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| Also appearing in Univers 01 are Harlan Ellison's "The Deathbird," A. E. van Vogt's "Ersatz Eternal," and Fred Pohl's "The Fiend" |
"Construction Shack" by Clifford D. Simak
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| Also appearing in Univers 01 are Harlan Ellison's "The Deathbird," A. E. van Vogt's "Ersatz Eternal," and Fred Pohl's "The Fiend" |
But first, let's take a gander at Wollheim's introduction to The 1974 Annual World's Best SF. Wollheim talks of science fiction being "a literature of prophecy, of prediction, of investigation into the worlds of if...", which I always like to hear somebody say, as I feel like, in the period I have been producing this blog, that all the cool kids have been saying "well, actually, science fiction is not about the future at all...." Many of the men and women who wrote and edited science fiction in the Twentieth Century were absolutely trying to predict the future, prepare people for the future, and shape the future.
Wollheim, however, admits that more important than all that speculation and prediction stuff is the fact that science fiction is "entertainment" and "escape." Wollheim believes that in 1973 science fiction is still in a transitional period, as it has been for a few years, but he doesn't offer any suggestion of what the genre is transitioning into. He notes that science fiction has been getting academic attention, but asserts that the academics misunderstand the genre because they ignore or hope to deny the reality that science fiction is mainly escapist entertainment, not something "world-shaking." Wollheim provides a little survey of the state of the magazines and anthologies, and takes some swipes at the New Wave and in particular Brian Aldiss' history of science fiction, Billion Year Spree, which he accuses of being myopic, of ignoring 90% of the actual science fiction that gets published. Wollheim quotes a review of Billion Year Spree that appeared in TLS (unfortunately, he doesn't provide a date or an author's name or anything) that argues that SF should be clear and straightforward, not focus too much on stream-of-consciousness and the trappings of the "psychological novel," and dismisses the New Wave as a lame revival of the surrealism of the 1920s and '30s.
Well, whatever Wollheim thought of the New Wave, here in The 1974 Annual World's Best SF he reprinted stories by Lafferty and Ellison, people who are at times associated with that vaguely-defined movement. Time to check those stories out, plus a story by a guy who I don't think anybody ever mistook for a new waver, adventure writer Tubb. Note that I am reading the versions of the stories found in the Wollheim/Saha anthology, not in the places they first appeared or in other reprints.
"Parthen" by R. A. Lafferty
This story was a hit with the editors--after its first appearance in Galaxy it was reprinted in not only Wollheim and Saha's yearly "Best of," but Lester del Rey's and Harry Harrison and Brian Aldiss'. A tale embraced by the broad SF community! Wollheim and Saha in their intro here in The 1974 Annual World's Best SF tell us it is about women's lib!Let's read four more stories that Judith Merril, born Judith Josephine Grossman in 1923, included in her 1960 anthology The Year's Best S-F: 5th Annual Edition; we'll be experiencing these tales in a scan of a 1961 paperback edition of the book. In our last episode we read from the volume a very good Ray Bradbury story, an OK story by Gordon Dickson and a weak Damon Knight story. Let's see if Clifford Simak, Fritz Leiber, J. G. Ballard and Ted Sturgeon deserve to be relaxing up in first class with Bradbury or should be crammed into steerage down there with Knight.
"A Death in the House" by Clifford D. Simak (1959)
I think Simak is a good writer, but sometimes his anti-human, anti-urban and anti-technology themes get on my nerves. Let's hope "A Death in the House," which debuted in an issue of H. L. Gold's Galaxy with a hubba hubba Wallace Wood cover, doesn't lean too heavily on those misanthropic and anti-modern tropes.Mose is a widower living alone on his "runty" farm which has no electricity--Mose hates electricity! He finds an alien on his property. Now, the cover illo of the October 1959 Galaxy might give you the idea that if you go out into space you'll find it inhabited by curvaceous babes, but Simak here in "A Death in the House" suggests space is home to hideous smelly monsters that don't even have what we would recognize as a face. The hideous alien in question is almost motionless, apparently on the brink of death, though the "worms" around its "head" are writhing with life, and it is making some kind of keening noise.
