on Neptune, where the pilot is taken after finding a signally device. The machine city and the necessity of fusion power and greater efficiencies predates The Matrix. However, unlike The Matrix, the machines drop humanity as so much dead weight, but the machine’s representative tells Bob, the pilot, “You still wonder that we let man die out…It was best. In another brief million years he would have lost his high estate. It was best” (112).

    Other connections with Campbell’s story are Asimov’s Robots. Campbell goes on a lot about resistances and coils, which is also the language that Asimov uses in his early robot stories. Campbell and Asimov had an extensive editor-author relationship, and Campbell helped Asimov develop the “Three Laws of Robotics.” This example further establishes where some of the imagery and terminology in Asimov’s stories may have originated beyond his own imagination.

    “Night” is an interesting story, and I’d be interested to see what connections could be made between it and Pamela Zoline’s “The Heat Death of the Universe” (read online here). These are two different stories, but given Campbell’s ideas about SF and the fact that Zoline’s story is very much New Wave and feminist in orientation, I believe that there is some elements of the latter that speak with or in reaction to the former.

    I found Campbell’s story in The Oxford Book of Science Fiction Stories, edited by Tom Shippey.

    Updated 7/19/2024: I changed the link above to a cached version on the Internet Wayback Machine.

  • Julie Phillips’ James Tiptree, Jr.: The Double Life of Alice B. Sheldon

    After going up to the 36th floor of the University of Pittsburgh’s Cathedral of Learning, I picked up a copy of Julie Phillip’s James Tiptree, Jr.: The Double Life of Alice B. Sheldon from Jay’s Book Stall on Fifth Avenue. Jay’s a nice guy, and we talked about Kurt Vonnegut after I asked him about a picture of him and the author that he had taped to the wall.

    I’ll probably find something useful in Phillip’s biography of Alice B. Sheldon to use in my utopias essay on Tiptree’s “Houston, Houston, Do You Read?” and Gilman’s Herland.  I’ll post a more detailed review of the book when I finish reading it.

  • Vonda N. McIntyre’s “The Mountains of Sunset, The Mountains of Dawn”

    Vonda N. McIntyre’s “The Mountains of Sunset, The Mountains of Dawn” is a wonderfully beautiful tale about love across the generations among a space faring winged and taloned species. Originally published in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction in 1974, it’s about a young male (called grandchild) who falls in love with a much older female (called grandmother). The “grandchild” wants to mate with the “grandmother” in order to effect his metamorphosis into an adult. Grandmother is a subversive influence on the grandchild, because she breaks from the decision of the others to remain in space. Also, she allows grandchild to continue his infatuation with her.

    I like this story, because of the descriptive language that the author uses to describe flying and hunting prey. I felt myself carried over the air currents as these flying beings freely explored the space that we can only do so through the mediation of technology. It’s a story worth reading, and the generational themes and Freudian issues should be further explored. It can be found in The Norton Book of Science Fiction.

  • Avram Davidson’s “The House the Blakeneys Built”

    The first story that I’ve read by Avram Davidson is “The House the Blakeneys Built.” Originally published in 1965, it’s about a family that finds them flung into an unknown part of the universe after their “boat” ran into something on the way to “the Moons of Lor.” The normal human visitors encounter a group of inbred people living in a castle on the nearest planet. After living with these descendants of two polygamist families for a while, they attempt to live on their own outside the confines of the “castle.” Living apart and breaking with the inbreds’ “law,” results in a confrontation leaving the two “alien” men dead and the women and new born child are taken back to the castle in order to, “Teach them better” (124). Davidson creates an interesting inversion of normality and alienness. The normal shipwrecked visitors are strangers and therefore alien to the inbred and decidedly alien looking natives. This story can be found in The Norton Book of Science Fiction.

    Out of curiosity, I looked up Avram Davidson in The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, edited by John Clute and Peter Nicholls. Clute reports that he’s an orthodox Jew and he served both in the US Navy (1941-1945) and alongside the Israelis in the 1948-1949 Arab-Israeli War (302). I suppose I was curious about his name, because the only other encounter I’ve had with an “Avram” was in Marge Piercy’s He, She and It.

  • James Tiptree, Jr.’s “Houston, Houston, Do You Read?”

    “Houston, Houston, Do You Read?” is another great Tiptree story. The novella was originally published in 1976 in the collection edited by Vonda N, McIntyre and Susan J. Anderson, Aurora: Beyond Equality. It’s about a future Earth space mission sent around the sun that is flung into the far future following an accident with a solar flare. The three male astronauts find themselves in a world only populated by women who also happen to be clones of a common stock.

    I’m currently writing a paper looking at the similarities between “Houston, Houston, Do You Read?” and Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s Herland. Tiptree’s novella is, in many ways, a retelling of Herland in a far future, but far more ambiguously regarding the fate of the three male astronauts as compared with Van, Jeff, and Terry. Also, Tiptree explores the nature of power along two different axes. The first concerns the biological/anthropological concept of dominance and submission among the three male astronauts. She does this by looking at the “beta” male’s past, Lorimer, and his relationship with the two alpha males, Bud and Dave. He is also the narrator of the story. The other is the cultural constructs of male dominance over females as illustrated by Lorimer’s suppressed impulses and thoughts as well as Dave and Bud’s overt actions. I believe that there are significant links between the two stories, and Tiptree may have wrote “Houston, Houston, Do You Read?” as a Second Wave Feminist reaction or simply response to Gilman’s much earlier work.

    This is another story that’s a must read! Of all of the stories that I’ve read by Tiptree, this is my favorite. It’s an interesting story that connects to many significant gender and cultural issues. Besides the connection with Herland, the cloned women in the utopic future remind me of the Cylons of the re-imagined Battlestar Galactica.