No ordinary critic, Norman Spinrad explicates, celebrates, and sometimes excoriates science fiction from the privileged perspective of an artist armed with intimate knowledge of the craft of fiction and even of the writers themselves. In these 13 essays, Spinrad urges science fiction as a genre to reach its potential. He divides the essays—new works written specifically for this book combined with those that appeared in Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine— into five sections: "Literature and Genre: A Critical Overview," in which Spinrad establishes his critical standards; "Alternate Media: Visual Translations," a discussion of comic books and books made into movies; "Modes of Content: Hard SF, Cyberpunk, and the Space Visionaries"; "Psychopolitics and Science Fiction: Heroes—True and Otherwise"; and "Masters of the Form: Careers in Profile," discussions of Sturgeon, Vonnegut, Ballard, and Dick.
Born in New York in 1940, Norman Spinrad is an acclaimed SF writer.
Norman Spinrad, born in New York City, is a graduate of the Bronx High School of Science. In 1957 he entered City College of New York and graduated in 1961 with a Bachelor of Science degree as a pre-law major. In 1966 he moved to San Francisco, then to Los Angeles, and now lives in Paris. He married fellow novelist N. Lee Wood in 1990; they divorced in 2005. They had no children. Spinrad served as President of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America (SFWA) from 1980 to 1982 and again from 2001 to 2002.
These essays are 25 to 30 years old, and so diving into them I wondered if I would find them of historical interest only or possibly simple dated. When Spinrad covers more general topics – the difference between sf and sci-fi, the need for critical standards, etc – there is a sense of familiar territory being gone over once again. Putting yourself back into the time of their original publication is necessary, but even that bit of intellectual time travel is made easy by Spinrad’s lively, opinionated, and extremely readable prose.
He is best when he gets down to specifics. He is good on the issues of literary quality versus scientific accuracy in hard science fiction. He makes a case that cyberpunk should be relabeled neuromanticism, and that when Greg Bear found himself on a cyberpunk panel at the 1985 Worldcon, he did indeed belong there, despites Bear’s claims to the contrary. The New Wave gets mentioned in several contexts, but perhaps because Spinrad himself was closely involved with it, he does devote an entire essay to it.
In a couple of contexts he makes the point that much of what keeps sf relegated to the pulp publishing category, what he terms the masturbatory power fantasies aimed at adolescent males, can also be found in the best of sf writing, and is justifiably considered the sort or ur myth that underlies much of Western myth and literature. It may seem obvious, but 25 years later it remains a point worth making, that much depends on how well written something is. And Spinrad doesn’t hesitate to divide the flock.
Even if you feel you will know the arguments Spinrad is going to put forth, there is still the pleasure of reading his prose. And you might find something that decades after it was written can still really piss you off. And what can be better than that?
Mr. Spinrad set out to get the ball rolling on creating a serious critical framework for discussing science fiction and fantasy, something that would go beyond the minutiae of fandom and connect to the larger project of literary criticism. For my money, he did a great job. I have returned to it several times since I first read it back in college, and I recommend it to anyone interested in the interplay between SF/Fantasy as narrative forms, as genres, as marketing categories, or as business would do well to pick this gem up.
Very few science fiction writers ever tell us about the genre in which they work, the few that have haven't been particularly interesting. As usual, Spinrad is the exceptional; must read for anyone who is a reader of the genre!
Published in 1990 and including essays going back to 1985, this collection has both held up well and aged badly. The critical insights are as valid today as they were when published though they are related to books and films from a previous era. Some of the cultural touchstones do not hold up as well. Consistent references to recreational sex and drug use sound seriouly dated and there are a number of word choices (barbled?) that reek of patchouli and the use of the phrase, "far out man!" Still Spinrad clearly has a deep and well earned understanding of science fiction in all its forms and the final essay on Phillip K. Dick, particularly the analysis and appreciation for The Transmigration of Timothy Archer (admittedly one of my favorite books of all time)is worth the price of admission.