That"s about all we can say about Hank, He doesn"t like New York because it"s too dirty, noisy and big. He dotes on Thorne Smith. Rite now he"s trying to crash Argosy with a story--and in the future you can expect some big things from this quiet author.
Oh, yes, and is it true what they say about Kuttner?
No, he doesn"t use dope to get the effect in his stories. He has a ma.s.sive painting of Art Barnes on his desk and when he prepares to write he squints once and once only at that painting to get gruesome atmosphere. Then he starts typing!
Take a bow, Mr. Kuttner.
(Jus bend over a little more, Hank! A" K" BARNES)
WHUMP!
Ouch! (KUTTNER)
The End (of Kuttner)
a.n.a.lYSIS
[Ill.u.s.tration]
FROM J CHAPMAN MISKE: Pretty snappy cover on the 1st issue of fufa. At least I like it. Simple stuff looks best on mimeod covers. By the way, what, I"d like to know, is the s.e.x of that Bokian creature? WHY MR.
MISKE! WE THOT U ABh.o.r.eD s.e.x! TSK! TSK! I"m for Technocracy. Personally I suspect Reynolds of being Kuttner NOPE.... TRY AGAIN, JACK. Your poetry not so hot. U wandered a bit and were melodramatic.
DALE HART POSTS: Bok cover good. Yerke and Reynolds interesting.
Forrie"s story unique. Yur poem full of thot but it didn"t scan very well. MAYBE IT"S BECUZ I"M MORE BRITISH THAN I AM _SCAN_-DIN-AVIAN.
(BRAD) How about an increase in pages--this issue much too small. HOPE YU LIKE THIS BIGGER SIZE, DALE.
GERTRUDE HEMKIN MUMBLES: Cover startling, technocracy article sounds sensible, ron reynolds satire amusing and contains a few kernels of logic, at that. And where hav I red 4SJ"s RECORD bee4?
(WE _Wonder_) HENRY Ha.s.sE TYPES: "Hans Bok steals 1st honors 4 his cover. Hope yu can get Hans to do all yur ill.u.s.trations each month."
YES; HENRY, WE"LL HAVE BOK ON THE COVER EVERY ISSUE FROM NOW ON EVEN THO HE"S BUSY IN NEW YORK WITH HIS PANTING--SINCE THE EDITORIAL FOR FUFA WAS STENCILED THE DECEMBER ISSUE OF WEIRD TALES HAS APPEARED ON THE STANDS ALL OVER AMERICA WITH ITS COVER DONE BY BOK. IT WAS FUTURIA FANTASIA"S PLEASENT DUTY, THIS SUMMER; TO BRING ABOUT THAT DEAL BETWEEN BOK AND WEIRD AND WE ARE JUSTLY PROUD OF HANS AND HIS SUCCESS. HERE"S HOPING HE HITS ASTOUNDING NEXT. Ha.s.sE CONTINUES: "Best written feature was yur poem, Brad. Next is Reynolds piece and the one by Ackerman." DUE TO LACK OF s.p.a.cE IN THIS ISSUE WE ARE CONDENSING THE ABOVE LETTERS. IN THE WINTER EDITION THERE WILL BE A BIGGER LETTER DEPARTMENT--THAT IS, IF YU WRITE IN. WE"RE ANXIOUS TO KNOW HOW YOU LIKED OUR SPECIAL _the pendulum_. UNTIL THEN, FU, FAREWELL!
RETURN FROM DEATH
_by ANTONY CORVAIS_
They were seated in his parked, car, miles from the city, when Robert told Ellen; "I"ll always love you, darling, forever and ever. I just can"t help myself, and I don"t want to."
The girl nestled closer without reply.
"And if something should happen to one of us, the other would wait--because love like ours will never know death--it must go on--for eternity," he continued. "I know that I"ll love you even when I"m dead, and if there are such things as spirits, I"ll come back to you--somehow.
Or would it frighten you?"
Ellen pouted: "Don"t be so funereal! It makes me feel strangely inside.
Of course nothing can separate us. It"s a beautiful nite and we"re wasting it on--oh, dear!" Her eyes had glanced at the small clock on the paneling. "It"s late, Robert. You must hurry me home now or mother will be furious!"
Sighing, Robert started the car. As they roared toward town over the twisting roadway, suddenly the car swerved.
"Lookout, Bob! A man!" It was Ellen"s high voice screaming.
The car skidded sickeningly on loose gravel, crashed thunderously through the railing bordering the highway, and richocheted, turning over and over, halting as wreckage. Robert was crushed under the metal bulk, losing consciousness.
