Obits

Any old topic will do, I suppose.

Obits

Postby Omphalos » Tue Jul 14, 2009 1:55 pm

Seems like a lot of the old guard of SF from the thirties through the fifties are starting to pass away. I'd like to keep track of who dies, thus this thread.

First on the list is Charles Brown, who died yesterday. Brown was the editor for years of Locus. Here is a link to an announcement on the Locus site.

The topic is stickied as I have a feeling we will be adding to it quite a bit in the upcoming months and years.
Something is about to happen, Hal. Something wonderful!

-James C. Harwood, Science Fiction Writer, Straight (March 5, 1956 - May 25, 2010)



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Re: Obits

Postby Eyes High » Tue Jul 14, 2009 3:24 pm

Will this be just for those who pass away from here on out or may we mention those who have 'recently' died?

Delete this if you wish it just to be about those who pass away in the future. But if you don't mind I would like to mention three that we spoke of over at Worm's during this last year:

Philip José Farmer passes

Michael Crichton dies

Trek's First Lady Passes Away

Please delete anything (even my whole post if need be) that doesn't fit here.
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Re: Obits

Postby Omphalos » Tue Jul 14, 2009 9:20 pm

Thanks, Eyes. I was actually gonna go and post about those who have died recently.
Something is about to happen, Hal. Something wonderful!

-James C. Harwood, Science Fiction Writer, Straight (March 5, 1956 - May 25, 2010)



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Re: Obits

Postby A Thing of Eternity » Wed Jul 15, 2009 10:44 am

Not sure if he's old enough to count, but of course Arthur C. Clarke.
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Re: Obits

Postby Omphalos » Wed Jul 15, 2009 10:53 am

Of course. You know, its been a long time since Clarke wrote anything that I wanted to read. But when he was in his prime I thought he was wonderful. A few months ago I started a book that collects all of his short fiction. I got sidelined somewhere along the way, but I was reminded when i saw your post to go back to it.

He and Pohl put out a book called The Last Theorem. I was thinking I should get that one and read it too. Anyone here read it?
Something is about to happen, Hal. Something wonderful!

-James C. Harwood, Science Fiction Writer, Straight (March 5, 1956 - May 25, 2010)



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Re: Obits

Postby Liege-Killer » Fri Jul 17, 2009 12:44 pm

J.G. Ballard was pretty recent -- a couple months ago?

And there was Disch last year.
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Re: Obits

Postby Omphalos » Wed Dec 16, 2009 12:07 pm

Something is about to happen, Hal. Something wonderful!

-James C. Harwood, Science Fiction Writer, Straight (March 5, 1956 - May 25, 2010)



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Re: Obits

Postby Omphalos » Mon Jan 11, 2010 3:21 pm

The IROSF is dying. I know that SR and I read that once in a while. Here is the Locus article.
Something is about to happen, Hal. Something wonderful!

-James C. Harwood, Science Fiction Writer, Straight (March 5, 1956 - May 25, 2010)



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Re: Obits

Postby Omphalos » Mon Feb 01, 2010 4:15 pm

Kage Baker apparently died this morning of cancer. I did not even know that she was ill.

http://greenmanreview.com/
Something is about to happen, Hal. Something wonderful!

-James C. Harwood, Science Fiction Writer, Straight (March 5, 1956 - May 25, 2010)



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Re: Obits

Postby Omphalos » Sun Feb 14, 2010 12:52 pm

Just heard that William Tenn has died at 89. This posting is from the SFRA listserve, taken from the NYT and was not produced by me.



*William Tenn, Science Fiction Author, Is Dead at 89 *

By GERALD JONAS

Published: February 13, 2010. New York Times, Feb. 14, 2010, page A24 of the
New York edition.

William Tenn, who wrote satirical science fiction at a time when few writers
in the genre displayed a sense of humor, died at his home in Pittsburgh on
Feb. 7. He was 89.

