Read Sense of Wonder: A Century of Science Fiction Online
Authors: Leigh Grossman
Tags: #science fiction, #literature, #survey, #short stories, #anthology
THE UGLY CHICKENS, by Howard Waldrop
AWARDS IN SCIENCE FICTION, by Lauren Cunningham
A LETTER FROM THE CLEARYS, by Connie Willis
SEVEN AMERICAN NIGHTS, by Gene Wolfe
THE COMPUTER ITERATES THE GREATER TRUMPS, by Gene Wolfe
PART 7: Science Fiction in the Age of Consolidation
SHADOW CATCHER, by Ayana R. Abdallah
A ROLL OF THE DICE, by Catherine Asaro
STEAMPUNK, by Burgsbee L. Hobbs
BEARS DISCOVER FIRE, by Terry Bisson
THEY’RE MADE OUT OF MEAT, by Terry Bisson
HELL IS THE ABSENCE OF GOD, by Ted Chiang
WHEN SYSADMINS RULED THE EARTH, by Cory Doctorow
SURVIVALISM, by Kyle William Bishop
DEBRA DOYLE AND JAMES D. MACDONALD
UNCLE JOSHUA AND THE GROOGLEMEN, by Debra Doyle and James D. Macdonald
STANDING ROOM ONLY, by Karen Joy Fowler
THREE HEARINGS ON THE EXISTENCE OF SNAKES IN THE HUMAN BLOODSTREAM, by James Alan Gardner
GRIOTS OF THE GALAXY, by Andrea Hairston
DANCE DANCE REVOLUTION, by Cathy Park Hong
SCIENCE FICTION AND LYRIC POETRY, by Seo-Young Jennie Chu
A HABIT OF WASTE, by Nalo Hopkinson
POSTCOLONIAL SCIENCE FICTION, by Ericka Hoagland
EVIL ROBOT MONKEY, by Mary Robinette Kowal
MY MOTHER, DANCING, by Nancy Kress
THE HARDENED CRIMINALS, by Jonathan Lethem
THE LINCOLN TRAIN, by Maureen F. Mchugh
SCIENCE FICTION AND ANIME, Mark Gellis
CANADIAN SCIENCE FICTION IN ENGLISH, by Ruby S. Ramraj
ALTERNATE HISTORIES, by Darrell Schweitzer
SCIENTIFIC ROMANCE, by Darrell Schweitzer
AT THE CONCLUSION OF AN INTERSTELLAR WAR, by Darrell Schweitzer
APPENDICES AND GUIDES FOR WRITERS
SIXTY RULES FOR SHORT SF (AND FANTASY), by Terry Bisson
WRITERS’ WORKSHOPS, by Debra Doyle
INVENTING THE FUTURE, by Mike Brotherton
SUBMITTING A MANUSCRIPT, by Leigh Grossman
LITERARY AGENTS, Leigh Grossman
A Century of Science Fiction
Copyright © 2011 by Leigh Ronald Grossman except essays, which are copyright © 2011 by their listed authors, and stories and poems which are copyright as listed at the end of each selection.
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever without the express written consent of the publisher, except for short excerpts in reviews, or as provided by U.S. copyright law.
Cover art copyright © Crop / Shutterstock
Cover design by John Betancourt
Interior design by Leigh Grossman
Special thanks to Elizabeth M. Glover
Dedicated to Meg Grossman and Rob Grossman, who made sure to pass on their favorite books to their little brother.
Published by
Wildside Press, LLC
www.wildsidebooks.com
For more information, see:
http://wonder.swordsmith.com
I have a mixed relationship with the giant Norton Anthology-type books that are used to teach many literature courses. On the one hand I love the idea of a single volume that includes most of the key writers in the field. For years I had to assign ten separate books in my science fiction classes and there were still huge gaps and important writers who I never got to teach. Every few years anthologies would go out of print and I’d have to scrape together some other combination of books that didn’t do quite what I
wanted and hopefully didn’t cost my students a prohibitive amount.
