PDA

View Full Version : Robert Sheckley - Sci Fi Author


K'Nort
12-10-2005, 02:28 PM
From today's local paper.

Prominent sci-fi writer Sheckley dies

Saturday, December 10, 2005
MIKE FRANCIS
The Oregonian

Noted fantasy writer and longtime Portlander Robert Sheckley died Friday, Dec. 9, 2005, in a Poughkeepsie, N.Y., hospital, 28 days after he was stricken with a brain aneurysm. In recent days, he went into a coma from which he never awakened. He was 77.

Sheckley, who lived in Portland for almost 20 years before moving in 2003, had a variety of health problems, from late-stage emphysema to heart attacks, but had rallied from them all. He made headlines in May when he collapsed with a severe cold while in Kiev, Ukraine, where he was the guest of honor at a convention of science fiction writers and fans. He contracted pneumonia, fell unconscious and remained gravely ill for a while but recovered enough to be flown to his daughter's home near Pine Plains, N.Y.

He regained his vitality in New York and was in communication with friends and family, including his wife, Portland writer Gail Dana. He lived in an apartment in Red Hook, about 20 miles from his daughter, Anya Sheckley. The day he suffered his aneurysm, he had hiked into town with his ever-present backpack full of books.

Sheckley wrote many novels, short stories, scripts and magazine pieces. He was especially popular in Europe, where his books were translated into Russian, Polish, Italian, French and other languages. He was in demand at science fiction conventions, and organizers flew him to New Zealand, France, Romania, England and other countries where his work was revered. When he appeared, he was treated like "a rock star," family members said.

Among his works were such collections as "Can You Feel Anything When I Do This?" "Citizen in Space" and "Is That What People Do?" He wrote dozens of novels, including "The Game of X," "Dimension of Miracles" and "Mindswap," which he said he thought was one of his best works.

His book "Immortality Inc." was adapted for a film called "Freejack," starring Anthony Hopkins, Rene Russo and Mick Jagger. "The 10th Victim" became an Italian movie starring Marcello Mastroianni and Ursula Andress. He also wrote for graphic novels, multimedia games, television and other mediums.

In Portland, Sheckley lived a mostly quiet and ascetic life. Clad in well-worn bluejeans and T-shirts, he carried his backpack of books around, frequently hiking from the east side across the Willamette River to the Central Library and Powell's Books. He spent many hours in the library's Sterling Room for Writers, where writers could work in semi-privacy.

He also participated in the Community of Writers, a nonprofit program that brought writers and poets into classrooms.

"He was really gentle with the kids," said Larry Colton, who founded and oversaw the writing program. "Some teachers said, 'Some kids I could never get to write, he got to write.' "

Sheckley was born in Brooklyn, N.Y., in 1928. He grew up in New York and New Jersey, and served in Korea with the U.S. Army. He was a self-employed freelancer most of his adult life, though he was an editor for Omni magazine from 1979 to 1982. He traveled widely and said he yearned to return to the island of Ibiza, where he was a member of a loose-knit community of artists in the 1970s.

He married five times, the last to Dana in 1991. He acknowledged that being married to him could frustrate a woman but wrote of Dana, "I can't imagine life without her." He had four children, Anya, Jason, Alisa and Jed, and three grandchildren, all of whom live in the New York region or New England. He is also survived by a sister, Joan Klein of New York.

He will be buried in the Artists Cemetery in Woodstock, N.Y.

Expletive Deleted
12-10-2005, 03:46 PM
Darn it. I haven't read much of his stuff, but what I've read I've really liked.

Greg Hatcher
12-10-2005, 04:49 PM
Aw crap. I am a fool. Sheckley was a favorite of mine but I never knew he lived so close. Hell, I probably ran into him in Powell's at some point since it sounds like we both practically lived there during the time I was in Portland.

berk
12-10-2005, 05:08 PM
One of the all time greats. He possessed a truly unique voice. I've always had the impression that he never received quite the degree of acclaim he deserved, but the article seems to indicate that he was getting at least some of the respect he was due, at least elsewhere in the world if not in his own country. Coincidentally, I picked up one of his earlier short story collections, Citizen In Space at a used bookstore the other day.

Lester C.
12-10-2005, 09:45 PM
Damn it all to hell.

Slam_Bradley
12-11-2005, 03:14 PM
I just saw this on Locus Online earlier today. I worried about this when he fell ill earlier this year in the Ukraine. On the plus side he'd been getting much well-deserved recognition in the last few years, being named Author Emeritus by the SFWA in 2001 and having Dimensions of Scheckley published in 2002 and The Masque of Manana published earlier this year.

One of the greats and possibly The greatest SF humorist.

