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 Who
are these people, and what are they doing in Conjunctions? Jonathan
Lethem won the National Book Critic’s Circle Award for Motherless
Brooklyn, and Harold Bloom put John Crowley’s Little, Big
on his list of 100 Best Books of the 20th century, but aren’t
Gene Wolfe and Joe Haldeman science fiction writers? And didn’t
Neil Gaiman become well-known with a series of, um, graphic novels,
the street or gutter phrase for which is comic books?
Yes, they are, and he did, and the author of these words is, even
worse, a conspicuously popular horror writer. Should you have a
reflexive disdain for anything connected to genre fiction, as you
very well may, issue #39 of Conjunctions is going to represent,
at least initially, something of an unwelcome aberration in the
history of an otherwise honorable literary journal. Those who have
just nodded in assent should turn immediately to the back of the
book and read the critical essays by Gary K. Wolfe and John Clute,
which ought to persuade even the faintest of hearts to persevere.
Clute and Wolfe know what they are talking about, far better than
I, and my conversations with them over the past few years –
conversations that began at the 1998 International Conference for
the Fantastic in the Arts in Ft. Lauderdale – have helped
me understand the phenomenon this collection is designed to illustrate.
It would be easy but misleading to account for this in evolutionary
terms. That is, it is not really accurate to say that over the past
two decades the genres of science fiction, fantasy, and horror have
been, unnoticed by the wider literary culture, transforming themselves
generation by generation and through the work of each generation’s
most adventurous practitioners into something all but unrecognizable,
hence barely classifiable at all except as literature. Even evolution
doesn’t work that way. The above process did take place, and
it was completely overlooked by the wider literary culture but it
did not happen smoothly, and the kind of post-transformation fictions
represented here owe more than half of their DNA and much of their
underlying musculature to their original genre sources. Contemporary,
more faithful versions of those sources are to be found all over
the place, especially in movie theaters and the genre shelves at
Barnes & Noble. Gene Wolfe, who is necessary to this volume,
was producing fiction of immense, Nabokovian rigor and complexity
thirty years ago, alongside plenty of colleagues who were satisfied
to work within the genre’s familiar templates. Now, writers
like Nalo Hopkinson, John Kessell, and Patrick O’Leary, for
all of whom Gene Wolfe is likely to be what Gary K. Wolf calls a
“touchstone,” are still publishing shorter fiction in
magazines like Asimov’s and Fantasy and Science Fiction, and
so is Kelly Link. (Jonathan Carroll, Jonathan Lethem, Elizabeth
Hand, John Crowley, and China Miéville seldom write short
fiction, and we are are fortunate to have stories from them.) Strictly
on grounds of artistic achievement, these writers should all along
have been welcome in thoughtful literary outlets.
Some who could easily be included here are not, among them Terry
Bisson, Ted Chiang, Tom Disch, Geoff Ryman, Ray Vukovich, Jeffrey
Ford, Jeff Vandemeer, Graham Joyce, Kit Reed, and Carol Emshwiller.
I regret their absence. Had I approached this literary territory
from the other side, I would have included Mark Chabon, Dan Chaon,
and Stewart O’Nan: the latter two, especially, approach horror
from the inside out, with the understanding that it is above all
a point of view.
(For remarkably mature examples of that particular point of view,
which has literally no points in common with the genre’s conventional
definitions, see M. John Harrison’s “Entertaining Angels
Unawares” and John Crowley’s limpid, devastating “The
Girlhood of Shakespeare’s Heroines.” These two stories
give us an Angel of Death and a gracious Lucifer, and in them the
world is spun helplessly toward disorder, loss, uncertainty, and
grief – horror being the literature that, as if under a sacred
charge, most urgently honors the brute fact of these conditions
– while the stories themselves both suggest and preserve a
profound internal mystery.)
I am grateful for Bradford Morrow’s suggestion that I guest
edit an issue of his journal, of which I have long been a friend
and supporter. Brad’s trust in this project, never in question,
deepened as we went along, as did my appreciation of the dazzlingly
efficient Conjunctions team, Michael Bergstein, Martine Bellen,
Pat Sims, and Bill White. With a crew like that, Roebling could
have put up the Brooklyn Bridge in a matter of weeks.
Peter Straub
August 6, 2002
New York City
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