On the other hand, I do have an issue with the traditional Norton Anthology–type approach: It tends to depict the writers as if they were special creatures touched by the gods, distinct from the rest of humanity. While I think putting the importance of particular works in context is important, I’ve always felt (as a writer and editor myself) that that approach was too exclusionary. It’s distancing to readers, and largely ignores the relationships between writers, readers, and editors, which in science fiction tend to be particularly convoluted and intertwined. And it does a disservice to students who are themselves aspiring writers, by implying that if they lack some divine spark they can never reach the next level. That approach tends to ignore the level of honing their craft that most writers do (Ray Bradbury talks about the “million words” one needs to write before reaching that level) and the system of readers and fandom which germinates and supports those writers.
It’s easy to get the impression from some literary anthologies that writing is an entirely solitary profession, and that most writers lock themselves in garretts and work in a vacuum. Science fiction doesn’t get written that way. It’s a small, incestuous, gossipy field and always has been. By and large everyone knows everyone else. People can be amazingly supportive or carry grudges for generations. Drop by the bar at a literary convention and you’ll run into writers telling stories and kicking ideas around, in much the same way that if you dropped into the right bar in the seventeenth century you’d run into Shakespeare and Kit Marlowe drinking and telling stories and kicking ideas around. I’ve tried to make this book comprehensive, but also to convey a sense of the relationship between writers, editors, and fans that has made science fiction so distinctive over the last century.
* * * *
Before anyone else, I need to extend a broad thanks to all of the writers who agreed to allow me to reprint their work at rates far below what they deserved, in the interest of making an inexpensive science fiction textbook available to students. Even in a two-million-word book there were a few painful omissions, and a few writers had to be left out because no ebook rights were available.
While I mostly worked directly with writers in securing story rights, I owe a particular debt of gratitude to a number of literary agents. Most literary agents prefer not to represent authors for story sales, since they generally lose money on them. (The payments are far less than the time required to represent their clients.) Sometimes it’s necessary, as in the case of literary estates where there is no author to work with directly. I am deeply appreciative of all the agents who went out of their way to make sure this book could come together in a way that showcased their clients and remained affordable to students. I especially want to thank Vaughne Lee Hansen of the Virginia Kidd Agency, who has more writers in the book than any other agent but remained cheerful and helpful throughout. Eleanor Wood was involved in the project at a very early stage, since she is the agent for SFWA as well as many writers I wanted to include. That meant extra time getting the boilerplate contracts right and making sure things got off on the right foot. I’m grateful to Eleanor and her assistant Maria Leone Karastergiou of the Spectrum Literary Agency. I also want to thank Kay McCauley of the Pimlico Agency; Merrilee Heifetz and Miriam Newman at Writers House; Russ Galen and Ann Behar at Scovil Galen Ghosh; Jane Judd; Katy Loffman at Pollinger, Limited; Diana Finch; Colin Smythe; John Silbersack and Nicole Robson at Trident Media; and Linn Prentis.
Editorial assistants Lauren Cunningham, Sheri Giglio, and Colleen Lynch did yeoman research work during the book’s last stages, as well as taking on many other small projects that helped make
Sense of Wonder
a better book.
John Betancourt of The Wildside Press stepped forward and picked up the book when its original publisher backed out of the project. I couldn’t have hoped for a more supportive publisher or one who shared my vision any more closely.
Amy Goldschlager and Dennis McCunney made suggestions that helped shape the earliest forms of
Sense of Wonder
, as it began its evolution from raw idea to its present form. Elizabeth Glover lent both formative suggestions and her design expertise.
