Search 
     
 
 Most Popular Searches:  Subscription | Immigration | Great Depression | Florida Sites | Elvis Presley  
 
American Heritage Blog << Blog Home
 
 
 

November 30, 2007
L. Sprague de Camp

Posted by Fredric Smoler at 09:50 AM  EST

This last Tuesday was the centenary of the birth of L. Sprague de Camp, who provided a few generations of teenaged boys with a remarkable amount of pleasure as a writer of alternate history, fantasy, and science fiction, and produced some durable work in a lot of other genres, writing over a hundred books. De Camp had a degree in aeronautical engineering from Caltech, along with an M.S. in engineering, and he spent the Second World War working in the Philadelphia Naval Yard with two other writers, Robert A. Heinlein and Isaac Asimov, who were even more famously associated with the golden age of American science fiction, and both of whom, like de Camp, actually knew some science. De Camp’s engineering background may have given him his determined rationalism and aggressive contempt for cant—he wrote a once-famous history of the Scopes trial and a number of books debunking pseudoscientific hooey of various kinds. This distaste for pseudoscience did not stop him from producing some delightful fantasy novels. One of those books, in which some Depression-era Americans entered the world of Spenser’s Faerie Queen, cost me an astonishing amount of money in fines and a fair amount of baffled disappointment, since at the age of 15, on the strength of what I took to be de Camp’s salacious wit, I borrowed a volume of Spenser from the public library, and found the poem so inaccessible that I abandoned it, forgotten, in an obscure corner of my parents’ house.

De Camp’s most celebrated and beloved work of alternate history, Lest Darkness Fall, from 1941, in which a time-travelling American engineer arrests the fall of Rome, arguably kicked off that genre in America, and it is still in print. Lest Darkness Fall was a response to Mark Twain’s A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court, and it is still generating homages and sequels, the most recent a short story, “The Apotheosis of Martin Padway,” by S. M. Sterling, reprinted just this year in a collection of Stirling’s short fiction; Stirling is probably the closest thing de Camp has to an heir among current writers of alternate history. As a fantasist, de Camp was witty and a little bawdy, also learned, and a lot of fun. Other personae included what seemed a gentle but not too gentle version of another traditional American type, the village atheist, and de Camp was an older and admirable sort of American in other ways, too: He wrote some histories of invention, technology, and engineering, also a good monograph on the history of naval weapons, which are all subjects more kinds of people seemed to care about when I was a boy than appear to now. He was also a pioneer in writing the history of the profession he went into: He wrote biographies of other American writers of fantasy, including books on Robert E. Howard and H. P. Lovecraft, which made him some enemies among cultists, and he made other contributions to the history of genre fiction. It seems only fair to return the compliment, and note the centenary of his birth.

Discuss this post
 


Browse by Week
 

November 25–30, 2007

November 17–24, 2007

November 9–16, 2007

November 1–8, 2007

 
 
 
Browse by Month
 

November 2009

May 2009

April 2009

March 2009

September 2008

August 2008

February 2008

December 2007

November 2007

October 2007

September 2007

August 2007

July 2007

June 2007

May 2007

April 2007

March 2007

February 2007

January 2007

December 2006

November 2006

October 2006

September 2006

August 2006

July 2006

June 2006

May 2006

April 2006

March 2006

February 2006

January 2006

December 2005

November 2005

October 2005

September 2005

August 2005

 
 
Contributors
 
 

Frederick E. Allen

Allen Barra

Alexander Burns

Ellen Feldman

Julie M. Fenster

John Steele Gordon

Claire Lui

Audrey Peterson

Frederic D. Schwarz

Fredric Smoler

Richard F. Snow

Catherine Sumner

Joshua Zeitz


Contact Us >>

 
 
 
 

Contact Us  |  Subscriber Services  |  Terms and Conditions  |  Privacy Policy  |  Site Map  |  Advertising  |  HeritageSites.us  
 

American History from AmericanHeritage.com. Copyright 2008 American Heritage Publishing. All rights reserved.