Blish wrote literary criticism of science fiction using the pen nameWilliam Atheling Jr. His other pen names included Donald Laverty, John MacDougal, and Arthur Lloyd Merlyn.[1]
Blish attended meetings of the Futurian Science Fiction Society in New York City during this period.
Futurian members Damon Knight and Cyril M. Kornbluth became close friends. However, Blish's relationships with other members were often bitter.[5] A personal target was fellow member Judith Merril, with whom he would debate politics. Merril would frequently dismiss Blish's self-description of being a "paper fascist". She wrote in Better to Have Loved (2002), "Of course [Blish] was not fascist, antisemitic, or any of those terrible things, but every time he used the phrase, I saw red."[6]
In 1947, he married Virginia Kidd, a fellow Futurian.[1] They divorced in 1963. Blish then married artist J. A. Lawrence in 1964,[1] moving to England that same year.
From 1962 to 1968, Blish worked for the Tobacco Institute as a writer and critic. Much of his work for the institute went uncredited.
Blish died on July 30, 1975, from complications related to lung cancer. He was buried in Holywell Cemetery, Oxford. The Bodleian Library at Oxford is the custodian of Blish's papers.[7] The library also has a complete catalog of Blish's published works.
Career
Throughout the 1940s, Blish published most of his stories in the few pulp magazines still in circulation. His first story was sold to fellow Futurian Frederik Pohl for Super Science Stories (1940), called "Emergency Refueling". Other stories were published intermittently, but with little circulation. Blish's "Chaos, Co-Ordinated", co-written with Robert A. W. Lowndes, was sold to Astounding Science Fiction, appearing in the October 1946 issue, earning Blish national circulation for the first time.
Pantropy (1942–1956)
Blish was what Andrew Litpack called a "practical writer".[5] He would revisit, revise, and often expand on previously written stories. An example is "Sunken Universe" published in Super Science Stories in 1942. The story reappeared in Galaxy Science Fiction as "Surface Tension", in an altered form in 1952. The premise emphasized Blish's understanding of microbiology, and featured microscopic humans engineered to live on a hostile planet's shallow pools of water. The story proved to be among Blish's more popular and was anthologized in the first volume of Robert Silverberg'sThe Science Fiction Hall of Fame.[8] It was also anthologized in The Big Book of Science Fiction (2016), edited by Ann and Jeff VanderMeer.[9]
The world of microscopic humans continued in "The Thing in the Attic" in 1954, and "Watershed" the following year. The fourth entry, "A Time to Survive", was published by The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction in 1957. The stories were collected, edited together, and published as the fix-upThe Seedling Stars (1956), by Gnome Press. John Clute said all of Blish's "deeply felt work" explored "confronting the Faustian (or Frankensteinian) man".[5]
The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction asserts that not until the 1950s, and the Okie sequence of stories beginning their run, "did it become clear [Blish] would become a [science fiction] writer of unusual depth".[10] The stories were loosely based on the Okie migration following the Dust Bowl of the 1930s, and were influenced by Oswald Spengler's two-part Der Untergang des Abendlandes (The Decline of the West).
The stories detail the life of the Okies, humans who migrate throughout space looking for work in vast city-ships, powered by spindizzies, a type of anti-gravity engine. The premise and plot reflected Blish's feelings on the state of western civilization, and his personal politics.[5] The first two stories, "Okie", and "Bindlestiff", were published in 1950, by Astounding. "Sargasso of Lost Cities" appeared in Two Complete Science-Adventure Books in April 1953. "Earthman, Come Home" followed a few months later, published by Astounding. In 1955, Blish collected the four stories together into an omnibus titled Earthman, Come Home, published by Putnam.
More stories followed: In 1956, They Shall Have Stars, which edited together "Bridge" and "At Death's End", and in 1958, Blish published The Triumph of Time. Four years later, he published a new Okies novel, A Life for the Stars. The Okies sequence was edited together and published as Cities In Flight (1970).
Clute notes, "the brilliance of Cities in Flight does not lie in the assemblage of its parts, but in the momentum of the ideas embodied in it (albeit sometimes obscurely)."[5]
After Such Knowledge (1958–1971)
Blish continued to rework older stories, and did so for one of his best known works, A Case of Conscience (1958). The novel originated as a novella, originally published in an issue of If, in 1953. The story follows a Jesuit priest, Ramon Ruiz-Sanchez, who visits the planet Lithia as a technical member of an expedition. While on the planet they discover a race of bipedal reptilians that have perfected morality in what Ruiz-Sanchez says is "the absence of God", and theological complications ensue. The book is one of the first major works in the genre to explore religion and its implications. It was the first of a series including Doctor Mirabilis (1964) and the two-part story Black Easter (1968) and The Day After Judgment (1971). The latter two were collected as The Devil's Day (1980). An omnibus of all four entries in the series was published by Legend in 1991, titled After Such Knowledge.
A Case of Conscience won the 1959 Hugo Award for Best Novel, and was collected as part of Library of America's omnibus American Science Fiction: Five Classic Novels 1956-1958.[11][12]
Bantam Books commissioned Blish to adapt episodes of Star Trek. The adapted short stories were generally based on draft scripts and contained different plot elements from the aired television episodes.
