Difference between revisions of "Most Senior SF Writer"

From Fancyclopedia 3
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 1: Line 1:
 
Who, among the major writers, has been writing for the longest time?  And who held the record before them?
 
Who, among the major writers, has been writing for the longest time?  And who held the record before them?
  
(Note that this has a significant judgment element.  First, "major" is inevitably subjective to a degree. In particular, there were undoubtedly early writers for magazines like ''[[Weird Tales]]'' or the [[mundane]] who published  something that was arguably [[SF]] and lived on forgotten by [[fandom]].  We're not interested in these.  Second, there are writers who are not forgotten, but whose writing career was relatively brief. We're looking for people with the longest ''active careers'', not who were simply long-lived. To count, an active career should have spanned at least a majority of the time since their first appearance. (So Mary Shelly, while undoubtedly an SF writer, qualifies only because there are no other contenders.)  Most subjective of all, is "major." Given two people who have essentially equivalent careers, where one is of significantly greater stature and influence in the field, we will pick the latter._
+
(Note that this has a significant judgment element.  First, "major" is inevitably subjective to a degree. In particular, there were undoubtedly early writers for magazines like ''[[Weird Tales]]'' or the [[mundane]] who published  something that was arguably [[SF]] and lived on forgotten by [[fandom]].  We're not interested in these.  Second, there are writers who are not forgotten, but whose writing career was relatively brief. We're looking for people with the longest ''active careers'', not who were simply long-lived. To count, an active career should have spanned at least a majority of the time since their first appearance. (So Mary Shelly, while undoubtedly an SF writer, qualifies only because there are no other contenders.)  Most subjective of all, is "major." Given two people who have essentially equivalent careers, where one is of significantly greater stature and influence in the field, we will pick the latter.)
  
 
<tab head=top>
 
<tab head=top>

Revision as of 08:23, 24 December 2020

Who, among the major writers, has been writing for the longest time? And who held the record before them?

(Note that this has a significant judgment element. First, "major" is inevitably subjective to a degree. In particular, there were undoubtedly early writers for magazines like Weird Tales or the mundane who published something that was arguably SF and lived on forgotten by fandom. We're not interested in these. Second, there are writers who are not forgotten, but whose writing career was relatively brief. We're looking for people with the longest active careers, not who were simply long-lived. To count, an active career should have spanned at least a majority of the time since their first appearance. (So Mary Shelly, while undoubtedly an SF writer, qualifies only because there are no other contenders.) Most subjective of all, is "major." Given two people who have essentially equivalent careers, where one is of significantly greater stature and influence in the field, we will pick the latter.)

First published Born Died Who? Span Years on Top
1818 1797 1851 Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley 33 33
1851 1828 1905 Jules Verne 54 54
1879 1859 1930 Arthur Conan Doyle 51 25
1888 1866 1946 H. G. Wells 58 16
1912 1875 1950 Edgar Rice Burroughs 38 4
1919 1896 1975 Murray Leinster 56 25
1928 1908 2006 Jack Williamson 78 31
1937 1919 2013 Frederik Pohl 68 7
1949 1923 2020 James Gunn 71 7
1950 1932 John Jakes
1953 1926 Tony Thorne
1954 1935 still active Robert Silverberg

Jack Williamson had the longest run (not counting Shelley and Verne).

For a somewhat different take, see Dean of Science Fiction.


Miscellaneous
This is a miscellaneous page