The Last Dangerous Visions

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The Last Dangerous Visions
EditorHarlan Ellison / J. Michael Straczynski
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SeriesDangerous Visions
Genrespeculative fiction
Publication date
September 2024
(projected)
Preceded byAgain, Dangerous Visions 

The Last Dangerous Visions (often abbreviated TLDV, sometimes LDV) is an unpublished original speculative fiction anthology intended to follow Dangerous Visions (1967) and Again, Dangerous Visions (1972). Like its predecessors, it was edited by American author Harlan Ellison, with introductions to be provided by him. Ellison died in 2018 with the anthology unfinished.

On November 13, 2020, the Ellison estate's executor J. Michael Straczynski announced his intention to publish it. In 2022 it was purchased by Blackstone Publishers and is planned for publication in September 2024.

Background[edit]

The third anthology was started but, controversially, has yet to be finished. It has become something of a legend in science fiction as the genre's most famous unpublished book.[1][2] It was originally announced for publication in 1973, but has not seen print fifty years later. Ellison came under criticism for his treatment of some writers who sold their stories to him, estimated to number around 120.[3] Many of these writers have since died.

British author Christopher Priest, whose story "An Infinite Summer" had been commissioned for TLDV in 1974 and withdrawn after four months without any response, wrote a lengthy critique of Ellison's failure to complete the project. It was first published by Priest in 1987 as The Last Deadloss Visions, a pun on the title of Priest's fanzine Deadloss where it appeared.[4] It proved so popular that it had two more editions, expanded with reader letters and other events, later in 1987 and 1988. In 1994 it was further expanded as The Book on the Edge of Forever (an allusion to Ellison's Star Trek episode, "The City on the Edge of Forever") from American publisher Fantagraphics Books, this was nominated for the Hugo Award for Best Related Work.[5] Priest also released the final draft online.[6]

On June 28, 2018, Ellison died, with the anthology still unfinished.

J. Michael Straczynski work[edit]

On November 13, 2020, the Ellison estate's executor J. Michael Straczynski announced that he would oversee the project to publish the book.[7][8] Straczynski's volume will not include withdrawn stories nor stories "overtaken by real-world events", so the final length is just a sixth of the originally intended, but will include new stories from major contemporary science fiction writers as well as work from new authors, including one story from an unpublished writer. The book will conclude with "one last, significant work by Harlan which has never been published" which "ties directly into the reason why The Last Dangerous Visions has taken so long to come to light." The stories will be organized by theme and accompanied by artwork from Tim Kirk (who had been commissioned in the 1970s). The rights to all stories not used will revert to the authors.

In the initial announcement, Straczynski stated his intention to market the book to publishers in March/April 2021. He then reported sending the finished manuscript to an agent on September 26, 2021,[9] with an updated word count of 112,000.[10] On July 10, 2022, Straczynski announced on Twitter that The Last Dangerous Visions will be published on September 1, 2024, by Blackstone Publishers.[11]

Contents[edit]

The contents of The Last Dangerous Visions were announced on several occasions, beginning in the January 1973 issue #7 of the semiprozine Alien Critic.[12] Stories were being added, dropped, or substituted between each announced version. The most complete version was announced in 1979; listed were 113 stories by 102 authors, to be collected in three volumes.

Contents as of 1979[edit]

It was announced in the April 1979 issue of the Locus magazine that the anthology had been sold to Berkley Books, which planned to publish the 645,000 words of fiction in three volumes. A table of contents was published in the June 1979 issue (#222). Story titles are followed by an approximate word count (note that the totals given do not match the sum of individual stories; Ellison may have added his introductions to each volume). Authors marked with a '†' have died since submitting their work to Ellison. Stories marked with a '‡' have been published elsewhere by the author or their estate.

Book One[edit]

34 authors, 35 stories, 214,250 words.

