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Tuesday, March 18, 2008

R.I.P., Arthur C. Clarke



Arthur C. Clarke died today. This post is not going to be a review of his life, you can look on Wikipedia or any newspaper tomorrow for that.

This is simply a tribute to my favorite science fiction writer, whose death saddens me.

When I was in Middle School and High School I was (surprise, surprise) a nerd. A geek. My friends and I loved science and science fiction. We read it and we watched it and we wrote it. In my own particular circle, the face-off was always between Isaac Asimov and Arthur C. Clarke, and I was an Arthur C. Clarke nerd.

Don't get me wrong, I loved Asimov too, but Sir Arthur had something more for me, and that was a sly sense of humor. You can see it in his mainstream works, such as the ever-popular 2001 (I'm sorry, Dave), and in his lesser-known works, such as his "Tales from the White Hart' series of stories. 'Tales from the White Hart' remains among my favorite science-fiction books ever. It takes place in a British pub, and recounts the tall tales of Harry Purvis, a scientist who can trade stories with the best of them. The stories are witty, intelligent, and funny.

The first Arthur C. Clarke story I ever read was called "The Nine Billion Names of God", in a paperback anthology of the same name. The coincidence here is that this story dealt with llamas in Tibet, who were programming a computer to compute the nine billion names of God, at which point His purpose would be served, and the Universe would cease to exist. Tibet is, of course, in the news and my thoughts today.

When I was in 7th grade we had things called "Mini Courses"- these were extra-curricular course taught twice a week by teachers on subjects like word games, fencing, bargello, weather forecasting, and so on. Somehow my friend Marc and I persuaded my homeroom teacher, Mrs. Lewis, to sponsor us as "teachers" of a Mini-Course called "The Science-Fiction Book Club". We didn't have this idea in time to get it into the booklet they passed around at the beginning of the term, so not many people knew it existed. When Mini-Course sign-up period came, we sat in Mrs. Lewis's room at our own table, ready to take our students, as other students came in for Mrs. Lewis's course on word games.

When the room was full Mrs. Lewis stood up and said "Everyone who is here for Word Games, sit where you are. Everyone who is here for the Science Fiction Book Club, go over and sit with Marc and Forrest".

And everyone looked at us, sitting at our table, all alone, and nobody moved.

But hey, it turned out ok. We had a classroom and a whole two extra periods a week all to ourselves, and we signed the "passed course" sheets for each other the first day, and just read books and goofed off for the entire term. It was cool.

And I read a lot of Arthur C. Clarke stories that period. Arthur C. Clarke had the rare gift to be a serious scientist and a witty and original storyteller, and his passing saddens me.

I raise a glass tonight to Sir Arthur. May the Nine Billion Names of God include yours.

12 comments:

Mike said...

One of the few sci-fi writers I actually liked. There's not many even remotely like him anymore.

Forrest Proper said...

He was truly one of a kind.

Commander Zaius said...

I'm shocked, I had no idea and heard nothing all day. I was more into Asimov, Bradbury and Herbert but of his books I loved Childhood's End. How humanity merged with the Overmind freaked my young mind out to the extreme. Imperial Earth and a look at Earth and the United States in 2276. And Songs of a Distant Earth which I had heard one time long ago was being considered for being made into a movie. Someone might fill his space but no one will ever take his place.

Commander Zaius said...

Crap, I forgot about the Rama books. Read the first three several times.

Phoebe Fay said...

This is the first I'd heard this. Wow.

Here's to you, Sir Arthur. Thank you for many hours of reading pleasure and many big thoughts for thinking.

Forrest Proper said...

BB and Phoebe (hey, that rhymes), I just heard it myself. It is shocking. Somehow, I thought he would find a way to live forever.

Well, in a way he did.

Malach the Merciless said...

Another geek bites the dust. Gygaz, Robert Anton Wilson, Clarke . . us geeks are in morning.

"It's made of stars"!

Anonymous said...

I love how you express yourself. I raise a glass tonight too, to you! =)

AngryMan said...

I need to read more of his stuff.

Forrest Proper said...

Malach: Yes, a bad week for geeks everywhere.

Nerdgirl: Awww, thanks! *cyber blush*

Webcam: Thank God you showed up, I as beginning to be depressed that your Spam had missed my blog!

Angryman: Buy a few of his paperbacks to read while waiting to change diapers...

anaglyph said...

Arthur Clarke once said that when he died, he hoped that he would wake up in a chair with an alien being taking some kind of headgear off him and saying 'Well, there ya go - that's what it's like to spend some time as a human on Planet Earth'

Maybe now he knows...

here today, gone tomorrow said...

When I was a kid, ACC took my brain to the stars. I'll never forget him for that gift.