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An unfortunate updating to Pohl and Kornbluth’s The Space Merchants

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  C. M. Kornbluth, Frederik Pohl, George Lucas    Posted date:  September 23, 2011  |  2 Comments


When I was a kid, I loved reading all the reissued novels in the late ’60s that featured the adventures of Doc Savage and other pulp heroes. One of the things I liked the most was that sense of time travel; that is, experiencing a story from another era. Which is why when I came across a Spider reprint that had been updated—I think the vintage of a bottle of wine was of a date which had come after the original story had been published—I felt cheated.

Didn’t the publisher realize it was eliminating one of the things that had attracted me to the book in the first place?

Based on how Wikipedia recounts what happened, I wasn’t the only one who felt that way:

It seems likely that these four books were edited and modernized reprints, one of several reasons why they may have never caught on with their intended audience. In one, Death and the Spider, with an original publishing date of 1940, Nita Van Sloan is shown driving an Jaguar E-type X-KE, a sportscar not created and on the streets until 1961, some nineteen years later.

I was even more offended when I learned that James Schmitz had been edited in rerelease to eliminate numerous references to smoking, which later came up at a World Fantasy Con panel I was on during which I, without realizing it, ended up sitting next to the guy who was responsible for that expurgation. (You can check out the discussion—and see the flabbergasted Nancy Kress—starting at 11:56 here.)

So you can imagine how I felt when I read the following in a review of Frederik Pohl and C. M. Kornbluth’s The Space Merchants in the September 19 issue of Publishers Weekly:

Pohl has attempted to make this classic novel relevant to modern readers with new references to Wal-mart, Enron, and Reagan, but the revisions only throw the 1950s attitudes and gender stereotypes into sharp relief, resulting in a dated, muddled mess.

It’s been years since I last read that 1950s classic, so I can’t speak to the palatability of its attitudes. I only know that this type of updating is a terrible, horrible, no good, very bad idea.

Please, kids … don’t do this at home.

Let’s leave this sort of thing to George Lucas … agreed?





2 Comments for An unfortunate updating to Pohl and Kornbluth’s The Space Merchants


Simon Haynes

I’ve been working with the daughter of a 1950’s british SF author, scanning and proofing a long-lost trilogy so they could be released in ebook format. The attitudes and language are very 50’s in places, but I think it’s important to keep that historical accuracy. When you read an older book you go in expecting a snapshot of the era, and with the understanding that attitudes were different.

Stephen Dedman

The saddest thing about that is that The Space Merchants was already one of the most prophetic works of sf ever published, with its depiction of a world impoverished by consumerism, and which has demonised conservationists.



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