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Tuesday, May 17, 2016

Some Cordwainer Smith Books (Part 2)

Last time out, I was talking about receiving my first batch of Cordwainer Smith books in the post, and that I was waiting for another batch. Well, the second batch has now arrived, three books. Actually, two separate books, and an extra copy of one of them.

The two books are We The Underpeople and When The People Fell, both published by Baen Books. The reason that I have an extra copy of one of them is simple: I ordered both books and didn't realise that they were different editions, different sizes. The original Baen 2007 edition was a trade paperback, and the 2012 edition was a much smaller mass market paperback, so they don't go together too well on the bookshelf. I'd mistakenly ordered one of each, so I had to rectify my mistake, and immediately ordered a copy of the 2007 trade paperback edition of When The People Fell. The smaller mass market paperback edition will serve as a reading copy, while the two trade paperbacks go on the bookshelves. Extra copies never go to waste. :)

The good news for hardcore Cordwainer Smith fans, or those just wanting to try him out, is that these two books contain ALL of the science fiction writing of this great author. There's no need to track down any of his other books, unless you're one of those OCD obsessives (like myself), who has to have all the different editions, with the different introductions and different covers.

We The Underpeople contains not only an excellent Introduction by Robert Silverberg, but also Smith's only SF novel, NORSTRILIA, and five of his best short stories. When The People Fell contains an equally excellent Introduction by Frederik Pohl, the remaining twenty-two stories in his Instrumentality of Mankind future history sequence, plus six non-Instrumentality stories.

That's all of Cordwainer Smith's SF stories in two books. Awesome, truly awesome. And required reading for anyone who considers themselves true, hardcore SF fans. All I can say is: Go get 'em!

Wednesday, May 11, 2016

Some Cordwainer Smith Books

I'm back on a book binge at the moment, all sorts of books from Amazon, Ebay and other sources. From the SF lit side of things, I've been concentrating on one of my favourite authors, Cordwainer Smith, and the first batch of four Smith books has recently arrived on my doorstep.

The first of the Smith books is the original 1968 Pyramid Books paperback edition of The Underpeople, which is the second half of Smith's only SF novel, NORSTRILIA. The first half was The Planet Buyer, which I already have in it's original Pyramid 1964 paperback edition. I've had the Sphere Books 1975 UK paperback edition of The Underpeople for years, but I wanted the original US Pyramid edition to go with my US original edition of The Planet Buyer.

The other three books are interesting in that they are three different editions of the same book, namely The Best of Cordwainer Smith. First we have the July 1975 hardcover Book Club Edition edition, published by Nelson Doubleday Inc, then the September 1975 Ballantine Books 1st paperback edition. Aside from the larger size and different dustcover art of the hardcover edition, everything is exactly the same, except for a couple of things. Two of the stories are reversed in order for some inexplicable reason, and J.J. Pierce's excellent Future History Timeline is in a much easier to read vertical format in the hardcover, whereas in the paperback edition it's in a harder to read horizontal format spanning several levels.

The third version of the book is actually a UK edition, trade paperback format, No.10 in the SF Masterworks series, published by Gollancz/Orion. Aside from the larger size and beautiful cover art, the internals of this edition are exactly the same as the Ballantine 1st US paperback edition, including the horizontal format Future History Timeline. This one is worth having for the lovely cover artwork and the fact that it's one of the SF Masterworks series.

I've still got several more Cordwainer Smith books due to arrive soon in the post. I'll list those when they arrive.

Wednesday, April 27, 2016

"Dormant" (1948) by A. E. van Vogt

TITLE: "Dormant" (1948) by A. E. van Vogt
CATEGORY: Short Fiction
SUB-CATEGORY: Short Story
SOURCE: BEST SCIENCE-FICTION STORIES edited by Michael Stapleton (Hardcover, Hamlyn, 1977, ISBN: 0-600-38243-5, 750pp)
ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED: Startling Stories, November 1948

I was rummaging in the vaults a while ago, and I came upon an old anthology that I haven't read in years. Well, me being me, I couldn't resist having a browse through it, and looking at the extensive contents listing of excellent stories, the memories started flooding back.

