And Having Writ... Explained

And Having Writ...
Author:Donald R. Bensen
Country:United States
Language:English
Genre:Science fiction, Alternate history
Publisher:Bobbs-Merrill
Release Date:July 1978
Media Type:Print (hardback & paperback)
Pages:250 (first edition, hardback)
Isbn:0-672-52078-8
Isbn Note:(first edition, hardback)
Dewey:813/.5/4
Congress:PZ4.B4739 An PS3552.E54765
Oclc:3870456

And Having Writ... is a 1978 science fiction/alternate history novel by American writer Donald R. Bensen.[1] Nominated for the 1979 John W. Campbell Award,[2] it tells the story of aliens who crash-land on Earth in 1908 and then journey around the planet, trying to jump-start World War I. Even though they fail to do this, they succeed in creating the circumstances for their ultimate departure from Earth after a period of suspended animation.[3]

Plot summary

According to the novel, the Siberian explosion was originally caused by the crash landing of the spacecraft named The Wanderer. In this alternate reality, however, the alien astronauts are able to commandeer their failing vessel so that it lands in the Pacific Ocean, just outside San Francisco.

Shortly after landing, the quartet of spacemen are rescued from the sea by an American ship and taken to California.[3] The Wanderer sinks into the ocean, and the team reasons that they must find a way to accelerate Earth's technological advances so that they can get back home. The eventual conclusion at which they arrive is that they must provoke the planet into what Ari claims is an inevitable global conflict, one that will (through weaponry innovations) result in a boom of new science and industry.

Characters

The astronauts and their roles

The four astronauts never identify their home world, merely saying that they are a team of Explorers sent to gather information about foreign planets.

Historical characters

The astronauts interact with a number of important global personages during their stay on Earth.

Secretary of War William Howard Taft, who in reality served as the 27th President from 1909 to 1913 and then became a Supreme Court Justice, appears very briefly at the beginning of the book. His one and only cameo comes in 1908, when he and Theodore Roosevelt are discussing the effects that the presence of extraterrestrials could have on the election. He is asked by the Republican National Committee to relinquish their nomination for President, news that overjoys President Roosevelt, who assumes that he will be the new nominee. It is Taft who delivers the startling news that the Committee plans to nominate Thomas Alva Edison.

Literary significance and criticism

"a smoothly humorous sf novel set in an alternate world engendered by the survival of the aliens whose crash-landing caused the Siberian Tunguska explosion of 1908. Thomas Alva Edison and H.G. Wells make appearances (John Clute/Encyclopedia of SF).[4]

Background

See main article: Tunguska event and Tunguska event in fiction. The actual Tunguska Event was a massive explosion in Siberia, in June 1908. The explosion, unexplained even today, felled sixty million trees and produced shockwaves that could be felt four hundred miles away. A popular explanation is that a small comet disintegrated just before impact; conspiracy theorists have more fanciful explanations.

Release details

Footnotes

  1. Web site: Uchronia: And Having Writ.... www.uchronia.net.
  2. Web site: Campbell awards 1979 . 2006-07-27 .
  3. Web site: Bensen, D.R. And Having Writ... plot . . 2006-07-27 .
  4. Book: Clute, John . John Clute

    . The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction . John Clute . Peter Nicholls . Orbit . 25 November 1999. 1-85723-897-4 .

References

. And having Writ... . Donald R. Bensen . Bobbs-Merrill . 1978 . 0-672-52078-8 .