Better to Have Loved: The Life of Judith Merril

by Judith Merril

Other authorsEmily Pohl-Weary (Author)
Paperback, 2002

Status

Available

Call number

PS3525.E643 Z47

Publication

Between the Lines (Toronto, 2002). 300 pages.

Description

Judith Merril was a pioneer of twentieth-century science fiction, a prolific author, and editor. She was also a passionate social and political activist. In fact, her life was a constant adventure within the alternative and experimental worlds of science fiction, left politics, and Canadian literature.Better to Have Loved is illustrated with original art works, covers from classic science fiction magazines, period illustrations, and striking photography.

User reviews

LibraryThing member iansales
Also read for research for Apollo Quartet 4 All That Outer Space Allows. This is sort of Merril’s autobiography – it was compiled by Pohl-Weary from an aborted attempt by Merril to write an autobiography, her letters to various well-known sf names, and the introductions to some of her books
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(her collections and the anthologies she edited). Merril started out in the Futurians, an influential New-York-based group of fans in the 1940s, writing pulp fiction for hire, chiefly crime and westerns. They weren’t a very pleasant bunch in those days – at one point, they reformed the Futurians specifically to exclude one person they felt wasn’t much fun – but they were very close-knit, often kipping over for months at a time at friends’ houses. Merril was certainly outspoken, and these days she’d probably be described as “poly” – neither of which in those days endeared her much to her fellow fans and writers. Some of the gossip Merril drops in is horribly fascinating – such as, for example, when Frederik Pohl was an editor early in his career he’d buy his friends’ stories and keep 60% of the fee; or that, later, when Merril was an influential editor, writers would approach her and beg to be included in her next anthology, and they’d tell her they wouldn’t even accept a fee. Merril moved to Canada in the 1960s, and eventually took Canadian citizenship. She comes across as one of those opinionated but interesting people you’d probably dislike on meeting. Worth reading.
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Awards

Hugo Award (Nominee — 2003)
Toronto Book Award (Nominee — 2003)
Locus Recommended Reading (Non-Fiction — 2002)

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

2002

Physical description

300 p.; 7.39 inches

ISBN

1896357571 / 9781896357577
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