Sense of Wonder: A Century of Science Fiction (73 page)

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Authors: Leigh Grossman

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Public indignation waxed high. Derogatory remarks about “wops” were flung about. Shouts of “Holy war!” were heard. I could feel the tension in the atmosphere as I took my seat in the crowded church in the evening. I had been assured that the message of the gostak and the doshes would be thoroughly expounded so that even the most simple-minded and uneducated people could understand it fully. Although I had my hands full at the university, I was so puzzled and amazed at the course events were taking that I determined to give the evening to finding out what the slogan meant.

There was a good deal of singing before the lecture began. Mimeographed copies of the words were passed about, but I neglected to preserve them and do not remember them. I know there was one solemn hymn that reverberated harmoniously through the great church, a chanting repetition of “The Gostak Distims the Doshes.” There was another stirring martial air that began, “Oh, the Gostak! Oh, the Gostak!”—and ended with a swift cadence on “The Gostak Distims the Doshes!” The speaker had a rich, eloquent voice and a commanding figure. He stepped out and bowed solemnly.

“The gostak distims the doshes,” he pronounced impressively. “Is it not comforting to know that there is a gostak; do we not glow with pride because the doshes are distimmed? In the entire universe there is no more profoundly significant fact: the gostak distims the doshes. Could anything be more complete yet more tersely emphatic! The gostak distims the doshes!” Applause. “This thrilling truth affects our innermost lives. What would we do if the gostak did not distim the doshes? Without the gostak, without doshes, what would we do? What would we think? How would we feel?” Applause again.

At first I thought this was some kind of introduction. I was inexperienced in listening to popular speeches, lectures and sermons. I had spent most of my life in the study of physics and its accessory sciences. I could not help trying to figure out the meaning of whatever I heard. When I found none, I began to get impatient. I waited some more, thinking that soon he would begin on the real explanation. After thirty minutes of the same sort of stuff as I have just quoted, I gave up trying to listen. I just sat and hoped he would soon be through. The people applauded and grew more excited. After an hour I stirred restlessly; I slouched down in my seat and sat up by turns. After two hours I grew desperate; I got up and walked out. Most of the people were too excited to notice me. Only a few of them cast hostile glances at my retreat.

The next day the mad nightmare began for me. First there was a snowstorm of extras over the city, announcing the sinking of a merchantman by an Engtalian cruiser. A dispute had arisen between the officers of the merchantman and the port officials, because the latter had jeered disrespectfully at the gostak. The merchantman picked up and started out without having fulfilled all the customs requirements. A cruiser followed it and ordered it to return. The captain of the merchantman told them that the gostak distims the doshes, whereupon the cruiser fired twice and sank the merchantman. In the afternoon came the extras announcing the Executive’s declaration of war.

Recruiting offices opened; the university was depleted of its young men, uniformed troops marched through the city, and railway trains full of them went in and out. Campaigns for raising war loans; home-guards, women’s auxiliaries, ladies’ aid societies making bandages, young women enlisting as ambulance drivers—it was indeed war; all of it to the constantly repeated slogan: “The gostak distims the doshes.”

I could hardly believe that it was really true. There seemed to be no adequate cause for a war. The huge and powerful nation had dreamed a silly slogan and flung it in the world’s face. A group of nations across the water had united into an alliance, claiming they had to defend themselves against having forced upon them a principle they did not desire. The whole thing at the bottom had no meaning. It did not seem possible that there would actually be a war; it seemed more like going through a lot of elaborate play-acting.

Only when the news came of a vast naval battle of doubtful issue, in which ships had been sunk and thousands of lives lost, did it come to me that they meant business. Black bands of mourning appeared on sleeves and in windows. One of the allied countries was invaded and a front line set up. Reports of a division wiped out by an airplane attack; of forty thousand dead in a five-day battle; of more men and more money needed, began to make things look real. Haggard men with bandaged heads and arms in slings appeared on the streets, a church and an auditorium were converted into hospitals, and trainloads of wounded were brought in. To convince myself that this thing was so, I visited these wards and saw with my own eyes the rows of cots, the surgeons working on ghastly wounds, the men with a leg missing or with a hideously disfigured face.

Food became restricted; there was no white bread, and sugar was rationed. Clothing was of poor quality; coal and oil were obtainable only on government permit. Businesses were shut down. John was gone; his parents received news that he was missing in action.

