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E. E. Smith

Edward Elmer Smith (May 2, 1890 – August 31, 1965) was an American food engineer (specializing in doughnut and pastry mixes) and science-fiction author, best known for the Lensman and Skylark series. He is sometimes called the father of space opera.

E. E. Smith
Smith c. 1960
BornEdward Elmer Smith
(1890-05-02)May 2, 1890
Sheboygan, Wisconsin, US
DiedAugust 31, 1965(1965-08-31) (aged 75)
Seaside, Oregon, US
Pen nameE. E. "Doc" Smith
OccupationFood engineer, writer
NationalityAmerican
Alma materUniversity of Idaho (two degrees in chemical engineering, 1914)
Period1928–1965 (published writer)[1]
GenreScience fiction (notably space opera)
Spouse
Jeanne MacDougall
(m. 1915)
Children3

Biography edit

Family and education edit

Edward Elmer Smith was born in Sheboygan, Wisconsin, on May 2, 1890, to Fred Jay Smith and Caroline Mills Smith, both staunch Presbyterians of British ancestry.[2] His mother was a teacher born in Michigan in February 1855; his father was a sailor, born in Maine in January 1855 to an English father.[3] They moved to Spokane, Washington, the winter after Edward Elmer was born,[4] where Mr. Smith was working as a contractor in 1900.[3] In 1902, the family moved to Seneaquoteen,[5] near the Pend Oreille River, in Kootenai County, Idaho.[6] He had four siblings, Rachel M. born September 1882, Daniel M. born January 1884, Mary Elizabeth born February 1886 (all of whom were born in Michigan), and Walter E. born July 1891 in Washington.[3] In 1910, Fred and Caroline Smith and their son Walter were living in the Markham Precinct of Bonner County, Idaho; Fred is listed in census records as a farmer.[7]

Smith worked mainly as a manual laborer until he injured his wrist while fleeing from a fire at the age of 19. He attended the University of Idaho. (Many years later he would be installed in the 1984 Class of the University of Idaho Alumni Hall of Fame.[8]) He entered its prep school in 1907, and graduated with two degrees in chemical engineering in 1914.[9] He was president of the Chemistry Club, the Chess Club, and the Mandolin and Guitar Club, and captain of the Drill and Rifle Team; he also sang the bass lead in Gilbert and Sullivan operettas.[10] His undergraduate thesis was Some Clays of Idaho, co-written with classmate Chester Fowler Smith, who died in California of tuberculosis the following year, after taking a teaching fellowship at Berkeley.[11] Whether the two were related is not known.

On October 5, 1915, in Boise, Idaho[12] he married Jeanne Craig MacDougall, the sister of his college roommate, Allen Scott (Scotty) MacDougall.[13] (Her sister was named Clarissa MacLean MacDougall; the heroine of the Lensman novels would later be named Clarissa MacDougall.) Jeanne MacDougall was born in Glasgow, Scotland; her parents were Donald Scott MacDougall, a violinist, and Jessica Craig MacLean. Her father had moved to Boise when the children were young, and later sent for his family; he died while they were en route in 1905. Jeanne's mother, who remarried businessman and retired politician John F. Kessler in 1914[14] worked at, and later owned, a boarding house on Ridenbaugh Street.

The Smiths had three children:

  • Roderick N., born June 3, 1918, in the District of Columbia, was employed as a design engineer at Lockheed Aircraft.
  • Verna Jean (later Verna Smith Trestrail), born August 25, 1920, in Michigan, was his literary executor until her death in 1994. (Her son Kim Trestrail is now the executor.[15]) Robert A. Heinlein in part dedicated his 1982 novel Friday to Verna.[16]
  • Clarissa M. (later Clarissa Wilcox), was born December 13, 1921, in Michigan.[17]

Early chemical career and the beginning of Skylark edit

 
A scene from the first installment of The Skylark of Space, August 1928

After college, Smith was a junior chemist for the National Bureau of Standards in Washington, D.C., developing standards for butter and for oysters,[18] while studying food chemistry at George Washington University.[9] During World War I, he "wanted to fly a Jenny, but chemists were too scarce. (Or were Jennies too valuable?)"[19] He ended up being sent to the Commission for Relief in Belgium headed by Herbert Hoover.[9] His draft card, partly illegible, seems to show that Smith requested exemption from military service, based on his wife's dependence and on his contribution to the war effort as a civilian chemist.[20][original research?]

One evening in 1915, the Smiths were visiting a former classmate from the University of Idaho, Dr. Carl Garby (1890–1928)[21] who had also moved to Washington, D.C. He lived nearby in the Seaton Place Apartments with his wife, Lee Hawkins Garby. A long discussion about journeys into outer space ensued, and it was suggested that Smith should write down his ideas and speculations as a story about interstellar travel. Although he was interested, Smith believed after some thought that some romantic elements would be required and he was uncomfortable with that.

Lee Garby offered to take care of the love interest and the romantic dialogue, and Smith decided to give it a try. The sources of inspirations for the main characters in the novel were themselves; the "Seatons" and "Cranes" were based on the Smiths and Garbys, respectively.[22] About one third of The Skylark of Space was completed by the end of 1916, when Smith and Garby gradually abandoned work on it.

Smith earned his master's degree in chemistry from the George Washington University in 1917, studying under Dr. Charles E. Munroe,[5][23][24] whom Smith called "probably the greatest high-explosives man yet to live".[9] Smith completed his PhD in chemical engineering in 1918, with a food engineering focus.[18][25] His dissertation, The effect of bleaching with oxides of nitrogen upon the baking quality and commercial value of wheat flour, was published in 1919.[26][27]

 
The serial novel Skylark Three began as Amazing Stories cover story (August 1930)
 
Spacehounds of IPC was also serialized in Amazing Stories.
 
Triplanetary was the last of Smith's 1930s novels to be serialized in Amazing Stories; his Lensman novels were published in Astounding Stories.
 
Smith's novelette "Lord Tedric", the cover story in the March 1954 issue of Universe Science Fiction, was novelized by Gordon Eklund nearly 25 years later.
 
Smith's novel The Galaxy Primes was serialized in Amazing Stories in 1959.
 
After E. Everett Evans died in 1958, Smith completed his unfinished novel, Masters of Space. The novel was serialized in If.

Writing Skylark edit

In 1919, Smith was hired as chief chemist for F. W. Stock & Sons of Hillsdale, Michigan, at one time the largest family-owned mill east of the Mississippi,[28] working on doughnut mixes.[5]

One evening late in 1919, after moving to Michigan, Smith was baby-sitting (presumably for Roderick) while his wife attended a movie. He resumed work on The Skylark of Space, finishing it in the spring of 1920.[29][30] He submitted it to many book publishers and magazines, spending more in postage than he would eventually receive for its publication. Bob Davis, editor of Argosy, sent an encouraging rejection letter in 1922, saying that he liked the novel personally, but that it was too far out for his readers.[31] Finally, upon seeing the April 1927 issue of Amazing Stories, he submitted it to that magazine. It was accepted, initially for $75, later raised to $125.[32] It was published as a three-part serial in the August to October 1928 issues[1] and it was such a success that associate editor Sloane requested a sequel before the second installment had been published.[33] (According to Warner, but no other source, Smith began work on the sequel, Skylark Three, before the first book was accepted.[34])

Garby, whose husband died in 1928, was not interested in further collaboration, so Smith began work on Skylark Three alone.[35] It was published as another three-part serial, in the August to October 1930 issues of Amazing, introduced as the cover story for August.[1] This was as far as he had planned to take the Skylark series. It was praised in Amazing's letter column,[36] and he was paid ¾¢ per word, surpassing Amazing's previous record of half a cent.[37]

The early 1930s: between Skylark and Lensman edit

Smith then began work on what he intended as a new series, starting with Spacehounds of IPC,[38] which he finished in the autumn of 1930.[39] In this novel, he took pains to avoid the scientific impossibilities which had bothered some readers of the Skylark novels.[40] Even in 1938, after he had written Galactic Patrol, Smith considered it his finest work.[39] He later said of it, "This was really scientific fiction; not, like the Skylarks, pseudo-science".[41] Even at the end of his career, he considered it his only work of true science fiction.[42] It was published in the July through September 1931 issues of Amazing, with Sloane making unauthorized changes.[43] Fan letters in the magazine complained about the novel's containment within the Solar System, and Sloane sided with the readers. So when Harry Bates, editor of Astounding Stories, offered Smith 2¢/word—payable on publication—for his next story, he agreed. This meant that it could not be a sequel to Spacehounds.[37]

This book would be Triplanetary, "in which scientific detail would not be bothered about, and in which his imagination would run riot."[39] Indeed, characters within the story point out its psychological[44] and scientific[45] implausibilities, and sometimes even seem to suggest self-parody.[46] At other times, they are conspicuously silent about obvious implausibilities.[47][48] The January 1933 issue of Astounding announced that Triplanetary would appear in the March issue, and that issue's cover illustrated a scene from the story, but Astounding's financial difficulties prevented the story from appearing.[49] Smith then submitted the manuscript to Wonder Stories, whose new editor, 17-year-old Charles D. Hornig, rejected it, later boasting about the rejection in a fanzine.[50] He finally submitted it to Amazing, which published it beginning in January 1934, but for only half a cent a word. Shortly after it was accepted, F. Orlin Tremaine, the new editor of the revived Astounding, offered one cent a word for Triplanetary. When he learned that he was too late, he suggested a third Skylark novel instead.[51]

In the winter of 1933–34, Smith worked on The Skylark of Valeron, but he felt that the story was getting out of control. He sent his first draft to Tremaine, with a distraught note asking for suggestions. Tremaine accepted the rough draft for $850, and announced it in the June 1934 issue, with a full-page editorial and a three-quarter-page advertisement. The novel was published in the August 1934 through February 1935 issues.[1] Astounding's circulation rose by 10,000 for the first issue, and its two main competitors, Amazing and Wonder Stories, fell into financial difficulties, both skipping issues within a year.[52]

