John Wyndham

John Wyndham
Born (1903-07-10)10 July 1903
Dorridge, Warwickshire, England
Died 11 March 1969(1969-03-11) (aged 65)
Petersfield, Hampshire, England
Nationality English
Other names John Wyndham Parkes Lucas Beynon Harris[1]
Occupation Science fiction writer
Wyndham's first published sf story, "Worlds to Barter", was published in the May 1931 issue of Wonder Stories, under his "John Beynon Harris" byline
Wyndham/Harris as pictured in the May 1931 Wonder Stories
Wyndham's second story, "The Lost Machine", was cover-featured on the April 1932 issue of Amazing Stories, also under his Harris byline
Wyndham's 1934 novelette "The Moon Devils" was the cover story for the April issue of Wonder Stories, also under the Harris byline
Wyndham's 1951 novelette "Tyrant and Slave-Girl on Planet Venus" was the cover story for the first and only issue of Ten Story Fantasy, under his "John Beynon" byline

John Wyndham Parkes Lucas Beynon Harris (/ˈwɪndəm/; 10 July 1903 – 11 March 1969)[2] was an English science fiction writer best known for his works written using the pen name John Wyndham, although he also used other combinations of his names, such as John Beynon and Lucas Parkes. Some of his works were set in post-apocalyptic landscapes. His best known works include The Day of the Triffids (1951) and The Midwich Cuckoos (1957), the latter filmed twice as Village of the Damned.

Early life

Wyndham was born in the village of Dorridge near Knowle, Warwickshire (now West Midlands), England, the son of George Beynon Harris, a barrister, and Gertrude Parkes, the daughter of a Birmingham ironmaster.[1]

His early childhood was spent in Edgbaston in Birmingham, but when he was 8 years old his parents separated and he and his brother, the writer Vivian Beynon Harris, spent the rest of their childhood at a number of English preparatory and public schools, including Blundell's School in Tiverton, Devon, during World War I. His longest and final stay was at Bedales School near Petersfield in Hampshire (1918–21), which he left at the age of 18, and where he blossomed and was happy.

Career

After leaving school, Wyndham tried several careers, including farming, law, commercial art and advertising, but mostly relied on an allowance from his family. He eventually turned to writing for money in 1925 and, by 1931, was selling short stories and serial fiction to American science fiction magazines, most under the pen names "John Beynon" and "John Beynon Harris", although he also wrote some detective stories.

World War II

During World War II, Wyndham first served as a censor in the Ministry of Information,[3] then joined the British Army, serving as a Corporal cipher operator in the Royal Corps of Signals.[4] He participated in the Normandy landings, although he was not involved in the first days of the operation.[1]

Postwar

After the war, Wyndham returned to writing, inspired by the success of his brother, who had four novels published. He altered his writing style; and, by 1951, using the John Wyndham pen name for the first time, he wrote the novel The Day of the Triffids. His pre-war writing career was not mentioned in the book's publicity, and people were allowed to assume that it was a first novel from a previously unknown writer.

The book proved to be an enormous success[3] and established Wyndham as an important exponent of science fiction. During his lifetime, he wrote and published six more novels under the name John Wyndham.

Personal life

In 1963, he married Grace Isobel Wilson, whom he had known for more than 20 years; the couple remained married until he died. He and Grace lived for several years in separate rooms at the Penn Club, London and later lived near Petersfield, Hampshire, just outside the grounds of Bedales School. A collection of his letters to Grace written during the Second World War are held in the University of Liverpool archive. Wyndham explores the issues around women being forced by their biology to choose between careers and love in Trouble with Lichen.

Death

He died in 1969, aged 65, at his home in Petersfield, survived by his wife and his brother.[5] Subsequently, some of his unsold work was published; and his earlier work was re-published. His archive was acquired by Liverpool University.[6]

On 24 May 2015 an alley in Hampstead that appears in The Day of the Triffids was formally named Triffid Alley as a memorial to him.[7]

Books

Early novels published under other pen names

Novels published in his lifetime as by John Wyndham

Posthumously published novels

Short story collections published in his lifetime

  • Jizzle (1954) (Jizzle; Technical Slip; A Present From Brunswick; Chinese Puzzle; Esmeralda; How Do I Do?; Una; Affair of the Heart; Confidence Trick; The Wheel; Look Natural, Please!; Perforce to Dream; Reservation Deferred; Heaven Scent; More Spinned Against)
  • The Seeds of Time (1956) (Chronoclasm; Time to Rest; Meteor; Survival; Pawley's Peepholes; Opposite Number; Pillar to Post; Dumb Martian; Compassion Circuit; Wild Flower)
  • Tales of Gooseflesh and Laughter (1956), US edition featuring stories from the two earlier collections
  • Consider Her Ways and Others (1956) (Consider Her Ways; Odd; Oh, Where, Now, is Peggy MacRaffery?; Stitch in Time; Random Quest; A Long Spoon)
  • The Infinite Moment (1961), US edition of Consider Her Ways and Others, with two stories dropped, two others added

