Scott Connors
Forfatter af The Selected Letters of Clark Ashton Smith
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Værker af Scott Connors
Lost Worlds: The Journal of Clark Ashton Smith Studies, issue no. 3 (2006) — Redaktør — 5 eksemplarer
Associated Works
The Door to Saturn (The Collected Fantasies of Clark Ashton Smith, Vol. 2) (2007) — Redaktør — 244 eksemplarer
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His trilogy of stories set on a common Mars, "The Vaults of Yoh-Vombis", "The Dweller in the Gulf" (in a restored text noticeably different than earlier published versions), and "Vulthoom" all have lingering alien horrors lurking underneath the cities of the more modern Martians. The human explorers who encounter them all have their bodies or integrity maimed to one degree to another. The first two are particularly effective horror stories.
"The Monster of the Prophecy" features the old standby of a human caught up in alien intrigues. But, after being used as a pawn in a palace coup offworld and forced in to exile, the poet hero (Smith was an accomplished poet) finds the contentment and respect denied him on Earth -- even if he is exiled in an alien body. "The Letter from Mohaun Los" has Smith again in satirical mode. Here the target is the technophilia of the science fiction published by Hugo Gernsback as well as the modern age's meddling and obsessive legalities. "The Plutonian Drug" is, as you would expect, a drug trip story. Here the drug enables visions five hours in the past and future simultaneously. "The Immortals of Mercury" is another tale of underground alien superscience horror.
Smith called "The Eternal World" the hardest story of his to write. Here the attraction isn't so much the human time traveler's journey to a dimension with no time as the poetic language of apocalypse at the end. Of all the stories in the book, "The Demon of the Flower", a re-working of the prose poem "The Flower-Devil", is the closest to the fantasies which Smith's reputation primarily rests. Its prose is lush, its world decadent, its flora sinister, and its heroics futile. "A Star-Change" is a working out of Smith's contention that journeying to an alien world would work profound and unwelcome changes on a human's mind. "The Secret of the Cairn" has deliberate evocations of the Garden of Evil story, and is another Smith story of an artist finding no succor or inspiration in encountering the bizarre and alien.
Most of these stories are from 1932-1935. The one exception is 1954's "Phoenix". As the editors note, its science was dated even when it was published, and its ending is predictable. But it offers the joys of poet Smith in top form from the opening image of a black sun occulting the stars of Earth's sky to its ending of doomed love. Only Smith could wring poetry out of a list of elements as a dying mankind, imprisoned under the surface of a frigid Earth, attempts to jumpstart the dead sun with ancient nukes.
Fans of Smith will very much appreciate the long and informative introduction by editors Scott Connors and Ron Hilger. They talk about each story's genesis and the reaction Smith's work got when first published. Many future science fiction luminaries were inspired by it. Others hated what they saw as irrational and pretensious.
Smith was a special author and worth reading though his best qualities are not often on display here.… (mere)