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Dallas McCord "Mack" Reynolds
Born(1917-11-11)November 11, 1917
DiedJanuary 30, 1983(1983-01-30) (aged 65)
Other namesClark Collins, Mark Mallory, Guy McCord, Dallas Ross and Maxine Reynolds

Dallas McCord "Mack" Reynolds (November 11, 1917 - January 30, 1983) was an American science fiction writer. His pen names included Dallas Ross, Mark Mallory, Clark Collins, Dallas Rose, Guy McCord, Maxine Reynolds, Bob Belmont, and Todd Harding.[1][2] His work is noteworthy both for its focus on socioeconomic speculation and its radical, sometime satiric, perspectives. He was a considerably popular author from the 1950s to the 1970s, especially with readers of science fiction and fantasy magazines.[2][3]

Reynolds was the first author to write an original novel based upon the 1966-1969 NBC television series Star Trek. The book, Mission to Horatius (1968), was aimed at young readers.

Biography

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Reynolds was born in Corcoran, California, the second of four children of Verne La Rue Reynolds and Pauline McCord. When the family moved to Baltimore in 1918, his father joined the Socialist Labor Party so that from an early age Reynolds was raised to accept the tenets of Marxism and Socialism. In 1935, while still in high school in Kingston, New York, Reynolds joined the SLP and became an active advocate of the party’s goals. The following year, he toured the country with his father giving lectures and speeches, and became recognized as a significant force in advocating the SLP.[3]

After graduating from high school, Reynolds worked as a reporter for the Catskill Morning Star from 1937–38 and as editor of the weekly Oneonta News from 1939-40. In 1937, he married his first wife, Evelyn Sandell, with whom he had three children, Emil, La Verne, and Dallas Mack Jr. From 1940 to 1943 Reynolds worked for IBM at the San Pedro, California Shipyards. He also worked actively as organizer of the SLP, campaigning with SLP presidential candidate John Aiken in 1940. After attending the U.S. Army Marine Officer’s Cadet School and the U.S. Marine Officer’s School, he joined the U.S. Army Transportation Corps in 1944 and was stationed in the Philippines as a ship's navigator until 1945. Upon returning home from the Corps, Reynolds learned that Evelyn had become involved with another man. They divorced and she took their children with her.[3]

From 1946-49, Reynolds worked as a national organizer for the SLP.[4] In 1946, he made his first fiction sale, “What is Courage?”, to Esquire magazine. A year later, he met a woman who shared his radical politics, Helen Jeanette Wooley. They were married in September 1947, and Jeanette agreed to support Reynolds while he began his career as a fiction writer. After searching for a place with a low cost of living, they moved to Taos, New Mexico, where Reynolds met science fiction writers Walt Sheldon and Fredric Brown. Brown, later one of Reynolds’ frequent collaborators, convinced Reynolds to shift from writing detective stories to writing science fiction. Reynolds’ first sale of a science fiction story, “Last Warning” (also known as "The Galactic Ghost"), sold to Planet Stories in June 1949 but was not printed until 1954. His first published science fiction story, “Isolationist” appeared in Fantastic Adventures in June 1950.[3] His career soon took off, resulting in a sale of 18 stories in 1950 alone.[1] In 1951, he published his first novel, The Case of the Little Green Men, a mix of the murder-mystery and science fiction genres that became "an instant classic of science-fiction-fan related fiction." [5]

In 1953, the Reynolds moved to San Miguel de Allende, in Guanajuato, Mexico, where they lived for only eighteen months before embarking on a journey through Europe and the East that lasted almost ten years and included stays in Greece, Yugoslavia, Algeria, Morocco, Spain, Eastern Europe, Finland, India, Japan, and Hong Kong. In 1955, Reynolds became a correspondent for Rogue magazine and began making money writing about his travels as well as from his science fiction stories. In 1958, he became a choice writer for John W. Campbell’s Astounding Science Fiction, remaining its “most prolific contributor” for the next ten years.[6] The same year, the publication of How to Retire without Money, to which Reynolds contributed under the byline Bob Belmont, led the National Executive Committee of the SLP to charge Reynolds with "supporting the fraudulent claims of capitalist apologists, viz, that capitalism offers countless opportunities to those who are 'alert'" [7] and caused Reynolds to resign his membership from the SLP.[3]

