Jun. 26th, 2010
More Bleiler
Jun. 26th, 2010 04:27 pmSo far I find I disagree with Bleiler's judgments as much as I agree with them, which isn't all that surprising and not all that interesting as a general observation. People always disagree in their judgments on literature. The biggest disagreement I've had with him so far is his assessment of Murray Leinster's early SF, which he doesn't think much of. I find his characterization of "The Mad Planet" (1920) -- "competent textbook natural history" -- to completely miss the point of the story, which I see as a conceptual breakthrough story: a weak man learning to use tools and weapons to project power in a nightmare world. Then again, Bleiler's assessment may be a clue as to why these early Leinster stories never show up in his Best Of collections, despite the fact that Gernsback thought they were important enough to reprint alongside Verne and Wells in the early issues of Amazing.
However, Bleiler is just killing me with some of his descriptions of stories I've long wanted to get my hands on. For example, Robert W. Cole's The Struggle for Empire (1900), which I've faunched after ever since reading that it may well be the earliest example of space opera. Here's what Bleiler says:
"The first real space opera, filled with space battles, invasions, and escalating weapons; a nineteenth-century E.E. Smith story in many respects. ... A remarkable work for its time. While the theme of the story is obviously that of a naval imaginary war of the terrestrial sort, the author goes far beyond this in his concept of space empires, weapons, space tactics, and much else. The story vehicle is trivial, but the strengths elsewhere more than make up for this weakness. In some of the descriptions there is a touch like M.P. Shiel's. * The Struggle for Empire is one of the great missed opportunities in the history of science-fiction. If it had been as well circulated as H.G. Wells' The War of the Worlds (to which it is superior in concept, if weaker in execution) science-fiction might have developed a generation earlier."
Poking around on Google just now I see that it was released in a facsimile edition in 1998, but I don't see any copies available. I'm curious why this book is so obscure, because every reference I've seen to it indicates that it would be of great interest to the historically-minded SF reader. Seems like the perfect kind of thing for Project Guttenberg, except that it's probably so rare that hardly anybody has access to the text. So on top of wanting to put together a Homer Eon Flint collection, now I want to reprint this novel too! Just as soon as I think of a name for my publishing imprint ...
However, Bleiler is just killing me with some of his descriptions of stories I've long wanted to get my hands on. For example, Robert W. Cole's The Struggle for Empire (1900), which I've faunched after ever since reading that it may well be the earliest example of space opera. Here's what Bleiler says:
"The first real space opera, filled with space battles, invasions, and escalating weapons; a nineteenth-century E.E. Smith story in many respects. ... A remarkable work for its time. While the theme of the story is obviously that of a naval imaginary war of the terrestrial sort, the author goes far beyond this in his concept of space empires, weapons, space tactics, and much else. The story vehicle is trivial, but the strengths elsewhere more than make up for this weakness. In some of the descriptions there is a touch like M.P. Shiel's. * The Struggle for Empire is one of the great missed opportunities in the history of science-fiction. If it had been as well circulated as H.G. Wells' The War of the Worlds (to which it is superior in concept, if weaker in execution) science-fiction might have developed a generation earlier."
Poking around on Google just now I see that it was released in a facsimile edition in 1998, but I don't see any copies available. I'm curious why this book is so obscure, because every reference I've seen to it indicates that it would be of great interest to the historically-minded SF reader. Seems like the perfect kind of thing for Project Guttenberg, except that it's probably so rare that hardly anybody has access to the text. So on top of wanting to put together a Homer Eon Flint collection, now I want to reprint this novel too! Just as soon as I think of a name for my publishing imprint ...