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In my previous blog post I discussed six stories by Russell Winterbotham that were published between 1952 and 1956. I was searching for evidence that he might have become a more sophisticated science fiction story teller in the later part of his career (1952 - 1958).
In the earlier phase of his science fiction story publishing (1935 - 1943), Winterbotham published creative short stories. During the 1950s, there were more options for the publication of longer format stories and Winterbotham moved in that direction.
In this blog post, I explore one more of Winterbotham's stories from the early 1940s and contrast it with three of his stories that were published in the late 1950s.
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Telepathy in 1957. "Extra Space Perception" was published by Winterbotham in the May 1957 issue of Science Fiction Stories. In "Extra Space Perception", Winterbotham took a serious look at the mystery of human telepathy. Winterbotham adopted an evolutionary approach, imagining that after living on the Moon for many generations, human colonists from Earth might evolve new abilities.
interior art for "Extra Space Perception" |
Big 300. The story is set 300 years into the Space Age. The three main characters in "Extra Space Perception" are Ace Crosbi, Diane Walace (that's the two of them, driving across the surface of the Moon, in the image to the right) and Judd Beecher. Ace owns a casino on the Moon and Diane runs Crap Table No. 3.
Sciensy™. Winterbotham's theory of telepathy is built around "Teq"; Thought energy quanta. According to Winterbotham, Teq is a type of radiation produced by the Sun. Teq is absorbed by living creatures, but when they can hold no more, they release "old Teq" from their bodies which can carry thought impressions into the minds of nearby people (see Figure 1, below). Teq is in short supply on Earth, but more readily available on the Moon.
Figure 1. thought energy quanta |
magic moonbeams strike the Moon Pool |
Mathematics in 1958. In the October 1958 issue of Future Science Fiction was "The Variable Constant" by R. R. Winterbotham. At the ISFDB, "The Variable Constant" is listed as the last science fiction story ever published by Winterbotham in a magazine. I generally despise alien invasion stories, but as the title suggests, "The Variable Constant" concerns mathematics and the Evil™ invading aliens never kill anyone or destroy a single city of Earth.
Figure 2. Text excerpt from "The Variable Constant". |
Big 600. The invading aliens (they are called the Beorhi) are able to use mathematics and computerized calculations to predict human behavior and control the people of Earth. The story begins 600 years after the arrival of the aliens on Earth when only a few humans have avoided the Beorhi effort to selectively breed humans for docility (see Figure 2).
Readers are quickly informed by Winterbotham that Gerd Thane is the one human who the Beorhi fear. Gerd is special because he is the protagonist can think for himself and his behavior is not completely predictable. Now, see if you can guess who will liberate Earth from the Evil™ clutches of the Beorhi. You may not even need mathematics and a computer to successfully make your prediction.
Figure 3. |
Sadly, a major component of the story concerns the ability of the aliens to use hypnosis or conditioning to control the behavior of Earthlings. In particular, Gerd's lover, Miss Charis Ryna, has been conditioned since birth to play her part in the future for Earth that the Beorhi have carefully calculated and worked hard to achieve.
You might ask: if the mathematical calculations of the Beorhi show that Gerd Thane is a potential threat to their control of Earth, then why don't the Beorhi simply kill Gerd?
Figure 4. |
In the January 1939 issue of Amazing Stories was a short autobiographical blurb from Winterbotham in which he mentioned that when in school he had an interest in medicine and science.
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For another autobiographical essay in the January 1940 issue of Fantastic Adventures, Winterbotham stated that his introduction to science fiction magazines came by way of an issue of Amazing Stories that he discovered on a news-stand. However, he also recalled a Nick Carter story that involved going into a volcano, and it was that story that first got him interested in science fiction. It was not until 1934 that he had enough free time to begin seriously reading "everything in sight" and soon he began selling his fiction for publication in pulp magazines. He wrote stories in the science fiction genre and others (such as westerns and detective stories) as well. Winterbotham claimed that he got his story ideas from his "day job", which was writing non-fiction.