  1. "Among the Beautiful Bright Children"‡ by James E. Gunn† (9100)
  2. "Dark Night in Toyland"‡ by Bob Shaw† (4000) – published in 1988; withdrawn by Shaw's estate after his 1996 death
  3. "Living Inside" by Bruce Sterling (2250)
  4. "The Bing Bang Blues" by Delbert Casada (2000)
  5. "Ponce De Leon's Pants" by Mack Reynolds† (1800)
  6. "The True Believer" by A. Bertram Chandler† (7000)
  7. "The Bones Do Lie"‡ by Anne McCaffrey† (7000)
  8. "Doug, Where Are We? I Don't Know. A Spaceship Maybe" by Grant Carrington (3800)
  9. "Child of Mind" by Lisa Tuttle (6800)
  10. "Dark Threshold" by P. C. Hodgell (1500)
  11. "Falling From Grace" by Ward Moore† (4000)
  12. "The 100 Million Horses of Planet Dada" by Daniel Walther† (both French and English versions) (4200)
  13. "None So Deaf" by Richard E. Peck (2000)
  14. "A Time for Praying" by G. C. Edmondson† (7700)
  15. "The Amazonas Link" by James Sutherland (6000)
  16. "At the Sign of the Boar's Head Nebula"‡ by Richard Wilson† (47000)
  17. "All Creatures Great and Small" by Howard Fast† (1200)
  18. "A Night at Madame Mephisto's" by Joseph F. Pumilia (1200)
  19. "What Used to be Called Dead"‡ by Leslie A. Fiedler† (2800)
  20. "Not All a Dream"‡ by Manly Wade Wellman† (5400)
  21. "A Day in the Life of A-420" by Felix C. Gotschalk† (Jacques Goudchaux) (2600)
  22. "The Residents of Kingston" by Doris Piserchia† (5000)
  23. "Free Enterprise"‡ by Jerry Pournelle† (11000)
  24. "Rundown" by John Morressy† (1200)
  25. "Various Kinds of Conceit"‡ by Arthur Byron Cover (2000)
  26. "Son of 'Wild in the Streets'" by Robert Thom† (15800)
  27. "Dick and Jane Go to Mars" by Wilson Tucker† (7500)
  28. "On the Way to the Woman of Your Dreams" by Raul Judson (3800)
  29. "Blackstop" by Gerard Conway (5500)
  30. "Ten Times Your Fingers and Double Your Toes"‡ by Craig Strete (3500)
  31. "The Names of Yanils"‡ by Chan Davis (9000)
  32. "Return to Elf Hill" by Robert Lilly (900)
  33. "The Carbon Dream"‡ by Jack Dann (9500)
  34. "Dogs' Lives"‡ by Michael Bishop (6000) (since withdrawn by the author)

Book Two[edit]

32 authors, 40 stories, 216,527 words.

