Art by Hannes Bok

C. M. Kornbluth – Part 1 1939-1944

Art by M. D. Jackson
Cyril M. Kornbluth

This post is brought to you by the upcoming Steel and Stone by M. D. Jackson. This novel is made up of three parts, “Rolling Stone” which appeared in Ships of Steel last year, plus two further adventures about Stone the secret agent working with Marella, a woman he saves from invisible foes aboard a spaceliner. Later stories feature Steel’s ship Darlin’ (Darling Buds of May), a killerbot like you’ve never experienced before, as well as Marella’s adventure aboard a Niven Ring at the edge of the galaxy. All three parts combine to make a Space Adventure novel that will keep you turning pages!

Cyril Kornbluth (1923-1958) was a satiric Science Fiction writer, perhaps best known today as a collaborator with Gunner Cade (1952) with Judith Merrill and Frederik Pohl on The Space Merchants (1953). Some of his stories were adapted for television, and many are well-remembered for their witty and economical touches. Like Henry Kuttner, Kornbluth’s early death certainly costs us many great stories.

This post could have been called The Early Kornbluth after the Doubleday series that featured Isaac Asimov, Fred Pohl, Jack Williamson and Frank Belknap Long. The 1976 The Best of C. M. Kornbluth (edited by Fred Pohl) only includes two stories from this list: “The Rocket of 1955” and “The Words of Guru”. This may be because Kornbluth was young and larning his craft, but I think it also was because so many of these stories are collaborations.

Art by Richard Powers

Cyril Kornbluth, like the other Futurians, found their first magazine publication (after the fanzies) with three of their friends, Frederik Pohl, Donald A. Wollheim and Robert A. W. Lowdnes. These young men were all editors of shoe-string budget magazines, not much more than professional fanzines really. After their tiny budgets ran out, if their friends couldn’t provide manuscripts, they wrote them themselves. While this meant these pulps were not jammed with big names, it did mean new developing writers like Kornbluth had a place to see their work in print. For CMK, that meant the work if not his name.

The young Kornbluth was the pseudonymous Kornbluth, using a dozen nom de plums. He might have chosen this because he wanted to use his own name on more serious fare but mostly it was either a hangover from the fanzines (which were often irreverent) or because he had three or more stories in an issue. The pseudonym “S. D. Gottesman” reportedly was like Lynyrd Skynyrd, named after a hated school teacher.

And young is right, for some of these stories were written when Cyril was only sixteen. Like Cyril’s friends, his earliest work appears in fanzines but his transition is quick to professional magazines. By 1942 he had cracked John W. Campbell’s Astounding (with Donald A. Wollheim) and began his short career in the Detective Pulps.

1939

Artist unknown

“The Pursuit of Crame” (Scienti-Tales, March 1939) reprinted in The Phantagraph, March 1945) as Cyril Kornbluth

“The Ill-Advised Abracadabrations of Magus Heslich” (Cosmic Tales, March 1939)

Art by David A. Kyle and Hannes Bok

“The Rocket of 1955” (Escape, #2, August 1939) (as Cyril Kornbluth) reprinted in Stirring Science Stories, April 1941 (as Cecil Corwin) and Worlds Beyond, February 1951

“A Funny Article on the Convention” (Escape #3, September 1939) was Kornbluth’s take on the First World Science Fiction Convention in 1939

1940

“Ye Fantasie Bookes” (The Science Fiction Fan, March 1940)

Art by Gabriel Mayorga

“The Song of the Rocket” (Super Science Stories, March 1940) as by Gabriel Barclay – The Barclay house name would later be used by Manly Wade Wellman

Art by Hannes Bok

“Stepsons of Mars” (Astonishing Stories, April 1940) with Richard Wilson and Dirk Wylie as Ivar Towers

Art by Eron

“King Cole of Pluto” (Super Science Stories, May 1940) as S. D. Gottesman

Art by John B. Michel

“Grave” (The Phantagraph, May 1940)

“Stone” (The Phantagraph, May 1940)

“The Indefatigible Minimum” (The Phantagraph, June 1940) as by S. D. Gottesman

Art by Eron

“Before the Universe” (Super Science Stories, July 1940) as S. D. Gottesman

“The Return of the Indefatigible Minimum” (The Phantagraph August 1940) as by S. D. Gottesman

Artist unknown

“Nova Midplane” (Super Science Stories, November 1940) with Frederik Pohl as S. D. Gottesman

Art by Leo Morey

“Trouble in Time” (Astonishing Stories, December 1940) with Frederik Pohl as S. D.Gottesman

Art by Chet Cohen

“The Martians” (Escape #7, January 1940) as Gabriel Barclay

1941

Art by John Giunta

“Vacant World” (Super Science Stories, January 1941) with Frederik Pohl and Dirk Wylie as Dirk Wylie

Artist unknown

“Dead Center” (Stirring Science Stories, February 1941) as S. D. Gottesman

Art by Hannes Bok

“Thirteen O’Clock” (Stirring Science Stories, February 1941) as Cecil Corwin

Art by Leo Morey

“New Directions” (Cosmic Stories March 1941) as by Walter C. Davies

Art by John Forte Jr.

