July 1947...typical SS cover for 1947. |
Looking at St. Clair's ISFDB citations, one sees that she, like her slightly later-arriving peers such as Algis Budrys and Robert Sheckley (or Ursula Le Guin and Michael Shaara...Kate Wilhelm and Richard McKenna...Philip K. Dick and...), generated a torrent of work from the latter 1940s through the end of the 1950s, when she slowed a bit...and, like those other (shall we call them "post-Futurian"?) writers, she was the product of a broad, rigorous college education in literature and writing, in a way that most of the auto-didacts who had been Futurians or associated with the Futurian magazines such as Astonishing Stories or Science Fiction were not, even if their interests and approaches (and educations) were similar--and those folks would be much of the core of writers who helped make Galaxy what it was, and so influential on sf and other literature which followed. While St. Clair was publishing these stories in Samuel Merwin's issues of Startling Stories, the odd (but influential and well-remembered) story such as William Tenn's "Child's Play" or T. L. Sherred's "E for Effort" was popping up in John Campbell's Astounding Science Fiction...even if Campbell eventually regretted publishing a few of them since he had some trouble with their perspective when it set in with him. Certainly, Judith Merril and Evelyn E. Smith and Kit Reed, as well as Theodore Sturgeon, Kurt Vonnegut, Ray Bradbury and certainly Fritz Leiber, might've found themselves nudged in certain directions in their writing by that of St. Clair, who would do more forceful work than "Super Whost" while retaining this story's charm and wit...perhaps such other underappreciated geniuses as Wilma Shore were influenced as well.
Please see Patti Abbott's blog for more of today's books and/or stories...and a reminder of why the late Ron Scheer matters...
Well, I have to hold my hands up to, this is another writer I have only rarely come across, but I'll try and make up for this (just got one of the Kate Wilhelm mysteries by the way - shall report back soon-ish).
ReplyDeleteHey, which? I still need to read the Constance and Charlie series, and you definitely should read DEATH QUALIFIED first of the Barbara Holloway novels (anyone should, unless they're definitely antipathic toward the fantasticated in their crime fiction). The Greenberg collection THE BESt OF MARGARET ST. CLAIR is a good start for her.
ReplyDeleteI am intrigued! I have added St. Clair to my BOLO list at my new blog, Crimes in the Library.
ReplyDeleteI hope you will stop my now and then to see what fiendish plots might be happening in the Library.