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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Life  





2 Writing  





3 Legacy  





4 Short works  



4.1  1940s  





4.2  1950s  





4.3  1960s  





4.4  1970s  





4.5  2000s  







5 Collections  





6 Novels  





7 Related books  





8 References  





9 External links  














James H. Schmitz






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


James H. Schmitz
Schmitz with his dog.
Schmitz with his dog.
Born

James Henry Schmitz


(1911-10-15)October 15, 1911
Hamburg, Germany
DiedApril 18, 1981(1981-04-18) (aged 69)
NationalityAmerican
Occupation(s)Short story writer, novelist
Years active1943–74
SpouseBetty Mae Chapman Schmitz
Schmitz's "The Second Night of Summer", part of his "Agent of Vega" series, was the cover story in the third issue of Galaxy Science Fiction in 1950
Schmitz's novelette "Captives of the Thieve-Star" was the cover story in the May 1951 issue of Planet Stories
The first installment of Schmitz's novella "The Ties of Earth" took the cover of the November 1955 issue of Galaxy Science Fiction
Schmitz's novella "Left Hand, Right Hand" was the cover story on the November 1962 issue of Amazing Stories
Schmitz's novella "Beacon to Elsewhere" took the cover of the April 1963 issue of Amazing Stories

James Henry Schmitz (October 15, 1911 – April 18, 1981) was an American science fiction writer born in Hamburg, Germany[1] of American parents.

Life[edit]

Schmitz was educated at a Realgymnasium in Hamburg,[2] and grew up speaking both English and German. The family spent World War I in the United States, then returned to Germany.[3] Schmitz traveled to Chicago in 1930 to go to business school, then switched to a correspondence course in journalism. Unable to find a job because of the Great Depression, he returned to Germany to work with his father's company.[4] Schmitz lived in various German cities, where he worked for the International Harvester Company,[2] until his family left shortly before World War II broke out in Europe.[2][5]

During World War II, Schmitz served as an aerial photographer in the Pacific for the United States Army Air Forces. After the war, he and his brother-in-law managed a business which manufactured trailers until they ended the business in 1949.[5]

After the war, he made his home in California, where he lived until his death.[3]

Schmitz died of congestive lung failure[5] in 1981 after a five-week stay in hospital in Los Angeles. He was survived by his wife, Betty Mae Chapman Schmitz.

Writing[edit]

Schmitz wrote mostly short stories, which sold chiefly to Galaxy Science Fiction and Astounding Science-Fiction (which later became Analog Science Fiction and Fact). Gale Biography in Context called him "a craftsmanlike writer who was a steady contributor to science fiction magazines for over 20 years."[2]

Schmitz is best known as a writer of "space opera", and for his strong female characters (such as Telzey Amberdon and Trigger Argee) who did not conform to the "damsel in distress" stereotype typical of science fiction of the time.[6]

His first published story was "Greenface", published in August 1943 in Unknown.[7]

Most of his works are part of the "Hub" series and feature characters with telepathy. However, the novel that "is usually thought of as Schmitz's best work"[6]isThe Witches of Karres, concerning juvenile "witches" with genuine psi-powers and their escape from slavery. The Witches of Karres was nominated for a Hugo Award. In recent years, his novels and short stories have been republished by Baen Books, edited and with notes by Eric Flint.

In an introductory essay comparing Schmitz with contemporary author A. E. van Vogt, Gardner Dozois wrote, "Although he lacked van Vogt's paranoid tension and ornately Byzantine plots, the late James H. Schmitz was considerably better at people than van Vogt was, crafting even his villains as complicated, psychologically complex, and non-stereotypical characters, full of surprising quirks and behaviors that you didn't see in a lot of other Space Adventure stuff."[6]

Dozois added:

And his universes, although they come with their own share of monsters and sinister menaces, seem as if they would be more pleasant places to live than most Space Opera universes, places where you could have a viable, ordinary, and decent life once the plot was through requiring you to battle for existence against some Dread Implacable Monster; Schmitz even has sympathy for the monsters, who are often seen in the end not to be monsters at all, but rather creatures with agendas and priorities and points-of-view of their own, from which perspectives their actions are justified and sometimes admirable—a tolerant attitude almost unique amidst the Space Adventure tales of the day, most of which were frothingly xenophobic.[6]

John Clute writes in The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction,

From 1949, when "Agent of Vega" appeared in ASF as the first of 4 stories later assembled as Agent of Vega (collection of linked stories 1960), he regularly produced the kind of tale for which he remains most warmly remembered: Space Opera adventures, several featuring female Heroes depicted with minimum recourse to their "femininity" – they perform their active tasks, and save the Universe when necessary, in a manner almost completely free of sexual role-playing clichés. Most of his best work shares a roughly characterized common background, a Galaxy inhabited by humans and aliens with room for all and numerous opportunities for discoveries and reversals that carefully fall short of threatening the stability of that background. Many of his stories, as a result, focus less on moments of Conceptual Breakthrough than on the pragmatic operations of teams and bureaux involved in maintaining the state of things against criminals, monsters and unfriendly species; in this they rather resemble the tales of Murray Leinster, though they are more vigorous and less inclined to punish adventurousness.[7]

