Happy Birthday Hugo Gernsback!
Who is Hugo Gernsback and why are the Hugo Science Fiction / Fantasy Awards named after him?
Hugo
Gernsbacher, born August 16, 1884 in Luxembourg immigrated to the
United States in 1904 to New York. Hugo was fascinated by electricity
and invented a dry battery which he patented upon arriving in the United
States. He established a radio and electrical supply house called
Electro Importing Company and developed a small portable radio
transmitter called the Telimco Wireless Telegraph. He went on to patent 80 inventions.
Gernsback published a magazine for electrical experimenters called Modern Electronics
which was later taken over by Popular Science. To fill up some empty
space in the magazine, he decided to write a futuristic story which ran
in 12 installments.
That story was later published in 1926 as a novel called "Ralph 124C 41+"
which was set in the 27th century and is still available today. He
started a number of magazines including the first magazine dedicated
exclusively to science fiction called "Amazing Stories." the magazine of scientifiction in 1926.
First Issue April 1926
Hugo
coined the term scientifiction which later went on to be known as
Science Fiction. Thanks to the beauty of the internet I found an
original pdf of an article of Gernback's called Plausibility in
Scientifiction on Mumpsimus (thank you, Matthew)
Gernsback
unfortunately went bankrupt and lost control of Amazing Stories. He
quickly bounced back and went on to publish three more magazines: Air
Wonder Stories, Science Wonder Stories and Science Wonder Quarterly.
Air
Wonder and Science Wonder were merged into one magazine Wonder stories
in 1930 and sold it in 1936 to Beacon Publications where it continued to
be published for 20 more years.
Gernsback
is lauded as the father of science fiction. The first annual Science
Fiction Achievement awards was awarded back in 1953 with retro awards
handed out for the years 1946 in 1996, retro award 1951 given in 2001
and 1954 retro award presented in 2006. The award were unofficially
called the "Hugo's" until the name was officially changed and use
beginning in 1993. In 1960 he was given a special Hugo Award as "The
Father of Magazine Science Fiction." The Science Fiction and Fantasy
Hall of Fame was founded in 1996 and Hugo Gernsback was one of the first
inductees along with Jack Campbell (1908-2006), A.E. van Vogt's
(1912-2000) and John W. Campbell Jr. (1910-1971)
Hugo Gernsback died in New York on August 19, 1967 at the age 83.
If
you want to know more about Hugo Gernsback, his electronic
accomplishments, all about his magazines and his life, you find
everything you want to know here and here.
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I've never been a big sci/fi fan. As a reader of fantasy, however, I sometimes find that the two overlap. I'd never heard of Hugo Gernsback. This is interesting.
ReplyDeletewow, thanks for the info!
ReplyDeleteI finished Edge of Forever by Sherryl Woods, it was bound together with A Natural Father by Sarah Mayberry
Cool! I never knew any of this. My husband is a sci-fi fan and he'll probably enjoy this information.
ReplyDeleteI linked to Only a Novel, which, though it is a first novel and self-published, is comparable to much of the professional fiction that I review. I was surprised and thrilled, because I hadn't expected such quality. It's a great light read for bookish people. Enjoy!
So surprised how much I loved The Aeneid!
ReplyDelete