Showing posts with label Eighteen-Nineties. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eighteen-Nineties. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

SF authors born 1894-1903: 1903

1. George Orwell
2. John Wyndham

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George Orwell (1903-1950)

Not a Radium-Age SF author.

Eric Arthur Blair, better known by his pen name George Orwell, was an English author. His work is marked by a profound consciousness of social injustice, an intense dislike of totalitarianism, and a passion for clarity in language.

Considered "perhaps the 20th century’s best chronicler of English culture",[2] he wrote works in many different genres including fiction, polemics, journalism, memoir and critical essays. His most famous works are two novels, Animal Farm (1945) and Nineteen Eighty-Four (1949).

* Nineteen Eighty-Four (Harcourt, 1949) is a classic dystopian novel by English author George Orwell. It is set in the eponymous year and focuses on a repressive, totalitarian regime. The story follows the life of one seemingly insignificant man, Winston Smith, a civil servant assigned the task of falsifying records and political literature, thus effectively perpetuating propaganda, who grows disillusioned with his meagre existence and so begins a rebellion against the system. The novel has become famous for its portrayal of surveillance and society's increasing encroachment on the rights of the individual. Since its publication the terms Big Brother and Orwellian have entered the popular vernacular.

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John Wyndham (1903-1969)


John Wyndham was the pen name used by the often post-apocalyptic British (Golden Age) science fiction writer John Wyndham Parkes Lucas Beynon Harris. Early in his career, Wyndham used various other combinations of his names, such as "John Beynon" or "Lucas Parkes."

During WWII Wyndham served first as a censor in the Ministry of Information, then entered the army to serve as a Corporal cipher operator in the Royal Corps of Signals. He participated in the Normandy landings, although was not involved in the first days of the landings. After the war Wyndham altered his writing style and by 1951, using the "John Wyndham" pen name for the first time, wrote the novel The Day of the Triffids. People were allowed to assume that it was a first novel from a previously unknown writer. The book proved to be an enormous success and established Wyndham as an important exponent of science fiction.

Radium-Age SF:

* "The Lost Machine" (Amazing Stories, TK 1932). The Lost Machine is the posthumous history of an artificial intelligence's experiences on the barbaric planet Earth in the primitive times of the early 20th Century. One of Wyndham's most anthologized works, which was published first in Amazing Stories, it is a predecessor to Isaac Asimov's robot tales. Its narrator is a machine from Mars, lost on the third planet, the earth. "I know what it is to be an intelligent machine in a world of madness," the visitor concludes before dissolving itself.

Other SF (incomplete list):

* "The Man from Beyond" (1934). The Man From Beyond sees a human desperately attempting to convince the people of Venus to have nothing to do with their neighbours in space as they are without hope of redemption.

* The Secret People (1935). Set in 1964, The Secret People takes us to a place intruders never leave. After Mark Sunnet's rocket plane crashes in the Sahara Desert, which is being turned into a "New Sea" by France and Italy in a monumental feat of engineering, he and his girlfriend Margaret find themselves prisoners of a people determined to keep their existence secret. These short-statured people (who resemble white pygmies) dwell in an underground network of vast caves and are, on the face of it, mired in primitivism. The caves are lit by luminous globes of unknown power, suggesting that this civilization was once highly developed technologically but is now long past its time of glory. While Margaret and her cat become a focus of worship, Mark is thrown in with the other prisoners. These are people of various nationalities who were unfortunate enough to stray into the pygmies' domain over the years — destined to live out their lives subsisting on the fungus of giant mushrooms which grow in the caves. While many are slumped in apathy, some of the captives have preserved their sanity by working on an escape tunnel. The rising water levels have heightened the sense of urgency. The "submerged nation" theme was derived from Wells's The Time Machine (1895).

* Planet Plane (also known as Stowaway to Mars, 1936). Written by a young, pre-Triffids Wyndham under the name John Beynon, this is a less well developed effort that nonetheless shows his talent. The plot is standard, with an attractive female stowaway joining an all-male crew on a race to be the first nation to land on Mars, but it's graced with original details and intelligent epithets such as "Mind is the control of brain by memory," and the fast-paced plot keeps you reading. The most interesting elements are the Martian landscape, the rusty berserk Martian robots, and the sad remains of the Martian people whose cities are like a series of empty rooms. When the story turns into a space romance, you understand why the stowaway had to be female.