I fondly remember this particular story as one of my favourites from that anthology. A. E. van Vogt's short story "Dormant" was one of those Golden Age of Science Fiction classics first published in the November 1948 edition of Startling Stories, and the story isn't one of those far-future, outer space tales, but is actually pretty much in a contemporary setting, 1948, the same year as the actual publication date of the story. Being an historian (I was actually studying history at school at the time I read it), I've always really liked the strong post-World War II setting of this tale, with the US destroyer Coulson and it's crew doing mop up operations on a remote pacific island, finding hidden caches of fuel and other goodies left behind by the Japanese.

But they also find a lot more than just Japanese leftovers. There's the perplexing mystery of a gigantic rock, weighing millions of tons, which seems to be able to move around the island at will. A rock with a surface temperature of many hundreds of degrees, and which hurls out seemingly random destructive radioactive blasts. A giant rock which is not actually a rock, but an ancient, sentient robot bomb left on Earth countless millions of years ago by some alien race in a long-forgotten interstellar war.

The sections of the story from the POV of the bomb are among my favourites. The bomb, which actually has a name (it calls itself Iilah), has been dormant for countless aeons, but has recently been reawakened by the radiation from the atomic bomb tests on Bikini Atoll in 1946. It has got only low-level life functions back, and is suffering from amnesia. It cannot see the water, air, and even the humans around it. It's simply totally unaware of their existence. All it can see are the ships and the planes, which it takes for strange lifeforms, flying around in the "sky". And it's the bomb's attempts to communicate with these "lifeforms", to try find out where it can get more sources of atomic energy to revive it, which unwittingly causes so much destruction and kills so many people.

And of course the humans, predictable as ever, just HAVE to start shooting at the damned thing. The giant "rock" fights back, kicking their asses and destroying the Coulson, much of the other equipment, and unknowingly snuffing out dozens of lives of which it is totally unaware. The remainder of the taskforce is ordered off the island, and an atomic bomb dropped, which is, ironically, exactly what Iilah needs. The flood of energy totally reinvigorates it, and it remembers its mission. It IS a robot bomb, after all, so it promptly follows orders, explodes and knocks Earth out of its orbit and into the sun. And so the world ends in 1948. :)

"Dormant" must be one of the first A. E. van Vogt short stories that I read (maybe even the first) back in the day, although I'd definitely read a few of his novels before that point. It was during this timeframe that I also came across three other van Vogt short stories - "The Monster", "Vault of the Beast" and "Black Destroyer" - in anthologies that I'd taken out from the local library, but I'm pretty sure that I read "Dormant" before any of the others. Those four stories became huge favourites of mine during my mid-to-late-teens, and kick-started my obsession for hunting down collections of van Vogt short fiction.

"Dormant" (indeed all four of these stories) has stuck in my mind these past forty years, and is one of those early gems that cemented my newly-acquired obsession as a hardcore SF fan. I'll always have a soft spot in my heart for this one.

Anyone who might want to read this story, and is finding it hard to get a copy of this anthology, can also find the story in a couple of van Vogt's short story collections, notably Destination: Universe! and Transfinite: The Essential A.E. van Vogt.

Wednesday, March 30, 2016

THE EARLY POHL (1976) by Frederik Pohl

This time out, I'm going to take a look at a collection of very early stories by one of my favourite SF writers, who also happened to be one of the best editors in the SF industry, and one of the true titans of the SF world, Frederik Pohl. The eight stories and single poem span the years 1937-1944, and there is also a nice introduction and further introductory piece, The Early Pohl, both written by the man himself.

TITLE: THE EARLY POHL
AUTHOR: Frederik Pohl
CATEGORY: Short Fiction
SUB-CATEGORY: Single-Author Collection
FORMAT: Hardback (with dustjacket), US 1st Edition, New York, 1976, 183 pages
PUBLISHER: Doubleday & Co. Inc., New York.

