Posted: Mon Apr 12, 2010 3:14 pm
Is it "The Moon is a harsh mistress" By Roberta Heinlein?
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Seems it's time for another clue. Have I finally found something sufficiently obscure?Commander McLane wrote:Will a superweapon, controlled by three philanthropic individuals, be able to force the UK and the US to abstain from a bloody war against each other?
Author and title of this quite early SF-novel, please.
The author was originally an electrical engineer, working for an important company at his time. Because not only his engineering, but also his literary skills became obvious, he was placed in their literary office. Later he was working as a journalist specializing in writing popular articles about science. But only with his first SF-novel about 20 years later he fully became a free lance writer.The author was long dead when the first Hugo was awarded, so he never got one. But he published an essay once in a magazine edited by Hugo Gernsback, although it wasn't Amazing Stories, and it wasn't a story.
I suspect allikat meant to type "Robert A Heinlein"..Commander McLane wrote:(and it's not "Roberta" as well ).
No, and it is not quite that early. The author is one generation after Stockton. The first entry in his bibliography is from 1902 (and it's non-fiction).Disembodied wrote:Could it be Frank R Stockton's The Great War Syndicate?
Commander McLane wrote:Will a superweapon, controlled by three philanthropic individuals, be able to force the UK and the US to abstain from a bloody war against each other?
Author and title of this quite early SF-novel, please.
Commander McLane wrote:The author was long dead when the first Hugo was awarded, so he never got one. But he published an essay once in a magazine edited by Hugo Gernsback, although it wasn't Amazing Stories, and it wasn't a story.
The novel I am looking for is a stand-alone, but also has a sequel, which however can also be read as a stand-alone. The sequel deals with another worldwide crisis, in fact with climate change in the northern hemisphere, which was caused by one of the major powers diverting the gulf stream in a rather spectacular way.Commander McLane wrote:The author was originally an electrical engineer, working for an important company at his time. Because not only his engineering, but also his literary skills became obvious, he was placed in their literary office. Later he was working as a journalist specializing in writing popular articles about science. But only with his first SF-novel about 20 years later he fully became a free lance writer.
Commander McLane wrote:Will a superweapon, controlled by three philanthropic individuals, be able to force the UK and the US to abstain from a bloody war against each other?
Author and title of this quite early SF-novel, please.
Commander McLane wrote:The author was long dead when the first Hugo was awarded, so he never got one. But he published an essay once in a magazine edited by Hugo Gernsback, although it wasn't Amazing Stories, and it wasn't a story.
Commander McLane wrote:The author was originally an electrical engineer, working for an important company at his time. Because not only his engineering, but also his literary skills became obvious, he was placed in their literary office. Later he was working as a journalist specializing in writing popular articles about science. But only with his first SF-novel about 20 years later he fully became a free lance writer.
Oh boy, this time I seem to have pulled it off. German SF, sufficiently obscure to the rest of the world that even the nerds don't know it!Commander McLane wrote:The novel I am looking for is a stand-alone, but also has a sequel, which however can also be read as a stand-alone. The sequel deals with another worldwide crisis, in fact with climate change in the northern hemisphere, which was caused by one of the major powers diverting the gulf stream in a rather spectacular way.
You're on to something here. The author I am looking for was a pupil at the Gymnasium in Gotha where Laßwitz was teaching mathematics and physics, and was very much influenced by him.Selezen wrote:Endless Googling posits Kurd Lasswitz as a possibility for the author.
Well, german at least is my mother tongue, and I might have to consider myself a scifi nerd, nevertheless ... even after using Google and Wikipedia and wrecking my brain after everything I've ever read or heard in that direction, I give up. This is significantly more obscure than the north pole scientist story ...Commander McLane wrote:Oh boy, this time I seem to have pulled it off. German SF, sufficiently obscure to the rest of the world that even the nerds don't know it!
I am wondering about the German board members, however. The writer I am looking for is (or at least was) absolutely famous in Germany ...