William Tenn

William Tenn passed away this weekend. He was one of the last of the great Golden Age science fiction writers. He was also the first writer I ever saw at a convention. I was about twelve and had convinced my father to take me to Rovacon, a small science-fiction convention in the neighboring town of Roanoke, Virginia, where William Tenn was the guest of honor. I was having fun exploring the con and I only made it to the last ten or fifteen minutes of his talk, but immediately wished I had heard the whole speech. In the portion I heard, he was talking about the difficulties of time traveling. Not the scientific or technological hurdles, but the social ones. He mentioned how a man from just one hundred years ago would find it extremely hard to function in today’s society, and vice versa. Think of all the differences between now and 1910: Technology, certainly. Health and sanitation, too. But think of societal attitudes and how they’ve changed: Women’s lib. Civil rights. The U.N. Non-isolationist policies. A person traveling back to 1910 could quickly find themselves in trouble just mentioning some commonly accepted modern beliefs. At the age of twelve, I found this fascinating, and I still do. Now more than ever I wish I had made it the entire talk.

My favorite of Tenn’s stories is Time in Advance. In the future, criminals are shipped out to harsh frontier worlds to serve out their sentences performing the back-breaking work of terraforming the planets. Few survive more than a few years, let alone their entire sentence. There is also the option of serving time in advance. In this case, you haven’t committed any crime yet, but you are planning to. By serving your sentence first, with a hefty fifty-percent reduction in length, you are entirely free to commit your crime upon your return to Earth — if you happen to survive. As the story begins, two convicts have just returned after serving their time in advance for murder. This is a big story for the media — only rarely does a single time-in-advancer survive, let alone two arriving on the same day. However, the two convicts find that having the freedom to commit a murder of their choice open up doors and exposes secrets they weren’t expecting. It’s a great story, with a nice undercurrent of dark comedy.

Time in Advance, along with 32 other stories can be found in Immodest Proposals: The Complete Science Fiction of William Tenn, Volume 1. If you haven’t the story before, or Tenn at all, I recommend picking up the book, or (more economically) at least encouraging your library to do so.

6 Responses to “ William Tenn ”

  1. You can also find Time in Advance in the book “The 13 crimes of science fiction” (http://www.amazon.com/13-crimes-science-fiction/dp/0385152205 ), which may or may not be easier to find.

    I knew this story sounded familiar, but I didn’t think I’d ever heard of Tenn. But that was definitely one of my favorite stories in this collection, along with Asimov’s The Singing Bell.

  2. That’s a great book. I think every story in there is worth reading. It was there that I first discovered Randall Garrett’s “Lord Darcy” stories.

  3. That sounds like a totally brilliant premise. If there was a Kindle edition, I would pick it up right now.

  4. I didn’t know any of his stuff was back in print! I think I’m gonna have to put that book on the list.

  5. [...] writer that I know nothing about. And thanks to Wired’s Steven Levy as well as Scott over at Polite Dissent, I got some insight into the late writer, William Tenn, who died on February [...]

  6. I didn’t recognize the name William Tenn, but when you mentioned “Time in Advance” – excellent story, that.
    We have “The 13 Crimes of Science Fiction” around here somewhere. Way past time to sort/alphabetize/index the books; “13 Crimes” is hiding somewhere among the thousand or so SF hardcovers.

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