time travel to the future by Eric Russell (cover by Howard Brown) |
In the Garage
Many science fiction story tellers can't resist creating time travel stories. However, I doubt if there is anything more annoying and dreary than fictional accounts of Time Travel Wars in which competing factions endlessly use time travel to keep reverting changes to the timeline that were triggered by their adversaries. Yawn. Thus, I've long clung to the idea that the only "good" time travel stories are those in which time travel exists for a short period and then the time travel technology can no longer be used.
Mad scientist? (see "Requiem for Methuselah") |
Another traditional Sci Fi story element is the "mad scientist", the technological genius who, working alone in his garage (or the basement or the spare room upstairs) can (in his spare time) invent things like time machines. If time travel is invented by such a solitary and antisocial dude, then it is not too difficult to reach the end of your time travel story and destroy the one time machine that was ever built, saving us from a Time Travel War.
re-writing roles for women |
William White
Anthony Boucher |
2. Previously, Rylla had shared with me some of the lore about how Isaac Asimov had come to write his time travel novel, The End of Eternity.
3. I've also been looking back at stories written by Asimov that concern telepathy. If i) telepathy makes for fun Sci Fi and ii) time travel is so hard for story writers to resist, then why not combine these two plot elements?
cover art by Don Sibley |
In that issue of Galaxy was 1) Asimov's short story "Misbegotten Missionary" (about telepathic aliens) and 2) White's "Transfer Point" (a time travel story). It would be interesting to know how Asimov reacted when he read "Transfer Point".
The "missionary" in "Misbegotten Missionary" is a telepathic alien lifeform that can effortlessly "listen" to the thoughts of humans and other Earthly lifeforms. The "missionary" is from a planet where all of the lifeforms are linked telepathically into one huge super-organism. (Asimov would later recycle this plot idea in his 1989 novel Nemesis.)
dead alien |
Original cover art by Robert Adragna. This version: in the Buld Reality |
The secret to telepathy resides in "green patches" that the aliens have instead of eyes. If the aliens modify a human baby for telepathy, then its eyes are replaced by little patches of green fur. Even Earthly bacteria are endowed with two tiny green patches by the aliens, apparently making them part of the telepathically-coordinated web of alien life. According to Asimov, the aliens can make females give birth to telepathic babies by "controlled use of radiant energy". Ah, the wonders of science!
Time Warp
in the Ekcolir Reality |
"Misbegotten Missionary" also suffers from not being very good as a science fiction story. I like to imagine that Asimov's writing interests evolved through the successive Realities of Deep Time. In the Foundation Reality, Asimov was a science writer, informing the public about advances in science and technology, particularly in the areas of robotics and space travel. In the Asimov Reality, the younger Asimov, under the influence of his older time traveling self, became known for creating wild fantasy stories, published in magazines such as Unknown. The science fiction genre was not created until the Ekcolir Reality. In that Reality, Asimov published a story called "Green Sighted".
Vyrko and Lavra investigate the time travel machine in "Transfer Point" |
According to Rylla, in the Ekcolir Reality, Asimov published "Green Sighted" in the first issue of Galaxy magazine. Asimov never read White's "Transfer Point" (published in the second issue of Galaxy) and so in that Reality Asimov never became interested in writing a time travel novel.
source |
Transfer Point
Asimov's story "The Red Queen's Race" (1949) was about the existence of an unchangeable time travel loop that was built into the timeline of Earth. The world-as-we-know-it was made possible when a chemistry textbook was sent back in time to ancient Greece. One view of time travel is that there can be no time travel paradoxes and many science fiction stories about time travel go out of their way to avoid time travel paradoxes. Anthony Boucher's "Transfer point" (1950) is a story about a time loop that was changed. It is easy to imagine how Asimov could have been influenced by "Transfer point", leading him to include in The End of Eternity another time loop that gets broken.
Unknown future. |
No future? |
You'll have to read "Transfer point" to learn about Boucher's surprising time loop and how it is broken. I'm still hoping that Rylla can obtain more details from the Writers Block about William White's role in making sure that Asimov wrote The End of Eternity.
Next: a tempting replicoid
visit the Gallery of Book and Magazine Covers |
No comments:
Post a Comment