Edwin Charles Tubb


Edwin Charles Tubb, also known as E. C. Tubb, was a British writer of science fiction, fantasy and western novels. The author of over 140 novels and 230 short stories and novellas, Tubb is best known for The Dumarest Saga, an epic science-fiction saga set in the far future. Michael Moorcock wrote, "His reputation for fast-moving and colourful SF writing is unmatched by anyone in Britain."
Much of Tubb's work was written under pseudonyms including Gregory Kern, Carl Maddox, Alan Guthrie, Eric Storm and George Holt. He used 58 pen names over five decades of writing, although some of these were publishers' house names also used by other writers: Volsted Gridban, Gill Hunt, King Lang, Roy Sheldon and Brian Shaw. Tubb's Charles Grey alias was solely his own and acquired a big following in the early 1950s.

Life

Tubb was born in London and resided there until his death in 2010. He married Iris Kathleen Smith in 1944 and is survived by their two daughters, Jennifer and Linda, three grandsons, John Barham, Alan Barham and Steven, and two granddaughters, Lisa Elcomb and Julie Hickmott.

Career

An avid reader of pulp science-fiction and fantasy in his youth, in 1938 Tubb made contact with other British fans and made his first attempts at writing in the genre. "My first attempts were written for my own pleasure," he later told New Worlds, "and they are now perfect examples of what not to do". Tubb found that he had a particular talent as a writer of stories in that genre when his short story "No Short Cuts" was published in New Worlds magazine in 1951. Previously a salesman of printing machinery, he opted for a full-time career as a writer and soon became renowned for the speed and diversity of his output.
Tubb contributed to many of the science fiction magazines of the 1950s including Futuristic Science Stories, Science Fantasy, Nebula. and Galaxy Science Fiction. He contributed heavily to Authentic Science Fiction, editing the magazine for nearly two years from February 1956 until it folded in October 1957. During this time he found it so difficult to find good writers to contribute to the magazine that he often wrote most of the stories himself under a variety of pseudonyms: one issue of Authentic was written entirely by Tubb, including the letters column.
His main work in the science fiction genre, the Dumarest series, appeared from 1967 to 1985, with two final volumes in 1997 and 2008. His second major series, the Cap Kennedy series, was written from 1973 to 1983.
Later in life Tubb updated many of his 1950s science fiction novels for 21st century readers.
Tubb was one of the co-founders of the British Science Fiction Association.

Honors

Tubb was Guest of Honour at Heicon, the 1970 World Science Fiction Convention, in Heidelberg, Germany. He was a five-time winner of the Nebula Science Fiction Magazine Literary Award and the recipient of the 1955 Cytricon Literary Award for Best British SF Writer. His short story "Lucifer!" won the Europa Prize in 1972. In 2010, his novel The Possessed won the Premio Italia Award for Best International Novel.

Works

The Dumarest saga

Tubb's best known series is The Dumarest Saga, a far future epic science-fiction saga charting the adventures of traveler Earl Dumarest as he attempts to find his way back to his home planet, Earth, from a region of space so far distant that the existence of the planet is believed to be nothing more than a myth. Originally written in what Michael Moorcock has described as a "conscious and acknowledged imitation" of Leigh Brackett's Eric John Stark stories, the series subsequently developed a style of storytelling unique to Tubb.
Published over a span of more than 40 years, the Dumarest Saga comprised 33 novels. The 33rd, which brings closure to Dumarest's search for Earth, was published in 2008 by Homeworld Press of Chicago. A pair of Dumarest short stories, entitled "Child of Earth" and "Figona" and published in the science fiction anthologies Fantasy Adventures 1 and Fantasy Adventures 2, were extracts from this longer work.

Cap Kennedy series

Tubb's other main novel series, Cap Kennedy, is space opera in the style of Perry Rhodan. Known as F.A.T.E. in the UK, the novels follow the adventures of Captain 'Cap' Kennedy, a Free Acting Terran Envoy with licence to act as judge, jury, and executioner, and the power to intervene in any situation which threatens the peace of the Terran Sphere, an interplanetary federation centred on Earth.
Independently wealthy and operating from his personal spaceship, the Mordain, Kennedy is assisted on his missions by engineer Penza Saratov, veteran scientist Professor Jarl Luden, and alien navigator Veem Chemile, a humanoid chameleon who claims to be descended from the Zheltyana, an ancient race which dominated the galaxy in the distant past before vanishing without trace. The discovery of mysterious artifacts left behind by the Zheltyana on different worlds often provided the spring-board for the stories in the series.
Lester del Rey found that although the first volume managed to "avoid the primitiveness and the formula" that spoiled many similar series, the virtues of such series were also missing, leaving him unenthusiastic. He later noted improvement in a subsequent installment.
Tubb wrote 17 Cap Kennedy novels, all under the pseudonym Gregory Kern.
These books were the basis for the Commander Scott series from German publishers Bastei. This series included all of the Cap Kennedy books by Tubb as well as a number of further novels, written under pseudonym by different German authors. Published in the format of romanheft, the series lasted for 42 issues from 1975 to 1976.

