RIP: Charles Sheffield 99
uberdood writes "Dr. Charles Sheffield, noted for such SF works as the Heritage Universe series, Tomorrow and Tomorrow, Higher Education, The Ganymede Club, Brothers to Dragons, Cold As Ice, and The Mind Pool, has died of brain cancer at the age of 67. Sheffield will be remembered for colorful characters such as McAndrew - and the wealth of short stories that helped make SF pulp rags so enjoyable. More information can be found via the Washington Post article. One of my favorite authors, dammit."
Lived it (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Lived it (Score:1)
If you haven't read any of his stuff, I recommend starting with something like "Higher Education."
God bless him, he was a cool author. [snif; restrained mourning and respectful thoughts for the dearly departed.]
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Re:cat got my tongue (Score:1, Informative)
This may be what Sheffield died from. Brain cancer.
"It's not a tumor"
*p.s. don't think me a coward, I just don't have the time to register at this moment! Feel free to email me back at cybergothgirlie@yahoo.com*
Sandra
Re:cat got my tongue (Score:1, Informative)
Getting back on topic, I agree his death is truly a great loss and a shame.
Re:cat got my tongue (Score:3, Insightful)
It may be a difference of US/UK usage, but I've worked with a lot of British biologists and never noticed it that way.
Re:cat got my tongue (Score:2)
Re:The nice thing about Slashdot's slowness (Score:2, Informative)
I am not an American, but not to consider a man who was a renowned scientist and science-fiction writer an American icon means that you must have been abducted by aliens 40 years ago, forced to watch only US commercials, Tony Blair footage and Ally McBeal having a romantic fit, to see how long would your neuronal structures survive to this onslaught!!!
He was so kind to grant me a special authorisation to copy an out of print book of his, Trader's World, as I was using it in a graduate course I was teaching in an American university.
Had more Americans read this book, probably there would be by now a different administration in the White House, as it is a novel that furthers tolerance and understanding, rather than sending in the Special Forces to solve international conflicts...
Of my 18 bright graduates students not a single one thought he was not a very good writer [and they didn't even know what he had achieved as a scientist an a technologist].
Re:The nice thing about Slashdot's slowness (Score:4, Insightful)
Right or wrong, icon would imply being prominent in the public eye. Dr. Sheffield was brilliant. He was known and respected in the sciences as well as the science fiction circles. I have no doubt that he treated you and everyone he came in contact with kindly.
But, he was not "pop culture." He was not a Hollywood name. He was not a Spice Girl or a member of N'Sync. He didn't have music videos. He didn't do a posthumous duet with Elvis or John Lennon. (Well at least he didn't voluntarily do one during his lifetime.) He didn't appear on Leno or American Bandstand. He didn't host Saturday Night Live (well he might have, but nobody's watched it in the last 10 years anyway.)
I am not saying that these are good things. I'm just listing off the crap required to be an "American Icon (TM)" in the true P.T. Barnum tradition of "never underestimating the taste of the American public."
(And is caffeine a basic nutrient or a food group?)
Re:The nice thing about Slashdot's slowness (Score:1)
Hopefully I may be forgiven for believing, possibly because of my wobbly English, that you were actually being unfair to him. This is what I thought deserved a dissenting voice.
Your vivid description of an "American icon" seems to me quite truthful-being an "American icon" does not seem anything to write home about, though...
[And yes, it looks like your pals are more powerful than mine, as your karma gets bumped up so much, whilst I have to struggle to get a miserly 2...].
Also, I believe that caffeine is a basic nutrient, but it might be considered a food group on the sole condition that the user be a night-prowling hardcore geek. Unfortunately I don't qualify...
We should strive to be like Sheffield (Score:4, Insightful)
He took the usual path of life, went and got a job, got married, and had children. But when he turned 40 and was in Iran doing business for a huge multinational corporation, something in him snapped -- and after reading a Sci-Fi novel, he decided to become a writer himself.
He left his high-paying job, and later his wife left him because he couldn't pay the bills. After miserable failure, he still persisted, and eventually got published and became a famous and respected Sci-Fi writer.
He's gone now, but at least he didn't go through the last years of his life a zombie like everyone else: an overworked corporate zombie with a wife for show, someone who, on the inside, is truly happy but is too afraid to challenge it.
Not true.. (Score:3, Interesting)
[-)
Thank you! (Score:1)
Oh, and did you know that there's actually a metal tribute album [metal-observer.com] to ABBA?