Mose carries the alien into his untidy house and tries to keep it warm and comfortable, even has the local doctor come by to look at it, but neither Mose nor the doc have any idea how to help the creature, so it dies. Mose wants to give it a decent Christian burial, but the undertaker and the local minister don't want to provide services to a non-human; Mose thinks "what heels some humans are."
Mose buries the dead alien and from its grave, from an egg or seed on its person that shares its memories, sprouts a plant that after some months breaks free and is more or less the same alien. (Simak has foreshadowed in multiple ways that this alien is essentially a plant, and so its rebirth is not that bug a surprise to us readers.) The alien lives with Mose, and though they can't talk, Mose is happy to have a companion--the loneliness he has suffered for years is eased. Mose helps the alien fix its spacecraft; Mose hates paper money and has a stack of silver coins, and the alien uses the silver to repair the vessel. Then the alien leaves, but first gives to Mose a little translucent sphere with flickering internal lights, a device that projects a field or something that relieves loneliness--Mose will never be alone.
This is a pretty good story, sort of heartwarming even if Simak indulges in some of the attitudes I just told you annoy me. While Simak's tale is somewhat similar to Bradbury's "The Shoreline at Sunset," in that story the humans who interact with the alien are reprehensible, while here in the saga of Old Mose, while most humans are callous or exploitative, our protagonist makes an effort to do the right thing and he is rewarded for his good deeds by being made a sort of honorary member of a society superior to our own. A good choice by Merril, and it serves her theory that the good stories of 1959 were about the question of what it means to be human.
"A Death in the House" has taken seed within and reemerged from the pages of numerous anthologies and Simak collections; Merril liked it enough to include it in her Best of the Best anthology that re-reprinted her favorite stories from her famous anthology series.
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Among the stories appearing in translation in Des souris et des robots is "The Golden Bugs," which we read in 2018. |
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| Among the stories in Theodore W. Hipple and Robert G. Wright's The Worlds of Science Fiction are Stephen Goldin's "Sweet Dreams, Melissa" and Chad Oliver's "Final Exam," both of which we have blogged about here at MPFL. |
"The Man Who Lost the Sea" by Theodore Sturgeon (1959)
The title of this story feels familiar, so much so that I thought I'd read it until I double checked and found no record of a blog post about it. In 1999, Arthur C. Clarke in an intro to the story in the anthology My Favorite Science Fiction Story announced that "The Man Who Lost the Sea" inspired his own "Transit of Earth," which we read in 2016. Here in The Year's Best S-F: 5th Annual Edition, Merril suggests that it no longer makes sense for SF to be about "rocketry" and "astrogation" and "planet-hopping," as the hard sciences have "caught up with us" and offer little room for speculation, and so SF writers are turning to what she calls, in quotes, "'humanic studies.'" Then she wonders whether Sturgeon, whom she calls "Solo Sturgeon," with "The Man Who Lost the Sea" is doing old-style SF, exploring the "humanic studies," or even pioneering beyond them.Keep in mind that while these stories debuted elsewhere, and have been reprinted in later books, I am reading them today in a scan of a 1961 paperback edition of Merril's anthology.
"The Handler" by Damon Knight (1960)
"The Handler" debuted in an issue of Rogue which is chock full of content from SF authors, including Harlan Ellison's "Final Shtick," which we read a few years ago. This issue seems to have as its theme alcohol--I guess they figured it was pointless to compete with Playboy in the jazz department. I have seen the Table of Contents of this issue on ebay, and Robert Bloch, Robert Silverberg, and Mack Reynolds all contribute articles about booze (William F. Nolan's article is about Dean Martin, which perhaps also qualifies.) Is "The Handler" also about the sauce? Well, in her intro to the story here in The Year's Best S-F: 5th Annual Edition, Merril, after telling us how great a guy Knight is, hints that "The Handler" is a caustic attack on the entertainment industry. SF doesn't have to be adventures in strange worlds and speculations on what life might be like in a future of different technologies, customs, and political and economic systems--it can also be a guy making fun of TV!"The Handler," like 4 pages here in TYBSF5, is a boring joke story about how showbiz people are shallow phonies who are fooling themselves while they fool the public (who are also probably fooling themselves.) A big party is underway! Everybody is drinking! A big handsome guys comes in--he is the hero of the hour! Everybody loves him! Big guy is, apparently, the host or emcee or whatever of a TV show, I guess like a Jack Benny or Steve Allen or Jack Paar sort of figure. The just completed show was a huge success, and will get renewed, and everybody involved is ecstatic! Then comes our twist! The big handsome man is a machine, and the short ugly guy who sits in the machine and operates it climbs out of it to take a break from his hot sweaty work. And all the many people who owe their livelihoods to him are cold to him, find him disgusting, even though they were falling all themselves expressing adoration of the machine, every move of which he controlled. His colleagues urge him to climb back aboard the machine and when he does the love fest for the big handsome guy continues.
