Mind Fields

Mind Fields

The painting "Attack at Dawn" is featured on the front cover.
Author Harlan Ellison
Illustrator Jacek Yerka
Cover artist Jacek Yerka
Country United States
Language English
Genre Short stories
Publisher Morpheus International
Publication date
1994
Media type Print (Hardcover)
Pages 71 pp
ISBN 1-883398-03-7
OCLC 30117410
759.13 20
LC Class ND955.P63 Y472 1994

Mind Fields is a book featuring paintings by the Polish artist Jacek Yerka and short stories by the American author Harlan Ellison. The 34 paintings by Yerka were created first. Ellison then wrote a short story based on his reaction to each of these paintings. The only exception was the story "Under the Landscape" which was based on two similar paintings.

Contents

  1. The Creation of Water
  2. Twilight in the Cupboard
  3. Amok Harvest
  4. Theory of Tension
  5. Back to Nature
  6. Internal Inspection
  7. Metropolis II
  8. In the Oligocenskie Gardens
  9. Europe
  10. Fever
  11. Attack at Dawn
  12. Susan
  13. Between Heaven and Hell
  14. Shed of Rebellion
  15. To Each His Own
  16. Eruption
  17. The Inquisition
  18. Beneath the Dunes
  19. The Silence
  20. Darkness Falls on the River
  21. Paradise
  22. Express Delivery
  23. The Agitators
  24. Truancy at the Pond
  25. Ammonite
  26. Base
  27. Foraging in the Field
  28. Traffic Prohibited
  29. Afternoon with the Bros. Grimm
  30. The Cosmic Barnyard
  31. Under the Landscape (two paintings)
  32. Ellison Wonderland
  33. Please Don't Slam the Door

Paintings

The paintings in Mind Fields are typical of Yerka's style. According to Yerka, many of the paintings, including "Between Heaven and Hell" and "Attack at Dawn", draw on his childhood memories from the 1950s as their primary inspiration.[1] Other paintings, such as "Amok Harvest" and "Express Delivery", draw on his experiences traveling through the Polish countryside.[1]

Yerka was responsible for the title of all but two of the story-paintings, which were named by Ellison.[2] The first of these, "Susan", was named after Ellison's wife. Ellison also named the painting "Ellison Wonderland" after one of his short story collections and his home in California because he "was hoping that they would give [him] that painting." The painting was later given to Ellison as a gift shortly after the book was published during an interview with Tom Snyder on The Late Late Show.

Stories

Ellison became involved with Yerka's paintings when he was asked to write an introduction to the Mind Fields collection. According to Ellison, he found the paintings so inspiring that he told his publishers that he wanted to write a story for each one.[3] While Ellison generally based the narrative of each story on some aspect of the painting, this was not always the case. In "Attack at Dawn" for instance, the story has little to do with the physical objects represented in Yerka's painting. Instead, Ellison chose to base the story on the painting's prominent themes of transformation and attack.[4]

Ellison also wrote many of the stories to reflect subjects and themes that commonly occur in his work. "Twilight in the Cupboard" and "The Silence" both prominently feature the themes of Jewish assimilation and the Holocaust. The former was inspired in part by Ather D. Morse's 1967 book While Six Million Died.[5] "Eruption" and "Ammonite" embody the lost city/Atlantis theme present in much of Ellison's work. "Metropolis II" also incorporates themes from many of Ellison's other stories. In particular, it mixes autobiographical details with fiction in a manner similar to "All the Lies that are My Life" and other stories.[4]

Although Ellison did not follow his usual custom of writing an introduction to the book, he did provide commentary on 17 of the stories in the form of endnotes. These notes describe the background to some of the stories, and point out important themes. Yerka's son Philip died during the creation of the book, and Ellison dedicated the final story "Please Don't Slam the Door" to his memory in one of the notes.

References

Footnotes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Yerka, Jacek (2006). "Jacek Yerka by Himself...". agra-art. Retrieved 2007-12-14.
  2. Weil & Wolfe 2002, p. 239
  3. Weil & Wolfe 2002, p. 238
  4. 4.0 4.1 Weil & Wolfe 2002, p. 240-241
  5. Weil & Wolfe 2002, p. 196-197