The Lensman series edit

In January 1936, a time period where he was already an established science-fiction writer, he took a job for salary plus profit-sharing, as production manager at Dawn Donut Co. of Jackson, Michigan.[9][53] This initially entailed almost a year's worth of 18-hour days and seven-day workweeks. Individuals who knew Smith confirmed that he had a role in developing mixes for doughnuts and other pastries, but the contention that he developed the first process for making powdered sugar adhere to doughnuts cannot be substantiated.[54] Smith was reportedly dislocated from his job at Dawn Donuts by prewar rationing in early 1940.[55]

Smith had been contemplating writing a "space-police novel" since early 1927;[56] once he had "the Lensmen's universe fairly well set up", he reviewed his science-fiction collection for "cops-and-robbers" stories. He cites Clinton Constantinescue's "War of the Universe" as a negative example, and Starzl and Williamson as positive ones.[57] Tremaine responded extremely positively to a brief description of the idea.[58]

Once Dawn Donuts became profitable in late 1936, Smith wrote an 85-page outline for what became the four core Lensman novels. In early 1937, Tremaine committed to buying them.[59] Segmenting the story into four novels required considerable effort to avoid dangling loose ends. Smith cited Edgar Rice Burroughs as a negative example.[58] After the outline was complete, he wrote a more detailed outline of Galactic Patrol, plus a detailed graph of its structure, with "peaks of emotional intensity and the valleys of characterization and background material." He notes, however, that he was never able to follow any of his outlines at all closely, as the "characters get away from me and do exactly as they damn please."[60] After completing the rough draft of Galactic Patrol, he wrote the concluding chapter of the last book in the series, Children of the Lens.[61] Galactic Patrol was published in the September 1937 through February 1938 issues of Astounding. Unlike the revised book edition, it was not set in the same universe as Triplanetary.[62]

Gray Lensman, the fourth book in the series, appeared in Astounding's October 1939 through January 1940 issues. Gray Lensman was extremely well received, as was its cover illustration.[63] Campbell's editorial in the December issue suggested that the October issue was the best issue of Astounding ever, and Gray Lensman was first place in the Analytical Laboratory statistics "by a lightyear", with three runners-up in a distant tie for second place.[64] The cover was also praised by readers in Brass Tacks, and Campbell noted, "We got a letter from E. E. Smith saying he and [cover artist] Hubert Rogers agreed on how Kinnison looked."[65]

Smith was the guest of honor at Chicon I, the second World Science Fiction Convention, held in Chicago over Labor Day weekend 1940,[66] giving a speech on the importance of science fiction fandom entitled "What Does This Convention Mean?"[67] He attended the convention's masquerade as C. L. Moore's Northwest Smith, and met fans living near him in Michigan, who would later form the Galactic Roamers, which previewed and advised him on his future work.[68]

After Pearl Harbor, Smith discovered he "was one year over age for reinstatement" into the US Army. Instead he worked on high explosives at the Kingsbury Ordnance Plant in La Port, Indiana, at first as a chemical engineer, but gradually worked his way up to chief. In late 1943 he became head of the Inspection Division, and was fired in early 1944.[9] An extended segment in the novel version of Triplanetary, set during World War II, suggests intimate familiarity with explosives and munitions manufacturing. Some biographers[who?] cite as fact that, just as Smith's protagonist in this segment lost his job over failure to approve substandard munitions, Smith did as well.[citation needed]

Smith spent the next few years working on "light farm machinery and heavy tanks for Allis-Chalmers," after which he was hired as manager of the Cereal Mix Division of J. W. Allen & Co.,[9] where he worked until his professional retirement in 1957.[55]

Retirement and late writing edit

After Smith retired, he and his wife lived in Clearwater, Florida in the fall and winter, driving the smaller of their two trailers to Seaside, Oregon, each April, often stopping at science fiction conventions on the way.[23] (Smith did not like to fly.[69]) In 1963, he was presented the inaugural First Fandom Hall of Fame award at the 21st World Science Fiction Convention in Washington, D.C.[23] Some of his biography is captured in an essay by Robert A. Heinlein, which was reprinted in the collection Expanded Universe in 1980. A more detailed, although allegedly[70] error-ridden biography is in Sam Moskowitz's Seekers of Tomorrow.

Robert Heinlein and Smith were friends. (Heinlein dedicated his 1958 novel Methuselah's Children "To Edward E. Smith, PhD".[71]) Heinlein reported that E. E. Smith perhaps took his "unrealistic" heroes from life, citing as an example the extreme competence of the hero of Spacehounds of IPC. He reported that E. E. Smith was a large, blond, athletic, very intelligent, very gallant man, married to a remarkably beautiful, intelligent, red-haired woman named MacDougal (thus perhaps the prototypes of 'Kimball Kinnison' and 'Clarissa MacDougal'). In Heinlein's essay, he reports that he began to suspect Smith might be a sort of "superman" when he asked Smith for help in purchasing a car. Smith tested the car by driving it on a back road at illegally high speeds with their heads pressed tightly against the roof columns to listen for chassis squeaks by bone conduction—a process apparently improvised on the spot.

In his nonseries novels written after his professional retirement, Galaxy Primes, Subspace Explorers, and Subspace Encounter, E. E. Smith explores themes of telepathy and other mental abilities collectively called "psionics", and of the conflict between libertarian and socialistic/communistic influences in the colonization of other planets. Galaxy Primes was written after critics such as Groff Conklin and P. Schuyler Miller in the early '50s accused his fiction of being passé, and he made an attempt to do something more in line with the concepts about which Astounding editor John W. Campbell encouraged his writers to make stories. Despite this, it was rejected by Campbell, and it was eventually published by Amazing Stories in 1959. His late story "The Imperial Stars" (1964), featuring a troupe of circus performers involved in sabotage in a galactic empire, recaptured some of the atmosphere from his earlier works and was intended as the first in a new series, with outlines of later parts rumored to still exist.[72] In fact, the Imperial Stars characters and concepts were continued by author Stephen Goldin as the "Family D'Alembert series". While the book covers indicate the series was written by Smith and Goldin together, Goldin only ever had Smith's original novella to expand upon.

The fourth Skylark novel, Skylark DuQuesne, ran in the June to October 1965 issues of If, beginning once again as the cover story. Editor Frederik Pohl introduced it with a one-page summary of the previous stories, which were all at least 30 years old.[1]

Lord Tedric edit

Smith published two novelettes entitled "Tedric" in Other Worlds Science Fiction Stories (1953) and "Lord Tedric" in Universe Science Fiction (1954). These were almost completely forgotten until after Smith's death. In 1975, a compendium of Smith's works was published, entitled The Best of E. E. "Doc" Smith, containing these two short stories, excerpts from several of his major works, and another short story first published in Worlds of If in 1964 entitled "The Imperial Stars".

In Smith's original short stories, Tedric was a smith (both blacksmith and whitesmith) residing in a small town near a castle in a situation roughly equivalent to England of the 1200s. He received instruction in advanced metallurgy from a time-traveler who wanted to change the situation in his own time by modifying certain events of the past. From this instruction, he was able to build better suits of armor and help defeat the villains of the piece. Unlike Eklund's later novels based on these short stories, the original Tedric never left his own time or planet, and fought purely local enemies of his own time period.

A few years later and 13 years after Smith's death, Verna Smith arranged with Gordon Eklund to publish another novel of the same name about the same fictional character, introducing it as "a new series conceived by E. E. 'Doc' Smith". Eklund later went on to publish the other novels in the series, one or two under the pseudonym "E. E. 'Doc' Smith" or "E. E. Smith". The protagonist possesses heroic qualities similar to those of the heroes in Smith's original novels and can communicate with an extra-dimensional race of beings known as the Scientists, whose archenemy is Fra Villion, a mysterious character described as a dark knight, skilled in whip-sword combat, and evil genius behind the creation of a planetoid-sized "iron sphere" armed with a weapon capable of destroying planets. As a result, Smith is believed by many to be the unacknowledged progenitor of themes that would appear in Star Wars. In fact, however, these appear in the sequels written by others after Smith's death.

Critical opinion edit

Smith's novels are generally considered to be classic space operas,[73] and he is sometimes called the first of the three "novas" of 20th-century science fiction (with Stanley G. Weinbaum and Robert A. Heinlein as the second and third novas).[74]

Heinlein credited him for being his main influence:

I have learned from many writers—from Verne and Wells and Campbell and Sinclair Lewis, et al.—but I have learned more from you than from any of the others and perhaps more than for all the others put together ...[75]

Smith expressed a preference for inventing fictional technologies that were not strictly impossible (so far as the science of the day was aware) but highly unlikely: "the more highly improbable a concept is—short of being contrary to mathematics whose fundamental operations involve no neglect of infinitesimals—the better I like it" was his phrase.[76]

Lensman was one of five finalists when the 1966 World Science Fiction Convention judged Isaac Asimov's Foundation the Best All-Time Series.[77]

The Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame inducted Smith in 2004.[78]

Extending the Lensman universe edit

Vortex Blasters (also known as Masters of the Vortex) is set in the same universe as the Lensman novels. It is an extension to the main storyline which takes place between Galactic Patrol and Children of the Lens, and introduces a different type of psionics from that used by the Lensmen. Spacehounds of IPC is not a part of the series, despite occasional erroneous statements to the contrary. (It is listed as a novel in the series in some paperback editions of the 1970s.)

Influence on science and the military edit

Smith was widely read by scientists and engineers from the 1930s into the 1970s. Literary precursors of ideas which arguably entered the military-scientific complex include SDI (Triplanetary), stealth (Gray Lensman), the OODA loop, C3-based warfare, and the AWACS (Gray Lensman).

An inarguable influence was described in a June 11, 1947, letter[79] to Smith from John W. Campbell (the editor of Astounding, where much of the Lensman series was originally published). In it, Campbell relayed Captain Cal Laning's[80] acknowledgment that he had used Smith's ideas for displaying the battlespace situation (called the "tank" in the stories) in the design of the United States Navy's ships' Combat Information Centers. "The entire set-up was taken specifically, directly, and consciously from the Directrix. In your story, you reached the situation the Navy was in—more communication channels than integration techniques to handle it. You proposed such an integrating technique and proved how advantageous it could be. You, sir, were 100% right. As the Japanese Navy—not the hypothetical Boskonian fleet—learned at an appalling cost."

