John Thomas Sladek

John Thomas Sladek
Born 15 December 1937(1937-12-15)
Waverly, Iowa, US
Died 10 March 2000(2000-03-10) (aged 62)
Minneapolis, Minnesota, US
Occupation Novelist
Nationality American
Period 1966 - 2000
Genres Science fiction

John Thomas Sladek (December 15, 1937 – March 10, 2000) was an American science fiction author, known for his satirical and surreal novels.

Contents

Life and work

Born in Waverly, Iowa in 1937, Sladek was in England in the 1960s for the New Wave movement and published his first story in New Worlds. His first science fiction novel, published in London by Gollancz as The Reproductive System and in the United States as Mechasm, dealt with a project to build machines that build copies of themselves, a process that gets out of hand and threatens to destroy humanity. In The Müller-Fokker Effect, an attempt to preserve human personality on tape likewise goes awry, giving the author a chance to satirize big business, big religion, superpatriotism, and men's magazines, among other things. Roderick and Roderick at Random offer the traditional satirical approach of looking at the world through the eyes of an innocent, in this case a robot. Sladek revisited robots from a darker point of view in the BSFA Award winning novel Tik-Tok, featuring a sociopathic robot who lacks any moral "asimov circuits", and Bugs, a wide-ranging satire in which a hapless technical writer (a job Sladek held for many years) helps to create a robot who quickly goes insane.

Sladek was also known for his parodies of other science fiction writers, such as Isaac Asimov, Arthur C. Clarke, and Cordwainer Smith. These were collected in The Steam-Driven Boy and other Strangers (1973).

A strict materialist, Sladek subjected dubious science and the occult to merciless scrutiny in The New Apocrypha. Under the name of James Vogh, Sladek wrote Arachne Rising, which purports to be a nonfiction account of a thirteenth sign of the zodiac suppressed by the scientific establishment, in an attempt to demonstrate that people will believe anything. In the 1960s he also co-wrote two pseudonymous novels with his friend Thomas M. Disch, the Gothic The House that Fear Built (1966; as Cassandra Knye) and the satirical thriller Black Alice (1968; as Thom Demijohn).

Another of Sladek's notable parodies is of the anti-Stratfordian citation of the hapax legomenon in Love's Labour's Lost "honorificabilitudinitatibus" as an anagram of hi ludi, F. Baconis nati, tuiti orbi, Latin for "these plays, F. Bacon's offspring, are preserved for the world, "proving" that Francis Bacon wrote the play. Sladek noted that "honorificabilitudinitatibus" was also an anagram for I, B. Ionsonii, uurit [writ] a lift'd batch, thus "proving" that Shakespeare's works were written by Ben Jonson.

Sladek returned from England to Minneapolis, Minnesota[1] in 1986, where he lived until his death in 2000 from pulmonary fibrosis.

Bibliography

Science fiction novels

Science fiction collections

Selected Short stories

Mystery novels and stories

Nonfiction

References

Notes
  1. ^ Clute and Nicholls 1995, pp. 1113.
  2. ^ a b c d Reginald 1992, p. 905.
  3. ^ Clute 1995, p. 186.
  4. ^ Clute and Nicholls 1995, pp. 1114.
Bibliography
  • Clute, John (1995). Science Fiction: The Illustrated Encyclopedia. London, New York, Stuttgart: Dorling Kindersley. pp. 312. ISBN 9780751302028. 
  • Clute, John; with Peter Nicholls (1993 (2nd ed. 1995)). The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction. New York: St. Martin's Griffin. pp. 1386. ISBN 9780312134860. 
  • Reginald, Robert (1992). Science Fiction and Fantasy Literature, 1975-1991. Detroit, Washington DC, London: Gale Research, Inc.. pp. 1512. ISBN 9780810318250. 
  • Stephensen-Payne, Phil; with Chris Drumm (1998). John T. Sladek Steam-Driven Satirist. Galactic Central Bibliographies for the Avid Reader. ISBN 1871133505. 

External links