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Hilbert Schenck (1926–2013)

Author of A rose for Armageddon

20+ Works 259 Members 6 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Disambiguation Notice:

Used the name Hilbert Schenck, Jr. when writing poetry.

Works by Hilbert Schenck

Associated Works

The Oxford Book of Science Fiction Stories (1992) — Contributor — 506 copies, 9 reviews
The Ascent of Wonder: The Evolution of Hard SF (1994) — Contributor — 435 copies, 6 reviews
The Best Science Fiction of the Year #8 (1979) — Contributor — 216 copies, 3 reviews
The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: 9th Series (1961) — Contributor, some editions — 163 copies
5th Annual Edition: The Year's Best S-F (1960) — Contributor — 159 copies, 4 reviews
6th Annual Edition: The Year's Best S-F (1961) — Contributor — 139 copies, 1 review
Perpetual Light (1982) — Contributor — 107 copies
The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction: A 30-Year Retrospective (1980) — Contributor — 94 copies, 1 review
Chrysalis 5 (1979) — Contributor — 32 copies, 1 review
Christmas Forever (1993) — Contributor — 26 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Schenck, Hilbert
Legal name
Schenck, Hilbert van Nydeck, Jr.
Other names
Schenck, Jr., Hilbert
Birthdate
1926-02-12
Date of death
2013-12-02
Gender
male
Occupations
science fiction writer
engineer
Organizations
University of Rhode Island
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Disambiguation notice
Used the name Hilbert Schenck, Jr. when writing poetry.
Associated Place (for map)
Massachusetts, USA

Members

Reviews

17 reviews
My reactions reading this novel in 1993. Spoilers follow.

This was an original, moving, fast moving tale.

The blurbs calling this a Lovecraftian tale are only partly right. There is delving into historical documents like journals and diaries and newspapers, but, whereas in a Lovecraft tale death and/or insanity follow such pursuits, here the result is, for protagonist Eve Pennington, much more benign and transcendental – though still deadly for her.

Schenck has a knack for creating show more characters. I not only liked Eve Pennington, but my favorite was old would-be spy Ed C. Berry who helps Pennington. Even the details of Pennington’s incest with her sister are handled naturally, realistically, and, though it’s normally an act I’d find repugnant and alien, I accepted it as a crucial, important event in her life, an experience she cherished.

On the down side, the evil government conspiracy was a bit hackneyed and predictable (I’m not sure Schenck even wanted to disguise biologist Marta Hoerner’s role as an evil government agent.), but I still cheered when the alien wasted them. I agree with Pennington and her lover Ian McPherson – the aliens power to control minds, bodies, and perceptions is too awesome to trust to government.

But the very best part of the book – a wonderful, clever, original and very good part it is – is the alien and the mystery around it, a lonely, shipwrecked alien on Muskeget Island, an alien that just wants to die. But to do that he must have human help, human aid, to override his survival programming. He must wait for a hurricane to threaten his hideaway on Muskeget, lure a human host nearby so the alien can put its personality into the host’s body and be destroyed with the host. To ensure the host stays, the alien replays intimate (in every sense of the word) sexual experiences of certain women (It finds women more receptive to its powers) to keep them while death closes in. It is by a indirect series of manipulations of people near the Island that Pennington is lured there to relive an incestuous incident with her beloved and dead sister. As the hurricane closes in, time slows and Pennington relives her experience with her sister and also the special, very detailed memories of others who have been to the island.
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Eve Pennington, along with a cast of lovable academics, discover an alien presence underneath an island off Nantucket. What does it want? And, rather more importantly for Eve and her friends, what do the major world governments want with it?
Seriously one of the best books I've read in quite some time. Though the characters spent a good portion of the pages pondering the philosophical realities and consequences of their current situation, and discussing those thoughts with each other as well, show more it was still a captivating tale. show less
½
This is an odd little book. I heard of it while researching the NB-36 nuclear testbed, and it was obviously inspired by that. The author worked on that and related projects. The story is wild, with bizarre characters and a lot of steam train references. Fun, but weird. There is drug use, racism, sexism, you name it; it's a satire, so the author is making fun of his characters, but it is jarring sometimes.

It's a quick read, and actually so short that there is a short story afterwards about show more weather modification. Again, bizarre characters and a strange story. show less
A novella and a short story. The title novella recounts the story of an eccentric Air Force Colonel's campaign to get the US Government to fund and build a nuclear-powered bomber for no better reason than that it would be powered by steam. It degenerates into a story about pointless bureaucracy and the oxymoron of 'military intelligence'.

The second story is a near-future tale of weather control by crude cloud-seeding techniques. It is built around a single joke about a pair of homosexual show more water-bomber pilots who call their aeroplane the 'Gay Enola' (for those who don't get that, the B-29 that dropped the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima was called the 'Enola Gay' after the pilot's mother-in-law.)

Two slight stories, each based around a single premise, and overall an interesting curiousity. Vincent di Fate's cover art, though, steals the show with a rendition of the nuclear-powered bomber which looks like a giant mutant cross between a Handley Page Victor and a Convair B-36 - one of the latter was used as a flying atomic test-bed aircraft and demonstrated that the concept of a nuclear-powered aeroplane was utterly unworkable.
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½

Awards

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Statistics

Works
20
Also by
18
Members
259
Popularity
#88,670
Rating
3.8
Reviews
6
ISBNs
15
Favorited
1

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