Real it was; there could be no more doubt of it. The thing that made it seem most real was the picture of a mangled, hopeless wreck of humanity sent back from the guns, a living protest against the horror of war. Suddenly someone would say, “The gostak distims the doshes!” and the poor wounded fragment would straighten up and put out his chest with pride, and an unquenchable fire would blaze in his eyes. He did not regret having given his all for that. How could I understand it?

And real it was when the draft was announced. More men were needed; volunteers were insufficient. Along with the rest, I complied with the order to register, doing so in a mechanical fashion, thinking little of it. Suddenly the coldest realization of the reality of it was flung at me when I was informed that my name had been drawn and that I would have to go!

All this time I had looked upon this mess as something outside of me, something belonging to a different world, of which I was not a part. Now here was a card summoning me to training camp. With all this death and mangled humanity in the background, I wasn’t even interested in this world. I didn’t belong here. To be called upon to undergo all the horrors of military life, the risk of a horrible death, for no reason at all! For a silly jumble of meaningless sounds.

I spent a sleepless night in maddened shock from the thing. In the morning a wild and haggard caricature of myself looked back at me from the mirror. But I had revolted. I intended to refuse service. If the words “conscientious objector” ever meant anything, I certainly was one. Even if they shot me for treason at once, that would be a fate less hard to bear than going out and giving my strength and my life for—for nothing at all.

My apprehensions were quite correct. With my usual success at self-control over a seething interior, I coolly walked to the draft office and informed them that I did not believe in their cause and could not see my way to fight for it. Evidently they had suspected something of the sort already, for they had the irons on my wrists before I had hardly done with my speech.

“Period of emergency,” said a beefy tyrant at the desk. “No time for stringing out a civil trial. Court-martial!”

He said it to me vindictively, and the guards jostled me roughly down the corridor; even they resented my attitude. The court-martial was already waiting for me. From the time I walked out of the lecture at the church I had been under secret surveillance, and they knew my attitude thoroughly. That is the first thing the president of the court informed me.

My trial was short. I was informed that I had no valid reason for objecting. Objectors because of religion, because of nationality and similar reasons, were readily understood; a jail sentence to the end of the war was their usual fate. But I admitted that I had no intrinsic objection to fighting; I merely jeered at their holy cause. That was treason unpardonable.

“Sentenced to be shot at sunrise!” the president of the court announced. The world spun around with me. But only for a second. My self-control came to my aid. With the curious detachment that comes to us in such emergencies, I noted that the court-martial was being held in Professor Vibens’s office—that dingy little Victorian room where I had first told my story of traveling by relativity and had first realized that I had come to the
t
-dimensional world. Apparently it was also to be the last room I was to see in this same world. I had no false hopes that the execution would help me back to my own world, as such things sometimes do in stories. When life is gone, it is gone, whether in one dimension or another. I would be just as dead in the z dimension as in the t dimension.

“Now, Einstein, or never!” I thought. “Come to my aid, O Riemann! O Lobachevski! If anything will save me it will have to be a tensor or a geodesic.”

I said it to myself rather ironically. Relativity had brought me here. Could it get me out of this?

Well! Why not?

If the form of a natural law, yea, if a natural object varies with the observer who expresses it, might not the truth and the meaning of the gostak slogan also be a matter of relativity? It was like making the moon ride the treetops again. If I could be a better relativist and put myself in these people’s places, perhaps I could understand the gostak. Perhaps I would even be willing to fight for him or it.

The idea struck me suddenly. I must have straightened up and some bright change must have passed over my features, for the guards who led me looked at me curiously and took a firmer grip on me. We had descended the steps of the building and had started down the walk.

Making the moon ride the treetops! That was what I needed now. And that sounded as silly to me as the gostak. And the gostak did not seem so silly. I drew a deep breath and felt very much encouraged. The viewpoint of
relativity
was somehow coming back to me. Necessity manages much. I could understand how one might fight for the idea of a gostak distimming the doshes. I felt almost like telling these men. Relativity is a wonderful thing. They led me up the slope, between the rows of poplars.

Then it all suddenly popped into my head: how I had gotten here by changing my coordinates, insisting to myself that I was going
upward.
Just like making the moon stop and making the trees ride when you are out riding at night. Now I was going upward. In my own world, in the
z
dimension, this same poplar was
down
the slope.

“It’s downward!” I insisted to myself. I shut my eyes and imagined the building behind and
above
me. With my eyes shut, it did seem downward. I walked for a long time before opening them. Then I opened them and looked around.

