John Sladek

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John Thomas Sladek
Born(1937-12-15)December 15, 1937
Waverly, Iowa, US
DiedMarch 10, 2000(2000-03-10) (aged 62)
Minneapolis, Minnesota, US
OccupationNovelist
NationalityAmerican
Period1966–2000
GenreScience fiction
Literary movementNew Wave

John Thomas Sladek (December 15, 1937 – March 10, 2000)

science fiction author, known for his satirical and surreal
novels.

Life and work

Born in

sociopathic robot who lacks any moral "asimov circuits", and Bugs
, a wide-ranging satire in which a hapless technical writer (a job Sladek held for many years) helps to create a robot who quickly goes insane.

Sladek was also known for his parodies of other science fiction writers, such as Isaac Asimov, Arthur C. Clarke, and Cordwainer Smith. These were collected in The Steam-Driven Boy and other Strangers (1973). Under the pseudonym of "James Vogh", Sladek wrote Arachne Rising, which purports to be a nonfiction account of a thirteenth sign of the zodiac suppressed by the scientific establishment, in an attempt to demonstrate that people will believe anything. In the 1960s he also co-wrote two pseudonymous novels with his friend Thomas M. Disch, the Gothic The House that Fear Built (1966; as "Cassandra Knye") and the satirical thriller Black Alice (1968; as "Thom Demijohn").

Another of Sladek's notable parodies is of the

anti-Stratfordian citation of the hapax legomenon in Love's Labour's Lost "honorificabilitudinitatibus" as an anagram of hi ludi, F. Baconis nati, tuiti orbi, Latin for "these plays, F. Bacon's offspring, are preserved for the world", "proving" that Francis Bacon wrote the play. Sladek noted that "honorificabilitudinitatibus" was also an anagram for I, B. Ionsonii, uurit [writ] a lift'd batch, thus "proving" that Shakespeare's works were written by Ben Jonson
.

Sladek returned from England to

pulmonary fibrosis. He was married twice, to Pamela Sladek, which ended in divorce in 1986, and to Sandra Gunter whom he married in 1994. He had a daughter from his first marriage.[1]

Skepticism

A strict materialist, Sladek subjected the occult and pseudoscience to merciless scrutiny in The New Apocrypha. The book critically examined the claims of dowsing, homeopathy, parapsychology, perpetual motion and Ufology.[3]

Bibliography

Science fiction novels

Science fiction collections

Omnibus editions

  • The Complete Roderick comprising Roderick and Roderick at Random Gollancz SF Masterworks #45 2001, Overlook Press 2004
  • The Reproductive System / The Müller-Fokker Effect / Tik-Tok Gollancz 2013

Mystery novels and stories

  • The Castle and the Key (as by Cassandra Knye) Paperback Library 1967
  • "By an Unknown Hand", the first story featuring the detective Thackeray Phin, which was awarded the first prize in The Times Detective Story Competition in 1972, and published in The Times Anthology of Detective Stories (now included in the collection Maps, edited by David Langford (2002));
  • Black Aura Jonathan Cape 1974, Panther 1975, a Phin novel;
  • "It Takes Your Breath Away", a Phin short story, originally printed in theatre programmes for a London play, 1974 (now included in Maps);
  • Invisible Green Gollancz 1977, the second Phin novel. Both Phin novels are
    locked room mysteries
    .

Nonfiction

  • The New Apocrypha: A Guide to Strange Science and Occult Beliefs Stein and Day 1973, Panther 1978
  • Arachne Rising: The Search for the Thirteenth Sign of the Zodiac (1977) (as James Vogh)
  • The Cosmic Factor (1978) (as James Vogh)
  • Judgement of Jupiter (1980) (as Richard A. Tilms)[5][2]
  • The Book of Clues (1984)[4]

With Thomas M. Disch

  • The House that Fear Built (1966)
  • Black Alice (1968)

Selected short stories

References

  1. ^ a b Langford, David (April 13, 2000). "Obituary: John Sladek". theguardian.com. Retrieved March 1, 2015.
  2. ^ a b Clute, John. "Sladek, John T." The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction (3rd ed.). Retrieved March 19, 2017.
  3. ^ Priest, Christopher. (1974). "The New Apocrypha by John Sladek". New Scientist. March 21. p. 770.
  4. ^ a b c d Reginald 1992, p. 905.
  5. ^ Clute 1995, p. 186.
Citations

External links