CAMPBELL, John W(ood) Jr

CAMPBELL, John W(ood) Jr
(1910-1971)
   US writer and editor who took a degree in physics in 1932 from MIT and Duke University. JWC was a devotee of the SF MAGAZINES from their inception, and sold his first stories while still a teenager, beginning with "Invaders from the Infinite" to AMAZING STORIES; however, the manuscript was lost by editor T. O'Conor SLOANE, so it was his second sale, "When the Atoms Failed" (1930), that became his first published story.In the early 1930s JWC quickly built a reputation as E.E. "Doc" SMITH's chief rival in writing galactic epics of superscience. The most popular of these was the Arcot, Morey and Wade series, in which the heroes faced a succession of battles of ever-increasing size fought with a succession of wonderful weapons of ever-decreasing likelihood. Initially published in various magazines from 1930, they were put into book form as The Black Star Passes (fixup 1953), Islands of Space (1931 Amazing Stories Quarterly; 1957) and Invaders from the Infinite (not his first, lost story) (1932 Amazing Stories Quarterly; 1961); all were assembled as A John W. Campbell Anthology (omni 1973). Also well received was The Mightiest Machine (1934 ASF; 1947), but three sequels featuring its hero Aarn Munro were rejected by ASF's editor F. Orlin TREMAINE, eventually appearing in The Incredible Planet (coll 1949).The second phase of JWC's career as a writer began with "Twilight" (1934), a tale of the FAR FUTURE written in a moody, "poetic" style, the first of a number of stories, far more literary in tone and varied in mood, published under the pseudonym Don A. Stuart. From now on, JWC wrote little sf under his own name, preferring to concentrate on the highly popular Stuart stories; exceptions included the Penton and Blake series published in TWS in 1936-8 and collected in The Planeteers (coll 1966 dos), and, on one occasion, the use of the name Karl Van Campen for a story in an issue of ASF that already contained a Stuart story and part of a JWC novel. He was by now becoming closely identified with Tremaine's ASF, where all the Stuart stories appeared; these included the Machine series: "The Machine", "The Invaders" and "Rebellion" (all 1935). In 1936 he began, under his own name, a series of 18 monthly articles on the Solar System, and from 1937 he also published a number of articles as Arthur McCann. The climax of his popularity came with a Stuart effort, The Thing from Another World (1938 ASF as "Who Goes There?"; 1952 chap Australia), a classic sf horror story about an Antarctic research station menaced by a shape-changing ALIEN invader, which was first filmed, without the shape-changing, as The THING (1951), and later, also as The THING (1982), with the basic premise restored. Far more famous under its original title than under the film-influenced book retitling, "Who Goes There?" was perhaps the climax of his fiction-writing career, and close to its end; Don A. Stuart's last stories appeared in 1939. Two collections were assembled to take advantage of that fame: Who Goes There?(coll 1948; vt The Thing and Other Stories 1952 UK; vt The Thing from Outer Space 1966 UK) and - with differing contents - Who Goes There? (coll 1955). In September 1937 JWC was appointed editor of Astounding Stories, a post he would retain until his death (the magazine being retitled ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION in 1938 and Analog in 1960); henceforth he wrote almost no fiction.JWC brought to his editorial post the fertility of ideas on which his writing success as both JWC and Don A. Stuart had been based, together with a determination to raise the standards of writing and thinking in MAGAZINE sf. New writers were encouraged and fed with ideas, with remarkable success. By 1939, JWC had discovered Isaac ASIMOV, Lester DEL REY, Robert A. HEINLEIN, Theodore STURGEON and A.E. VAN VOGT, though the two latter writers had already been publishing for some time in other genres. L. Sprague DE CAMP, L. Ron HUBBARD, Clifford D. SIMAK and Jack WILLIAMSON, already established sf writers, soon became part of JWC's "stable". Henry KUTTNER and C.L. MOORE became regular contributors from 1942. These were the authors at the core of JWC's " GOLDEN AGE OF SF" - a period corresponding roughly to WWII - when ASF dominated the genre in a way no magazine before or since could match. Most of these