I was at the end of the avenue of poplars. I was surprised. The avenue seemed short. Somehow it had become shortened; I had not expected to reach the end so soon. And where were the guards in olive uniforms? There were none.

I turned around and looked back. The slope extended on backward above me. I had indeed walked downward. There were no guards, and the fresh, new building was on the hill behind me.

Woleshensky stood on the steps.

“Now what do you think of a
t
dimension?” he called out to me. Woleshensky!

And a
new
building, modern! Vibens’s office was in an old Victorian building. What was there in common between Vibens and Woleshensky? I drew a deep breath. The comforting realization spread gratefully over me that I was back in my native dimension. The gostak and the war were somewhere else. Here were peace and Woleshensky.

I hastened to pour out the story to him.

“What does it all mean?” I asked when I was through. “Somehow—vaguely—it seems that it ought to mean something.”

“Perhaps,” he said in his kind, sage way, “we really exist in four dimensions. A part of us and our world that we cannot see and are not conscious of projects on into another dimension, just like the front edges of the books in the bookcase, turned away from us. You know that the section of a conic cut by the
y
plane looks different from the section of the same conic cut by the
z
plane? Perhaps what you saw was our own world and our own selves intersected by a different set of coordinates.
Relativity,
as I told you in the beginning.”

* * * *

 

Copyright © 1930 by Experimenter Publishing Co., Inc.

AMERICAN SCIENCE FICTION MAGAZINES, by Hildy Silverman
 

Please allow me to introduce myself. My name is Hildy Silverman and as I write this, I am the publisher and editor-in-chief of
Space and Time
, the oldest (since 1966), continuously-published-under-the- same-title, speculative fiction small press magazine still in existence. Yes, those are a lot of modifiers. Because of the twists and turns of magazine publishing, you will find that there are older magazines, but they’ve experienced interruptions in publication, magazines of the same age, but they now bear different titles, and so on. So many different science fiction ’zines (as they are affectionately called by fans) have risen and fallen between 1926 to the present that it is impossible to do more than touch upon the major players in this look at the birth of the science fiction magazine, its proliferation during the Golden and Silver Ages of science fiction, and its ongoing evolution into e-zines and new media platforms.

WEIRD TALES

 

Although
Argosy
established itself as the first pulp magazine in 1896 and began publishing a significant number of science fiction stories in the early 1900s, it was the 1923 debut of
Weird Tales
that first brought an entire magazine dedicated to fantastic short fiction to the public. Founded by ex-journalist J.C. Henneberger in Chicago, IL, its first editor, Edwin Baird, combined gothic fantasy, science and horror fiction, and is credited for launching the careers of such greats as H.P. Lovecraft, Clark Ashton Smith and many others. Due to significant losses, attributed to Baird’s poor editorial oversight, he was replaced by Farnsworth Wright, an assistant editor who only got the job after Lovecraft refused to move to Chicago to take the reins. Wright is credited with publishing then-unknown playwright Tennessee Williams’ first story.

Weird Tales
struggled with comparatively low circulation figures throughout its initial run, never topping 50,000 per issue. While that number would have publishers jigging in the streets these days, keep in mind that competing magazines were regularly enjoying circulation figures in the hundreds of thousands (some claimed a million readers) back then.

The magazine finally folded in 1954, only to be revived several times by various publishers and editors, including such noteworthies as George H. Scithers and Stephen H. Segal. Today,
Weird Tales
continues to publish some of the finest macabre fiction, under the auspices of Ann Vandermeer.

AMAZING STORIES

 

The first English language magazine to only publish science fiction was 1926’s
Amazing Stories
. It was founded by inventor and science buff Hugo Gernsback, after he received positive reader response to the occasional science fiction stories he published in Science and Invention, an otherwise fact-based magazine. Gernsback, often called the “father of science fiction” and for whom the prestigious Hugo award is named, is credited with having launched the science fiction genre of the pulps with Amazing Stories.

Gernsback’s first fiction editor was T. O’Conor Sloane and, under his guidance, the magazine became an immediate success. Early circulation figures estimate 100,000 eager “scientifiction” (the term coined by Gernsback) readers digested each issue, prompting Gernsback to add a 1928 companion quarterly. During its 26-year run,
Amazing
published many notables like Manly Wade Wellman, E.E. “Doc” Smith, and Jack Williamson.

