The release of George Zebrowski
and Gregory Benford's anthology Skylife:
Space Habitats in Science and Story provides a rare opportunity
to interview the book's editors together.
Gregory Benford has decades
of experience as a space scientist, both as a professor of astrophysics
and plasma physics at the University of California, Irvine and as a consultant
to NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, the Department of Energy and the White
House Council on Space Policy. He is perhaps better known, though, for
his award-winning and bestselling science
fiction.
George Zebrowski has written
copiously about space habitats (the classic Macrolife, its sequel
Cave of Stars, and the John W. Campbell Award winning Brute Orbits)
and has forgotten more of the history of science fiction than most of us
will ever know. He is also a critic and editor.
Why is space important?
Gregory Benford (GB):
It's the last
great territory, an indispensable source of wonder and raw materials alike.
We're going to get itchy, cooped up on this small world.
George Zebrowski (GZ):
A culture
that fails to develop spacefaring risks extinction at worst and extreme
discomfort and backwardness at best. I'm with Arthur
C. Clarke about this: an age of exploration brings cultural renaissance,
because exploration outward is also a journey into ourselves.
What is the relationship
between science and science fiction?
GB: Far too large
a question! I'd say SF is the bard of science, as Poul Anderson put it.
GZ: The
simple answer is that what we can do we must first imagine. The more complex
answer is that science and technology have an effect on human lives, and
that this effect can only grow more profound, and that is a fit subject
for fictional explorations.
Literature of the traditional
kind assesses what has been; science fiction looks forward through the
shadows that possibility casts backward into our times, and attempts to
see the dramatic changes that will work on human character. See my essay
in the current Nebula volume, just out.
What are you reading right
now?
GB: The
Light of Other Days by Stephen Baxter and Arthur C. Clarke.
GZ: I read a number
of books at once. Recently I have read some very little-known works: two
novels by Charles Jackson, The Lost Weekend and The Fall of Valor,
both from the 1940s. A remarkable book from the 1930s, All Night at
Mr. Stanyhurst's by Hugh Edwards. A work on cosmology by Martin Rees,
Before the Beginning. A remarkable old book by Lancelot Law Whyte,
Essay on Atomism, and The Future of Unbelief by Gerhard Szczesny,
which though written in the 1960s has not dated in its insights at all.
The Lost World by Arthur Conan Doyle, which I have never read before
and find wonderful.
Atypically for an SF anthology
introduction, the introduction to Skylife (a longer version appears
in two recent issues of The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction)
is lengthy, dense, filled with ideas and a lot of fun to read. This is
a truly amazing piece of work--what was the division of labor?
GZ: We
each rewrote each other's drafts. I went first, then Greg. Four or five
times. We added paragraphs right up to the end. Greg did the magazine pass
all by himself, and I wish we'd gotten that draft into the book. We had
no disagreements.
GB: We
each handled aspects we thought we knew best. I did the more technical,
George the metaphysical.
The selection of tales
in Skylife is excellent, but are there any others you wish you could
have included? Is a Skylife II likely?
GZ: Robert
A. Heinlein's "Universe", of course, but his estate has reserved reprint
rights on just about everything. We might have looked for more original
work, and perhaps an all original Skylife collection will be next.
We have a bibliography at the back of the book, which should keep readers
busy for some time.
GB: Sure
-- Heinlein's "Universe". We would've, except his widow wouldn't give us
permission, and I thought the Don Wilcox story "The Voyage that Lasted
600 Years" actually told more about the history of the ideas, too.
In the realm of the space
habitat, we've had Skylab,
Mir,
and soon the International
Space Station. What do you see as the next logical step for the space
habitat? Do you think there will be a "next step" anytime in the near future?
GB: We
must develop a true recyclable habitat, no more camping out in space. This
is crucial to going
to Mars, or anywhere beyond the Moon, for a few days. And we must have
centrifugal gravity experiments in low earth orbit, to prepare for longer
missions. These have been obvious since the early '60s, but NASA has resolutely
done zero-g work, not the crucial centrifugal jobs.
GZ: My feeling is
that the International Space Station will become a "construction shack"
for the building of something much better, even before it's complete. Lunar
bases seem logical. Fast, continuous-boost ships can shrink the solar system
to something that can be crossed in weeks, and these will need a place
in space where they will be constructed. Soon? Maybe not. Human beings
seem to recharge after a quiet period, and often the same problems are
better solved with later knowledge and technology.
The U.S. space program
has been slowing for the last thirty years; a manned mission anywhere out
of low earth orbit is at least a decade away. Do either of you see a government
like China or even the private sector as likely to take up the slack?
GB: I
doubt any government, especially China,
will summon the resources to go into space in a big way. That's why I proposed
in The
Martian Race a prize system, with half a dozen governments providing
the funding (after the explorers return, though!) but leaving the innovative
private area to do the job and take the risks -- two areas NASA fears.
I really think this is the only way to do it.
GZ: The private sector
has everything before it. Other nations, of course, may try, but I think
they lack the dedication -- and even when they have it, they lose it quickly.
If you could each pick
one big-ticket program related to research or exploration to be funded,
what would it be and why?
GB: Study
centrifugal gravity and make a closed habitat work. Without those, there
will be no more exploration at all.
GZ: Improvements
in human health and longevity might make us less frantic to do what we
do at the corporate and governmental levels, and maybe help us look outward
more than we do. Maybe.
Given that I have the
attention of you both -- Benford collaborated with Arthur C. Clarke on
Beyond the Fall of Night and Zebrowski is a Clarke scholar and one
of the author's close friends -- I'd love your reactions to the fact that
the New York Times Millennium Time Capsule at the American Museum
of Natural History contains a copy of 2001. How do you think that
the people of 3000 AD will react to it?