* The Day of the Triffids (Michael Joseph, 1951). Although Wyndham had already written other novels, this was the first that he had written under this name and it appeared to be by a new author. It was this novel which established him as an important writer, and remains his best known. The Day of the Triffids was cited by Karl Edward Wagner as one of the thirteen best science-fiction horror novels. Arthur C. Clarke called it an "immortal story". In his book Billion Year Spree: The History of Science Fiction, Brian Aldiss coined the term cosy catastrophe to describe the subgenre of post-war apocalyptic fiction in which society is destroyed save for a handful of survivors, who are able to enjoy a relatively comfortable existence. He specifically singled out The Day of the Triffids as an example of this genre.

* The Kraken Wakes (Michael Joseph, 1953; published in the United States as Out of the Deeps).

* The Chrysalids (Michael Joseph, 1955; published in the United States as Re-Birth). Homo Superior novel.

* The Midwich Cuckoos (Ballantine, 1957). Filmed twice as Village of the Damned.

Friday, January 2, 2009

SF authors born 1894-1903: 1902

1. Philip Gordon Wylie

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Philip Gordon Wylie (TK)

TK

SF authors born 1894-1903: 1899

1. Jorge Luis Borges
2. Laurence Manning

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Jorge Luis Borges (1899-1986)

Jorge Francisco Isidoro Luis Borges was an Argentine writer born on 24 August 1899 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. He was brought-up bilingual in Spanish and English. In 1914 his family moved to Switzerland where he attended school, then traveled around Spain. On return in 1921, he began his career as a writer with the publication of poems and essays in Surrealism literary journals. He worked as a librarian, spending most of his time at work writing articles and short stories. He suffered political persecution at the hands of the Peron administration and became a public lecturer.

Due to a hereditary condition Borges became blind in his early fifties. In 1955 he was appointed director of the National Public Library (Biblioteca Nacional) and professor of Literature at the University of Buenos Aires. In 1961 he came to international attention when he received the first International Publishers' Prize Prix Formentor, his work was published in the US and in Europe. He died in Geneva, Switzerland, in 1986.

Ficciones (London and New York, 1962, in translation). It is the most popular anthology of short stories by Jorge Luis Borges, and is considered by many to be the best introduction to his work. Seventeen stories with "parallel paths in time" theme.

Ficciones should not be confused with Labyrinths, though they have much in common. Labyrinths is a separate translation of Borges material, by James E. Irby, that also appeared in 1962. Together, these two translations led to much of Borges's worldwide fame in the 60s. Several stories appear in both volumes.

* "Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius" (1940)
* "The Approach to Al-Mu'tasim" (1936, not included in the 1941 edition)
* "Pierre Menard, Author of the Quixote" (1939)
* "The Circular Ruins" (1940)
* "The Babylon Lottery" (1941)
* "An Examination of the Work of Herbert Quain" (1941)
* "The Library of Babel" (1941)
* The Garden of Forking Paths" (1941)
Etc.


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Laurence Manning (TK)

TK

SF authors born 1894-1903: 1897

1. Robert M. Coates

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Robert M. Coates (TK)

TK

SF authors born 1894-1903: 1896

1. F. Scott Fitzgerald
2. Murray Leinster

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F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896-1940)

Important American mainstream author. Born St. Paul, Minn. Known for This Side of Paradise (1920), The Beautiful and the Damned (1922), and The Great Gatsby (1925).

* "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button" (Colliers, May 27, 1922; Tales of The Jazz Age, 1922). Benjamin Button, who we now understand looks like Brad Pitt, is born a man of about 70 years of age. Instead of growing older as the years pass, he grows younger. Sometimes anthologized as SF, but actually light fantasy.

* "The Diamond as Big as the Ritz" (Smart Set, June 1922; Tales of The Jazz Age, 1922). John T. Unger, of Hades, on the Mississippi, enters St. Midas's near Boston, the priciest school in the world. There he becomes friendly with Percy Washington, who takes him home with him that summer. Percy's father, Braddock, lives in a luxurious domain of about five square miles, hidden in the Montana Rockies. Cartographers have been bribed to keep Washington's hideout off the map. Washington's source of wealth is a mountain of solid diamond, which an ancestor of his discovered during the Civil War. Convincing his slaves that the South had won the war, he built his estate atop the mountain. The slaves' descendants are still enslaved. Washington uses anti-aircraft guns to shoot down planes that fly overhead, and he keeps captured aviators in a pit. Unger discovers that he will be murdered at the end of the summer, and — having fallen in love with Washington's daughter, Kismine — determines to flee with her. Just then, however, an escaped aviator returns with a fleet of avenging bombers, who blow up the domain.