Contents (8 stories, 1 poem):

  • Introduction by Frederik Pohl
  • The Early Pohl by Frederik Pohl
  • "Elegy to a Dead Planet: Luna", originally published as "Elegy to a Dead Satellite: Luna" under the pseudonym "Elton Andrews", (poem, Amazing, October 1937)
  • "The Dweller in the Ice", originally published under the pseudonym "James MacCreigh" (short story, Super Science Stories, January 1941)
  • "The King's Eye", originally published under the pseudonym "James MacCreigh", (short story, Astonishing Stories, February 1941)
  • "It's a Young World", originally published under the pseudonym "James MacCreigh", (novelette, Astonishing Stories, April 1941)
  • "Daughters of Eternity", originally published under the pseudonym "James MacCreigh" (short story, Astonishing Stories, March 1942)
  • "Earth, Farewell!", originally published under the pseudonym "James MacCreigh", (novelette, Astonishing Stories, February 1943)
  • "Conspiracy on Callisto", originally published under the pseudonym "James MacCreigh", (short story, Planet Stories, Winter 1943)
  • "Highwayman of the Void", originally published under the pseudonym "Dirk Wylie", (novelette, Planet Stories, Fall 1944)
  • "Double-Cross", originally published under the pseudonym "James MacCreigh", (short story, Planet Stories, Winter 1944)

Aside from the poem, "Elegy to a Dead Planet: Luna", which was Pohl's first published work, I haven't read any of these stories before. The first two Pohl stories that I did read, way back in my early and mid-teens, were also early ones from the same era as these stories, both appearing under the same "James MacCreigh" pseudonym as most of the stories in this collection.

"Wings of the Lightning Land" was a novelette which first appeared in the November 1941 edition of Astonishing Stories, and was the very first Pohl/MacCreigh story that I ever read, in the classic anthology Science Fiction: The Great Years, edited by Carol & Frederik Pohl (who else?). The other one that I read shortly afterwards was "Let the Ants Try", a short story that first appeared in the Winter 1949 edition of Planet Stories, and which I read in another SF anthology (can't remember which) back in my mid-teens. Both of these stories had a huge effect on me at that early age, and have remained firm favourites ever since I first read them over forty years ago. They are among a select group of SF stories that have stuck firmly in my mind virtually my entire life.

I'm actually very surprised that both of these stories were not included in this collection, as they're two of Pohl's best early stories from this era, and they really should've been in this book. They would've been a perfect fit for this one. Ah, well, I have them in other anthologies anyway. As I'm a big fan of Pohl's work, and I always love stories from this time period, I really should enjoy these stories. I think I'll be in for a real treat with this collection.

Friday, January 29, 2016

Some New Books - January 2016

I haven't bought any new SF books in ages now, but, with Christmas behind me and a few quid spare in my pocket, I took the notion over the past couple of weeks to trawl Ebay.co.uk for some books. Actually, none of them are "new", as there's not a lot of modern SF that I enjoy, with the exception of some anthologies of short fiction and a very narrow range of authors and sub-genres. But I did find two second hand/used anthologies of classic Golden Age stuff, which is much more my kind of thing, one collection of Isaac Asimov's fantasy stories, essays and articles, and, finally, one "Best of the Year" SF anthology, from 2007.

  • SCIENCE FICTION: THE BEST OF THE YEAR 2007 EDITION edited by Rich Horton (trade paperback, Prime Books, Germantown MD, US, 2007, ISBN-10: 0-8095-6297-9, ISBN-13: 978-0-8095-6297-8)
  • MAGIC: THE FINAL FANTASY COLLECTION by Isaac Asimov (Paperback, Voyager, London, 1997, ISBN: 0-00-648203-1)
  • GREAT TALES OF THE GOLDEN AGE OF SCIENCE FICTION edited by Isaac Asimov, Charles G. Waugh and Martin H. Greenberg (hardback, Galahad Books, New York, 1991, ISBN: 0-88365-772-4)
  • THE GOLDEN AGE OF SCIENCE FICTION edited by Kingsley Amis (Large Format Paperback, Penguin Books, 1983, first published by Hutchinson & Co., 1981)

The SCIENCE FICTION: THE BEST OF THE YEAR 2007 EDITION trade paperback is a nice anthology of reasonably recent (less than ten years old) stories, twelve in all, five from Asimov's SF Magazine, two from F&SF, and the other five from five different sources both magazines and books. I haven't read this one yet, but there are a few authors in it that I usually like (Robert Reed, Walter Jon Williams, Ian Watson, Robert Charles Wilson), and Rich Horton rarely puts together a bad "Best SF" anthology.

