Edmond Moore Hamilton (October 21, 1904 – February 1, 1977)[1] was an American writer of science fiction during the mid-twentieth century.[2] He is known for writing most of the Captain Future stories.
Edmond Hamilton's career as a science fiction writer began with the publication of "The Monster God of Mamurth", a short story, in the August 1926 issue of Weird Tales.[3] Hamilton quickly became a central member of the remarkable group of Weird Tales writers assembled by editor Farnsworth Wright, that included H. P. Lovecraft and Robert E. Howard. Weird Tales would publish 79 works of fiction by Hamilton from 1926 to 1948, making him one of the magazine's most prolific contributors. Hamilton became a friend and associate of several Weird Tales veterans, including E. Hoffmann Price and Otis Adelbert Kline; most notably, he struck up a 20-year friendship with close contemporary Jack Williamson, as Williamson records in his 1984 autobiography Wonder's Child. In the late 1930s Weird Tales printed several striking fantasy tales by Hamilton, most notably "He That Hath Wings" (July 1938), one of his most popular and frequently-reprinted pieces. Hamilton wrote one of the first hardcover compilations of what would eventually come to be known as the science fiction genre, The Horror on The Asteroid and Other Tales of Planetary Horror (1936). The book comprises the following stories: "The Horror on the Asteroid", "The Accursed Galaxy", "The Man Who Saw Everything" ("The Man With the X-Ray Eyes"), "The Earth-Brain", "The Monster-God of Mamurth", and "The Man Who Evolved".
Through the late 1920s and early 1930s Hamilton wrote for all of the science fiction pulp magazines then publishing, and contributed horror and thriller stories to various other magazines as well. He was very popular as an author of space opera, a subgenre he created along with E.E. "Doc" Smith, and which earned him nicknames like “The World Wrecker”.[4] His story "The Island of Unreason" (Wonder Stories, May 1933) won the first Jules Verne Prize as the best science fiction story of the year (this was the first science fiction prize awarded by the votes of fans, a precursor of the later Hugo Awards). In the later 1930s, in response to the economic strictures of the Great Depression, he also wrote detective and crime stories. Always prolific in stereotypical pulp magazine fashion, Hamilton sometimes saw four or five of his stories appear in a single month in these years; the February 1937 issue of the pulp Popular Detective featured three Hamilton stories, one under his name and two under pseudonyms. In the 1940s, Hamilton was the primary force behind the Captain Futurefranchise,[5] a science fiction pulp designed for juvenile readers that won him many fans, but diminished his reputation in later years when science fiction moved away from space opera. Hamilton was associated with an extravagant, romantic, high-adventure style of science fiction, perhaps best represented by his 1947 novel The Star Kings.
In 1969, the Macfadden/Bartell Corporation published a collection of short science fiction stories "Alien Earth and Other Stories" (520-00219-075), where Hamilton's 1949 "Alien Earth" was featured along with novelettes by Isaac Asimov, Robert Bloch, Ray Bradbury, Arthur C. Clarke and others.
Marriage and collaboration
Hamilton met his fellow science fiction author and screenwriter Leigh Brackett for the first in the summer of 1940, but later lost her track during the war years, until they met once again at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel, where she and Ray Bradbury invited him to the coast in 1946.[16] On December 31, 1946, Hamilton married her in San Gabriel, California, and moved with her to Kinsman, Ohio. Afterward he would produce some of his best work including his novels The Star of Life (1947), The Valley of Creation (1948), City at World's End (1951)[3] and The Haunted Stars (1960). In this more mature phase of his career, Hamilton moved away from the romantic and fantastic elements of his earlier fiction to create some unsentimental and realistic stories, such as "What's It Like Out There?" (Thrilling Wonder Stories, December 1952), his single most frequently-reprinted and anthologized work.
Though Hamilton and Leigh Brackett worked side by side for a quarter-century, they rarely shared the task of authorship; their single formal collaboration, Stark and the Star Kings, originally intended for Harlan Ellison's The Last Dangerous Visions, would not appear in print until 2005. It has been speculated[by whom?] that when Brackett temporarily abandoned science fiction for screenwriting in the early 1960s, Hamilton did an uncredited revision and expansion of two early Brackett stories, "Black Amazon of Mars" and "Queen of the Martian Catacombs" — revised texts were published as the novellas People of the Talisman and The Secret of Sinharat (1964).
Edmond Hamilton died in February 1977 in Lancaster, California, of complications following kidney surgery.[17] In the year before his death, Toei Animation had launched production of an anime adaptation of his Captain Future novels and Tsuburaya Productions adapted Star Wolf into a tokusatsu series; both series were aired on Japanese television in 1978. The Captain Future adaptation was later exported to Europe, winning Hamilton a new and different fan base than the one that had acclaimed him half a century before, notably in France, Italy and Germany.