Rock on!
SexyKellyOsborne Is A Troll (Score:1)
Re:We should strive to be like Sheffield (Score:2)
Re:We should strive to be like Sheffield (Score:1)
Re:We should strive to be like Sheffield (Score:1)
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Re:We should strive to be like Sheffield (Score:5, Informative)
Sheffield had three wives, four children, and was a physicist before he started writing. His first wife actually died of cancer. His widow is Nancy Kress, also a well known author of science fiction who has won more awards than he has.
You may take a gander at this short autobiography [sff.net].
Remarried Re:We should strive to be like Sheffield (Score:2)
Charles Sheffield remarried Nancy Kress, a very talented SF writer in her own right.
Didn't Live It (Score:5, Interesting)
I met him years ago and he seemed far younger than his actual age. He was a brilliant man and an author who deserved far more recognition than he received. Sheffield was, perhaps, THE finest writer of SCIENCE fiction during his time. He carried a regular job as Chief Scientist at the Earth Sciences Corporation and was more prolific than most full time writers. In a field that barely pays a fair rate for adult novels, he also wrote short stories and novels for young adults. His name should have been ranked with Asimov, Heinlein and Clarke.
Perhaps now that he's gone the SF community will realize what they've lost - or perhaps they'll just go back to reading Star Wars and Star Trek books.
Kermit
Can we have an obituary category? (Score:2, Interesting)
And generally, a great deal of disrespect is generated with stories, such as these. A spinning grave icon, indeed. But this isn't news for nerds.
Re:Can we have an obituary category? (Score:3, Insightful)
We don't need stories about people who, you know, actually did something worthwhile with their careers in the tech sector. Screw that.
His books live (Score:5, Informative)
Re:His books live (Score:1)
Brother to Dragons (Score:2, Interesting)
Damn.
Re:Call me ignorant... (Score:1)
Och, Damn. (Score:4, Interesting)
My two cents (Score:2)
As long as we're talking about SF authors, I can recommend two authors you may not have read: Alfred Bester and Greg Egan. Bester's two most well-known novels are The Demolished Man [amazon.com] and The Stars My Destination [amazon.com], which really are great classics from the 50s. Egan is a current writer; his books involve a lot of nanotech and quantum physics (some of it even comprehensible), like Permutation City [amazon.com] and Diaspora [amazon.com], although I would really recommend Diaspora as his best book so far.
Re:My two cents (Score:1)
Anyway, there are a lot more great SF authors out there than Bester and Egan - Dan Simmons, Robert Reed, Alastair Reynolds, Michael Swanwick, Allen Steele (though I suggest sticking to Steele's short stories, his novels are just political dogma disguised as SF), George R. R. Martin (Martin was well known in the Sci Fi field long before his current fantasy popularity) - plus the obvious Big Names - Orson Scott Card, Heinlein, Isaac Asimov, I could go on forever. If only there were more time to read...
Tomorrow and Tomorrow (Score:1)
Charles Sheffield, dead at 67 (Score:2)
Even if you didn't enjoy his books such as "Tomorrow and Tomorrow", "Higher Education", and "The Ganymede Club" (not to be confused with "The Gay Men Club"!), you probably enjoyed watching his son, Gary Sheffield, help the Florida Marlins win the world series. Truly a geek icon.
NOOOO! (Score:1)
Read only a little (Score:1)
I actually got it as a filler during one of the times I've joined the Club in the past 25 years.
I've read and enjoyed it several times but never took the time to read any of his other work. I suppose I will now.
R.I.P.
City on Mars named after him - Kinda cool (Score:3, Interesting)
Kind of a neat way to honor an author you admire, doncha think?
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Thanks (OT) (Score:2)
Truth is, I was kinda scared when I saw the message about your reply at my message center ("But I know Robinson must've acknowledged him somewhere!"). Human nature to assume the worst, I guess. :)
Odd, that I never thought to call those books "beautiful," and yet they absolutely are. You hit the nail right on the head. It's a shame that there aren't more works that deserve that label.
Re: (Score:1)
Can someone suggest a reading list? (Score:4, Interesting)
So, here's my question: Does anyone who has read him have a suggestion on which book would be a good one as a first read? Not necesarrily his best (as that might include his series) but a single novel or collection that would give me a feel for his work and let me know if I would like to dig further into his collected works.
