Sad loss, but the work lives on. Brian Aldiss 18 August 1925 – 19 August 2017.
In the foreward of Space, time and Nathaniel
(NEL 1971), Aldiss asks, ‘What happens to old science fiction? Is it as
expendable as last year’s calender?’ to which the answer is, ‘Maybe.’ Nostalgia
comes into play, and SF, though usually concerning the future, possesses a
history worthy of study. In technical detail, science fiction stories do date
quicker than bananas. Already with some of my own short stories I’m finding
evidence of a lack of mobile phones, and when you look back to stories
published more than thirty-five years ago you can but cringe when Captain Zorge
calculates his next hyperspace jump on a slide rule. My edition of Stan (the
acronym by which this book came to be known) can only be described as much
loved and deeply in need of Sellotape. Just looking at the cover with its
acorn-headed failed man gazing with its huge turquoise eyes into some
immeasurable distance, sitting cobwebbed on a pile of bones, provides me with
the thrill of remembered reading pleasure. Yet, Aldiss says of even this edition,
‘a whiff of period charm hangs over it’. However, Stan contains what for me are
some of the classic short stories of the genre, and is well-worth a read for
any of those who might think they are doing anything new. My favorite has to be
The Failed Men. This excellent time travel story tells of a relief
effort run by the fourth millennium Paulls to which twenty-fourth century
humans have been recruited – both races brothers in comparison to the people,
of millions of years in the future, that they are trying to help. And what is
the plight of these last? They have buried themselves alive because they have
‘failed’. Put across in this story is the incredible frustration of the
rescuers in trying to find out precisely what is meant by that failure – frustration
in some cases leading to despair. No real explanation is offered and it is from
this enigma that comes the appeal, that and the sheer story-telling ability. I
don’t know whether or not this book is available now. It ought to be, not least
for students studying the genre, but mostly because, slide rules aside, a good
story is timeless.
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