His death was announced by his niece the pediatrician Perri Klass, a
contributor to The New York Times.

Mr. Klass, whose real name was Philip Klass, brought biting wit, restless
intelligence and a supple prose style to classic science-fiction themes like
time travel and alien-human interactions. A contemporary of Robert A.
Heinlein, Isaac Asimov and Arthur C.
Clarke<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/c/arthur_c_clarke/index.html?inline=nyt-per>,
he helped create modern science fiction in the 1940s and ’50s, when the
genre’s dominant form was the short story, published in monthly magazines
known as pulps, for the poor quality of their paper.

As a Swiftian humorist in a field better known for futuristic speculation,
rousing space adventures and grim cautionary tales, he was admired but never
quite embraced by his contemporaries. He was repeatedly passed over for the
major awards granted by the genre’s fans and writers — an omission somewhat
amended when he was named guest of honor at the 2004 World Science Fiction
Convention, nearly four decades after he had all but abandoned writing
fiction to teach at Pennsylvania State
University<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/p/pennsylvania_state_university/index.html?inline=nyt-org>
.

Philip Klass was born in London on May 9, 1920, and immigrated with his
parents to New York as a baby. Raised in Brooklyn, he served in the Army
during World War II as a combat engineer; after his discharge he began
selling stories to magazines like Astounding Science Fiction. Pen names were
common among magazine writers of the time; Mr. Tenn later said he could not
remember why he chose William Tenn for his science fiction, but once he had
gained a reputation under that name, editors would not let him publish under
his own.

Perhaps his quintessential short story is “Brooklyn Project” (1948), which
in under 10 pages describes a top-secret government experiment in time
travel that goes eerily awry. He wrote it as a political satire, aimed at
anti-Communist witch hunts like those of the House Un-American Activities
Committee. Its depiction of a docile press corps bullied into submission by
the government might have been written in the first decade of the 21st
century. But its real target is the age-old human failing of hubris.

In the plot, a government spokesman repeatedly assures reporters that travel
into the past cannot possibly have any effect on the present — even as the
spokesman and all the reporters morph into “slime-washed” and “bloated
purpled bodies” that have evolved along the new timeline created by the
experiment. Mr. Tenn gives the self-satisfied spokesman the last word.
“ ‘See,’ cried the thing that had been the acting secretary to the executive
assistant on press relations,” the story concludes. “He extended 15 purple
blobs triumphantly: ‘Nothing has changed!’ ”

Mr. Tenn had a lifelong lover’s quarrel with science fiction. In a 1975
interview, he described it as a “peculiarly modern” form of literature,
“fundamentally derived from the industrial and scientific revolutions.” But
he deplored “the idiocies and the bad writing in it, the cliquishness, the
cultishness,” which he said “don’t really belong in an adult form.”

His disaffection with the field led him to accept a one-year appointment to
teach at Penn State in 1966, despite having no college degree. He remained
on the faculty for 23 years, offering popular courses in writing and on
science fiction as literature.

Beginning in 2001, Nesfa Press, the publishing arm of the New England
Science Fiction Association, reprinted his complete works in three volumes.
His stories have been translated into French, German, Russian, Japanese and
other languages.

He is survived by his wife, Fruma Klass, a writer whom he married in 1957; a
daughter, Adina Klass Lamana; and a sister, Frances Goldman-Levy.

He wrote little fiction after becoming a teacher, a major exception being
“On Venus, Have We Got a Rabbi,” published in 1974 in a Jewish-themed
anthology called “Wandering Stars,” which tackles the question of whether a
Hebrew-speaking alien that looks like a “wrinkled and twisted” brown pillow
with short gray tentacles can be considered a Jew.
As for his own identity, he declared in an interview in 1975: “I’m a mystic.
A very rational Jewish orthodox
atheist<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/a/atheism/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier>mystic.”
Something is about to happen, Hal. Something wonderful!

