Theodore Sturgeon
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Theodore Sturgeon (February 26, 1918 – May 8, 1985) was an American science fiction author. He was born Edward Hamilton Waldo in Staten Island, New York; in 1929, after a divorce, his mother married William Sturgeon, and Edward changed his name to Theodore the better to match his nickname, "Ted".
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[edit] Work
He sold his first story in 1938 to the newspaper McClure's Syndicate which bought much of his early (non-fantastic) work; his first genre appearance was "Ether Breather" in Astounding Science Fiction a year later. At first he wrote mainly short stories, primarily for genre magazines such as Astounding and Unknown, but also for general-interest publications such as Argosy Magazine. He used the pen name "E. Waldo Hunter" when two of his stories ran in the same issue of Astounding. A few of his early stories were signed "Theodore H. Sturgeon". He once ghosted an Ellery Queen novel, The Player on the Other Side (Random House, 1963).
Many of Sturgeon's works have a poetic, even an elegiac, quality. He was known to use a technique known as "rhythmic prose", in which his prose text would drop into a standard meter. This has the effect of creating a subtle shift in mood, usually without alerting the reader to its cause.
His most famous novel More Than Human (1953) won serious academic recognition particularly in Europe, where it was seen as high-quality literature.[attribution needed]
Sturgeon wrote the screenplays for the Star Trek episodes "Shore Leave" (1966) and "Amok Time" (1967, later published in book form in 1978). The latter is known for his invention of the Pon farr, the Vulcan mating ritual. Sturgeon also wrote several episodes of Star Trek that were never produced. One of these was notable for having first introduced the Prime Directive. He also wrote an episode of the Saturday morning show Land of the Lost, "The Pylon Express", in 1975. Two of Sturgeon's stories were adapted for The New Twilight Zone. One, "A Saucer of Loneliness", was broadcast in 1986 and was dedicated to his memory. His 1944 novel, "Killdozer", was the inspiration for the 1970's made-for-TV movie, Marvel comic book, and alternative rock band of the same name.
Although Sturgeon is well known among readers of classic science-fiction anthologies (at the height of his popularity in the 1950s he was the most anthologized author alive) and much respected by critics (John Clute writes in The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction: "His influence upon writers like Harlan Ellison and Samuel R. Delany was seminal, and in his life and work he was a powerful and generally liberating influence in post-WWII US sf"), he is not much known among the general public and won comparatively few awards (though it must be noted that his best work was published before the establishment and consolidation of the leading genre awards, while his later production was scarcer and weaker). He was listed as a primary influence of the much more famous Ray Bradbury and Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. Kurt Vonnegut has stated that his character Kilgore Trout was based on Theodore Sturgeon.
[edit] Sturgeon's Law
In 1951, Sturgeon coined what is now known as Sturgeon's Law: "Ninety percent of SF [science fiction] is crud, but then, ninety percent of everything is crud." This was originally known as Sturgeon's Revelation; Sturgeon has said that "Sturgeon's Law" was originally "Nothing is always absolutely so." However, the former phrase is now widely referred to as Sturgeon's Law.
[edit] Bibliography
[edit] Novels
- The Dreaming Jewels (1950), also published as The Synthetic Man
- More Than Human (1953, fix-up of three linked novellas, the first and third written around the previously published "Baby Is Three") — winner of the International Fantasy Award
- The King and Four Queens (1956, Western) (a novelization of the movie of the same name)
- I, Libertine (1956, for-hire hoax as "Frederick R. Ewing")
- The Cosmic Rape (1958), abridged version published as To Marry Medusa
- Venus Plus X (1960)
- Some of Your Blood (1961)
- Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (a novelization of the movie of the same name, based on an early draft of the script) (1961)
- The Rare Breed (1966, Western) (a novelization of the movie of the same name)
- Godbody (1986)
[edit] Short works
Sturgeon was better known for his short stories and novellas. Here is a sampling of titles:
- "Ether Breather" (September, 1939, his first published science-fiction story)
- "Derm Fool" (March, 1940)
- "It" (August, 1940)
- "Microcosmic God" (April, 1941)
- "Yesterday Was Monday" (1941)
- "Killdozer" (November, 1944)
- "Bianca's Hands" (May, 1947)
- "Thunder and Roses" (November, 1947)
- "The Perfect Host" (November, 1948)
- "Minority Report" (June 1949, no connection to the 2002 movie, which was based on a later story by Philip K. Dick)
- "One Foot and the Grave" (September, 1949)
- "The World Well Lost" (June, 1953)
- "Mr. Costello, Hero" (December, 1953)
- "The Skills of Xanadu" (July, 1956)
- "The Other Man" (September, 1956)
- "Need" (1960)
- "How to Forget Baseball" (Sports Illustrated December 1964)
- "The Nail and the Oracle" (Playboy October 1964)
- "Slow Sculpture" (Galaxy February 1970) - winner of a Hugo Award and a Nebula Award
- "Occam's Scalpel" (August, 1971, with an introduction by Terry Carr)
- "Vengeance Is" (1980, Dark Forces anthology edited by Kirby McCauley)
North Atlantic Books has been releasing the chronologically assembled The Complete Short Stories of Theodore Sturgeon since 1995; volume 10, with stories from 1957-1960, was published in 2005. [1]
[edit] External links
- The Theodore Sturgeon Page - an informative fan site; includes The Theodore Sturgeon Literary Trust
- Theodore Sturgeon at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- Theodore Sturgeon's online fiction at Free Speculative Fiction Online
- Theodore Sturgeon article at Memory Alpha, a Star Trek wiki.
- Some of Your Blood, Millipede Press 2006
Categories: Wikipedia articles needing factual verification | 1918 births | 1985 deaths | American horror writers | American science fiction writers | Hugo Award winning authors | Nebula Award winning authors | People from Staten Island | Science fiction critics | Science Fiction Hall of Fame | Star Trek script writers | Worldcon Guests of Honor