Unfortunately, Gernsback was a known miser (and that’s being kind, or so Those In the Know tell me) and so often wound up publishing reprints and lower-quality material, while better writers stuck with the higher-paying
Weird Tales
and
Argosy
. Gernsback’s troubled finances eventually cost him
Amazing Stories
when lawsuits by his printer and paper supplier forced him into bankruptcy. The magazine survived under other owners and editors, through various formats and release schedules, all the way until 2006 when its last owner, Paizo Publishing, decided it was no longer worth releasing even in a simple .pdf format.

ASTOUNDING STORIES

 

In 1930, William Clayton founded Gernsback’s greatest (re: only) competition in the still-nascent science fiction market. Although more financially stable and higher-paying in the early years than Amazing Stories, Astounding Stories’ content, acquired by its original editor, Harry Bates, left a lot to be desired. The magazine was more focused on formulaic action than quality science fiction content.

The Depression took its toll on Clayton. By 1933, he, like Gernsback, was forced to declare bankruptcy. However, this was hardly the end for
Astounding Stories
—in fact, its glory days still lay ahead. A new publisher took over and put experienced editor F. Orlin Tremaine in charge of content. Tremaine had an eye for new science fiction concepts and favored creativity over action. It was under him that such greats as Murray Leinster and Stanley G. Weinbaum became regular contributors. Circulation numbers quickly increased to 50,000 readers by the middle of 1934, nearly double the estimates for closest competitors
Amazing Stories
and another Gernsback effort,
Wonder Stories
. Now bearing a solid reputation for quality science fiction,
Astounding
dominated the market.

It was Tremaine’s replacement in 1937 by the legendary John W. Campbell that ushered in the Golden Age of the science fiction magazine. Legendary author Robert Silverberg notes, “If Gernsback was Augustus—rather more of a Claudius—then Campbell was Hadrian.” An experienced science fiction writer, Campbell was pretty much given free rein by 1938 to remake
Astounding Stories
in his own image, which he proceeded to do by renaming it
Astounding Science-Fiction. Campbell sought even more sophisticated stories than his immediate predecessor and, throughout the 1940s, launched the careers of future luminaries that included Isaac Asimov, Robert Heinlein, and Lester Del Ray.

Campbell wanted to get rid of the “Astounding” in
Astounding Science-Fiction
for years, but it took until 1960 before he was finally granted permission to change the name to
Analog
. It remains in publication under that name today, one of the top three science fiction magazines (along with
Asimov’s
and
Fantasy & Science Fiction
) to this day, making
Astounding Stories/Analog
history’s longest-running continuously published science fiction magazine.

THE COMPANION MAGAZINES

 

There were several magazines produced as “companions” to the Big Two,
Amazing
and
Astounding
, by their respective publishers. In 1929, despite already being on the verge of bankruptcy, Hugo Gernsback joined with his brother in publishing three other magazines:
Science Wonder Stories
,
Air Wonder Stories
, and
Science Wonder Quarterly.
Only
Science Wonder Stories
attracted an audience and so Gernsback rolled it and
Air Wonder Stories
together to form
Wonder Stories
. Gernsback sold it in 1936 but, though its title changed a few more times, it remained in print until 1955.

Michael Ashley, author of the seminal volumes
History of Science Fiction Magazines
, states, “During the period 1931–34, mostly under (editor) David Lasser, Wonder Stories published the best SF available and turned the field around, preparing the ground for Tremaine and Campbell.” Indeed, until publication ceased in 1955, Wonder’s content arguably rivaled Astounding’s, thanks to groundbreaking stories from the likes of Ray Bradbury, Theodore Sturgeon, and Philip José Farmer. Amusingly, while known as Thrilling Wonder Stories, the publication ran a series of stories by none other than John W. Campbell. In the end, the competition from Astounding Stories overwhelmed Wonder.

Startling Stories
debuted in 1939. It featured “science fantasy” and was intended as a companion to
Thrilling Wonder Stories
. Its format was unique, in that it featured a novel in each issue augmented by a couple of short stories, most of which were written by Henry Kuttner. Its most successful editor was Sam Merwin, Jr. and the magazine became quite popular from the late 1940s through the early 1950s.
Startling
became a casualty of the times, however, after the dual blows of the 1954 backlash against comics and the 1955 strike by American News Corporation badly damaged the pulp publishing industry.