Knight provides us yet another reminder that we are all putting on an act at all times to maintain our careers and relationships, and that smart unattractive people envy and resent good-looking people and behind-the-scenes people envy and resent the figureheads who get the glory. "The Handler" isn't bogus, and it has the virtue of being short, but it is banal. So, just a marginal thumbs down rather than a vicious condemnation. Her intro suggests Merril and Knight were friends, and that, and the fact that Merril loves including in her anthologies stories that debuted outside the category SF mags, perhaps suggests why she thought "The Handler" worthy of reprint here, and even in the anthology that collected her favorites from all her annual Best ofs. "The Handler" has also reappeared in Knight collections and many more anthologies, including those that endeavor to define the parameters of the SF canon, prescribe what are the greatest SF stories, like Ursula LeGuin's The Norton Book of Science Fiction and Frederik Pohl's The SFWA Grand Masters: Volume 3.
Against a background of the inevitable ninety per cent of inept or hackster trash, the better stories, as they emerge each year, always show some very definite--and different from the year before--emphasis on one area of speculation or another.While unfalsifiable nonsense, this theory is sort of a fun way of looking at the world. Anyway, Merril suggests that "The Shoreline at Sunset," like all the best SF of 1959, is about how we define what it means to be human.
“I wish that Nyuto would see me and talk with me,” said Tarzan of the Apes. “Then he would know that it would be better to have me for a friend than for an enemy. Many men have tried to kill me, many chiefs greater than Nyuto. This is not the first hut in which I have lain a prisoner, nor is it the first time that men have prepared fires to receive me, yet I still live, Lukedi, and many of them are dead."In January, we read an Edgar Rice Burroughs novel in which Tarzan met the descendants of English crusaders who were still living like it was the medieval era right there in the middle of Africa. In February, we read an Edgar Rice Burroughs novel in which David Innes met the descendants of 17th-century pirates who were living like it was the 1600s right there in Pellucidar. Well, it's March and today we're going to read an Edgar Rice Burroughs novel in which Tarzan meets people descended from Roman legionaries who are living like its the 1st century A.D. right there in the middle of Africa. Africa really is the most diverse continent!
Tarzan and the Lost Empire debuted in 1928 and '29 across five issues of the magazine Blue Book. Four of those issues of Blue Book have cover illos devoted to the latest saga of Lord Greystoke, and these illustrations are laden with spoilers--who could have guessed that Tarzan would fight a lion in this adventure?
I am experiencing Tarzan and the Lost Empire via my $1.25 Ballantine copy of the novel, Ballantine 24171, which has a Boris Vallejo cover. The cover of the paperback says "complete and unabridged," but I don't know about that. In Chapter 10 of this edition we find "rein" for what appears (correctly) as "reign" in Ace F-169, the 40¢ edition with the Frazetta cover, and in a 1931 Grosset & Dunlap hardcover. Now, maybe that is just a typo. But look at the epigraph I have placed at the head of this blog post, Tarzan telling a member of the Bagego tribe, who are preparing to burn Lord Greystoke alive, that he has been captured many times and escaped many times. Tarzan, in my Ballantine edition, says "...nor is it the first time that men have prepared fires to receive me...." But in the Ace and Grosset & Dunlap editions Tarzan says "...nor is it the first time that black men have prepared fires to receive me...." The word "Negro," capitalized in my Ballantine, is not capitalized in the Ace or Grosset & Dunlap printings, and at least once "blacks" in the older books is replaced in the Ballantine with "Negroes." Maybe not a big deal if you are reading Tarzan for fun, but something to keep in mind if you are reading these novels with an eye to learning about the period in which they were written or about Burroughs himself and what he actually wrote.