Poor Man's Time Travel. A full-blown Sci Fi time travel story has a time machine, but there is a way to reach the far future without a time machine. Just "sleep" your way to the future.
image source |
Alan Brown wrote: "The Black Flame" at its heart it is a love story." Similarly, Winterbotham usually managed to configure his science fiction stories so as to include a romantic love-interest for the male protagonist. I have no idea if Winterbotham was influenced by having read "The Black Flame", but it would not surprise me if he had been. And if other Sci Fi story tellers imagined a trip of 1000 years into the future (see also: "The Cosmic Engineers"), then why not go even further into the future?
Figure 5. interior art for "Captives of the Void" |
Figure 6. In the Ekcolir Reality. |
The ending provided by Winterbotham for "Captives of the Void" reminds me of Isaac Asimov's 1956 story "The Last Question".
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Gerd and Charis. Now we can return to "The Variable Constant" and Winterbotham's problem of finding a way for the protagonist Gerd and the cute Charis to live happily ever after. First of all, don't worry about the Beorhi overlords. They are killed by a mysterious plague, and when reinforcements arrive from the alien home world, the newly arriving Beorhi spacecraft are blasted by a squadron of nuclear-bomb-equipped missiles that is conveniently on hand. However, a slave to her Beorhi conditioning, Charis has tried to kill Gerd (see Figure 7).
Figure 7. The Last Question |
The thrilling conclusion. When Charis dolefully asks Gerd, "Would you marry a woman who tried to kill you?" you might imagine that this is the time for Gerd to reassure his lover and say he knows that she was forced into her attempted murder by her Beorhi conditioning and that misdeed can't diminish his never-ending love for her. However, we get the unusual passage shown in Figure 8.
Figure 8. |
cover art by Ed Valigursky |
I have to wonder if by 1958 Winterbotham's interests might have been shifting towards the writing of longer stories. His story "The Space Egg" in the March 1958 issue of Amazing Science Fiction was described as a "complete novel". The story begins in Kansas where a new super-sonic aircraft is being tested: the WD-40 XDW-49.
Figure 9. Uncredited art for "The Space Egg". |
This is a Test
Janet in the Ekcolir Reality |
The nimble and quick test pilot is Jack. He flies the XDW-49 above 200,000 feet and mysteriously runs into something that drills two neat holes in the plane's canopy (Figure 10).
The story's first person narrator is Bob, who is tasked with managing the cameras that capture images from the XDW-49 while it is in flight. Since this is 1958ish, the film has to be taken off of the plane and sent by train to Kansas City to be developed.
Winterbotham quickly introduces readers to Janet (a secretary, working for the test-flight team) who seems to be the number one interest of Bob. While Jack is landing the XDW-49, injured and bleeding, Bob is asking Janet out on a date. Bob starts providing hourly reports on the cute outfits that Janet is wearing.
Jack snaps. |
At this point, about 30 pages into "The Space Egg", I could not stop myself from thinking about Hal Clement's 1949 story "Needle" which was about aliens who arrive on Earth and take up residence inside the bodies of humans.
Now Jack no longer blinks his eyes. What has gotten into Jack? He gets a gunshot wound, which then almost instantly heals. With a UFO mystery like this, we need the help of a physicist, Dr. Maynard, the brains behind the XDW-49 space-plane.
The Dr. Maynard theory of energy beings. |
Ruby and Jack in the sun. |
The Dreaded Energy Beings. With two gunshot deaths and two people (Ruby and Jack) under the control of the alien energy creatures, Bob is undeterred from his mission and he invites Janet to lunch.
Figure 10. alien egg attack |
Finally, the film from the XDW-49 space-plane flight returns from Kansas City (see Figure 11, below) and we get to see the alien "eggs" form when two mysterious energy creatures from outer space pass through the plexiglass canopy of the space-plane. One energy being quickly moves inside Jack's body as soon as it is within the cockpit of the XDW-49 (see Figure 10).
Winterbotham provided readers with a whole lot of hand-waving about how "life is energy" so we should not be surprised by the existence of alien energy beings.
image source |
X-rays to the Rescue. So, how can the alien energy creatures be defeated? Dr. Maynard quickly decides to fight energy with energy and he builds an x-ray generator. Apparently, Winterbotham wrote for some comicbooks such as Chris Welkin-Planeteer and in fine comicbook fashion, laboratory glassware (on-hand at an airport) is quickly fashioned into an x-ray generating tube.