Fantastic Adventures
was also developed as a companion to
Amazing Stories
in 1939. Raymond Palmer launched it as part of publisher Ziff-Davis’s attempt to expand the pulp magazine market after its acquisition of
Amazing Stories
. Alas, in spite of initially solid sales, the overall low quality of the fiction dragged it down. New editor Howard Browne absorbed it into his 1952 effort, Fantastic. Rather than science fiction, however, the focus shifted to fantasy, and circulation fell off as science fiction readers turned away. Browne’s half-hearted efforts to re-incorporate more science fiction led to some improvement in sales, but it was never a powerhouse like Amazing or Astounding. Nevertheless, Fantastic continued to limp along into the 1960s under different editors, largely ignored by Ziff-Davis until they sold it to Sol Cohen. During the 1960s, Cohen’s reprint policy became the focus of an infamous dual against a still-new writers’ rights organization, the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America. By 1980, after a few more failed attempts at revivification, publication ceased.

Not to be outdone, John W. Campbell launched a 1939 companion magazine to
Astounding Stories
called
Unknown Worlds
. Though the theme was ostensibly fantasy, Campbell utilized many of the same contributors already appearing in
Astounding
, so stories were most often hybrids of fantasy and science fiction. Notables who appeared during
Unknown Worlds’
short-but-distinguished run included A.E. van Vogt, L. Sprague de Camp, and L. Ron Hubbard. In 1943, the magazine was canceled because of paper shortages blamed on World War II. According to author and editor Darrell Schweitzer,
Unknown Worlds
remains an important footnote in the history of science fiction magazines, because an “
Unknown
school of fantasy fiction” remains impactful to this day.

THE MAGAZINE OF FANTASY & SCIENCE FICTION

 

By the late 1940s, the heyday of the pulps had passed, not due to a lack of readership but more because of outside forces associated with World War II and the paper shortages it caused. However, though the Golden Age may have passed, a Silver Age soon followed.

In 1949, a new quarterly called
The Magazine of Fantasy
began publication under the aegis of editors Anthony Boucher and J. Francis McComas. The name soon changed to
The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction
in order to encompass all of the content presented. The goal was to offer genre fiction stories on a plane far above what was commonly associated with the pulp era. The look of the magazine was different than the others, as well. It eschewed interior artwork and mimicked the layout of a literary journal, and included formal introductions to each story by Boucher. The new effort quickly attracted some of the top writers in the field: Ray Bradbury, Damon Knight, and the debut by a young future master, Richard Matheson.

Aside from its notable contributors, some of the great editors in the field of science fiction and fantasy have served at what is today called
Fantasy & Science Fiction
, or simply
F&SF
. They include William Tenn, Avram Davidson, and Kristine Kathryn Rusch.
F&SF
remains one of the modern “big three” publications in the science fiction world and continues to showcase high-quality content from industry greats.

GALAXY SCIENCE FICTION

 

Founding editor Horace L. Gold—“Vespasian” to Gernsback’s Claudius and Campbell’s Hadrian, according to Mr. Silverberg’s earlier analogy—was already a very successful author of adventure, fantasy, mystery and science fiction when he launched
Galaxy Science Fiction
in 1950. Perhaps because of his deep roots as a writer, Gold went out of his way to pay up to six cents a word to his contributors, in comparison to the still-average one-half to two cents paid by his competitors. He also paid upon acceptance, rather than on publication, and was known for actively discovering new writers.

Under Gold,
Galaxy
focused on stories about social issues rather than nifty technology, as was more common in the pulps. He published the Bradbury story, “The Fireman” that became the basis of
Fahrenheit 451
, along with seminal works by Robert Heinlein and Alfred Bester.

After suffering debilitating injuries in a car accident, Gold ceded the editor’s chair to Frederik Pohl, who was already assisting in the production department. Pohl continued Gold’s tradition of publishing high-quality, socially conscious science fiction until 1969, when then-owner Robert Guinn sold it to Universal Publishing and Distribution Corporation. The subsequent editor’s shift was undistinguished, but
Galaxy
recovered briefly under the stewardship of Jim Baen in the 1970s. Sadly, after Baen left, financial problems and other issues led to its demise in 1980. Galaxy was revived for a short time by Gold’s son in 1994, but again petered out. Nevertheless, Gold’s legacy as having provided the foundation for the “New Wave” of science fiction secured Galaxy’s place of honor in the history of science fiction magazines.

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