authors, and many others, acknowledged the profound influence JWC had on their careers, and the number of acknowledged sf classics which originated in ideas suggested by him would be impossible to assess. Asimov persistently credited JWC with at least co-creating the articulation of the Three Laws of Robotics (Isaac ASIMOV; ROBOTS). A startling example of the pervasiveness of his influence can be found in The Space Beyond (coll 1976); it contains a hitherto unpublished JWC novella, "All", which forms the basis of Robert A. Heinlein's Sixth Column (1949).In addition to editing ASF, JWC initiated the fantasy magazine UNKNOWN, which from its birth in 1939 to its premature death (caused by paper shortages) in 1943 was equally influential in its field.Although the writing had been on the wall ever since about 1945, the period of ASF's dominance can be said to have ended, quite abruptly, with the appearance of The MAGAZINE OF FANTASY AND SCIENCE FICTION in 1949 and GALAXY SCIENCE FICTION in 1950. By this time JWC's domineering editorial presence had become restricting rather than stimulating and several of his central authors had left the stable (sometimes acrimoniously); comparatively few major writers after 1950 began their careers in his magazine. Nevertheless, between 1952 and 1964 he won 8 HUGO awards for Best Editor. Much of his interest and energy became focused in his editorials, many of which showed an essentially right-wing political stance. Some are reprinted in Collected Editorials from Analog (coll 1966) ed Harry HARRISON; and the characteristic flavour of his mind comes across, perhaps even more clearly, in The John W. Campbell Letters, Volume 1 (anth 1986) assembled by Perry A. CHAPDELAINE, Tony Chapedelaine and George HAY. He flirted with various kinds of PSEUDO-SCIENCE, notably Hubbard's DIANETICS, which was loosed on an unsuspecting world through an article in ASF. The bellicose appetite for knowledge of his early years, and the revelation that Competent Men might be able to figure the world's plumbing, narrowed into an incapacity to brook dissent. However, the magazine remained popular and commercially successful, winning 7 HUGO awards under JWC's editorship. His death in 1971 was marked by an unprecedented wave of commemorative activity: two awards were founded bearing his name (the JOHN W. CAMPBELL AWARD and the JOHN W. CAMPBELL MEMORIAL AWARD), a memorial anthology was published - Astounding: John W. Campbell Memorial Anthology (anth 1974) ed Harry Harrison - and an Australian symposium about him - John W. Campbell: An Australian Tribute (anth dated 1974 but 1972) ed John Bangsund - appeared. Such a response was justified; although in later years he had turned his back on most developments in sf, during the first two decades of his career he had created two significant writing reputations under two separate names, and had come to bestride the field as an editor. More than any other individual, he helped to shape modern sf.
   MJE
   Other works: The Moon is Hell! (coll 1951; later UK edns contain only the title story); Cloak of Aesir (coll 1952); The Ultimate Weapon (1936 ASF as "Uncertainty"; 1966 dos); The Best of John W. Campbell (coll 1973 UK) and - with different contents - The Best of John W. Campbell (coll 1976).As Editor: From Unknown Worlds (anth 1948); The Astounding Science Fiction Anthology (anth 1952; with 8 stories cut, vt in 2 vols as The First Astounding Science Fiction Anthology 1954 UK and The Second Astounding Science Fiction Anthology 1954 UK, these 2 vols being reissued with all cuts restored, 1964 and 1965 UK; with 15 stories cut 1956 US, this version being reissued, vt Selections from the Astounding Science Fiction Anthology 1967; with 15 stories and an article cut, vt Astounding Tales of Space and Time 1957 US); Prologue to Analog (anth 1962), Analog 1 (anth 1963) and Analog 2 (anth 1964), all three assembled as Analog Anthology (omni 1965 UK); Analog 3 (anth 1965; vt A World by the Tale 1970); Analog 4 (anth 1966; vt The Permanent Implosion 1970); Analog 5 (anth 1967; vt Countercommandment and Other Stories 1970); Analog 6 (anth 1968); Analog 7 (anth 1969); Analog 8 (anth 1971).
   About the author: The Magic That Works: John W.Campbell and the American Response to Technology (1994) by Albert I.Berger.

Science Fiction and Fantasy Encyclopedia. . 2011.

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