In the Ekcolir Reality original art by Henry Clive and Anita Kunz |
In Part 1 of this series, I mentioned that in 1942, Clement wrote a short "Probability Zero" story for Astounding. I've previously suggested that one way to get published by John Campbell was to include an equation in your story. This seemed to have worked for Clement in the case of "Avenue of Escape". Clement was an expert at getting published in Astounding, but in Part 2 of this series, I mentioned a major problem that Clement faced when he wrote Needle. Clement tried to write intelligently about alien biology, but in 1949 even human biology was not yet very well understood.
in the Ekcolir Reality |
In the Spring 1977 issue of Unearth, Clement took up the challenge of trying to imagine how genetic engineering might be used to create an aquatic human. As a young boy, when I read The Naked Ape I was exposed to the idea that humans might have evolved some adaptations to an aquatic environment, and that is such a fun idea that I eventually imagined the Nereids, the Tequid and the Grendels, three aquatic humanoid species featured in my own stories. In his essay, Clement divided the problem into several parts.
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2. Clement then turned his attention to the oxygen problem. For my imaginary aquatic humanoids, I have always made them air-breathers. However, Clement asked if it would be possible to make an aquatic humanoid that obtained oxygen directly from the water that they swim through.
original cover art by Leo Morey |
However, Clement was not in the market for magical oxygen-replacing chemicals, so he discussed a problem that arises from using gills to obtain oxygen from water. Gills have a large surface area exposed to the surrounding water and would efficiently exchange not just oxygen into an aquatic human's blood but also heat out of the body as well. Clement worried that you could not keep a human brain warm and functioning if you swam through cold water while using gills.
3. The last issue taken up by Clement was what he termed a "professional" consideration.
in the Ekcolir Reality |
Clement expressed his wish that dozens of story writers would create new science fiction stories featuring aquatic humans who had been crafted by genetic engineering.
in the Ekcolir Reality |
Anti-matter.
Sturgeon's "Minority Report" is a First Contact story with a BOOM!
The story reveals a startling fact: that Earth is a true minority planet, one of the few places in
the universe inexplicably made of anti-matter, so we can never go visit
exoplanets; we'd be annihilated if we touched them. Along the way, Sturgeon made use of one of my least favorite Sci Fi plot elements: the genius inventor.
I want to be a writer. interior art by Paul Orban |
Genius with a Gudge. Earthlings belatedly learn that Humanity and the galaxy got lucky because Mr. Gudge was one of the few humans to ever use Earth's interstellar spaceship drive to visit another star system. He secretly wrote down an account of First Contact that was found centuries after the actual First Contact events.
Three Antis.
Sturgeon's story is highly contrived: discovery of the interstellar
spaceship drive was made by a genius working in his garage, so there
were only ever two interstellar spaceships built. I despise science
fiction stories in which a lone genius makes a major technological
advance and then there is never anyone else who can replicate that
miraculous break-though. Such miracles are anti-scientific.
anti-matter interstellar empire; interior art by Paul Orban |
In the June 1949 issue of Astounding there was also a review of "Slaves of Sleep" by L. Ron Hubbard, which had just come out in book format. The next year, Hubbard published "The Masters of Sleep" which was part of his launch of Dianetics.
Campbell on telepathy (July 1939) |
Fake Drive
Also
in the July 1939 issue of Unknown where "Slaves of Sleep" was originally published, there was an essay called "To Drive Men Mad" by John W.
Campbell (published under the fake name 'Arthur McCann'). In that short
essay he stated that Rhine had demonstrated the existence of telepathy. This was one of many scams that Campbell tried to force down the throats of Sci Fi fans while editing pulp magazines.
The June 1949 issue of Astounding also contained a "joke" article called "The Aphrodite Project" by astronomer R. S. Richardson. Campbell was so comfortable lying to
fooling his readers that the cover for that issue showed a fake
illustration depicting very tall mountains penetrating the cloud tops of
Venus. Richardson used the fake name 'Philip Latham' when publishing
science fiction and fake astronomy.
interior art for "Mother Earth" |
Logic of Empires. In the May 1949 issue of Astounding was "Mother Earth"
by Isaac Asimov which tells some of the history of conflict between
Earth and the first 50 exoplanets colonized by humans. "Mother Earth" is
a good story to read during the pandemic because it features the
residents of planet Aurora who live on their private estates and who
have no need to have physical contact with anyone outside of their
immediate family. And their robots. Related Reading: The Surrogates, also Surrogates
interior art for "The Fires Within" |
fragment from "The Fires Within" |
fantasy #3 |
Fantasy Life. Sadly, as was the case for Clement's 1942 story "Proof", Clarke's creatures of Earth's interior are actually composed of handwavium. There is no known way to stabilize complex solid structures like a chromosome at the high temperatures found inside the Earth or the Sun. Sounds like a job for hierions.
cover art by David Mattingly |
Since I grew up during the MAD era of Mutually Assured Destruction, I find it impossible to ignore stories that involve the Sci Fi issue of technological catastrophes. I'll probably have to read Clement's novel The Nitrogen Fix just to see how he destroyed Earth's ecosystem while still making it possible for a few humans to survive.
Kirk and Spock magically become "water breathers" |
The End of the Moon |
Also: others who studied astronomy and then wrote science fiction stories include Alastair Reynolds and Donald H. Menzel
Next: 2022 Change Challenge... writing in both directions at the same time
visit the Gallery of Book and Magazine Covers |
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