Alexei Panshin

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(August 14, 1940 – August 21, 2022)

Author and sf critic Alexei Panshin was a former fan who won the 1967 Best Fan Writer Hugo. His first published novel, Rite of Passage (1968), won the Nebula Award for Best Novel in 1969. Other SF novels include Star Well (1968), The Thurb Revolution (1968), and Masque World (1969).

His critical works include Heinlein in Dimension (1968), SF in Dimension (1976), and The World Beyond the Hill (1989), written with his wife Cory. A collection of his short fiction is Farewell to Yesterday's Tomorrow (1975).

A possibly apocryphal story made his name fannishly synonymous with the term neopro. Though Panshin and his wife insisted it never happened, that didn’t stop fandom from spreading the tale and the usage.

The Panshins married in 1969. Alexei reminiscenced, he first laid eyes on Cory at Tricon, the 24th World Science Fiction Convention in Cleveland, in 1966, though she didn't mention him in her conrep (Twilight Zine #20, October 1966: see Cory Seidman (Panshin)'s Tricon Reminiscence): "Over the next several years she and I would see each other from time to time at gatherings at Charlie and Marsha Brown's apartment in the Bronx." After he published Star Well in October 1968, she sent him his "first fan letter ever." "I won her heart with The Thurb Revolution. We were married the following June."

Awards, Honors and GoHships:

Heinlein in Dimension[edit]

Heinlein in Dimension is Panshin's 1968 detailed analysis of the fiction of Robert A. Heinlein from Advent.

Advent hyped the book as a "critical analysis of Heinlein's novels and stories, his style and technique, his strengths and his weaknesses, and his place in modern science fiction. It is a study in depth which is neither adulatory nor carping."

Heinlein hated it. Heinlein's animosity seemed to be directed more against Panshin personally as against the work. This may stem from an article Panshin had written for Shangri-L'Affaires about sexuality in RAH's fiction, concluding that he avoided dealing with adult sexuality. Redd Boggs, who was editing Shangri-L'Affaires at the time, ran the article under the title "By His Jockstrap" (mocking Heinlein's famous story "By His Bootstraps").

Additionally, while researching the manuscript, Panshin had gotten the loan of letters written by Heinlein to a recently deceased conservative fan, Arthur George "Sarge" Smith, to whom RAH had dedicated his novel Starship Troopers. Even though Panshin found nothing useful in the letters, when Heinlein learned of it, he was enraged at what he took to be an invasion of his privacy. According to one source, Heinlein threatened Advent with a lawsuit if the book were published. This caused Advent to temporarily postpone publication, however, several chapters of the book were subsequently published by Leland Sapiro in his fanzine Riverside Quarterly, and when no lawsuit materialized, Advent went ahead with publication of the entire manuscript.

A few years after the book had been published, Panshin encountered Heinlein at a speaking and book signing event in New York City. He was convinced that Heinlein had simply been misinformed about the book's contents, which was not at all anti-Heinlein, and wanted to make known that he was in fact a great admirer of RAH; however, when he approached Heinlein, in an attempt to bury the hatchet between the two of them, he was frostily rebuffed. The exchange was witnessed by three New York fans, Gary Farber, Ben Yalow, and Moshe Feder. Farber later remembered: "Panshin walked up and stuck out his hand, beginning an apology to Heinlein. Heinlein wouldn't let him complete his first sentence, interrupting him with the coldest 'Good day, sir.' and refusing to take his hand. Panshin tried several times, but just got his words interrupted with 'Good day sir.' After several attempts, and Heinlein's utter refusal to even listen to a single sentence of apology, Alexei gave up."



Person 19402022
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