The stories were collected into twelve volumes and published as a title series of the same name from 1967 to 1977. The adaptations were largely written by Blish; however, his declining health during this period proved problematic. His wife, J. A. Lawrence, wrote a number of installments. Her work remained uncredited until the final volume, Star Trek 12, published in 1977, two years after Blish's death.[13]: 25
The first original novel for adults based on the television series, Spock Must Die! (1970),[14] was also written by Blish, and he planned to release more. According to Lawrence, two episodes featuring popular character Harry Mudd, "I, Mudd" and "Mudd's Women", were held back by Blish for adaptation to be included in the follow-up to Spock Must Die!.[15] However, Blish died before a novel could be completed. Lawrence did eventually adapt the two episodes, as Mudd's Angels (1978), which included an original novella The Business, as Usual, During Altercations by Lawrence. In her introduction to Star Trek 12, Lawrence states that Blish "did indeed write" adaptations of the two episodes. The introduction to Mudd's Angels acknowledges this, stating that Blish left the two stories in various stages of completion and they were finished by Lawrence; Blish does not receive author credit on the book.
Blish credited his financial stability later in life to the Star Trek commission and the advance he received for Spock Must Die!.[13]: 21
Literary criticism and legacy
Blish was among the first literary critics of science fiction, and he judged works in the genre by the standards applied to "serious" literature.[16] He took to task his fellow authors for deficiencies, such as bad grammar and a misunderstanding of scientific concepts, and the magazine editors who accepted and published such material without editorial intervention. His criticism was published in "fanzines" in the 1950s under the pseudonym William Atheling Jr.
The essays were collected in The Issue at Hand (1964) and More Issues at Hand (1970). Reviewing The Issue at Hand, Algis Budrys said that Atheling had, along with Damon Knight, "transformed the reviewer's trade in this field". He described the persona of Atheling as "acidulous, assertive, categorical, conscientious and occasionally idiosyncratic".[16]
Blish was a fan of the works of James Branch Cabell, and for a time edited Kalki, the journal of the Cabell Society.
In his works of science fiction, Blish developed many ideas and terms which have influenced other writers and on occasion have been adopted more widely, such as faster than light communication via the Dirac communicator, introduced in the short story "Beep" (1954). The Dirac is comparable to Ursula K. Le Guin's ansible.
Blish is also credited with coining the term gas giant, first used in the story "Solar Plexus", collected in the anthology Beyond Human Ken, edited by Judith Merril. The story was originally published in 1941, but did not contain the term. Blish reworked the story, changing the description of a large magnetic field to "a magnetic field of some strength nearby, one that didn't belong to the invisible gas giant revolving half a million miles away".[17]
Blish's work was published by a variety of publishers in the United Kingdom and the United States, often with variations between editions, and with different titles. Blish also expanded and re-published his older work on numerous occasions. His works continued to be re-published after his death.
Very few of Blish's first editions were assigned ISBN numbers.
Short fiction and novellas (1935–1986)
Novels published in complete form, or serialized, in fiction magazines are included for completeness, and to avoid confusion.
β Novelette, ε Novella, γ Novel.
The Planeteer (1935–1936)
"Neptunian Refuge" (November 1935)
"Mad Vision" (December 1935)
"Pursuit into Nowhere" (January 1936)
"Threat from Copernicus" (February 1936)
"Trail of the Comet" (March 1936)
"Bat-Shadow Shroud" (April 1936)
Super Science Stories (1940)
"Emergency Refueling" (March 1940)
"Bequest of the Angel" (May 1940)
"Sunken Universe" (May 1942), rewritten as "Surface Tension" (1952)
Stirring Science Stories (1941)
"Citadel of Thought" (February 1941)
"Callistan Cabal" (April 1941)
Science Fiction Quarterly (1941)
"Weapon Out of Time" (April 1941)
"When Anteros Came" (December 1941)
Cosmic Stories (1941)
"Phoenix Planet"β (May 1941)
"The Real Thrill" (July 1941)
Future (1941–1953)
"The Topaz Gate"β (August 1941)
"The Solar Comedy" (June 1942)
"The Air Whale" (August 1942)
"Struggle in the Womb" (May 1950)
"The Secret People"β (November 1950)
"Elixir" (September 1951)
"Testament of Andros"β (January 1953)
Astonishing Stories (1941)
"Solar Plexus" (September 1941)
Super Science and Fantastic Stories (1944)
"The Bounding Crown"β (December 1944)
Science*Fiction (1946)
"Knell", as by Arthur Lloyd Merlyn (January 1946)
Astounding Science Fiction (1946–1957)
"Chaos, Co-Ordinated"β as by John MacDougal, with Robert A. W. Lowndes (October 1946)
The Seedling Stars (February 1959). Signet #S1622.
Best Science Fiction Stories of James Blish (1965). Faber & Faber, also published as The Testament of Andros (August 1977). Arrow Books ISBN0-09-914840-4.
^James, Blish (January 1976). "Surface Tension". In Silverberg, Robert (ed.). The Science Fiction Hall of Fame. Vol. 1. New York: Avon. pp. 477–514. ISBN9780380007950.
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