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Murray Leinster (William Fitzgerald Jenkins) (1896-1975)

John Clute writes that, of all the candidates from "the prewar years," Murray Leinster deserves more obviously the sobriquet of "the dean of science fiction." (Science Fiction Writers, ed. Bleiler, 2d edition.) For the first decade and a half of his science fiction career (approx. 1919-36), Leinster wrote widely and adeptly for a number of magazines, though never for Gernsback's Amazing Stories.

Leinster is primarily known as a Golden-Age SF writer; the 30 or 40 stories he published between 1942 and 1950 (he didn't write SF from 1936-42) constitute the heart of his work for critics. Among pulp SF writers who got their start before WWII, only Jack Williamson (1908), Clifford D. Simak (1904), and Edmond Hamilton (1904) made anything like as successful a transition to postwar conditions and markets. I consider them Golden-Age writers, not Radium-Age.

Clute makes a left-handed compliment about Leinster:

In a career extending from 1915 to about 1970, Leinster virtually never surprised one (with joy or shock or dismay) by his use of language; and he never indulged in the expression of insights that could in any sense be thought of as psychological or "poetic," either to contemplate the human condition or to speculate upon it... [H]e was able to create — and increasingly, as the years passed, he became trapped in — a whole galaxy safe from alarm... At the heart of his work, as befits the creator of so stable a universe, lies a clear and probably personal horror of metamorphosis, of change. Nothing to which he gives assent in his fiction ever alienates the reader from the values of prewar America.


Leinster was clear about "the nature of the world he wished to create and preserve: a small-town, decent, conservative, hopeful America whose enemies were almost invariably external." (Clute, ibid.) Clute notes in Leinster's work a "comedic drive toward a restoration of stability."

* "The Runaway Skyscraper" (Argosy, 1919). The first of some 1,300 science fiction and fantasy stories by Leinster. Clute says: "a ramshackle effort, without scientific plausibility and almost without plot." (Science Fiction Writers, ed. Bleiler, 2d edition.)

* "The Mad Planet" (Argosy, TK 1920). Leinster's first important SF tale. On a far-future Earth (30,000 years hence), a young man flees through an apocalyptic landscape dominated by proliferating vegetable growths and huge insects. Sequels: "Red Dust" (1921) and "Nightmare Planet" (1953). The three stories were expanded into the 1954 novel The Forgotten Planet.

* "Red Dust" (Argosy, TK 1921). Sequel to "The Mad Planet."

TK

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GOLDEN-AGE LEINSTER


The dream idyll of prewar America continues to shine through these stories.

* "Sidewise in Time" (1934; a "time storm" causes various Earths to intersect on different time tracks -- this story supposedly introduced into the magazine market the concept of parallel worlds) and "Proxima Centauri" (1935) are considered two of Leinster's best stories from his first period, because they violate his comedic drive toward a restoration of stability.

TK

Thursday, January 1, 2009

Hardboiled Generation (1894-1903)

A version of this post originally appeared at the Boston Globe blog Brainiac, on 5/27/08.

Gertrude Stein (b. 1874) referred to those American litterateurs — Ernest Hemingway (b. 1899), F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896), Ezra Pound (1885), T.S. Eliot (1888), Sherwood Anderson (1876), Waldo Peirce (1884), Sylvia Beach (1887), and herself — who lived in Paris between the end of World War I and the beginning of the Depression as the Lost Generation. But let's face it, out of that group, only Hemingway and Fitzgerald, plus fellow expats John Dos Passos (1896) and Malcolm Cowley (1898), belonged to the cohort of Americans who came of age during and shortly after World War I. Born between 1894 and 1903, these Americans were in their teens and 20s in the Teens (1914-23; not to be confused with the 1910s), and in their 20s and 30s in the Twenties (1924-33). There is no Lost Generation. Let's call 'em the Hardboileds, instead.

