Women
Wrote the Future, Vol. 1: Tales from Galaxy edited
by J. LaRue
Vintage
Lists, 2023
Introduction
A mythology in science fiction circles—academia and
readership alike—claims women were excluded from the genre until the
late-1960s and early-1970s, when writers like Joanna Russ, Ursula K. Le Guin,
and Octavia E. Butler jumped the sexism barrier that had kept women out.
While these writers are culturally important, both inside and outside the
genre, it is nonsense to imagine they appeared on the science fiction scene
without precedence. The first woman to publish a story in a science fiction
magazine was Clare Winger Harris when her tale, “The Fate of Poseidonia” was
published in the June 1927 issue of Amazing Stories. It was that same pulp, Amazing
Stories, that created the entire modern science fiction genre when its first
issue hit newsstands in April 1926. And those first few years, between 1926
and 1929, were a dark period for women and science fiction because only 17
stories by six known female authors were published. The next ten years (1930
– 1939) weren’t much better with 62 stories by 25 women published, but the
1940s saw a significant gain with 209 stories by 47 female writers, and in
the 1950s women exploded on the scene with 634 tales, by 154 writers. While
these numbers represent a slim ratio of the total number of science fiction
stories published during this period, it was a beginning that ultimately led
to the celebration of women as some of the best writers in the genre.* This anthology, which is
intended as a tribute and to bring attention to these early female writers,
is a survey of the fiction published by the most respected science fiction
magazine of the 1950s: Galaxy. Galaxy’s first issue reached newsstands in
October 1950. The list of contributors for that issue included many of the
genres’ brightest stars: Theodore Sturgeon, Richard Matheson, Fritz Leiber,
and Isaac Asimov. It also started a trend of publishing women writers by
publishing Katherine MacLean’s brilliant novelette, “Contagion” (which,
unfortunately, isn’t included in this collection). Although three other
marvelous stories by MacLean—“Pictures Don’t Lie” (Aug. 1951), “The Snowball
Effect” (Sep. 1952), and “Games” (Mar. 1953)—are scattered across its pages. Over the rest of the 1950s,
Galaxy published 30 stories written by thirteen women. The tales ranged from
imaginative adventures—Rosel George Brown’s “From an Unseen Censor” (Sep.
1958)—to cultural critique, “One Way” by Miriam Allen deFord (Mar. 1955), to
homegrown silliness, with a feminist bent, like Ruth Laura Wainwright’s
“Green Grew the Lasses” (July 1953). These stories, along with thirteen
others written by women and published by Galaxy in the 1950s, are reprinted
in Women Wrote the Future, Vol. 1: Tales from Galaxy. And frankly, they are
some of the best tales to appear in Galaxy during its 30-year run. Included are gems by genre
stars like Katherine MacLean, as mentioned above, and Betsy Curtis, and
rising stars like Rosel George Brown. Each story and its author are briefly
introduced and while some of the writers are little-known with only a few
publishing credits, others had impressive careers both in and out of science
fiction. Miriam Allen deFord—“One Way” (Mar. 1955) and “The Eel” (Apr.
1958)—was a suffragette, wrote for Nation, and won an Edgar Award for Best
Crime Fact Book. Phyllis Sterling Smith—“What is POSAT” (Sep. 1951)—attended
Stanford and Tufts, she worked for the Psychological Testing Corporation, and
she was an energy consultant for the Environmental Protection Agency. Ann
Warren Griffith—“Zeritsky’s Law” (Nov. 1951)—attended Barnard College,
piloted as a WASP in WW2, and wrote for The New Yorker and The Atlantic. And
those are only three of the 12 writers inside this anthology.
__________
*publishing statistics come from Partner in Wonder, by Eric
Leif Davin (Lexington Books, 2006)
Click here for the Kindle edition and here
for the paperback at Amazon.
|
Table of Contents
“Games” by Katherine
MacLean / “The Pilot and the Bushman” by Sylvia Jacobs / “One Way” by Miriam
Allen deFord / “Rough Translation” by Jean M. Janis / “Pictures Don’t Lie” by
Katherine MacLean / “The Vilbar Party” by Evelyn E. Smith / “What is POSAT?”
by Phyllis Sterling Smith / “Green Grew the Lasses” by Ruth Laura Wainwright
/ “The Trap” by Betsy Curtis / “Know Thy Neighbor” by Elisabeth R. Lewis /
“Tea Tray in the Sky” by Evelyn E. Smith / “Homesick” by Lyn Venable / “The
Snowball Effect” by Katherine MacLean / “Zeritsky’s Law” by Ann Griffith /
“From an Unseen Censor” by Rosel George Brown / “The Eel” by Miriam Allen
deFord
Click here
for the Kindle edition and here for the paperback at Amazon. |
|
Thursday, May 9, 2024
"Women Wrote the Future, Vol. 1: Tales from Galaxy" edited by J. LaRue
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