GB: I
served on the New York Times time capsule panel, and got a laugh
out of including 2001.
They might as well know us by our unrealized dreams... I think denizens
of 3000 AD will find it amusing, betraying attitudes and assumptions we
cannot now even guess.
GZ: 2001 (the
novel and film) may become a human "uplift myth" in future centuries, and
be viewed much as we see the Odyssey of Homer as a meditation on
life and mortality; and it may seem just as quaint in its surface features,
though maybe not in essentials.
Both of you have been
SF writers for three decades or more. What do you think is the biggest
difference in the field between when you started and now?
GZ: Intellect
and thought have less prestige within SF, although there are more thoughtful
and brilliant writers than ever -- but whose ear do they have? Intellect
and thought are not as admired as they once were. As Jay Bulworth (in Warren
Beatty's movie) said, "Money turns everything to crap."
Money should be a means,
not an end. When editors throw up their hands and say "what can we do,"
I reply that it was publishers who made today's lesser readers, by following
rather than leading. He who does not oppose what is makes a pact with all
past wrongs.
GB: It's
split into myriad subfandoms. Hard SF was a small area when I started writing,
and now supports perhaps a dozen or more writers. It's always been the
core, and expansion of audience has helped. But SF has taken over the visual
media, and the genre's tragedy is that its best work does not get translated
to TV or movies.
To do it is difficult, but not impossible.
Any particular stories
you'd love to see on the big screen?
GZ: Starman
Jones and Have Spacesuit Will Travel, both by Heinlein.
And instead of the Stars Wars films, I once dreamed of the Lensman
novels by E. E. Smith with Christopher Reeve in the lead as Kimball Kinnison.
Jack Williamson's Legion of Space novels would have been so much
better than Star Wars. Come to think of it, The Paradox Men
by Charles L. Harness, often described as "widescreen baroque," would beat
anything on the screen --if done straight, with no updates or fiddling.
Any of H.G. Wells's novels, with no updates, in period.
GB: I'd like to see
Poul Anderson's The High Crusade made -- great fun!
I think someone actually
did The High Crusade...
GB: I
know, but it's terrible! A cheap German production, actually. Even Poul
hates it. I meant a real movie of it, done Spielberg style.
Both of you have taught
SF at a college level. What was on the syllabus (i.e., what books, in your
mind, are crucial to the history of the genre, or were at the time)?
GB: I
taught the classics, as might appear in the SFWA anthology. But more recent
work should be included, perhaps by having the class read all or most of
the Hartwell or Dozois Best of the Year collections.
GZ: I
taught one of the first full-credit university courses in SF during the
early '70s at SUNY/Binghamton, Harpur College. My books included mostly
what was in print: City by Simak, Starship Troopers by Heinlein,
and a half dozen others. I took students by petition, and turned away 60
or more.
You've been friends a
long time, yet this is your first collaboration. Now that it's received
its share of critical acclaim, do you think you'd like to make this an
ongoing partnership? If so, what would you like to do next?
GZ: Greg
and I have one or two major anthology ideas in mind, which will be announced
in due course. But I think the most important stuff that has passed between
us over three decades is the conversations and the friendship.
GB: I
have a few vague ideas for collections that should be done--but whether
publishers think them profitable we'll have to see. Maybe a volume of Sex
Meets SF?
Is there a question you
have always wished an interviewer would ask? If so, what's the answer?
GB: Q:
Why do you do all this labor, when just being a professor of physics should
be enough? A: Gosh, I never thought of that! I'll stop writing right now
. . . .
GZ: What
do I wish you'd asked me? Was the career as a writer and editor of SF worth
it? My love of what I do is undiminished -- and what I do when I write
is so much more interesting than actual publication. I learn constantly,
in many fields. I observe the world, not just see it. I have known some
of the most interesting people of my time. My childhood gods have in some
cases become my friends. But what goes on between a writer and his readers
is still mostly an affair about which the publisher is the last to know.
What are you working on
now?
GB: I'm
taking time off to help develop a new sort of spacecraft for NASA, a
light sail
to be driven in space by microwave beams directed from the ground. Like
a solar sail, but with photons controlled from the source, so light pressure
can change orbits, spin the sail, maybe even more. It's a wild card longshot
idea. We're trying to test this at JPL now, trying to levitate a sail and
spin it, against gravity.
I want to take a year off
writing, at least. I've done too much the last 2 years -- 2 novels, 2 anthologies,
short story collection, 2 nonfiction . . . whoosh!
GZ: Right now I am
working on short stories and articles, also on a mystery/detective novel.
Other projected novels, well developed already, are: After the Stars
are Gone, The History Machine, Stranger Ships, This Life and Later
Ones. Two sequels to The Killing Star, and The Biotimers,
all with Charles Pellegrino, if we can find the time.
Beyond that, I have great
feeling for another dozen novels, and maybe 50 works of short fiction,
if life and energy stay with me.
The biggest problem is a
publishing industry that is in ruins, that does not know what to do about
it, that does active harm to authors by slowing their careers, often stopping
them. It's time to take back the SF field and put it again into the care
of its writer-editors, the kind of people who created this distinctive
movement of literature.
There has rarely been a major
SF editor who was not a writer. Dream teams of SF writer-editors wait to
do the job, except for the ignorance of corporate money.
Additional
question to George Zebrowski
Additional
questions to Gregory Benford
Robert A. Heinlein's "Universe"
is currently in print and available as the first half of Orphans of
the Sky.
What do you think? Send your
comments to the editor.