Richard Geis, R.I.P.
.
Richard E. Geis died almost a month ago on February 4, 2013, but in the way that happens when real life intersects with genre fame, the word got out to the rest of us only a few days ago.
How times have changed! When I first became aware of science fiction fandom some thirty years ago, anybody who claimed to know anything about science fiction had to read Geis's fanzine, Science Fiction Review . This was back in the old mimeograph-and-staples days. Now, I suspect, only those of us who were there back then remember him.
Geis was an argumentative guy with a feisty prose line. He made a living writing soft core porn -- over a hundred such novels by his unashamed count -- and he was unabashedly and unapologetically conservative, in the libertarian mode. This was back when science fiction was assumed by default to be visionary and liberal
Yet everybody who was anybody read Geis and took his opinions into account. Why? Two reasons. One was that his zine reviewed as much of contemporary science fiction as could be managed. The other was that he openly acknowledged his prejudices and recognized that other people felt differently
Dick Geis had one stroke of brilliance -- his creation of a fictional Other named Alter Ego, (that's him on the cover up above), a blue-collar demon with whom he would argue the merits of current SF. Geis would take the default literary argument (Le Guin is brilliant, Wolfe is God, and good writing is essential) while, to his ostensible horror, Alter argued what would much later be the punk argument -- that SF was a trash art, that the beat mattered where grammar did not, that intellectual rigor meant nothing compared to the visceral stuff of plot. Since he only engaged in these arguments over works that were worth arguing over, his writings pleased those who liked the works in question and those who did not as well.
Now he's gone, an exemplar of a way of fannish life that is rapidly disappearing in the rear-view mirror as science fiction careens wildly into the future.
Rest in peace, Dick. May the afterlife be as impossibly hospitable to you as the world promised by your paperback covers.
*

Richard E. Geis died almost a month ago on February 4, 2013, but in the way that happens when real life intersects with genre fame, the word got out to the rest of us only a few days ago.
How times have changed! When I first became aware of science fiction fandom some thirty years ago, anybody who claimed to know anything about science fiction had to read Geis's fanzine, Science Fiction Review . This was back in the old mimeograph-and-staples days. Now, I suspect, only those of us who were there back then remember him.
Geis was an argumentative guy with a feisty prose line. He made a living writing soft core porn -- over a hundred such novels by his unashamed count -- and he was unabashedly and unapologetically conservative, in the libertarian mode. This was back when science fiction was assumed by default to be visionary and liberal
Yet everybody who was anybody read Geis and took his opinions into account. Why? Two reasons. One was that his zine reviewed as much of contemporary science fiction as could be managed. The other was that he openly acknowledged his prejudices and recognized that other people felt differently

Now he's gone, an exemplar of a way of fannish life that is rapidly disappearing in the rear-view mirror as science fiction careens wildly into the future.
Rest in peace, Dick. May the afterlife be as impossibly hospitable to you as the world promised by your paperback covers.
*
Published on March 04, 2013 09:44
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