Joint interviews of Brackett and Hamilton by Dave Truesdale were published in Tangent (Summer 1976),[18] and by Darrell Schweitzer in Amazing Stories (January 1978),[3] — the latter published several months after Hamilton's death, but conducted "much earlier", Truesdale attributes to Schweitzer.[18]
Edmond Hamilton / Leigh Brackett Day
On July 18, 2009, Kinsman, Ohio, "celebrat[ed] Edmond Hamilton Day, honoring 'The Dean of Science Fiction' and Kinsman resident".[19]
The Triumph of Captain Future (1940), reprinted as Galaxy Mission
Captain Future and the Seven Space Stones (1941)
Star Trail to Glory (1941)
The Magician of Mars (1941)
The Lost World of Time (1941)
Quest Beyond the Stars (1942)
Outlaws of the Moon (1942)
The Comet Kings (1942)
Planets in Peril (1942)
The Face of the Deep (1943)
Worlds to Come (1943)
Star of Dread (1943)
Magic Moon (1944)
The Tenth Planet (1969)
Red Sun of Danger (1945), reprinted as Danger Planet
Outlaw World (1946)
Volumes #14 (Worlds to Come, 1943) and #17 (Days of Creation, 1944) were written by Joseph Samachson while #20, The Solar Invasion (1946) was by Manly Wade Wellman. The main series was followed by a set of seven novelettes from 1950–1951: "The Return of Captain Future", "Children of the Sun", "The Harpers of Titan", "Pardon my Iron Nerves", "Moon of the Unforgotten", "Earthmen No More" and "Birthplace of Creation".
Interstellar Patrol
A space opera sequence based on the seminal "Crashing Suns". With the exception of "The Sun People", the stories were assembled as Crashing Suns in 1965.
A space opera sequence: the first, The Star Kings, is a reworking of The Prisoner of Zenda while Return to the Stars is a fix-up of four stories: "Kingdoms of the Stars", "The Shores of Infinity", "The Broken Stars" and "The Horror from the Magellanic". A crossover between this universe and Brackett's, "Stark and the Star Kings", was released in 2005, having originally been submitted to The Last Dangerous Visions. Two further stories in the same universe, "The Star Hunter" (1958) and "The Tattooed Man" (1957), were reissued in 2014 as The Last of the Star Kings.
The Star Kings (1949), originally published in Amazing Stories in 1947, and as a paperback in 1950 under the title Beyond the Moon[20]
In 2009, Haffner Press released the first two books in a program to collect all of Hamilton's prose work. A volume (the first of six) collecting the first four Captain Future novels also appeared at the same time. Early in 2010, additional volumes were announced.
The Metal Giants and Others, The Collected Edmond Hamilton, Volume OneISBN978-1893887312 (2009)
The Star-Stealers: The Complete Tales of the Interstellar Patrol, The Collected Edmond Hamilton, Volume TwoISBN978-1893887336 (2009)
The Universe Wreckers, The Collected Edmond Hamilton, Volume ThreeISBN978-1893887411 (2010)
The Reign of the Robots, The Collected Edmond Hamilton, Volume FourISBN978-1893887657 (2013)
^Estep, Larry (n.d.). "Edmond Hamilton". Pulpgen.com. Archived from the original on September 24, 2015. Retrieved September 22, 2006. The peak of Hamilton's popularity probably came in the 1920s and 1930s where he proved as popular with the readers of Weird Tales as such prominent authors as Robert E. Howard and H.P. Lovecraft.
^Weinberg, Robert (n.d.). "Captain Future". RobertWeinberg.net. Archived from the original on March 14, 2016. Edmond Hamilton took [Mort] Weisinger's so-so idea about 'Mr. Future' and turned the concept into 'Captain Future'.
^Irvine, Alex (2010). "1950s". In Dolan, Hannah (ed.). DC Comics Year By Year: A Visual Chronicle. London: Dorling Kindersley. p. 64. ISBN978-0-7566-6742-9. [Strange Adventures] issue #1 also saw the first appearance of...Chris KL-99, from legendary sci-fi author Edmond Hamilton and artist Howard Sherman.American edition(registration required) at the Internet Archive.
^Irvine "1950s" in Dolan, p. 80: "In the story 'The Batwoman' by writer Edmond Hamilton and penciler Sheldon Moldoff (as Bob Kane), Bruce Wayne took notice of a young admirer who...was fighting crime while wearing a bat-costume very similar to the one the Dark Knight wore."
^Irvine "1950s" in Dolan, p. 91: "Space Ranger...debuted in Showcase #15 in stories by writer Edmond Hamilton and artist Bob Brown."
^Markstein, Don (2008). "Space Ranger". Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Archived from the original on May 26, 2024. Retrieved October 18, 2012. Editor Jack Schiff took charge of the character, and handed him over to writers Edmond Hamilton and Gardner Fox for development. Bob Brown illustrated their script.
^Eury, Michael (2006). The Krypton Companion. TwoMorrows Publishing. p. 26. ISBN9781893905610.
^McAvennie, Michael "1960s" in Dolan, p. 110: "Writer Edmond Hamilton and artist John Forte made the first-ever reference to the nefarious Time Trapper."
^McAvennie "1960s" in Dolan, p. 113: "Writer Edmond Hamilton and artist John Forte introduced them to Karth Arn, a super-strong acrobat calling himself 'Lone Wolf'...The hero soon adopted the moniker of Timber Wolf."
^Cowsill, Alan; Irvine, Alexander; Korté, Steve; Manning, Matthew K.; Wiacek, Stephen; Wilson, Sven; Beatty, Scott; Greenberger, Robert; Wallace, Daniel, eds. (2016). The DC comics encyclopedia: the definitive guide to the characters of the DC universe (First American ed.). New York, New York: DK Publishing. ISBN978-1-4654-5357-0.
^ abTruesdale, Dave (December 12, 2009). "Tangent Online Presents: An Interview with Leigh Brackett & Edmond Hamilton". Tangent Online. Archived from the original on April 3, 2016. Retrieved July 11, 2014. Reprint of April 1976 interview by Dave Truesdale and Paul McGuire III (Tangent, Summer 1976); with Introduction by Truesdale (2009), "Ed and Leigh" appreciation by James Gunn (1994), "Ed and Leigh" by Jack Williamson (1994), Afterword by Truesdale (2009).