Greg Fowlkes, editor-in-chief of Resurrected Press, said, "During the 50s and 60s "Space Opera" and James H. Schmitz were almost synonymous. He was famous for his tales of interstellar secret agents and galactic criminals, and particularly for heroines such as Telzey Amberdon and Trigger Argee. Many of these characters had enhanced "psionic" powers that let them use their minds as well as their weapons to foil their enemies. All of them were resourceful in the best heroic tradition."[8]

In an essay in the anthology The Good Old Stuff (1998), Dozois laments that the book Agent of Vega is "long out-of-print, alas, but one which – if you can find it – delivers as pure a jolt of Widescreen Space Opera Sense of wonder as can be found anywhere." However, the website Free Speculative Fiction Online freely offers Agent of Vega, along with several of Schmitz's other stories, including "Greenface", "Balanced Ecology", "Lion Loose", "Goblin Night", and many more.

Schmitz wrote the introduction to the concordance The Universes of E. E. Smith.[9]

Legacy[edit]

Gardner Dozois has said, in prefacing the Schmitz tale "The Second Night of Summer",[10] in which humans on the planet Noorhut face an attack from aliens and are, unbeknownst to themselves, saved by the actions of a single woman with psi powers, Granny Wannattel, with the sole help of a friendly alien she calls her pony:

Schmitz was decades ahead of the curve in his portrayal of female characters—years before the Women's Movement of the '70s would come along to raise the consciousness of SF writers (or attempt to), Schmitz was not only frequently using women as the heroines in swashbuckling tales of interplanetary adventure—itself almost unheard of at the time—but he was also treating them as the total equal of the male characters, every bit as competent and brave and smart (and ruthless, when needs be), without saddling them with any of the "female weaknesses"—like an inclination to faint or cower under extreme duress, and/or seek protection behind the muscular frame of the Tough Male Hero) that would mar the characterization of women by some writers for years to come. (The Schmitz Woman, for instance, is every bit as tough and competent as the Heinlein Woman—who, to be fair, isn't prone to fainting in a crisis either—but without her annoying tendency to think that nothing in the universe is as important as marrying Her Man and settling down to have as many babies as possible.)[6]

With his popular equality-between-the-sexes fiction, Schmitz eased the way for later writers such as Joanna Russ, James Tiptree, Jr., Kit Reed, Connie Willis, Sheri S. Tepper, and other science fiction authors who used female protagonists and feminine point-of-view more than half the time. Of "The Second Night of Summer", Dozois went on to write, "the hero of the piece is not only a woman, but an old woman ... a choice that most adventure writers wouldn't even make now, in 1998, let alone in 1950, which is when Schmitz made it!"[6]

Mercedes Lackey places her first meeting with science fiction at age 10 or 11, when she happened to pick up her father's copy of James H. Schmitz's Agent of Vega.

Short works[edit]

Listed chronologically, with month and year of publication, as well as the magazine, listed in parentheses.

1940s[edit]

1950s[edit]

1960s[edit]

1970s[edit]

2000s[edit]

Collections[edit]

Listed by title, with chronological publishing list.

Novels[edit]

Listed by title, with chronological publishing list.

Related books[edit]

This is a sequel of The Witches of Karres which follows the continuing adventures of Captain Pausert, Goth, and the Leewit.
This is a sequel of The Wizard of Karres which follows the continuing adventures of Captain Pausert, Goth, and the Leewit.
This is a sequel of The Sorceress of Karres which follows the continuing adventures of Captain Pausert, Goth, and the Leewit.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Von Ruff, Al. "James H. Schmitz – Summary Bibliography". isfdb.org. Internet Speculative Fiction Database. Retrieved October 9, 2012.
  • ^ a b c d "James H(enry) Schmitz". Gale Biography in Context. Retrieved October 9, 2012.
  • ^ a b "The Best of James H. Schmitz". New England Science Fiction Association. June 24, 2003. Archived from the original on January 17, 2018. Retrieved October 9, 2012.
  • ^ "James H. Schmitz [sidebar]". SF Site. Retrieved October 9, 2012.
  • ^ a b c Scheick, Robyn. "Schmitz, James H. (1911–1981)". Millersville University Archives, Millersville University of Pennsylvania. Archived from the original on December 12, 2012. Retrieved October 9, 2012.
  • ^ a b c d e f Dozois, Gardner (1999). The Good Stuff: Adventure SF in the Grand Tradition. New York: SFBC. p. 45.
  • ^ a b Clute, John; Nicholls, Peter (1995). "Schmitz, James H(enry)". The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction. New York: St Martin's Griffin. pp. 1057–1058. ISBN 0-312-09618-6.
  • ^ Fowlkes, Greg (2010). "James H. Schmitz Resurrected: Selected Stories of James H. Schmitz – Editor's Notes". Resurrected Press. Archived from the original on October 16, 2014. Retrieved October 10, 2012.
  • ^ Ellik, Ron; Bill Evans (1966). "The Universes of E. E. Smith". New England Science Fiction Association. Archived from the original on January 29, 2013. Retrieved October 9, 2012.
  • ^ Schmitz, James H. (1950). "The Second Night of Summer [full text]". Free Speculative Fiction Online. Archived from the original on February 16, 2020. Retrieved October 9, 2012.
  • External links[edit]


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