Jim Young, R.I.P.
.
A good friend died yesterday. I can't say that I knew Jim Young as well as I would have liked. We ran across each other only once or twice or thrice a year. But I enjoyed the hell out our time together when we did.
All careers in science fiction are strange careers. But Jim's was stranger than most. He came into SF from the State Department, where he was in the diplomatic corps. His proudest brag was that, in a classified paper, he had been the only one to call the collapse of the Soviet Union. His highest post was being responsible for three "sandboxes in North Africa," as he called them. His remit, he told me, was to keep the sandboxes' inhabitants from killing each other for no reason at all.
When George W. Bush came into office, Jim quit the corps. "I can't work under Condoleezza Rice," he said, and I doubt that the rest of that administration would have made him happy either. At that time, he was writing well-received science fiction stories, and two novels, The Face of the Deep , which I never saw (it was published long before I met him) and Armed Memory .
I liked the stories and Armed Memory quite a lot. It was one of the first post-cyberpunk novels to successfully move beyond cyberpunk. In it, people could be genetically modified to make themselves half-human and half-shark (or combinations of other animals) in a future so desperate that doing so seems like a good idea. Here's what Publisher's Weekly had to say about it:
Armed Memory was an extremely promising beginning. If Jim had stuck with SF and put his all into it, he might well have been as good as any of my peers -- and my peers include James Patrick Kelly, William Gibson, Nancy Kress, Kim Stanley Robinson, and brand-new Grand Master Connie Willis.
He didn't, however. Just as he was starting to get somewhere as a writer, Jim decided the time had come to follow his dreams... and went off to Hollywood to become a star.
Spoiler Alert: Jim didn't become a star. And now he's dead, struck down by brain cancer. An ironic end for a man who was so effortlessly smart.
But death comes like the finger of God to draw a line below your life and tot up the sums. All the zeroes fall off. And when the end result is looked at, Jim chose wisely. He could have settled for a good-enough life in the State Department or a distinguished-enough career in science fiction. Instead, he followed his dreams. In this, I believe, he was wise.
Vaya con Dios, amigo. May what you find exceed your dreams.
Above: Jim's publicity shot. He was much more handsome in person.
*

A good friend died yesterday. I can't say that I knew Jim Young as well as I would have liked. We ran across each other only once or twice or thrice a year. But I enjoyed the hell out our time together when we did.
All careers in science fiction are strange careers. But Jim's was stranger than most. He came into SF from the State Department, where he was in the diplomatic corps. His proudest brag was that, in a classified paper, he had been the only one to call the collapse of the Soviet Union. His highest post was being responsible for three "sandboxes in North Africa," as he called them. His remit, he told me, was to keep the sandboxes' inhabitants from killing each other for no reason at all.
When George W. Bush came into office, Jim quit the corps. "I can't work under Condoleezza Rice," he said, and I doubt that the rest of that administration would have made him happy either. At that time, he was writing well-received science fiction stories, and two novels, The Face of the Deep , which I never saw (it was published long before I met him) and Armed Memory .
I liked the stories and Armed Memory quite a lot. It was one of the first post-cyberpunk novels to successfully move beyond cyberpunk. In it, people could be genetically modified to make themselves half-human and half-shark (or combinations of other animals) in a future so desperate that doing so seems like a good idea. Here's what Publisher's Weekly had to say about it:
Young's writing creates a strong sense of excitement, his future world is familiar enough to be appealing (and distorted enough to be hip) and the mysteries he explores are intense and compelling.
Armed Memory was an extremely promising beginning. If Jim had stuck with SF and put his all into it, he might well have been as good as any of my peers -- and my peers include James Patrick Kelly, William Gibson, Nancy Kress, Kim Stanley Robinson, and brand-new Grand Master Connie Willis.
He didn't, however. Just as he was starting to get somewhere as a writer, Jim decided the time had come to follow his dreams... and went off to Hollywood to become a star.
Spoiler Alert: Jim didn't become a star. And now he's dead, struck down by brain cancer. An ironic end for a man who was so effortlessly smart.
But death comes like the finger of God to draw a line below your life and tot up the sums. All the zeroes fall off. And when the end result is looked at, Jim chose wisely. He could have settled for a good-enough life in the State Department or a distinguished-enough career in science fiction. Instead, he followed his dreams. In this, I believe, he was wise.
Vaya con Dios, amigo. May what you find exceed your dreams.
Above: Jim's publicity shot. He was much more handsome in person.
*
Published on June 13, 2012 00:30
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