Fitzgerald described his contemporaries as "grown up to find all gods dead, all wars fought, all faiths in man [i.e., ideologies] shaken." Europeans born between 1894 and 1903 felt the same way: They modified Marxist ideology and gave us Western Marxism (Bertolt Brecht, the Frankfurt School) and Surrealism (Bataille, Breton, Aragon, Soupault, Éluard, Crevel, Desnos, Vitrac, Leiris, Artaud, Queneau, Tanguy, Buñuel, Masson, Magritte). Raymond Chandler, a member of an older cohort who didn't start writing fiction until he was in his 40s, and who therefore was afforded a certain amount of perspective on his juniors, explained that hardboiled fictions were a response to the postwar American world: "Their characters lived in a world gone wrong, a world in which, long before the atom bomb, civilization had created the machinery for its own destruction and was learning to use it with all the moronic delight of a gangster trying out his first machine-gun. The law was something to be manipulated for profit and power. The streets were dark with something more than night."

In the hardboiled fiction of the Twenties and Thirties, according to one critic, an "anxious sense of fatality is usually attached to a pessimistic conviction that economic and socio-political circumstances will deprive people of control over their lives by destroying their hopes and by creating in them the weaknesses of character that turn them into transgressors or mark them out as victims." This characterization allows us to perceive that other literature of the period — not just genre novels — is hardboiled, too: John Dos Passos' The 42nd Parallel, William Faulkner's Sanctuary, Erskine Caldwell's Tobacco Road, Nathanael West's Miss Lonelyhearts, John Steinbeck's Tortilla Flat, Ernest Hemingway's To Have and Have Not. T.W. Adorno, who may or may not actually be a Partisan, wrote his terse masterpiece, Minima Moralia, while living in hardboiled LA — and it shows.

In many of the most important Radium-Age SF novels and stories written by Hardboileds, all gods are dead, all wars fought, all faiths in man shaken.

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I've identified the following 19th- and 20th-century European and American generational cohorts, each of which gave us important Radium-Age SF authors: Prometheans (1844-53) | Plutonians (1854-63) | Anarcho-Symbolists (1864-73) | Psychonauts (1874-83) | New Kids (1884-93) | Hardboileds (1894-1903) | Partisans (1904-13). I've also reinvented more recent generational cohorts: New Gods (1914-23) | Postmoderns (1924-33) | Anti-Anti-Utopians (1934-43) | Baby Boomers (1944-53) | OGXers (Original Generation X) (1954-63) | PCers (1964-73) | Netters (1974-83) | Millennials (1984-93)

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Science Fiction authors of this generation include:

* Aldous Huxley (Brave New World)
* Charlotte Haldane (Man's World)
* J. B. Priestley (Adam in Moonshine)
* F. Scott Fitzgerald ("The Diamond as Big as the Ritz")
* Murray Leinster ("The Runaway Skycraper," the Preston-Hines series)
* Robert M. Coates (The Eater of Darkness)
* Laurence Manning"Man Who Awoke" series, "Stranger Club" series)
* Philip Gordon Wylie (Gladiator, The Murderer Invisible; with Edwin Balmer: When Worlds Collide, After Worlds Collide)

Honorary member of the Hardboileds: Edmond Hamilton (Across Space, The Metal Giants)

GOLDEN-AGE SF AUTHORS

* John Wyndham (The Day of the Triffids, The Kraken Wakes, The Chrysalids, The Midwich Cuckoos)
* Jorge Luis Borges (Ficciones, Labyrinths)

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Meet the Hardboileds.

1894: Dashiell Hammett, E. E. Cummings, Harold L. Davis, Jack Benny, Donald Deskey, Jean Toomer, Norman Rockwell, Mark Van Doren, Walter Brennan, Isham Jones, Moms Mabley, Bessie Smith, Martha Graham, Paul Green, Blind Lemon Jefferson, Fred Allen, Stuart Davis, Harold Gray, E.C. Segar, James P. Johnson, Norbert Wiener, John Howard Lawson, Philip K. Wrigley. Elsewhere: Aldous Huxley, Meher Baba, Nikita Khrushchev, Louis-Ferdinand Céline, King Edward VIII, Isaac Babel, Joseph Roth, J. B. Priestley, Jean Renoir, Friedrich Pollock. Honorary New Kids: Ben Hecht, Donald Ogden Stewart, James Thurber, Rudolf Hess.

