- CHESTERTON, G(ilbert) K(eith)
- (1874-1936)UK writer and illustrator of his own books and many by Hilaire BELLOC - with whom he was long associated, to use George Bernard SHAW's nickname, as The Chesterbelloc. A posthumous collection, Daylight and Nightmare (coll 1986), which assembles fantasy and some sf stories from 1897 through 1931, may demonstrate the range of his emblem-haunted imagination as a teller of tales, but most of his numerous works fall into various other categories - GKC in general exemplified the Edwardian man of letters and wrote on almost everything, in every conceivable form, from poetry through the famous Father Brown detective stories to Catholic polemics on to "weekend" essays and literary criticism and history. His first novel, The Napoleon of Notting Hill (1904), sets the nostalgic, medievalizing, anti-Wellsian, surreally Merrie-Englande tone of most of his sf novels, which tended, in one way or another, to idealize a dreamlike England; in their arguments about its desirability they comprise a series of UTOPIAS, though often only by implication.His finest novel, The Man who was Thursday: A Nightmare (1908), is a fantasy set in the Babylon-like London so alluring to writers of the fin de siecle: various secret agents disguised as anarchists are shown to have been recruited to man the frontiers of the world by their greatest foe, who turns out to be not only their legitimate boss but in fact God. The book - dramatized by his brother's widow, Mrs Cecil Chesterton, and Ralph Neale as The Man Who Was Thursday (1926) - has been an acknowledged influence upon such Catholic writers as R.A. L AFFERTY and Gene WOLFE; and the magic-carpet London so lovingly created by GKC and his confreres arguably marks a significant stepping-stone - along with Robert Louis STEVENSON's New Arabian Nights (coll 1882) - between the world of Charles DICKENS and that of STEAMPUNK.JCOther works: The Ball and the Cross (1909 US); The Flying Inn (1914), featuring what seems a Turkish conspiracy (but is actually the scheme of an English politician) to impose Prohibition on England, attended by a Turkish INVASION; The Man who Knew too Much (coll 1922); The Return of Don Quixote (1927); Tales of the Long Bow (coll of linked stories 1925), which culminates in a NEAR FUTURE revolution; a RURITANIAN novella, "The Loyal Traitor", in Four Faultless Felons (coll 1930); "The Three Horsemen of Apocalypse", in The Paradoxes of Mr. Pond (coll 1937), which Jorge Luis BORGES admired; The Surprise (written c1930; 1952), a play.About the author: The literature on GKC is very extensive. A bibliography is G.K. Chesterton: A Bibliography (1958) by John Sullivan; a recent study is Gilbert: The Man who was G.K. Chesterton (1990) by Michael G. Coren.
Science Fiction and Fantasy Encyclopedia. Academic. 2011.