One underlying theme of the later Lensman novels was the difficulty in maintaining military secrecy—as advanced capabilities are revealed, the opposing side can often duplicate them. This point was also discussed extensively by John Campbell in his letter to Smith.[81] Also in the later Lensman novels, and particular after the "Battle of Klovia" broke the Boskonian's power base at the end of Second Stage Lensmen, the Boskonian forces and particularly Kandron of Onlo reverted to terroristic tactics to attempt to demoralize Civilization, thus providing an early literary glimpse into this modern problem of both law enforcement and military response. The use of "Vee-two" gas by the pirates attacking the Hyperion in Triplanetary (in both magazine and book appearances) also suggests anticipation of the terrorist uses of poison gases. However, Smith lived through WWI, when the use of poison gas on troops was well known to the populace; extending the assumption that pirates might use it if they could obtain it was no great extension of the present-day knowledge.

The beginning of the story Skylark of Space describes in relative detail the protagonist's research into separation of platinum group residues, subsequent experiments involving electrolysis, and the discovery of a process evocative of cold fusion (over 50 years before Stanley Pons and Martin Fleischmann). He describes a nuclear process yielding large amounts of energy and producing only negligible radioactive waste—which then goes on to form the basis of the adventures in the Skylark books. Smith's general description of the process of discovery is highly evocative of Röntgen's descriptions of his discovery of the X-ray.

Another theme of the Skylark novels involves precursors of modern information technology. The humanoid aliens encountered in the first novel have developed a primitive technology called the "mechanical educator", which allows direct conversion of brain waves into intelligible thought for transmission to others or for electrical storage. By the third novel in the series, Skylark of Valeron, this technology has grown into an "Electronic Brain" which is capable of computation on all "bands" of energy—electromagnetism, gravity, and "tachyonic" energy and radiation bands included. This is itself derived from a discussion of reductionist atomic theory in the second novel, Skylark Three, which brings to mind modern quark and sub-quark theories of elementary particle physics.

Literary influences edit

In his 1947 essay "The Epic of Space", Smith listed (by last name only) authors he enjoyed reading: John W. Campbell, L. Sprague de Camp, Robert A. Heinlein, Murray Leinster, H. P. Lovecraft, and A. Merritt (specifically The Ship of Ishtar, The Moon Pool, The Snake Mother, and Dwellers in the Mirage, as well as the character John Kenton), C. L. Moore (specifically "Jirel of Joiry"), Roman Frederick Starzl, John Taine, A. E. van Vogt, Stanley G. Weinbaum (specifically "Tweerl"[82]), and Jack Williamson. In a passage on his preparation for writing the Lensman novels, he notes that Clinton Constantinescu's "War of the Universe" was not a masterpiece,[83][84] but says that Starzl and Williamson were masters; this suggests that Starzl's Interplanetary Flying Patrol may have been an influence on Smith's Triplanetary Patrol, later the Galactic Patrol. The feeding of the Overlords of Delgon upon the life-force of their victims at the end of chapter five of Galactic Patrol seems a clear allusion to chapter 29 of The Moon Pool, Merritt's account of the Taithu and the power of love in chapters 29 and 34 also bear some resemblance to the end of Children of the Lens.[85] Smith also mentions Edgar Rice Burroughs, complaining about loose ends at the end of one of his novels.

Smith acknowledges the help of the Galactic Roamers writers' workshop, plus E. Everett Evans, Ed Counts, an unnamed aeronautical engineer, Dr. James Enright, and Dr. Richard W. Dodson. Smith's daughter, Verna, lists the following authors as visitors to the Smith household in her youth: Lloyd Arthur Eshbach, Heinlein, Dave Kyle, Bob Tucker, Williamson, Pohl, Merritt, and the Galactic Roamers. Smith cites Bigelow's Theoretical Chemistry–Fundamentals as a justification for the possibility of the inertialess drive. Also, an extended reference is made to Rudyard Kipling's "Ballad of Boh Da Thone May 18, 2013, at the Wayback Machine" in Gray Lensman (chapter 22, "Regeneration", in a conversation between Kinnison and MacDougall). Again in Gray Lensman, Smith quotes from Merritt's Dwellers in the Mirage, even name-checking the author:

He could not even pray, with immortal Merritt's Dwayanu, "Luka - turn your wheel so that I need not slay this woman!"

Sam Moskowitz's biographical essay on Smith in Seekers of Tomorrow states that he regularly read Argosy magazine, and everything by H. G. Wells, Jules Verne, H. Rider Haggard, Edgar Allan Poe, and Edgar Rice Burroughs. Moskowitz also notes that Smith's "reading enthusiasms included poetry, philosophy, ancient and medieval history, and all of English literature".[86] (Smith's grandson notes that he spoke, and sang, German.[87]) The influence of these is not readily apparent, except in the Roman section of Triplanetary, and in the impeccable but convoluted grammar of Smith's narration. Some influence of 19th-century philosophy of language may be detectable in the account in Galactic Patrol of the Lens of Arisia as a universal translator, which is reminiscent of Frege's strong realism about Sinn, that is, thought or sense.

Both Moskowitz and Smith's daughter Verna Smith Trestrail report that Smith had a troubled relationship with John Campbell, the editor of Astounding.[88][89] Smith's most successful works were published under Campbell, but the degree of influence is uncertain. The original outline for the Lensman series had been accepted by F. Orlin Tremaine,[61] and Smith angered Campbell by showing loyalty to Tremaine at his new magazine, Comet, when he sold him "The Vortex Blaster" in 1941.[90] Campbell's announcement of Children of the Lens, in 1947, was less than enthusiastic.[91] Campbell later said that he published it only reluctantly,[92] though he praised it privately,[93] and bought little from Smith thereafter.

Derivative works and influence on popular culture edit

  • Randall Garrett wrote a parody entitled Backstage Lensman which Smith reportedly enjoyed. Harry Harrison also parodied Smith's work in the novel Star Smashers of the Galaxy Rangers and the short story Space Rats of the CCC.
  • Sir Arthur C. Clarke's space battle in Earthlight was based on the attack on the Mardonalian fortress in chapter seven of Skylark Three.[94]
  • Steve 'Slug' Russell wrote one of the first computer games, Spacewar!, with inspiration from the space battles from the Lensman series.
  • The Japanese Lensman anime is more an imitation of Star Wars than a translation of the Lensman novels. Efforts to print translations of the associated manga in the United States in the early 1990s without payment of royalties to the Smith family were successfully blocked in court by Verna Smith Trestrail with the help of several California science-fiction authors and fans.
  • In his biography, George Lucas reveals that the Lensman novels were a major influence on his youth. J. Michael Straczynski, creator of the science-fiction television series Babylon 5, also has acknowledged the influence of the Lensman books.[95][96]
  • Superman creator Jerry Siegel was impressed, at an early age, with the optimistic vision of the future presented in Skylark of Space.[97]
  • An attempt to create a feature film based on the Lensman series by Ron Howard's Imagine Entertainment and Universal Studios began in 2008 with J. Michael Straczynski, the creator of Babylon 5, as writer,[98] but in 2014 the project was scrapped because of budget limitations.[99]
  • In her short "Pliocene Companion" book, author Julian May explained that a major character in her Exile series written in the early 1980s, Marc Remillard, was strongly influenced by Smith's villain character from Skylark DuQuesne, Marc DuQuesne. This was somewhat of a tribute to Smith. May had written an early SF work called Dune Roller in 1950, and had attended several Science Fiction Conventions in the early '50's, where she met and came to know Smith personally.
  • The 2019 album All Aboard the Skylark by Hawkwind is named after the stories.

Fictional appearances edit

Smith himself appears as a character in the 2006 novel The Chinatown Death Cloud Peril by Paul Malmont. The novel describes friendship and rivalry among pulp writers of the 1930s. He also appears as "Lensman Ted Smith" in the 1980 novel The Number of the Beast and as "Commander Ted Smith" in the 1985 novel The Cat Who Walks Through Walls, both by Robert A. Heinlein. It is also suggested that he was one of the inspirations for Heinlein's character Lazarus Long. Christopher Nuttall incorporates a fictional quote from “Edward E. Smith, Professor of Sociology” in his military science fiction book, “No Worse Enemy”.

