Alexei Panshin's The Abyss of Wonder
| JIM HARMON SAYS:
I was interested in Poul Anderson's remarks on Heinlein's
and Campbell's "unpopular" views. I'm glad somebody finally mentioned
Campbell. He has been running pieces "advocating" Totalitarianism
for years before Heinlein wrote "Starship Soldier." In fact, Heinlein
probably learned his ideas from Campbell. Everybody has been fearlessly
knocking Heinlein, but how many stories does he buy from us? I resented
the same elements in "Starship Soldier" (which Red Boggs advises us to
say three times, fast) in ASF by other writers at Campbell's instruction
long ago (long before I resented Campbell in Detroit). I don't think
this dislike is a sign that I want to repress freedom of speech or expression.
It seems Anderson is advocating that in denying us the right to
disagree with him, or Campbell, or Heinlein. Disagreement is not
suppression, Mr. Anderson. The free society is not the free from
contest. Campbell or Heinlein can say whatever they damned well please,
but I don't have to like it! And I don't feel that it is evil for
me not to buy a book I don't like, and to unrecommend it to anybody who
will listen. I did my bit in the good cause by doing my damndest
to keep the public library here from buying the book, or at least putting
it on the juvenile side of the house. I failed miserably. I
was not on the PTA, and another blow against censorship was struck.
Originally published in The Proceedings of the Institute
for Twenty-First Century Studies #137, October 1960.
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