Howard
Waldrop
Are they science fiction?
Are they fantasy? Are they
alternate history? Are they
from Mars or from Venus?
In the 1970s and 1980s,
Howard Waldrop's disorientingly
strange/familiar stories
made him a famous unknown
writer.
They racked up best-of-the-year
inclusions and award nominations,
sometimes several stories
a year in different categories. "Custer's
Last Jump" and "Mary
Margaret Roadgrader" were
nominated for the Nebula
in 1977. In 1980, "The
Ugly Chickens" captured
both the Nebula and the World
Fantasy Award, and narrowly
evaded the Hugo. In 1983, "Ike
at the Mike" was up
for the Hugo. In 1986, two
Waldrop stories, "Flying
Saucer Rock and Roll" and "Heirs
of the Perisphere," were
nominated for the same Nebula
award, placing hardcore Waldrop
fans in a schizophrenia-inducing
double-bind.
Amid such celebrity, Waldrop
himself continued to live
below poverty level, volunteering
for a top-secret study that
helped determine the nutritional
limits of using integrity
as hamburger helper. As part
of this historic experiment,
he once pulled a story that
had already sold to a big-bucks
market in order to place
it elsewhere for half the
price.
Occasionally stories slipped
through to higher-paying
markets -- Playboy, Omni,
and the like. Howard compensated
for these lapses of vigilance
by selling his books only
to very-high-quality small
presses or to publishers
who could be counted on not
to distribute them.
Award nominations kept racking
up: 1987, "The Lions
are Asleep This Night," for
the Nebula. 1988, "Night
of the Cooters" for
the Hugo. 1989, "Do
Ya, Do Ya Wanna Dance" for
the Nebula, and 1990, "A
Dozen Tough Jobs," for
the same.
And now, SFF.NET, bless
its heart, has brought Howard
Waldrop to the World Wide
Web. So thanks to the wonders
of cyberspace, to Howard's
uniquely contrarian marketing
savvy, and to his inability
to keep his stories off the
awards short-lists, Howard
Waldrop is now a legendary
unknown writer.
--Eileen Gunn
> Read
a recent article
about Howard
> Order Howard's
newest collection
online
> Read a review
of the collection |