Posthumously published collections

  • Sleepers of Mars (1973), a collection of five stories originally published in magazines in the 1930s: Sleepers of Mars, Worlds to Barter, Invisible Monster, The Man from Earth and The Third Vibrator
  • The Best of John Wyndham (1973)
  • Wanderers of Time (1973), a collection of five stories originally published in magazines in the 1930s: Wanderers of Time, Derelict of Space, Child of Power, The Last Lunarians and The Puff-ball Menace (a.k.a. Spheres of Hell)
  • Exiles on Asperus (1979)
  • No Place Like Earth (2003)

Short stories

John Wyndham's many short stories also appear with later variant titles or pen names. His stories include:

  • "Worlds to Barter" (1931)
  • "The Lost Machine" (1932)
  • "The Stare" (1932)
  • "The Venus Adventure" (1932)
  • "Exiles on Asperus" (1933)
  • "Invisible Monster" (1933)
  • "Spheres of Hell" (1933) [as by John Beynon]
  • "The Third Vibrator" (1933)
  • "Wanderers of Time" (1933) [as by John Beynon]
  • "The Man from Earth" (1934)
  • "The Last Lunarians" (1934) [as by John Beynon]
  • "The Moon Devils" (1934) [as by John Beynon Harris]
  • "The Cathedral Crypt" (1935) [as by John Beynon Harris]
  • "The Perfect Creature" (1937)
  • "Judson's Annihilator" (1938) [as by John Beynon]
  • "Child of Power" (1939) [as by John Beynon]
  • "Derelict of Space" (1939) [as by John Beynon]
  • "The Trojan Beam" (1939)
  • "Vengeance by Proxy" (1940) [as by John Beynon]
  • "Meteor" (1941) [as by John Beynon]
  • "Living Lies" (1946) [as by John Beynon]
  • "Technical Slip" (1949) [as by John Beynon]
  • "Jizzle" (1949)
  • "Adaptation" (1949) [as by John Beynon]
  • "The Eternal Eye" (1950)
  • "Pawley's Peepholes" (1951)
  • "The Rec Stuff" (1951)
  • "Tyrant and Slave-Girl on Planet Venus" (1951) [as by John Beynon]
  • "And the Walls Came Tumbling Down" (1951)
  • "A Present from Brunswick" (1951)
  • "Bargain from Brunswick" (1951)
  • "Pillar to Post" (1951)
  • "The Wheel" (1952)
  • "Survival" (1952)
  • "Dumb Martian" (1952)
  • "Time Out" (1953)
  • "Close Behind Him" (1953)
  • "Time Stops Today" (1953)
  • "Chinese Puzzle" (1953)
  • "Chronoclasm' (1953)
  • "Reservation Deferred' (1953)
  • "More Spinned Against" (1953)
  • "Confidence Trick' (1953)
  • "How Do I Do?" (1953)
  • "Esmeralda" (1954)
  • "Heaven Scent" (1954)
  • "Look Natural, Please!" (1954)
  • "Never on Mars" (1954)
  • "Perforce to Dream" (1954)
  • "Opposite Numbers" (1954)
  • "Compassion Circuit" (1954)
  • "Wild Flower" (1955)
  • "Consider Her Ways" (1956)
  • "The Day of the Triffids" (1957) [an excerpt from the novel]
  • "But a Kind of Ghost" (1957)
  • "The Meddler" (1958)
  • "A Long Spoon" (1960)
  • "Odd" (1961)
  • "Oh, Where, Now, Is Peggy MacRafferty?" (1961)
  • "Random Quest" (1961)
  • "A Stitch in Time" (1961)
  • "It's a Wise Child" (1962)
  • "Chocky" (1963)
  • "From The Day of the Triffids" (1964)
  • "In Outer Space There Shone a Star" (1965)
  • "A Life Postponed" (1968)
  • "Phase Two" (1973) [an excerpt]
  • "Vivisection" (2000) [as by J. W. B. Harris]
  • "Blackmoil" (2003)
  • "The Midwich Cuckoos" (2005) [with Pauline Francis]

Critical reception

John Wyndham's reputation rests mainly on the first four of the novels published in his lifetime under that name.[lower-alpha 1] The Day of the Triffids remains his best-known work, but some readers consider that The Chrysalids was really his best.[8][9][10]

He also wrote several short stories, ranging from hard science fiction to whimsical fantasy. A few have been filmed: Consider Her Ways, Random Quest, Dumb Martian, A Long Spoon, Jizzle (filmed as Maria) and Time to Rest (filmed as No Place Like Earth).[11] There is also a radio version of Survival.