Burroughs gets right down to business as we begin Tarzan and the Lost Empire. After Tarzan's little buddy Nkima the monkey opines that the white man is the worst kind of man (Tarzan doesn't count, he being considered by all a creature of the jungle), a white man shows up to request Tarzan's help. This guy is a German missionary, Doctor von Harben. His son Erich, an expert linguist and archaeologist and an amateur mountain climber, is missing! The Doctor and Tarzan, like everybody in the jungle, know of the legend of a white tribe living in the Wiramwazi mountains, and when Erich heard about the legend he decided to investigate it. But he hasn't returned from this expedition, even though some of his African porters have come back. These survivors of the expedition to Wiramwazi are pretty close-lipped about what happened, and the Doctor asks for Tarzan's help. By the sixth page of text, Tarzan is already on his way to Wiramwazi, little Nkima (you can see him on the cover of Blue Book and in Frazetta's cover illo for Ace F-169) sitting on his shoulder.
In Chapter 2 we join Erich on the slopes of the Wiramwazi. Erich has been abandoned by all his black hirelings, their superstitious fears of the ghosts said to inhabit the mountains having overcome their courage. These deserters took all of the expedition's food and rifles with them, but Erich isn't sore--after all, what can you expect from a bunch of Africans? Anyway, he has his Luger and can hunt rabbits with it as he climbs the mountains in search of their secrets.
For much of the novel the narrative switches back and forth between Tarzan's adventures and Erich's. As Tarzan proceeds to the Wiramwazi, Nkima, a coward and a blusterer, offers pretty entertaining comic relief. It is thanks to Nkima's interference that Tarzan falls while climbing the outer slope of the Wiramwazis and hits his head; unconscious, he is captured by a tribe of blacks, the Bagego. For centuries, the Bagego have been in contact with the white tribe of the Wiramwazi; the whites sometimes raid the Bagego, and sometimes trade with them. Among the Bagego there is no consensus on whether the Wiramwazi tribe is made up of flesh and blood men or ghosts--many think the white men are actually the ghosts of the Bagego's ancestors.
Meanwhile, Erich is rejoined by his most loyal black hireling, Gabula, and the two men go through several pages of mountain climbing which Burroughs renders quite entertaining. On the other side of the Wirmwazi, Erich and Gabula find a valley with a swamp, forest, river and island; when they get down into the valley they are captured by black warriors. These Africans speak a version of Latin, and bear swords and spears that remind Erich of those used by the ancient Romans! These blacks are provincials of a small Roman empire, and take Erich and Gabula to the fortified city with an architecture much like that of classical Greece and Rome where live the people who dominate them. This city is inhabited by a small elite of white people (among them a beautiful woman, daughter of a leading intellectual, Favonia, by whom Erich is smitten), a soldier and commercial class of mixed-race people whom Burroughs refers to as "brown," and a working and slave class of blacks. Apparently the Roman ruling class arrived here almost 1900 years ago and have had no contact with other white people since then; they have made little technological or cultural progress and wear togas and throw people into the arena and so forth.
The Bagego village is raided by brown legionaries commanded by a white officer and Tarzan is captured along with a bunch of villagers. it turns out here are two Roman cities in the valley beyond the Wiramwazi, each with its own Emperor, and they have been engaged in a cold war for over 1700 years. The city Erich was taken to is Castrum Mare; Tarzan is dragged to the other, Castrum Sanguinarius. Erich has managed to make friends over in Castrum Mare because he speaks Latin, but Tarzan can't speak Latin, and in Castrum Sanguinarius he is tossed in the dungeon under the arena, and then dragged before Emperor Sublatus. Taller, faster and stronger than everybody else, Tarzan escapes the Emperor's court, humiliating the Emperor in the process. Looking down into a courtyard from a tree, Tarzan spots an aristocrat trying to rape a woman, and, Good Samaritan that he is, he rescues her. The would-be rapist turns out to be Emperor Sublatus's son, Fastus! The woman is Delicta, daughter of a senator.Erich is taken to meet the Emperor of Castrum Mare, Validus Augustus, and the Emperor is fascinated by Erich's knowledge of the history of Rome since the founder of Castrum Sanguinarius left Europe during the reign of Nerva. Erich is shanghaied into the job of writing down all he knows about European history and even writing Validus Augustus' biography. Here, at the midway point of the novel, we get exposition about the history of the two Roman cities here in this African valley and a dose of that court intrigue that I find kind of boring, and the novel, which has been fast paced and focused on interesting relationships heretofore, bogs down a little bit. It didn't help that I briefly mixed up the conniving courtier of Castrum Mare, Fupus, adoptive son of Validus Augustus, with the equally villainous Fastus, son of Sublatus, over in Castrum Sanguinarius.