Thanks
Re:Can someone suggest a reading list? (Score:1)
Re:Can someone suggest a reading list? (Score:2)
Re:Can someone suggest a reading list? (Score:3, Informative)
I also read Tomorrow and Tomorrow, which started out really cool but probably should have been a short story. Basically this classical musician's wife dies of a rare sickness and so he has her cryogenically frozen so that she can be fixed and reborn. But he wants to be there when she wakes up, so he has to come up with a bunch of money in order to freeze himself too as well as keep them both on ice for the duration... He also realizes that no one is just going to decide to wake him and his wife up because they're nice people. They're going to need a reason to wake him up. (Which I thought was a very astute observation.) So he spends the next few years making uninteresting (to him) movie soundtracks and so on that sell well for money then once he has enough he goes around and interviews everyone he thinks will become 'the 21st century Mozart/Shakespeare/etc.'
Anyway, he spends the rest of the book racing through time trying to wake his wife. My opinion through most of it was that it was very well done and a fantastically interesting vision of the future, but in the end the main character was overwhelmingly obsessed with his lovly late wife. :/ But that aside, it was really cool.
Re:Can someone suggest a reading list? (Score:2)
A caveat, though: don't read his co-written books. They're terrible. So's the collection Erasmus Magister. Rather than bitching about these, I prefer to congratulate him. He's a hard science writer, and the fantasy/horror he wrote may have been bad, but he at least made the attempt at broadening his horizons. He could've just kept to the hard science and no-one would complain, but in going for books like the Judas Cross (terrible, terrible book) he showed us that he was willing to experiment.
Thanks, Slashdot (Score:1)
SF Author Necrology (Somewhat OT) (Score:3, Informative)
In any case, Locus Magazine has acknowledged the fact and dedicated a link [slashdot.org] to it. If you have a favorite who has passed away recently, you might want to look there and then click on their obituaries. You just might discover something you didn't know about your favorite author.
Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)
Re:A far-sighted author (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Time to bitch around (Score:3, Insightful)
So what the f*ck is going on here? In this thread I see ACs trolling and flaming all over the place. Allright, maybe you haven't read his works but so what? What's wrong with you people, if anything else doesn't matter to you then there is still the matter that someone is actually dead! Where is the respect for that? Whether you have read his stories or not, whether you liked them or not, this is a sad loss. (And yes, I know that other people die, too, and that's also a loss.)
Re:Time to bitch around (Score:2)
You'll have 20 or so redundant "Wow. He did great stuff. I'll miss him." messages. And then you'll have just as many complete trolls, "He didn't really die! He cross-gendered into a woman and his family is just morning the public passing of his old persona!" or "I'm still here! The reports of my death are greatly exagerated!"
The fact that this particular person is shown disrespect is nothing new. Attempt to search back (with the lack of a obit category) on similar stories previously posted. You'll see a trollfest far greater than you have here.
Sad, but a true statement of the way things are here.
Some sample writing (Score:2)
He didn't have any books in the current batch of books in the Baen Free Library, but there are a few Borderlands of Science columns at Baen.com [baen.com]
Plup rags? (Score:1)
I wouldn't exactly call Analog a "plup rag".
Re:Plup rags? (Score:1)
My very best to Nancy Kress, his widow (Score:1, Interesting)
RIP: Charles Sheffield (Score:1)
I've been a sf fan over 35 years now- since I was 10, and since the late '70s Charles Sheffield's work has been a constant favorite. I first became aware of his stories reading Analog- he had several of his early novels serialized [Proteus Unbound, Between the Strokes of Night], and quite a few shorter length works [the individual Trader's World & McAndrew stories] in it during early years of his career
Having read almost all of his sf titles, I unequivocally state that Sheffield offered a rare blend of unique extrapolations of current science & technology with interesting & well-paced plots.
I was lucky enough to meet & talk with him at a number of east cost sf cons over the last few years, at which he was a regular panelist and reader. Impressive, to say the least. If you like any kind of science-y sf, then I recommend you read any Sheffield you can get your mitts on!
My sympathies to his family, friends and fans.
silent lurker
Dismay (Score:1)
Not since Heinlein has there been an author who so successfully pulled off the "SF for teenagers" sub-genre. Sure the plots were re-hashes, or, more charitably, tributes, but darn it they were good clean fun. Well plotted, characters you cared about, and great settings - you can't ask for more than that.
So long Doc. I'll miss you.
This is extremely sad news! (Score:2)
My thoughts and prayers go out to his family.
-F-
Last Post! (Score:1)
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