MAGIC: THE FINAL FANTASY COLLECTION is a single-author collection of Isaac Asimov's fantasy (as opposed to SF) short fiction. It's also notable for collecting a number of Asimov's essays and articles about fantasy and other subjects. It's a bit of a strange one, this, although I found it an interesting mix of articles and fiction. And Asimov's fantasy is just as logical as his science fiction, with its own strict internal rules and limitations, which made it easy for me to read, despite the fact that I'm not a huge fan of reading fantasy.

GREAT TALES OF THE GOLDEN AGE OF SCIENCE FICTION is a cracking anthology of classic Golden Age SF put together by the ever-reliable trio of Isaac Asimov, Charles G. Waugh and Martin H. Greenberg. Nine stories in all, almost all of them published in Astounding during the 1941-1947 timeframe. Some of the biggest names in SF are in this one - Isaac Asimov, A.E. van Vogt, Jack Williamson, Theodore Sturgeon, Lester del Rey, C.L. Moore, Ross Rocklynne, A. Bertram Chandler, T.L. Sherred - and with some of their most classic stories.

THE GOLDEN AGE OF SCIENCE FICTION edited by Kingsley Amis is another cracking anthology, with a completely different group of stories and authors to the previous anthology. Only Asimov appears in both, but with different stories. And there are seventeen stories in this one, almost twice as many as the other anthology. Aside from Isaac Asimov, we've got Arthur C. Clarke, Poul Anderson, Frederik Pohl, Brian W. Aldiss, Cordwainer Smith, H. Beam Piper, Harry Harrison, Damon Knight, Anthony Boucher, James Blish, Robert Sheckley, J.G. Ballard, Kurt Vonnegut Jr., Jerome Bixby, F.L. Wallace and Philip Latham. That is a hugely impressive line-up of SF author talent with some of their most classic stories.

The Kingsley Amis anthology is a completely different kind of book to the other one edited by Asimov, Waugh and Greenberg. I wouldn't really consider it a real "Golden Age" anthology at all, as the stories are from the 1950s and 1960s (there's even one from 1979!), rather than the 1940s (the actual "Golden Age of SF" is usually considered to be circa 1938-1950, when Campbell's Astounding ruled the roost unchallenged, and before the appearance of F&SF and Galaxy). The stories are therefore slightly more sophisticated than those in the other book, with much less of an emphasis on stories from Astounding, and a much higher percentage coming from F&SF, Galaxy and other sources. The stories are of the highest calibre, and the only criticism I would have is none of them actually qualify as "Golden Age" SF, as they come from a later period, and there are several of the 1960s stories that even come dangerously close to belonging to the New Wave. I guess Amis' interpretation of "Golden Age" SF is a bit different to the rest of us, and maybe a bit more of a personal one. :)

All in all, a nice little batch of books. I've gotten the bug back again for hunting down SF books. I must get back on Ebay to see if I can find a few more classic anthologies.

Thursday, December 31, 2015

THE MEN AND THE MIRROR (1973) by Ross Rocklynne

This time out, we have a single author collection of short fiction by SF Pulps stalwart, Ross Rocklynne (real name Ross Louis Rocklin, February 21, 1913 – October 29, 1988). Rocklynne was very active in the SF magazines from the early-1930s up until the mid-1950s, when he disappeared off the scene for more than a decade (supposedly because of his interest in Dianetics), only returning in the late-1960s, when he wrote a small number of highly regarded stories, including "Ching Witch!", which appeared in Harlan Ellison's classic 1972 anthology, AGAIN, DANGEROUS VISIONS.

But it's Rocklynne's classic 1930s, 1940s and early-1950s stories that he is remembered most for. And this is a nice little collection, spanning 1936-1952, another fairly short book, only 208 pages and six stories, so it shouldn't be too hard to get through.