Bibliography edit

Lensman edit

  1. Triplanetary (1948)
  2. First Lensman (1950)
  3. Galactic Patrol (1950)
  4. Gray Lensman (1951)
  5. Second Stage Lensmen (1953)
  6. The Vortex Blaster (1960)
  7. Children of the Lens (1954)

Skylark edit

  1. The Skylark of Space (1946)
  2. Skylark Three (1948)
  3. Skylark of Valeron (1949)
  4. Skylark DuQuesne (1966)

Subspace edit

  1. Subspace Explorers (1965)
  2. Subspace Encounter (1983)

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e E. E. Smith at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database (ISFDB). Retrieved April 19, 2013.
  2. ^ Moskowitz p. 11. For this and all following dates, see also the timelines in Lucchetti pp. 31–35 and 113–47 and, to a lesser extent, Sanders pp. 1–2.
  3. ^ a b c 1900 Census, House 1515, Residence 438, Family 371, 3rd Ward of Spokane County, Washington, recorded June 13, 1900, accessed via online census images at heritagequest.com
  4. ^ Sanders p. 1 & 7. Trestrail p. 2 instead says that the family moved that year to Idaho, but Moskowitz p. 11–12 and Eshbach p. 85 both seem to agree with Sanders.
  5. ^ a b c Sanders p. 1.
  6. ^ Moskowitz p. 11–12.
  7. ^ 1910 Census, Residence 37, Family 37, Markham Precinct, Bonner County, Idaho, recorded April 25, 1910, accessed via heritagequest.com.
  8. ^ Letter from Flip Kleffner, Director of Alumni Relations, University of Idaho Alumni Association, to Verna Smith Trestrail, dated February 27, 1984.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g Smith, Edward E. (March 1953). "The People Who Make Other Worlds, No. 11: Edward E. Smith". Other Worlds. 5 (3): 1, 159.
  10. ^ Sanders p. 8
  11. ^ Latah County, Idaho Star-Mirror, March 25, 1915 May 4, 2008, at the Wayback Machine.
  12. ^ Western States Marriage Index Entry 84846 September 27, 2007, at the Wayback Machine, accessed April 5, 2007
  13. ^ Trestrail pp. 3 & 4, Sanders p. 8, Moskowitz p. 13. Trestrail spells the name "Allen."
  14. ^ Hawley, James Henry (1920). History of Idaho: The Gem of the Mountains. S.J. Clarke Publishing Company.
  15. ^ "Z9M9Z - A Lensman Website - Noreascon 4, E. E. "Doc" Smith Exhibit". www.ethanfleischer.com.
  16. ^ Heinlein, Robert A. (1984). Friday. New England Library. ISBN 0-450-05549-3.
  17. ^ Lucchetti p. 32, Warner, Moskowitz p. 22.
  18. ^ a b Moskowitz p. 13.
  19. ^ "The Project Gutenberg eBook of Tedric, by E. E. SMITH, Ph. D." www.gutenberg.org. Retrieved January 22, 2024.
  20. ^ Draft card (partly illegible). June 5, 1917. Retrieved from Ancestry.com July 2007.
  21. ^ Proceedings of the American Chemical Society 1928 "Deceased Members"
  22. ^ Sanders pp. 8–9, Moskowitz p. 14.
  23. ^ a b c Cain, Ruth (April 6, 1964). "Around Our Town And Country". Times-Union. Warsaw, IN. p. 14. Retrieved March 13, 2011.
  24. ^ "Doughnut Specialist Smith" says that his M.S. degree was from Harvard University and Johns Hopkins University, which is not consistent with other sources.
  25. ^ Sanders, p. 1; Lucchetti, p. 32; Barrett, p. 4, following Sanders.
  26. ^ . Archived from the original on March 1, 2007. Retrieved August 12, 2006.
  27. ^ The effect of bleaching with oxides of nitrogen upon the baking quality and commercial value of wheat flour, PhD thesis, George Washington University, 1919, approximately 100 pp.
  28. ^ [1] April 16, 2007, at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved April 5, 2007.
  29. ^ Sanders, p. 1; Moskowitz, p. 14.
    Warner says 1921.
  30. ^ "Doughnut Specialist Smith" says "It wasn't until 1919 that work really began ... Five years passed before acceptance by the first science-fiction magazine on the American market, and two more years elapsed before it was published." This is not consistent with other sources.
  31. ^ Sanders, p. 9; Moskowitz, p. 15.
  32. ^ Sanders, pp. 1, 9; Moskowitz, p. 15. Both sources say that T. O'Conor Sloane was the editor who accepted it, but Sloane's Wikipedia biography states that he was managing editor for the first issue of Amazing Stories and associate editor until 1929, when he became editor, replacing Hugo Gernsback [Sloane's associate editorial duties included accepting material for publication with the final say in the matter from Gernsback].
  33. ^ Moskowitz, p. 15.
  34. ^ Warner, "Edward E. Smith — A Biography"[permanent dead link].
  35. ^ Moskowitz, p. 15.
  36. ^ For example, one letter from John W. Campbell on pages 567–68 of the September issue ends by stating that Skylark of Space had been "the best story of scientifiction ever printed"—although most of the letter was devastating criticism of the science in the story.
  37. ^ a b Moskowitz p. 16
  38. ^ Moskowitz p. 16, Sanders p. 65.
  39. ^ a b c Warner.
  40. ^ Sanders p. 65. The book does, however, have significant scientific implausibilities, for example the breathable atmosphere on Saturn and some of Jupiter and its satellites.
  41. ^ Sheridan p. 3
  42. ^ Rogers p. 26.
  43. ^ Moskowitz p. 16, Rogers p. 14.
  44. ^ Lyman Cleveland's comment on the easy availability of "solid asteroids of iron", Amazing March 1934, p. 16, first edition p.196, as proving the pointlessness of the Nevians' attack.
  45. ^ Cleveland's expectation, correct according to special relativity, that inertialess travel would not be faster than light in the home reference frame, p. 223.
  46. ^ Nerado's comment, "Destruction, always destruction ... they are a useless race", February p. 81, p. 160.
  47. ^ Costigan & Bradley's lack of comment when they discover that the ship they are on has passed the speed of light, February p. 84, p. 168. This is the first mention in the story of faster-than-light travel.
  48. ^ Costigan & Bradley's failure to object, when told of the Nevians' impending second raid on Tellus (Earth), that they could easily obtain iron without further destruction, February p. 88, p. 175.
  49. ^ Moskowitz p. 17, Rogers p. 14.
  50. ^ Moskowitz p. 17, citing "Stories We Reject" in Fantasy Magazine December 1934.
  51. ^ Moskowitz p. 17
  52. ^ Moskowitz p. 17–8, Rogers pp. 24–30. Rogers agrees with Moskowitz that Astounding became the leading science-fiction magazine during this period, but does not attribute this solely to Smith.
  53. ^ Moskowitz p. 19, Warner.
  54. ^ The earliest web source for this claim seems to be Computer games: 40 years of fun, ZDNet UK, November 23, 2001 by Graeme Wearden. The article does not provide a source.
  55. ^ a b The Dictionary of Literary Biography,[citation needed] quoted at http://www.bookrags.com/Edward_Elgar accessed May 8, 2007.
  56. ^ "The Epic of Space" p. 83.
  57. ^ "The Epic of Space" p. 84. 'Canstantinescu's "War of the Universes"' is apparently an error for "The War of the Universe" by Clinton Constantinescu, Amazing Stories Quarterly, Fall 1931.
  58. ^ a b "The Epic of Space" p. 85.
  59. ^ Gharlane LensFaq section 1[permanent dead link], Moskowitz p. 19, "The Epic of Space" p. 85. Smith's account in "The Epic of Space" does not mention Tremaine's commitment. Moskowitz says that the outline was 80 pages. Smith only mentions that the section on Galactic Patrol was "only a few pages long."
  60. ^ "The Epic of Space" p. 86.
  61. ^ a b Moskowitz p. 19
  62. ^ The Commandant's account of the Patrol's early history at the beginning of the magazine version of Galactic Patrol does not describe what happened in the magazine version of Triplanetary. The reference to Virgil Samms and the Triplanetary Patrol is a later interpolation. (Astounding September 1937 pp. 12–13; cp. Fantasy Press edition pp. 8–9.) The reference to "the days of the semi-inert drive" and the Third Galactic Survey on page 34 of the same issue is not consistent with the history of partial inertialessness in either version of Triplanetary, and is omitted from page 42 of the Fantasy Press edition. (Amazing March 1934 pp. 28 & 33; cp. Fantasy Press edition pp. 223 & 231.) See also Gharlane's Lens FAQ Question 1. The Arisians' near-omniscience about the future is also interpolated, e.g., Astounding January 1938 p. 127 vs. first edition p. 205.
  63. ^ Z9M9Z – A Lensman Website – Gallery.
  64. ^ Astounding December 1939 pp. 6, 91.
  65. ^ Astounding December 1939 pp. 104.
  66. ^ Sanders p. 10, Moskowitz p. 12.
  67. ^ Resnick & Siclari.
  68. ^ Sanders p. 10, afterword to Second Stage Lensmen.
  69. ^ Pohl in Lucchetti p. 15, Al Trestrail in Lucchetti p. 19. Al Trestrail (p. 20) and Pohl (p. 14) also mention church attendance (Pohl in a fictional context), which none of the other sources seem to.
  70. ^ Gharlane of Eddore, Lensman FAQ, under "References."
  71. ^ Heinlein, Robert A (1986). Methuselah's Children. Baen Publishing Enterprises. ISBN 0-671-65597-3.
  72. ^ "The Best of E.E. "Doc" Smith. Classic Adventures in Space By One of SF's Great Originals" (PDF).
  73. ^ Clarke, Sir Arthur C. Astounding Days. pp. 102–3 ff.
  74. ^ Clarke, op. cit. p. 120, citing and agreeing with Isaac Asimov in his introduction to The Best of Stanley G. Weinbaum, who was the second nova.
  75. ^ William H. Patterson. Robert A. Heinlein: In Dialogue with His Century. New York: Tor Books, 2014, p. 200
  76. ^ Smith, E.E. Of Worlds Beyond (Advent ed.). p. 84.
  77. ^ Smith, Edward E. . Locus Publications. Archived from the original on October 16, 2012. Retrieved March 26, 2013.
  78. ^ . Mid American Science Fiction and Fantasy Conventions, Inc. Archived from the original on May 21, 2013. Retrieved March 26, 2013. This was the official website of the hall of fame to 2004.
  79. ^ Letter from John W. Campbell to E. E. Smith, pages 1–2, Dated June 11, 1947.
  80. ^ Presumably, this is later Rear Admiral Caleb Lanning, shipmate, friend, and occasional co-author of Heinlein.
  81. ^ Letter from John W. Campbell to E. E. Smith, page 2-3, Dated June 11, 1947.
  82. ^ "The Epic of Space" p. 80. The conventional spelling is "Tweel", though the most accurate spelling is "Trrrweerrlll." ("A Martian Odyssey", The Best of Stanley G. Weinbaum p. 5.)
  83. ^ Both Constantinescu's name and title are misspelled in the essay: Canstantinescu's "War of the Universes", p. 84.
  84. ^ Clinton Constantinescu (1912–1999), later Clinton Constant, was a Romanian Canadian chemical engineer and a member of the American Astronomical Society and several other scientific associations [2] Archived February 23, 2013, at archive.today. "War of the Universe", one of his forays into science fiction, depicted a grand multisided space melee using a great variety of superscience weapons, and involving various human races which developed independently of each other on many planets, as well as insectoid, bird-like, and termite-like creatures. A summary is provided on p. 83 of Everett Franklin Bleiler and Richard Bleiler's "Science-fiction: The Gernsback Years"[3]
  85. ^ The Moon Pool, A. Merritt, chapters 29 and 34
  86. ^ Moskowitz p. 14.
  87. ^ Al Trestrail, in Lucchetti, p. 20.
  88. ^ Smith, E. E. (2013). Subspace encounter. London. pp. Introduction. ISBN 978-0-575-12272-7. OCLC 893657189.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  89. ^ Moskowitz, Sam (1974). Seekers of tomorrow; masters of modern science fiction. Hyperion Press. pp. 21–22, 24. ISBN 0-88355-129-2. OCLC 745897.
  90. ^ Moskowitz p. 21
  91. ^ Moskowitz p. 23.
  92. ^ Sanders p. 15.
  93. ^ Letter to Clifford Simak June 18, 1953, The John W. Campbell Letters Volume 1, p. 177.
  94. ^ Clarke, Arthur C. (1990). Astounding Days. New York: Bantam. pp. 104. ISBN 0-553-34822-1.
  95. ^ . Archived from the original on August 20, 2008.
  96. ^ . Archived from the original on September 4, 2006. Retrieved June 6, 2007.
  97. ^ Gerard Jones, Men of Tomorrow, 2004, p. 29–31
  98. ^ . January 13, 2008. Archived from the original on January 13, 2008. Retrieved February 28, 2016.
  99. ^ "Interviews: J. Michael Straczynski Answers Your Questions - Slashdot". Features.slashdot.org. April 2, 2014. Retrieved February 28, 2016.