Space 1999 series

Tubb was the author of six novels based on Gerry Anderson's 1975 science fiction television series . Breakaway, Collision Course and Earthbound are novelizations of 11 scripts written for the series' first season format, while Alien Seed, Rogue Planet and Earthfall are original novels set within the first season continuity. The latter rejected the format changes of the TV series' second season to provide a satisfactory conclusion to the Space 1999 story.
Tubb's short story "Random Sample" from New Writings in SF 29 was revised to become "Dead End", a short story in the Space: 1999 anthology Shepherd Moon. The original story's Prometheus starship crew are replaced by the Moonbase Alpha characters in the Space: 1999 version. "Random Sample" was itself a revised version of a much earlier Tubb short, "Entrance Exam", originally published in New Worlds magazine.

Other science fiction

Tubb's best known standalone novel is The Space-Born, which started life as a serial for New Worlds Science Fiction magazine entitled "Star Ship". An acknowledged masterpiece of the "generational starship" story, the book tells of a society who are the sixteenth generation of the original crew of a vast starship on a 300-year journey to Pollux from Earth. The plot centres on a protagonist whose job is to eliminate anyone who has become a burden to the society, through ill health, mental instability, or anyone over 40.
Other notable standalone novels include Alien Dust, which charts the first 35 years of an Earth colony on Mars, and Moon Base, a science fiction detective thriller set on a British Moonbase where a biochemical computer is under development. The short story collections Ten From Tomorrow, A Scatter of Stardust and The Best Science Fiction of E.C. Tubb contain the best of Tubb's short form writing, including "The Last Day of Summer", "Little Girl Lost", "", "The Bells of Acheron", "Fresh Guy", "The Ming Vase", "J is for Jeanne", and "Evane".

Other genres

Outside the field of science fiction, Tubb wrote 11 western novels, a detective novel and a Foreign Legion novel for Badger Books. Once again, many of these were published under a variety of pseudonyms, including the house name "Chuck Adams", which were also used by other authors. In the 1970s he wrote a trilogy of historical novels set in Ancient Rome under the pseudonym Edward Thomson.

Dramatisations

Tubb's 1955 novel The Space-Born was dramatised for French television in 1962 as a 90-minute play for Radiodiffusion-Télévision Française. The production was directed by Alain Boudet from a script by Michael Subrela and broadcast on 11 December 1962.
The short story "Little Girl Lost", originally published in New Worlds magazine, was dramatised as a segment of Night Gallery in 1972. Adapted by Stanford Whitmore and directed by Timothy Galfras, with a cast featuring William Windom and Ed Nelson, the segment originally aired on 1 March 1972, paired with The Caterpillar in the penultimate episode of the series' second season.

The Dumarest Saga (US: Dumarest of Terra)

  1. The Winds of Gath
  2. Derai
  3. Toyman
  4. Kalin
  5. The Jester at Scar
  6. Lallia
  7. Technos
  8. Veruchia
  9. Mayenne
  10. Jondelle
  11. Zenya
  12. Eloise
  13. Eye of the Zodiac
  14. Jack of Swords
  15. Spectrum of a Forgotten Sun
  16. Haven of Darkness
  17. Prison of Night
  18. Incident on Ath
  19. The Quillian Sector
  20. Web of Sand
  21. Iduna's Universe
  22. The Terra Data
  23. World of Promise
  24. Nectar of Heaven
  25. The Terridae
  26. The Coming Event
  27. Earth is Heaven
  28. Melome
  29. Angado
  30. Symbol of Terra
  31. The Temple of Truth
  32. The Return
  33. Child of Earth
All as by Gregory Kern
  1. Galaxy of the Lost
  2. Slave Ship from Sergan
  3. Monster of Metelaze
  4. Enemy Within the Skull
  5. Jewel of Jarhen
  6. Seetee Alert!
  7. The Gholan Gate
  8. The Eater of Worlds
  9. Earth Enslaved
  10. Planet of Dread
  11. Spawn of Laban
  12. The Genetic Buccaneer
  13. A World Aflame
  14. The Ghosts of Epidoris
  15. Mimics of Dephene
  16. Beyond the Galactic Lens
  17. The Galactiad

    Space: 1999

  18. Breakaway
  19. Collision Course
  20. Alien Seed
  21. Rogue Planet
  22. Earthfall
  23. Earthbound

    The Chronicles of Malkar

  24. Death God's Doom
  25. The Sleeping City

    Other science fiction novels

All as by Edward Thomson
  1. Atilus the Slave
  2. Atilus the Gladiator
  3. Gladiator

    Comic Books