TITLE: THE MEN AND THE MIRROR
AUTHOR: Ross Rocklynne
CATEGORY: Short Fiction
SUB-CATEGORY: Single Author Collection
FORMAT: Paperback, 208 pages
PUBLISHER: Ace Books, First Ace Printing, New York, 1973
ISBN: 0 7278 1221 1

CONTENTS:

  • Introduction by Ross Rocklynne
  • "At the Center of Gravity" (Astounding Stories, June 1936)
  • "Jupiter Trap" (Astounding Stories, August 1937)
  • "The Men and the Mirror" (Astounding Science Fiction, July 1938)
  • Robert D. Swisher letter from Astounding Stories, November 1938
  • "They Fly So High" (Amazing Stories, June 1952)
  • "The Bottled Men" (Astounding Science Fiction, June 1946)
  • "And Then There Was One" (from Astounding Science Fiction, February 1940)

Ross Rocklynne was one of those writers who seemed to pop up regularly in the SF mags during the 1930s-1950s, and who was very popular, but was sadly underappreciated compared to his more famous contemporaries (Heinlein, Van Vogt, Asimov, Del Rey, etc), and so he never achieved the same level of fame as these authors. Perhaps this was because many of the stories were very unusual for that era, less mainstream commercial SF, and in many ways quite a bit ahead of their time. He was certainly a very powerful writer, almost avant-garde, and in many ways was a precursor to the New Wave of the 1960s. Maybe this explains why he was never as big as the likes of Heinlein or Van Vogt.

My own first encounters with Rocklynne's work came through reading some of his short fiction in various anthologies of Golden Age SF (I've never read any of his novels). The two that I remember best, and which stick in my mind, are “Into the Darkness” (Astonishing Stories, June 1940) and "Time Wants a Skeleton" (Astounding, June 1941). “Into the Darkness”, which spawned several sequel stories, is a fascinating tale with no human characters at all. The main characters are a bunch of ancient, sentient nebulas (not many writers could pull that one off)! "Time Wants a Skeleton" is a very clever time paradox/time loop story, which was quite unusual and complex back in 1941, although this type of story has become quite commonplace in recent years.

I've never read any of the stories in this collection before, and all of them are considered classic "scientific puzzle" or "scientific problem" stories, which were so much in vogue during that era. The first three stories, "At the Center of Gravity", "Jupiter Trap" and "The Men and the Mirror" were all published in Astounding in June 1936, August 1937 and July 1938 respectively, and were part of the "cops and robbers" Colbie and Deverel series, featuring Interplanetary Police Officer Lt. Jack Colbie, and his long time adversary, space pirate Edward Deverel. The third story and title story of the collection, "The Men and the Mirror" is followed by a very interesting letter published several months later in Astounding from one Robert D. Swisher, arguing that the calculations in "The Men and the Mirror" were completely wrong. Just the kinda thing that John W. Campbell Jr loved to publish, and guaranteed to cause much controversy and discussion! :)

The fourth and fifth stories were originally intended to be part of the Colbie and Deverel series, but for some reason Rocklynne changed the names, backgrounds and personalities of the main male adversaries. But in every other respect, they are still the same "cops and robbers" space stories. The final story of the six, "And Then There Was One", is a variation on the classic "Ten Little Indians" theme. It breaks (slightly, but not a lot) the trend of the "cops and robbers" theme in the previous five tales, and was obviously written to show that the premise of the first story, "At the Center of Gravity", was scientifically incorrect. Rocklynne sounds like a right screwball - quite obviously my type of guy! :)

The edition of THE MEN AND THE MIRROR that I have is the Ace Books 1st Paperback edition, and apparently Rocklynne himself was VERY unhappy about how Ace Books handled the publishing of his short story collection. And who could blame him? The stories were published out of chronological order, and, if that wasn't bad enough, the break between the fifth and sixth stories was completely ommitted, leaving out altogether both the title of the story and the author's introductory comments to the final story in the collection, "And Then There Was One". It is so bad that there are many readers who are convinced that there are only five stories in the collection. I've seen comments on Amazon.com complaining about this very thing. But trust me. There are six stories, not five. Just go to page 168 and check it out.