External links edit

smith, other, people, named, edward, smith, edward, smith, disambiguation, educator, diplomat, sometimes, referred, ezekiel, ezra, smith, edward, elmer, smith, 1890, august, 1965, american, food, engineer, specializing, doughnut, pastry, mixes, science, fictio. For other people named Edward Smith see Edward Smith disambiguation For the educator and diplomat sometimes referred to as E E Smith see Ezekiel Ezra Smith Edward Elmer Smith May 2 1890 August 31 1965 was an American food engineer specializing in doughnut and pastry mixes and science fiction author best known for the Lensman and Skylark series He is sometimes called the father of space opera E E SmithSmith c 1960BornEdward Elmer Smith 1890 05 02 May 2 1890Sheboygan Wisconsin USDiedAugust 31 1965 1965 08 31 aged 75 Seaside Oregon USPen nameE E Doc SmithOccupationFood engineer writerNationalityAmericanAlma materUniversity of Idaho two degrees in chemical engineering 1914 Period1928 1965 published writer 1 GenreScience fiction notably space opera SpouseJeanne MacDougall m 1915 wbr Children3 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Family and education 1 2 Early chemical career and the beginning of Skylark 1 3 Writing Skylark 1 4 The early 1930s between Skylark and Lensman 1 5 The Lensman series 1 6 Retirement and late writing 1 7 Lord Tedric 2 Critical opinion 3 Extending the Lensman universe 4 Influence on science and the military 5 Literary influences 6 Derivative works and influence on popular culture 7 Fictional appearances 8 Bibliography 8 1 Lensman 8 2 Skylark 8 3 Subspace 9 References 10 External linksBiography editFamily and education edit Edward Elmer Smith was born in Sheboygan Wisconsin on May 2 1890 to Fred Jay Smith and Caroline Mills Smith both staunch Presbyterians of British ancestry 2 His mother was a teacher born in Michigan in February 1855 his father was a sailor born in Maine in January 1855 to an English father 3 They moved to Spokane Washington the winter after Edward Elmer was born 4 where Mr Smith was working as a contractor in 1900 3 In 1902 the family moved to Seneaquoteen 5 near the Pend Oreille River in Kootenai County Idaho 6 He had four siblings Rachel M born September 1882 Daniel M born January 1884 Mary Elizabeth born February 1886 all of whom were born in Michigan and Walter E born July 1891 in Washington 3 In 1910 Fred and Caroline Smith and their son Walter were living in the Markham Precinct of Bonner County Idaho Fred is listed in census records as a farmer 7 Smith worked mainly as a manual laborer until he injured his wrist while fleeing from a fire at the age of 19 He attended the University of Idaho Many years later he would be installed in the 1984 Class of the University of Idaho Alumni Hall of Fame 8 He entered its prep school in 1907 and graduated with two degrees in chemical engineering in 1914 9 He was president of the Chemistry Club the Chess Club and the Mandolin and Guitar Club and captain of the Drill and Rifle Team he also sang the bass lead in Gilbert and Sullivan operettas 10 His undergraduate thesis was Some Clays of Idaho co written with classmate Chester Fowler Smith who died in California of tuberculosis the following year after taking a teaching fellowship at Berkeley 11 Whether the two were related is not known On October 5 1915 in Boise Idaho 12 he married Jeanne Craig MacDougall the sister of his college roommate Allen Scott Scotty MacDougall 13 Her sister was named Clarissa MacLean MacDougall the heroine of the Lensman novels would later be named Clarissa MacDougall Jeanne MacDougall was born in Glasgow Scotland her parents were Donald Scott MacDougall a violinist and Jessica Craig MacLean Her father had moved to Boise when the children were young and later sent for his family he died while they were en route in 1905 Jeanne s mother who remarried businessman and retired politician John F Kessler in 1914 14 worked at and later owned a boarding house on Ridenbaugh Street The Smiths had three children Roderick N born June 3 1918 in the District of Columbia was employed as a design engineer at Lockheed Aircraft Verna Jean later Verna Smith Trestrail born August 25 1920 in Michigan was his literary executor until her death in 1994 Her son Kim Trestrail is now the executor 15 Robert A Heinlein in part dedicated his 1982 novel Friday to Verna 16 Clarissa M later Clarissa Wilcox was born December 13 1921 in Michigan 17 Early chemical career and the beginning of Skylark edit nbsp A scene from the first installment of The Skylark of Space August 1928 After college Smith was a junior chemist for the National Bureau of Standards in Washington D C developing standards for butter and for oysters 18 while studying food chemistry at George Washington University 9 During World War I he wanted to fly a Jenny but chemists were too scarce Or were Jennies too valuable 19 He ended up being sent to the Commission for Relief in Belgium headed by Herbert Hoover 9 His draft card partly illegible seems to show that Smith requested exemption from military service based on his wife s dependence and on his contribution to the war effort as a civilian chemist 20 original research One evening in 1915 the Smiths were visiting a former classmate from the University of Idaho Dr Carl Garby 1890 1928 21 who had also moved to Washington D C He lived nearby in the Seaton Place Apartments with his wife Lee Hawkins Garby A long discussion about journeys into outer space ensued and it was suggested that Smith should write down his ideas and speculations as a story about interstellar travel Although he was interested Smith believed after some thought that some romantic elements would be required and he was uncomfortable with that Lee Garby offered to take care of the love interest and the romantic dialogue and Smith decided to give it a try The sources of inspirations for the main characters in the novel were themselves the Seatons and Cranes were based on the Smiths and Garbys respectively 22 About one third of The Skylark of Space was completed by the end of 1916 when Smith and Garby gradually abandoned work on it Smith earned his master s degree in chemistry from the George Washington University in 1917 studying under Dr Charles E Munroe 5 23 24 whom Smith called probably the greatest high explosives man yet to live 9 Smith completed his PhD in chemical engineering in 1918 with a food engineering focus 18 25 His dissertation The effect of bleaching with oxides of nitrogen upon the baking quality and commercial value of wheat flour was published in 1919 26 27 nbsp The serial novel Skylark Three began as Amazing Stories cover story August 1930 nbsp Spacehounds of IPC was also serialized in Amazing Stories nbsp Triplanetary was the last of Smith s 1930s novels to be serialized in Amazing Stories his Lensman novels were published in Astounding Stories nbsp Smith s novelette Lord Tedric the cover story in the March 1954 issue of Universe Science Fiction was novelized by Gordon Eklund nearly 25 years later nbsp Smith s novel The Galaxy Primes was serialized in Amazing Stories in 1959 nbsp After E Everett Evans died in 1958 Smith completed his unfinished novel Masters of Space The novel was serialized in If Writing Skylark edit In 1919 Smith was hired as chief chemist for F W Stock amp Sons of Hillsdale Michigan at one time the largest family owned mill east of the Mississippi 28 working on doughnut mixes 5 One evening late in 1919 after moving to Michigan Smith was baby sitting presumably for Roderick while his wife attended a movie He resumed work on The Skylark of Space finishing it in the spring of 1920 29 30 He submitted it to many book publishers and magazines spending more in postage than he would eventually receive for its publication Bob Davis editor of Argosy sent an encouraging rejection letter in 1922 saying that he liked the novel personally but that it was too far out for his readers 31 Finally upon seeing the April 1927 issue of Amazing Stories he submitted it to that magazine It was accepted initially for 75 later raised to 125 32 It was published as a three part serial in the August to October 1928 issues 1 and it was such a success that associate editor Sloane requested a sequel before the second installment had been published 33 According to Warner but no other source Smith began work on the sequel Skylark Three before the first book was accepted 34 Garby whose husband died in 1928 was not interested in further collaboration so Smith began work on Skylark Three alone 35 It was published as another three part serial in the August to October 1930 issues of Amazing introduced as the cover story for August 1 This was as far as he had planned to take the Skylark series It was praised in Amazing s letter column 36 and he was paid per word surpassing Amazing s previous record of half a cent 37 The early 1930s between Skylark and Lensman edit Smith then began work on what he intended as a new series starting with Spacehounds of IPC 38 which he finished in the autumn of 1930 39 In this novel he took pains to avoid the scientific impossibilities which had bothered some readers of the Skylark novels 40 Even in 1938 after he had written Galactic Patrol Smith considered it his finest work 39 He later said of it This was really scientific fiction not like the Skylarks pseudo science 41 Even at the end of his career he considered it his only work of true science fiction 42 It was published in the July through September 1931 issues of Amazing with Sloane making unauthorized changes 43 Fan letters in the magazine complained about the novel s containment within the Solar System and Sloane sided with the readers So when Harry Bates editor of Astounding Stories offered Smith 2 word payable on publication for his next story he agreed This meant that it could not be a sequel to Spacehounds 37 This book would be Triplanetary in which scientific detail would not be bothered about and in which his imagination would run riot 39 Indeed characters within the story point out its psychological 44 and scientific 45 implausibilities and sometimes even seem to suggest self parody 46 At other times they are conspicuously silent about obvious implausibilities 47 48 The January 1933 issue of Astounding announced that Triplanetary would appear in the March issue and that issue s cover illustrated a scene from the story but Astounding s financial difficulties prevented the story from appearing 49 Smith then submitted the manuscript to Wonder Stories whose new editor 17 year old Charles D Hornig rejected it later boasting about the rejection in a fanzine 50 He finally submitted it to Amazing which published it beginning in January 1934 but for only half a cent a word Shortly after it was accepted F Orlin Tremaine the new editor of the revived Astounding offered one cent a word for Triplanetary When he learned that he was too late he suggested a third Skylark novel instead 51 In the winter of 1933 34 Smith worked on The Skylark of Valeron but he