Many colleagues at UConn lent support in various ways, particularly Wayne Franklin, A. Harris Fairbanks, Ruth Fairbanks, and Sydney Plum. Richard Bleiler, UConn’s superb Humanities Librarian, had a wealth of suggestions that helped widen the scope of the book, and contributed an essay on Hugo Gernsback. I am also indebted to Seo-Young Jennie Chu at Queens CUNY for suggestions that strengthened the book’s poetry component enormously. John Kessel at NC State University and Ayana Abdallah at the University of Houston both made excellent story and author suggestions, in addition to contributing their own work to the book. Don Riggs at Drexel was one of the first contributors and I leaned on him a number of times for suggestions. Likewise Thomas Bertonneau, Kyle Bishop, Laurel Bollinger, Samuel Collins, Sibelan Forrester, Carol Franko, Sonja Fritsche, Andrew Gordon, Darren Harris-Fain, Mack Hassler, Karen Hellekson, Ericka Hoagland, Lee Hobbs, Jay Ingrao, Calvin Johnson, James McGrath, Katherine Pandora, Twila Papay, Amerdeep Singh, Breyan Strickler, and Lisa Swanstrom all helped to improve the book in important ways with their feedback and suggestions above and beyond the expertise they contributed in their essays.
Mike Resnick was the first author who committed to the book, even before I finalized the agreement with the publisher; I went to him for contract advice and ended up with that and much more. John Joseph Adams, Faye Ringel, Stan Robinson, Darrell Schweitzer, Gordon van Gelder, and Michael J. Walsh were enormously helpful in tracking down difficult-to-find writers (in addition to Stan’s and Darrell’s own contributions to the book).
In addition to the academic essay contributors, Betsy Wollheim of DAW Books, Toni Weiskopf of Baen Books, Hildy Silverman of
Space & Time
, Ian Randal Strock of
SFScope
, and reviewers Dan Kimmel and Tom Easton all generously contributed essays, suggestions, and support to the book.
A number of students at UConn and elsewhere volunteered to read over drafts of the introductory essays to help catch anything that might be confusing to undergraduates who were new to science fiction. I especially want to thank Emily Bonner, Georgios Katsikis, Jeremy Lawson, Kim Lawson, Sam Martin, Ryan McLean, Arthur Nowell III, Chelsea Raiola, Katelyn Wilson, and Myles Udland.
( –1926)
By and large, books were expensive and published in comparatively small numbers in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Mass market paperpacks were still well into the future, and people did most of their fiction reading in magazines and even newspapers (which were expensive as well, but not as pricy as books). Before the middle of the nineteenth century, fiction reading was looked down on in polite society, but that changed with the enormous popularity of Charles Dickens (in much the same way J. K. Rowling made it acceptable for adults to read children’s fantasy in the late twentieth century).
While science fiction wasn’t yet thought of as a genre, stories using proto-SF themes weren’t all that unusual. There wasn’t much actual science in works by Edgar Allan Poe and Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, but they were certainly speculative in a way that would later cause writer and critic Brian Aldiss to label Shelley’s
Frankenstein
the first science fiction novel. Other writers used science fictional images or ideas in otherwise mainstream works, or wrote quasi-allegorical utopias and dystopias set in distant places or times.
By the late nineteenth century, many recognizable science fictional tropes had begun to appear. The field had its first star authors in Jules Verne, writing near-future technothrillers, and H. G. Wells, writing more speculative social and military SF with deeply political themes. Both of those threads continue to be hugely influential on SF today; naturally, Verne and Wells politely despised each other’s writing choices, a tradition that also continues into the present.
In the early twentieth century, Edgar Rice Burroughs became fantastically wealthy by writing (among other things) planetary romances. There’s no more science in John Carter’s trip to Mars than there was in Mark Twain’s
A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court
a generation earlier; both characters have inexplicable out-of-body journeys allowing them to journey in space or time. Once on Mars, however, Carter’s swashbuckling experiences on the vast canvas of the Martian planet embody a sense of adventure that’s extraordinarily appealing in the increasingly mechanized world that World War I-era readers lived in.