“Return From M-15” (Cosmic Stories, March 1941) as S. D. Gottesman

Art by David A. Kyle

“The Martians Are Coming” (Cosmic Stories, March 1941) with Robert A. W. Lowdnes and Donald A. Wollheim as Robert W. Lowdnes

Art by David A. Kyle

“The Reversible Revolutions” (Cosmic Stories, March 1941) as Cecil Corwin

Art by John R. Forte Jr.

“The Psychological Regulator” (Comet Stories, March 1941) as Arthur Cooke

Art by John R. Forte Jr.

“Sir Mallory’s Magnitude” (Science Fiction Quarterly, Winter 1941) as S. D. Gottesman

Artist unknown

“The Castle on Outerplanet” (Stirring Science Stories, April 1941) with Robert A. W. Lowdnes and Frederik Pohl as S. D. Gottesman

Art by Burford

“A Prince of Pluto” (Future Fiction, April 1941) with Frederik Pohl as Paul Dennis Lavond

Art by Leo Morey

“Exiles of the New Planet” (Astonishing Stories, April 1941) with Robert A. W. Lowdnes and Frederik Pohl as Paul Dennis Lavond

Artist unknown

“Best Friend” (Super Science Novels, May 1941) with Frederik Pohl as S. D. Gottesman

Art by Hannes Bok

“So You Want to Be a Space-Flier?” (Cosmic Stories, May 1941) with Donald A. Wollheim as by Martin Pearson

Art by Hannes Bok

“Dimension of Darkness” (Cosmic Stories, May 1941) as S. D. Gottesman

Art by David A. Kyle

“No Place to Go” (Cosmic Stories, May 1941) as Edward J. Bellin

Artist unknown

“What Sorghum Says” (Cosmic Stories, May 1941) as Cecil Corwin

Art by Frank R. Paul

“Callistan Tomb” (Science Fiction Quarterly, Spring 1941) with Frederik Pohl as Paul Dennis Lavond

Art by Boris Dolgov

“Forgotten Tongue” (Stirring Science Stories, June 1941) as Walter C. Davies

Art by Hannes Bok

“Kazam Collects” (Stirring Science Stories, June 1941) as S. D. Gottesman

Art by Hannes Bok

“Mr. Packer Goes to Hell” (Stirring Science Stories, June 1941) as Cecil Corwin

Art by Hannes Bok

“The Words of Guru” as Kenneth Falconer (Stirring Science Stories, June 1941) reprinted Avon Fantasy Reader, No. 5

Art by Boris Dolgov

“Fire Power” (Cosmic Stories, July 1941) as S. D. Gottesman

Art by Hannes Bok

“Interference” (Cosmic Stories, July 1941) as Walter C. Davies

Art by Hannes Bok

“The City in the Sofa” (Cosmic Stories, July 1941) as Cecil Corwin

Art by Leo Morey

“Mars-Tube” (Astonishing Stories, September 1941) with Frederik Pohl as S. D. Gottesman

1942

Artist unknown

“Error in Guinea Pigs” (10 Story Mystery Magazine February 1942) as by Walter C. Davies

Art by Hannes Bok

“Masquerade” (Stirring Science Stories, March 1942) as Kenneth Falconer

Art by Hannes Bok

“The Golden Road” (Stirring Science Stories, March 1942) as Cecil Corwin

Art by Hannes Bok

“The Perfect Invasion” (Stirring Science Stories, March 1942) as S. D. Gottesman

“Segment” (The Phantagraph, March 1942)

Art by Paul Orban

“The Embassy” (Astounding Science-Fiction March 1942) with Donald A. Wollheim as by Martin Pearson

Art by Hannes Bok

“Crisis” (Science Fiction Quarterly, Spring 1942) as S. D. Gottesman

Art by Chester Cohen

“Einstein’s Planetoid” (Science Fiction Quarterly, Spring 1942) with Robert A. W. Lowdnes and Frederik Pohl as Paul Dennis Lavond

Art by Lin Streeter

“The Core” (Future Combined with Science Fiction, April 1942) as S. D. Gottesman

“The Objective Approach” (The Phantagraph, May 1942) as Cecil Corwin

Art by H. W. Wesso

“An Old Neptunian Custom” (Super Science Stories, August 1942) with Frederik Pohl as Scott Mariner

Art by Frank R. Paul

“The Extrapolated Dimwit” (Future Fantasy and Science Fiction, October 1942) with Robert A. W. Lowdnes and Frederik Pohl as S. D. Gotteman

1943

Art by Norman Saunders

“Cure for Killers” (10 Story Mystery Magazine February 1943) with Frederik Pohl as by Scott Mariner

1944

“Chant of the Black Magicians” (The Phantagraph, November 1944)

Conclusion

Cyril would not write another story until “Beer Bottle Polka” (Black Mask, September 1946). He spent 1943-1945 in the army, where he lugged a machine gun around the Ardennes Forest in the Battle of Bulge. This strain on his heart would ultimately kill him in 1958. But C. M. Kornbluth had many more stories to write, including The Space Merchants with Fred Pohl.

Next time: 1946-1958

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