felt that the story was getting out of control He sent his first draft to Tremaine with a distraught note asking for suggestions Tremaine accepted the rough draft for 850 and announced it in the June 1934 issue with a full page editorial and a three quarter page advertisement The novel was published in the August 1934 through February 1935 issues 1 Astounding s circulation rose by 10 000 for the first issue and its two main competitors Amazing and Wonder Stories fell into financial difficulties both skipping issues within a year 52 The Lensman series edit In January 1936 a time period where he was already an established science fiction writer he took a job for salary plus profit sharing as production manager at Dawn Donut Co of Jackson Michigan 9 53 This initially entailed almost a year s worth of 18 hour days and seven day workweeks Individuals who knew Smith confirmed that he had a role in developing mixes for doughnuts and other pastries but the contention that he developed the first process for making powdered sugar adhere to doughnuts cannot be substantiated 54 Smith was reportedly dislocated from his job at Dawn Donuts by prewar rationing in early 1940 55 Smith had been contemplating writing a space police novel since early 1927 56 once he had the Lensmen s universe fairly well set up he reviewed his science fiction collection for cops and robbers stories He cites Clinton Constantinescue s War of the Universe as a negative example and Starzl and Williamson as positive ones 57 Tremaine responded extremely positively to a brief description of the idea 58 Once Dawn Donuts became profitable in late 1936 Smith wrote an 85 page outline for what became the four core Lensman novels In early 1937 Tremaine committed to buying them 59 Segmenting the story into four novels required considerable effort to avoid dangling loose ends Smith cited Edgar Rice Burroughs as a negative example 58 After the outline was complete he wrote a more detailed outline of Galactic Patrol plus a detailed graph of its structure with peaks of emotional intensity and the valleys of characterization and background material He notes however that he was never able to follow any of his outlines at all closely as the characters get away from me and do exactly as they damn please 60 After completing the rough draft of Galactic Patrol he wrote the concluding chapter of the last book in the series Children of the Lens 61 Galactic Patrol was published in the September 1937 through February 1938 issues of Astounding Unlike the revised book edition it was not set in the same universe as Triplanetary 62 Gray Lensman the fourth book in the series appeared in Astounding s October 1939 through January 1940 issues Gray Lensman was extremely well received as was its cover illustration 63 Campbell s editorial in the December issue suggested that the October issue was the best issue of Astounding ever and Gray Lensman was first place in the Analytical Laboratory statistics by a lightyear with three runners up in a distant tie for second place 64 The cover was also praised by readers in Brass Tacks and Campbell noted We got a letter from E E Smith saying he and cover artist Hubert Rogers agreed on how Kinnison looked 65 Smith was the guest of honor at Chicon I the second World Science Fiction Convention held in Chicago over Labor Day weekend 1940 66 giving a speech on the importance of science fiction fandom entitled What Does This Convention Mean 67 He attended the convention s masquerade as C L Moore s Northwest Smith and met fans living near him in Michigan who would later form the Galactic Roamers which previewed and advised him on his future work 68 After Pearl Harbor Smith discovered he was one year over age for reinstatement into the US Army Instead he worked on high explosives at the Kingsbury Ordnance Plant in La Port Indiana at first as a chemical engineer but gradually worked his way up to chief In late 1943 he became head of the Inspection Division and was fired in early 1944 9 An extended segment in the novel version of Triplanetary set during World War II suggests intimate familiarity with explosives and munitions manufacturing Some biographers who cite as fact that just as Smith s protagonist in this segment lost his job over failure to approve substandard munitions Smith did as well citation needed Smith spent the next few years working on light farm machinery and heavy tanks for Allis Chalmers after which he was hired as manager of the Cereal Mix Division of J W Allen amp Co 9 where he worked until his professional retirement in 1957 55 Retirement and late writing edit After Smith retired he and his wife lived in Clearwater Florida in the fall and winter driving the smaller of their two trailers to Seaside Oregon each April often stopping at science fiction conventions on the way 23 Smith did not like to fly 69 In 1963 he was presented the inaugural First Fandom Hall of Fame award at the 21st World Science Fiction Convention in Washington D C 23 Some of his biography is captured in an essay by Robert A Heinlein which was reprinted in the collection Expanded Universe in 1980 A more detailed although allegedly 70 error ridden biography is in Sam Moskowitz s Seekers of Tomorrow Robert Heinlein and Smith were friends Heinlein dedicated his 1958 novel Methuselah s Children To Edward E Smith PhD 71 Heinlein reported that E E Smith perhaps took his unrealistic heroes from life citing as an example the extreme competence of the hero of Spacehounds of IPC He reported that E E Smith was a large blond athletic very intelligent very gallant man married to a remarkably beautiful intelligent red haired woman named MacDougal thus perhaps the prototypes of Kimball Kinnison and Clarissa MacDougal In Heinlein s essay he reports that he began to suspect Smith might be a sort of superman when he asked Smith for help in purchasing a car Smith tested the car by driving it on a back road at illegally high speeds with their heads pressed tightly against the roof columns to listen for chassis squeaks by bone conduction a process apparently improvised on the spot In his nonseries novels written after his professional retirement Galaxy Primes Subspace Explorers and Subspace Encounter E E Smith explores themes of telepathy and other mental abilities collectively called psionics and of the conflict between libertarian and socialistic communistic influences in the colonization of other planets Galaxy Primes was written after critics such as Groff Conklin and P Schuyler Miller in the early 50s accused his fiction of being passe and he made an attempt to do something more in line with the concepts about which Astounding editor John W Campbell encouraged his writers to make stories Despite this it was rejected by Campbell and it was eventually published by Amazing Stories in 1959 His late story The Imperial Stars 1964 featuring a troupe of circus performers involved in sabotage in a galactic empire recaptured some of the atmosphere from his earlier works and was intended as the first in a new series with outlines of later parts rumored to still exist 72 In fact the Imperial Stars characters and concepts were continued by author Stephen Goldin as the Family D Alembert series While the book covers indicate the series was written by Smith and Goldin together Goldin only ever had Smith s original novella to expand upon The fourth Skylark novel Skylark DuQuesne ran in the June to October 1965 issues of If beginning once again as the cover story Editor Frederik Pohl introduced it with a one page summary of the previous stories which were all at least 30 years old 1 Lord Tedric edit Smith published two novelettes entitled Tedric in Other Worlds Science Fiction Stories 1953 and Lord Tedric in Universe Science Fiction 1954 These were almost completely forgotten until after Smith s death In 1975 a compendium of Smith s works was published entitled The Best of E E Doc Smith containing these two short stories excerpts from several of his major works and another short story first published in Worlds of If in 1964 entitled The Imperial Stars In Smith s original short stories Tedric was a smith both blacksmith and whitesmith residing in a small town near a castle in a situation roughly equivalent to England of the 1200s He received instruction in advanced metallurgy from a time traveler who wanted to change the situation in his own time by modifying certain events of the past From this instruction he was able to build better suits of armor and help defeat the villains of the piece Unlike Eklund s later novels based on these short stories the original Tedric never left his own time or planet and fought purely local enemies of his own time period A few years later and 13 years after Smith s death Verna Smith arranged with Gordon Eklund to publish another novel of the same name about the same fictional character introducing it as a new series conceived by E E Doc Smith Eklund later went on to publish the other novels in the series one or two under the pseudonym E E Doc Smith or E E Smith The protagonist possesses heroic qualities similar to those of the heroes in Smith s original novels and can communicate with an extra dimensional race of beings known as the Scientists whose archenemy is Fra Villion a mysterious character described as a dark knight skilled in whip sword combat and evil genius behind the creation of a planetoid sized iron sphere armed with a weapon capable of destroying planets As a result Smith is believed by many to be the unacknowledged progenitor of themes that would appear in Star Wars In fact however these appear in the sequels written by others after Smith s death Critical opinion editSmith s novels are generally considered to be classic space operas 73 and he is sometimes called the first of the three novas of 20th century science fiction with Stanley G Weinbaum and Robert A Heinlein as the second and third novas 74 Heinlein credited him for being his main influence I have learned from many writers from Verne and Wells and Campbell and Sinclair Lewis et al but I have learned more from you than from any of the others and perhaps more than for all the others put together 75 Smith expressed a preference for inventing fictional technologies that were not strictly impossible so far as the science of the day was aware but highly unlikely the more highly improbable a concept is short of being contrary to mathematics whose fundamental operations involve no neglect of infinitesimals the better I like it was his phrase 76 Lensman was one of five finalists when the 1966 World Science Fiction Convention judged Isaac Asimov s Foundation the Best All Time Series 77 The Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame inducted Smith in 2004 78 Extending the Lensman universe editVortex Blasters also known as Masters of the Vortex is set in the same universe as the Lensman novels It is an extension to the main storyline which takes place between Galactic Patrol and Children of the Lens and introduces