John C. Wright ([info]johncwright) wrote,
@ 2008-03-19 10:15:00
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Sir Arthur C. Clarke has passed away
He will be missed.

It is the end of an era. Clarke was one of the Big Three (Asimov, Heinlein, Clarke) who defined serious science fiction. Before these three, science fiction consisted of a few serious European writers (H.G. Wells and Jules Verne) and a plethora of forgotten American pulp writers who wrote in cheap magazines called things like "Amazing Space Wonder Stories" and had titles like "Invasion of the
Atom Monster of Mercury!"

The first Clarke book I read was CITY AND THE STARS, and if you see parallels between it and my own works, they may not be coincidence. Ironically, he is most famous for his works set in the shallows of the near future rather than the deep sea of the far future.  He famously predicted (in the 1940's) that we would reach the moon by the year 2000. No one predicted that we would reach the moon, and give up on the moon, by 2000.

May he rest in peace.

ADDENDUM: The author Susan Schwartz says this of Arthur C. Clarke, and it sums my sentiments so exactly, I must repeat it here:
There were giants in the Earth in those days.



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[info]saintjoi
2008-03-19 02:51 pm UTC (link)
RIP, Arthur C. Clarke. He will be missed. He was the only sci-fi writer who made me laugh so hard that I atually dropped the book I was reading (the short story that ends with the awful pun about "a star-mangled spanner").

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[info]sce2aux
2008-03-19 03:52 pm UTC (link)
When I was a lad, I read Clarkes "juvenile fiction?" book 'Dolphin Island'. Running away from a foster home. Hopping onto a stalled hoverfreight... ditching in the pacific near Australia then ending up living on an island where scientist are studying dolphins. Diving in the reefs...surfing. oh, what a wonderful tale for a youngster to escape with.

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[info]belriose
2008-03-19 04:35 pm UTC (link)
Sad news indeed. A bright light has left this world.
May he find peace in the next one.

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[info]isaac_wilcott
2008-03-19 06:46 pm UTC (link)
Against the Fall of Night is my favorite SF book of all time, which is ironic since I can't stand anything else Clarke wrote. But this and The City and the Stars -- which I consider the other side of the same coin rather than a separate work -- are unparalleled works of pure imagination. For that alone Clarke would be justly remembered as one of the SF greats.

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[info]dirigibletrance
2008-03-19 07:11 pm UTC (link)
Clarke and Sagan influenced my early childhood so much. I don't think I'd resemble anything like the person I am now if there hadn't been copies of 2001, Rama, Fountains of Paradise, Contact, and Cosmos just lying around the house, waiting for me the read them.

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[info]belriose
2008-03-19 07:31 pm UTC (link)
They changed my life as well. They (He, Sagan, Asimov and some others) gave me love for the science, which was an obscure thing for me. And that love had been a cornerstone of my life since then. With no doubt the man I am now would be completely diferent if it wasn't for their books, too.

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[info]bibliophile112
2008-03-20 01:06 am UTC (link)
Pale Death with impartial tread beats at the poor man's cottage door and at the palaces of kings.
-Horace

And at the doors of genius

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[info]johncwright
2008-03-20 01:59 pm UTC (link)
Well said.

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