For weeks, while Erich is in Castrum Mare, ascribble scribble scribble (but taking breaks to flirt with Favonia), Tarzan is in hiding in Castrum Sanguinarius, protected by Delicta's fiancé, a popular officer in the army, and learns to speak Latin (which he could sort of read, already, thanks to his European education.) But eventually Sublatus's lackeys get their hands on Tarzan and Delicta's fiancé, and they end up in the dungeons under the arena along with many blacks and a spy from Castrum Mare, an aristocrat out of favor with Validus Augustus but popular with the people sent here in a fool's errand. Burroughs has been hinting that Castrum Mare is the better-run and less corrupt of the two Roman cities*, though the current Emperor is corrupt, and now he makes it very clear. Also made more clear is that there are many many more Africans in the valley than white people; Tarzan begins to consider leading the blacks in an uprising against the cruel Sublatus regime.
*Heredity and eugenics are recurring themes in Burroughs' work, and we learn that there is almost no crime in Castrum Mare because, for many centuries, criminals have been executed--along with their families! This keeps criminal tendencies from polluting the gene pool.
The last third of Tarzan and the Lost Empire is solid adventure fiction, with Tarzan making friends with and becoming leader of the men with whom he is imprisoned and who fight at his side in the arena over the course of a week-long celebration and then in the uprising against Sublatus that Tarzan sparks. What goes on in the dungeon, as the men plot to escape, and in the arena and during the uprising, the different types of fights that Tarzan and his comrades get forced into, is entertaining. Burroughs puts a lot of focus on human relationships--the evolving and quite fickle sentiment of the crowd towards Sublatus and Tarzan, and Tarzan's own relationships with his fellow prisoners. In the climax of the arena sequence, Sublatus, having failed to destroy Tarzan by making him fight men and then a lion, has six apes set upon him, only to see the apes recognize Tarzan as a friend. These apes form an important part of the uprising, as do the black tribes of the valley and even Tarzan's own tribe, the Waziri, summoned from far away by Nkima.Having overthrown Sublatus and put the father of Delicta on the throne of Castrum Sanguinarius, Tarzan and the Waziri, along with that spy and others, march at the head of an army to Castrum Mare to rescue Erich. Erich has been thrown in the arena thanks to the machinations of Fupus, who wants to marry Favonia, but before the games begin the daring Gabula comes from out of nowhere to murder Validus Augustus in front of the assembled populace. In the ensuing chaos, Erich and Gabula and the other people sentenced to the arena escape to hiding places within the city; Fupus becomes Emperor. Fupus's agents find Erich and friends just as the army that is with Tarzan arrives and overthrows the unpopular and incompetent Fupus; Erich is saved and can marry Favonia, and that spy is made Emperor. The novel ends with Tarzan praising the initiative taken by Nkima in bringing the Waziri.
Tarzan and the Lost Empire, the twelfth Tarzan book, is a step up from number 11, Tarzan, Lord of the Jungle. The arena, fighting, and mountain climbing scenes here in book 12 are better than the jousting and fighting scenes in its predecessor, and the characters and their relationships are more fun. The Roman cities embroiled in a cold war in this novel are more interesting than the medieval cities locked in a cold war in the previous novel. So, thumbs up for Tarzan and the Lost Empire. I'm looking forward to Tarzan #13, Tarzan at the Earth's Core!
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| Detail of illustration from the February 1929 Blue Book |