- Joined
- Mar 22, 2003
- Messages
- 14,995
Hobbit is busy.
It's rather difficult to come up with one masterwork for sf because that genre didn't start like the fantasy genre did. The fantasy genre sprang like Athena from the head of Zeus from the sf imprints, and sales of Tolkein by sf publishers were what cinched the deal. SF, though, emerged from dozens of pulp magazines publishing all sorts of sf stories, with crossover support from comics and later movies, and coalesced slowly into a genre that then, when the audience seemed to be large enough, moved into novels. Still, Verne and Wells did raise the possibility that a large audience might be interested in tales about imagined realities involving science, not magic. And that may have been the main factor in the formation of pulp sf tales. And Asimov's "Foundation" certainly gave sf a big boost. Heinlein's "Stranger in a Strange Land" also had some measurable effects as it became a pop culture hot topic at the time.
It's rather difficult to come up with one masterwork for sf because that genre didn't start like the fantasy genre did. The fantasy genre sprang like Athena from the head of Zeus from the sf imprints, and sales of Tolkein by sf publishers were what cinched the deal. SF, though, emerged from dozens of pulp magazines publishing all sorts of sf stories, with crossover support from comics and later movies, and coalesced slowly into a genre that then, when the audience seemed to be large enough, moved into novels. Still, Verne and Wells did raise the possibility that a large audience might be interested in tales about imagined realities involving science, not magic. And that may have been the main factor in the formation of pulp sf tales. And Asimov's "Foundation" certainly gave sf a big boost. Heinlein's "Stranger in a Strange Land" also had some measurable effects as it became a pop culture hot topic at the time.