You have to look very carefully to even find where "And Then There Was One" begins, as the final paragraph of the previous story, "The Bottled Men", ends about half way down page 168, there is a single paragraph break, and then straight into the first paragraph of "And Then There Was One". There is no title nor any author's comments (as there were with the previous five stories) to show where it begins. And this was compounded even further by the fact that there are only five stories listed on the Contents page - "And Then There Was One" is ommitted from that as well, although, strangely enough, it IS listed on the preceding Copyright/Credits page. All in all, this was a complete printing/publishing cock-up by the Ace Books editors, which, sadly, spoils the enjoyment of this nice collection somewhat. No wonder Ross Rocklynne was absolutely livid.

Just as an addendum, and through judicious use of Google, I've tracked down Rocklynne's author comments to "And Then There Was One". They were published for the very first time in a reference book, The Work of Ross Rocklynne: An Annotated Bibliography & Guide**, and I've reprinted the comments here, just in case anyone else has read the collection and might be interested:

"Sir Isaac Newton provided the idea. He already had Worked out the problem of the hollow planet before I approached it in "At the Center of Gravity". My answer was wrong. A decision was made to set the record straight, even though no complaining remarks about my ancient error had come through. The ten little Indians implied in the title became six big businessmen having a bit of a go at each other under rather strange and, in a manner of speaking, revolutionary conditions. Again, a planet was tailored to fit the problem."*

*The Work of Ross Rocklynne: An Annotated Bibliography & Guide p.59

**The Work of Ross Rocklynne: An Annotated Bibliography & Guide
by Douglas Menville
edited by Boden Clarke
Borgo Press, First Edition December 1989
Hardback: ISBN: 0-8095-0511-8 $19.95
Paperback: ISBN: 0-8095-0511-3 $9.95

Thursday, November 26, 2015

BEYOND THE BARRIERS OF SPACE AND TIME edited by Judith Merril

This time around, we have an SF anthology. This one is an oldie, from 1955, and is compiled and edited by Judith Merril, another of my favourite anthologists. This is the first Judith Merril anthology that I've featured on this blog, and most certainly won't be the last.

TITLE: BEYOND THE BARRIERS OF SPACE AND TIME
EDITED BY: Judith Merril
CATEGORY:Short Fiction
SUB-CATEGORY:Anthology
PUBLISHER: Sidgwick and Jackson, London, 1955
FORMAT: Hardback, 1st Edition, 291 pages

CONTENTS:

  • Introduction by Theodore Sturgeon
  • Preface by Judith Merril
  • "Wolf Pack" by Walter M. Miller, Jr. (short story, Fantastic, Sept/Oct 1953)
  • "No One Believed Me" by Will Thompson (Saturday Evening Post, April 24, 1948)
  • "Perforce to Dream" by John Wyndham (short story, Beyond Fantasy Fiction, Jan 1954)
  • "The Laocoon Complex" by J. C. Furnas (Esquire, April 1937)
  • "Crazy Joey" by Mark Clifton and Alex Apostolides (short story, Astounding Science Fiction, August 1953)
  • "The Golden Man" by Phillip K. Dick (novelette, If Magazine, April 1954)
  • "Malice Aforethought" by David Grinnell [Donald A. Wollheim] (short story, Fantasy & Science Fiction, Nov 1952)
  • "The Last Seance" by Agatha Christie (short story, Ghost Stories, November 1926)
  • "Medicine Dancer" by Bill Brown (short story, Fantasy Fiction, November 1953)
  • "Behold It Was a Dream" by Rhoda Broughton (Temple Bar, November 1872)
  • "Belief" by Isaac Asimov (novelette, Astounding Science Fiction, October 1953)
  • "The Veldt" by Ray Bradbury (Saturday Evening Post, September 23, 1950)
  • "Mr. Kincaid's Pasts" by J. J. Coupling [John R. Pierce] (short story, Fantasy & Science Fiction, August 1953)
  • "The Warning" by Peter Phillips (short story, Fantasy & Science Fiction, September 1953)
  • "The Ghost of Me" by Anthony Boucher (short story, Unknown, June 1942)
  • "The Wall Around the World" by Theodore R. Cogswell (novelette, Beyond Fantasy Fiction, September 1953)
  • "Operating Instructions" by Robert Sheckley (short story, Astounding Science Fiction, May 1953)
  • "Interpretation of a Dream" by John Collier (The New Yorker, May 5, 1951)
  • "Defense Mechanism" by Katherine MacLean (short story, Astounding Science Fiction, October 1949)

This anthology is a 1st UK Edition, published in London by Sidgwick & Jackson, old stalwarts in the SF publishing field. It features nineteen stories by a wide assortment of authors, many of them pretty obscure. There is also an Introduction by Theodore Sturgeon, a Preface by Judith Merril, and a Bibliography at the back of the book.