-James C. Harwood, Science Fiction Writer, Straight (March 5, 1956 - May 25, 2010)



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Re: Obits

Postby Omphalos » Wed Mar 10, 2010 6:04 pm

Corey Haim, Dead at 38

http://io9.com/5490319/lost-boy-corey-haim-dead-at-38

Surprised? Not me. I saw an episode or two of that Coreys show. That poor guy was a tweaker.
Something is about to happen, Hal. Something wonderful!

-James C. Harwood, Science Fiction Writer, Straight (March 5, 1956 - May 25, 2010)



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Re: Obits

Postby inhuien » Sat Mar 13, 2010 6:58 am

Omphalos wrote:That poor guy was a tweaker.
As in speedfreak?
Look, I'm not much good at big speeches, and I know I haven't always been an easy guy to get on with, and I know, that given the choice, I wouldn't have chosen you as friends, but I just want to say, that over the years, I have come to regard you as people I met.

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Re: Obits

Postby Omphalos » Sat Mar 13, 2010 12:08 pm

inhuien wrote:
Omphalos wrote:That poor guy was a tweaker.

As in speedfreak?


Yea. The kind of guy who just shakes constantly in front of you, and can't keep his mind on track. We call'em tweakers.
Something is about to happen, Hal. Something wonderful!

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Re: Obits

Postby inhuien » Sat Mar 13, 2010 1:15 pm

Ah, he ODed. Ach well, it's not like he'll be the last.
Look, I'm not much good at big speeches, and I know I haven't always been an easy guy to get on with, and I know, that given the choice, I wouldn't have chosen you as friends, but I just want to say, that over the years, I have come to regard you as people I met.

-Rimmer’s farewell speech
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Re: Obits

Postby Omphalos » Sat Mar 13, 2010 5:22 pm

On the local news here last night the LA DA said that he is going to have an autopsy performed so that they can use this guy's death in a case against a ring of theives who had stolen perscription pads from doctors. So look for someone to be "blamed" for Corey Haim's death other than Corey Haim.

:roll: :roll: :roll: :roll:
Something is about to happen, Hal. Something wonderful!

-James C. Harwood, Science Fiction Writer, Straight (March 5, 1956 - May 25, 2010)



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Re: Obits

Postby A Thing of Eternity » Sun Mar 14, 2010 1:08 am

Blame can be spread. Someone kills themselves with drugs, they're to blame (exceptions occur obviously), but the person handing them the "weapon" to do so shares the blame.
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Re: Obits

Postby Omphalos » Tue Jun 15, 2010 11:13 pm

Wiki notes that Everett Bleiler died a few days ago:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Everett_Bleiler

He was one of the early ones in the effort to bring a scholarly, analytical approach to SF.
Something is about to happen, Hal. Something wonderful!

-James C. Harwood, Science Fiction Writer, Straight (March 5, 1956 - May 25, 2010)



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Re: Obits

Postby Freakzilla » Wed Jun 16, 2010 9:47 am

They were destroyed because they lied pretentiously. Have no fear that my wrath
will fall upon you because of your innocent mistakes.

~Leto II, God Emperor
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Re: Obits

Postby Omphalos » Wed Jun 16, 2010 6:02 pm

Man, was it really 2008 that he died? Doesn't seem like it happened that long ago to me.
Something is about to happen, Hal. Something wonderful!

-James C. Harwood, Science Fiction Writer, Straight (March 5, 1956 - May 25, 2010)



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Re: Obits

Postby Freakzilla » Wed Jun 16, 2010 6:52 pm

Sorry if that was too long ago but I didn't see him on here and he's written some classics.
They were destroyed because they lied pretentiously. Have no fear that my wrath
will fall upon you because of your innocent mistakes.

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Re: Obits

Postby Omphalos » Wed Jun 16, 2010 7:45 pm

That's OK, Freak. I think I heard about that when it happened, and it really seems to me like that was just a few months ago. I just had one of those weird "time flies" moments.
Something is about to happen, Hal. Something wonderful!

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