  1. "Universe on the Turn"‡ by Ian Watson (4200) (subsequently withdrawn by the author)
  2. "The Children of Bull Weed" by Gordon Eklund (17000) (some sources title this "The Children of Bull Wood")
  3. "Precis of the Rappacini Report"‡ by Anthony Boucher† (850) (with an Afterword by Richard Matheson†)
  4. "Grandma, What's the Sky Made Of?" by Susan C. Lette (1500)
  5. "A Rousing Explanation of the Events Surrounding My Sister's Death" by David Wise† (1800)
  6. "The Dawn Patrol" by P.J. Plauger (10000)
  7. "I Had No Head and My Eyes Were Floating Way Up in the Air"‡ by Clifford D. Simak† (6600)
  8. "To Have and To Hold"‡ by Langdon Jones (20000)
  9. "The Malibu Fault" by Jonathan Fast (1750)
  10. "√-1 Think, Therefore √-1 Am" by Leonard Isaacs† (1000)
  11. "The Taut Arc of Desire" by Philippe Curval (7200) (both French and English versions)
  12. "A Journey South"‡ by John Christopher† (21500)
  13. "The Return of Agent Black" by Ron Goulart (3800)
  14. "The Stone Which the Builders Rejected"‡ by Avram Davidson† (2000)
  15. "Signals"‡ by Charles L. Harness† (13125)
  16. "Thumbing it on the Beam and Other Magic Melting Moments" by D. M. Rowles (2000)
  17. "End" by Raylyn Moore† (9250)
  18. "Uncle Tom's Time Machine" by John Jakes† (3000)
  19. "Adversaries" by Franklin Fisher† (4700)
  20. "Copping Out" by Hank Davis (1000)
  21. "Stark and the Star Kings"‡ by Edmond Hamilton† and Leigh Brackett† (10000)
  22. "The Danaan Children Laugh" by Mildred Downey Broxon (5300)
  23. "Play Sweetly, In Harmony" by Joseph Green (6300)
  24. "Primordial Follies"‡ by Robert Sheckley† (4000)
  25. "Cargo Run" by William E. Cochrane (18800)
  26. "Pipeline to Paradise"‡ by Nelson S. Bond† (5000)
  27. "Geriatric Ward"‡ by Orson Scott Card (7000)
  28. "A Night at the Opera" by Robert Wissner (3000)
  29. "The Red Dream" by Charles Platt (9800)
  30. "Living Alone in the Jungle"‡ by Algis Budrys† (1352)
  31. "The Life and the Clay" by Edgar Pangborn† (6500)

Book Three[edit]

36 authors, 38 stories, 214,200 words.

  1. "Mama's Girl"‡ by Daniel Keyes† (4000)
  2. "Himself in Anachron"‡ by Cordwainer Smith† (2500)
  3. "Dreamwork, A Novel" by Pamela Zoline (16000)
  4. "The Giant Rat of Sumatra, or By the Light of the Silvery" by the Firesign Theatre (5000)
  5. "Leveled Best" by Steve Herbst (1300)
  6. "Search Cycle: Beginning and Ending" by Russell Bates
    • "The Last Quest" (2500)
    • "Fifth and Last Horseman" (5000)
  7. "XYY" by Vonda McIntyre† (1600)
  8. "The Accidental Ferosslk"‡ by Frank Herbert† (3500)
  9. "The Burning Zone" by Graham Charnock (6000)
  10. "Cacophony in Pink and Ochre" by Doris Pitkin Buck† (5500)
  11. "The Accidents of Blood" by Frank Bryning† (5500)
  12. "The Murderer's Song"‡ by Michael Moorcock (7500)
  13. "On the Other Side of Space, In the Lobby of the Potlatch Inn" by Wallace West† (6500)
  14. "Two From Kotzwinkle's Bestiary" by William Kotzwinkle (5000)
  15. "Childfinder"‡ by Octavia E. Butler† (3250)
  16. "Potiphee, Petey and Me"‡ by Tom Reamy† (17000)
  17. "The Seadragon" by Laurence Yep (17000)
  18. "Emerging Nation" by Alfred Bester† (2000)
  19. "Ugly Duckling Gets the Treatment and Becomes Cinderella Except Her Foot's Too Big for the Prince's Slipper and Is Webbed Besides" by Robert Thurston (3500)
  20. "Goodbye" by Steven Utley† (2000)
  21. "Golgotha" by Graham Hall† (3200)
  22. "War Stories" by Edward Bryant† (10000)
  23. "The Bellman"‡ by John Varley (11500)
  24. "Fantasy for Six Electrodes and One Adrenaline Drip (A Play in the Form of a Feelie Script)"‡ by Joe Haldeman (10000)
  25. "A Dog and His Boy"‡ by Harry Harrison† (4000)
  26. "Las Animas" by Janet Nay (6800)
  27. "False Premises" by George Alec Effinger
    • "The Capitals Are Wrong" (4000)
    • "Stage Fright" (2500)
    • "Rocky Colavito Batted .268 in 1955" (5500)
    • "Fishing With Hemingway" (3000)
  28. "The Senior Prom"‡ by Fred Saberhagen† (4800)
  29. "Skin" by A. E. van Vogt† (7000)
  30. "Halfway There" by Stan Dryer (3000)
  31. "Love Song"‡ by Gordon R. Dickson† (6000)
  32. "Suzy is Something Special" by Michael G. Coney† (8000)
  33. "Previews of Hell"‡ by Jack Williamson† (3000)

