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The Best of Lester del Rey

Page 39

by Lester Del Rey


  The second story I ever wrote, after selling the first one, was “And It Comes Out Here.” It amuses me now to see science fiction discovering “experimentation” and trying to write in present tense—necessarily badly most of the tune, when there is no reason for the breaking of custom. Forty years ago, flushed with the success of a single sale, I sat down brashly to construct a story that had to be told in second person and in future tense—altered to present tense to simplify, with the future understood.

  Campbell rejected the story—not for the method of Celling, which he didn’t mind back in those “pulp writing” days, but because it went round and round and never came out of its circle. So it languished for a dozen years, with the original manuscript lost in the meantime. Then a discovery of notes and samples from my preliminary work enabled me to write it again, certainly almost exactly as it had been written at first. I’m glad the story eventually found a market in one of the magazines that had finally appeared to rival Campbell’s hi prestige. By then, the endless circle story had been done a number of times, so the idea no longer had the same novelty; but I hope and believe the story can stand on its own without the need of such novelty, which is never a substitute for story-telling.

  “The Monster” was written one night as warm-up exercise for a novelette that was overdue. It was intended for a fly-by-night mystery magazine that wanted to experiment with some science fiction. By the time the story was received, the night had passed and the magazine had flown out of existence. That was my good fortune, since the story then sold to a “slick” market that paid ten times as much and gave the tale a much better showcase.

  Back in 1950, there was a big flap hi science fiction over something called Dianetics, which I rather vigorously opposed as being handiman psychotherapy without a trained therapist, but with all kinds of wild claims. John Campbell was one of the advocates of the so-called “science of the mind,” and word soon reached me that he resented my stand and would never buy another story of mine.

  I knew him better than that, but I wanted proof. I had written a short story called “The Years Draw Nigh” rather hastily. So I dug it out, thought about it as I could then only think when aiming a story at Campbell, and rewrote it as it should have been in the first place. I also had an idea about jsome robots (and in case no one has noticed, I :Jc«S| robots and have written a great many stories about’ them) which I wrote up as “Instinct.”

  I took both stories in to Campbell. We barely mentioned Dianetics, had a pleasant lunch together, and talked. It had been a couple of years since we’d gotten together, but nothing had changed. Campbell bought both stories at his maximum rate. But for a year after that, I was still being told he was through with me.

  “Superstition” and “For I Am a Jealous People” are also connected, in a way. Frederik Pohl was putting together an original anthology for Ballantine Books called Star Short Novels and felt he had to have one outstanding novel with which to end the book. He came to me, and I wrote “Superstition” for him, figuring that the idea of total superstition being absolute fact was a good one. But the story wasn’t strong enough for him. (Campbell bought it almost instantly.) He wanted a controversial story.

  Well, I’d had an idea for a long time that couldn’t have been sold to any magazine at the time. And I was pretty sure Pohl wouldn’t take it, either, since it involved setting the God of the Bible—at least the Old Testament—against man. I made the idea sound as controversial as I could in outlining it—and he simply said, “Write it.” So the story that I never expected to write got on paper.

  Actually, “Jealous People” is one of the few stories that grew from some of my own philosophy, instead of being pure story. I’d speculated on the responsibility of a man who served both God and Mankind, and who found them in violent opposition. To me, the answer was obvious. So was the result. But for that, I had to put my real ending in a “quotation” from a spurious book of the Bible as a heading for the last chapter.

  “Superstition,” incidentally, is one of the few far-future, far-space stories I’ve written. To me, the real drama of a story lies within the characters, and the reality must lie within some reasonable distance of what we know. Beyond that distance, chaos rises to remove the order from drama.

  “The Keepers of the House” was a trick story—one without any real surface plot or truly sentient character. I wrote it on a wager to prove that Campbell couldn’t be fooled by writing skill—and he rightly rejected it as having no plot. But so much went into making the trick work that I’ve always felt the final story conveyed far more than if I’d given all the plot and background behind it—which I do know in great detail, incidentally.

  “Little Jimmy” was the result of a different kind of challenge. Tony Boucher was a fine editor, who had a stronger requirement for literary flavor than other magazine editors. I’d never sold him anything—nor, in fact, written anything for him. But finally I decided I would and could write something he couldn’t resist. So I took a simple idea and wrote it up in the style I’d previously used under a penname to sell a few slick stories. I wound up very pleased with the result, as was Boucher. I probably should have written others for him, but I never did.