The Bibliography erroneously lists the Anthony Boucher story ("The Ghost of Me") as having appeared in the June 1942 edition of Astounding Science Fiction. It was the June 1942 edition of Unknown. I've done the usual with all of the stories that appeared in the SF&F magazines, giving their month and year of publication, and noting if the stories were short stories, novelettes, etc. But several of the stories were not published in the SF&F magazines, appearing instead in general mass media publications. In those instances, only the name of the magazine and the year of publication is listed.

Highlighting the stories from the regular SF&F publications of that era, there are a few familiar faces and stories, although many are also totally unfamiliar to me. There are some old favourites - Bradbury's "The Veldt", Asimov's "Belief", and Dick's "The Golden Man" (an old childhood favourite of mine). There are also a bunch of unfamiliar stories from very familiar authors - Wyndham, Miller, Boucher, Sheckley, Clifton, Cogswell, Phillips, Wollheim (as David Grinnell) and MacLean. But the other stories are by totally unknown authors (to me, anyway). The stories may have appeared in the regular SF mags, but I'm afraid I'm totally unfamiliar with them and their authors (J. J. Coupling and Bill Brown).

In among the regular SF authors and magazines from that era, there are some real oddities. As I've already mentioned, there were several totally unfamiliar stories by unfamiliar authors, originally published in mainstream non-SF publications - John Collier (The New Yorker), J. C. Furnas (Esquire) and Will Thompson (Saturday Evening Post).

There is also a story from 1926 by Agatha Christie ("The Last Seance"), which is a strange one for an SF anthology, although many pre-1960s SF&F anthologies were often a varied mix of more cross-genre types of stories. Finally, there is another oddity which was first published way back in 1873, a story by Rhoda Broughton ("Behold It Was a Dream"). Broughton was the niece of J. Sheridan Le Fanu, and an accomplished author in her own right, although regretfully now mostly forgotten. The Bibliography completely omits the listing for this story, for some reason.

A very interesting anthology, and a bit of a strange mix. Should be a good read.

Saturday, October 31, 2015

TOM'S MIDNIGHT GARDEN (1958) by Philippa Pearce

This time out, I'm going to take a look at something completely different. It's a classic Young Adult/children's novel written by a British author who is very famous on this side of the Atlantic, but is probably a lot less-known to readers in the US.

Ann Philippa Pearce OBE (22 January 1920 – 21 December 2006), better known simply as Philippa Pearce, was a famous English author of children's literature. She wrote over thirty books during the years 1955–2008, and quite a few of her books and short stories fall under the fantasy and supernatural heading, including this particular novel, Tom's Midnight Garden.

TITLE: TOM'S MIDNIGHT GARDEN
AUTHOR: Philippa Pearce
COVER ARTIST/ILLUSTRATOR: Susan Einzig
CATEGORY: Novel
SUB-CATEGORY: YA/Children's Fantasy
FORMAT: 1st Edition Hardback, 229 pages
PUBLISHER: Oxford University Press, December 1958.
ISBN: 0-19-271128-8.

Tom's Midnight Garden belongs firmly in the classic timeslip fantasy sub-genre, which was so popular in British fantasy literature during the second third of the twentieth century. It's a charming, gorgeous, beautifully-written tale about the relationship between a young boy, time-slipping from the late-1950s back to the 1890s (and moving closer in time as the story progresses), and the young girl he meets and befriends there.

SYNOPSIS:

Tom Long is a young boy sent to stay with his Uncle Alan and Aunt Gwen, when his brother Peter gets measles. They live in a small upstairs flat of a huge house, which was once an impressive Victorian mansion. There's nowhere for him to play, as there's no garden, nothing but a tiny yard to park cars. The old landlady, Mrs Bartholomew, who lives in a room at the very top of the stairs, is a strange one. She keeps to herself, and hardly anyone ever sees her. She certainly doesn't like children running about, so Tom is expected to be quiet and behave himself (some chance of that - young boys must get up to mischief).