1895: John Ford, Edmund Wilson, Buckminster Fuller, Buster Keaton, Gracie Allen, Bud Abbott, J. Edgar Hoover, Lewis Mumford, Robert Hillyer, George Schuyler, Machine Gun Kelly, Babe Ruth, Michael Arlen, Robert Hillyer, Shemp Howard, Milt Gross, Dorothea Lange, Busby Berkeley. Elsewhere: Max Horkheimer, Paul Éluard, Gala Dalí, Ernst Jünger, F.R. Leavis, Robert Graves, Mikhail Bakhtin, Jiddu Krishnamurti, Rudolph Valentino, László Moholy-Nagy.

1896: F. Scott Fitzgerald, Howard Hawks, George Burns, John Dos Passos, Louis Bromfield, Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, Ira Gershwin, Robert E. Sherwood, Blind Gary Davis, Ethel Waters, Mamie Eisenhower, Jimmy Doolittle, Irwin Edman, Raoul Whitfield. Elsewhere: André Breton, Antonin Artaud, André Masson, Martin Niemoller, Wallis Simpson, Jean Piaget, Raymond Massey, A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, Oswald Mosley, Raymond Postgate.

1897: William Faulkner, Kenneth Burke, Bernard De Voto, Fletcher Henderson, Sidney Bechet, Rudolph Fisher, Frank Capra, Louise Bogan, Gene Tunney, Marion Davies, Thornton Wilder, Louis Lepke, Walter Winchell, Moe Howard, Amelia Earhart, Horace McCoy, Fletcher Henderson. Elsewhere: Lucky Luciano, Louis Aragon, Philippe Soupault, Georges Bataille, Joseph Goebbels, Anthony Eden, Wilhelm Reich, Douglas Sirk, Walter Pidgeon, Pope Paul VI, Vito Genovese, Eric Knight (Richard Hallas).

1898: Preston Sturges, Malcolm Cowley, Paul Robeson, George Gershwin, Stephen Vincent Benét, Lil Hardin Armstrong, Eric D. Walrond, Aaron Douglas, George Jessel, Armand Hammer, Scott O'Dell, Norman Vincent Peale, Thomas Boyd, Horace Gregory, Berenice Abbott, Alexander Calder, Peggy Guggenheim. Elsewhere: Herbert Marcuse, C.S. Lewis, René Magritte, Erich Maria Remarque, Bertolt Brecht, Hanns Eisler, Lotte Lenya, Golda Meir, Kenji Mizoguchi, Sergei Eisenstein, Alvar Aalto, Tamara de Lempicka, M. C. Escher, Henry Moore.

1899: Duke Ellington, E. B. White, Humphrey Bogart, Al Capone, Hart Crane, James Cagney, Ernest Hemingway, W.R. Burnett, Fred Astaire, Thomas A. Dorsey, Hoagy Carmichael, Allen Tate, Irving Thalberg, George Cukor, Léonie Adams, Vera Caspary, Gloria Swanson, Walter Lantz, Juan Trippe, Doc Barker, Norman Taurog, Louis Adamic. Elsewhere: Alfred Hitchcock, Vladimir Nabokov, Jorge Luis Borges, Leo Strauss, Weegee, Charles Boyer, Roger Vitrac, Erich Kastner, Charles Laughton, Noel Coward, Federico Garcia Lorca, Nevil Shute, Ramon Novarro, F.A. Hayek, Brassai, Jean de Brunhoff, Elizabeth Bowen, C.S. Forester, Bruno Hauptmann.

1900: Chester Gould, Adlai Stevenson, Spencer Tracy, Yvor Winters, Charlie Green, Don Redman, Thomas Wolfe, Aaron Copland, Stephen Bechtel, Natalie Schafer, Taylor Caldwell, Margaret Mitchell, Jean Arthur, Norman Foster, Lefty Grove, Mervyn LeRoy, Agnes Moorehead. Elsewhere: Kurt Weill, Luis Buñuel, Helene Weigel, Erich Fromm, René Crevel, Robert Desnos, Hans-Georg Gadamer. Yves Tanguy, Leo Löwenthal, Franz Leopold Neumann, Ignazio Silone, Jacques Prévert, Wolfgang Pauli, Martin Bormann, Ignazio Silone, Antoine de Saint Exupéry, Gilbert Ryle, Heinrich Himmler, Rudolf Hoess, Xavier Cugat, Adi Dassler, James Hilton, Geoffrey Household, Richard Hughes, Jean Negulesco, Nathalie Sarraute, Robert Siodmak, Charles Vidor.