Missing, withdrawn or added stories[edit]

The following nine stories were not in the 1979 list but are listed in previous published contents, or known as submitted to Ellison – as Ellison kept on acquiring new stories long into the 1980s, this is the case with most of them.[citation needed]

  • "Where Are They Now?" by Steven Bryan Bieler was sold to LDV in 1984 and withdrawn in 1988.
  • "The Great Forest Lawn Clearance Sale: Hurry Last Days!" by Stephen Dedman, according to the author's website.[citation needed]
  • "Squad D" by Stephen King was submitted to LDV in the late 1970s, but reportedly not accepted in its initial draft.
  • "How Dobbstown Was Saved" by Bob Leman was sold to LDV in 1981.
  • "The Swastika Setup" (10,000 words) by Michael Moorcock was withdrawn and replaced by "The Murderer's Song" between the 1973 and 1979 lists (see also below); it was published in a 1972 magazine and a 1976 collection The Lives and Times of Jerry Cornelius.
  • "An Infinite Summer" by Christopher Priest was commissioned, ignored and withdrawn in 1974 and published in 1976.
  • "The Sibling" by Kit Reed† was originally sold to LDV and published in 2011.[13]
  • "The Isle of Sinbad" (10,000 words) by Thomas N. Scortia† was listed in the 1973 Alien Critic but not in the Locus 1979 list.
  • "A Thin Silver Line" by Steve Rasnic Tem was announced as "forthcoming in The Last Dangerous Visions" in 1994.[14]

Stories published elsewhere[edit]

As of mid-2023, at least forty stories purchased for Last Dangerous Visions have been published elsewhere.