From 1961-64, Reynolds, at the request of his agent, wrote five sex novels: Episode on the Riviera, A Kiss before Loving, This Time We Love, The Kept Woman, and The Jet Set. In 1963, he published The Expatriates, a mix of travel memories and autobiographical material emphasizing the benefits of living outside the United States.[5]

In 1965, the Reynolds returned to San Miguel de Allende to stay.[3] While Reynolds continued to write and sell science fiction stories, by 1969 his sales began to decline and several of his novels were held back during a takeover of Ace Books in 1970 and not published until 1975.[6] During this difficult period of his life, Reynolds wrote two romance novels, The House in the Kasbah and The Home of the Inquisitor under the byline Maxine Reynolds.[5] He also began his most ambitious undertaking, a series of stories envisioning life in the year 2000.[4] Looking Backward from the Year 2000 and Equality: In the Year 2000 updated and critiqued the socialist utopias created by Edward Bellamy in Looking Backward: 2000-1887 and Equality,[8] which had helped shape Reynolds’ radical worldview at an early age.[3] Commune 2000 A.D., The Towers of Utopia, and Rolltown and the Lagrangia series explored marginal utopian colonies on earth and in space, respectively.[3] In 1976, the short story collection The Best of Mack Reynolds was published.[2]

By the end of the 1970s, Reynolds was having trouble getting his manuscripts published. One month before his death in 1983, as he was recuperating from cancer surgery, his new agent negotiated a contract with Tor Books. By 1986, eleven of his books had been published posthumously, five of them revised and co-authored by Dean Ing. After his death, The New England Science Fiction Association, which had invited Reynolds to be its Guest of Honor at Boskone XX, had the collection Compounded Interests published in his memory. In it, Reynolds identifies his Star Trek novel Mission to Horatius as his "bestseller." [3]

Fiction

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While Reynolds’ fiction spans an array of science fiction elements including time travel, alien visitation, world computers, Amazonian cultures, and intergalactic spy adventures, his radical interrogation of socioeconomic systems sets him apart from other science fiction writers. Pohl, Frederik. “Dallas McCord “Mack” Reynolds (1917—1983)” Accordingly, many of Reynolds’ original contributions to science fiction exist in the form of sociological predictions, some of which have come to pass: the credit-card economy, a "Common Europe," a basic guaranteed income for every citizen, mobile cities, or global societies with a universal religion and an Esperanto-based common language. (Smith)

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Galaxy poll toward the end of the 1960s (pohl)

Major Themes

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Alternative socio-economic systems

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Reynolds sought to shake his readers' complacent acceptance of Cold War capitalism by depicting a variety of post-capitalist near futures, many of which he envisioned could occur around the year 2000. His stories, therefore, cover an assortment of social systems including anarchy, communism, technocracy, syndicalism, meritocracy, various forms of socialism, and an extrapolation of free-enterprise economics, People's Capitalism.[3][9] In addition, some of his stories set up a rivalry between a collective and a competitive economy in order to asses their respective merits, sometimes coming to the conclusion that they cannot be compared except for their imperialistic aims, as in the novella "Adaptation," while at other times both systems are revealed to be equally decadent and stagnant, as in the Joe Mauser story "Frigid Fracas." [3]

Trouble in Utopia

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Reynolds has been called a "cautious," [8] "critical," [10] or "ambiguous" [3] Utopian writer because his many explorations of ideal societies, such as his updates of Edward Bellamy's Looking Backward: 2000-1887 and Equality, focus equally on Utopia's dilemmas as on its benefits. Usually, Reynolds' Utopias are worlds of almost complete industrial automation so that no one needs to work, everyone lives in security thanks to a guaranteed basic income, and those who volunteer for the few jobs left are chosen via a quantitative ability test.[8] At the same time, the population's very life of leisure has led to species stasis by discouraging the continual striving that gives humanity its purpose [10] as in the story "Utopian," or the Utopian welfare state has metamorphosed into a caste society where those in power aim to keep it, negating its members the opportunity to exert themselves to the full extent of their abilities, as in the Joe Mouser series.