Most of Wyndham's novels are set in the 1950s among middle-class English people. Brian Aldiss, another British science fiction writer, disparagingly labelled some of them "cosy catastrophes", especially The Day of the Triffids,[12] but the critic L.J. Hurst pointed out that in Triffids the main character witnesses several murders, suicides and misadventures, and is frequently in mortal danger himself.[13]

References

Notes

  1. For example, around 2000 they were all reprinted as Penguin Modern Classics.

Citations

  1. 1 2 3 Aldiss, Brian W. "Harris, John Wyndham Parkes Lucas Beynon". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Retrieved 1 May 2010.
  2. Online birth records show that the birth of a John Wyndham P. L. B. Harris was registered in Solihull in July–September 1903.
  3. 1 2 Liptak, Andrew (2015-05-07). "John Wyndham and the Global Expansion of Science Fiction". Kirkus Reviews. Retrieved 2017-03-05.
  4. "John Wyndham". The Guardian. 2008-07-22. Retrieved 2017-03-05.
  5. "John Wyndham". Literary Encyclopedia. 7 November 2006. Retrieved 1 May 2010.
  6. "John Wyndham Archive". Liv.ac.uk. Retrieved 2017-03-05.
  7. "Triffid Alley, Hampstead". Triffid Alley. Retrieved 2017-03-05.
  8. "The Chrysalids – Novel". h2g2. BBC. Retrieved 1 May 2010.
  9. Aldiss 1973, p. 254.
  10. "Jo Walton's review of The Chrysalids".
  11. IMDb
  12. Aldiss 1973, p. 293.
  13. Hurst, L. J. (Aug–Sep 1986), ""We Are The Dead": The Day of the Triffids and Nineteen Eighty-Four", Vector, Pipex, 113: 4–5, archived from the original on 10 August 2013

Bibliography

  • Aldiss, Brian W (1973), Billion year spree: the history of science fiction, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, ISBN 978-0-297-76555-4
  • Harris, Vivian Beynon. "My Brother, John Wyndham: A Memoir." Transcribed and ed., David Ketterer, *Foundation: The International Review of Science Fiction* 28 (Spring 1999): 5–50.
  • Ketterer David,. "Questions and Answers: The Life and Fiction of John Wyndham." *The New York Review of Science Fiction* 16 (March 2004): 1,6–10*
  • Ketterer, David. "The Genesis of the Triffids." *The New York Review of Science Fiction* 16 (March 2004): 11–14.
  • Ketterer, David. "John Wyndham and the Sins of His Father: Damaging Disclosures in Court." *Extrapolation* 46 (Summer 2005): 163–88.
  • Ketterer, David. "'Vivisection': Schoolboy John Wyndham's First Publication?" *Science Fiction Studies* 78 (July 1999): 303–311; expanded and corrected in *Foundation: The International Review of Science Fiction* 29 (Summer 2000): 70–84.
  • Ketterer, David. "'A Part of the . . . Family': John Wyndham's *The Midwich Cuckoos* as Estranged Autobiography." In *Learning From Other Worlds: Estrangement, Cognition and the Politics of Science Fiction and Utopia*, ed Patrick Parrinder (Liverpool: University of Liverpool Press, 2001), 146–77.
  • Ketterer, David. "When and Where Was John Wyndham Born?" *Foundation: The International Review of Science Fiction" 42 (Summer 2012/13): 22–39.
  • Ketterer, David. "John Wyndham (1903[?]–1969)." *The Literary Encyclopedia* (15 pages, online, 7 November 2006).
  • Ketterer, David. "John Wyndham: The Facts of Life Sextet." In *A Companion to Science Fiction*, ed. David Seed (Oxford: Blackwell, 2003), 375–88.
  • Ketterer, David. "John Wyndham's World War III and His Abandoned *Fury of Creation* Trilogy." In *Future Wars: The Anticipations and the Fears, ed. David Seed (Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2012), 103–29.
  • Ketterer, David. "John B. Harris's Mars Rover on Earth." *Science Fiction Studies 41 (July 2014); 474-75.
  • The John Wyndham Archive, The University of Liverpool .
  • "John Wyndham", The Guardian (article), London, 22 July 2008 .
  • Priest, Christopher, Portrait of Wyndham and Wells, UK: Tiscali
  • Ketterer, "'Vivisection': Schoolboy 'John Wyndham's' First Publication?", SFS, Depauw, 78 .
  • John Wyndham (Realplayer) (TV interview), UK: BBC, 1960
  • John Wyndham on the nature of evil in his novels (interview), On writers, UK: BBC, 1960 (somehow restricted to viewing only in UK)
  • John Wyndham at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
  • "John Wyndham first editions", Book seller world (bibliography) .
  • Wyndham Web: The Internet's First Dedicated John Wyndham Site .
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