  1. The first was "An Infinite Summer" by Christopher Priest which appeared in Andromeda 1 (1976) edited by Peter Weston. – As noted above, Priest withdrew it from TLDV four months after it was commissioned and delivered without any response, so Ellison never formally purchased, i. e. paid it.
  2. "Ten Times Your Fingers and Double Your Toes" by Craig Strete (1980)
  3. "Primordial Follies" by Robert Sheckley (1981 in German, 1998 in Italian)
  4. "The Murderer's Song" by Michael Moorcock (the replacement for "The Swastika Set-Up") was first published in German translation in 1981, appeared in the 1987 anthology Tales from the Forbidden Planet and was republished several times in Moorcock's collections. (Moorcock commented in 2001 semi-jocularly: "Harlan is a good friend of mine and I have a fairly easy relationship with him on this. Every five years I take the story I originally did for him and let someone else have it. Then I write him a new story."[15] but further iterations, if any, are unknown.)
  5. "Universe on the Turn" by Ian Watson was published in 1984 in Last Wave and in his 1985 collection Slow Birds.
  6. "Dogs' Lives" by Michael Bishop was published in the Spring 1984 issue of The Missouri Review. It was subsequently reprinted in the 1985 edition of Best American Short Stories.
  7. "Signals" by Charles L. Harness (1987)
  8. "Dark Night in Toyland" by Bob Shaw (1988)
  9. "What Used to be Called Dead" by Leslie A. Fiedler (1990)
  10. "Living Alone in the Jungle" by Algis Budrys (1991)
  11. "A Journey South" by John Christopher (1991)
  12. "Himself in Anachron" by Cordwainer Smith (died 1966) was included in the 1993 retrospective collection The Rediscovery of Man. Ellison threatened to sue the New England Science Fiction Association for publishing the story, sold to Ellison for the anthology by Smith's widow.[16] Soon they "reached an amicable settlement" allowing the book to remain on sale; the Ansible speculated "Perhaps, when he consulted the contract, HE might have found his rights to the story had long expired?"[17]
  13. "Mama's Girl" by Daniel Keyes has only appeared in Japanese translation[18] (Collected Stories, Hayakawa, 1993).
  14. "Pipeline to Paradise" by Nelson Bond appeared in the anthology Wheel of Fortune (1995), edited by Roger Zelazny. It was reprinted in 2002 in Bond's second Arkham House collection, The Far Side of Nowhere. Ellison publicly acknowledged soliciting the story from Bond, who at the time had retired from writing.[19]
  15. "The Bones Do Lie" by Anne McCaffrey (1995)
  16. "The Senior Prom" by Fred Saberhagen in Prom Night (1999), an original anthology edited by Nancy Springer (and Martin H. Greenberg, uncredited)
  17. "Precis of the Rappacini Report" by Anthony Boucher, published as "Rappaccini's Other Daughter" in 1999.
  18. "The Names of Yanils" by Chan Davis (1999)
  19. "How Dobbstown Was Saved" by Bob Leman in his collection Feesters in the Lake and Other Stories (2002)
  20. "Among the Beautiful Bright Children" by James E. Gunn in his collection Human Voices (2002)
  21. "A Dog and His Boy" by Harry Harrison (2002)
  22. "The Bellman" by John Varley in Asimov's Science Fiction in 2003, and his collection The John Varley Reader in 2004
  23. "Previews of Hell" by Jack Williamson was included in his coffee-table retrospective Seventy-Five: The Diamond Anniversary of a Science Fiction Pioneer (2004) from Haffner Press.
  24. In 2005 Haffner Press published a large reprint collection of Edmond Hamilton's two "Star Kings" novels and Leigh Brackett's three stories starring her Eric Stark character, entitled Stark and the Star Kings. The title story is the long-lost tale by both writers which should have been published in Last Dangerous Visions.
  25. "Fantasy for Six Electrodes and One Adrenaline Drip" by Joe Haldeman (which he had believed lost until finding an old carbon copy of the manuscript) was published in his 2006 collection A Separate War and Other Stories.
  26. "Where Are They Now?" by Steven Bryan Bieler appeared in the Spring 2008 (Volume VII, Issue 4) online magazine Slow Trains.[20]
  27. "Geriatric Ward" by Orson Scott Card was published in his 2008 collection Keeper of Dreams.
  28. "To Have and to Hold" by Langdon Jones appeared in audio format on Episode 146 of the podcast StarShipSofa.
  29. "The Sibling" by Kit Reed was published as "Baby Brother" in 2011.[21]
  30. "At the Sign of the Boar's Head Nebula" by Richard Wilson was published in 2011.
  31. "Childfinder" by Octavia E. Butler (2014)[22]
  32. "The Accidental Ferosslk" by Frank Herbert was published as "The Daddy Box" in 2014.
  33. "I Had No Head and My Eyes Were Floating Way Up In the Air" by Clifford D. Simak (2015)
  34. "Love Song" by Gordon R. Dickson was published in "The Best of Gordon R. Dickson, Volume 1" (2017).
  35. "The Carbon Dream" by Jack Dann appeared in 2019 as "The Carbon Dreamer" in Shivers VIII from Cemetery Dance Publications.
    • The anthology also includes "Squad D" by Stephen King, a submission to The Last Dangerous Visions which Ellison had not accepted outright.[citation needed]
  36. "Various Kinds of Conceits" by Arthur Byron Cover was included The Unquiet Dreamer: A Tribute to Harlan Ellison (2019) from PS Publishing.
  37. The anthology also includes "A Thin Silver Line" by Steve Rasnic Tem (see above)
  38. "Free Enterprise" by Jerry Pournelle was published in the 2019 Baen Books collection The Best of Jerry Pournelle under the title "The Last Shot".
  39. "Not All a Dream" by Manly Wade Wellman will be issued as a chapbook to customers preordering the two volume Haffner Press The Complete John the Balladeer.[citation needed]
  40. "The Stone Which the Builders Rejected" by Avram Davidson in AD:100 Volume 1, a 2023 collection of his unpublished stories
  41. "Potiphee, Petey and Me" by Tom Reamy in Under the Hollywood Sign: The Collected Stories of Tom Reamy, Subterranean Press 2023