a different type of psionics from that used by the Lensmen Spacehounds of IPC is not a part of the series despite occasional erroneous statements to the contrary It is listed as a novel in the series in some paperback editions of the 1970s Influence on science and the military editSmith was widely read by scientists and engineers from the 1930s into the 1970s Literary precursors of ideas which arguably entered the military scientific complex include SDI Triplanetary stealth Gray Lensman the OODA loop C3 based warfare and the AWACS Gray Lensman An inarguable influence was described in a June 11 1947 letter 79 to Smith from John W Campbell the editor of Astounding where much of the Lensman series was originally published In it Campbell relayed Captain Cal Laning s 80 acknowledgment that he had used Smith s ideas for displaying the battlespace situation called the tank in the stories in the design of the United States Navy s ships Combat Information Centers The entire set up was taken specifically directly and consciously from the Directrix In your story you reached the situation the Navy was in more communication channels than integration techniques to handle it You proposed such an integrating technique and proved how advantageous it could be You sir were 100 right As the Japanese Navy not the hypothetical Boskonian fleet learned at an appalling cost One underlying theme of the later Lensman novels was the difficulty in maintaining military secrecy as advanced capabilities are revealed the opposing side can often duplicate them This point was also discussed extensively by John Campbell in his letter to Smith 81 Also in the later Lensman novels and particular after the Battle of Klovia broke the Boskonian s power base at the end of Second Stage Lensmen the Boskonian forces and particularly Kandron of Onlo reverted to terroristic tactics to attempt to demoralize Civilization thus providing an early literary glimpse into this modern problem of both law enforcement and military response The use of Vee two gas by the pirates attacking the Hyperion in Triplanetary in both magazine and book appearances also suggests anticipation of the terrorist uses of poison gases However Smith lived through WWI when the use of poison gas on troops was well known to the populace extending the assumption that pirates might use it if they could obtain it was no great extension of the present day knowledge The beginning of the story Skylark of Space describes in relative detail the protagonist s research into separation of platinum group residues subsequent experiments involving electrolysis and the discovery of a process evocative of cold fusion over 50 years before Stanley Pons and Martin Fleischmann He describes a nuclear process yielding large amounts of energy and producing only negligible radioactive waste which then goes on to form the basis of the adventures in the Skylark books Smith s general description of the process of discovery is highly evocative of Rontgen s descriptions of his discovery of the X ray Another theme of the Skylark novels involves precursors of modern information technology The humanoid aliens encountered in the first novel have developed a primitive technology called the mechanical educator which allows direct conversion of brain waves into intelligible thought for transmission to others or for electrical storage By the third novel in the series Skylark of Valeron this technology has grown into an Electronic Brain which is capable of computation on all bands of energy electromagnetism gravity and tachyonic energy and radiation bands included This is itself derived from a discussion of reductionist atomic theory in the second novel Skylark Three which brings to mind modern quark and sub quark theories of elementary particle physics Literary influences editIn his 1947 essay The Epic of Space Smith listed by last name only authors he enjoyed reading John W Campbell L Sprague de Camp Robert A Heinlein Murray Leinster H P Lovecraft and A Merritt specifically The Ship of Ishtar The Moon Pool The Snake Mother and Dwellers in the Mirage as well as the character John Kenton C L Moore specifically Jirel of Joiry Roman Frederick Starzl John Taine A E van Vogt Stanley G Weinbaum specifically Tweerl 82 and Jack Williamson In a passage on his preparation for writing the Lensman novels he notes that Clinton Constantinescu s War of the Universe was not a masterpiece 83 84 but says that Starzl and Williamson were masters this suggests that Starzl s Interplanetary Flying Patrol may have been an influence on Smith s Triplanetary Patrol later the Galactic Patrol The feeding of the Overlords of Delgon upon the life force of their victims at the end of chapter five of Galactic Patrol seems a clear allusion to chapter 29 of The Moon Pool Merritt s account of the Taithu and the power of love in chapters 29 and 34 also bear some resemblance to the end of Children of the Lens 85 Smith also mentions Edgar Rice Burroughs complaining about loose ends at the end of one of his novels Smith acknowledges the help of the Galactic Roamers writers workshop plus E Everett Evans Ed Counts an unnamed aeronautical engineer Dr James Enright and Dr Richard W Dodson Smith s daughter Verna lists the following authors as visitors to the Smith household in her youth Lloyd Arthur Eshbach Heinlein Dave Kyle Bob Tucker Williamson Pohl Merritt and the Galactic Roamers Smith cites Bigelow s Theoretical Chemistry Fundamentals as a justification for the possibility of the inertialess drive Also an extended reference is made to Rudyard Kipling s Ballad of Boh Da Thone Archived May 18 2013 at the Wayback Machine in Gray Lensman chapter 22 Regeneration in a conversation between Kinnison and MacDougall Again in Gray Lensman Smith quotes from Merritt s Dwellers in the Mirage even name checking the author He could not even pray with immortal Merritt s Dwayanu Luka turn your wheel so that I need not slay this woman Sam Moskowitz s biographical essay on Smith in Seekers of Tomorrow states that he regularly read Argosy magazine and everything by H G Wells Jules Verne H Rider Haggard Edgar Allan Poe and Edgar Rice Burroughs Moskowitz also notes that Smith s reading enthusiasms included poetry philosophy ancient and medieval history and all of English literature 86 Smith s grandson notes that he spoke and sang German 87 The influence of these is not readily apparent except in the Roman section of Triplanetary and in the impeccable but convoluted grammar of Smith s narration Some influence of 19th century philosophy of language may be detectable in the account in Galactic Patrol of the Lens of Arisia as a universal translator which is reminiscent of Frege s strong realism about Sinn that is thought or sense Both Moskowitz and Smith s daughter Verna Smith Trestrail report that Smith had a troubled relationship with John Campbell the editor of Astounding 88 89 Smith s most successful works were published under Campbell but the degree of influence is uncertain The original outline for the Lensman series had been accepted by F Orlin Tremaine 61 and Smith angered Campbell by showing loyalty to Tremaine at his new magazine Comet when he sold him The Vortex Blaster in 1941 90 Campbell s announcement of Children of the Lens in 1947 was less than enthusiastic 91 Campbell later said that he published it only reluctantly 92 though he praised it privately 93 and bought little from Smith thereafter Derivative works and influence on popular culture editRandall Garrett wrote a parody entitled Backstage Lensman which Smith reportedly enjoyed Harry Harrison also parodied Smith s work in the novel Star Smashers of the Galaxy Rangers and the short story Space Rats of the CCC Sir Arthur C Clarke s space battle in Earthlight was based on the attack on the Mardonalian fortress in chapter seven of Skylark Three 94 Steve Slug Russell wrote one of the first computer games Spacewar with inspiration from the space battles from the Lensman series The Japanese Lensman anime is more an imitation of Star Wars than a translation of the Lensman novels Efforts to print translations of the associated manga in the United States in the early 1990s without payment of royalties to the Smith family were successfully blocked in court by Verna Smith Trestrail with the help of several California science fiction authors and fans In his biography George Lucas reveals that the Lensman novels were a major influence on his youth J Michael Straczynski creator of the science fiction television series Babylon 5 also has acknowledged the influence of the Lensman books 95 96 Superman creator Jerry Siegel was impressed at an early age with the optimistic vision of the future presented in Skylark of Space 97 An attempt to create a feature film based on the Lensman series by Ron Howard s Imagine Entertainment and Universal Studios began in 2008 with J Michael Straczynski the creator of Babylon 5 as writer 98 but in 2014 the project was scrapped because of budget limitations 99 In her short Pliocene Companion book author Julian May explained that a major character in her Exile series written in the early 1980s Marc Remillard was strongly influenced by Smith s villain character from Skylark DuQuesne Marc DuQuesne This was somewhat of a tribute to Smith May had written an early SF work called Dune Roller in 1950 and had attended several Science Fiction Conventions in the early 50 s where she met and came to know Smith personally The 2019 album All Aboard the Skylark by Hawkwind is named after the stories Fictional appearances editSmith himself appears as a character in the 2006 novel The Chinatown Death Cloud Peril by Paul Malmont The novel describes friendship and rivalry among pulp writers of the 1930s He also appears as Lensman Ted Smith in the 1980 novel The Number of the Beast and as Commander Ted Smith in the 1985 novel The Cat Who Walks Through Walls both by Robert A Heinlein It is also suggested that he was one of the inspirations for Heinlein s character Lazarus Long Christopher Nuttall incorporates a fictional quote from Edward E Smith Professor of Sociology in his military science fiction book No Worse Enemy Bibliography editMain article E E Smith bibliography Lensman edit Triplanetary 1948 First Lensman 1950 Galactic Patrol 1950 Gray Lensman 1951 Second Stage Lensmen 1953 The Vortex Blaster 1960 Children of the Lens 1954 Skylark edit The Skylark of Space 1946 Skylark Three 1948 Skylark of Valeron 1949 Skylark DuQuesne 1966 Subspace edit Subspace Explorers 1965 Subspace Encounter 1983 References edit a b c d e E E Smith at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database ISFDB Retrieved April 19 2013 Moskowitz p 11 For this and all following dates see also the timelines in Lucchetti pp 31 35 and 113 47 and to a lesser extent Sanders pp 1 2 a b c 1900 Census House 1515 Residence 438 Family 371 3rd Ward of Spokane County Washington recorded June 13 1900 accessed via online census images at heritagequest com Sanders p 1 amp 