RIP Mr. Scheckley

Nate C.
12-13-2005, 06:02 PM
One of the greats and possibly The greatest SF humorist.

You intrigue me, Mr. Bradley.

Funnier than Douglas Adams, or does he not count? I may have to check this gentleman out.

berk
12-13-2005, 07:25 PM
You intrigue me, Mr. Bradley.

Funnier than Douglas Adams, or does he not count? I may have to check this gentleman out. IIRC, Adams himself was an admirer of Sheckley's work, as was none other than Kingsley Amis. Not all his work was humourous, though. One of my favourite books of his, The Status Civilization, is a straight space-opera adventure story.

Nate C.
12-13-2005, 07:38 PM
IIRC, Adams himself was an admirer of Sheckley's work, as was none other than Kingsley Amis. Not all his work was humourous, though. One of my favourite books of his, The Status Civilization, is a straight space-opera adventure story.

curioser and curioser.

thanks, Berk.

(do you reccomend Kingsley Amis? All I know of him is that he was a Victorian humorist genre writer. Never read any of his stuff.)

berk
12-14-2005, 09:18 AM
(do you reccomend Kingsley Amis? All I know of him is that he was a Victorian humorist genre writer. Never read any of his stuff.) Not Victorian, and not even strictly a humourist, although some of his books do contain some very funny material, but I definitely recommend his earlier stuff, starting with Lucky Jim (probably the funniest one) and extending into the early 70's; haven't read too much later than that. Apart from Lucky Jim, I remember particulary liking Take a Girl Like You, That Uncertain Feeling, and The Green Man. I haven't read The Anti-Death League, a well-known novel of his from that period which often appears on various "best of" lists (I think Burgess put it among his top novels of the century or something).

Slam_Bradley
12-14-2005, 10:34 AM
You intrigue me, Mr. Bradley.

Funnier than Douglas Adams, or does he not count? I may have to check this gentleman out.


As berk pointed out, Douglas Adams readily acknowledged his debt to and admiration of Mr. Sheckley. I think that Adams, at his best, was probably better than Sheckley. But Sheckley was much more well-rounded than Adams. He was significantly more prolific and was not as tied to certain themes and ideas.

The Mirrorball Man
12-14-2005, 10:48 AM
"Everyone sees one or two things in his life that make him doubt his normality, doubt sanity, doubt his very existence. For a moment the orderly universe is disarranged and the fabric of belief is ripped. But the moment passes."
Robert Sheckley

Iangould
12-15-2005, 12:00 AM
While Robert sheckley was capable of excellent and profound serious writing, I will remember him most for the delight and whimsy of his humorous works.

Paul McEnery
12-19-2005, 01:44 AM
Not Victorian, and not even strictly a humourist, although some of his books do contain some very funny material, but I definitely recommend his earlier stuff, starting with Lucky Jim (probably the funniest one) and extending into the early 70's; haven't read too much later than that. Apart from Lucky Jim, I remember particulary liking Take a Girl Like You, That Uncertain Feeling, and The Green Man. I haven't read The Anti-Death League, a well-known novel of his from that period which often appears on various "best of" lists (I think Burgess put it among his top novels of the century or something).
I've never met an Amis novel I didn't like. Come to think of it, for Nate, the Anti-Death League would be an entertaining read. But my two personal favourites are Stanley and the Women and the autobiographical You Can't Have Both.

berk
12-19-2005, 04:38 PM
I've never met an Amis novel I didn't like. Come to think of it, for Nate, the Anti-Death League would be an entertaining read. But my two personal favourites are Stanley and the Women and the autobiographical You Can't Have Both.I picked up The Anti-Death League at a used book store a couple weeks ago, so I'll rpobably read that one sometime over the next few months. I haven't had a bad experience with an Amis novel yet, either. I even liked Russian Hide and Seek, although I thought the premise was rather silly. Can't think right now why I haven't read any of his later books.

To bring this back on topic, here's a quote I found from Kingsley Amis about the thread's subject, Robert Sheckley:I once called Robert Sheckley `science-fiction's premier gadfly' and this was rightly taken as indicating strong approval, but I don't think I had quite the word I wanted. A gadfly is a force that provokes you into doing something, whereas all Sheckley provokes you into doing is reading more Sheckley. What I was after was a way of conveying that quality of his by which he shakes you up, makes you revise your ideas of what's possible in science fiction, in literature as a whole and in the universe. Where other writers will do different things in different stories, Sheckley will do them in the same story. It must be over twenty years since I first read it, but I shall never forget the delightful shock of `Specialist', which made me see that it's possible for a story to be ingenious, funny, touching, tense and powered by an idea that is squarely in the tradition of SF and at the same time completely original. Hail, master! I must try to find this story, Specialist, somewhere; haven't read that one.