Tuesday, September 18, 2018

Recently Read: The Skylark of Space by E. E. Smith



Taking a break from other reading, I thought I would take a trip down memory lane. Edward Elmer Smith, known, for his PhD in Chemistry, as “Doc” to his legion of fans in the Golden Age, was one of the popular science fiction writers in the early generations of the genre. This, his first novel, was published in 1928, serialised in Amazing Stories under the hand of Hugo Gernsbach – ninety years ago! It is worth bearing in mind the novel was written between 1915 and 1921 when Smith was in university, and the first half of the story, set on Earth and comprising a scientific, industrial and espionage thriller, was co-written with Lee Hawkins Garby, wife of a colleague. (Smith is reputed to have always had his romantic material ghost written, he was good at space ships and vast machines, not lovey-dovey stuff.)  That’s over a hundred years ago! Al Capone was at the height of his powers when this novel was serialised, and Albert Einstein was the most influential cosmologist, with decades of work ahead of him.

I remember reading many years ago a comment from one of the big voices in the field, that it was “unfortunate” so many people were introduced to science fiction through the likes of E. E. Smith. I took immediate exception to the remark, having enjoyed his work as a kid, but many years later I can perhaps see where that critic was coming from.

The work was first collected under one cover in 1946, it was already venerable even then. So, how does a novel written so far back survive, through an infinitude of editions, today?

I first read this novel when I was about eleven – the same copy, the Panther edition of 1974. The striking Chris Foss cover of course has nothing to do with the content of the book, something for which Foss was notorious, though his style was an undoubted selling point for a great many paperbacks of the period. The Foss mystique was welded to the Panther/Grenada reissue of the E. E. Smith classics in the 70s and for me, as a young science fiction enthusiast, the covers leant a fascination and compulsion to what were even then very old narratives.

The story concerns a scientist making a serendipitous discovery akin to cold fusion, the total conversion of matter into energy, released in a controlled manner. This gives him and his partner fundamental control of propulsion (a reactionless space drive), weapons, tractor beams and instrumentation overcoming the limitations of physics as they were then understood. Of course, a voyage into deep space is planned, the construction of a vessel to embody all these technologies – and there’s a bad guy of Holmesian complexity, think an evil Sherlock, equal in scientific competence to the heroes but utterly devoid of scruple. Yes, Moriarty by any other name.

The heroes, Seaton and Crane, are comic book stereotypes – brilliant in the Bruce Wayne/Tony Stark way, champion athletes with rippling physiques they never seem to have to work at, iron-jawed and of both unshakeable courage and golden-headed adherence to the side of the angels – ruthless too, in their willingness of wage war with superior weapons on behalf of their conception of right. No “Prime Directives” here, just pile on and annihilate! Kill the aliens!

It’s fascinating to consider this first outing for a big name. The style is pulpy and underdeveloped in many ways, and his penchant for having his characters speak in the American slang of the period is both charming and irritating – confusing to me when I was a kid. His real science is liberally sprinkled in, while his flights of technical fancy are wonderful to behold. His dismissal of the “Einstein theory” as “just a theory” is rather quaint, allowing his space vessels to travel at thousands of times the speed of light, while acknowledging that inertia still applies! Nevertheless, this novel is recognised as the first work of “space opera,” the first even marginally convincing attempt to explain deep space flight by scientific means, and to bring together the elements of the violent and exotic juxtaposed with hard steel and furious energies.

The influences are rather clear, though – as a child I was not yet widely enough read to know what I was looking at or make some rather obvious connections. Smith was heavily influenced by Burroughs – his alien civilization of the planet Osnome, lit by the light of a fifteen-star cluster so that night is unknown, peopled by warrior societies locked in a 6000-year war, equipped with flying vessels of every sort and welded to a social order based on monarchy and notions of Darwinian fitness, is detailed luxuriously and drips inference of Burroughs’ Barsoom. This is hardly surprising, A Princess of Mars must have been on Smith's bookshelf when he first put an ink-dipped pen nib to paper. The planet is unremittingly hot, therefore clothes are rarely worn – the classic way to spice up the narrative with the bare skin forbidden by polite society of the age. Yet the social mores of the Twenties are painfully in focus, the proprieties are observed at all times, no sex before marriage – and of course there is a great wedding scene as both heroes and their girlfriends exchange cloying vows of eternal betrothal in a glittering alien spectacle. Smith spent an entire chapter on it, the public must have lapped it up. One sees the wedding of John Carter and Dejah Thoris as the precursor, and the wedding of Ming the Merciless and Dale Arden in Flash Gordon, made just a few years after Smith’s opus, as the inevitable Hollywood cash-in. (Viewed objectively, Flash Gordon channels Skylark of Space at so many levels.)

The novel has been edited many times, with major changes between 1928 and 1946, and Smith, still alive in the mid-1970s, reworked the text for a hardcover edition in 1975, abridging it and removing most of Garby’s contribution. This may be the same text as the 1974 Panther edition, which is noted as having been revised by the author, and there is no credit for a co-author. Revisions are clear when considering the early dates of original composition: the text, while never mentioning a date at which events take place (and Washington seems entirely contemporary, though Smith is careful to describe nothing stylistically, allowing the text to remain contemporary as cars lost their running boards and so forth) mentions nuclear energy, the supersonic jet, the helicopter, computer and television. This is a case of reality surging by a work of fiction, which was retrospectively updated in its details to keep pace.

Critical reaction has been mixed down the decades, with some recognising the novel’s influence upon the field, and others the almost painfully amateurish plot development. What fares worst a century on is perhaps the self-serving social model it supports – white Americans save the funny-coloured natives and are showered with fabulous wealth and elevated to the highest honours in the process. Perhaps it was not meant that way, and it may be unfair to saddle a period piece with the outlook of modern times, but we live in a hyper-sensitive age, and as surely as any other writers of the period, Smith operated inside his own social environment. There is one Asian in the story, a servant who speak Engrish poorly, and black people are non-existent, while women are definitely the weaker sex, forever trembling, clinging to male arms or trotting off to prepare food – oh yes, this is America a hundred years ago. In the sequels Smith became more adventurous, introducing action-woman characters, retiring the shrinking-violet model, but the original is painfully conservative.

An unmodified classic edition, crediting both authors, can be found at Project Guttenberg

Here is an excellent discussion of the liberties taken both artistically and scientifically in this and subsequent volumes.

Can I recommend this book today? It’s difficult to, other than as a curiosity, yet so seminal has its influence been that one would have to say it is required reading along with Verne and Welles for the serious aficionado of the genre. I found it less enthralling than Burroughs, less compelling than the SF outings of Clarke Ashton Smith, but it is what it is – the one that started it all. The Skylark really was the first starship of Earth.

Cheers, Mike Adamson

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