Most strange is the grandfather clock down in the hall. Tom can't get to sleep at night, so he lies listening to it as it strikes midnight. But instead of striking twelve times, the clock strikes thirteen! Overcome by curiosity, Tom sneaks downstairs, opens the back door, and finds not a dingy little back yard, but a huge sunlit garden (hey, it's supposed to be midnight!). So every night when the clock strikes thirteen, Tom runs downstairs and out into the gorgeous Victorian era garden.

He meets and befriends a lonely little girl called Hatty, who becomes his only playmate. Tom sees many other people in the garden, but only Hatty (and the gardener) can see him. All the other kids think that Hatty is playing alone, and that she's a bit of a weirdo. But strangely, on each nightly visit to the garden, Tom seems to be jumping around in time, mostly forward. Hatty is getting older, at first slowly, from a little girl a fair bit younger than Tom, to a girl his age, then faster and faster until she is much older than Tom, eventually becoming an adult. At this stage of the novel, she is courting a suitor (Barty), and she doesn't seem to see Tom any more. He is becoming more and more insubstantial until he fades away altogether.

On the very last night before he's ready to go home, Tom runs downstairs as usual. But the garden is gone. There's nothing there but the dark, dingy back yard. Tom crashes into bins, knocking them over and causing quite a racket, waking up the residents. He lies there sobbing, calling out Hatty's name. His Uncle Alan picks him up and helps him back into the house, excusing what happened to be a result of Tom "sleepwalking".

The next morning, Tom is summoned up the stairs to apologise to Mrs. Bartholomew. But instead of getting a major telling-off, he is greeted warmly and is astonished to find out that the old woman is actually Hatty, who had heard him calling out to her the previous night. She explains everything to Tom, including what happened after his final visit to the garden. On leaving her, he rushes back up the stairs and, to the amazement of his Aunt and Uncle, gives Mrs. Bartholomew a big hug, like he's known her all his life, and as though she is still a little girl.

Tom's Midnight Garden was Philippa Pearce's second novel, and was published by Oxford University Press in 1958. It is by far her most famous book, and it won the prestigious Carnegie Medal in 1958, an annual British literary award (first awarded in 1936) given to that year's outstanding new book for children or young adults (its nearest equivalents in the US would be the Newbery and Printz Awards). It's beautifully written, from the intelligent story, to the touching relationship between Tom and Hatty (and her older self, Mrs. Bartholomew), and the regular correspondence between Tom and his brother Peter, to whom he writes daily accounts of his adventures in the garden with Hatty, as Peter recovers from his bout of measles. Quite a few of the scenes in the book are exquisite and genuinely moving.

It's quite a different kind of book to the mainstream fantasy that most readers devour today. Pearce's novel comes from a storytelling tradition of an earlier age, from an era before mainstream fantasy became dominated by Tolkein and the endless stream of clones/copycats that took over the bookshelves in the wake of the meteoric rise in popularity of the Lord of the Rings books during the 1960s, and which still rule the bookshelves today, more than half a century later. Tolkein's Lord of the Rings trilogy was written during the years 1954-1958, so Tom's Midnight Garden was a contemporary literary work. However, it is an entirely different kind of fantasy to the Lord of the Rings books. Thankfully, I may add, as I am certainly no fan of the Tolkeinesque brand of high fantasy.

Tom's Midnight Garden has been a lifelong favourite of mine, ever since I was a young boy. I first read it when I was nine or ten, picking it up from the school library. I also had easy access to it over the years as it was readily available from local libraries (it was a very popular book in the UK back in the day). So I was able to revisit it quite a few times during my teens and twenties. I eventually bought my own paperback copy back in the 1970s (the 1976 Puffin paperback edition), which I dig out every couple of years for a re-read.

Philippa Pearce's classic novel was one of those remarkable childhood favourites that made an indelible mark on me as a young boy, and my love for this book will remain with me till the day I die. This is a true children's fantasy classic, and every young boy or girl really should read this gem at least once in their lives. Hell, even if you are not quite so young any more, if you have never read this book, put it right at the top of your "To Buy" list.