The continuous revolution

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Reynolds' heroes usually seek to improve on their societies by direct revolutionary action. Sometimes their revolution helps advance a people's level of civilization, as in the case of the North Africa series; sometimes it aims to upset a Utopian society where, while there is no want, inequality, or conflict, there is also no sense of purpose, as in the novel After Utopia [10] or the possibility of social mobility, as in the Joe Mauser series. Usually, once a revolution has succeeded in subverting the status quo, another revolution follows and subverts it, as in the story "Black Sheep Astray," giving the impression that social change is as endless as it is progressive.[3]

Progress and progression

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interaction between primitive and advanced societies: to modernize the primitive or leave them alone (Smith 65)

Several assumptions underline these stories: any socio-economic system will attempt to preserve its status quo, and thus negate its members the opportunity to exert themselves to the full extent of their abilities; while Utopia is not possible, the search for Utopia is; humanity finds its purpose in constantly striving for a better world.[6]

George W. Price

Reynolds understood that modernizing a backward society requires much more than booting out foreign imperialist overlords or dethroning native tyrants. It requires that the natives must change their own culture. That’s because nearly always it is precisely that native culture that keeps them in backwardness. Imperialists and tyrants may take advantage of the backwardness, but they don’t cause it and their departure won’t end it. And making such deep cultural changes is no easy task, as Homer Crawford painfully learns. The changes can’t simply be imposed by fiat. If leading people in battle is hard, persuading them to abandon traditional patterns of thought is far harder.

Several assumptions underline these stories: any socio-economic system will attempt to preserve its status quo, and thus negate its members the opportunity to exert themselves to the full extent of their abilities; ; humanity finds its purpose in constantly striving for a better world. while Utopia is not possible, the search for Utopia is[6]

His novels predicted many things which have come to pass, including pocket computers and a worldwide computer network with information available at one's fingertips.

Most of Reynolds' stories took place in Utopian societies, many of which fulfilled L. L. Zamenhof's dream of Esperanto used worldwide as a universal second language. Many of his novels were written within the context of a highly mobile society in which few people maintained a fixed residence, leading to "mobile voting" laws which allowed someone living out of the equivalent of a motor home to vote when and where they chose.

References

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  1. ^ a b . "Mack Reynolds-Summary Bibliography." The Internet Speculative Fiction Database.
  2. ^ a b c Stableford, Brian and John Clute. "Mack Reynolds." The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, 3d edition (online). Ed. John Clute, David Langford, and Peter Nicholls. 2012. Web.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Smith, Curtis C. Welcome to the Revolution: the Literary Legacy of Mack Reynolds. San Bernardino, CA: Borgo, 1995. ISBN 1557422362 (10). ISBN 978-1557422361 (13).
  4. ^ a b Manousos, Anthony. "Mack Reynolds." Dictionary of Literary Biography, vol. 8: Twentieth-Century American Science Fiction Writers. Part 2: M-Z. Ed. David Cowart and Thomas L. Wymer. Detroit, Michigan: Gale Research, 1981. 85-88. ISBN 0810309181 (10). ISBN 9780810309180 (13). Print.
  5. ^ a b c Kemp, Earl. "Revisiting The Expatriates: A Capricious Chronology." eI43 8.2. (April 2009). Web. Text available at eFanzines.com.
  6. ^ a b c Stableford, Brian. "The Utopian Dream Revisited: Socioeconomic Speculation in the SF of Mack Reynolds." Foundation 16 (May 1979). Print. Reprinted in Outside the Human Aquarium: Masters of Science Fiction. Rockville, MD: Wildside LLC, 2008. ISBN 0893704571 (10). ISBN 978-0893704575 (13).
  7. ^ N.E.C. Reports. National Executive Committee of the Socialist Labor Party. State Historical Society of Wisconsin, 1959; quoted in Smith 20.
  8. ^ a b c Kapell, Matthew. "Mack Reynolds' Avoidance of His Own Eighteenth Brumaire: A Note of Caution for Would-be Utopians". Extrapolation 44.2 (2003). Republished by The Free Library.
  9. ^ Reynolds, Mack. "Afterword." Foundation 16 (May 1979): 54-55. Print.
  10. ^ a b c James, Edward. "Utopias and Anti-utopias." The Cambridge Companion to Science Fiction. Ed. Edward James and Farah Mendlesohn. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2003. 219-229. ISBN 0521016576 (10).ISBN 978-0521016575 (13). Print.