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Bison Drama. Sadly, Winterbotham's "The Space Egg" feels like a comic strip struggling to become a science fiction novel. And with so many pages available to him, Winterbotham even included a riveting account of how in 1958 you could pay $450.00 to have the privilege of shooting a bison and having the meat flash frozen and shipped to your house.
That passage about bison was how Winterbotham raised the issue of how the alien energy beings might take-over the world and exterminate Humanity.
Planeteers of the Ekcolir Reality. (image sources) |
interior art for "The Space Egg" |
Who's Counting? Jack and Ruby defend their sunny position up on the roof. They each have a hand-gun and are ready to shoot anyone that gets in their way. In two "dramatic" scenes, they each try to shoot Bob, but each has used up all their bullets and so Bob survives.
Figure 11. Movie night; alien creature feature. |
Tit for Tat. Charged-up with sunlight, Ruby "reproduces" and infects another human with the mysterious alien "energy", creating a third pod-person. However, this new pod person is almost immediately blasted to bits by Maynard's x-ray generator. Is it a stand-off?
"Scratch One Alien" |
Dark Energy. Bob thinks that some misty "mirror energy" was captured on film of the XDW-49 flying through the ionosphere, and it looked dark. Did Winterbotham anticipate the concept of dark energy?
The China Egg in the Ekcolir Reality |
Some of the typographical errors in "The Space Egg" are rather comical. Winterbotham depicted the local sheriff as chewing gum. When Jack and Ruby come down off of the roof for the big dramatic final shoot-out (even a light-weight Colt Cobra had been found for Janet) the text of the story says that the sheriff "spit out his gun".
You'll have to read "The Space Egg" to find out how the energy beings from the ionosphere are defeated. The ending reminds me of the Star Trek episode "Where No Man Has Gone Before".
cover art by John Schoenherr |
Electrical Virus. I've never read the free-standing novel form of The Space Egg. The cover of the Monarch Books edition describes the space eggs as bringing an "electrical virus" to Earth. The cover shows a "space egg" outside of the XDW-49, which was not part of the story as I read it in Amazing Science Fiction.
image source |
Mention of a virus raises the question: might The Andromeda Strain have been inspired by "The Space Egg"?
Sinister Symbionts. In the November 1958 issue of The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction Anthony Boucher provided a one-sentence synopsis of The Space Egg in which he labeled the story as being "lightweight". I suspect that we can interpret that "lightweight" descriptor as indicating that the imaginary science in The Space Egg is likely to remind readers of the slap-dash science deployed in comics where action or romance is of most concern to some author who has no scientific training. However, I give Winterbotham credit for trying to think outside the box and imagine a form of life that truly unlike life as we know it on Earth.
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In the September 1959 issue of Science Fiction Stories was a longer commentary on The Space Egg by Robert Silverberg. It is not clear that Silverberg did more than quickly skim the story since he miss-states the origin of the titular space eggs. Also, Silverberg dismisses the whole "mirror matter" hypothesis that is devised by Dr. Maynard in the story. I'd like to ask Silverberg: if Maynard's idea is wrong, do you have a better theory that could account for the strange events taking place in the story? While reading "The Space Egg", I had fun imagining that some unknown form of sedronic matter might be able to enter into a person and alter their behavior, but then I'm confortable imagining that humans evolved as biological organisms containing a zeptite endosymbiont.
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I like to imagine that in an alternate Reality, women dominated the golden age of science fiction and wrote stories that gave more prominent roles to female characters. Winterbotham's character Ruby Cascade starts out as a sexy bimbo and then turns into a vengeful and jealous puppet of an alien life-force.
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Winterbotham suggested that life as we know it here on Earth originated from the same "primordial life-force" that shows up in "The Space Egg" and transforms Jack the test-pilot into a new kind of super-human entity. Sadly, Winterbotham made no attempt to account for Jack's sudden increase in strength. Winterbotham raised the specter of extrasensory perception in "The Space Egg" to account for the ability of the "primordial life-force" to select the two appropriate human bodies that the alien force takes control of. If we invite telepathy into the story, then why not add telekinesis?
bullet-proof man |
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Related Reading: Philip Wylie's 1930 superman who like Jack and Ruby could not be killed by bullets. Also: "The Pompous Asteroid" by Winston Marks.
Next: more old Sci Fi stories published from 1930 to 1943.
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