  As to “The Seat of Judgment,” it came about as a result of spending too much tune at the bar with Robert Mills, while he was an editor of Venture, a short-lived but excellent magazine. He kept demanding a story when I didn’t really want to do one. Finally, I picked a verse from the Bible and told him I’d only write a story around it, which I knew wasn’t what he wanted. But he bought the story on the spot, and I had to write it—much to my pleasure, as it turned out. There’s a bitter and rather blasphemous ending to the story—beyond the words I’ve written—which is clearly possible and perhaps can be guessed by anyone who cares to think about it.

  And finally, there’s “Vengeance is Mine.” It came to be written as many stories were—I needed some money. I wanted to go to a Science Fiction Convention, but didn’t have the cash on hand; and for such things, I always insisted on having money I could safely spare. So Fred Pohl agreed to get me quick payment, and I wrote the story pretty much overnight. As happens with most of the stories I like best in retrospect, this one came very easily, if.

  But behind if; of course, lay ideas which were important enough to me to add to my feeling for the story. I’ve studied a lot of history, and I never saw that the so-called positive emotions and ideas ever accomplished more than the “negative” ones. Love did very little for mankind throughout history; and while hate and envy and rage produced much to deplore, often the muse of history could bend such motives to shape the course of advancement and good. God, if you like, can use the Adversary—and usually does.

  Judgment, like memory, is prone to color personal things hi ways which may not always stand the test of reality. And these are only the stories which I judge to be my best—for whatever best that may be.

  But though there are many others I like (and many I wish I had never written), I am willing to be judged by the ones I have selected for this collection. Look on my works—and I hope you don’t despak!

  Lester del Rey

  New York City

  March, 1978

  Copyright

  A Del Rey Book

  Published by Baliantine Books

  Copyright © 1978 by Lester del Rey Introduction: The Magnificent. Copyright © 1978 by Frederik Pohl

  All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions.

  Published in the United States by Baliantine Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New York and simultaneously in Canada by Baliantine Books of Canada, Ltd., Toronto, Canada.

  Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 78-62267

  ISBN 0-345-27336-2

  Manufactured in the United States of America

  First Baliantine Books Edition: September 1978

  Cover art by H. R. Van Dongen

  “Helen O’Loy,” copyright © 1938 by Street & Smith P
ublications, Inc., for Astounding Science Fiction, December 1938.

  The Day Is Done,” copyright © 1939 by Street & Smith’ Publications, Inc., for Astounding Science Fiction, May 1939.

  The Coppersmith,” copyright © 1939 by Street & Smith Publications, Inc., for Unknown, September 1939.

  “Hereafter, Inc.,” copyright © 1941 by Street & Smith Publications, Inc., for Unknown Worlds, December 1941.

  The Wings of Night,” copyright © 1942 by Street & Smith Publications, Inc., for Astounding Science Fiction, March 1942.

  “Into Thy Hands,” copyright © 1945 by Street & Smith Publications, Inc., for Astounding Science Fiction, August 1945.

  “And It Comes Out Here,” copyright © 1951 by World Editions, Inc., for Galaxy Science Fiction, February 1951.

  The Monster,” copyright © 1951 by Popular Publications, Inc., for Argosy magazine.

  The Years Draw Nigh,” copyright © 1951 by Street & Smith Publications, Inc., for Astounding Science Fiction, October 1951.

  “Instinct,” copyright © 1952 by Street & Smith Publications, Inc., for Astounding Science Fiction, January 1952.

  “Superstition,” copyright © 1954 by Street & Smith Publications, Inc., for Astounding Science Fiction, August 1954.

  “For I Am a Jealous People,” copyright © 1954 by Baliantine Books, Inc., for Star Short Novels.

  The Keepers of the House,” copyright © 1955 by King-Size Publications, Inc., for Fantastic Universe, January 1956.

  “Little Jimmy,” copyright © 1957 by Fantasy House, Inc., for Fantasy and Science Fiction, April 1957.

  “The Seat of Judgment,” copyright © 1957 by Fantasy House, Inc., for Venture Science Fiction, July 1957.

  “Vengeance Is Mine,” copyright © 1964 by Galaxy Publishing Corporation for Galaxy Science Fiction, December 1964.

  Footnote

  1

  See Author’s Afterword.

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