1901: Walt Disney, Louis Armstrong, Zeppo Marx, Ed Sullivan, Gary Cooper, Clark Gable, Sterling Allen Brown, Carl Barks, Ed Begley Sr., Whittaker Chambers, A.B. Guthrie, Bebe Daniels, Brian Donlevy, Melvyn Douglas, Allen B. DuMont, Nelson Eddy, George Gallup, John Gunther, Granville Hicks, Ub Iwerks, Allyn Joslyn, Harry Partch, Linus Pauling, Rudy Vallee, Chic Young. Elsewhere: Robert Bresson, Marlene Dietrich, Jacques Lacan, Michel Leiris, Henri Lefebvre, André Malraux, Enrico Fermi, Fulgencio Batista, Maurice Evans, Alberto Giacometti, Werner Heisenberg, Emperor Hirohito, Louis Kahn, Lee Strasberg.

1902: John Steinbeck, Langston Hughes, Eric Hoffer, Ogden Nash, Tallulah Bankhead, Ray Kroc, Sidney Hook, Wallace Thurman, Gwendolyn B. Bennett, Arna Bontemps, Christina Stead, Wolcott Gibbs, Thomas Nast, Ansel Adams, Kenneth Fearing, Mortimer J. Adler, George Carol Sims (Paul Cain), Henry Steele Commager, Richard J. Daley, Stepin Fetchit, Larry Fine, Strom Thurmond, Margaret Hamilton, Corliss Lamont, Max Lerner, Charles Lindbergh, F. O. Matthiessen, Talcott Parsons, Richard Rodgers, David O. Selznick, Jessamyn West, Darryl F. Zanuck. Elsewhere: Karl Popper, Meyer Lansky, Anthony Asquith, Joe Adonis, Carlo Gambino, Albert Anastasia, Erik Erikson, John Houseman, Victor Jory, Ayatollah Khomeini, Max Ophüls, Oskar Morgenstern, Emeric Pressburger, Ralph Richardson, Leni Riefenstahl, Norma Shearer, Christina Stead, Alfred Tarski, William Wyler.

1903: Bing Crosby, Nathanael West, Eliot Ness, Rachel Carson, Walker Evans, Bob Hope, Countee Cullen, Roy Acuff, John Dillinger, Bix Beiderbecke, Arnold Gingrich, Erskine Caldwell, Vincente Minnelli, James Beard, Kay Boyle, Dorothy Dodds Baker, Arthur Godfrey, Edgar Bergen, Chill Wills, Ward Bond, Al Hirschfeld, Joseph Cornell, James Gould Cozzens, Lou Gehrig, Curly Howard, Estes Kefauver, Clare Boothe Luce, Anne Revere, Dr. Spock, James Michener. Elsewhere: Claudette Colbert, Evelyn Waugh, Hans Jonas, Mark Rothko, Herbert Spencer, Bruno Bettelheim, Kenneth Clark, Raymond Queneau, Victor Gruen, Malcolm Muggeridge, George Coulouris, Tor Johnson, Louis Leakey, Anaïs Nin, Alan Paton, Georges Simenon, John Beynon Harris (John Wyndham). Honorary Partisans: Cornell Woolrich, George Orwell, John Dillinger, Mark Rothko, maybe T.W. Adorno and Cyril Connolly (all 1903).

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HONORARY HARDBOILEDS: Anita Loos, Edward G. Robinson, Charles S. Johnson, Walter Francis White, Joan Miró (all born in 1893), plus Zora Neale Hurston (1891; claimed she was born in 1901). Also: James T. Farrell, Graham Greene, Frank Gruber, Joan Crawford, Peter Lorre, Salvador Dali, Edmond Hamilton (all born in 1904).

HARDBOILEDS WHO ARE HONORARY PARTISANS: Cornell Woolrich, George Orwell, John Dillinger, Mark Rothko, maybe T.W. Adorno and Cyril Connolly (all 1903).

HARDBOILEDS WHO ARE HONORARY NEW KIDS: Ben Hecht, Donald Ogden Stewart, James Thurber, Rudolf Hess. (All 1894.)

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

SF authors born 1894-1903: 1894

1. Charlotte Haldane
2. Aldous Huxley
3. J. B. Priestley

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Charlotte Haldane (TK)

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Aldous Huxley (TK)

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J. B. Priestley (TK)