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Tomlinson, Paul (2003). Harry Harrison: An Annotated Bibliography. p. 41.
  2. ^ Langford, David (2005). The Sex Column and Other Misprints. pp. 11–12. First published in SFX #1, June 1995
  3. ^ Dangerous Visions entry in The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction
  4. ^ [1] at ISFDB
  5. ^ "1995 Hugo Awards". The Hugo Awards. 26 July 2007. Retrieved 2012-03-22.
  6. ^ Mirror of the original site at Internet Archive
  7. ^ Straczynski, J. Michael [@straczynski] (November 13, 2020). "Final transmission. The last word on the subject. For now. For more information, go to: https://patreon.com/posts/43848905" (Tweet). Retrieved 31 May 2022 – via Twitter.
  8. ^ Straczynski, J. Michael (14 November 2020). "On Finishing The Last Dangerous Visions". Patreon. Retrieved 31 May 2022.
  9. ^ Straczynski, J. Michael [@straczynski] (September 27, 2021). "The book has been completed and sent to an agent with one of the biggest agencies in the world, where it is now being prepped and strategized to get the most reaction from publishers. Hope for it to finally land on editors' desks late October/early November" (Tweet). Retrieved 31 May 2022 – via Twitter.
  10. ^ Straczynski, J. Michael [@straczynski] (August 12, 2021). "Actually, it just went out the door (well, the email server) 10 minutes ago. THE LAST DANGEROUS VISIONS is now finished, 112,000 words by some of the most visionary writers of the last 48 years, right to the present moment. Proud and utterly exhausted from all that went into this" (Tweet). Retrieved 2021-08-12 – via Twitter.
  11. ^ Straczynski, J. Michael [@straczynski] (July 10, 2022). "More news about Harlan Ellison's THE LAST DANGEROUS VISIONS. To build excitement for TLDV, Blackstone will be republishing the original DV on September 1 '23; AGAIN, DANGEROUS VISIONS will come out about six months later, culminating in the publication of TLDV on September 1 '24" (Tweet). Retrieved 10 July 2022 – via Twitter.
  12. ^ Letter from Ellison, pp. 22–25. "Listed at random—not as they will appear finally in the anthology." Priest summarized: "68 authors and stories (plus the three promised rewrites) … total word-length of 445,250." Plus "60,000 words of introductions I [Ellison] have yet to write, or the 50,000 words of Afterwords that are written … over 75 full-page illustrations done by Tim Kirk"
  13. ^ Bibliography: Baby Brother at ISFDB
  14. ^ "The Scream Factory 015 (1994)".
  15. ^ Letter at multiverse.org dated 29 January 2001, quoted at https://groups.google.com/g/rec.arts.sf.written/c/8eZzPaNVRC4/m/RTes726Ba3IJ
  16. ^ "ConFrancisco Continued". Ansible. 76. November 1993. ISSN 0265-9816.
  17. ^ "Infinitely Improbable". Ansible. 77. December 1993. ISSN 0265-9816.
  18. ^ Janet Clark, CliffsNotes on Keyes' Flowers For Algernon, Cliffs Notes, University of Nebraska–Lincoln, pp. 57
  19. ^ Allen, Mike. "Roanoke writer widely admired", The Roanoke Times, November 6, 2006. Archived September 9, 2012, at archive.today
  20. ^ "Slow Trains", Spring 2008
  21. ^ Bibliography: Baby Brother at ISFDB
  22. ^ "Unexpected Stories". Open Road Media. 24 June 2014. Archived from the original on 2015-09-07. Retrieved 2015-08-25.

External links[edit]