Thrown clear, Ellen scrambled to the man, bent over him. Something more than pain filmed his eyes; he heard himself muttering: "I"ll come back?--you wait--" in a failing whisper as illimitable darkness swept over him, accompanied by dreadful nausea. A point of light appeared in the void, expanding into a dazzling rectangle which split into thousands of lesser planes; these shaped a geometric pattern which whirled dizzily, humming, the drone rising in pitch with every sickening revolution, becoming incessant mechanical scream----
"And this is death. This is past human endurance." With sudden omniscience he knew that he WAS dead and the meaning of the spinning pattern. The knowledge ebbed and carried with it all of his memories except for Ellen"s face and her name.
The wheeling design parted like a curtain, and Robert observed beyond it a branching path spreading before him like a flattened tree. At the end of every fork was Ellen"s face, wavering and blurred. He fixed his attention upon the nearest furcation, aspiring toward it desperately, and sensed himself hovering in s.p.a.ce.
Shock, as of lightning coursing his veins, knotted him with agony.
Involuntarily his eyes squeezed shut. Icy air tortured his lungs. As he raised his voice in weak protest, the pain ceased and he relaxed, spent.
His eyes continued shut, as though the lids were gummed down. Failing in many attempts to open them, he quested food, found it, and consoled himself with it.
Occasionally plaintive voices babbled unintelligibly, arousing him.
Always, if he listened, he heard a gentle murmur reply to the voices.
And then everything was quiet. He felt very sleepy. Finally he dropped off into slumber, deep and restful.
Between periods of sleep, Robert struggled with his heavy eyelids.
Memories might have a.s.sociated his sightlessness with blindness--but he had none. There were only Ellen"s face and her name which, when expecially desperate, he called again and again.
Gradually his vision became clear, and he stared in awe at a world of immensity which was peopled with t.i.tans. The picture of Ellen in this gigantic place troubled him, for the colossal beings looked upon him as an animated toy. Often he was elevated to their reeking mouths, kissed, and dropped aside; if he were insistent upon attention, inquiring for Ellen, the giants beat him and thrust him from their presence.
Inert bare-surfaced looming things inclosed him, from some of which, when he approached them, he was kicked away. Incredibly huge portals barred egress to an outer world, from which seeped strange sharp odors.
By calling his one word to the world beyond the doors, Robert endeavored to explain to the t.i.tans that Ellen might possibly be outside. But they hushed him with amus.e.m.e.nt, sometimes with abuse.
There had been others prisoned here like himself while he had not seen, but they had vanished now, but this bothered him not in the least--his thoughts were of Ellen, and finally the giants lifted him and put him into a windowless room and clamped a fretted ceiling over it. The chamber rocked gently; he realized that it was being moved from one place to another. Leaping frantically he touched the ceiling"s lattice, clung to it, struggling to force himself through its interstices.
Unsuccessful, tiring, he fell back, crouched in a corner, weeping.
Motion of transit ended--the confining ceiling vanished. Robert scrambled over a wall, dropped to the ground of the outer world, whose heavy conflicting odors, dazzling lights and moving shadows alarmed him.
Dim with distance was the withdrawing form of a giant, which he pursued, crying out his one word, "ELLEN!"
The giant vanished among weird wavering plants. Alone, Robert skulked nervously through tall rustling things, was terrified at times by an unexpected sound or motion. But the swaying things appeared unaware of him and he became self-confidant. Discovering a stretch of damp earth gemmed with puddles, he drank. His head c.o.c.ked at a sound reminiscent of Ellen: her soothing voice.
A giantess had appeared over him. She was--ELLEN! At sight of her, Robert"s pent memories burst free, overwhelming his consciousness with turbulent pageantry. He thrust up his arms; gently indulgent, the girl bent and drew him to her breast. She cuddled him, cooing to him. At the moment her monstrous size did not concern him.
"I"ve found you! I"ve found you!" he cried. "Oh, Ellen, if only you knew how lonely it has been--" He opened his glad heart to her in a stammering urgency, bliss in his eyes, tears in his voice. Breathless, he raised his face to the girl"s; she hesitated. Then she kissed him and set him down at her feet. She strode away. Crying with hurt amazement, he followed. She shook her head. She kept walking swiftly. He could not keep up with her and he stopped forlornly as she disappeared behind an obstruction. He stared after her with unbelieving eyes. Tho mysteriously stunted, he had returned to her from death, and she had not accepted him. He stepped close to one of her prodigious footprints in the mud and surveyed it grimly. His eyes sought an impression of his own foot. And suddenly he cried in mingled grief and horror--for there in the mud was his footprint--small--strange--the footprint of a half-grown cat!
CONVENTIONAL NOTES or the report on THE S.F.L. BALL GAME