Figure 1. cover art by Frank R. Paul |
While recently searching for interesting female characters in early science fiction stories I read "The Menace of Mars" by Clare Winger Harris. When I was about ten years old, one of my friends told me the idea that atoms were like tiny star systems, so the Solar System must be an atom inside some gigantic uberworld. I told my friend that it was a stupid idea, but I did not know that the uberstory for this idea was published in 1928. Extending the analogy that stars are like atomic nuclei, Harris imagined that the universe goes through a phase change from gas to solid and then from solid to liquid. "The Menace from Mars" is told from perspective of a man, but it is a female college student (Vivian) who figures out that the galaxy has gone through a magical phase transition and in so doing, now all the stars have become very much closer to Earth.
in the Ekcolir Reality |
And not only does Mars get very close to Earth, Earth is now closer to the Sun, so all of Earth except the poles becomes too hot for Earthlings. Antarctica is now the "new Eden". But the equatorial deserts of Earth are just perfect for invading red protoplasm from Mars.
radio-controlled mechanical man and his galactic liquid phase |
Spilt Milk. Seeing these images, you might suspect that this mechanical man has gone out of control, but NO, we are told that man who built this robot (Emil Peters) is in complete control of its actions by means of radio control signals. I guess the lion wrestling and truck lifting is probably how NASA tests its space robots before a mission.
promotional blurb for "To The Moon by Proxy" |
in the October 1928 issue of Amazing Stories |
the underground |
Emil laments not having designed his space exploring robot with the expectation of having to deal forcefully with anti-social Lunarians. The End.
see the November 1929 Amazing Stories |
Also in the October 1928 issue of Amazing Stories was an essay by Leslie F. Stone. What prompted her to write a letter to the editor of Amazing Stories was having seen a previous letter from another woman; a rare occurrence. Stone was pleased to have seen "The Moon Pool" re-published in Amazing Stories. One of the big surprises for me in looking back at Amazing Stories and other early Sci Fi magazines is the vast amount of reader commentary about the pulp magazine covers. Leslie Stone felt that the glaring colors of the Amazing Stories covers were not needed and might actually make it less likely for new readers to buy the magazine.
image source |
R. Nyrtia using the Qway body template. |
As told in The Historical Archive, Nyrturians must reproduce artificially since there are only Nyrturian females. R. Nahan crafted the Nyrturians as a human variant that can share thoughts by means of a form of technology-assisted telepathy. R. Nyrtia's positronic brain was crafted from the template of a Nyrturian named Qway.
The EscapistsTalkative by Nihil-Novi-Sub-Sole available under CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 |
Nahan knew that when he became able to travel back in time to rescue R. Gohrlay, he would use a disguise: the physical form of one of the Escapist Clan members who Gohrlay had befriended just before her death (see the image to the left).
Ancestor Worship. When Nahan brought into existence the Nyrturians as a new human variant, Nahan established a system for technology-assisted back-Time transmission of information that could be used by the Nyrturians.
Trans-temporal communication with Nyrturian ancestors |
In order for this system to be maximally utilized, the Nyrturians developed a culture that promoted obsessive tracking and remembrance of ancestors. That system eventually led to a few Nyrturians becoming temporal foci, recipients of useful information from the future that allowed those individuals (such as Qway) to be particularly successful and important. In fact, once such success was achieved, Nahan had to then "remove" those key heroes of Nyrturian society from the historical record in order to prevent too much confusing information being sent back to them from future Nyrturians.
interior art by Edd Cartier |
Goblin Reservation |
In any case, it seems like someone should write a sequel to "The Gnarly Man" that updates the story to include modern technology such as genome sequencing. I like to think that Matilda (known to her academic colleagues as "the Wild Woman from Wichita") would have been able to track down Clarence at his new hiding place home near Kansas City. I'm imagining that Matilda was known as "the Wild Woman" because she was part Denisovan.
Related Reading: "The Fall of Mercury" and Alley Oop the Neanderthal in The Goblin Reservation.
Next: Part 5 of The Historical Archive.
visit the Gallery of Book and Magazine Covers |
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