7 Trestrail p 2 instead says that the family moved that year to Idaho but Moskowitz p 11 12 and Eshbach p 85 both seem to agree with Sanders a b c Sanders p 1 Moskowitz p 11 12 1910 Census Residence 37 Family 37 Markham Precinct Bonner County Idaho recorded April 25 1910 accessed via heritagequest com Letter from Flip Kleffner Director of Alumni Relations University of Idaho Alumni Association to Verna Smith Trestrail dated February 27 1984 a b c d e f g Smith Edward E March 1953 The People Who Make Other Worlds No 11 Edward E Smith Other Worlds 5 3 1 159 Sanders p 8 Latah County Idaho Star Mirror March 25 1915 Archived May 4 2008 at the Wayback Machine Western States Marriage Index Entry 84846 Archived September 27 2007 at the Wayback Machine accessed April 5 2007 Trestrail pp 3 amp 4 Sanders p 8 Moskowitz p 13 Trestrail spells the name Allen Hawley James Henry 1920 History of Idaho The Gem of the Mountains S J Clarke Publishing Company Z9M9Z A Lensman Website Noreascon 4 E E Doc Smith Exhibit www ethanfleischer com Heinlein Robert A 1984 Friday New England Library ISBN 0 450 05549 3 Lucchetti p 32 Warner Moskowitz p 22 a b Moskowitz p 13 The Project Gutenberg eBook of Tedric by E E SMITH Ph D www gutenberg org Retrieved January 22 2024 Draft card partly illegible June 5 1917 Retrieved from Ancestry com July 2007 Proceedings of the American Chemical Society 1928 Deceased Members Sanders pp 8 9 Moskowitz p 14 a b c Cain Ruth April 6 1964 Around Our Town And Country Times Union Warsaw IN p 14 Retrieved March 13 2011 Doughnut Specialist Smith says that his M S degree was from Harvard University and Johns Hopkins University which is not consistent with other sources Sanders p 1 Lucchetti p 32 Barrett p 4 following Sanders Find in a Library The effect of bleaching with oxides of nitrogen upon the baking quality and commercial value of wheat flour Archived from the original on March 1 2007 Retrieved August 12 2006 The effect of bleaching with oxides of nitrogen upon the baking quality and commercial value of wheat flour PhD thesis George Washington University 1919 approximately 100 pp 1 Archived April 16 2007 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved April 5 2007 Sanders p 1 Moskowitz p 14 Warner says 1921 Doughnut Specialist Smith says It wasn t until 1919 that work really began Five years passed before acceptance by the first science fiction magazine on the American market and two more years elapsed before it was published This is not consistent with other sources Sanders p 9 Moskowitz p 15 Sanders pp 1 9 Moskowitz p 15 Both sources say that T O Conor Sloane was the editor who accepted it but Sloane s Wikipedia biography states that he was managing editor for the first issue of Amazing Stories and associate editor until 1929 when he became editor replacing Hugo Gernsback Sloane s associate editorial duties included accepting material for publication with the final say in the matter from Gernsback Moskowitz p 15 Warner Edward E Smith A Biography permanent dead link Moskowitz p 15 For example one letter from John W Campbell on pages 567 68 of the September issue ends by stating that Skylark of Space had been the best story of scientifiction ever printed although most of the letter was devastating criticism of the science in the story a b Moskowitz p 16 Moskowitz p 16 Sanders p 65 a b c Warner Sanders p 65 The book does however have significant scientific implausibilities for example the breathable atmosphere on Saturn and some of Jupiter and its satellites Sheridan p 3 Rogers p 26 Moskowitz p 16 Rogers p 14 Lyman Cleveland s comment on the easy availability of solid asteroids of iron Amazing March 1934 p 16 first edition p 196 as proving the pointlessness of the Nevians attack Cleveland s expectation correct according to special relativity that inertialess travel would not be faster than light in the home reference frame p 223 Nerado s comment Destruction always destruction they are a useless race February p 81 p 160 Costigan amp Bradley s lack of comment when they discover that the ship they are on has passed the speed of light February p 84 p 168 This is the first mention in the story of faster than light travel Costigan amp Bradley s failure to object when told of the Nevians impending second raid on Tellus Earth that they could easily obtain iron without further destruction February p 88 p 175 Moskowitz p 17 Rogers p 14 Moskowitz p 17 citing Stories We Reject in Fantasy Magazine December 1934 Moskowitz p 17 Moskowitz p 17 8 Rogers pp 24 30 Rogers agrees with Moskowitz that Astounding became the leading science fiction magazine during this period but does not attribute this solely to Smith Moskowitz p 19 Warner The earliest web source for this claim seems to be Computer games 40 years of fun ZDNet UK November 23 2001 by Graeme Wearden The article does not provide a source a b The Dictionary of Literary Biography citation needed quoted at http www bookrags com Edward Elgar accessed May 8 2007 The Epic of Space p 83 The Epic of Space p 84 Canstantinescu s War of the Universes is apparently an error for The War of the Universe by Clinton Constantinescu Amazing Stories Quarterly Fall 1931 a b The Epic of Space p 85 Gharlane LensFaq section 1 permanent dead link Moskowitz p 19 The Epic of Space p 85 Smith s account in The Epic of Space does not mention Tremaine s commitment Moskowitz says that the outline was 80 pages Smith only mentions that the section on Galactic Patrol was only a few pages long The Epic of Space p 86 a b Moskowitz p 19 The Commandant s account of the Patrol s early history at the beginning of the magazine version of Galactic Patrol does not describe what happened in the magazine version of Triplanetary The reference to Virgil Samms and the Triplanetary Patrol is a later interpolation Astounding September 1937 pp 12 13 cp Fantasy Press edition pp 8 9 The reference to the days of the semi inert drive and the Third Galactic Survey on page 34 of the same issue is not consistent with the history of partial inertialessness in either version of Triplanetary and is omitted from page 42 of the Fantasy Press edition Amazing March 1934 pp 28 amp 33 cp Fantasy Press edition pp 223 amp 231 See also Gharlane s Lens FAQ Question 1 The Arisians near omniscience about the future is also interpolated e g Astounding January 1938 p 127 vs first edition p 205 Z9M9Z A Lensman Website Gallery Astounding December 1939 pp 6 91 Astounding December 1939 pp 104 Sanders p 10 Moskowitz p 12 Resnick amp Siclari Sanders p 10 afterword to Second Stage Lensmen Pohl in Lucchetti p 15 Al Trestrail in Lucchetti p 19 Al Trestrail p 20 and Pohl p 14 also mention church attendance Pohl in a fictional context which none of the other sources seem to Gharlane of Eddore Lensman FAQ under References Heinlein Robert A 1986 Methuselah s Children Baen Publishing Enterprises ISBN 0 671 65597 3 The Best of E E Doc Smith Classic Adventures in Space By One of SF s Great Originals PDF Clarke Sir Arthur C Astounding Days pp 102 3 ff Clarke op cit p 120 citing and agreeing with Isaac Asimov in his introduction to The Best of Stanley G Weinbaum who was the second nova William H Patterson Robert A Heinlein In Dialogue with His Century New York Tor Books 2014 p 200 Smith E E Of Worlds Beyond Advent ed p 84 Smith Edward E The Locus Index of SF Awards Index of Literary Nominees Locus Publications Archived from the original on October 16 2012 Retrieved March 26 2013 Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame Mid American Science Fiction and Fantasy Conventions Inc Archived from the original on May 21 2013 Retrieved March 26 2013 This was the official website of the hall of fame to 2004 Letter from John W Campbell to E E Smith pages 1 2 Dated June 11 1947 Presumably this is later Rear Admiral Caleb Lanning shipmate friend and occasional co author of Heinlein Letter from John W Campbell to E E Smith page 2 3 Dated June 11 1947 The Epic of Space p 80 The conventional spelling is Tweel though the most accurate spelling is Trrrweerrlll A Martian Odyssey The Best of Stanley G Weinbaum p 5 Both Constantinescu s name and title are misspelled in the essay Canstantinescu s War of the Universes p 84 Clinton Constantinescu 1912 1999 later Clinton Constant was a Romanian Canadian chemical engineer and a member of the American Astronomical Society and several other scientific associations 2 Archived February 23 2013 at archive today War of the Universe one of his forays into science fiction depicted a grand multisided space melee using a great variety of superscience weapons and involving various human races which developed independently of each other on many planets as well as insectoid bird like and termite like creatures A summary is provided on p 83 of Everett Franklin Bleiler and Richard Bleiler s Science fiction The Gernsback Years 3 The Moon Pool A Merritt chapters 29 and 34 Moskowitz p 14 Al Trestrail in Lucchetti p 20 Smith E E 2013 Subspace encounter London pp Introduction ISBN 978 0 575 12272 7 OCLC 893657189 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Moskowitz Sam 1974 Seekers of tomorrow masters of modern science fiction Hyperion Press pp 21 22 24 ISBN 0 88355 129 2 OCLC 745897 Moskowitz p 21 Moskowitz p 23 Sanders p 15 Letter to Clifford Simak June 18 1953 The John W Campbell Letters Volume 1 p 177 Clarke Arthur C 1990 Astounding Days New York Bantam pp 104 ISBN 0 553 34822 1 IGN Interview with J Michael Straczynski Part 1 of 4 Archived from the original on August 20 2008 ATTN JMS Lensman Archived from the original on September 4 2006 Retrieved June 6 2007 Gerard Jones Men of Tomorrow 2004 p 29 31 SCI FI Wire The News Service of the SCI FI Channel SCIFI COM January 13 2008 Archived from the original on January 13 2008 Retrieved February 28 2016 Interviews J Michael Straczynski Answers Your Questions Slashdot Features slashdot org April 2 2014 Retrieved February 28 2016 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to E E Smith nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Edward Elmer Smith nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Edward Elmer Smith Works by E E Smith in eBook form at Standard Ebooks Works by E E Smith at Project Gutenberg Works by Edward Elmer Doc Smith at Faded Page Canada Works by or about E E Smith at Internet Archive Works by E E Smith at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Edward E Smith at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database E E Smith at the Internet Book List E E Smith biography Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame E E Smith at IMDb Skylark Three original magazine version Spacehounds of IPC original magazine version Some Clays of Idaho Archived July 15 2014 at the Wayback Machine Smith s bachelor s thesis from the University of Idaho Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title E E Smith amp oldid 1221512054, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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